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101219

Familiar Quotations

Familiar Quotations
e/f
collection

of passages, phrases and


to their sources in

proverbs traced
ancient

and modern

literature

by

JOHN BARTLKTT
fourteenth Edition
RKVI.SK1)

AND KN1.AKUKU
Editor

KMII.Y

MOKISON BKCK.

1 .11

It*,

Brown and Company Bosujn Toioiito

COPYRIGHT l88a l891 BY JOHN BARTMTT COPYRIGHT X910> I914, *9I9 134* * T ANNA SPRAGUE DBWOLF AND LOUISA BAKTLUTT DONA1 DION COPYRIGHT 1937, 1948. *955* *9** LITTLE, BROWN AMD COMPANY (tNC.)
f

OO MAT ft* ALL RIGHT! RIfERVKD. HO PAftT OF T M O* BY AttY IK ANY FOX)* REPRODUCED HlfCTHONlC OR MECHANICAL MEAN* IMCLUXHN IHFOKMAriON VTORAC1 AND RITRJXVAL 1 Y I T 1 M t WITHOUT * I * M * IION IN WRITXMC FROM THr X L * K f ^ T fY A f X C
f Jt

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It

REVIEWER WHO MAY

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VI

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGUE CARP

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664

frr// E^tfioff

P*MitbeJ

FourttetlA

fi/M

FR1NTR0 IN THE WNITt

*TAT* O*

Attffttlf A

Preface
TO THE FOURTKKNTH KDITION
entered into our language, itself a "fanot associated with cither pears or trees, hut a source book nearly as indispensable as the dictionary: "I .emit it up in Bttrttettr Sir Winston Churchill thought it an "admirable work** and

has

now

BARTLKTT" miliar quotation/*


it

studied

intently,

he

tells

us in
give

My

Kefrfy Life.

"The' quotations

engraved upon the

memory

you good thoughts,

Thn

also

when make

you anxious to read the authors and hx>k for more/* Readers and editors of Bartlett have done just thisand found more, In more than a
century of life Bartlett has grown prodigiously and steadily each year, So, why now a new edition?
its

sales increase

The most
that have

obvious reason, of course,

is

the

number

of quotations

become memorable

since* the* last

edition in 1955. Historical

events* the growth of philosophy and science*, the cinincner of certain statesmen, writers, ports, and otheis whet tin words effectively* strongly influence our use of language? and choice of expressions. An appendix
1

to Rttrtlctt
in

might

have*

taken rare <f these addend;!; this had

bwn

dfinc

sonic curlier editions,

But today
if,

reasons for a thorough revision*


historical

important additional likt a dictionary, this collection of


ttirre
art:

and

living sayings

is

to keep alnt'ast of tht* time**,

and popular expressions change from one gcmwi tion to another, and the facility of tcmmitmicatiim has accelerated this
Literary
tastes

emerge from the? shadow of neglect am! begin to IK* quoted; others fade from fishinit or their worels lose their relevance tc the times, Fach create catchy phrases, some of them
proe'cw,

Figures of

the

past

ff

lasting.

And

all

the while then*

is

supposes, will provide a balla&t for tiwu? to totwwuwMk* with one another,

an aecrettwi of sayings which, one ctviltftttioit for as long as men con

PREFACE TO THE FOURTEENTH EDITION

As the two postwar

editions of Rartlctt* the twelfth

and

thirteenth,

record the advent of the atomic age, so the fourteenth hears the particular imprint of the last decade. Since the publication of the last
edition, a large

ages," leaving

number of world-renowned their mark upon our culture

figures

now "belong

to the

men

like ('hmctiill.

Ken

Hamnedy, Adlai Stevenson, Pope John XXIII, Nehru. OpjK<nheimer. men of letter like Robert marskjold, Albert Schweitzer; distinguished
Frost,

Hemingway, T,S.

Kliot, I'aulkncr* Aldcnis

Huxley, K, K.

Cum-

mings, Roethkc, Pasternak, 'Hwrlxx Carl Sandburg,

Omw

It is inter

edition that bears their esting to speculate, furthermore, whether this death dates for the first time will carry more of their quotation* than
will future editions, affected as they will l>e

by

liistonc;il jicrspectivc.
,i

Some phenomena

of recent years are crystalliml in

word or phrase;

beat generation, brinkmanship, the Great Society, the affluent sothe revolution of rising ex ciety, the multiversity, cybernetics* racism, the other Amenta pectations, the American Establishment* poverty
nature and the sue of the Bartktt audience provide another tea son for a new edition, The vastly increased number of \tiuients the

The

expanding interests of the intellectually curious, a* evidenced by the tremendous variety of paperbacks and inexpensive editions on every subject, demand a broader reach into other fields of Ittcutme and an
amplification of authors hitherto inadequately represented Outdated translation is another reason for revision. The elastics fur

the most part have been heretofore represented In transitions itit changed since the nineteenth century, some of them death auliait.
Until
his

has appeared in Pope's translation, of which even contemporary, the classicist Richard Bcntlcy, remarked, "It is ;i pretty poem, Mr, Pope, but you must not call it Homer.** Tim* enough;
those ''familiar quotations" like

now Homer

ing guest" are

*pml the part more Pope than Homer, They now apjxw appropiiatrh
T

"Welcome

the coining.

under Pope, while well-known Homeric lines, like "All stranyets and beggars are from 7euK and a gift, though small is prcciom," arc here
included for the
first

time.

As our range of space on this earth,


tures of Asia,

reference expands inversely with the shrinkage of

mon

and sayings from the cultures and litcra Europe and South America are assimilated into our cum heritage, Increasing interest in science, and the recognition that
expressions
vi

PREFACE TO THE FOURTEENTH EDITION

Freud, for example, in Audcn's phrase


ion/' insist

is

now

"a whole climate of opin-

on greater representation from scientists and psychiatrists. number of figures besides Freud and Jung have never appeared

perhaps because they were not thought to have said anything actually "familiar/' or perhaps because they have not occurred to the editors as natural sources of quotations. But it was astonishing
in Bartlett before,

to find

among

the missing Confucius, Columbus, Chekhov, Bolivar,

Brandeis, Bergson, Sir

Thomas

Malory, Cotton Mather, John Marshall,


,

Pushkin, Flaubert Gandhi,

important figures like credited with a single quote, not necessarily the most famous one. An amazing number of famous quotations have been overlooked
in previous editions.

Other Tan, Kant, Kierkegaard, St Augustine or Julias Caesar formerly were


,

Uo

Here are

a few;

Man
clue

is

the measure of

all

things

the young (Juvenal }; There (Protagoras); The greatest reverence is is always something new out of Africa (Pliny); But it does move (Gali-

dead and opened, you shall find "Calais" lying in my heart (Mary Tudor); But that was in another country; and besides, the wench is dead (Mark we); One
leo);

There go the ships (Psalm 104);

When

am

man

with courage makes a majority (Andrew Jackson); Surprised by

joy (\Yortisworthi;

Not

Angles, but angels {Utc:;w\ 1); Pr.use the SIM,

on shore remain (John Mario); K

War

is

nmeh
) ;

(Kimtein); y.K.I). (Euclid); too serious a matter to be entrusted to the military

me 3

Hypocrite lectcur HUM semhtoblc won here (Baudelaire); A journey of a thousand miles must begin with a single step (Lao Txu); 1 beseech you, in the boweh of Christ, think it possible you may

(Clemenecau

IK*

mistaken (Cromwell), a saying which fudge I Dirtied Hand would like to have "written over the portals of every church, every school, of every legislative body in the United every courthouse, and
,
.

States"
Errors

the

title

the misquotation of of Cray's Klesy in omitting the word Written before in a


persist-**-

-one for over a

hundred

years:

Country Churchyard,
be inescapable conclusion is that a collection of this kind must thoroughly overhauled from time to time, Today a single editor, or a

The

brace

erf

editors,

is

no longer adequate
1 *

for
1

what to

fohi> Rartlctt in i&)t

was

still

"this very agreeable pursuit/

It is

one thing to carry on the

tradition of ''familiar

and "worthy
vii

of perpetuation/' to recognize in

PREFACE TO THE FOURTEENTH EDITION


the sifting of hoary sayings the line that
still

persists as vital or pertinent,

But

to

assume authority on the well-known quotations;


all

in all the fields

and among

the authors

now

presumptuous. Thus, for the first has had a staff of consulting scholars

represented in this edition would be* time, the editor of Familiar Quotations

who have

spent

many
sources,

hours

helping to compile well-known material from the


Japanese, Sanskrit, Russian,

classics,

from Chinese,

German, French, and Spanish

from

Latin America, and from the sciences, psychology, medicine, American


history, political science,

also

American and English literature Thev have* scanned the existing text for errors, and recommended what to

wood or no longer relevant. At least i fourth of these experts are under thirty, to give proper representation tn the
eliminate as "dead

younger generation.
editor of the fourteenth edition gratefully acknowledges the contributions of the Elizabeth Perkins Aldrieh. Peter Atmtas, following:

The

George

Basalla,

William

Twain

in the thirteenth
Pitts,

Courtenay* Bernard IX* Voto (for Mark and fourteenth editions K Admiral K. KHer
J,

USN, Dudley

Arthur Freeman, Paul ftcnnd. Richard CumhtK'h,

Stanley Kunitz, Elena Levin, Louis Lyons, David McCord,, Robert Mimhall, Samuel Eliot Morison, Henry A, XJmuv. Grt'ipnv Kalian, John Paul Russo, Alain Seance, Tcph Stewart, Maurice B, SIMM*. Ml)
,

John L, Sweeney, Praeott B. Wintcrstccn, Jr. Philip Yttnng, In addition to the countless friends and the faithful traders of
Bartlett

who

write in to point out errors

and omission*, the follmvun*

especially thanked for help and advice: Judge Bjiley Aldric h. Catharine Cooper, John Kenneth Galbraith* Donald Gallup, Seymour Harris, James Laughlin, Robert Lescher, Henry F. ftmtmcr. Arthur

are to be

Schlesinger,

Jr.,

Robert Smsman, Michael des Tombe, Aleumfei Wil

liams, the Reverend Prcscott B.


It is

Wintmtcen.

I),P.

impossible to exaggerate

what the thirteenth and fourteenth

editions of Familiar Quotations

complex styling problems is matched by tor exceptional matiuty and ear for the elusive line. In without peer judgment and taste Uic Moreover, she is responsible for the index, which is the brqoit and nicnt
i

copycditing department at tery of

owe to Mary Rsicklifft', hmd of the Little, Brown and Company Her rnav

thorough that Bartlett has ever had,

viu

PREFACE TO THE FOURTEENTH EDITION


say anything which has not been said already/' observed La Bruyre in 1688. But anyone looking at the quotations after that date will know that there will be new always ways to bring home old truths. "Poetry reminds man of his limitations ... of the
richness

"We come too late to

and

diversity of his existence/'

John

V.

Kennedy remarked.

It

has always been evident too that, as he said, "Art establishes the basic

human truths which must serve as the touchstone of our judgment/' The great lines and passages from the ancients make us recognise, with reassurance or resignation how little man changes down the ages,
Seneca, in the
first

century, could be speaking of

hour when he
tionally.

writes,

"We

are

us at this veiy mad, not only individually, but naisolated murders;

We check manslaughter and

but what of war

and the much vaunted crime of slaughtering whole peoples?"


learning

We

can

take comfort from Solon in the sixth century B.C,-~ "I grow old ever

many

things/*

B<x>h "arc the voices of the distant and the dead/' William Kllery Channing tells us, "and make us heirs of the spiritual life of past ages/"
Quotations, like books, "are true
faithfully use
levelers.

They

give to

all,

who

will

them, the society, the

spiritual presence, of

the best and

greatest of our race/*


Rttrthtt provides a distillation of flu* heritage, a guide to the manifold ways in which man has tried to express the basic human truths.

KMU.Y
(

Mttfttticm

BW:K, Editor

*ant<m, Massachusetts

Historical
Book Store

Note
colsix*

THK

University

in

lege for

John Bartlctt

He went

Cambridge, Massachusetts, was to work there at the age of

teen after attending the Plymouth public schools* and in 1849 when he was twenty-nine he lx>ught the store, It had become a meeting place for book loving Harvard and and them students, piofessors through
develo|>ed John Bartlett's reputation for knowing a quotation, author and source. From his commonplace book of the wont popular passages

evolved K*r;u7mr Quotations, which he published himself and had printed in an edition of a thousand copies by the? "printers to the
university*" in 1855,
It

fifty

modest brown paperbound volume of two hundred and right pages, representing a hundred and sixty nine authors, many
a

was

ht

single quotation or, like his friend

fames Russell

I<rm*cll,

by two,

The

Bible and Shakes |K*aro took up about a third of the book; the balance was chiefly Kngihh poetry- Milton. Pope. Byrosu and Words

worth claiming the greatest number of


lection of prow? from Milton, Bacon,
lay.

entries,

Thar

was

a small se-

Ben Franklin, Tom Paine, Macau and one maxim from La Rochefoucauld, "thpocmy is the homage

that vice jwys to virtue,"

No

Chaucer. Blake. Shelley* nor several other

authors

who

could not have been

nineteenth century.

the tongue in the mid mere handful of Americans were included: Ixwg*

much upon

fellow, Irving, Bryant, Ixmx'll

-The
then,
son*

Star Spangled Banner/'


it

and a line each from "Hail Columbia," and '"Hie Old Oaken Bucket/ People
1

scans, were not given to quoting Washington,

Adamv

|eflFer

Piitrici

Henry, IXiniel Webster* or even Kmerson

(who made

Rarth'tt bv the third edition in iH<;H).

Gettysburg Address had not yet been delivered, Walt Whitman published Isave* of (torn that same year, and 'Ilmrcau W<tfdten the
xi

The

HISTORICAL NOTE
writers were so in advance of their time, it seems year before. Both until the tenth that neither was to be included in Familiar Quotation*

edition in 1914, nine years after Bartlctt's death, The little book, one of the earliest collections of quotations,
success,

was

and

in

1863

Little,

of the fourth edition.

becoming senior partner mUiar Quotations until


having also published

Brown and Company became the publisher firm that same year, John Bartlett joined the later. He continued to edit Fu fifteen
years
his

The

Books on Angling, and a Complete matic Works and Poems,

death at the age of eighty five in u>o^ Shakespeare Phrase Buofc. <t Catalogue of Concordance to ShakMpeartfx Dra-

In 1914 Nathan Haskdl Dole, poet, editor, and translator from the French and Russian, edited the tenth edition, now grown twice the

and three times the thickness of the first. Dole's purpose ,1% he from thaw writers put it, was "to incorporate in the work quotations in literature has been achieved since the mite of the ninth whose
size

place

edition in 1891,"

and

to

add

selections

from other "best writer* of


veal of

their day/' His criterion

was that passages should have "the


Harriett's

popular approval" and be "distinctly worthy of perpetuation."


respectful
ing, "It is
it is

He

puid

homage

to

John

"impeccable judgment,"

declar-

not always easy for Klisha to wear the mantle of Khjah; hut

Elisha's business to carry

on

his predecessor's

work

in

the same

spirit"

Either because of contemporary tastes in literature or oversight, there were some rather surprising omissions in the tenth edition, No Blake.
Pindar, Hawthorne, William or

pick at

Henry James, or Ktnily Dickinson, to but William Butler Yeats made it with, oddly enough. random,

the one

poem he himself refused to include in 1m (Mlvvtvd r<jrm#. "The Land of Heart's Desire/* There was a large section of "misc'eltaiteand the
Bible, for

ous, translations, appendix/'

some

reason,

now

aj>

pcared at the

end of the book, In the present edition it Im been restored once more to the front, a fitting opening to quotations from

our Judaea-Christian culture.

No new
Elijah's

edition appeared until 1937, a few

yean

alter Dole'* death,


editor,

mantle passed to Christopher Morlcy, author, poet


sake.

dubbed an "angloliterophilc"
its

own

Louella D.

for his love of the Kngliih language for Everett joined forces as associate editor,
xii

HISTORICAL NOTE

Morley's preface to the eleventh edition is a lively essay which at the outset asks the question which every Bartlett editor, we feel, must try to
answer:

made

His broad literary background him an ideal editor, and Miss Everett's ear for the popular line or

"What makes words memorable?"


more

verse gave that edition a


hitherto.

topical quality

than the book had had

For the
currency.

first

Some

time the editors weeded out quotations no longer in of the quainter lines by Miss Fannie Steers, Sir Samuel

Tuke, and Captain Charles Morris ("Solid

men

of Boston,

make no

long orations; Solid men of Boston, drink no deep potations") had seen their day. The flowery descriptive verse and the sugary senti-

ments of the

last half
still

though a great deal

of the nineteenth century were sharply cut, remained. Furthermore, Miss Everett combed

over the favorite poetry of the Nineties, and added such versifiers as Mary Artemisia Lathbury, "the Chatauqua Laureate"; and Julia Moore, "the Sweet Singer of Michigan," of whom Mark Twain wrote: "The

one and unfailing great quality which distinguishes her poetry from Shakespeare's and makes it precious to us is its stem and simple irrelevancy."

They

still

persevere into this edition of the 1960'$.

Morlcy not only added to the twentieth-century quotations, he culled every period from ancient times on, reflecting perhaps a broadening
cultural outlook on the part of the average American.
cal order of authors

The

chronologi-

remained, but otherwise the change in the eleventh edition was more striking than in any other, and the innovation of the

two-column page allowed a vast increment of now quotations within a


single volume*

Morle/s theory of selection was broader than John Bartlett's. "Previous editions adhered almost with pedantry, to the touchstone of familiarity/' ho wrote. "Only phrases or quotations that had gained
wide recognition, become hypodermic, were admitted.
matter of new inclusions
to
this edition
is
.

In

the

make

literary

not so stringent: we have tried power the criterion rather than width and vulgarity
so

of fame."

"Literary power"

is

"familiarity" that this

much more a matter of personal opinion than new approach opened up for future Bartlett
xiii

editors the temptation to exploit their literary passions. Restraint has

HISTORICAL NOTE

been necessary to keep the volume from becoming idiosyncratic or growing into an anthology. World War II and the atomic age required an updating of Bartlett,

and in 1948 Morley and Everett published the twelfth edition with the Charter of the United quotations from Churchill, Hitler, Einstein, Nations, William Laurence, Douglas MacArthur, Truman, Lippmann,
and
others.

There was

also a catchall section for quotations

omitted

Jones);

in previous editions, like "I have not yet begun to fight" (John Paul Article III, section 3 on treason from the Constitution of the

an island," famous as the source of the title of Hemingway's novel For Whom the Bell Tolls; Lord Acton's "Power tends to corrupt"; Emerson's "Four snakes gliding up United
States;

Donne's

"No man

is

and down ... not

to eat, not for love

."

The

year 1955

mar^e(i

ti^ e centennial of Familiar Quotations,

and

it

was altogether appropriate for a new revised edition to appear, this time issued by the Little, Brown editors themselves. They continued
the tradition of adding new quotations throughout and of eliminating the no-longer familiar, thus improving the work, which increases steadily

in popularity.

The

fourteenth edition

is

discussed in the Preface.

EMILY MORISON BECK, Editor

xiv

Guide

to the

Use

of FAMILIAR
The The

QUOTATIONS
xix.
first

For the sections of the book see the Contents, page

Preface, p. v, discusses the fourteenth edition. Historical Note, p. xi, tells of the different editions of

Familiar Quotations from the

edition of 1855 on.

The
The arrangement
is

Quotations
is

not by topics or subject matter, nor

it

by

authors alphabetically, as in some collections. It is by authors chronologically with selections from their works in chronological order. Birth

and death dates as well as pseudonyms accompany the author's name, and each work is dated wherever possible. Quotations give chapter and
verse of their sources, or similarly, act, scene

and

line

from dramatic

works.
chronological arrangement lends historical value to the collection of authors and quotations. One becomes quickly aware that Pericles,

The

Sophocles, Euripides, Thucydides and Plato were contemporaries, as were Confucius, Lao Tzu, Aesop, Heraclitus, and the Suttapitaka a
earlier.

century
Sir

The

great poets of the

Middle Ages

Dante, Petrarch,

and Chaucer

Columbus, upon and Machiavclli were Malory, contemporaries. Shakespeare appropriately is in the midst of the Elizabethans, Ben Franklin, Sam-

follow one

another.

One

discovers that

Thomas

and John Adams were contemporaries; so were Jefferson, Goethe, and Talleyrand, while Kipling and Yeats were bom in the same year and lived, actively writing, into their seventies. The chronological selections of an author show his development, and
uel Johnson,

William

Pitt,

in

some

found

instances provide a distillation of his work. Students have this helpful in studying an author, both as a review and as an

incentive to read

more

of the work quoted.

xv

GUIDE TO THE USE OF Familiar Quotations

Footnotes and Cross -References

When

the quotation

is

a translation the original language

if

familiar

manyheaded beast," from Horace, on page 1233, has a footnote quoting the Latin, with cross-references to variations, and examples of derivative
versions.

in itself appears in a footnote. For example,

"The people

are a

it

In cases where the familiar quotation differs from the original whence derives, as in the case of the Latin mottoes of the Great Seal of the
Virgil, footnotes

United States from


provide
full

(on pages ii6b, nya, and

ngb)
ex-

information.

The

footnotes also cross-reference.

For

ample, a quotation
referring to Keats's

from Horace's Epode

XIV

has a footnote crossit

Ode

to a Nightingale,

which

inspired.

Under

Keats

we

find a footnote to the

Ode which

cross-refers

back to Horace.

Suppose you wish to find out who first used the expression "iron curtain/' You look up either "iron" or "curtain" in the index, which
tion that

sends you to page 924^ Here, under Churchill, you find the quotamade the expression famous, in his speech at Fulton, Missouri,
5,

1946, together with a lengthy footnote which relates the other ways people used it before he did.

on March

Franklin D, Roosevelt
the idea that

is

usually credited with having

first

"The only

thing

we have

to fear

is

fear itself."

expressed Both the

index and the footnote for the Roosevelt quotation indicate its derivation from earlier writers, some in languages other than Knglish.

Index of Authors (page 1107)


Authors are

Page numbers

listed alphabetically with their birth and death dates. are given for both the author's main entry and for his

quotations in footnotes throughout the text.

Index (page 1155)


In this edition we have continued and expanded the Bartlett tradition of of the thorough indexing quotations. The result is voluminous more than 117,000 entries.
first of all at facilitating the location of remembered or half-remembered or almost forgotten or topical xvi
is

This thoroughness

aimed

GUIDE TO THE USE OF Familiar Quotations


Bartlett has about morning") quotations. The index plays another role as a browsing book of unusual proportions. The pursuit of an evocative index entry noticed almost at random may lead to
("Let's see

what

renewed pleasures or to the discovery of hitherto unsuspected sources of illumination and enjoyment.

Keep

the following in

mind when

using the index:

(1) Spelling follows American (Webster) forms, but there are occasional exceptions; for example, burnt (not burned) offerings.
(2) Hyphenation also occasionally varies from Webster; for example, we index drop-scenes (in Webster drop scenes) to isolate it from other drop entries. (3) Dialect and other significantly variant spellings are generally

indexed in Webster forms as well as in the original ('ammer'/hammer).


(4) Alphabetization
is

for inflected forms of a

(we hope) strict, which means that word may be widely separated from

entries
entries

for the word itself; for example, nightcap, nightingale, nightmare and other entries separate night from night's. The standard order of plural and possessive forms is: lover's, lovers, lovers'.

an important word in a very familiar phrase is in a contracted form (Beauty's but skin deep; An honest man's the noblest
(5)

When

work

of

God)

Honest man

indexed also in the singular (Beauty skin deep; noblest work). But most such contractions are indexed
it is

only in the original form

(What

cat's averse to fish).

under one keyword continue to another column of (6) the index, the keyword is repeated at the top of the new column. If you
entries

When

find your

keyword
or page

at the top of a
if

column, check the foot of the previous


to be sure of covering
all

column

necessary

the entries

in the same order as in the quowith the the correct position except when abbreviated in tation, keyword it starts the quotation (a and fo with the page number indicate left and

under the keyword. (7) The words of each entry are

right

columns on the page)


Hope,

all h. abandon who enter here, beautiful Evelyn H. y 66jb deferred maketh the heart sick, 243 feed on h., zoia
is

the thing with feathers, 7353

xvn

GUIDE TO THE USE OF Familiar Quotations

When
entry
it

the keyword occurs both at the start and in the body of the is not abbreviated:
Alps,

beyond A. lies on Alps arise, 4033

Italy,

1253

There are so many familiar ways of indexing one familiar phrase under one keyword (Love, one jot of former L; Love, jot of former 1.; In(8)
tellect,

monuments

of unaging
all

i.;

Intellect,

unaging

i.),

that you should

look for your quotation in

locations under the possible alphabetical

between one possibility keyword. Several columns of entries may come and another (as in the first example above).
In checking a two-word term of which one word is the keyword that retention of the quotation's original (for example, old age), note order means that all entries about the term will not necessarily appear
(9)

grouped together:
Age, dance attention upon old
green old a., "}6jb old a. and experience, 3$2b old a. should burn, loyob
'tis

a.,

88;a

well

an old

a. is out,

3723

(10) If you don't find your quotation under one keyword, try another. The first word of a quotation, moreover, is not necessarily a

keyword. If you think Milton said fresh fields and pastures new, you will not find it under fields but you will (with its original fresh -woods) under fresh, pastures, and new. have, however, tried to include in

We

but mine
sir,

footnotes and in the index such popular misquotations as A poor thing own as well as the originals in this case An ill-favored thing,

but mine own, from Shakespeare's A$ You Like It. (11) If your quotation does not emerge under any of the remem-

bered keywords, try synonyms or related words. A quotation about valor is often remembered as about courage; dullness as boredom; approbation as praise; and so on. (12) If you are using the index as a topical source (looking for all the quotations you can find about nature or bravery or wisdom or love
or whatever), think of
all

the synonyms and related words you can

and then,

in addition, browse, eat, enjoy. You'll find

more.

Emily Morison Beck

Mary
xviii

Rackliffe

Contents
Preface to the Fourteenth Edition
Historical

v
xi

Note
Use
of Familiar Quotations

Guide

to the

xv

Familiar Quotations from Ancient Egypt and the Bible to the Present

Index of Authors
Index to the Quotations

1107
ll ?5

Familiar C^uiotations

ANCIENT EGYPT
Mine
is

yesterday,

Boofe of the

I know tomorrow. Dead [c. 3500 B.C.

and

after]

Death is before me today As a man longs to see his house When he has spent many years
captivity.

in

Be a craftsman in speech that thou mayest be strong, for the strength of one is the tongue, and speech is 2 mightier than all fighting.

Papyrus by an unknown author. Third Poem


Creator of all sustenance.

and

giver

of

their

Maxims

of Ptahhotep
[c.

3400 B.C.]

Hymn

More
upright

acceptable

man

is the virtue of the than the ox of him that

to the Sun by Suti and Hor, architects to Amenhotep III [c. 1400 B.C.]

doeth iniquity.
Instruction to Prince Merikere

from

his father,
[c.

Heracleopolis

a pharaoh of 2200 B.C.]

Valiant herdman who drives his cattle, Their refuge and giver of their suste16. nance.
Sole lord taking captive day,
all

lands every
that

man's virtue
is

is

his

monument, but

forgotten

of evil repute. Egyptian tombstone inscription


[c.

the

man

As

one

beholding
sky,

them
a

walk
the

2100 B.C.]

therein; Shining in the

being as

sun.

None

corneth from thence

He makes

the seasons by the months.


desires, desires.

That he may tell us how they fare. Lo, no man taketh his goods with
him.
Yea, none returneth again that
thither.*
is

Heat when he Cold when he


Every land
is

Ib.

in rejoicing

gone

At

his

rising

every day,

in

order to
Ib,

The Song

of the Harp-flayer
[c.

praise him.

2100 B.C.]

To whom do

IKHNATON
C.

speak today?
.

Brothers arc evil, Friends of today arc not of love.

1385-1358
sky,

B.C.

Thou dawnest
zon of the

beautifully in the hori-

To whom do
There arc no

speak today?

The

land

righteous, left to those is


4

O
who do

living

Aton who wast the Beginning

of

life!

Hymn

to the

Sun

iniquity,

When
The

Papyrus
[c.
1

by an unknown author 2000 B.C.]. Second Poem


of

thou settest in the western horizon of the sky, earth is in darkness like death, 1
16.

From JAMFJ HKNRY BRKASTW>, The Dawn

Civitiiation [19$$].

The pen
KoWAW)

is

mightier

than

the

sword.

&*
*

B<it.wr.K-LYTroN, Richtlicu, act 17, $c. a Eftleiiaxte* $:/$, p. aHa; / Timothy 6:7,
p.

Kvery lion den,

cometh

forth

from

his

All serpents, they sting.


*

P'35; Thcogni*,

77a;andShakcip<!arep.t6*a. Frciwjrvcd in the Berlin Mtueura.

Sec Psalm 104:30, p, *ib.

IKHNATON
Darkness broods, The world is in silence,

AMENEMOPE
And
apply thine hension.
it is

heart to their compre-

He

that made horizon. 1


is

them

resteth

in

his

For

Hymn

to the

Sun The

a profitable thing to put 1 in thy heart.

them

Bright the horizon;

the earth

when thou
as

risest in

The Wisdom
truly

Amenemope, III who pnttcth prudent man,


of

When
Thou

thou shinest
drivest

Aton by day
.
. .

himself aside,
Is like

Men waken
feet

away the darkness. and stand upon

a tree growing in a garden,

their

He
He
His

flourisheth
fruit,

and
the

multiplieth

his

When
Then The

in all the world they

thou hast raised them up. ... do their


16.
sail

abideth

in

presence

of

his

work. 2
barks

lord, fruit is sweet, his

upstream and downis

And he

findeth his

end

shade is pleasant, in the garden. 2


16.

VI
the

stream

alike.

Every highway
dawnest.

open because thou

Remove not
Better

the

landmark

on
Ib.

3 boundary of the fields.

VII
of

The

fish

in the river leap

up before

thee.

is

poverty

in

the

hand

Thy

8 green sea.

rays are in the midst of the great Ib.

God
Than
riches in the storehouse.

Better are

loaves

How manifold are thy works!


They
are hidden before

when the

heart
16.

is

men,
is

joyous

sole

God,

beside. whom there

Than
no

riches in unhappincss. 4
thyself to seek for

IX
fl

other.

Weary not
They

more.

Thou

didst create the earth according Ib. to heart. 4

16.
[riches] have wings like geese,

thy

made themselves

AMENEMOPE*
Tenth century
that sent him. 6
B.C.

And
one
I

4 they have flown to heaven*


16,

In order to return a report to the

Consider for thyself these thirty chapters,

The Wisdom

of

Amenemope,

Incline thine ears to hear


fl

my

sayings,

That they tion J

arc satisfaction

and
16.

instruc-

XXVII

i$ee Psalm 104;**, p. ib. See Psalm 204:33, a}, p. *ib, 8 See Psalm 104:25, a6, p. gib. *See Psalm 104:114, p. sib. * The Wisdom of Amenemope was translated into Hebrew, it was read by Hebrews, and an important part of it found its way into the Old Testament . . This whole section of about a chapter and a half of the Book of
.

A scribe skillful in his office, He shall find himself worthy


courtier. 8
1

of being a
16.

See Proverbs a:/7~/$,


/,

f>.

t$b.
Jercrritah
tjii-**,

*See Psalm
P* S4b.
8

p,

166,

and

Proverbs (s*:i7~5:n)

is

largely

drawn verba-

of Amenemope; that is, version is practically a literal translation from the Egyptian, JAMES HENRY BREASTED, The Dawn of Civilization [1935] 8 See Proverbs 22:21, p. agb. the

tim from

The Wisdom

Hebrew

See Proverbs 92:98, p. st$b, See Proverbs /$;*/7, p, a^b. See Proverbs 33:4, p. $b. Sec Proverbs *);}, p. 151*. 7 See Proverbs aa.'ao, p. *$b, the direct reference to Amcnemope and hU ay!ngs. "Sec Proverbs 33:29, P- *5&
* *

THE

BIBLE: GENESIS

THE HOLY BIBLE THE KING JAMES VERSION


1611

THE OLD TESTAMENT


In the beginning

into his nostrils the breath of

life;

and

man became
And

a living soul.

God

created the

Genesis 2:7
the Lord God planted a garden eastward in Eden. 2:8

heaven and the

earth.

And
void;

the deep. And the Spirit of God upon the face of the waters.

the earth was without form, and and darkness was upon the face of

The

tree of life also in the midst of

moved
2

the garden.

2:9

And God
and

said,

Let there be

light:

there was light.

But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it:
for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die. 2:17 It is not good that the man should be alone; I will make him an help meet for him. 2:18

And

Genesis* 1:1-3 4 the evening and the morning


first

were the

day.

1:5
it

And God And God

saw that

was good.
i

no
in

And
sleep to

the Lord
fall

said,

Let us make

man
i

God caused a deep and he slept: Adarn, upon


his ribs,

onr image, after our likeness.

:z6

and he took one of

and closed

Male and female

created

he them.
1:27

up the

flesh instead thereof.


rib,

And
had

the taken

and multiply, and replenand subdue it: and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over every
fruitful,

Be

woman,
flesh.

which the Lord God from man, made he a 2:21-22


flesh

ish the earth,

Bone of my bones, and


Therefore
father
shall

of

my
his

2:23
a

living earth.

thing

that

moveth

upon the

man
and

leave

and

his mother,

shall cleave

And on
his

the seventh day

God ended
2:2

unto his wife: and they shall be one


flesh.

work which he had made.

And
and

the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed
our joys, there was no one that more filled our heart*, than the blessed continuance of the preaching of God's stored Word among ui; which is that inestimable treasure, which exceUeth all the riches of the
1

And

they

his wife,

were both naked, the man and were not ashamed.


2:24-25

Among

all

the serpent was more subtile than any beast of the field. 3:1

Now

Your eyes
shall
evil.

shall be opened, and ye be as gods, knowing good and

because the fruit thereof cxtcndkth itnot only to the time spent in this transitory world, but directcth and disposcth men unto that eternal happiness which is above in heaven. This Translator? Dedication to J&mei /
earth;
self,

3:5

* Fiat lux,

The
*

First

Thf V-utgtite Book of MUM*, ant of the

five

they sewed fig leaves together, and made themselves aprons. 1 And they heard the voice of the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day. 3:7-8
sometimes as
Bible of 1557-1560 was known the Breeches Bible because in this passage "aprons" is rendered as "breeches/*

And

books of the Pentateuch.

*Thc Geneva

Numbers
vcr*e.

in Bible citations represent chapter

and

THE BIBLE: GENESIS

The woman whom


with me, she gave did eat.

thou gavest to be
of the tree,

me

and

Genesis 3:12

Jubal: he was the father of all such as* handle the harp and organ. Genesis 4:21

What
And
the

is

this that

thou hast done?

And Enoch walked


And
all

with God.

woman

said,

The

serpent

beguiled ine, and I did eat. And the Lord God said unto the serpent, Because thou hast done this, thou art cursed above all cattle, and above every beast of the field; upon thy
belly shalt thou go, and dust shalt eat all the days of thy life.
It

5:24 the days of Methuselah were


5:27

nine hundred sixty and nine years.

And Noah
Japheth.

begat Shem,

Ham, and
5:33

thou

There were
those days
old,
,

giants in
.

the earth in

shall bruise

thy head, and thou


3:15
shalt

shalt bruise his heel.

were of

men

mighty men of renown.

which
6:4

In

sorrow

thou

bring

forth

Make
And
the ark.

thee an ark of gopher wood.

children.

3:16

6:14
of every living thing of
sort shalt
all flesh,

In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread, till thou return unto the ground; for out of it wast thou taken: for dust thou art, and unto dust shalt

two of every

thou bring into


6:19

And

the rain was

upon the

earth

thou return.

forty days
called
his

and

forty nights.

And Adam
living.

7:12
rest for the

wife's

name
all

Eve; because she was the mother of

But the dove found no


sole of her foot.

3:19-20

8:9

So he drove out the man: and he


placed at the east of the garden of Eden cherubims, and a flaming sword which turned every way, to keep the way of the tree of life. 3:24

And,

lo,

in

her mouth was an olive

leaf pluckt off.

8;n

For the imagination of man's heart is evil from his youth. 8:2 1

And Abel was


Cain was a
I

tiller

a keeper of sheep, but of the ground.


4:2

While the earth remaincth, seedtime and harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and winter, and day and night
shall

not cease,

8:22

Am my brother's keeper?
The
crieth

4:9

voice

of

thy brother's

blood
4:10

'

unto

me

from the ground.


shalt thou

Whoso shcddcth man's blood, by man shall his blood bt* shed: for in the image of God made he man. 9:6
I

do

set

my bow

in the cloud,

and

it

fugitive

and a vagabond
is

be in the earth.

be for a token of a covenant between me and the earth.


shall

4^2
greater than I can

9:1 3

My
bear.

Even

as

punishment
the

Nimrod the mighty hunter


'

^3
Lord
set

And
Cain
-

mark upon
4:15

out from the presence of the Lord, and dwelt in the land of Nod.
Jabal: he was the father of such as dwell in tents.

And Cain went

10:9 Therefore is Hie name of it called Babel; because the Ixm! clid there confound the language of all the
earth.

before the Lord.

nr
I
.

U't there be no strife, between rne and thee .


brethren.

pray thee,
tor

we he
i^-g

4:20

Abram dwelled

in

the land of Ca-

THE BIBLE: GENESIS


naan, and Lot dwelled in the cities of the plain, and pitched his tent toward Sodom. Genesis 13:12
In a good old age.

between me and thee, when we are absent one from another.


Genesis 31:49

15:15
will

And

Jacob was
a

left alone;

and there

His
[Ishmaers] every man, and against him.
father of
thee..

hand
every

be against man's hand


16:12

wrestled

man
let

with him until the

Thy name shall be Abraham; for a many nations have I made


17:5
if

32:24 thee go, except thou bless me. 32:26 And Jacob called the name of the place Pcniel: for I have seen God face
I

breaking of the day.


will

not

My Lord,
But
his

now

have found favour


I

to face,

and

my life

is

preserved.

in thy sight, pass not away, from thy servant.

32:30
pray thee,
18:3

Behold, this dreamer comcth.

37:19

looked back [Lot's] from behind him, and she became a


wife
pillar of salt.

They stript Joseph out of his coat, his coat of many colours. 37:23

19:26

The Lord made


prosper in his hand.

all

that he did to

My
lamb

son, God will provide himself a for a burnt 22:8 offering.


a

Behold behind him


thicket by his horns.

ram caught

in a

39:3 she caught him by his garment, saying, Lie with me: and he left his garment in her hand, and fled, and got

And

22:13

him

out.

39:12

Ksau was a cunning hunter, a man of the field; and Jacob was a plain man,
dwelling

And

25:27 he [Ksau] sold his birthright

in tents.

unto Jacob.

the seven thin and ill favoured kinc that ciune up after them are seven years; and the seven empty ears blasted with the east wind shall be seven years of famine. 4 J;2 7

And

Then Jacob gave pottage of Ion tiles.

Ksau bread and


25:33-34

Then

hairs with

shall ye bring down sorrow to the grave.

my

gray

43:38
times

The
f

voice

is

Jacob's voice, but the

hands are the hands of Ksau.

27:22

so

But Benjamin's mess was much as any of theirs.

five

43 34
:

brother came with subtilty, and hath taken away thy blessing. 27:35
[Jacob] dreamed, and behold a ladder set up on the earth, and the top of it reached to heaven: and behold the

ny

Wherefore have yc rewarded


good?

evil for

44:4
in

He

The man

whose hand the cup

is

found, he shall be

my servant.
his brother

44-'* 7

angels of

God

And he

fell

ing

on

it.

ascending and descend28:12


is

upon

Ben;

jamin's neck, ancf wept; wept upon his neck.

and Benjamin 45 *4
fat

Surely the Lord

in this place;

and

knew

And
land.

it

not
is

28:16

ye

shall

cat

the

of

the
of

45:18
they

This

none other but the home of


this
is

And
Goshcn.

came

into

the

land

God, and

the gate of heaven.

46:28

28:17

Jacob served seven years for Rachel; and they .seemed unto him but a few
days, for the love he had to her.

But I will lie with my fathers, and thou shalt carry me out of Kgypt, and bury me in their buryingplace. And he said, I will do as thou hast said.
47:30
i

29:20
Mi?.pah; for

he

said,

The Lord watch

Sc

Corinthians 13:11, p. 5*b.

THE BIBLE: GENESIS


Unstable as water, thou shalt no Genesis 4
I

EXODUS
thus shall ye eat your shoes
staff
it;

And

with your

excel.

loins girded,

have waited
the

for thy salvation,

and your
the
passover.

in

on your feet, your hand; and ye


it is

Lord.

shall eat it in haste:

49:1

the Lord's

Unto

utmost
.

bound
a

of

everlasting hills

49:2 6

Now

there arose

up

new king
Joseph.

over
1

Egypt, which

knew not

Exodus

1:8

She took for him an ark of bulrushes, and daubed it with slime and with
pitch.
I

through the land of night and will smite all the firstborn in the land of Kgvpt, both man and beast; and against all the gods of Egypt I will execute Judgment: I am the Lord Exodus 12:11-12
I

For

will pass

Egypt

this

2:

have been a stranger in a strange


2:22
fire,

This day [Passover] shall be unto for a memorial; and ye shall keep it a feast to the Ix>rd throughout your

you

land. 2

generations.

1*3:14

Behold, the bush burned with and the bush was not consumed.

Seven days shall ye cat unleavened


bread.

13:25

3:2

Put

off

for the place

thy shoes from off thy feet, whereon thou standest is


3:5

There was a great cry in Egypt; for there was not a house where there was not one dead.
12:30

holy ground.

And Moses
afraid to look

hid his face; for he was

which yc day, came out from Kgypt out of the house


this

Remember

in

upon God.
with milk

3:6

land
8

flowing
said

and
3:8

honey.

And God

3:14 slow of speech, and of a slow tongue. 4 : 10 Let my people go.


I

THAT I AM.
am

unto Moses,

AM

15:5 the Lord went before them by day in a pillar of a cloud, to lead them the way; and by night in a pillar of fires to give them light 13:31

of bondage.

And

And the children of Israel went into the midst of the sea upon the dry ground: and the waters were a wail
unto them on their right hand, and on
their left
I will

5:1

Ye

shall

no more
brick.

straw to

make

give the people

1^:22

5:7

Thou

sing unto the Lord, for he hath

shalt say unto Aaron,

rod, and cast it before Pharaoh, shall become a serpent.

Take thy and it


7:0
'

And he hardened
This
is

Pharaoh's heart.
7:13

triumphed gloriously: the hone and his hath he thrown into the sea, The Lord is my strength and song. and he is become my salvation z
rider
,

5:1-3
i

The Lord Thy

is

man

olf

war.

the finger of God.

j;j

8:19
1

Darkness which

may be

felt.

0:2 1

bring one plague more upon Pharaoh, and upon Egypt. 11:1 Your lamb shall be without blemish.
12:5
of Moses, second of the five books of the Pentateuch, * See Sophocles, p. 8*b. Also in Exodus j$;j and Jeremiah //.>
1

Yet

will I

C) Lord, is become right hand, glorious in power: thy right hand, Lord, hath dashed in pieces the

cneiny. i?:6

Thou

sentcst forth

consumed them

thy wrath, wind*

as stubble.

Thc Second Book

died by the Egypt, when we sat by the flcshpob, and when we did eat bread to the full.

Would

to

God we had

hand of the Lord

in the land of

THE
It is

BIBJLJK:

JL.X.UIJU&

manna.
shalt

Exodus 16:15

Thou
there
live.

canst

not see

my
see

face:

for

Thou
me.

have no other gods before

shall

no

man

me, and Exodus 33:20

Thou

shalt not

make unto thee any


20:3-4

And he
Lord

graven image.

For I the Lord thy God am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generation of them that hate me. 1 20:5

forty days and forty nights; he did neither cat bread, nor drink water. And

[Moses]

was there with the

he wrote upon the tables the words of


the covenant, the ten

commandments.
34:28

Thou

shalt not take the


in vain.

name

of the

Whatsoever partcth the hoof, and is clovcnfooted, and cheweth the cud,

Lord thy God

207

among the

beasts, that shall ye eat.

Leviticus

11:3

Remember
it

the sabbath day, to keep

And
you.

the swine

...

is

unclean to

holy. Six days shalt thou labour,

and do

all

Of

thy work: But the seventh day not do any work.

their flesh shall ye not eat.

... thou

shalt

20:8-10

11:7-8 Let him go for a scapegoat into the 16:10 wilderness.

Honour thy father and thy mother: that thy days may be long upon the land which the Lord thy God giveth
thcc. a

And when

ye reap the harvest of your

Thou Thou Thou Thou

shalt not
shalt

kill.

land, thou shalt not wholly reap the corners of thy field, neither shalt thou the gleanings of thy harvest*

gather

not commit adultery. shalt not steal. shalt not bear false witness

And thou

shalt not glean thy vine-

yard, neither shalt thou gather every grape of thy vineyard; thou shalt leave

against thy neighbour. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's house, thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's wife, nor his manservant, nor Tus

them for the poor and stranger: I am 1 the Lord your God. 9:9-10

Thou
Thou
2

shalt not

go up and down

as a

talebearer

among
shalt

thy people,

19:16

maidservant, nor his ox, nor his

ass,

nor

love

any thing that


But
let

is

thy neighbour's.

20:12-17
not

thyself.

neighbour as thy ' 19:18

God

speak with

us, lest

we

die.

20:19

The Lord bless thec, and keep thee: The Lord make his face shine upon
thec,

He

that smiteth a

man, so

that he

die, shall

be surely put to death.


21:22
3

and be gracious unto thee: lift up his countenance upon thee, and give thee peace.

The Lord

Numbers* 6:24-26
Sent to spy out the land,
13:16

Kye
for

hand, foot
I

for eye, tooth for tooth, for foot.

hand
21:24

And your

children shall

wander in
14:33
is

Behold,

to keep tliee in the way.

send an Angel before thee, 23:20


people.
let

the wilderness forty years.

He whom
*

thou
of

blessest

blessed.

stiff necked
is

32:9

22:6
The Third Book

Who
>&{
#**<

on the Lord's side?

him

Moe,

third of the five

come unto me.


F.mipictai,
j>.

32:26
Htta.

book* of the Fen ta touch. * Also in Matthew 191*9 and 33.79,

Mark

12:31
2:8,

and
five

}},

Romans

13:9, Galatians $:rj>

Jamiss

Arvhylui,

j>.

78;*,

The Fourth Book

Al*> in

Moae*, fourth of the books of the Pentateuch.


of

THE BIBLE: NUMBERS

JOSHUA

The Lord opened


ass,

the

mouth

of the

A dreamer of dreams.
The wife
The poor
land. 1

have

and she said unto Balaam, I done unto thee?

What
of thy
shall

Deuteronomy bosom
.

13:1
1

Numbers 22:28
Let
eous,
his!

3 :6

never cease out of the


15:11

me
and
is

die the death of the rightlet

my

last

end be

like

God
lie. 1

23:10 not a man, that he should

And
all

thou shalt become an astonish-

ment, a proverb, and a byword,


nations.

among
28:37
say.

23:19
2

In

the

What hath God wrought!

2 3 .-23

morning
it

thou

shalt

Would God
morning!

How
and thy

goodly are thy tents,


tabernacles,

O Israel!
will

Jacob,

were even! and at even thou shalt say, Would God it were

24:5
find

Be
out.

sure

your

sin

you
32:23

The
I

secret things

Lord our God.

28:67 belong unto the 29:29


life

Thou
with
soul,
all

shalt love the

Lord thy God thine heart, and with all thy

have set before you

and death,
*

all thy might. these words, which I command thee this day, shall be in thine heart: And thou shalt teach them diligently

and with

blessing and cursing: therefore choose life, that both thou and thy seed may
live.

And

30:19
is

He
for all
truth.

unto thy children.

the Rock, his work is perfect: his ways arc judgment: a God of

Deuteronomy

6:5-7

He
eye.

Ye
God, 4

shall

not tempt the Lord your 6:16


thy

32:4 kept him as the apple of his 32:10


fat,

hath chosen thee to be a special people unto himself.


7:6

The Lord

God

Jeshurun waxed

and kicked.
3^:1?
thy strength 33:35
*

As thy days, so
'

shall

be.

Man doth not live by bread only, but by every word that proccedeth out of the mouth of the Lord doth man
5

The

eternal

God
the

is

underneath are

everlasting
his

thy refuge, and arms.

live.

?37
No man
Be
knoweth of
clay.

8:3

into a

For the Lord thy good land,

God

bringeth thee
8:7

[Moses']

sepulchre unto this

34:6

land of wheat, and barley, and and fig trees, and pomegranates; a land of oil olive, and honey; A land wherein thou shalt eat bread without scarceness, thou shalt not lack any thing in it; a land whose stones arc iron, and out of whose hills thou
vines,

3 strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee whithersoever thou goest.

The Book

of Joshua 1:9

the priests that bare the ark of the covenant of the Lord stood firm on

And

mayest dig
i
fl

brass.

8:8-9

See Aeschylus, p. ySb.

Quoted by Samuel F. B. Morse in the first telegraph message he sent to his partner, Alfred Vail, from Washington to Baltimore, May *4,
1844.

dry ground in the midst of Jordan, and the Israelites passed over on dry ground, until all the people were passed clean over Jordan. 3:17
all

The Fifth Book of Moses, last of the five books of the Pentateuch. * Also in Matthew 4:7. 6 Man shall not live by bread alone. Matthew
*

Mighty men of

valour.

6:2

to pass, when the people heard the sound of the trumpet, and 1 Scc Matthew 26:11, p. 443*.
it
*

And

came

4:4

Also In Deuteronomy }X:6 t

7, aj.

10

THE BIBLE: JOSHUA


the people shouted with a great shout, fell down flat, so that the people went up into the city [Jericho], Joshua 6:20

SAMUEL

There was a swarm of bees and

that the wall

honey

in the carcase of the lion.

Judges 14:8

Out

of the eater

came

His fame was noised throughout


the country.

all

and out
sweetness.

of

the

strong

forth meat, came forth

6:27

14:14

Hewers
water.

of

wood and drawers


still

of

9:21

If ye had not plowed with my heifer, ye had not found out my riddle.

Sun, stand thou

upon Gibeon;
the
valley

14:18

and

thou,

Moon,

in

of

Ajalon.

10:12
stricken in years. 1

He smote them

hip and

thigh.

15:8
13:1
all

Old and
I

am

With the jawbone


have
I

going
shall

the

way

of

the

of an ass ... skin a thousand men. 15:16


Philistines

earth.

2 3 :1 4

The
son.

They
sides. 2

be

be upon
I

thee,

Sam-

as

The
Jael,

your Book of Judges 2:3

thorns

in

*&9

Heber's wife, took a nail of the tent, and took an hammer in her hand, and went softly unto him, and smote the nail into nis temples, and fastened it into the ground; for he was
fast asleep,

Then

once,
eyes.

pray thee, only this Strengthen me, God, that I may be ... avenged of the Philistines for my two 16:28

and weary: so he died.


4:21
. ,
.

So the dead which he slew at his death were more than they which he slew in his life. 16:30

Deborah arose mother in Israel.


I

arose

From Dan even

to Bcersheba.

20:1
5.7

The

stars

in

their

courses

against Sisera.

fought 5:20

All the people arose as

one man.
20:8

She brought
dish.

forth butter in a lordly

5:25

Israel:

At her feet he bowed, he fell, he lay down; at her feet he bowed, he fell: where he bowed, there he fell down
dead.
5:27
tarry the wheels of his chariots? 5:28

right

In those days there was no king in every man did that which was 2 1 .-25 in his own eyes.

Why
every

Have they not divided the

me not to leave thee, or to from following after thee: for whither thou gocst, I will go; and where thou lodgcst, I will lodge: thy people shall be my people, and thy God my The Rook of Ruth 1:10 God.
Entreat
return

prey; to

man

damsel or two?
of

5:30

'Hie

sword

the

Lord,

and

of

glean and gather after the 2:7 reapers among the sheaves.

Let

me

Gideon.
Is

7:18

Go
law.

not empty unto thy mother in


3:^7

not the gleaning of the grapes of Knhraim better than the vintage of 8:2 Abie/cr?

In the flower of their age. The First Book of Samuel 2:33

Say now Shibboleth:


Sibbolcth:
for lu*
it

and he

said

The Lord

called

Samuel:

and he
3:4

could not frame to


12:6

answered, Here

am

I.

pronounce
1

right.

Alto in / Kings ;;/, Scc // (..onnthtan* /a;;,

Speak, Lord; for thy servant hcarcth.


p. jjjh.

3*'9

THE BIBLE:

SAMUEL

n SAMUEL
in

b
lives,

Be
men. 1

strong,

and

like quit yourselves I Samuel 4:9


Israel: for

pleasant

their

and

in

their

The
Is

glory

is

departed from
taken.

the ark of

God is

4:22
the prophets? 10:11

death they were not divided: they were swifter than eagles, they were stronger II Samuel 1:23 than lions.

Saul also

among

How
Thy

are

the mighty fallen


to

in

the
1:25

midst of the battle!


love

God save the king. A man after his own heart.


fellow.

me was

wonderful,

10:24
13:14

Every man's sword was against his


14:20
his

of women. passing the love How are the mighty fallen, and the i :2 6-2 7 weapons of war perished
I

Abner
fifth rib.

smote

him

under

the
2:23

But Jonathan heard not when


father

charged

the

people

with

the

Know
Israel?

he put forth the end of the rod that was in his hand, and dipped it in an honeycomb, and put his hand to his mouth; and his eyes were
oath: wherefore

ye not that there


fallen

is

a prince
clay

and a great man

this

in

'3:38

enlightened:

14:27

all the house of Israel the Lord on all manner before played of instruments made of fir wood, even

And David and

for

For the Lord seeth not as man seeth; man looketh on the outward appearance, but the Lord looketh on the
16:7
I

on harps, timbrels,
cymbals.

and on and on

psalteries,

cornets,

and on and on
6:5

heart.

David danced before the Lord.


*

know

6:14

ness of thine heart.

thy pride, and the naughti1 7:2 8


fail

Let no man's heart

Tarry at Jericho until your beards be 1 10:5 grown.


Set ye Uriah in the forefront of the
hottest battle*
11:15;

because of
17:32
thee.

him

[Goliath].

Go, and the Lord be with

17:37
. chose him five [David] smooth stones out of the brook.
.
.

The poor man had


little

nothing, save one


13:3

And he

ewe lamb.
art the

Thou

man

2 ,7
I

17:40

Now
fast?

he

is

dead, wherefore should bring him back again?

So David prevailed over the Philistine with a sling and with a stone.
17:50
Saul hath slain his thousands, and David his ten thousands. 1 8:7

Can

shall

go to him, but he shall not return


12:23

tome*

And
vid] as

Jonathan

loved
soul.

him [Da20:17

For we must needs die, and arc as water spilt on the ground, which cannot be gathered up again. 14:14

he loved

his

own

Would Cod
Absalom,

had died

for thee.

Wickedness
wicked.
I

proceedeth
fool.

from

the

24:13
2 6:2 1
it

have played the


it

1 my son, my son! 8:3 3 The Lord is my rock, and my 22:2 fortress, and my deliverer.

Tell

not in Gath, publish

not in

the streets of Askelon.

David the son of sweet psalmist of Israel

Jesse

the
33:1

The Second Book


1

of Samuel i .-20

Went

in jeopardy of their lives.

Saul and Jonathan were lovely and See I Corinthians 16:13, P 53^

23:17
*Alfo in / Chronicle* xpty.

12

THE BIBLE:

KINGS

KINGS

wise and an understanding heart. The First Book of the Kings 3:12
is

sea, like

There ariseth a little cloud out of the a man's hand. I Kings 18:44
loins,

Many, as the sand which sea in multitude.

by the
4:20

And he girded up his beforeAhab.

and ran
18:46

man
tree.

Judah and Israel dwelt safely, every under his vine and under his fig
4:25

[Solomon] spake three thousand proverbs: and his songs were a thou-

He

sand and

But the Lord was not in the wind: and after the wind an earthquake; but the Lord was not in the earthquake: And after the earthquake a fire; but the Lord was not in the fire: and after the fire a still small voice. 19:1 1-12
Let not him that girdeth on his harness boast himself as he that putteth
it off.

five.

4:32

The wisdom

of Solomon.

4:34

proverb and a byword people.

among

all

20:11

9:7

Hast thou found me,

O mine enemy?
21:20

the oueen of Sheba heard of the fame of Solomon ... she came to 10:1 prove him with hard questions.

When

The dogs
of Jezreel.

shall eat Jezebel

by the wall
21:23

The

half

was not

told

me:

thy

wisdom and fame which I

prosperity exceedeth the heard. 10:7

But there was none like unto Ahab, which did sell himself to work wicked*
ness in the sight of the Lord, Jezebel his wife stirred up.
I

whom
21:25

came the navy of Tharshish, bringing gold, and silver,


in three years
apes,
ivory,

Once

saw
as

and

and peacocks.

10:22

hills,

upon the a not that have shepherd. sheep


all

Israel

scattered

King Solomon loved many strange n;i women.


father hath chastised you with I will chastise you with 12:11 scorpions.

22:17

My

Feed him with bread of affliction, and with water of affliction, until I

come

whips, but

in peace.

22:27

To your tents, O Israel. He went and dwelt by


Cherith, that
is

12:16

There appeared a chariot of fire, and horses of fire, and parted them both asunder; and Elijah went up by a
whirlwind into heaven.

the brook before Jordan. 17:5

The Second Book

of the

and and

the ravens brought him bread in the morning, and bread flesh in the evening; and he drank of the brook. 17:6

And

Kings 2:11

flesh

The chariot of Israel, and the horsemen thereof. And he saw him no
more.
2:12
is

An

handful of meal in a barrel, and a


17:12

There
Is

death in the pot.

4:40

little oil in a cruse.

And the barrel of meal wasted not, neither did the cruse of oil fail
17:16

thy servant a dog, that do this great thing?

he should
8:1 3

What
The

hast thou to

do with peace?
9:1 8

turn thee behind me.


is

How
opinions?

long

halt

ye

between

two
18:21

Either he
ing, or

is

he

is

talking, or he is pursuin a journey, or pcradven-

of driving driving he dnveth for son of the Nimshi; Jehu 9:20 furiously.
like

the

hire he sleepeth, and

must be awaked.
18:27

Jezebel heard of it; and she painted her face, and tired her head, and looked out at a window. 9:30

THE BIBLE: H KINGS


Set thine house in order.
II Kings 20:1 wipe Jerusalem as a man wipeth a dish, wiping it, and turning it 21:13 upside down.
I

JOB

will

Let the day perish wherein I was born, and the night in which it was 1 said, There is a man child conceived.

His mercy endureth for ever.

The

First

Book of the Chronicles 16:41

Job 3:3 For now should I have lain still and been quiet, I should have slept: then had I been at rest,

With
earth,

The Lord

understandeth the thoughts.

searcheth all hearts, and all the imaginations of 28:9

kings and counsellors of the which built desolate places for

themselves.

For
thine

all things come of thee, and of own have we given thee, 1 29:14

3:13-14 There the wicked cease from troubling; and there the weary be at
3:17

rest

Our
shadow.

days

on the earth
-

are

as a 2 9 :1 5

ever perished* being innocent? or where were the righteous cut off?

Who

4-7

old age, [David] died in a good full of days, riches, and honour.

He

29:28

Thou

art a

gracious and and of great kindness. The Book of

ready to pardon, merciful, slow to anger,

God

Fear came upon me, and trembling. 4:14 Then a spirit passed before my face; the hair of my flesh stood up, 4:1 y
Shall mortal

Nehemiah 9:17
and put

God?
his

shall a

man be more just man be more pure

than than
4:17

maker?
killeth

Mordecai rent
on

his clothes, sackcloth with ashes.

The Book

of Esther 4:1

the foolish envy slayeth the silly one.

Wrath

man, and
5:2

The man whom


to

honour.

the king delighteth 6:6


gallows.

Man
sparks

is

born unto trouble, as the

fly

upward.
the wise
in

5:7
their

They hanged Hainan on the

He
7:10

taketh

own
5:13

craftiness.

One
evil.

that feared God, and eschewed The Book of Job 1:1


also.

Satan came

z;6

For thou shaft be in league with the stones of the field: and the beasts of the field shall be at peace with thcc.
5:23 to thy grave in a full age, like as a shock of corn comcth

Satan answered the Lord, and said, From going to and fro in the earth, and from walking up and down in it. 1:7

And the Lord said unto Whence comost thou? Then

Satan,

Thou

shalt

come

ja in his season.

$;26
arc right

How

forcible

words!
<5:

Doth Job

fear

God

for nought?
1:9

3?

Naked came I out of my mother's womb, and naked shall I return thither: the Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken
away; Lord.
blessed

be the name of the


1:21

days are swifter than a weaver's shuttle, and arc spent without hope. 7:6 He shall return no more to his house, neither shall his place know him any
more/-*
*

My

7:10

Skin for skin, yea, all that a hath will he give for his life.

man
2:4 2:9

Curse God, and


1

die.

See Kuripide*, p. 84a, 'When a few yean arc come, then 1 thai I h*U not return, go the way whence 1 Job 16:22 The place thereof shall know it no more.

See Marcus Aurelius, p. 1422.

Psalm 103:16

THE BIBLE: JOB


I

would not

live

alway: let

me
just

alone;

for

my

days are vanity.

Job 7:16
with
9:2

Oh that my words were now written! oh that they were printed in a book!
Job 19:23
I

But how should man be

God? The

know

that

my
:

redeemer

land of darkness and the shadow 10:21 of death.

that he shall stand at 1 upon the earth

liveth, the latter

and
day

And
see

though, after

Canst thou by searching find out

destroy this body, yet in

my skin, worms my flesh shall I


19:25-26
the

God?

11:7
thine age shall be clearer than

God.
the
root
of
in

And

Seeing

matter

is

the noonday.

11:17

found

me.

19:28

No

doubt but ye are the people, and


shall die

wisdom

with you.

12:2

The
scorn.

just upright

man

is

laughed to
12:4

tongue.

Though wickedness be sweet in his mouth, though he hide it under his 20:12
Suffer me that I may speak; that I have spoken, mock on.

and

after

But now ask the beasts, and they shall teach thee; and the fowls of the air, and they shall tell thee: Or speak to the earth, and it shall teach thee; and the fishes of the sea
shall declare

2 1 .-3

Shall any teach

God

knowledge?
21:22

They

are of those that rebel against

unto thee.
is

12:7-8

the light.

24:13
shall

With

the ancient

wisdom; and in
12:12

The womb

length of days understanding.

worm
shall

forget him; the shall feed sweetly on him; he

be no more remembered.

discovereth deep things out of darkness, and bringeth out to light the 1 2 .-22 shadow of death
.

He

24:20 his in not are stars the pure Yea,


sight.

Man

that

is

born of a

woman

is

of

few days, and full of trouble. He comcth forth like a flower, and is cut down: he fleeth also as a shadow, and continueth not. 14:1-2

and

man, that is a worm? man, which is a 2 5 : 5-^ worm? But where shall wisdom be found? and where is the place of under-

How much
the

less

son

of

But man
yea,

dieth,

man
is

givcth

and wasteth away: up the ghost, and


14:10

standing?

28:12
28:13

where
If a

he?
die, shall

The The

land of the living.


price of

man

he

wisdom

is

live again?

above rubies. 2 28:18

14:14

Should a wise
edge,

and

fill

utter vain knowlhis belly with the east


i 5 :2
all.

man

wind?
Miserable comforters arc ye

Behold, the fear of the Lord, that is wisdom; and to depart from evil is 28:28 understanding.
I

16:2

joy.

caused the widow's heart to sing for 29:13

My days arc past.


I

17:11

I was eyes to the blind, to the lame.

and

feet

was

29:15
for all living.

have said to corruption,


father: to the

Thou
art

art

my

worm, Thou

my
*

The house appointed


Also In Hook of

mother, and

30:23

my sister.
terrors.

17:1
18:1

Common

Prayer, Burial of
rubies.

The
I

king of

the Dead.

am

teeth.

escaped with the skin of mj 19:20

[Wisdom]

is

more precious than

Proverbs 3:15 Sec Sophocles, p. Sab.

THE BIBLE: JOB


a brother to dragons,companion to owls.
I

PSALMS
clothed
his

am

and a
3 O:2 9

J6

hast thou thunder?

neck

with

Job 39:19
valley,

My
would

desire

is,

that

answer

me,

the Almighty and that mine


3 1 .-3 5

He

paweth in the

his strength: joiceth in

and he gocth on
39

rc-

to
;2 *

adversary

had written

a book.

meet the armed men.

Great

men

are not always wise.

32:9

am full of matter, For within me constraineth me.


I

the spirit

32:18
33:23

One among
Far be
it

a thousand.

from God, that he should


34:10

the ground with fierceness and rage; neither believcth he that it is the sound of the trumpet. He saith among the trumpets, I la, battle afar off, ha; and he smclleth the the thunder of the captains, and the 2 4~ 2 5 shouting.

He

swalloweth

do wickedness.

Behold,

am

vile;

what

shall

He
edge.

knowlmultiplieth words without 35 :l6

answer thee?

Behold

now behemoth,

4O: 4 which I

made
ox.

Fair north.

weather

cometh

out

of

the

with thcc; he cateth grass as an 40**$

37 :22

the Lord answered Job out of the whirlwind, and said, is this that darkeneth counsel

Then

Canst thou draw out leviathan with a hook? 4* :1

Who

Hard
stone.

as a piece of the

nether mill-

by words without knowledge? Gird up now thy loins like a man.


38:1-3

41:24
the deep to boil like a 4* : 3* earth there is not his like, who
fear,

He maketh
pot.
is

Where

wast thou when

laid

the

foundations of the earth? declare, if thou hast understanding. 38:4

Upon made without

41 :3J

He
pride.
I

is

a king over all the children of

The morning
all

sang together, and the sons of God shouted for joy.


stars

38:7

41:34 have heard of thee by the hearing of the ear: but now mine eye seeth
thec.

42:5

Hitherto shalt thou come, but no further: and here shall thy proud waves be stayed? 38:11

So the Lord blessed the latter end of 42:12 Job more than his beginning.
in

Hast thou entered into the springs of the sea? or hast thou walked in the
search of the depth?

Blessed is the man that walketh not the counsel of the ungodly, nor standeth in the way of sinner*, nor

38:16

sitteth in the seat of the scornful.

Hath the

rain a father? or

who hath
38:28

begotten the drops of dew?

But his delight is in the law of the Lord; and in his law doth he meditate
l>c like a tree planted by the rivers of water, that bringeth forth

Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion? 38:31 Canst thou guide Arcturus with
sons?
his

day and night. And he shall

his fruit in his season; his leaf also shall not wither; and whatsoever he clocth
shall prosper.

38:32

Who
heaven.

can

number

wisdom? or who

the clouds in can stay the bottles of

The ungodly are not so: but arc like the chaff which the wind driveth away,
The Book
*

38:37

of Psalms
p.

i.-i-vf

See

Hast thou given the horse strength?

Amenemofw, VI,
P- 34

4b,

and

**.

16

THE

BIBLE: PSALMS

Why do the heathen rage, and the people imagine a vain thing? Psalms 2:1
Blessed are
trust in
all

God; and the firmament showeth


handiwork.

his

Psalms 29:2
uttereth speech,

Day unto day

and
29:2

him.
lift

they that put their 2:12

night unto night showeth knowledge.

Lord,

thou up the light of thy


us.

countenance upon
I

4:6
in peace,

gone out through all the earth, and their words to the end of the
is

Their line

will

both lay
1

me down

world. In

them hath he

set a tabernacle

and

for the sun,

sleep,

4:8

the mouth of babes and sucklings hast thou ordained strength, because of thine enemies; that tnou mightest still the enemy and the
of

Out

avenger.

8:2

is man, that thou art mindful him? and the son of man, that thou visitest him? 8:4

What

Which is as a bridegroom coining out of his chamber, and rejoiccth as a strong man to run a race. His going forth is from the end of the heaven, and his circuit unto the ends of it: and there is nothing hid from the heat thereof. 19:4-6
The judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether. More to be desired are they than
gold, yea, also than

of

Thou

hast

made him
is

little

lower
8:5

than the angels.

than

much

fine gold: sweeter

How
earth.

excellent

thy

name

in all the

honey and the honeycomb.


29:9-20

8:9

Flee as a bird to your mountain.


11:1

Cleanse thou

me

from

secret faults.

19:22

How
Lord?

long wilt thou forgot me,


fool

13:1

The
There
is

hath said

in

his

heart,

no God.

14:1

and

Let the words of my mouth, and the meditation of my heart, be acceptable in thy sight, Lord, my strength, and J 9 :1 4 my redeemer.

53:1

Lord, who shall nacle? who shall


hill?

Thou
desire.

hast

abide in thy taberdwell in thy holy


15:1

given

him

his

heart's

22:2

He
Hie

that swcarcth
not.
arc
2

to his

own

hurt,

and ehangeth
lines

15:4
fallen

hast thou thou so far from helping me, and from the words

Mv

God,

my God, why
'

forsaken

me?

why

art

of

pleasant places;
Heritage.

yea,

unto me in have a goodly


16:6

my roaring? They part my


cast lots

22:2

and

upon
is

garments among them, 22:28 my vesture.


shepherd;
to
lie
I shall

Keep
hide
wings.

me

as the apple of the eye,8

The Lord
want.

my
me

not

me
rocle

under

the

shadow of thy
17:8

lie niaketh
pastures: waters.

down

in green
still

He
yea,

he

leaclcth

me

beside the

upon a cherub, and did fly: he did fly upon the wings of the
*

He
in

wind.

18:10

rcstorcth my soul: he leadcth me the paths of 'righteousness for his


I

The
>

heavens

declare

the

glory

of

lay me down In jwact, and take my Hwik of Gnmmmi l*rayrr, Ptattn 4:9 rni. *Uir hit In fallen unto me in a fair gtound.
I

wilt

name's sake. Yea, though


valley of the

walk

through
I

the
will

shadow

of death,

- ftwtk nf
B

Gttmmtm IVayfr,

l'$atm 16:7

*This
7:3.
i.

wait

the psalm Christ recited


27:46, p.

on the

Al>

in Druttrtmtttny )?:tu

and Prwrrbs

See

Matthew

45.

THE BIBLE: PSALMS


fear
art with me; thy they comfort me. Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies: thou

no

evil: for

thou

My times are in thy hand.


From
Sing
skilfully

rod and thy

staff

Psdms

31:15
3 1 .-20

the

strife of

tongues.

anointest

my

head with

oil;

my

cup

unto him a new song; with a loud noise.

play
33:3
is

runneth over.
Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life: and I will dwell in the house of the Lord for
ever.

taste

and see that the Lord

good.

34 :8

Psalms 23
earth
is

The
fulness

the Lord's, and


world,
it

the

thereof; the that dwell therein.

and they

Keep thy tongue from evil, and thy from speaking guile. lips Depart from evil, and do good; seek 34:1 3-14 peace, and pursue it.
Rescue

For he hath founded


seas,

upon the

my

tions,

it upon the floods. ascend into the hill of the Lord? or who shall stand in his holy

and established
shall

my

soul from their destrucdarling from the lions.

Who
He

35:17

How

excellent

is

O God!
The meek
1

thy lovingkindness, 36:7


inherit

place?
that hath clean hands,

and

shall

the earth. 1
37:11

pure

who hath not lifted up his soul unto vanity, nor sworn deceitfully. 24:1-4 Lift up your heads, ye gates; and be ye lift up, ye everlasting doors; and
heart;

have been young, and now am old; yet have I not seen the righteous forsaken, nor his seed begging bread.
37 :2 5
I have seen the wicked in great 3 like a power, and spreading himself tree. 37 : 35 green bay

the King of glory shall

come

in.

24:7

Who

is

this
is

of hosts,

he

King of glory? The Lord the King of glory.


24:10
is

The Lord
salvation;
is

whom

and light shall I fear? the Lord

my

my

Mark the perfect man, and behold the upright: for the end of that man is 37:37 peace.*
For thine arrows
thy hand
I

the strength of

my life;
host

of

whom

stick fast in rnc,

and
38:2

shall

be afraid?

prcsseth

me sore.
heed to
tongue.

27:1

Though
against

an

should

said, I will take


I sin

encamp

my

ways,
39:1

that

not with

me, my heart shall not fear: though war should rise against me, in this will I be confident. 27:3

my

heart was hot within me, while I was musing the fire burned, 59:3

My

The Lord
shield.

is

my
"

strength

and

my
28:7

Lord,
that
I

make me

to

know mine end.


days,
frail
I

and the measure of

Worship the Lord


holiness.

in the beauty of

my may know how


man
at
his

what am.

it is;

?9-'4

29:2
for

Weeping may endure

Every
night,

best

state

is

but joy cometh in the morning.


30:5
forgotten as a dead man out of mind: I am like a broken vessel.
I

altogether vanity.

39:5

Surely every

am

show: surely
1

walketh in a vain are n they disquieted

man

Flourishing.

Sec Matthew 5;$, p, 4<a, Book of

Common
man
pcacr
;;
at
,-

31:12
1

Psalm w.}6
For that shall bring a
last.

Bominus

illuminatio

mea.

The

Vulgate.

the

Motto of Oxford University.

Book of Common Prayer, I'w/m

l8

THE
vain:

BIBLE: PSALMS

he heapeth up riches, and knoweth not who shall gather them. Psalms 39:6
a stranger with thee, and a fathers were. all as sojourner,

A broken and a contrite God, thou wilt not despise.


Oh
then
rest.
1

heart,

Psalms 51:17
that
I

For

am

had wings
I

like a dove! for

my

would

fly

away,

and be

at

spare me, that I may recover be no strength, before I go hence, and

55:6

39:12-13 As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after thee,

more.

We took sweet counsel together.


55 :1 4 The words of his mouth were smoother than butter, but war was in 2 his words were softer than his heart: oil, yet were they drawn swords.
55:21

OGod.

My
living

soul thirsteth for

God,

for the

God.
cast

42:1-2

Whv art thou


and wliy
art

down,

O my soul?
end 43:5
42:7
1

thou disquieted in me?


42:5, 11

They

are like the deaf adder that


will

stoppeth her ear;

Which

not hearken to the voice


58:4-5

Deep

calleth

unto deep.
is

of charmers, charming never so wisely.

My
writer.

tongue

the pen of a ready


45*

Moab
I

is

The
within.

king's daughter

is

all

glorious

shoe: Philistia, triumph 60:8 thou because of me.


cast out

my my

washpot; over

Edom

will

45:13

our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble. Therefore will we not fear, though
is

God

Lead
than
I.

me
is

to the rock that

is

higher 61:2

He

only

my

rock and
I

my

salvation:

the earth be removed, and though tne mountains be carried into the midst of
the sea,

he is moved.

my

defence;

shall

not be
62:6

46:1-2

Thou

renderest to every

man

accord-

Be

still,

and know that

am God.
46:10

ing to his work.

62:12

Kvery beast of the forest is mine, and the cattle upon a thousand hills.
50:10

My soul thirsteth for thee y my flesh longeth for thee in a dry and thirsty 63:1 land, where no water is,
Thou crownest
goodness.

was shapen in iniquity; and in did my mother conceive me. 51


1 I

sin
*:5

the year with thy 65:11

Make
lands.

a joyful noise unto

God,

all

ve

clean

Purge me with hyssop, and shatt wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow. S J: 7
be
;

60:1

We
water.

went through

fire

and through
66:12

a clean heart, God; and renew a right spirit within me.

Create in

me

God
Cast
faileth.

setteth the solitary in families,

68:6

51:10

me

not

off in the

time of old

And
me.

take not thy holy spirit from


'

5 2;n

age; forsake

me

not when

my

strength

7* 9
:

Open
shall

thou

my

lips;

and
the

my mouth
5 1:1 5
>

He

shall

come down
of

like rain

upon
lhan
of

show

forth thy praise.


is

Sec KuripidcR, p. 84^.


lofter

Thin Paaim
its
in:

known

an

MiHmrc from
firnt

opening word in the Vulgate. The Have mercy upon me. O God.

line

butter,

his mouth were war in hi* heart. Common Prayer, Psalm 50:33

*Thc word*

having

Rook

THE BIBLE: PSALMS


the mown grass: as showers that water Psalms 72:6 the earth.

The
years

and

days of our years are threescore ten; and if by reason of


is

His enemies His

shall lick the dust.

72:9

strength they be fourscore years, yet their strength labour and sorrow; for 1 is soon cut off, and we fly away.
1

it

name

shall

endure for ever.


72:17

Psalms 9o:-K>
So teach us to number our days, that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom.
90:12
Establish thou the work of our hands upon us; yea, the work of our hands
establish

A stubborn and rebellious generation.


78:8

But ye
like

shall die like

men, and

fall

one of the princes.


hosts!

82:7

How
Lord of

amiable are thy tabernacles,

thou

it.

90; 1 7

84:1

He
of the
I

They go from

strength to strength.

that clwelleth in the secret place

84.7

A day in thy courts is better than a thousand. I had rather be a doorkeeper in the house of my God, than to dwell in the tents of wickedness. 84:10
Mercy and
righteousness
truth are

most High shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty.


will say

of the

Ix>rd,

He

is

my
him

refuge and

my

fortress:

my

God;

in

will! trust.
Surely he shall deliver thee from the snare of the fowler, and from the

met

and peace have

together; kissed

noisome pestilence.

each other,

85:10

He
his

shall cover thee

and under
truth

Lord, why castest thou off my soul? why hidest thou thy face from me?

with his feathers, his wings shalt thou trust: shall be thy shield and

buckler,

88:14 Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place in all generations. Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever thou hadst formed the earth and the world, even from everlasting to everlasting, thou art God. Thou turnest man to destruction;

Thou
terror
flieth

not be afraid for the by night; nor for the arrow that
shalt
for the pestilence that walkoth nor for the destruction that

by day.

Nor

in darkness;

wasteth at noonday.

thousand

shall fall at

thy side, and

and men.

sayest,

Return,

yc

children

of

ten thousand at thy right hand; but it shall not conic nigh thee. 91:1-7
lie shall give his angels charge over
thee, to

For a thousand in thy sight arc years but as yesterday wnen it is past, and as a watch in the night. Thou earnest them away as with a
they are as a sleep: in the morning they arc like grass which groweth up. In the morning it flourished!, and groweth up; in the evening it is cut
flood;

keep thee in
shall

They
stone.*

hands, 'lest

all thy wavs. bear thee up in their thou dash thy foot against a

Thou shalt tread upon the lion and adder: the young lion and the dragon
shalt thou trample

under

feet

91:11-19

down, and withereth. 1


told. 2
l

90:1-6
is

The

righteous shall flourish

like the

We spend
We
tale

our years as a talc that

90:9

See Isaiah 40:6, 8t p. jsb, and / Peter IMJ,

p. $6b.
*

bring our years to an end, as


that
is

it

were

told.

Book

of

Common

Prayer, Psalm 90:9

1 The dayi of our age are thrcencnn* and t<rn; and though men be to strong that they ornne to fourscore year*, yi U thdr strength then but labour and sorrow; o toon pawcth it away, and we are gone, Rook of Common Prsytr, Psalm 90:10 Also in Matthew 4:6*

2O

THE
palm
tree:

BIBLE:

PSALMS

he

shall

grow

like a cedar in

Wine
man.

that

maketh glad the heart

of

Lebanon.
waters.

Psalms 92:12

Mightier than the noise of

many
93:4

Psalms 204:15 The cedars of Lebanon. 104:16

In his hand are the deep places of the earth: the strength of the hills is his
also.

He appointeth the moon for seasons: the sun knoweth his going down.
Thou
forest

rnakest

night: wherein
it:

all

darkness, and it is the beasts of the

The
his

sea is his, and he made hands formed the dry land.

and
:

do creep
their

forth.

The young
95 4~5

lions roar after their prey,

and seek

meat from God.


they gather themlay

We
and

are the people of his the sheep of his hand.

The sun

ariscth,

pasture,

95:7
song.
96:1

selves together, their dens.

and

them down

in

sing unto the Lord a

new
the

Man
in

goeth forth unto his work and

The Lord
rejoice.

reigneth;

let

earth

to his labor until the evening. Lord, how manifold are thy works!

wisdom hast thou made them


is full

all:

97:1

nil

a joyful noise unto the Lord, ye lands. Serve the Lord with gladness: come before his presence with singing.

Mnkc

the earth

of thy riches*

So is this great and wide sea, wherein are things creeping innumerable, both small and great beasts.

Know

ye that the Lord he


us,

is

God:

There go the
leviathan, whom play therein.

ships:

there

is

that

it

is

he that hath made

ourselves;

we

are his people,

and not we and the

thou hast made to

These wait
mayest give
season.

sheep of his pasture.


Kilter into his gates with thanksgiving, and into his courts with praise: be thankful unto him, and Ness his

all upon thee; that thou them their meat in due 104:2 9-27*

name.
everlasting;

Such as sit in darkness and in the shadow of death. 107:20

For the Lord is good; his mercy is and his truth endureth to all generations. 100

They

ships, that

that go down to the sen in do business in great waters.

107:23

My
1

clays are

consumed
as a

like

smoke.
202:3

They mount up to the heaven, they go down again to the depths. 107:26
a

wateh, and am upon the house top.


1

sparrow alone 202.7

They reel to and fro, and stagger like drunken man, and are at their wit's
107:27
I

As

the

heaven
is

is

earth, so threat that fe.ii him.

his

above the mercy toward them


high
203:12

end.

As for man, his clays arc as grass: as a flown of the field, so he flourisheth. For the wind passeth over it, and it is ftow: and the place thereof shall know 1 it no more. 203:15-26

poor and needy, and my heart is wounded within me. 1 am gone like the shadow when it cleclineth: I am tossed up and down as

For

am

the locust

109:22-23

Thou
The

hast the

dew

of thy youth. 110:3


is

Who
In'ts

laveth the

in

the waters:

beams of his cluimwho maketh the

fear of the

Lord

the beginning

of wisdom.

122:10

clouds his chariot; who walketh upon the* wwijs of the wind. 204:3
*

From

the rising of the sun unto the

See lithnaton, p. jb.

21

THE BIBLE: PSALMS


going

down
is

of the same the Lord's


praised.

name

to

be

Psalms 113:3

Let us Lord.

go
be

into

the

house of the Psalms 122:1


thy
walls,

The mountains
and the
not:
not.

little hills like

skipped like rams, 1 lambs. 14:4

Peace

within

and
122:7

prosperity within thy palaces.

They have mouths, but they speak


eyes

They
joy.

that

sow

in tears shall reap in

have

they,

but

they

see

He
come

that goeth

forth

and weepeth,
shall

They have
I liars.

ears,

but they hear not. 1 115:5-6


haste,

bearing precious seed,

doubtless

said

in

my

All

men

are

again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him. 126:5-6

116:11
the sight of the Lord
1 1 6:1
is

Precious in the death of his saints.

Except the Lord build the house, they labour in vain that build it: except the Lord keep the city, the watchman

waketh but

in vain.

stone which the builders refused is become the head stone of the 118:22 corner. 2

The

127:1

He giveth

his beloved sleep.

127:2

This

is

made.

the day which the Lord hath 118:24

As arrows are in the hand of a mighty man; so arc children of the


youth.

Blessed be he that cometh in the 118:26 name of the Lord.8

Happy
Out
thee,

is

the

man
.

that

hath
1

his

quiver full of

them

27:4-5
1

Thy word
and a
I

is

lamp unto
but when

my
1
I

feet,

O Lord.

of the depths have

cried unto

light

unto

30:2

my path.

19:105
speak,

for peace: they are for war.


I will lift

am

My

soul waiteth for the

Lord more

120.7

up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my help. 4 My help cometh from the Lord, which made heaven and earth. He will not suffer thy foot to be moved: he that keepcth thcc will not
slumber.

than they that watch for the morning. 130:6 I will not to mine eyes, or sleep |ive slumber to mine eyelids. 1 1 32:4
it

Behold, liow good and how pleasant is for brethren to dwell together in

unity!

i^n
the rivers of Babylon, there
yea,

By
Israel shall

we

sat

Behold, he that kecpeth neither slumber nor sleep.

down,

we wept, when we remem-

bered Zion. a

thy keeper: the Lord is thy shade upon thy right hand. The sun shall not smite thec by day, nor the moon by night.
is

The Lord

The Lord
evil:

shall preserve thec

from

all

hanged our harps upon the willows in the midst thereof. For there they that carried us away captive required of us a song; and they that wasted us required of mirth,

We

he

going out and thy coming in from this time 121 forth, and even for evermore.
I
1

The

shall preserve thy soul. Lord shall preserve thy

saying,

Sing us one of the songs of


shall

Zion.

How

we

sing the Lord's song in

a strange land?
If I forget thee, ()

was glad when they said unto me,

Jerusalem, let
let

my
my

Also in Psalm x^y:x6-xj. a Also in Matthew 31:43, 8 Also in Matthew az:p, 23:3$,

right
If

hand forget her cunning. I do not remember thee,


we
at

Mark

11:9,

and

Luke
*I
does

iy.; 5
lift

up my

eyes to the hills.

From whence

Also In Proverbs 6:4, By the waters of Babylon

down ami

wept:

when we remembemi
of

thee*

Stan.

my

help come?

Revised Standard Version

Rook

Common

Praytr, Ptatm Jtf:t

22

THE BIBLE: PSALMS


tongue cleave mouth.
to

PROVERBS

the

roof

of

my

Her ways
and
all

are ways of pleasantness,

Psalms 137:1-0 Lord, thou hast searched me, and known me. Thou knowest my downsitting and mine uprising, thou understandest my
off.

her paths are peace, Proverbs 3:17 Be not afraid of sudden fear. 3:25

Wisdom
fore

is

thought afar

get wisdom:

the principal thing; thereand with all thy


4:7

139:1-2

getting get understanding.

Whither

shall I

whither shall I If I ascend up into heaven, thou art


there:
if I

go from thy spirit? or flee from thy presence?


in hell, behold,

make my bed

of the just is as the shining light, that shineth more and more unto the perfect day. 4:1 8

The path

thou

art there.

Keep thy heart with


out of
it

all

diligence; for

If I take the

and
sea;

wings of the morning, dwell in the uttermost parts of the

are the issues of

life.

4:23

Even there shall thy hand lead me, and thy right hand shall hold me.
139:7-10

For the lips of a strange woman drop as an honeycomb, and her mouth is smoother than oil: But her end is bitter as wormwood,
sharp as a two-edged sword.

5 :3~4

The
1

darkness and the light are both

Go

alike to thee.

am

fearfully

39 :12 and wonderfully made.


1

sider her ways,

to the ant, thou sluggard; conand be wise:

Which
ruler,

having no guide, overseer, or

139:14

They have sharpened their tongues


like a serpent.

Provideth her meat in the summer, and gathereth her food in the harvest.

140:3
satis-

6:6-8

Thou
fiest

openest thine hand, and

Yet
little

the desire of every living thing. 145:16


is

a little sleep, a little slumber, a * folding of the hands to sleep: So shall thy poverty come as one that

The Lord
call

nigh unto
to all that

upon him,

them that call upon him


all

travelleth,

and thy want

as

man.

an armed 6:10-11

in truth.

145:18
trust

Lust not after her beauty in thine


heart; neither let her take thee with her
eyelids.

Put not your

in princes.

146:3

6:25
a

He
he

telleth the

number

of the stars;

Can
and
feet

man

take

fire

in his

bosom,

callcth

them

all

by their names.
147:4
that

his clothes

not be burned?
coals,

Can one go upon hot


not be burned?

and

his

Let

every

thing

hath

breath

6:27-28

praise the Ix)rd.

150:6
discretion,

To

young man knowledge and

give subtilty to the simple, to the

Jealousy is the rage of a man: therefore he will not spare in the day of

The

Proverbs 1:4

My

6:34 goeth after her straightway, as an ox goeth to the slaughter. 7:22


vengeance.

He
I

son,

if

sent thou not.

sinners entice thee, con1:10

love

them that

love me;

that seek

me

Wisdom

early shall find

and those me.


8:i 7

crieth without; she uttercth


streets.

her voice in the

1:20

length of davs is in her right hand; and in her left hand riches and honor.

Wisdom hath builded her house, she hath hewn out her seven pillars.
9:1
1

Also In Proverbs

THE BIBLE: PROVERBS


Reprove not a scorner, lest thee: rebuke a wise man, .and
love thee.

he hate he will

and a stranger doth not intermedProverbs 14:10 dle with his joy.
ness;

Proverbs 9:8

Even
ful.

in laughter the heart

is

sorrow-

Stolen waters are sweet, and bread eaten in secret is pleasant. 9:17

M M

:1

The prudent
going.

man

lookcth well to his


:I

A wise son maketh


a foolish son
is

a glad father: but the heaviness of his


10:1

mother.

In all labor there is profit: but the talk of the lips tcndcth only to penury.

Blessings are upon the head of the the mouth just: but violence covereth

14:23
a nation. Righteousness exalteth

of the wicked.

The memory but the name


rot.

of the just is blessed: of the wicked shall

14:34

soft answer turneth

away wrath.
15:1

10:6-7
stirreth

Hatred
covereth

up

strifes:

but love
10:12

A
He

merry heart
is

maketh a cheerful
of
2

all sins.

countenance:
heart the spirit
that
is

but by sorrow
broken.
of a

the
5:2 3

In the multitude of counsellors there


is

safety.

merry heart hath a

He

that

is

surety for a stranger shall


1

smart for

it.

1:14-15

As a jewel of gold
so
is

in a swine's snout,
is

continual feast. Better is little with the fear of the Lord than great treasure and trouble
therewith. Better is a dinner of herbs
is,

a fair

woman which

without
11:22

where love
15:15-17

discretion.

than a stalled ox and hatred there-

He
fall.

that trusteth in his riches shall

with. 1

11:28
virtuous

A
strife.

wrathful
is

man

stirreth

up

strife:

woman

is

crown

to her

but he that

husband.

12:4
the
life

slow to anger appcascth 15:18


in

A righteous man regardeth


his beast:

of

A
good

word spoken
is it! is

due season, how


15:23

but the tender mercies of the wicked are cruel. 1 2 :i o

Before honour

humility,

The way
eyes.

of a fool

is

right in his

own

15:33

and

iS: 1 2

12:15
deferred

Hope
sick.

maketh

the

heart

man's heart dcviseth his way; but the Lord dirccteth his steps. 16:9
Pride gocth before destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall. 3 16:18

13:12

The way The

of transgressors

is

hard.

13:15
desire accomplished the soul.
is

sweet to
it

The hoary head


be found
in the

13:19

a crown of glory, if way of righteousness.


is

that spareth his rod hateth his son: but he that loveth him chastencth him betimes. 2

He

He that is slow to anger is better than the mighty; and he that mirth his spirit than he that talceth a city.
16:31-32

13:24
14:9

Fools

make

mock

at sin.

Whoso mocketh
eth his Maker,
1

The
1

heart knoweth his

own

bitter-

the poor reproach* 17:5


p. 4b. and note.

Also in Proverbs 2416. See Menander, p. losta, and note.

See

Amencmope, IX,
p. Sib,

*Sce Sophocles,

THE BIBLE: PROVERBS

He that repeateth rateth very friends.


Whoso
shall

matter sepaProverbs 17:9


evil

Bread of deceit is sweet to a man; but afterwards his mouth shall be filled
with gravel.
Proverbs 20:17
that flattereth

rcwardeth evil for good, not depart from his house.

Meddle not with him


with his
It
is

17:13

lips.

20:19

merry heart doeth good medicine.

like

27:22

better to dwell in a corner of the housetop, than with a brawling woman


in a

that hath knowledge spareth his words: and a man of understanding is of an excellent spirit.

He

wide house.

21:9 and 25:24


is

good name

Kven
peace,
is

than great riches.

rather to be chosen 22:1

fool,

when he holdeth
is

his

counted wise,

17:27-28
his

fool's

mouth

destruction.

Train up a child in should go: and when he not depart from it.

the way he
is

old,

he
to

will

22:6
the

i8 7

A
A
won

The borrower
lender.

is

servant

wounded

spirit

who can

bear?

18:14

Bow down
words of heart unto
For
it is

brother offended is harder to be than a strong city: and their contentions are like the bars of a
castle.

22:7 thine ear, and hear the the wise, and apply thine
a pleasant thing
tliee;
1

my knowledge.
if thou keep they shall withal be

18:19
findeth a wife findeth a good 18:22

them within
fitted in

Whoso
thing.

thy
I

lips.

22:17-18

Have
things

not written to thee excellent

that hath friends must show himself friendly: and there is a friend that sticketh closer than a brother.

A man

18:24

counsels and knowledge, 2 might make thee know the certainty of me words of truth; that thou mightest answer the words of
in
I

That

truth to

Wraith maketh many

them

that send unto thee? 8

friends.

22:20-21
19:4

Remove not
Scest

foolish sou

is

father;

and the contentions of

the calamitv of his a wife


19:13
business?

the ancient landmark. 4 22:28

arc a continual dropping,

thou a

He

He that hath pity upon the poor lendeth unto the Lord. 19:17
Wine
raging.
It
is

man diligent in his shall stand before kings.**


if

Put a knife to

is

mocker, strong drink

is

man

thy throat, given to appetite.

22:29 thou be a
23:2

20:1
I^abor

not to be rich:

cease from

an honour for a man to cease but every fool will be 20:3 meddling.

thine

own wisdom. 6
certainly

from

23:4

strife:

Riches
wings.
7

make
in

themselves
23:5

Kven

a child

is

known by

his doings*

whether his work be pure, and whether it be right. The hearing ear, and the seeing eye, the I*ord hath made even both of 20:11-12 them,
naught, saith the is when he but gone his way, buyer; then he boasteth. 20:14
It
is

As he thinketh
he.
1

his heart, so

is

23:7

Sec Amcnemope, III, p. 4b. See Amenemope, XXVII, p. 4b, See Amcnemope, I, p. 4*> * Also in Proverbs *}:io. Sec Amenemope, VII,
p. 4b.

naught,

it

is

See Sec 7 See

Amenemope, XXVII, p. Amencmope, IX, p. 4*>. Amenemope, X, p. 4b.

4b.

THE BIBLE: PROVERBS


the glutton shall to poverty: and drowsiness shall clothe a man with rags.

The drunkard and

Open rebuke
love.

is

better than

secret

come

Proverbs 23:21
she is Despise not thy mother when old. 23:22

but the

Faithful are the kisses of an

wounds of a friend; enemy are deceitful.


Proverbs 27:5-6

To
is

Look not thou upon the wine when red, when it giveth his colour in the cup, when it moveth itself aright. At the last it biteth like a serpent,
it is

sweet.

the hungry soul every bitter thing 27:7


is

Better is a neighbour that than a brother far off.

near

27:10
a

and stingeth

like
is

an adder.

23:31-32

sharpeneth sharpeneth the countenance


friend.

Iron

iron;

so

man
his

of

A
If

wise

man

knowledge

strong; yea, a increaseth strength.

man

of

27:17
flee

24:5

The wicked

when

no

man

thou faint in the day of adversity,


is

thy strength

small.

24:10
is

pursueth: but the righteous are bold as 28:1 a lion.

word

fitly

spoken

gold in pictures of
If thine

silver.

like apples of 25:1 z

He

that

maketh haste to be

rich shall

not be innocent.

28:20

enemy be hungry, give him bread to eat; and if he be thirsty, give


him water to drink:
For thou shalt heap coals of fire 1 25:21-22 upon his head.

He
fool.

that trusteth in his

own

heart

is

28:26
that giveth unto the poor shall

He

not lack.

28:27
all

As cold waters to a thirsty good news from a far country.

soul, so is

A fool uttereth
Where
perish.

his

mind.

25:25
there
is

For men to search their own glory is not glory. 25:27

no

vision, the people

29:18

Answer

a fool according to his folly.

26:5

As a dog returneth

to his vomit, so a

man's pride shall bring him low: but honour shall uphold the humble in spirit. 29:23

fool returneth to his folly. Seest thou a man wise in his

Give

me

own
fool

neither poverty nor riches,

conceit? There

is

more hope of a
saith,

30:8

than of him.

Accuse not a servant unto his master.


is

The
lion in
streets.

slothful

man
a

There
is

30:10

the

way;

lion

in

the

The

horseleach hath two daughters,


30: i j

26:11-13
diggeth a
pit rolleth a stone, it
shall
fall

crying, Give, give.

Whoso
therein:
will

and he that return upon him.

There be three things which are too wonderful for me, yea, four which I

26:27

forth. 2

Boast not thyself of tomorrow; for thou knowest not what a day may bring
27:1

know not: The way of an eagle in the air; the way of a serpent upon a rock; the way
of a ship in the midst of the sea; and the way of a man with a maid,

Let another
thine
1

man

praise thee,

and not
27:2
p.

own mouth.
Romans
i$:$o

30:18-19

Sce

and Marcus Aurelius,

i4*b.
*

Sec Sophodes, p. 8*b.

Give strong drink unto him that is ready to perish, and wine unto those that be of heavy hearts. 3 1 :6

THE BIBLE: PROVERBS

ECCLESIASTES
straight:

Who
her price

can find a virtuous woman? for is far above rubies.


Proverbs 31:10-11
gates,

made

and

that

which

is

The

wanting cannot be numbered.


Ecclesiastes 1:14-15
is much grief: and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth

heart of her husband doth safely

trust in her.

In

much wisdom

Her husband is known in the when he sitteth among the elders


land*

of the

sorrow.

1:18
excelleth
folly,

31:23

Wisdom
One

as

far

as

Strength and honour are her clothing,

light excelleth darkness.

2:13
all.

31:25

event happeneth to them


dieth

In her tongue is the law of kindness. She lookcth well to the ways of her household, and eateth not the bread of
idleness.

2:14

How
fool.

the

wise

man?

as

the 2:16

Her
blessed.

children arise up, and call her

31:26-28
daughters
is

Many
vain:

have

done

virtu-

ously, &ut them cxcellest

them

all.
is

feareth the Lord* she shall be praised. Give her of the fruit of her hands; and let her own works praise her in the

Favour but

deceitful,

and beauty

every thing there is a time to every purpose heaven. A time to be born, and a a time to plant, and a time
that

To

season,

and

under the
time to
die;

to pluck

up

woman

which

is

that

A time to kill, and a time to heal; a time to break down, and a time to build
up;

planted;

A
a

gates,

31:29-31

time to weep, and a time to laugh; time to mourn, and a time to

Vanity of vanities, saith the Preacher, vanity of vanities; all is vanity. What profit hath a man of all his labour which he taketh under the
sun?
generation passeth away, and another generation comctb: but the earth abiclcth for ever.

dance;

A time to cast away stones, and a time to gather stones together; a time to embrace, and a time to refrain from
embracing; A time to get, and a time to lose; a time to keep, and a time to cast
away; A time to rend, and a time to sew; a time to keep silence, and a time to
*

One
The

sun also nriseth. Eccksiastcs 1:2-5

All the rivers run into the sen; yet the sea in not full. 1:7

speak;

A time to love, and a time to hate; a time of war, and a time of peace.
3:1-8

The

eye

is

nor the ear

filled

not satisfied with seeing, with hearing. 1:8

Wherefore

There
sun.

is

no new thing under the


1:9

are already dead more than the living which are yet alive. 4:2

praised

the dead which

no remembrance of former things; neither shall there be any remembrance of things that are to

There

is

Better is an handful with quietness, than both the hands full with travail

and vexation of

spirit.

4:6
is

come
1

with those that shall

come

after.

I:M
have seen
all

threefold

cord

not

broken.

quickly 4:12

the works that are


all is

done under the

sun; and, behold, vanitv and vexation of spirit.

Better is a poor and a wise child than an old and foolish king. 4:1;
*

That which

is

crooked cannot be

Sec Homer, p. 66a.

THE BIBLE: ECCLESIASTES

God

is

in heaven,

earth: therefore let thy words

and thou upon be few.


Eccksiastes 5:2

A man hath no better thing under the sun, than to eat, and to drink, and Eccksiastes 8:15 to be merry. 1 A
lion.

that thou shouldest not vow, than that thou shouldest vow and

Better

is

it

living

dog

is

better than a dead

not pay.

5:5
sleep

The
sweet

of

... but

a labouring man is the abundance of the

For the living know that they shall but the dead know not any thing, neither have they any more a reward;
die:

rich will not suffer

him

to sleep.

for the

memory

of

them

is

forgotten.

5:12
'

hand. 2

As he came forth of his mother's womb, naked shall he return to go as he 1 came, and shall take nothing of his labour, which he may carry away in his
5:11;

do

Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, it with thy might; for there is no

work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom, in the grave, whither thou
goest.

A good name is better than precious ointment; and the day of death than the day of one's birth. 8
7:1

The

race

is

9:10 not to the swift, nor the


9:1
1

battle to the strong.

feast

is

made

for laughter,

and
an-

better to go to the house of mourning, than to go to the house of


It
is

wine maketh merry;


swereth
all

but

money

things.

10:19
carry

feasting.

7:2

A bird
matter.

of the air shall

As the crackling of thorns under a


pot, so
is

and that which hath wings

the voice, shall tell the


10:20

the laughter of the fool.


7:6

Better

is

the end of a thing than the

Cast thy bread upon the waters; for thou shalt find it after many days.

7:8 In the day of be prosperity joyful, but in the day of adversity consider.

beginning thereof.

He that obscrveth the wind shall not sow; and he that regardeth the clouds
shall

not reap,

1 1

:^

7:14

Be not

righteous over

much.

7:16

In the morning sow thy seed, and in the evening withhold not thine hand.
11:6
Rejoice,

There is not a just man upon earth, that doeth good, and sinneth not.
7:20

young man,

in thy youth,

11:9

more bitter than death the woman, whose heart is snares and nets, and her hands as bands.
I

And

find

7:26

have

One man among a thousand have I found; but a woman among all those
I

when thou
in them.

thv Creator in the days of thy youth, while the evil davs come not, nor the years draw nigh,
shalt say,
I

Remember now

have no pleasure

not found.

7:28

God hath made man upright; but they have sought out many inventions.
7:29

While the sun, or the light, or the moon, or the stars, be not darkened,
nor the clouds return after the
In the day
rain:

There
l

is

no discharge

in that

war
8;8

Sec Job /.-a/, p. 14*. * Sec The Song of the Harp-Player, p. ta. 8 Sec Publilius Syrus, p.

i^a.

the keepers of the house shall tremble, and the strong men shall bow themselves, and the grinders cease because they are few, and those that look out of the windows be darkened, 1 See Luke 1:1:19, p. 4fib.

when

28

THE BIBLE: ECCLESIASTES


the doors shall be shut in the the sound of the grinding is low, and he shall rise up at the voice of the bird, and all the daughters of music shall be brought low.

SONG OF SOLOMON
Rise up,

And

my

love,

streets,

when

come away.
For, lo, the winter over and gone;

my
is

fair

one,

and

past, the rain is

Ecclesiastes 12:1-4

The almond
the
grasshopper
rail;

tree shall flourish, shall be a burden,

and and

The flowers appear on the earth; the time of the singing of birds is come, and the voice of the turtle is heard in our land. Song of Solomon 2:10-12

desire shall
his long

because

man

goeth to

The

little foxes,

that spoil the vines.

home, and the mourners go


streets:

2:15
Until the day break, and the shadows flee away. 2:17 and 4:6

about the

ever the silver cord be loosed, or golden bowl be broken, or the pitcher be broken at the fountain, or the wheel broken at the cistern. Then shall the dust return to the earth as it was: and the spirit shall return unto God who gave it. 12:5-7

Or

the

By night on my bed

whom my
but
I

soul lovcth:

sought him sought him,


3:1

found him not

Thy two breasts are like two young roes that are twins, which feed among
the
lilies.

The words
and
assemblies.

as nails fastened

of the wise are as goads, by the masters of

4:5

Thou

art all fair,

my love;
is

there

is

no
4.7

12:11

spot in thee.

Of making many books there is no end; and much study is a weariness of the flesh. Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter: Fear God, and keep his commandments: for this is the whole duty of man.
For

How much
wine!

better

thy love than 4:10

north wind; and come, Awake, thou south; blow upon my garden, that the spices thereof may flow out. Let my beloved come into 'his garden, and eat
his pleasant fruits.

God

shall bring every

work into

4:16

judgment, every thing, whether it be good, or whether it be evil. 12:12-14

with

secret

My beloved put in his hand by the hole of the cloor, and my bowels were
moved
His
for

him.
is

5:4

The song
mon's.
I

of songs, which is SoloThe Song of Solomon 1:1

mouth
is

most sweet:
is

yea,

he

is

altogether lovely. This

comely, O yc daughters of Jerusalem, as the tents of Kedar, as the curtains of Solomon.

am

black,

but

and

this

my

friend,

beloved, daughters of

my

Jerusalem.

5:16

1-5

thou

fairest

among women.
1:8
lily

she that lookcth forth as the morning, fair as the moon, clear as the sun, and terrible as an army with 6:10 banners?
is

Who

am

the rose of Sharon, and the

Return,
2:1

return,

Shulamitc.
6:13

of the valleys.

As the apple tree the wood, so is my


sons.

among

Moved among
me was
love.

the trees of the


2:3

Thy

belly

is

like a

heap of wheat

set

about with

lilies.
is

7:2

Thy neck

as a tower of ivory.

His banner over

7-4
that goeth down sweetly, causing the lips of those that are asleep to speak. 7:9
. .
.

with flagons, comfort me Stay with apples: for I am sick of love. 2:4-5

me

Like the best wine

29

THE BIBLE: SONG OF SOLOMON


I

ISAIAH

am my me

beloved's,

and
of

his desire

is

Walk
wanton

with stretched forth necks and


eyes,

toward me.
Set
a seal
as

Song

Solomon 7:10

as a seal

upon

death;

grave.

upon thine heart, as thine arm: for love is strong jealousy is cruel as the 8:6
quench love, drown it.
8-7

they go, their feet.

walking and mincing as and making a tinkling with


Isaiah 3:16

In that day seven hold of one man.

women

shall take 4:1

Many waters cannot neither can the floods


Make

My

wellbeloved hath a vineyard in a


hill.

very fruitful

5:1

And he

looked

for

judgment, but

beloved, and be thou haste, like to a roe or to a young hart upon

my

the mountains of spices.

0:14

behold oppression; for righteousness, but behold a cry. Woe unto them that join house to

The ox knoweth
ass his master's crib.

his owner,

and the

be no

The Book

of the Prophet Isaiah 1:3


sick,

house, that lay field to field, till there be placed place, that they may alone in the midst of the earth!

5:7-8

The whole head whole heart faint.


As a lodge

is

and the
J
.*5

Woe
the

unto them that


that

rise

up

early in

morning,

they

may

follow
5:1
1

strong drink.

in a garden of cucumbers. z:8

Bring no more vain oblations.


1:13

Woe unto them that draw iniquity with cords of vanity, and sin a$ it were with a cart rope. 5:1 8 Woe
I

unto them that


evil.

call evil

seek judgment, relieve the oppressed, judge the fatherless, plead for the widow.
well;

Learn to do

and good
saw

good, 5:20
a

also the

Lord

sitting

upon

Come
gether
scarlet,
.
.

now, and let us reason though your sins be


.

to-

as

throne, high and lifted up, filled the temple.

and

his train

they shall be as white as snow.

one

Above had

it

six

1:17-18

stood the seraphims: each wings; with twain he

They

shall

beat their swords into

plowshares,

and

their

spears

into

pruninghooks: nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more. 1 2:4
In
idols bats.

covered his face, and with twain he covered his feet, and with twain he did 6:1-2 fly.
hosts:
glory.

Holy, holy, holy, is the whole earth

the
is

Lord

of

full

of his
6:3

that

day a
to

man

shall

cast

his

...

the

moles and

to

the 2:20
is

Cease ye from man, whose breath


in his nostrils.

2:22

undone; because I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips: for mine eyes have .seen the King, the Lord of hosts. 6:5
is

Woe

me!

for

am

The
of

stay

bread, water.

and the staff, the whole stay and the whole stay of
3:1

Whom shall
us?

heard the voice of the Lord, saying. I send, and who will go for

Then

said

I,

Here

am

I;

ye that ye beat my people to pieces and grind the faces of the poor? 3;I?
1

What mean

me.

'send 6:8

Then

said

I,

Lord,

how

long?

Also in Joel y.io and Micah 4:3.

Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and

THE
bear a son, and shall call his

BIBLE: ISAIAH
evil, and the wicked for their iniquity; and I will cause the arrogancy of the proud to cease, and will lay low the

name

Immanuel.

Isaiah 7:14

For a stone of stumbling and for a rock of offence. 8:14


people that walked in darkness have seen a great light: they that dwell in the land of the shadow of death,

haughtiness of the terrible.

The

haiah 13:11
thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning! 14:12

How

art

upon them hath the

light shined.

Is this

the

man

that

made

the earth

9:2

to tremble, that did shake kingdoms.

For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given: and the government shall be upon his shoulder: and his name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor,

14:16

The

nations

shall

rush

like

the
17:13

rushing of

many

waters.

And

The mighty God, The everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace. Of the increase of his government
and peace there
shall

they shall fight every one against


19:2
of

his brother.

The burden
sea.

the

desert

of

the

be no end.
9:6-7
the

As whirlwinds in the south pass through; so it cometh from the desert, 21:1 from a terrible land.
Babylon
is

The
head.

ancient and honorable, he

is

x fallen, is fallen;

9:15

the graven images of her gods

and all he hath


2 1 .-9

And there shall come forth a rod out of the stem of Jesse, and a Branch shall grow out of his roots: And the Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and of 1 1:1-2 the fear of the Lord.
lite wolf also shall dwell with the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the kid; and the calf and the

broken unto the ground.

Watchman, what

of the night? 21:11

we

Let us eat and drink; for tomorrow shall die. 22:13


I will

fasten

him

as a nail in a sure

place.

22:23
are
princes.

Whose merchants
As
with
the

23:8

maid,

so

with

her
24:2

young fatling together; and a little child shall lead them. And the cow and the bear shall feed;
lion

and the

mistress.

their

young ones

shall

lie

down

to-

gether- and the lion shall eat straw like

the ox.

And the suckling child shall play on and the weaned the hole of the asp, child shall put his hand on the cockatrice'

For thou hast been a strength to the in his poor, a strength to the needy distress. 25:4 A feast of fat things, a feast of wines on the lees. 25:6
swallow up death in victory;2 and the Lord God will wipe away tears from off all faces.8 25:8

He

will

den.

.shall not hurt nor destroy in all holy mountain: for the earth shall lx- full of the knowledge of the I^ord, as 1 1 the waters cover the sea. .'6-9

my

They

Open ye the gates, that the righteous nation which kcepcth the truth may enter in.

Thou

wilt

For
strength

the

Lord and my

JKHOVAH
song;

is

my
is

whose mind
* 8

is

keep him in perfect peace, stayed on thee.


26:2-3

he

also

become my

salvation.

12:2

Sec Revelation 14:8 , p. 5&b. Sec / Corinthians XW4* ? 5S*

And

will

punish the world for their

*Scc Revelation 31:4, p. $8b.

31

THE BIBLE: ISAIAH

Awake and

sing.

Isaiah 26:19
little

Thou
Incline
hear.
I shall

trustest

in

the staff of this


Isaiah 36:6

Hide thyself as it were for a moment, until the indignation be


past.

broken reed.
thine
ear,

over-

O
my

Lord,

and
37 ;2 7

56:20

crooked serpent that Leviathan, . the dragon that is in the sea.


27:1

go

softly all

years in the

bitterness of

my soul.
ye,

38:1 5

Comfort

For precept must be upon precept,


line

comfort yc

my

people.

precept upon precept; line upon line, upon line; here a little, and there a 28:10 little.

40:1

Speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem, and cry unto her, that her warfare is
accomplished, that her iniquity is pardoned: for she hath received o'f the Lord's hand double for all her sins. The voice of him that cricth in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make straight in the desert a 1 highway for our God, 40:2-3

have made a covenant with death, and with hell are we at agreement. 28:15
It

We

shall

be

vexation

understand the report.

only to 28:19

They
drink.

are

drunken,

but

not with
29:9

wine; they stagger, but not with strong

Their strength

is

to
it

sit still.

Every valley shall be exalted, and every mountain and hill shall be made low: and the crooked shall be made
straight,

Now
table,

go, write
it

before

them

in a

and the rough places


is

plain.

and note

be for the time


ever.

in a book, that it to come for ever

may
and
All flesh
grass,
is

40:4

and
the

30.7-8
of adversity,

ness thereof
field.

as

the goodliflower of the


all

The bread
of affliction.

and the water


30:20
it.

40:6
grass
2

The
fadcth:

This

is

the way, walk ye in

the flower withcreth, but the word of our God shall

30:21 Behold, a king shall reign in righteousness,

stand for ever*

40:8
cities

Get thee up into the high mountain say unto the Behold your God!
,

32:1

of }udah,

an hiding a covert from the tempest; as rivers of water in a dry place, as the shadows of a great rock in a weary land. 32:2
a
shall
as

be place from the wind, and

And

man

40:9
flock
like

He

shall

feed

his

An habitation court for owls.


The
as the rose.

of

dragons,

and a

shepherd: he shall gather the lambs with his arm, and them in his carry bosom, and shall gently lead those that are with young. 40; 1 1

desert shall rejoice,

34 ;1 3 and blossom
35:1

The nations arc as a drop of a bucket, and are counted as the small dust of the balance. 40: 1 5
Have ye not known? have ye not heard? hath it not been told you from the beginning? 40:2 z

the eyes of the blind shall be opened, and the ears of the deaf shall

Then

be unstopped.

Then

hart,
sing.

shall the lame man leap as an and the tongue of the dumb

They
Luke

that wait

upon the
AUo

Ixird shall
in

35:5-6
shall flee

Sorrow and sighing

*5cc Matthew
3:4

):). p. 39!*,

Murk

/;;,

away. 35:10

and John 1:13. * See Psalm $o;}~6t p. aoa, tnd note.

32

THE BIBLE: ISAIAH


renew
their strength; they shall

JEREMIAH

mount

up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary; and they shall walk, and not faint. 1 Isaiah
40:3

Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts.
Isaiah 55.7

For

my

thoughts

are

not

your

They helped every one his neighbour; and every one said to his brother, Be of good courage. 41:6

thoughts, neither are ways, saith the Lord.

your ways
far off,

my
55:8
to

Peace to him that

is

and

A
and

bruised reed shall he not break, the smoking flax shall he not

him

that

is

near.

57 :1 9

quench.
Shall

42:3

and the glory of the Lord


thee.

Arise, shine; for thy light is come, is risen

upon
00:1

the clay say to him that fashioncth it, What makest thou?

A little one shall become a thousand, and a small one a strong nation.
60:22

that thou hadst hearkened to

my
oil

commandments! then had thy peace been as a river, and thy righteousness as the waves of the sea. 48:18
48:22 Therefore the redeemed of the Lord shall return, and come with singing unto Zion.
51:11

Give unto them beauty for ashes, the of joy for mourning, the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness.
62:3

There is no peace, unto the wicked.

saith the Lord,


I

have trodden the winepress alone; and of the people there was none with

me:

for

will

tread

anger, and trample ana their blood snail

Thou
cup

them in mine them in my fury; be sprinklea upon


will stain all

hast drunken the dregs of the of trembling. 51:17

my garments, and raiment.


rags;

my
63:3

Therefore hear

now

this.

51 12 1

beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that bringcth good

How

All our righteousnesses are as filthy and we all do fade as a leaf,

64:6

titling that publisheth peace.

52:7
52:8

We
I

all

are the

work of thy hand*


64:8

They

shall see eye to eye.

He is despised and rejected of men; a mnn of sorrows, and acquainted with


grief,

am holier

than thou.

65:5

For, behold, I create and a new earth. 1

new heavens
65:17

53:3

And
Surely he hath borne our carried our sorrows,
All
griefs,

and
53:4

they

shall

build houses,

and

we
is
1

like

sheep have gone astray. 53:6


as

they shall plant and cat the fruit of tnem. vineyards, Tney shall not build, and another
inhabit; they another eat.
shall

inhabit

them;

and

not

plant,

and

He
!

brought

lamb to the
53.7

65:21-22

slaughter.
In.

As one
so will
I

whom his
as

mother comforteth,
66:13
horses
in

everyone that thirsteth, come ye


55:1

comfort you.
fed

to the waters.
Itahold, to
I

They were

the

witness

commander
*

have given the people, a to the people.


9: ja.

him

for

morning: every one neighed


neighbour's wire*

after his

leader

and
55^4

The Book
*

of the Prophet

Jeremiah 5:8
Sec Revelation a/:/, p. 585.

Al** in

Ant

33

THE BIBLE: JEREMIAH


Hear now
without
eyes,

EZEKDEL
heat cometh, but her leaf shall be shall not be careful in the neither shall cease
fruit.
1

and which have and see not; which have ears, and
this,

foolish people,

when

understanding;

green; and year of drought,

hear not.

Jeremiah 5:21
people hath a revolting and
5:23

from yielding

Jeremiah 27:5-8

But

this

The
things,

a rebellious heart.

heart is deceitful above all and desperately wicked: who


it?

is Saying, Peace, peace; when there no peace. 6:1^ and 8:11

can know

27:9

Stand ye in the ways, and see, and ask for the old paths, where is the good 1 6:16 way, and walk therein.

As the partridge sitteth hatcheth them not; so he that gettcth shall leave riches, and not by right, his of midst the in them days, and at
his

on eggs, and

Amend
The
Is

your ways and your doings. 7:3 and 26:13


is

end

shall

be a

fool.

27:11

Thou
evil.

art

my

harvest

past, the

summer

is

hope in the day of *7 :1 7

ended, and we
there

are not saved.


in Gilead?

8:20
8:22

earth, earth, earth, hear the

word
22:29

no balm
had

of the Lord,

Oh

that I

in the wilderness a

The
2

fathers

lodging place of wayfaring


I

men

and the
r:6

children's

have eaten a sour grape, teeth are set on


3 1:*9

edge,

will

feed

them

with wormgall to

With my whole
whole
soul.

heart and with

my
for

wood, and give them water of


drink. 2

32:42

9:25

And

seekest

thou great
not.

things

the Ethiopian change his skin, 13 or the leopard his spots? .-23

Can

thyself? seek

them

45:5
that
is

How
was
as a
full

doth the city


of people!

sit solitary,

Her sun
yet day.

is

gone down while


strife

it

was
15:9
of

how

she become
of
1:1

widow!

A man
contention.

of

and a

man

The Lamentations
Jeremiah

15:10

The

sin of

pen of iron, diamond.

Judah is written with a and with the point of a


17:1

She weepeth sore in the night, and her tears are on her checks: among all her lovers she hath none to comfort
her.
1

12

Cursed be the man that trusteth in man, and maketh flesh his arm, and whose heart departeth from the Lord. For he shall be like the heath in the desert, and shall not see when good cometh; but shall inhabit the parched
places in the wilderness, in a salt land and not inhabited.

Is it nothing to you, all ye that pass by? behold, and see if there l>c any i i i sorrow like unto my sorrow.
:

It

is

good

for a

man

that

lu*

bear the
3:27

yoke in

nis youth.

As

it

were a wheel in the middle? of a

Blessed is the man that trusteth in the Lord, and whose hope the Lord is. For he shall be as a tree planted by the waters, and that spreadeth out her roots by the river, and shall not see
1

wheel.

The Book
As
is

of the Prophet Rzekiel 1:16


is

the mother, so

her daughter,

Stare

*I

wiH

make

The Vulgate super vias antiquas. feed them with wormwood, and them drink the water of gall. Jere-

See Amcnemopc, VI, p.


p. i6b.
*

b;

abo

J**sfm

/,

miah 37:75

Also in Ettkitl /*;*.

34

THE BIBLE: EZEKIEL

NAHUM
he
will raise us

The
Can

parting of the way.

king of Babylon stood at the Ezekiel 21:21


37:3

the third day

up,

shall live in his sight.

and we Hosea 6:2

these bones live?

He
earth.

shall

come unto

ye dry bones, hear the word of the Lord.' 37:4

as the latter

and former

us as the rain, rain unto the


6:3

Every man's sword


his brother.

shall

be against
38:21

His legs of iron, his feet part of iron and part of clay.

For I desired mercy, and not sacrifice; and the knowledge of God more than burnt offerings. 6:6

They have sown the wind, and they


shall reap the

The Book
fell

of Daniel 2:33

whirlwind.

8:7

Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, down bound into the midst of the
fiery furnace.
.

Yc have plowed
reaped iniquity.
I

wickedness, ye have
1 0:1
.
.

burning

3:23
.
.

drew

them with

bands
1 1

of
.*4

Nebuchadnezzar from men, and did eat


Belshazzar
feast

was

driven

love.
I

grass as oxen.

have multiplied

visions,

and used
of

4 33
:

similitudes,

by the ministry

the king

made

great

prophets.
I

the 12:10

to a thousand of his lords.

will

ransom them from the power

:1

And
written,

this

is

the writing

that was

MENE, MENE, TEKEL,


is

of the grave; I will redeem them from death: death, I will be thy plagues; 1 grave, I will be thy destruction.

UPHARSIN.
This
thing:

13:14
interpretation
it.

the

of

the

Your

old

MKNE; God
art

hath numbered

your young

men shall dream dreams, men shall sec visions.


Joel 2:28

thy kingdom, and finished

TKKKL; Thou
balances, and art

weighed in the found wanting.


is

PKRES; Thy kingdom


and given
to the

divided,
Persians.

Multitudes in the valley of decision. 3:14

Medcs and

5:25-28

They sold the righteous for silver, and the poor for a pair of shoes.

According to the law of the Medcs and Persians, which altcrcth not. 6:22

Amos
Can two walk
be agreed?

2:6

together, except they


3:3
in the belly of the

They brought Daniel, into the den of lions.

and

cast

him
6:16

And Jonah was


fish

three days and

three nights.

So Daniel was taken up out of the den, and no manner of hurt was found upon him, because he believed in his God. 6:23

Jonah 1:17
doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?

What

The Ancient

of days.

7:9

and
fro,

Micah

6:8

7:1 3

run to and knowledge shall be increased.

Many

shall

and
12:4
living

The
ness. 2

faces of

them

all

gather blackNahum 2:10


it

Ye
God.

Write the

are

the

sons

of

the

vision,

and make

plain

Hosca 1:10
like priest.

Like people,

4:9

After two clavs will he revive us: in

See / Corinthians X3W~55 f p. 5$*The faces of them all arc as the blackness of a kettle. Douay Bible [1609], Ate/mm a:xo. The English version of the Roman Catholic Bible was first printed in Douay, France.

THE BIBLE: HABAKKUK


upon
tables,

APOCRYPHA
a little after

that

he may run that

and brethren, and


swords.

draw out
all

readethit.

Habakkuk

2:2

I Esdras 3:22
is

The Lord
all

is in his holy temple: let the earth keep silence before him. 2:20

Great
1

Truth, and mighty above


I

things.

4:41
is

What
to

past

know, but what

is

for

Your

fathers,

where are they? And


Zechariah 1:5

come

know

not.

II Esdras 4:46

the prophets, do they live forever?


I have spread you abroad winds of the heaven.

as

the four 2:6

therefore keep thy sorrow to and bear with a good courage that which hath befallen thee. 10:15
thyself,
I

Now

shall light a candle of understand-

Not by might, nor by power, but by

ing in thine heart, which shall not be

my

spirit, saith

the Lord of hosts.

4:6

put out.
If

*4 :2 5

For who
small

hath despised the day of


4:10
ass.

things?

accordingly:

thou hast abundance, give alms if thou have but a little, be

Behold, thy King cometh unto thee


. .
.

lowly,

and riding upon an

not afraid to give according to that Tobit 4:8 little.

9:9 Prisoners of hope.

Put on her garments of gladness.


Judith
1

9:12
for

0:3
all

So they weighed
pieces of silver.
1

my

The
price thirty

car

of

jealousy

heareth

11:12

things.

What
hands?
.

The Wisdom
Our time
passcth away.
is

are
.
.

wounds in thine Those with which I was


these

of

Solomon i;ao
shadow that
2:5

very

wounded

in the

house of

my

friends.

13:6

Have we not
one

God

one father? hath not Malachi 2:10 created us?


all
I

Let us crown ourselves with rosebuds, 2:8 before they be withered*

For
tal,

God

created

man

messenger, and he shall prepare the way before

Behold,

will

send

my

and made him


eternity.

to

to be immorbe an image of his

own
devil

me.

Nevertheless

3:1

came death

through envy of into the world.

the

Behold, the day cometh. 4:1 Healing in his wings. 4:2 Behold, I will send you Elijah the prophet before the coming of the great and dreadful day of the Lord. 4:5

2:33-24

The
hand
In

souls of the righteous arc in the of God, and there shall no

torment touch them.


the

seemed

sight to die:

of

the

unwise

they
is

and

their departure

THE APOCRYPHA*
And when they arc in their cups, they forget their love both to friends
See Matthew 26:1$, p. 440. These books form part of the sacred literature of the Alexandrian Jews, and with the exception of // Esdras are found interspersed with the Hebrew Scriptures in the ancient copies of the Septuagint, or Greek Version of The Apocrypha Accordthe Old Testament.
1

taken for misery, And their going from us to be utter destruction: but thev are in peace. For though they fee punisned in the
sight of

men, yet 'is

their

hope

full of

immortality.

And having been a little chastised, they shall be greatly rewarded: for Cod proved them, and found them worthy
for himself.
3 :1 ~5
vcritas et pra<*valct,
-

ing to the

Authorized Version, Preface (Oxford

*Magna
gate,

est

The

Vul-

University Press)

Book

/// (uncanonJcal)

THE BIBLE: APOCRYPHA They that put their trust in him shall understand the truth. The Wisdom
of
Profess not the knowledge thou hast not. A stubborn heart shall fare
last.
. .

that

Solomon

3:9

evil at

the

Even so we in like manner, as soon as we were born, began to draw to our


end.
5:13

Ecclesiasticus 3:25-26

For the hope of the ungodly is like that is blown away with the wind and passeth away as the
dust
.

Wisdom exalteth her children, layeth hold of them that seek her. He that loveth her loveth life.
Observe the opportunity.

and

4:11-12
4:20

remembrance of
but a day.

a guest that tarrieth

5:14

Be not
frantick

For the very true beginning of her [wisdom] is the desire of discipline; and the care of discipline is love.
6:17

among

as a lion in thy house, thy servants.

nor

to receive,
est repay.

Let not thine hand be stretched out and shut when thou should-

4 : 3-3 I

the

And when common

was born,

drew

in

air,

and

fell

upon, the

Set not thy heart upon thy goods; and say not, I have enough for my
life.

earth,
first

which is of like nature; and the voice which I uttered was crying,
7:3

5:1

as all others do.

with every wind, and go not into every way. 5:9


Let thy
life

Winnow not

All

men have one


like

entrance into

life,

be

sincere.

5:1

and the

going out.
that

7:6

Be not ignorant of any thing


great matter or a small.
If

in a
5:1 5

The

light

cometh

from

her
7:10

[wisdom] never goeth out.

thou wouldest get a friend, prove


first.

can number the sand of the sea, and the drops of rain, and the days
of eternity?

Who

him

6.7
is

A
A
life.

faithful friend

a strong defence:

The Wisdom
Sirach, or

of Jesus the Son of Ecclesiasticus, 1:2

and he that hath found sucn an one hath found a treasure. 6:14
faithful friend
is

To whom

hath the root of wisdom


1:6
is

the medicine of 6:16

been revealed?
For the Lord
full

of compassion

ing, cet

and

mercy,

longsuffering,

pitiful forgivcth sins, time of affliction.


'flic

and

and very and savcth in


2:11

thou sccst a man of understandthee betimes unto him, and let root wear the steps of his door* thy 6:36
If

greater
thyself.

thou

art,

the

more
3:18

humble

Whatsoever thou takest in hand, remember the end, and thou shalt never do amiss. 7:36
Rejoice not over thy greatest being dead, but remember that
all

Many

are

renown: but the meek.

place, mysteries are revealed

in

high

and of
unto
3:19

enemy we die
8:7

Miss not the discourse of the elders.

Seek not out the things that are too hard for thee, neither search the things that are above thy strength. 3:21

8:9

Forsake not an old friend; for the new is not comparable to him: a new
friend
is

ters:

Be not curious in unnecessary matfor more things are shewed unto

as

new

thou shalt drink

wine; when it is old, it with pleasure.


9:10

thec than

men

understand.

3:23

37

THE BIBLE: APOCRYPHA


Pride
is

hateful

before

God

anc

man.

Ecclesiasticus 10.7

He

that

is

to day a king to

morrow
10:10

All wickedness is but little to the wickedness of a woman. Ecdesiasticus 25:19

shall die.

The

discourse

of

fools

is

irksome.

Pride was not


furious anger for a woman.

made

for

men, no

27:13

them

that are born o 10:18

Be not
ness.

overwise in doing thy busi

Many have fallen by the edge of the sword: but not so many as have fallen 28:18 by the tongue.
Better
is

10:26

the

life

Many kings have sat down upon the ground; and one that was never thought of hath worn the crown.
11:5

mean

cottage,

than

of a poor man in a delicate fare in

another man's house.

29:22

There
body.

is

no

riches

above
the
of

sound
30:16
of a

In the day of prosperity there is a forgetfulness of affliction: and in the day of affliction there is no more

Gladness of the heart

is

life

man, and the

joyfulness

man
30:22

remembrance of

prolongeth his days.

prosperity.

1 1 :2

Judge none blessed before his death.


11:28

Envy and wrath shorten the


carefulness

life,

and
the

bringeth

age

before

time.

30:24
for riches

friend cannot be

known

in pros-

perity: and an in adversity.

Watching
flesh,

consumeth the
31:1

enemy cannot be hidden


12:8

and the care thereof driveth away

sleep.

How agree
pot together?

the kettle and the earthen


13:2
fall is

Let thy speech be short, compre33:8 hending much in few words.


Consider that I laboured not for myself only, but for all them that seek 33:17 learning.
"

beginning to up of his friends: but a poor

rich

man

held
his

man

down
friends.

being
13:21

is

thrust

also

away

by

The
evil.

heart of a

man
it

Leave not

a stain

in

thine honour.

countenance, whether

changeth his be for good or


13:25

33:22

Let the counsel of thine


stand.

own

heart
37:13

So

is

word

better than a

gift.

18:16

Honour

a physician

with the honour


uses

Be not made a beggar by banqueting 1 upon borrowing. 8:33

due unto him for may have of him:


created him.

the*

for the

winch ye Lord hath


38:1
let

He

that

shall fall

contemncth small things 1 by little and little. 9:1


it

When
for

the dead
rest;

is

at rest,

his

remembrance

and be comforted
spirit
is

Whether

be to friend
lives.

or foe, talk

not of other men's

19:8

him, when from him.

his

departed 38:23
.
.

A
ter,

man's attire, and excessive laughand gait, shew what he is, 19:30
tale out of season
[is as]

How
talk
is

can he get of bullocks?

wisdom

whose
38:3 5

A
I

rnusick in

mourning.
will

22:6

Let us now praise famous men, and our fathers that begat us, 44:1
All

not be ashamed to defend a

these

friend.
1

22:25

See Solon, p. 6ga, and note.

generations, :imes.

were honoured in and were the glory of

their their

THE BIBLE: APOCRYPHA


There be
of them, that

MATTHEW

have

left a

name behind them,

that their praises

might be reported. And some there be, which have no memorial; who are perished, as though they had never been; and are become as though they had never been born; and
their children after them.

They saw the young child with Mary mother, and fell down, and worshipped him: and they presented unto him gifts; gold, and frankincense,
his
. .

and myrrh.

And being warned of God in a dream that they should not return to Herod, they departed into their own country
another way.

Ecclesiasticus 44.7-9

Matthew 2:11-12
I

Their bodies are buried in peace; but


their

Out
son.

of

name liveth

Egypt have

called

for evermore.

my
2:15

44:14

His word burned

like a

lamp.
48:1

are not. 1

Rachel weeping for her children, and would not be comforted, because they
2:18

works of the Lord, bless ye ye the Lora: praise him and exalt him above all 1 for ever. The Song of the Three Holy Children 35
all

He

shall

be called a Nazarene.
2:23
for

Repent
heaven
is

ye:

the

kingdom

of
3:2

at

hand.

Daniel had convicted them of false witness by their own mouth. The History of Susanna 61
thing to make a long prologue, and to be short in the story The Second Book of the itself.
It is a foolish

The voice of one crying in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the 2 Lord, make his paths straight.
3 :3

And
honey,

his

meat was

locusts

and wild
3:4

Maccabees 2:32

When
Speech
cars.

he was

at the last gasp.

generation of vipers, who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to

7-9
finely

come?

3.7

framed dclightcth the


15:39

Now also
down, and

the axe

is

laid

unto the root

of the trees: therefore every tree bringcth not forth good fruit is
cast into the
fire.

which

hewn
3:10

THE NEW TESTAMENT


Behold, a virgin shall be with child, and shall bring forth a son, and they
shall call his

The
dove.

Spirit of

God

descending like a 3:16

name Emmanuel, which


is,

This

is

my

beloved Son, in

whom

being interpreted

God

with

us.

am
1:33

well pleased.

3:17
fasted forty days 4:2
I

7/ic Gospel According to St.

Matthew

And when he had


hungred.

Now when
hem

and forty nights, he was afterward an


Follow me, and
fishers

Jesus

was born in Bethle-

of Judaea in the days of Herod the king, behold, there came wise men from the east to Jerusalem,

will

make you
4:19

of men.

Saying,
star
in

Where
east*

is

King of the Jews?


the

for

he that is born we have seen his


are

Blessed arc the poor in spirit: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. 5:3
1 Rahcl weeping for her children refused to because they were not. be comforted Jeremiah }*:?$
, ,

and

come

to
.

worship him.
*

2:1-2
of

In

thr

lkx>k

Common

Prayer

(Th*

Brnrdffii?):

"magnify him."

Sec Isaiah 40:3, p. 3*0.

39

THE BIBLE: MATTHEW


Blessed are they that mourn: for they shall be comforted. Blessed are the meek: for they shall
inherit the earth.
1

for

Swear not at all; neither by heaven; it is God's throne:

Nor by
footstool.

the

earth;

for

it

is

his

Matthew 5:34-35

Blessed are

and
shall

thirst after righteousness: for

they

which do hunger
they

be

filled.

Resist not evil: but whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also. 5:39

Blessed are the merciful: for they shall obtain mercy. Blessed are the pure in heart: for

they shall see God. Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God.
for righteousness' sake: for theirs
2 kingdom of heaven.

Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate them which despiteyou, and pray for and use persecute you. you, fully

Blessed are they which are persecuted is the

He maketh his sun to rise on the evil and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust, 5:45
Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect.
5:48

Matthew 5:4-10
are the salt of the earth: but if the salt have lost his savour, wherewith shall it be salted? 5 :1 3

Ye

When
left

thou

doest alms, let

not thy

are the light of the world. city that is set on an hill cannot be hid. Neither do men light a candle, and

Ye

hand know what thy

right

hand
6:3

doeth.
After this

manner

put

it

under

bushel,

candlestick; and it giveth light that are in the house.

but on unto

a
all

Our Father

therefore pray ye: which art in neavcn, 1

Let your light so shine before men, may see your good works, and Father which is in heaven. glorify your Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfil.
that they

Hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heavenGive us this day our daily bread.

And forgive us our debts, as 2 forgive our debtors. And lead us not into temptation,
deliver us

we

5:14-17
heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the
Till

but from evil: For tninc is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory,
for ever.

Amen

6:9-1 3

law,

till

all

be

fulfilled.

5:18

Whosoever looketh on a woman to lust after her hath committed adultery


with her already in his heart. And if thy right eye offend thee, pluck it out, and cast it from thee: for it is profitable for thee that one of thy members should perish, and not that thy whole body should be cast into
hell.

Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth, where moth and rust doth and where thieves break corrupt, steal: and through
But
lay

up

for yourselves treasures in

heaven.

6:19-50
is,

For where your treasure your heart be also.

there will

6:21
the eye.
6:22
is

The

light of the

body

is

And
cut
*
'

if

thy right

hand offend

thee,

If therefore the light that

in thcc

it off.

5:28-30

*Our

Father,

who

tre In hcavea.

Rook

of

Common
those

Prayer,

Morning Prayer

See Psalm 3j:xz, p. i8b, the Mount. See Lao-Tzu, p. ?4a.

The Sermon on

'And forgive us our trespaue*. Aft we forgive who tretpaw against u*. Boo* of Common Prayer, Morning Prayer

4o

THE
be darkness, how great
ness!
is

BIBLE:

MATTHEW
Wide
is

that dark6:23

the gate, and broad

is

the
7:13

Matthew
he

way, that leadeth to destruction.

No man
either

can serve two masters: for


Strait
is

Matthew

will hate the one, and love the other; or else he will hold to the

one,
serve
Is

and despise the other. Ye cannot God and mammon. 6:24

the gate, and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it. 7:14

Beware

of

false

not the life more than meat, and the body than raiment? Behold the fowls of the air: for they sow not, neither do they reap, nor
gather into barns.

prophets,

which

come

to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves.

7:15

0:25-26

By

their fruits ye shall

know them.
7:20

Which of you by taking thought can add one cubit unto his stature? 6:27
Consider the
they grow; they
spin.
lilies

Not

every one that

saith

unto me,

toil not,

of the field, how neither do they 6:20

Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth the will of my Father which is in heaven.
7:21

Even Solomon
not

in all his glory was arrayed like one of these. 6:29

morrow:

no thought for the the morrow shall take thought for the things of itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.
therefore
for

Take

[The house] founded upon a rock.


shall

fell

not:

for

it

was
7:25

But the children of the kingdom


be cast out into outer darkness:
there shall be weepingteeth.

and gnashing of
8:22

6-34

Judge not, that ye be not judged.


7:1

With what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again. And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother's eye, but considerest not the beam that is in
thine

and the birds have nests; but the Son of man hath not where to lay his head.
foxes have holes,
of the air

The

8:20

Follow me; and


their dead.

let

the dead bury


8:22

own

eye?

7 :2 ~3
out the
7:5

Why
faith?

are ye fearful,

ye of

little

8:26

Thou hypocrite, first cast beam out of thine own eye.


swine.

Neither cast ye your pearls before


7:6
it

The whole herd lently down a steep

of swine ran vioplace into the sea f and perished in the waters* 8:32

Ask, and

shall

and ye shall find; opened unto you.

be given you; seek, knock, and it shall be


7:7

He saw
sitting

man, named Matthew,


9:9

at the receipt of custom.

Or what man
if

is

there of you,
will

whom
7:9

They

that

be whole need not a


9:12

son ask bread, stone?


his

he give him a

physician, but they that are sick*

Therefore

all

things whatsoever ye
:

would that men should do to you, do yc even so to them for this is the law and
the prophets. 1
Confucius, p.

the righteous, but sinners to repentance. 9:2 3


I

am

not come to

call

7:12

7b.

Can the children of the bridechamber mourn, as long as the bridegroom is with them? 9:15

41

THE BIBLE: MATTHEW


Neither do
old bottles.

men

put new wine into

He
me.

that

is

not with

me

is

against

Matthew 9:17
is

Matthew 12:30
tree
is

The maid The

not dead, but sleepeth. 9:24


is

The
Out
the

known by

his fruit.

12:33
of the abundance of the heart
speaketh.

harvest truly the labourers are few.

plenteous, but

9:37

mouth

12:34

rather to the lost sheep of the 10:6 house of Israel.

Go

here.

Behold, a greater than Solomon is 12:42


seeds
fell

Freely ye have received, freely give. 10:8

Some

by the way
had

side.
*3--4

not receive you, nor hear your words, when ye depart out of that house or city, shake off the dust of

Whosoever

shall

Because they withered away.

no

root,

they
13:6

your feet

10:14

But other
fold,

Be ye therefore wise as serpents, and 10:16 harmless as doves.

brought forth

good ground, and some an hundredsome sixtyfold, some thirtyfold.


fell

into

fruit,

13:8

Ye

shall

be hated of

all

men

for

my

name's sake.

10:22

of this world, deceitfulncss of riches,


care

The

and

the

13:22
like to a
1
1

The disciple is not above his master, nor the servant above his lord.
10:24

The kingdom of heaven grain of mustard seed.


Pearl of great price.
Is

is

3:3

Are not two sparrows sold for a farthing? and one of them shall not fall on the ground without your Father. But the very hairs of your head are all numbered. 10:29-30
I

3 .-46

not

this the carpenter's

son?
'3*'5?

prophet

is

not without honour,


1

save in his

own

country.

3:57

came not

to

sword.

send peace, but a 10:34


life shall lose it:

The

daughter of

Hcrodias danced
24:6

He

before them, and pleased Herod.

that findeth his


1 it.

and he that loscth


shall find

his life for

my

sake

Give

me

10:39

He
hear.

a charger.

here John Baptist's head in 14:$


five

that hath ears to hear, let

him

We
two

have here but

loaves,
2

11:15

fishes.

of man came eating and and drinking, they say, Behold a man gluttonous, and a winebibber, a friend of publicans and sinners. But wisdom

The Son

and 4 :a 7

And they did all eat, and were filled: and they took up of the fragments that remained twelve baskets full. 14:20
And
Jesus
sea.

is

justified of

her children.

11:19

unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you
rest.

Come

in the fourth watch of the night went unto them, walking on the

14:25
of good cheer;
it
is
I;

Be
afraid.

be not
14:27

Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For rny yoke is easy, and my burden
is light.
i

thou of them doubt?

little faith,

wherefore didst
14:31

11:28-30
x6:*$, p. 4ja.
I

Of
God.

truth

thou

art

the

Son

of

See

Matthew

14:33

42

THE
Not mouth
that

BIBLE:
the

MATTHEW
It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God.

which

goeth

into

man; but that which cometh out of the mouth, this defileth a man. Matthew 15:11
defileth a

Matthew 19:24

They be blind leaders of the blind. And if the blind lead the blind, both
shall fall into the ditch.

Many that are first shall be the last shall be first.


day,
Is it

last;
1

and
9:30

dogs eat of the crumbs fall from their masters' table.

The

a :1 5 4 which 1

Borne the burden and heat of the


20:12

5 :2 7

evening, ye say, It will be fair weather: for the 16:2 sky is red.
it is

When

will

not lawful for with mine own?

me

to

do what

20:15
21:12

The
living

signs of the times.


art the Christ, the

Overthrew the tables of the moneychangers.

16:3

Thou

Son of the
16:16

God.
art Peter,

My house

shall

will build

and upon this rock I and the gates of church; my hell shall not prevail against it. And I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven. 16:18-19

Thou

prayer; but ye thieves.

be called the house of have made it a den of


21:13
it.

They made

light of

22:5

Many
chosen.

are

called,

but

few

are

22:14

Get thee behind me, Satan.

16:23

Whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for

Render therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's; and unto

God

the things that are God's.

my sake shall
For what
shall gain the

find
is

it.

22:21

man

profited,

if

he

own

soul?

whole world, and lose his 16:25-26


not enter into
1

Whosoever shall exalt himself shall be abased; and he that shall humble
himself shall be exalted.

33:12

Except yc be converted, and become


as little children, ye shall

Woe

the kingdom of heaven.

8:3

hypocrites! for ye pay tithe of anise and cummin.

unto you, scribes and Pharisees, mint and


23:23

more of that sheep, than of the ninety and nine which wont
rcioiccth

He

Blind guides, which strain at a gnat, and swallow a camel. 23:24

not astray.

18:13
three arc gathered name, there am I in the
or

Where two
together in my midst of them. 2

Whitecl sepulchres, which indeed appear beautiful outward, but are within 2 3 :2 7 full of dead men's bones.
Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that the prophets, and stoncst them which are sent unto thee, how often
()
killcst

18:20
.

Until seventy times seven

18:22

What

therefore

together, let

not

God hath joined man put asunder.8


19:6
sell

would

have gathered thy children

If

thou wilt be perfect, go and

hen gatnereth her chickens under her wings, and yc would


together, even as a

that thou hast, and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven*
19:21
1

not!

23:37
shall

Ye

hear of wars and rumours of

St.

Prayer of Chryaostom, p, 6ob. See Rook of Common Prayer, Solemnization

See Matthew 10:39, p. 4a. See Rook of Common Prayer, A

wars: see that ye be not troubled: for all these things must come to pass, but

the end

is not yet. For nation shall

rise

against nation.

of

Matrimony,

p. 6ib.

24:6-7

43

THE BIBLE: MATTHEW


Abomination of
desolation.

What
deliver
will

will

ye give me, and

will

Matthew 24:15
Wheresoever the carcase is, there the eagles be gathered together.

him

unto

you?

And

they

covenanted with of silver. 1

him
hand.

for thirty pieces

Matthew 26:15
26:18

24:28

My

time
I

is

at

Heaven and
but

earth shall pass away,


shall

my

words

not pass away. 24:35

say unto you, that one of Verily 26:21 shall betray me. you

Lord,
It

is it I?

26:22

The one
other
left.

shall

be taken, and the


24:40
of heaven be

had been good for that had not been born.


Jesus took bread,

man
it,

if

he

26:2^

Then

shall the

kingdom

and blessed
it

likened unto ten virgins, which


their lamps,

and

took and went forth to meet the

brake

it,

and gave
Take, took

to the disciples,
this
is

and

said,

eat;

bridegroom.

my

body.

And

five

of

them were

And he
wise,

the
it

and

cup,
to

five

were foolish.

25:1-2
faithful

thanks, and gave Drink ye all or it;

and gave tncm, saying,

Well done, thou good and


servant
.
.

Enter thou into the joy of


25:21

thy lord.

For this is my blood of the new testament, which is shed for many for the remission of sins, 26:26-28
This night before the cock crow, thou shalt deny me thrice. a^
;

every one that hath shall be given, and he shall have abundance: but from him that hath not shall be taken away even that which he hath.

Unto

my
this

Father,

25:29
before him shall be gathered all nations: and he shall separate them one from another, as a shepherd divideth his sheep from the goats. 25:32

not

as I will*

cup pass but

be possible, let from me: nevertheless,


if
it

as

thou

wilt,

26:39

And

Could ye not watch with


hour?

we

one

Watch and pray, that ve enter not into temptation: the .spirit indeed is
willing,

For I was an hungred, and yc gave meat: I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink: I was a stranger, and yc took me

but the

flesh i*

weak,

me

He came
All

to

Jesus,

ami

said.

Hail,
a

in:

Master; and kissed him.

^'*f9

Naked, and ye clothed me: I was sick, and ye visited me: I was in prison, and ye came unto me. 2 5:
35~3<>

they that take the sword shall perish with the swore). 26:^2

Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me.
25:40
26:7

Thy speech

lx*\vr.tu'th thcr,

26:73

Then began he saying, I know

to curse

not

awl tci swear, the man, And

An

alabaster

box of very precious


is

immediately the eoek crew.

2^74

ointment.

The
in.

potter's field,

tri

To what

bury shammers 3*^7

purpose

this waste?

26:8
you; but

Have thou nothing


lst man,
Let him
[Pilate]
b<*

to

do with

that

For ye have the poor always with me ye have not always. 1


26:1
1

37;* 9
crucified,

27:32

took water, and washed hi*

hands before the multitude,


Sec Deuteronomy 15:11, p. job.
1

Set?

ZfrHarlah tt t.

ji,

ijfU,

44

THE BIBLE: MATTHEW

LUKE

am

innocent of the blood of this


it.

just

Clothed, and in his right mind.

person: see ye to
children.

Matthew 27:24
us,

Mark

5:15

His blood be on

and on our
27:25

My

little

daughter

lieth at the point

of death.

5:23
in himself that virtue

A place called Golgotha, that is to 27:33 say, a place of a skull.


This
is

Knowing
I

had
5:30

gone out of him.


see

Jesus the

King of the Jews.


27:37

men
I

as trees, walking.

8:24

Lord,
unbelief.

believe;

help

thou

mine
9:24

He
save.

saved others; himself he cannot 27:42

Eli, Eli,

say,

My

lama sabachthani? that is to God, my God, why hast thou


1

Suffer the little children unto me, and forbid them not: for of such is the kingdom of God. 10:14

to

come

forsaken

me?

27:46

And, behold, the veil of the temple was rent in twain from the top to the bottom; and the earth did quake, and the rocks rent 27:51

for a pretense

Which devour widows* make long


a

houses,
prayers.

and

12:40

And there came poor widow, and she threw in two mites.
certain

and

His countenance was like lightning, his raiment white as snow. 28:3
ye
therefore,

12:42

Go

and

teach

all

nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the 28:19 Holy Ghost

Watch ye therefore: for ye know not when the master of the house cometh,
at

imto Lo, I am with you alway, even 2 8:20 the end of the world.

even, or at midnight, or at the cockcrowing, or in the morning: Lest coming suddenly he find you *3 : 3$~& sleeping.

There cometh one mightier than I after me, the latchet of whose shoes I am not worthy to stoop down and
unloose.

Go yc into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature. 16:15
Hail,

the Lord

thou that art highly favoured, is with thee: blessed art thou
to

The Gospel According to St. Mark 1:7


Arise,

among women. The Gospel According


St.

Luke 1:28
shall

and take up thy bed, and


2:9
for

For

with

God

walk.

nothing

be
1:37

impossible,

The sabbath was made not man for the sabbath.


If a

man, and
2:27
itself,

Blessed

is

the fruit of thy

womb.
1:42

house be divided against that house cannot stand.

3:25

My

soul doth magnify the Lord.

1:46

bringeth forth fruit of herself; first the blade, then the ear, after that the full corn in the ear.

The

earth

For he hath regarded the low estate


of his handmaiden: for, behold, from

henceforth
blessed.

all

generations shall call

me

4:28

What manner

of

man

is

this?

4:41

My
many.
i

name

is

legion:

for

we

are

hath scattered the proud in the imagination of their hearts. He hath put down the mighty from
their scats,

He

5 ;9
p. ivb.

and exalted them of low


itfJ-S 3

Sec Psalm za:xf

degree.

45

THE BIBLE: LUKE

He
away.

hath

filled

things; arid the rich

the hungry with good he hath sent empty

in Jesus increased favour in and ure,

wisdom and
with

stat-

God and
Lwfe
2:52
all

Luke

1:53

man.

Blessed be the Lord God of Israel; for he hath visited and redeemed his
people.

[The devil] kingdoms of the world in a


of time.
Physician, heal thyself.

shewed unto him

the

moment
4'5

1:68

As he spake by the mouth of his holy prophets, which have been since the
world began: That we should be saved from our enemies, and from the hand of all that hate us. 1:70-71

4:23
all

unto you, speak well of you!

Woe

when

men

shall

6:26
for-

Her

sins,

which are many, are

given; for she loved

much.

7:47

Through the tender mercy of our God; whereby the dayspring from on
high hath visited
us,

Nothing

is

secret, that shall

not be
8:1 7

made

manifest.

To

give light

darkness and in

them that the shadow of


to

sit

in

death.

man, having put his hand to the plow, and looking Dack, is fit for the 9:62 kingdom of God.

No

1:78-79
she brought forth her firstborn son, and wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger; because there was no room for them in the inn. 2:7

Nor

scrip,

nor shoes.
this house.
is

10:4
1

And

Peace be to

0:5

The

labourer

worthy of his lure. 10:7


fall

There were in the same country shepherds abiding in the field, keeping
watch over their flock by night. And, lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them, and the glory of the Lord shone round about them: and they were sore afraid. And the angel said unto them, Fear
not:
for,

I beheld Satan as lightning heaven.

from
10:18

prophets and kings have dewhich ye sec, and have not seen them: and to hear those things which yc hear, and havenot heard them. 10:24

Many

sired to sec those things

A A

certain

Jerusalem to Jericho, and


thieves.

man went down from fell among


10:50
. . .

behold,

bring

tidings of great joy,

which

shall

you good be to all

certain Samaritan

had comI0: 33

people.

For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, which is Christ
the Lord.

passion on him.

2:8-11

Go, and do thou likewise. But Martha was cumbered

10:37 about 10:40

Glory to God in the highest, and earth peace, good will toward men. 1

on

much

serving.
is

But one thing

needful: ancl

Marv

2:14

Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace. 2:29

hath chosen that good part, which shall not be taken away from her. 20:42 This is an evil generation: they seek a
sign.

light to lighten the Gentiles,


Israel.

and
2:32

21:29

the glory of thy people

Soul, thou hast


for

much
take

Wist ye not that


Father's business?
l

must be about

many

years;

gocxls laid up thine ease, cat,

my
of

drink,

and be merry. 1

22:19

2:49
has

The Douay
will."

Bible

"peace

to

men

fool this night thy soul shall be required of thec, 12:20


*$ee Ecclcsiastcs 8:t$ t p. t8b.

Thou

good

46

THE BIBLE: LUKE


Let your loins be girded about, and Luke 12:35 your lights burning.
If

JOHN
these should hold their peace, the would immediately cry out.

stones

For unto whomsoever much is given, him shall be much required: and to whom men have committed much, of
of

Lake 19:40

God

forbid.

20:16

him they will ask the more. 12:48 The poor, and the maimed, and the
halt,

He
In
souls.

is

not a

God

of the dead, but of

the living.

20:38
patience
possess

and the

blind.

4:2 1

your

ye

your 21:19

Which
tower,

of you, intending to build a

sitteth

not

down

first,

and
14:28

The Son

of

man coming

in a cloud

counteth

the cost, sufficient to finish it?

whether he have
have found
15:6

with power and great glory.

21:27 This do in remembrance of me.

Rejoice with me; for my sheep which was lost.

Not my

will,

22:19 but thine, be done.


22:42

Wasted
living.

his

substance with riotous


15:13

Bring hither the fatted calf,


it

and

kill

For if they do these things in a green tree, what shall be done in the dry?
23:31

15:23

For

this

my

alive again;

he was

son was dead, and is lost, and is found.


15:24

The

place,

which

is

called Calvary.

23:33
Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do. 23: 34

Son, thou art ever with me, and all that I have is thine. l : l $ 3

Lord,

remember

me when

thou
2 3 :4 2

The
of light.

children of this world arc in

coinest into thy

kingdom.

their generation wiser

than the children


16:8

To

day shalt thou be with

me

in

paradise.

2 3 :43
I

He
least

that
is

is

faithful in that

which

is

Father, into thy hands

commend
23:46
Ib.
just.

faithful also in

much: and he
is

my

spirit.

that
in

is

unjust in the least

much.

unjust also 16:10

lie gave
lie

up the ghost*

The

beggar died, and was carried by

was a good man> and a


seek yc the living

the angels into Abraham's bosom. 16:22

23:50

Why
dead?
tales.

among

the 24:5

Between us and you there


gulf fixed.
It

is

a great

16:26

Their words seemed to them as idle


24:11

stone

were better for him that a millwere hanged about his neck,
cast into the sea,
I ,ot's

Did not our heart

bum

within us,
24:32

and he

17:2
1
I

while he talked with us?

Remember
God,
other
I

wife.

7:32
as

thank thcc, that


arc.

am

not

In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the

men

18:11

Word

was God,

God
Out
thee.

be merciful to

me

The Gospd According


St.

to
1:1

a sinner.

John
in

18:13
of thine

And
ness;

the

light

shincth

darkit

own mouth

will

judge 19:22

and the darkness comprehended

not.

1:5

47

THE

BIBLE:

JOHN

There was a man sent from God whose name was John. John 1:6 The true Light, which lighteth every man that cometh into the world.
1:9

He
light.

was a burning and a shining John 5:35


5:39
so

Search the scriptures.

What

are they

among

many?
6; 9

The Word was made flesh, and among us ... full of grace
truth.

dwell

and
1:14

Gather up the fragments main, that nothing be lost.


I

that

re-

6:12

am

the bread of

life.

No man
time.

hath

seen

God

6:35

at

any
1:18

It is

the spirit that quickeneth. 6:63

Behold the

Lamb

of

God, which
1:29

taketh away the sin of the world.

Judge not according to the appearance, 7:24

Can

there any good thing

come out

Never man spake

like this

man.
7:46
you, let
8:7

of Nazareth?

He that
Hereafter ye shall see- heaven open, and the angels of God ascending and

is

without sin

among

him

first

cast a stone at her.


I

descending upon the Son of man.


1:51

Neither do sin no more.


I

condemn

thee: go,

and

8;n

Woman, what
thee?

mine hour

is

have I to do with not yet come.


2:4

the light of the world: he that followcth me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of life. 8:12

am

The

water that was

made

The
wine.
2:9

truth shall

make you

free,

8:32

he had made a scourge of small cords, he drove them all out of


the temple.

When

are of your father the devil there is no truth in him. he


. .
.

Ye

is

liar,

and the father of

it,

2:15

8:44

Make not my Father's house of merchandise.

house

an
2 ;i 6

must work the works of him that sent me, while it is day: the night cometh, when no man can work.
I

Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God.


3-3

9-4

Whether he be a sinner or no. know not: one thing I know, that,


I

The wind bloweth where

it

whereas
listeth,
I

was blind,

now

see.

9:25
10:9

and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, and whither it goeth; so is every one that is
born of the Spirit
3:8

am the door, I am come that

they might have

life,

and that they might


abundantly.
I

have

it

more
io;ao

How can
God

these things be?

3:9

so loved the world, that

he gave

the good shepherd: the good shepherd givcth 1m life for the sheep.
1

am

his only begotten Son, that believeth in him should not

whosoever perish, but


3:16
is,

0:1

have everlasting

life.

Other sheep
this fold.
I

have, which are not of

10:26

The hour cometh, and now


Father in
spirit

when
4:23

the true worshippers shall worship the

and

in truth.

the resurrection, and the life: he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live:

am

THE BIBLE: JOHN

ACTS
saith

in

And whosoever liveth and me shall never die. 1


Jesus wept.
It is

believeth

Pilate

unto

him,

What

is

truth?

John 18:38
18:40

John 11:25-26
11:35

Now Barabbas was a robber.


Behold the man!
*

expedient for us, that one man 1 1 .-50 should die for the people.

19:5

Woman,

behold thy son!


not.2

19:26
19:30

the light with you. Walk while ye have the light, lest 12 darkness come upon you. .-3 5
a little while
is

Yet

It is finished.

Touch me

20:17

That thou

doest,

do quickly.
13:27
I

Then
not

saith

faithless,

he to Thomas ... be but believing. 20:27

A
you,

new commandment

give unto

That ye love one another.


*3'34

Blessed are they that have not seen, and yet have believed. 20:29

Let not your heart be troubled: ye believe in God, believe also in me. In my Father's house are many mansions: if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place
for you.

Suddenly there came a sound from heaven as of a rushing mighty wind, The Acts of the Apostles 2:2

14:1-2

I will come again, and receive you unto myself; that where I am, there ye

There appeared unto them cloven tongues like as of fire, and it sat upon each of them. And they were all filled with the Holy Ghost, and began to speak with
other tongues.
Silver
3: 3~4
I

may be
I
life.

also.

14:3

and gold have


I thce.

none; but such


3:6

am

the way, the truth, and the


14:6

as I
If

have give
this

counsel or this work be of

I will

not leave you comfortless.


14:18

men, it But

will
if

come

to nought:

it
it.

be of God, ye cannot
5'3#~39
perish with thee,

Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you: not as the world givcth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.
14:27

overthrow

Thy money

8:20 In the gall of bitterness, and in the bond of iniquity, 8:23


Saul, yet breathing out threatenings

Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his
friends.

and slaughter against the


the Lord.
Saul,

disciples of

15:13

9:1

Ye have not
chosen you.

chosen me, but


2

have
15:16
1

Saul,

why

persecutest

thou
9:4

me?
It is

Whither goest thou?


joy

6:5

hard for thce to kick against the


9:5
is

Ask, and ye shall receive, that your may be full. 16:24


of

pricks.

He

chosen vessel unto me.


9:15

Be
1

good

cheer;

have overcome
16:33

the world.
Also in Book of the Dead.
*

Immediately there as it had been scales.


*Kcce homo.
Noli

fell

from

his eyes

Common

Prayer, Burial of

9:18

The

Vulgate

Quo

vadis?

The Vulgate

me

cangerc.

The Vulgate

49

THE BIBLE: ACTS

ROMANS
I

What God hath cleansed, that call Acts 10:15 not thou common.
God
The
is

am ...

Cilicia, a citizen of

Jew of Tarsus, a city no mean city.

in

no

1 respecter of persons.

Acts 21:39

10:34

Brought up
Gamaliel.

in this city at the feet of

gods are likeness of men

come down
.

to us in the

22:3
chief

14:11

We
us.

also

are

men

of like passions

with you.

14:15
over into Macedonia, and help

Come

captain answered, a great sum obtained I this freedom. And Paul said, But I was free 22:28 born.

And With

the

16:9

God
wall.

shall

smite thee, thou whitcd


23:3

Certain
sort.

lewd fellows of the baser


17:5

Revilest thou God's high priest?

of Athens, I perceive that in all things ye are too superstitious. For as I passed by, and beheld your devotions, I found an altar with this
inscription,

Ye men

23:4
I

am

Pharisee,

the

son

of

Pharisee.

23:6

TO THE UNKNOWN
17:22-23

conscience void of offence toward

GOD.
God
that

God, and toward men.

24:16
I

the world, and all things therein, seeing that he is Lord of heaven and earth, dwelleth not in

made

When
I

have a convenient season,

will call for thee,

24:25
2 5:11

temples made with hands; Neither is worshipped with


seeing he giveth to
all life,

appeal unto Caesar*

men's

hands, as though he needed any thing,

Paul, thou art beside thyself; learning doth make thee mad.

much
26:24

and breath,
I

and

all

things;

hath made of one blood all nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the earth. 1 7:24-36

And

not mad but speak forth the words of truth and soberness. 2612 5
.
.

am

For
corner.

this

For in him we live, and move, and have our being; as certain also of your own poets have said, For we are also his
2

thing was not done in a

26:26

Almost thou pcrsuadest


Christian.

me

to

be

offspring.

17:28

26:28
judgcst another, thou

Your
heads.

blood

be

upon

your

own
18:6

Wherein thou
condemnest

thyself.

Mighty

in the Scriptures.

The
18:24

Mave not so much as heard whether there be any Holy Ghost.


19:2 All with one voice about the space of two hours cried out, Great is Diana of

We

Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the Romans 2:1


a

These, having not the law, are unto themselves.

law
2:14

Wh^re no
gression.

law

is,

there

is

no
in

trans4:1 5

the Ephesians.
It
is

a 9:

34

Who

against

hope believed

more
is

blessed to give than to

hope. 4:18
did
5:20

receive.

20:35
no
respect
of

*For there
God.
a

persons

with
iosb;

Where sin abounded, much more abound.


him.
5

grace

Romans a:iz See Aeschylus, p. 780; Cleanthes, p. Aratus, p. 104 a; and Dante, p. i6ib.

Death hath no more dominion over


6:9

THE BIBLE: ROMANS


I

CORINTHIANS
is

speak after the manner of men. Romans 6:19


is

Vengeance
the Lord.

mine;

I will

repay, saith

Romans
evil,

12:19
12:21

The wages of sin gift of God is eternal

death; but the


6:23

life.

Be not overcome of come evil with good.

but over-

The good
the
do. 1
evil

that

I
I

which

would I do not: but would not, that I


7:19

The powers
God.

that be are ordained of


13:1
all
is

Render therefore to
tribute to
to

their dues:

Who

shall deliver

me

from the body


7:24

whom

tribute

due; custom

of this death?

Heirs of God, and joint-heirs with Christ, 8:17

custom; fear to honour to whom honour.

whom

whom

fear;

Owe no man
one another.

anything, but to love 13.7-8

For we know that the whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain together
until

Love

is

now.

8:22

the fulfilling of the law. 13:10


is

All things work together for them that love God.


If

good

to

The
hand:
of

night

far spent, the


let

day

is

at

8:28
against
8:31

let us therefore cast off

darkness,

and

us

the works put on the

God

be for

us,

who can be

armour of

light.

us?

Who

shall separate us

from the love


8:35

of Christ?

Let us walk honestly, as in the day; not in rioting and drunkenness, not in chambering and wantonness, not in

Neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, Nor height, nor depth, nor any other

and envying. But put yc on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make not provision for the flesh, to
strife
fulfil

the lusts thereof. 1

13:12-14
14:1

be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. 8:38-39
creature, shall

Doubtful disputations.
his

Let every man be fully persuaded in own mind. 14:5

Hath not the

potter power over the

clay, of the same lump to make one vessel unto honour, and another unto

For none of us liveth to himself, and no man dictli to himself.

dishonour?

9:21

For who hath known the mind of the Lord? 11:34 Let love be without dissimulation.
12:9

For whether we live, we live unto the Lord; and whether we die, we die unto the Lord whether we live therefore, or die, we are the Lord's, 14:7-8
:

Let

us

therefore

follow

after

the

things which

make

for peace.

14:19

Be kindly
Given

affectioned one to another

with brotherly love.


to hospitality.
in

12:10
12:13

then that are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weak, and not to please ourselves. 15:1

We

Be not wise Recompense


evil.

your

own

God

conceits.
evil

hath chosen the foolish things

to

no man

of the world to

for

God hath chosen


the world to
arc mighty.

12:16-17

confound the wise; and the weak things of confound the things which

If it

be

possible, as

much
all

as lieth in

you, live peaceably with

men,
12:18

First Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the Corinthians 1:27


1

The

See Euripides, p. $4b, and Ovid, p. uga.

See

St,

Augustine, p. 1472, note

i.

THE BIBLE:
As
it is

CORINTHIANS
1

written,

Eye hath not

seen,

charity,

am become

as

sounding

nor ear heard.


I

I Corinthians 2:9

have planted, Apollos watered; but


the increase.
together with

brass, or a tinkling cymbal. I Corinthians 13:1

God gave

3:6

We are labourers
Every man's

Though I have all faith, so that I could remove mountains, and have not
charity, I

God:
3:9

am

nothing.
I

ye are God's husbandry.

And though
body
to

bestow

all

my
I

goods to
give

work

shall

be made

feed the poor, and though

my
not

manifest: for the day shall declare it, because it shall be revealed by fire; and the fire shall try every man's work of

be

burned,

and

have

what

sort it

is.

3:13

For the temple of temple ye are.

God

it profiteth me nothing. Charity suffereth long, and is kind; charity envieth not; charity vaunteth not itself, is not puffed up. 13:2-^

charity,

is

holy, which

Beareth
things, things.

all

things,
all

believeth

all

3:17

are made a spectacle unto the world, and to angels, and to men.

We

hopeth

things, cndureth all

Charity never faileth,

13.7-8

4:9

We

know

in part,

and we prophesy
is

Absent
spirit.

in

body,

but

present

in

5:3

in part. feut when

that

which

perfect

is

little

leaven leaveneth the whole


:6

lump.
It is better to

marry than to burn.

79
The
away.
fashion

come, then that which is in part shall be done away. When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when 1 became a man, I
put away childish things. For now we sec through a glass, darkly; but then face to face:* now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known.
1

of this world passeth

7 : 31

Knowledge puffeth up, * but charity


edifieth.
I

8;i
all

am made

things to

all

men.
9:22

And now
charity,

abideth faith, hope, charity,


is

these three; but the greatest of these

Know
prize?

a race run

ye not that they which run in all, but one rcceiveth the

19:9-13

If

the

trumpet

give

an

uncertain

sound,
battle?

who

shall prepare himself to the

i^;

Let him that thinkcth he standetli take heed lest he fall. j oa 2


All things are lawful for me, but all 1 things are not expedient. 0:23

Ixit all

things be

done decently and


'i-f^o

in order.

And
also,

last

of

all

lie

was seen of sue


out
of
clue

as

of

one

born

The
If

earth

is

the Lord's,

and the
10:26

time.

fulness thereof.

For
that
apostle,

am

am

woman
I

have long

hair, it

is

the least of the apostles, not meet to be called an because I the persecuted

glory to her.

n;a j
speak with the tongues of
angels,

church of God.
*In the Revised Standard Version thttrlty throughout this chtpter 1* translated a tow the love of mankind in the ieme of the Creek a%ap4 and the Ijntln caritta,
1

Though

men and
1

of

and

have

not

Men

ear,

have not heard, nor perceived by the neither hath the Isaiah 64:4 eye seen.

See Homer, p. 65a. See Genesis 33:30, p, 7b,

THE BIBLE:
But by the
am.
grace of

CORINTHIANS
I

GALATIANS

God

am what

I Corinthians 15:8-10
is

we

Seeing then that we have such hope, use great plainness of speech.
II Corinthians 3:12

But now
dead,

and become the

Christ risen from the firstfruits of

them
came

that slept. For since by man

came death, by man


all die,

are seen are things temporal; but the things which are not seen are eternal.

The

which

4:18

also the resurrection of trie dead.


as in

For

Adam

even so in

We

walk by

faith,

not by

sight.

Christ shall

all

be made

alive.

57

15:20-22

Now is
report

the accepted time.

6:2
evil

The
stroyed

last
is

enemy

that shall be

de-

By honour and dishonour, by


and good
report.

death.

15:26
corrupt

6:8

Evil communications manners.

good
15:33
is

As having nothing, and yet pos1 sessing all things.

6:10
9:7
zi,-6

Thou

fool, that

which thou sowest


it

God

loveth a cheerful giver.


I

not quickened, except

One
It is

15:36 star differeth from another star


15:41
in corruption; it
is

die.

Though
For ye

be rude in speech.

in glory.

suffer fools gladly, seeing ye

yourselves are wise,

11:19

sown
first

raised in
1

Forty stripes
5:42

save one.
flesh. 2
is

incorruption.

11:24
12:7
perfect
in

The

man

is

of the earth, earthy.

thorn in the

shall

Behold, I show you a mystery; not all sleep, but we shall all be

We

My strength weakness.
The

made

12:9

changed, In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump: for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be

grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Ghost, be with you
all. 8

13:14

The

changed.

For this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality. 15:51-53
swallowed up in victory. 1 death, where is thy sting? O grave, 1 where is thy victory? 5:54-55 Watch ye, stand fast in the faith,

hands of fellowship, The Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the Galatums 2:9
right

Weak and
It
is

beggarly elements.
4-*9

Death

is

good to be zealously affected always in a good thing. 4:18

Ye arc

fallen

from

grace.

5:4

quit you like


If

2 men, be strong.

16:13

any

man

love not the Lord Jesus

Christ, natha.

let

him be Anathema Mara16:22

For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh: and these are contrary the one to the other: so that yc cannot do the things that ye would. 5:17

Not
for

of the letter, but of the spirit: the letter killeth, but the spirit
life.

The

fruit of the Spirit

is

love, joy,

peace, longsuffering,
ness, faith,

gentleness, good-

givcth

The Second
l

Epistle of Paul the


1

Meekness, temperance.

5:22-23

Apostle to the Corinthians 3:6


See Isaiah 25:8, p. gib, and Hosea
4:9, p. isa.
ij.-tj,

p.

S5b-

Terence, p. 1098, and Wotton, p. joob. Sec Judges a:$, p. na. AUo in Book of Common Prayer, Morning

'Sec / Samuel

Prayer [end].

53

THE BIBLE: GALATIANS


Every
burden.

THESSALONIANS

man

shall

bear

his

own
6:

Gdatians
deceived;

Be not
he

for whatsoever a also reap.

God is not mocked man soweth, that shal


6:

Whose end is destruction, whose God is their belly, and whose glory is in their shame, who mind earthly things.
Philippians 3:19

Let us not be weaiy in well doing


6:9 strengthened with might by his Spirit in the inner man. The Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the Ephesians 3:16

God, which passcth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus. 1
of

The peace

To be

47
Whatsoever things arc
true, whatso-

Carried about with


doctrine.

every

wind

oi

ever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things arc pure, whatsoever things are lovely,

4:14

are members one of another. Be ye angry, and sin not: let not the sun go down upon your wrath.

We

whatsoever things are of good report; if there be any virtue, and if there t>e any praise, think on these things. 4:8
I have learned, in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content. 4:1 1

4:25-26
Speaking to yourselves in psalms

hymns and
Lord.
1

spiritual songs,

and singing and


the
5:19
6:11

By him were
are in heaven,
visible

all

things created, that

and that arc in earth,

making melody

in your heart to

and

invisible

...

all

things

Put on the whole armour of God.


For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against rulers of the powers, against the darkness of this world, against spiritual
wickedness in high places. Wherefore take unto you the whole armour of God, that ye may be able to withstand in the evil day, and having done all, to stand. 6:12-13

were created by him, and for him: And he is before all things, and by

him

all

The Epistk
Touch
not;

things consist. of Paul the Apostle to the Colossiaw

1:16-27
2:22

taste

not;

handle not,

Set your affection on things above, not on things on the earth, 3:2

Where

there

is

neither Greek nor

To
gain.

live

is

Christ,

and

to

die

is

Jew, circumcision nor uncircmncision, Barbarian, Scythian, bond nor free: but Christ is all, and in all, 1
3:1

The

Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the Philippians 1:21

Fathers, provoke not your children to anger, lest they be discouraged. 3:2 1

out your fear and trembling.

Work

own

salvation with

Let your speech be alway with grace, seasoned with salt.


'

4:6

2:12

For it both to
pleasure.

is

God which
and
to

Luke, the beloved physician.

worketh in you

4; 1 4

will

do of

Labour of

love,

his

good
2:13

This one thing

The First Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the The&alonittng 1:5

I do, forgetting

those

things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are
before,
I
1

own

Study to be quiet, and to do your business. i : jj


of the Lord so

The day
3
:1

cometh

as a

press toward the mark.

3~*4

thief in the night.


1

^
Cammtm
Prayer,

Sce

Book

of

Common
59!).

Prayer,

Morning

Also

in

Book

of

Prayer (Venite), p.

Communion

Haly

(Blessing).

54

THE BIBLE:

THESSALONIANS

HEBREWS
love of

Ye are all the children of light, and the children of the day: we are not of the night, nor of darkness.
I Thessalonians 5:5

The
evil. 1

money

is

the root of

all

Timothy 6:10

Fight the good fight of faith, lay hold on eternal life. 6:12

and

Putting on the breastplate of faith love; and for an helmet, the hope
5:8
5:1 7
fast that

Rich

in

good works.

6:18

of salvation.

Science falsely so called.

6:20
spirit

Pray without ceasing.


Prove
is

For

God

hath not given us the

all

things; hold

which
5:21

of fear; but of power, of a sound mind.

and of

love,

and

good.

The Second

The

law

is

good,

if

man

use

it

Epistle of Paul the Apostle to Timothy 1:7

lawfully.

The

First Epistle Apostle to

of Paul the

A workman
ashamed.

that needeth not to be

Timothy
chief.

1:8

2:15

Christ Jesus save sinners; of

came

into the world to

Be
I

instant in season, out of season.

whom I am
not

4:2

1:15

For
his

if

man know

how

to rule

have fought a good fight, I have finished rny course, I have kept the
faith.

house, how shall he take care of the church of God? x 3:5

own

4:7

The Lord reward him


his works.

Not
their
iron.

greedy of filthy lucre.


lies

3:8

according to 4:14
are pure. of Paul to

Speaking

in

conscience

hypocrisy; scared with

having a hot
4:2

Unto the pure all things The Epistte

Titus 2:15

Every creature of God is good, and nothing to be refused, if it be received with thanksgiving. 4:4
Refuse
fables.

Making mention of thee always

in

my prayers.
The
Epistle of Paul to

Philemon

1:4

profane

and

old

wives*

Who

maketh

4.7

his angels spirits,


fire.

and

his ministers a

flame of

But if any provide not for his own, and specially for those of his own house, he hath denied the faith, and is worse than an infidel. 5:8

The

Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the Hebrews 2:7

They learn to be idle, wandering about from house to house; and not only idle, but tattlers also and busybodies, speaking things which they
ought not. 5:13 Drink no longer water, but use a little wine for thy stomach's sake.
5:23

The word of God is quick, and powerful, and sharper than any twoedged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerncr of the thoughts and intents of
the heart. 4:12
to

Strong meat bclongeth


are of full age.

them

that

5:14

We brought nothing into


and
out. 2
1

this world,

They
of

it

is

certain

we can

God

carry nothing

crucify to themselves the Son afresh, and put him to an open

shame.
1

6:6
and
Plato, p. 943.

6:7
Sec Sophocles, p. 8aa,

Sec Sophocles, p. 82a.

*Also in Book of the Dead. Sec also


Player, p. 3a,

Common
The

Prayer, Burial of Song of the Harp'

Radix
Prologue,

malorum
I.

est
[c.

cupid it as.
1387],

CHAUCER.
Pardoner's

The Canterbury Tales


6

The

and

Ecdesiasttts 5:*$, p, a8a.

THE BIBLE: HEBREWS Without shedding


remission.
of blood
is no Hebrews 9:22

PETER

For the wrath of man worketh not the righteousness of God.


ye doers of the word, hearers only.

Faith

is

hoped
seen.

for,

the substance of things the evidence of things no


11:1
also are

Be

James 1:19-20 and not


1:22
i

Wherefore seeing we

com

Unspotted from the world.

.-27
is

passed about with so great a cloud oJ witnesses ... let us run with patience
the race that
is

As the body without the


dead, so faith without works
also.

spirit
is

dead
2:26

set before us,


12

Looking unto Jesus the author and


finisher or our faith.

How
kindleth!

:i-2

great

matter

little

fire

Whom
teneth.

3:5
it is

the

Lord loveth he chas12:6

The tongue can no man tame;


an unruly
evil.

3:8

The
fect.

spirits

of just

men made

per-

12:23

This wisdom dcscendeth not from above, but is earthly, sensual, devilish.
3:15
Resist the devil,

Let brotherly love continue. Be not forgetful to entertain strangers: for thereby some have entertained
angels unawares.

and he

will flee

from
4:7

you.

13:1-2

The Lord
fear

is

my helper,
shall

what man

and I will not do unto me.


13:6

your life? It vapour, that aDpeareth for a and then vanisneth away.
is

What

is

even a
time,

little

4:14

Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever. 13:8

patient therefore, brethren, unto the coming of the Lord. Behold, the

Be

husbandman waiteth
fruit

for the

precious

For here have we no continuing but we seek one to come.

of

the
it,

city,

13:14

patience for

hath long until he receive the early


earth,
5:7

and

and

latter rain.

To do good and
is

to

communicate

forget not: for with such sacrifices God well pleased. 13:16

Ye have heard
Job.

of

the patience of
5;

Let patience have her perfect work, that ye may be perfect and entire,

The
^

effectual

fervent

righteous

man
The

prayer

of a
j;i6

availeth

much.

wanting nothing. If any of you lack wisdom,


ask of God.

Hope
let

to the end.
First Epistle

him

General of Peter in j

The General

Epistle of

All flesh

James 2:4-5
Blessed is the man that endureth temptation: for when he is tried, he shall receive the crown of life. i .-12

of

man

is as grass, and all the glory as the flower of grass. The grass

withercth,
fallcth

and

the

lower

thereof

away: But the word of the I/>rd endureth

forever. 1

Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights, with whom is no
variableness, neither

1:34-25
lusts,

Abstain from fleshly against the soul.

which war
3:11

shadow of turning.
1:17

Honour

all

men. Love the brother2:17

hood. Fear God. Honour the king.


1

Be swift to hear, slow to speak, slow to wrath:

See Isaiah 40:6,

p,

b.

THE BIBLE:
Ornament
spirit.

PETER

REVELATION

of

meek and

quiet

I Peter 3:4

Giving honour unto the wife, as unto


the weaker vessel.

Patmos, for the word of God, and for the testimony of Jesus Christ. The Revelation of St. John the Divine 1:9

37
multitude of
4:8

What
and send which are

Charity
sins.

shall cover the

thou seest, write in a book, it unto the seven churches


in Asia.
I

1:11

A
away,

crown of glory that


be

fadeth not
5:4

And

being turned,

saw seven golden


1:12

candlesticks.

Be

sober,

vigilant;

because your

adversary the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom he may devour. 5:8

His feet like unto fine brass, as if they burned in a furnace; and his voice as the sound of many waters. 1:15

When
dead.
I

And
hearts.

saw him,

I fell at his feet as

the

day

star

arise

in

your

1:17
that liveth,
I

The Second

Epistle General of

am he

and was dead;


of hell

Peter 1:19

and, behold,
death.

am

alive for evermore,

Amen; and have the keys

and

of

The dog
again.

is

turned to his

own vomit
2:22

1:28

God

is

light,
all.

and

in

him

is

no

darkness at

I have somewhat against thee, because thou hast left thy first love. 2:4

The

First Epistle

General of

To him
Be thou
will

that overcometh will


life.

I give

John 1:5 If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not
in us.
1:8
is

to cat of the tree of


faithful

2.7

unto death, and I 2:20 of life. a crown thce give


shall

lie

antichrist,

that

dcnieth

Father and the Son.

the 2:22

He
iron.
I

rule

them with
the morning

a rod

of

2:27

seeth

this world's good, and brother have need, and shutteth up his bowels of compassion from him, how dwelleth the love of

Whoso

hath

will give

him

star.

2:28
I

his

will

not blot out his name out of


life,

the book of
I

3:5

God
God;

in

him?
that

3:17
loveth
is

He

not

knoweth not
4:8

for

God
is

love.

There

no

fear in love;

but perfect
4:18

love casteth out fear.

thy works, that thou art nor hot: I would thou wcrt cold or hot. So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spew thce out of my mouth. 3:1 5-16
neither cold

know

Raging waves of the sea, foaming out their own shame; wandering stars, to

Behold, knock.

stand at the door, and


3:20

whom

is

reserved

the

blackness

of

darkness for ever.

The General
I

Epistle of Jude 13

John,

who

also

am

your brother,

and companion in tribulation, and in the kingdom and patience of Jesus


Christ, was in the
isle

The first beast was like a lion, and the second beast like a calf, and the third beast had a face as a man, and the fourth beast was like a flying eagle. And the four beasts had each of
them
were
six
full

wings about him; and they


of eyes within: and they rest

that

is

called

57

THE BIBLE: REVELATION


not day and night, saying, Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty, which was, and is, and is to come.
Revelation 4:7-8

he had the mark, or the name of the


beast.

Revelation 23:17
is

Babylon
1

fallen, is fallen, that great

city.

14:8

Thou

hast created

all things,

and

for

thy pleasure they are and were created.


4:11

Blessed are the dead which die in the that they may rest from Lord .
.

their labours. 2

24:23

A book

sealed with seven seals.

And he

5 :l

gathered

a place called in

them together into the Hebrew tongue


26:26
lords,

He went
conquer.

forth conquering,

and to
6:2

Armageddon. He is Lord of
kings.

and King of
27:24

Behold a pale horse: and his name that sat on him was Death, and Hell 6:8 followed with him.

Another book was opened, which is the book of life. 20:22


I

Four angels standing on the four corners of the earth, holding the four
winds of the earth.
7:1

earth: 8
first

saw a new heaven and a new for the first heaven and the earth were passed away; and there
sea.
I

Hurt not the


nor the
trees.

earth, neither the sea,

was no more

7:3

and kindreds, and peoand tongues. 7:9 These are they which came out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes, and made them white in the
All nations,
ple,

John saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down from God out of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned
for her

And

husband.
shall

22:2-2
* all tears

God

their eyes;

from wipe away and there shall be no more

blood of the lamb.

7:14

They
thirst

light

shall hunger no more, neither any more; neither shall the sun on them, nor any heat. 7:16

neither sorrow, nor crying, death, neither shall there be any more pain:
for the former things are passed away.

21:4

There

shall

The name Wormwood.

of

the

be no night there.
22:5
unjust, let

star

is

called

8:11 of
this

He
still:

that

is

The kingdoms
of his Christ.

him be

world

unjust

arc

become the kingdoms

of our

Lord and
11:25

There was war in heaven: Michael and his angels fought against the dragon; and the dragon fought and his
angels,

and he which is filthy, let hint Ixr filthy still: and he that is righteous, let him be righteous still: and he that is holy, let him be holy still. And, behold, I come quickly.

zzm-tz
I am Alpha and Omega, the begin* ning and the end, the first and the

great dragon was cast out, that old serpent, called the Devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world.

And The

prevailed not.

22.7-8

last.
Isaiah a/:?, p, 51!*,

32: i ?

Also in Book of

Common

Prayfr t Runat

22:9

No man

might buy or

sell,

save that

the Dead. Set Isaiah rfy:/;, p. jjjb, *Scc Isaiah *$:*, p. jtb.

THE MISSAL

THE BOOK OF

COMMON PRAYER
is

THE MISSAL
Dominus vobiscum.

He
deed. 1

risen.

The Lord

is

risen in-

The Lord be

with you.
Blessing

Morning

Prayer, Easter, p. 5

Mea
culpa.

culpa,

mea

culpa,

mea maxima

places, to

moveth us, in sundry acknowledge and confess our manifold sins and wickedness.
Scripture
Ib. Minister's

The

Through
through

my

fault,

through

my

Opening Words,

p. 5

fault,

my

most grievous

fault.

We have erred,
ways
16.

The Confieor
Kyrie, eleison.

and strayed from thy

like lost sheep.

General Confession, p. 6

Lord, have mercy on us.

The

Kyrie

Gloria in excelsis Deo. Et in terra pax hominibus bonae voluntatis. Glory to God in the highest. And on earth peace to men of good will. 1

We have left undone those things which we ought to have done; And we have done those things which we ought not to have done. 16.
Have
offenders.

mercy

upon

us,

miserable
16.

The
Agnus Dei, qui
miserere nobis.
tollis

Gloria

Who

desireth

not the death of a

peccata mundi,

sinner, but rather that he from his wickedness and live.

may

turn

O Lamb

of

God, who takest away

16.

The

Declaration of

the sins of the world, have mercy on us. 2 Prayer


culpa, quae talem ac tantum mcruit habere Re4cmptorcm. C) happy fault, which has deserved to have such and so mighty a Redeemer. 8
fclix

Absolution, p. 7

Let us come before his presence with


thanksgiving;
in

and show him with psalms. 2

ourselves glad

16. Venite, p.

Exsultet on

In his

hand

arc

all

the corners of the

Holy Saturday

earth; and the strength of the hills is his also.

The

COMMON PRAYER*
Movable
feasts.

THE BOOK OF

his

sea is his, and he made it; and hands prepared the dry land.
16.

Tables and Rules, p. xxxi


1

See Luke 1:14, and note p. 46a. See John 7:39, p. 48a. This dates from the seventh century at the

Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost; As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. 16. Gloria Patri, p. 9 Amen.

latest,

and may be much

older.

It

ha

been
of the people, "according to the various exiPreface to the gency of times and occasions/' edition for the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America [1789] Also in The Book of Common Prayer is the prayer by Cardinal Newman on p. $g8a. Page numbers cited art for any printing of

attributed to St. Augustine and St, Ambrose. * It is a most invaluable part of that blessed
"liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free/' that in hi worship different forms and usages

may without offence be allowed, provided the substance of the Faith be kept entire; and that, in every Church, what cannot be clearly determined to belong to Doctrine must be referred
to Discipline; and therefore, by common consent and authority, may be altered, abridged, enlarged, amended, or otherwise disposed of, as may seem most convenient for the edification

The Book

of

Common
risen

MIe is risen. The Lord is


*

Mark

Prayer. 1616 indeed.

Luke

34:34

See Ephesians $:ZQ, p. 54a.

59

THE BOOK OF

COMMON

PRAYER

The
I

noble army of Martyrs.


Prayer,
in

Morning
believe

Te Deum,
the

p. 10

We, thine unworthy servants, do give thee most humble and hearty thanks
to us,
for all thy goodness and loving-kindness bless thee for and to all men;

God
of

Father Al-

mighty,

Heaven and earth: And in Jesus Christ his only Son our Lord: Who was conceived by the Holy Ghost, Born of the Virgin Mary:

Maker

We

our creation, preservation, and

all

the

but above all, for blessings of this life; thine inestimable love in the redemption of the world

Suffered
crucified,

under
dead,
hell;

Pontius

Pilate,

Was
de-

and buried:

He

scended into

The

third day

he rose

Christ; for the means of grace, the hope of glory,

by our Lord Jesus and for


Prayer,

again from the dead: He ascended into heaven, And sitteth on the right hand of God the Father Almighty: From thence he shall come to judge the quick

Morning

General

Thanksgiving, p. 29
dost promAlmighty God, who that when two or three arc gathered l thou wilt grant together in thy Name their requests; Fulfil now, O Lord, the desires and petitions of thy servants, as may be most expedient for them.
. .

ise

and the dead.


I

believe in the

Holy Ghost: The

holy Catholic Church; The Communion of Saints: The Forgiveness of sins: The Resurrection of the body: And the Life everlasting.
16. Apostles' Creed, p.

16,

Prayer of St. Chrysostom,


p,

20

15

of his Father before all worlds, God of God, Light of Light, Very God of very God; Begotten, not made; Being of one substance with the

Begotten

thee,

Lighten our darkness, we beseech O Lord; and by thy great mercy defend us from all perils and dangers of

this night.

Father;

Who

By whom

all

for us

men

things were made: and for our salvation

Evening Prayer,

Collect for
Perils, p. 32

Aid against

came down from heaven, And was incarnate by the Holy Ghost of the Virgin Mary, And was made man.
16.

From

pride, vainglory,

from envy, hatred, and

malice,'

and hypocrisy; and all

Nicene Creed,

p. 26

uncharitableness, Good Lord, deliver us.

O
and

whom

art the author of peace lover of concord, in knowledge of

God, who

The
From
all

Litany,

/?.

5^

standeth our eternal


is

life,

whose

the deceits of the world, the 16. flesh, and the devil.

service

perfect freedom; Defend us thy humble servants in all assaults of

From

battle

and murder, and horn


16.

our enemies.
16.

sudden death.

A Collect -for Peace, p.

17

Give to
concord.

all

all

God, the Creator and Preserver of mankind, we humbly beseech thee for all sorts and conditions of men; that thou wouldest be pleased to make thy ways known unto them, thy saving
all

nations unity, ' peace, and 16. p. 56


16. p.

The

kindly fruits of the earth.

57

health unto
16.

nations.

A Prayer for All Conditions


of

Almighty God, unto whom all hearts arc open, all desires known, and from whom no secrets are hid; Cleanse the
thoughts of our hearts by the inspiration of thy Holy Spirit, that we may perfectly love thee, and
worthily magnify thy holy

Men,

p,

18

We
ness
all

commend to thy fatherly goodthose who are any ways afflicted,

or distressed, in mind, body, or estate. 16. p. 19

Name. Hofy Communion,


jc8:ao, p,

Collect, J>.

67

Sec Matthew

454.

60

THE BOOK OF

COMMON

PRAYER

THE UPANISHADS

acknowledge and bewail our manifold sins and wickedness, Which we, from time to time, most grievously have committed, By thought^ word, and deed, Against thy Divine Majesty, Provoking most justly thy wrath and

We

To have and to hold from this day forward, for better for worse, for richer for poorer, in sickness and in health, to love and to cherish, till death us do
part.

do earnestly indignation against us. repent, And are heartily sorry for these our misdoings; The remembrance of

We

Solemnization of Matrimony, p. 301

With
Those

this

Ring

thee wed.
16. p.

them is of them

grievous unto us;


is

The burden
gether let
In

302
to-

intolerable.

whom God

hath joined
16. p.

HoZy Communion, General


Confession, p. 75

no man put asunder. 1


303
in

the

midst

of

life

we

are

with Angels and Arch- death. 2 Burial of the Dead, p. 332 all the company of with and angels, Earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust heaven, we laud and magnify thy to dust; in sure and certain hope of the thce. evermore praising glorious Name; Resurrection unto eternal life. 16. Proper Preface, p. 77

Therefore

Miserable sinners,
Ib.

16. p.

333

The

Exhortations, p. 86

Read,

mark,

learn,

and

The iron entered into his soul. The Psalter, Psalm 105:18, p. 472

inwardly

digest [the Scriptures], Collect for the

Second Sunday
in Advent, p. 92

COMMON PRAYER,
Grant that the old Adam in this Child may be so buried, that the new man may be raised up in him. Public Baptism of Infants, Blessing on the Child

THE BOOK OF ENGLISH

Dost thou renounce the devil and all his works, the vain pomp and
. .
.

glory of the world, with all covetous desires of the same, and the sinful desires of the flesh, so that thou wilt

not follow, nor be led by them? Holy Baptism, p. 276

To

love,

cherish,

and

to

obey.
I

An

outward and

visible sign

of an

Solemnization of Matrimony

inward and

spiritual grace.

With
endow.
p.

all

my

worldly goods

thee
16.

Offices of Instruction, Questions

on the Sacraments,
Is

292

not by any to be entered into unadvisedly or lightly; but reverently,


discreetly, advisedly, soberly, fear of God.

THE UPANISHADS
800-500 B.C.*

and

in the

Thou
1

art that. 4
etc.

Chandogya Upanishad 6.87,


Sec

Solemnization of Matrimony,
p.
If

300

any man can show just cause, why they may not lawfully bo joined together, let him now speak, or else
hereafter for ever hold his peace.
Ih.

Matthew 19:6, p. 4ja. "This h derived from a 3Utin antiphon, said to havr been composed by Notker, a monk of St. Gall, in t)ii, while watching some workmen
building a bridge at Martinnbrtickc, in peril of their livn. It form* the groundwork of Luther'*

antiphon /V Mintc.. "Amimt Indian literary chronology con* I hr dutn given are approximate. jrctui.il
i

forsaking all othois, keep thce only unto her, so long as re,

Wilt thou

*Tat
.
.

\\M\\ aii
i> r,

tilth
ii

th.ir

(Sanskrit). subtle essence


ttue;
it in

The
is

context:

That
art

the self of this

All.
fh.if.

ihr

the Self.

"Thou

boot

shall live?

Ib. p.

<>

SxrMkrtU."

THE UPANISHADS
Lead

HOMER

me from me me

the

unreal

to

the

A dream,

too,

is

from Zeus.
Iliad, bk. I,

real!

Lead Lead

from darkness to light! from death to immortality! Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 1.3.28


2 thus, not thus.
is

I 63 He knew the things that were and the things that would be and the things that had been before. I, 70
If

The

Not
and
Self.

16. 2.3.6

This Self
all

the honey of all beings beings are the honey of this


16. 2.5.14

think,

you arc very valiant, it is a god, I who gave you this gift. I, 178

The gods love the obscure and hate the obvious.8 16. 4.2.2

Speaking, he addressed her winged words. I, 202 and elsewhere

Whoever obeys the


particularly listen.

gods, to

him they
I,

Da
Give,

da da

Be

(that merciful. 5

is)

Be subdued,

218

From

his

tongue

flowed

speech
I,

If the slayer thinks he slays, If the slain thinks he is slain,

sweeter than honey.


Rosy-fingered early-bom.

249
the

dawn
I,

appeared,

Both these do not understand:

477 and elsewhere

He

slays not,

is

not

slain. 6

Kafka Upanishad 2.19

nodded with
lord's

Om. 7
Santi. 8

Passim

son of Kronos [Zeus] spoke, and his darkish brows, and immortal locks fell forward from the
deathless

The

Passim

head,

and he made
I,

great

Olympus tremble.
is

5*8
to

HOMER
C.

The Olympian
oppose.

a difficult foe
I,

yOO

B.C.

589

Sing, goddess, the wrath of Pelcus' son Achilles, a destroying wrath which

Uncontrollable laughter arose the blessed gods. 1

among
I,

599

upon the Achaeans myriad woes, and sent forth to Hades many valiant souls of heroes.
brought

councilor ought not to sleep the whole night through, a man to whom the populace is entrusted, and who has

The
the plan accomplished.

Iliad, bk. I,

many

responsibilities.
is

II,

24

And

of

Zeus was being I, 5

Proud

the spirit of Tens-fostered

1 Translated by F. MAX MCLLER. *Neti neti. The only possible description of the world soul self. The context: Not thus, not

their honor comes from 7x*ns, kings and Zeus, god of council, loves them. II, 296

A
Wng.

thus; for there

is

nothing

else

higher than this

thing.

multitude of rulers is not a g<x>d Let there be one ruler, one

"not thus."
Translated by R, C, ZAEHNER. *The voice of the thunder. The full
skrit
is:

204

He
Sanda-

Da da da
S.

iti.

Damyata

datta

who

[Thersites] was the ugliest man came to Ilium. II, 216

yadhvamiti. See T.
lines 400-433,
5

Eliot,

and note.

The Waste Land,

Translated by F. MAX MILLER. See Emerson, Brahma, p, 6o4a. Gita a,rt> is almost identical.
7

Bhagavad*

Yet with his powers of augurv he [Chromis] did not save himself from dark death. if, g

Om

is

a sacred

syllable

begin and end a scriptural recitation. Santi means "peace." T. S. Eliot, in his note to line 434 of The Waste Land, says, "The Peace which passeth understanding' is our equivalent to this word."

used especially to

The

to be cast aside.

glorious gifts of the gods are not

Ul,

fit;

men's minds are changeable, but when an old

Young

always

man

is

*Also In Odyssey VlUi 396,

62

HOMER
concerned in a matter, he looks both
before and
after.

Victory shifts from

man to man.
VI,
Z.

The
Iliad, bk. Ill,
Z.

Iliad, bk.

339
than

The

108

May men
his

say,

"He

is

far greater

Like cicadas, which sit upon a tree in the forest and pour out their piping voices, so the leaders of Trojans were Ill, 151 sitting on the tower.

father,"

when he
tears.

returns

battle.

from VI, 479

Smiling through

VI, 484

There is no reason to blame the Trojans and the well-greaved Achaeans that for such a woman they long suffer woes. Ill, 156

Attach a golden chain from heaven, and all of you take hold of it, you gods and goddesses, yet would you not be able to drag Zeus the most high from heaven to earth. VIII, 19

Words

like

winter snowflakes.
Ill,

222

The
hears

sun, which sees


things.

all

things and
Ill,

all

277
of

Son

of

Atreus,

what

manner

and unyielding. IX, 158 Hateful to me as the gates of Hades is that man who hides one thing in his heart and speaks another. IX, 312
Hades
is

relentless

speech has escaped the barrier of your teeth? IV, 350

Even when someone


there
is

battles

hard,

Far away in the mountains a shepherd hears their thundering.


not long who battles with nor do his children prattle about his knees when he has come back from battle and the dread
lives

He

the

an equal portion for one who lingers behind, and in the same honor are held both the coward and the brave man; the idle man and he who has done much meet death alike. IX, 318

immortals,

To be both
doer of deeds. 1

a speaker of

words and a IX, 443

fray.

V, 407
at
all

Not

similar arc the race of the

immortal gods and the race of walk upon the earth. 2

men who
V, 441

Prayers are the daughters of mighty Zeus, lame and wrinkled and slantingIX, 502 eyed.

Great-hearted Stcntor with brazen voice, who could shout as loud as fifty other men. V, 785

are effective.

companion's words of persuasion XI, 793

It was built against the will of the immortal gods, and so it did not last for

He was
his fellow

men;

a wealthy man, and kindly to for dwelling in a house

long.

XII, 8
is

by the side of the road, he used to entertain all comers. VI, 14


generation of men is like a generation of leaves: the wind scatters some leaves upon the ground, while others the burgeoning wood
brings

The single best augury one's country.


There
is

to fight for

XII, 243

of very sorry

a strength in the union even men, XIII, 237


all

of sleep

There is a fullness of and of love.


will certainly
all

things, even

XIII, 636

and the season of spring comes on. So of men one generation springs forth and another ceases.* VI, 146 Always to be bravest and to be preeminent above others. VI, 208
forth
1

You

not be able to take

the lead in

things yourself, for to

See Thomas Gray, p. 4403. See Xenophancs, p. 7ob. Sec Pindar, p. ygb, and Aristophanes, p. gib.

one man a god has given deeds of war, and to another the dance, to another the lyre and song, and in another widesounding Zeus puts a good mind.
XIII, 729
1

See James x:a, p* gSb.

HOMER
It is not possible to fight beyond your strength, even if you strive. The Iliad, bk. XIII, Z. 787

which breathe and move


earth.*

The
it

Iliad, bk.
is

upon the XVII, L 446


far

Sweeter

[wrath]

She [Aphrodite] spoke and loosened from her bosom the embroidered girdle of many colors into which all her allurements were fashioned. In it was love and in it desire and in it blandishing persuasion which steals the

by

than the
of

honeycomb dripping with sweetness,


and spreads men.
I

through
lie in

the

hearts

XVIII, 209
the dust
let

too shall

when

am

mind even
death. 1

of the wise.

but renown.
dead,

now

me win
all

noble

XIV, 214
Zeus does not bring
to fulfillment

XVIII, aao
men's plans XVIII, 328

There she met

sleep, the brother of

XIV, 231 and XVI, 672

Ocean,

who

is

the source of

The
of

all.

XIV, 246

Erinyes, who exact punishment men underground if one swears a

false oath.

The
It is

XIX, 359
Achilles will

hearts

of

the
.

noble

turned [by entreaty]

not unseemly for a

may be XV, 203 man to die

Not even

bring

all

his

words to fulfillment.

XX, 369

2 fighting in defense of his country.

XV, 496
Of men who have a sense of honor, more come through alive than are slain, but from those who flee comes neither
glory nor any help.

Miserable mortals who, like leaves, at one moment flame with life, eating the produce of the land, and at another

moment
It is

weakly perish.
for a

XXI, 463
young man mangled by the

XV, 563

entirely seemly killed in battle to lie

of the war is in our hands; the outcome of words is in the council. XVI,

The outcome

630
in

bronze spear. In his death all things appear fair. But when dogs shame the gray head and gray chin and nakedness of an old man killed, it is the most
piteous

But
the

he, whirl

mighty man, lay mightily


of
dust,

thing

that

forgetful

of

his

wretched mortals.

happens among XXIf, 71

horsemanship.

XVI, 775 Once harm has been done, even a


it.

scales,

fool understands

XVII, 32 XVII, 105 more nothing


all

the father held out the golden in them he placed two fates of dread death. XXII, 209

Then

and

The most preferable of evils.8


'

Surely
*

there

is

There are no compacts between lions and men, and wolves and lambs haw no concord. XXII, 362

wretched than a man, of


Sleep,

the things
HESIOD
*iob;
[c,

the

brother of Death.

By the ships there lies a dead man, unwept, unburied: Patroclus,*


XXII,

700 B.C.], The Theogony, I, 736 See Virgil, p. 9 a; Daniel,

j6

p.

Shake-

speare, p. *84a;

Shelley, p. 5683. Sleep, Death's twin brother. TKNNYSON,


[1850], pt.

and

In

Remembering lying now on his

this,

he wept

bitterlv,

side,

now on

his back,

Memoriam
a
8

LXV1U
should be

chosen. CICERO [106-43 B.C.], JD* Officiis ///, / Of harmes two, the lesse is tor to chese. CHAUCER, Troilus and Criseyde bk.
[13711-1 386],
II,
1.

See Horace, p. See Aristotle, p. 97b. Of two evils, the least

mb.

now on The

his face.

XXIV, 9
given

fates

have

mankind

patient soul.

XXIV, 49

Thus have the gods spun the thread


for wretched mortals: that they live in
1

470
always to be chosen. [1380-1471], Imitation of za
is

Of two evils the, less THOMAS A KEMPIS


Christ,

See Artotophanea, p. gib. *$ee Horace, p. mt>; Chaucer,


I

p.

i6$b;
p.

bk.

m,

ch.

Shakespeare, p. *6oa; Milton, p. 5451*; Stott, i; and Byron, p, 557b.

6,

HOMER
grief while they themselves are without cares; for two jars stand on the floor of

The immortals
where There
storm,
fair-haired
life is
is

will

send you to the


is.

Elysian plain at the ends of the earth,

Zeus of the
evils

gifts

which he

gives,

one of L 525

Rhadamanthys

and another

The

of blessings. Iliad, bk. XXIV,

No snow

supremely easy for men. there, nor ever heavy winter


rain,

Tell me, muse, of the man of many resources who wandered far and wide after he sacked the holy citadel of Troy, and he saw the cities and learned the

nor

and Ocean

is

ever

sending gusts of the clear-blowing west wind to bring coolness to men. The Odyssey, bk. IV, I 563

thoughts of

he

suffered in his heart

many men, and on the sea many woes. The Odyssey, bk. I, I i
follies

By

their

own

the fools.

they perished, I, 7

Look now how mortals are blaming the gods, for they say that evils come from us, but in fact they themselves have woes beyond their share because of their own follies. I, 32
Surely these things of the gods.
lie

Olympus, where they say there is an abode or the gods, ever unchanging: it is neither shaken by winds nor ever wet with rain, nor does snow come near it, but clear weather spreads cloudless about it, and a white radiance stretches above it. 1 VI, 42

on the knees
I,

267

You ought not


ways,
1

since

you

to practice childish are no longer that


I,

age.

296

May the gods grant you all things which your heart desires, and may they give you a husband and a home and gracious concord, for there is nothing when a greater and better than this husband and wife keep a household in oneness of mind, a great woe to their enemies and joy to their friends, and win high renown. VI, 180
Zeus,
All strangers and beggars are from and a gift, though small, is
2

rarely arc sons similar to their fathers: most are worse, and a few arc

For

better than their fathers.

II,

276

precious.

VI, 207

Gray-eyed Athena sent them a favorable breeze, a fresh west wind, singing over the wine-dark sea. II, 420

thought.

Their ships are swift as a bird or a VII, 36

We are quick to flare


men on
So
the earth.
it is

up,

we

races of

A
All

young

man

is

embarrassed
Ill,

to

VII, 307

question an older one.

24

men

have need of the gods.


Ill,

men
48

The minds

that the gods do not give all neither good looks grace nor intelligence nor eloquence. VIII, 167
gifts of
>

of the everlasting gods are


Ill,

not changed suddenly.

147

A
wave.

man

small

rock holds back

a
Ill,

great

296

No
his

mortal could vie with Zeus, for


his

mansions and

do not prosper; the slow up with the swift. VIII, 329 Kven if you gods, and all the goddesses too, should be looking on, yet
Kvil deeds

catches

possessions are

deathless.

IV, 78

The

majesty of the gods

their peaceful abodes,

is revealed, and which neither the winds

She [Helen] threw into the wine which they were drinking a drug which takes away grief and passion and brings IV, 220 forgctfulncss of all ills.
*

See / Corinthians *j:irt p.

5b.

shake nor clouds soak with showers, nor does the snow congealed with biting frost besmirch them with its white fall, but an ever cloudless sky vaults them over, and smiles with light LUCRETIUS [95bounteously spread abroad. 55 B.C.], DC Rcrum Natura III, 18 *See Theocritus, p. xo&a.

HOMER
would
I

be glad

to sleep with golden

Aphrodite.

The Odyssey,

bk. VIII,

I 341

tune, one whose livelihood was meager, than rule over all the departed dead. The Odyssey, bk. XI, I 489
Friends,

Among all men on the earth bards have a share of honor and reverence, because the muse has taught them
songs and loves the race of bards. VIII, 479

we have not

till

now been

unacquainted with misfortunes. XII, 208


It is tedious to tell
1 plainly told.

again tales already XII, 4^2


on, the bewitch-

Thus she
embrace
Thrice
I

I longed to mother's ghost. tried to clasp her image, and

spoke;

and

my

dead

The wine

urges

me

thrice it slipped through a shadow, like a dream. 1

my

hands, like XI, 204

ing wine, which sets even a wise man to singing and to laughing gently and rouses him up to dance and "brings forth words which were better unspoken.

They
pus,
forests,

strove to pile Ossa on Olymand on Ossa Pelion with its leafy

XIV, 463
It

that

they

might

scale

the

heavens. 2

XI, 315
is

who

equally wrong to speed a guest does not want to go, and to keep
is

one back

who

is

There
there
is

a time for

many

words, and

eager.

You ought

to

also a

time

for sleep. 8

make welcome the


send forth the one

present guest,

and

who

XI, 379 There is nothing more dread and more shameless than a woman who plans such deeds in her heart as the foul deed which she plotted when she contrived her husband s murder. XI, 427 In the extravagance of her evil she has brought shame both on herself and

wishes to go* 2 XV, 72

Even

his griefs are a joy long after to


all

one that rememlxTS and endured.8

that he wrought

XV, 400
XVII, 218

God

4 always pairs off like with like.

Bad herdsmen

ruin their flocks.

XVII, 346
Wide-sounding Xeus takes away half man's worth on the day whet) slavery comes upon him, XVII, 323
a

on

all

even

women who will come on one who is virtuous.

after her,

XI, 432
don't you be gentle to your wife either. Don't tell her everything you know, but tell her one thing and keep another thing hidden.

Therefore

Then dark death seixecl Argus, as soon as he had seen Odysseus in the
twentieth vear.

XVII,

XI, 441

There

is
.

no

more

trusting
r

in

women.
I

Xl 456

serf,
*

should rather labor as another's in the home of a man without for-

The gods, likening themselves to all kinds of strangers, go in various disguises from city to city* observing the wrongdoing and the righteousness of
men.

XVII,
feebler than a

See Virgil, p. n8b. a See Virgil, p. iiya. Then the omnipotent Father with his thunder made Olympus tremble, and from Ossa

Nothing

man

clots the

earth raise up, of all the things

breathe and
believes that

move on the
he
will

eartli, for

which he

hurled Pelion.

OVID [43
154

B.C.-A.D.

17],

Meta-

never suffer evil in

morphoses

If I.

I would have you call to mind the strength of the ancient giants, that undertook to lay the mountain Pelion on the top of Osa, and high set among those the RABEshady Olympus. LAIS, Works, bk. IV [1548], ch. 38 See Ecclesiastcs 3:7, p. a^b.

the future, as long as the gods give success and he flourishes in


1

him
his

See Shakttpcare, p. a 3 fib. See Pope, p, 4o*jb, See Virgil, p. n7b. * See Hey wood, p. 1833.
1

66

HOMER
strength; but when the blessed gods bring sorrows too to pass, even these he
spirit, for

HESIOD
Love, who is most beautiful among the immortal gods, the melter of limbs, overwhelms in their hearts the intelligence and wise counsel of all gods and
all

against his will, with steadfast the thoughts of earthly men are like the day which the father of
bears,

men.

The Theogony, L 120


as

gods and

upon them. The Odyssey, 6fe. XVIII, Z. 130 Men flourish only for a moment. 1 XIX, 328
brings
surely are difficult,

men

Dreams
ing,

confus-

and not everything in, them is brought to pass for mankind. For fleeting dreams have two gates: one is fashioned of horn and one of ivory. Those which pass through the one of sawn
ivory
are

16. 910 There was not after all a single kind of strife, but on the earth there are two kinds: one of them a man might praise when he recognized her, but the other
is

their eyelids dripped love.

From

they glanced

blameworthy.

Works and

Days, L 11

Potter bears a grudge against potter,

deceptive,

bringing

tidings

which come to nought, but those which issue from the one of polished horn
bring true results

and craftsman against craftsman, and beggar is envious of beggar, and bard of
bard. 1
Fools, they
16. 25 do not even know how

when

a mortal sees

them.2

XIX, 560

much more

is

the half than the whole. 2

16.40
Endure, my heart: you once endured something even more dreadful. XX, 18

Often an entire city has suffered be16. 240 cause of an evil man.

Your heart
stone.

is

always harder than a

He harms
another,

himself

who

does plan

harm
is

to

XXIII, 103

and the

evil

most

harmful to the planner.

16.

Therefore the fame of her excellence will never perish, and the immortals
will fashion

265

among earthly men a gracious song in honor of faithful Penel-

ope.

XXIV, 196

Badness you can get easily, in quanand it lies close tity: the road is smooth, by. But in front of excellence the immortal gods have put sweat, and long and steep is the way to it, and rough at
first.

HESIOD
yOO B.C. With the muses of Helicon
C.

then

it is

But when you come to the top, 3 easy, even though it is hard. 16. 287

let

us
i

begin our singing.

much
The
T.heogony, I

bad neighbor is a misfortune, as as a good one is a great blessing. 16. 346

They once taught Hesiod beauteous song, when he was shepherding his
sheep below holy Helicon.
16.

Do not seek evil gains; evil gains are 16. 352 the equivalent of disaster.
If
little,

22

We

know how

to speak

many

false-

you should put even a little on a and should do this often, soon

hoods which resemble real things, but we know, when wo will, how to speak 16. 27 true things.

this too

would become

big.

16.

361

On

his

tongue they pour sweet dew,


his

At the beginning of a cask and at the end take your fill; in the middle be spar16. 368 ing.
Sec Gay, p. 4<>ib, and Meredith, p, 7301, See Browning, p, 66*b, and note, *See Matthew 7//?-jy, p. 4ib. *See Chaucer, p. i6gb.
*

and from
*

mouth

flow gentle words,


16. 83

Sec Psalm 103:15, p. aia. Sec Virgil, p. 1194.

67

HESIOD
speeds a man on his jourand speeds him too in his work. ney, Works and Days, L 579

SOLON
wife is mine; and plague, and my hath this only. very happy who

The dawn

he

is

ing

Observe due measure, for right timis in all things the most important
Ib.

PITTACUS. From PLUTAKCH, Morals, On the Tranquillity of the Mind

factor.

694

1 Nothing too much. From DIOGENES LAKRTIUS, bk.

I,

Gossip is mischievous, light and easy to raise, but grievous to bear and hard
to get rid of.
entirely, if
is

sec.

63

No

many

gossip ever dies away people voice it: it too


Ib. 761

Do not speak
Not
cessity.

ill

of the dead. 2
16.

70
77

a kind of divinity.

even the gods fight against neIb.

ARCHILOCHUS
C.

Know the
Rule
will

680

B.C.

right timing.

Ifr.

79

Some
which
less

I left

Saian glories in the shield beside a bush, poor blame-

show the man.

BIAS.

From ARISTOTLK,

Nicfcoi

weapon, against

my will. But
I
it!

have
that

jnachean Kthics V,

saved myself
shield?

what care
I'll

for

Away with

get another

one no worse.

Fragment 6

MIMNERMUS
C.

Old women should not seek to be Fragment 27 perfumed.

650-0. 590
is

B.C.

What

life

there,

what

delight,
t

without golden Aphrodite?

The fox knows many things, but the 1 hedgehog knows one great thing, Fragment 103

Fragment

SOLON
c.

THE SEVEN SAGES


c.

658 -c, 559

B.C.

650-0. 600

B.C.

Know thyself.
Inscription at the Delphic Oracle. From PLTJTARCH,

but we shall not exchange with them our excellence* for riches,

Many men poor,

evil

men

are rich*

and

gocxl

Morals
Hesiod might
as well

Poets

tell

many
old

lies,

have kept his


8
I

Fragment
grow
ever

breath to cool his pottage.

learning

many

PERIANDER. From PLUTARCH, The Banquet of the Seven

things,

Fragfnent 22
is

Wise Men,

sec.

14

Speech

the image of actions.

From DICXSKNKS
bk.

Every one of you hath his particular


iThe
fox has

LvK,
I, arc.

many

tricks,
is

and the hedgehog


all.

has only one, but that ERASMUS, Adagio. [1500]

Laws
stand
object

the best of

are like spiders* webs,


firm
falls

which
larger

when

tiny

light,

yielding

Sayings throughout antiquity were variously attributed to the figures known as the "seven
sages." The list is commonly given as Thales, Solon, Periander, Cleobulus, Chilon, Bia*, Pittacus. (See Solon, column b.)

upon them, while a


g>.

'Sec Terence,

toft*;

Horace, p, tsoa; and


nit nini

Anonymous,

The

p. 151 a. I-atin form:

De moriuU

bonum

Spare your breath to cool your porridge. RABELAIS, Works, bk. V [1554], eh. *8

[Of chc dead, nothing hut Sec Propmiu*, p. s*Ha.

g<xxi).

68

SOLON
thing breaks
capes.
1

SAPPHO

through

them and

es-

SAPPHO
C.

6l2

B.C.

From PLUTARCH, The Banquet of the Seven Wise Men


Let us
sacrifice to
is

Deathless Aphrodite on your rich1 Fragment i wrought throne.

the Muses.

16call a

Until he

man

dead, do not yet 2 but only lucky. happy,

From HERODOTUS 3

I,

32

STESICHORUS
c.

630-0. 555

B.C.

Equal to the gods seems to me that sits facing you and hears you nearby sweetly speaking and softly laughing. This sets my heart to fluttering in my breast, for when I look on you a moment, then can I speak no more, but my tongue falls silent, and at once a delicate flame courses beneath

man who

This tale is not true: you [Helen] did not even board the well-benched ships, and you did not go to the citadel
of Troy.

my

Fragment

1 1

and with my eyes I see nothand my ears hum, and a cold sweat ing, bathes me, and a trembling seizes me all over, and I am paler than grass, and
skin,
I feel

that

am

near to death. 2

Fragment 2

ALCAEUS
625-0. 575 B.C. 4 dear Wine, boy, and truth. Fragment 66
c.

The stars about the lovely moon hide their shining forms when it lights up the earth at its fullest Fragment 4
I
.
.

Wine is

a peep-hole

on a man.*

loved you once long ago, Athis you seemed to me a small, un-

gainly child.

Fragments 40-41
has

Fragment 104
Let us run into a safe harbor. 5

Fragment 120

set, and the Pleiades; time passes, and I and midnight, Fragment 94 sleep alone.*
it is

The moon

ANACHARStS
fl.

C.

6OO

B.C.

Sweet mother, I cannot ply the loom, vanquished by desire for a youth through the work of soft Aphrodite.

[On learning
were four

that the sides of a ship

fingers thick] The passengers 6 are just that distance from death.

From DIOGENES LAERTIUS,


Anarcharsis 5
*Sec Zincgref, p. jsia, and Swift, p. jSSb. See EccUsiasticui xr:n8, p. jSa; Aeschylus, p. y8b; Sophocles p. 8ib; and Horace, p. isoa. Herodotus attributed these words to Solon.
*

Fragment 114 As an apple reddens on the high bough; high atop the highest bough it the apple no, not by pickers passed it oy, but they could not reach passed it. Fragment 116

As shepherds trample underfoot a hyacinth on the mountainside, and on the ground the purple flower.
Fragment 117
Evening star, you bring all things which the bright dawn has scattered: you bring the sheep, you bring the goat, 4 ou brin the child back to its mother. Fragment 120
Or "with your intricate charms." *Sec Catullus, p, lisa. * See Housman, p. 854b. *See Meleager, p. noa, and Housman, p. 854*.
*

Earliest

references
to

proverb In vino veritas (In wine

was known
Pliny

became the truth) which Plato (Symposium 3/7) and to


to

what

Is

the Elder [A,D. 33-79], Natural History


141,

XIV,

is probably the oldest poem using the image of the "ship of state." See

*Part of what

Sophocles, p, 8ib. "How thick do you judge the planks of our ship to be?" "Some two good inches and up ward," returned the pilot, "It seems, then, we are within two fingers' breadth of damnation. RABELAIS, Works, bk, IV [1548], ch. 93

IBYCUS

SIMONIDES
If cattle and horses, or lions, had hands, or were able to draw with their feet and produce the works which men do, horses would draw the forms of

IBYCUSi
580 B.C. There is no medicine to be found fo ife which has fled. Fragment 23
C.

argument needs no reason, nor a endship. Fragment 40

An

gods like horses, and cattle like cattle, and they would make the gods' bodies the same shape as their own. 1

Fragment 15

PHEIDIPPIDES
d.

One
men,
in

490

B.C.

similar

god, greatest among gods and to mortals neither in

Rejoice,

we are victorious. From LUCIAN, Pro Lapsu

2 shape nor even in thought,

Fragment 23
It takes a wise

Salutando 3

man

to recognize a

wise man.

ANACREON
C.

570 -C. 480

B.C.

From DIOGENES LAERTIUS, Xenophanes IX

ring water, bring wine, boyl Bring Dwering garlands to me! Yes, bring lem, so that I may try a bout with
>ve.

SIMONIDES
c.

Fragment 27
It
is

556-4683.0.

lad

both love and do not and am not mad. 2

love,

and

am

Fragment 79

hard to be truly excellent, foursquare in hand and foot and mind, formed without blemish. Fragment 4

War

spares not the brave, but the


8

The

city is the teacher of the

Dwardly.

man. Fragment 53

Fragment 101. From The Palatine Anthology Vff, 160

Fighting in the forefront of the Greeks, the Athenians crushed at Marathon the might of the gold-bearing

HIPPONAX
C.

Medes.

fragment 88
the Spartans, thou

570-520

B.C.

Go

tell

who

pnssest

There are two days when a woman is pleasure: the day one marries her and lie day one buries her. Fragment

bv,

That

here, obedient to their laws,

we

Jfc- 8

Fragment 92

XENOPHANES
570 -c. 475 B.C. Homer and Hesiod attributed to the ;ods everything that is a shame and a sproach among men. Fragment 1 i
c.

If the greatest part of excellence is nobly to die, this to us of all men has

fortune given: for struggling to clothe Greece in freedom, we lie in


4

imaging
ii

glory.

Fragment

Associated with Ibycus is the phrase "the ranes of Ibycus." It derives from the legend iat Ibycus was murdered at sea and his murerers were discovered through cranes that jllowed the ship. Hence, "the cranes of Ibycus" ecame a proverb for the agency of the gods a revealing crime. a See Catullus, p. 1153.

Painting is silent poetry, and poetry painting that speaks. From PUITAKCH, D* Gloria

Athenivmium
l

III,

346

See Montesquieu, p. 4mb. See Homer, p. 633, Translated by W. I.. Bowt**,


It

See Sophocles, p. 8*b.


j

Ruskfn said of this epitaph that noblest group of words uttered by


*

was the

man.

See Thucydides, p.

<joa.

70

CONFUCIUS

CONFUCIUS*
551-479 Fine words and an insinuating appearance are seldom associated with
true virtue.
B.C.

have not seen a person who loved one who hated what was not virtuous. He who loved virtue would esteem nothing above it.
I

virtue, or

The Confucian
If a

A
filial,

The Confucian Analects, bk. 1:3 youth, when at home, should be


and,
abroad,
respectful

Analects, bk. 4:6, i

man

to

his

right way,

in the morning hear the he may die in the evening

elders.

1:6

without regret.
. .

4:0
.

If a man withdraws his mind from the love of beauty, and applies it as sincerely to the love of the virtuous; if, in serving his parents, he can exert his

does not set The superior man his mind either for anything, or against
anything;

what

is

right

he

will follow.

4:10
see men of worth, we should think of equaling them; when we see men of a contrary character, we should turn inwards and examine ourselves.

utmost

strength;

prince, he intercourse with his friends, his words are sincere although men say that he

serving his can devote his life; if, in his


if,

in

When we

has not learned,

I will

certainly say that

4:17
cautious seldom
is

he

has.

1.7 faithfulness

The

err.

Hold
first

4:23

and

sincerity
1:8,

as
ii

Virtue

not

left to
it

stand alone.

He

principles.

who

Have no
self.

friends not equal to your1:8, Hi


faults,

practices

will

have neighbors.
4:25
If

you have abandon them.

When

Man
man

is

bom

do not

for uprightness.

fear to
1:8, iv

lose his uprightness,


is

and yet

live,

his escape

government by means of his virtue may be compared to the north polar star, which keeps its place and all the stars turn towards it.
2:1

He who

exercises

from death mere good fortune.

the effect of 6:16


diffi-

The man

of virtue makes the

culty to be overcome his first business, and success only a subsequent consider6:20 ation.

he [The superior man] speaks, and afterwards speaks according to his actions, 2:13
acts before
lost; 2

With
drink,

coarse rice to eat, with water to

and
I

my

bended arm

for a pil-

low
these

have

still

Learning without thought thought without learning

is
is

labor
peril-

things*

joy in the midst of Riches and honors ac-

ous.

you know it; and when you do not know a thing, to allow that you do not know it this is knowledge.8
that you

When

2:15 a thing, to hold

quired by unrighteousness are to a floating cloud.


I

me

as

7:15
in the

am

not one

who was born

know

possession of knowledge; I am one who is fond of antiquity, and earnest in

seeking
Is

it

there.

7:19

2:17

Things that arc done, it is needless to speak about things that are past,
.
.

virtue a thing remote? I wish to virtuous, and lol virtue is at hand.

be

7:29

it is

needless to blame.
attributed
to

"Sayings
follower*

3:21, if Confucius and his

The

superior

from The Chinese Classics, Vol. I: The Confucian Analects, translated by JAMKS

composed; the
of distress.

man is mean man

satisfied
is

and
7:36

always full
to follow a

Sec Lao Tzu, p. 7}b; Heraclitus, p* 77b; and Cardinal Newman, p. 5983. Sec Lao Tzu, p, 753.

The people may be made


made
path of action, but they to understand it.

may

not be
8:9

CONFUCIUS
dwelt among [barthere barians], what rudeness would be?
If a superior

man

days,

men

learn with a

view to the apAnalects, bk. 14:25


in his

probation of others.

The Confucian

The Confucian
While you

Analects, bk. 9:13,

The

superior

man

is

modest

are not able to serve

men,
the

how
life,

can
.

you
. .

serve

spirits

[of

dead]?

While you do not know


death? 11:11

how can you know about


is

in his actions. speech, but exceeds 14:29 with justice, and Recompense injury recompense kindness with kindness.

14:36, in

To go beyond
short.

as

wrong

as to fall

The determined scholar and the man


of virtue will not seek to live at the expense of injuring their virtue. They will even sacrifice their lives to preserve
their virtue complete.
If a
is

11:15,111

He

with

whom

neither slander that

gradually

soaks into the mind, nor statements that startle like a wound in the flesh, are successful may be called i 2 :6 indeed.
intelligent

5:8

man

take

no thought about what


sorrow near at

distant,

he

will find

In carrying on your government, why should you use killing [the unprincipled for the good of the unprincipled] at all? Let your evinced desires be for what is good, and the people will be

hand.

15^1

The
want

superior of ability.

man

is

distressed

by
1

his

5:1 8

What
himself.
in others.

What

the superior man seeks is in the mean man seeks is


1

The relation between superiors and inferiors is like that between the wind and the grass. The grass must bend when the wind blows across it.
good.

5:20

What
self,

you do not want done to your1 do not do to others, 1 5:2 3


a man's

12:19

When

knowledge

is

suffi-

Good government obtains when those who are near arc made happy, and those who are far off are attracted.
13:16,
ii

cient to attain, and his virtue is not sufficient to enable him to hold, whatever he may have gained* he will lose
again.

15:32,

The

and the modest are near to

firm, the enduring, the simple, virtue.

13:27

The

scholar
is

who

comfort
scholar.

not

cherishes the love of fit to be deemed a

superior man cannot be known in little matters, but he may be entrusted with great concerns. The small man may not be entrusted with great concerns, but he may l>e known in little

The

matters.

5 ; 33

14:3

in the view of gain thinks of righteousness; who in the view

The man who

of danger is prepared to give up his life; and who does not forget an old agreement however far back it extends such a man may be reckoned a complete man. J-f'*3>

Virtue is more to man than either water or fire. I have seen men die from treading on water and fire, but I have never seen a man die from treading the
course of virtue.
a

5:54

are nearly alike; by practice, they get to be wide apart.

By

nature,

men

17:2

He who
find
it

speaks without modesty will difficult to make his words

To be

able to practice

five

everywhere
good.
14:21

under

heaven

things constitutes

In ancient times, men learned with a view to their own improvement. Nowa-

perfect virtue. . * , [They are] gravity, 1 The Golden Rule. See Matthew -j;t* f p.

CONFUCIUS
generosity of soul, sincerity, earnestness, and kindness. The Confucian Analects, bk. 17:6

LAO TZU
There
arises

the recognition of

evil.

The

Way

of

Lao Tzu 2

In the government of the sage, He keeps their hearts vacuous,


Fills their bellies,

There
perior
.

are three things


is

which the
strong is old
.

su-

man

In youth guards against.


.
.

Weakens

their ambitions,

When he quarrelsomeness. When


.
.

lust.

And

he

...
*7 ^
:

He

covetousness.

strengthens their bones, to be withalways causes his people out knowledge [cunning] or desire,

Without recognizing the ordinances


of Heaven,
rior
it is

And

a supeimpossible to be

the crafty to be afraid to act.

16.3
1 Heaven and Earth are not humane.

man.

20:3,

Without an acquaintance with the


rules of propriety, it is impossible for the character to be established.

They

as straw dogs. regard all things

16. 5

20:3,

ii

The

it is

Without knowing the force impossible to know men.

of words,
20:3, Hi

spirit It is called

of the valley never dies. the subtle and profound

The
Is It is

female. and profound gate of the subtle

female

LAO
The Tao [Way]

TZXJi
be told of
is is

Sixth century[?] B.C.


that can

Heaven and Earth. seems to be always and continuous,


the root of
existing.
it

Use

and you

will never

wear

it

out.

The

not the eternal Tao; name that can be named


eternal

16. 6

not the

name. The Nameless is the and Earth;

origin of

Heaven
of
all

The best [man] is like water. Water is good; it benefits all


It

things

and

does not compete with them.


dwells in [lowly] places that all disdain. This is why it is so near to Tao. J6. 8

The Named
things.

is

the

mother
always

Therefore

let

there

be

non-

being, so

we may

see their sub-

And

tlety, let there

always be being, so

we

may see their outcome. The two are the same,


But
after they are produced, they different names.

To produce things and to rear them, To produce, but not to take possession
of them,

have

To

act,

but not to
them,

rely

on one's own
to

ability,

They both may be


*

allied

deep and pro-

To
This

lead

but

not

master
vir.

them
is

found.

called

Deeper and more profound,

profound and secret

The door

tue.

of

all subtleties!

The

Way

of

Lao Tzu
all

He who

When

the people of the world beauty as beauty,


ness.

know

loves the world as his body may be entrusted with the empire.
16. 13

There

arises the recognition of ugli-

We

look at
it;

it

do not see [Tao] and

When
i

as good, they all know the good translated too by Tzu, From The Way of

U.c.,

they are impartial.


sacrifices

Straw dog* were used in


discarded.

and then

WiNC-Tsrr CHAN.

73

TZU
Its

name is The
it

Invisible.
it;

come the hardest


world.

things
that
in

in

the

We listen to
Its

and do not hear


Inaudible.

name is The
touch
it

We
Its

and do not find

it;

Non-being penetrates there is no space.

which

name

is The Subtle [formless]. The Way of Lao Tzu 14

Through

this I

know

the advantage of
of

taking no action.

The Vague and Elusive. Meet it and you will not see
It is

The
There
is

Way

Lao Tzu 43
lavish

its its

Follow

it

and you

will

not see

head. back.
16.

no calamity greater than

desires.

There

is

no

greater guilt than discon-

Manifest plainness,

And
16.
will

Embrace simplicity, Reduce selfishness, Have few desires.

tentment. there is no greater disaster than


greed.
16.

46

19

One may know One may

the world without going

Abandon

learning and there

sorrow.

be no 16. 20

To yield is to be preserved whole. To be bent is to become straight. To be empty is to be full. To be worn out is to be renewed. To have little is to possess. To have plenty is to be perplexed. 1
16.

out of doors. see the Way of Heaven without looking through the windows. The further one goes, the less one knows. 1 Therefore the sage knows without going
about,

Understands without seeing, And accomplishes without any action.

22

16.

47

He who knows others is wise; He who knows himself is enlightened.


16.33
[The sage] never
great,
strives

He who possesses virtue in abundance May be compared to an infant.


16,

55

himself for the


great
16.
is

and thereby the

He who knows He who speaks


The more

does not speak. docs not know.

achieved.

34

Tao

invariably takes no action, and yet there is nothing left undone.


is

16. 56 made and order arc laws

prominent,

the action of Tao. Weakness is the function of Tao. All things in the world come from beReversion
ing.

The more
be.

thieves

and robbers there


16.
is

will

57

' Ruling a big country

like

cooking a
16,

small
non-being.

fish.

60

And being comes from

Tao
It is

is

When When
They

the storehouse of all things. the good man's treasure and the
refuge.
16.

the highest type of


diligently practice
it.

men

hear

bad man's

62

Tao,
the average type of
half believe in
it.

men
men

hear

journey of a thousand miles must 8 16. 64 begin with a single step.

Tao,

When
The
1

They

People are difficult to govern because they have too much knowledge.
hear
I
it.

the lowest type of

16.

65

Tao, They laugh heartily at

16. 41
is

have three them:


1

treasures.

Guard and keep


the further <mir
ic.

softest things in the world over-

I.e., the more one from the Tao,

atudiea,

See the Sermon on the Mount,

Matthew

I.e.,

too

p. 4oa.

much handling

will tpoll

Traditional translation.

74

LAO TZU

AESOP

The first is deep love, The second is frugality, And the third is not to

A
dare to be
is

wise

man

has no extensive knowlis

He who
The

ahead of the world. Because of deep love, one

edge; has extensive knowledge a wise man. 1

not

coura-

sage does not accumulate for himself OU>11 .

geous. Because of frugality, one is generous. Because of not daring to be ahead of the world, one becomes the leader
of the world.

The

Way

When

armies are
is

Lao Tzu 67 mobilized and issues


of

joined,

uses for others, the more he has himself. The more he gives to others, the more he possesses of his own. The Way of Heaven is to benefit others and not to injure. The Way of the sage is to act but not

The more he

The man who


win.

sorry over the fact will Ib. 69

to compete.

The

Way

of

Lao Tzu 81

To know
best.

that you do not

know

is

the

To

AESOP2
know when you do not
1
fl.

pretend to

C.
.

know

is

a disease.

16. 71

550

B.C.

Heaven's net is indeed vast. Though its meshes are wide,


nothing.
2

it

misses
Ib. 73

. The lamb began to follow the wolf in sheep's clothing. The Wolf in Sheep's Clothing
.

To

undertake executions for the master


executioner [Heaven] is like hewing wood for the master carpenter.

Appearances often are deceiving,


Ib.

Do not count your chickens before 8 they are hatched,


The Milkmaid and Her
I

Whoever

undertakes to hew wood for the master carpenter rarely escapes Ib. 74 injuring his own hands.
of

Pail

am

The Way
It
is

Heaven has no

favorites.

sure the grapes are sour. 4 The Fox and the Grapes

always with the good man,


Ib.

No
79
small,

is

act of kindness, ever wasted.

no matter how
the

Let there be a small country with few


people.
.

The Lion and


The Hare and

Mouse

Though neighboring communities

over-

Slow and steady wins the

race,

look one another and the crowing of cocks ancl barking of dogs can be heard, Yet the people there may grow old ancl die without ever visiting one an1

the Tortoise

other.

Ib.

80

* Sec Confucius, p. 71 a; Hcraclitus, p. 7yb; and Cardinal Newman, p, 5982, 1 Animal fables from before Aesop's time and after were attributed to him. The first collection was made two hundred years after his death.

True words

are not beautiful; * Beautiful words arc not true.

A good man does not argue; He who argues is not a good


*

See also la Fontaine, p. 5593. *To swallow gudgeons ere they're And count their chickens ere hatched.

catch d,
they're

SAMUEL

man.
*The
fox,

pt.

BUTI.KR, Hudibras, [1664], canto }> I

W}

The kingdom

Sec Omfucius, p. 71 a. of heaven

is

like

unto a net,

was <at into the sea, and gathered of Matthtw 77:^7 every kind.
that
I.e.,

they are not "fine-sounding."

when he cannot reach the grapes, GEORGE HERBERT, says they arc not ripe. Jacula Prudentum [1640] "They are too green/' he said, "and only LA FONTAINE, bh. Ill [1668], good for fools/' fable //, The Fox and the Grapes

75

AESOP
1 Familiarity breeds contempt.

The Fox and the Lion

The boy
villagers

"Wolf, wolf!" and the to help him. The Shepherd Boy and the Wolf
cried

the goose could give, he killed it and opened it only to find nothing. The Goose with the Golden

came out

Eggs

Put your shoulder to the wheel.


Hercules and the

crust eaten in peace is better than a banquet partaken in anxiety.

Wagoner
16.
if

The gods
selves. 1

help them that help them-

The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse


Borrowed plumes.

would often be sorry wishes were gratified. 2

We

our

The
It is

Jay and the Peacock

The Old Man and Death


Union
3

not only fine feathers that make


16.

gives strength.

fine birds.

The Bundle
While
I

of Sticks

Self-conceit
tion.

may lead to self-destrucThe Frog and the OK

many hoof marks going in, I see none coming out. It is easier to get into the enemy's toils than out
see again.

People often grudge others what they cannot enjoy themselves.

The

Lion, the Fox,

and the Beasts

The Dog
It is thrifty to

in the

Manger

prepare today for the

haft of the arrow had been feathered with one of the eagle's own

The

wants of tomorrow.

plumes.
the Grasshopper
lot;

The Ant and


be
first

We often give our enemies the


destruction. 4

means of our own


*God
himself.
loves to help

Be content with your


in

one cannot
*

The Eagle and


him who
AESCHYLUS [51*5-456
337

the Arrow
Fragment

everything.

strive* to help
-c.],

Juno and the Peacock

A
came

the mountain.
forth, 8

huge gap appeared At last


The,

in the side of

Heaven helps not

tiny in

mouse
Labor

the men who will not act. SOPHOCLES [49$-4<>5 B.C.], Fragment stitt Try first thyself, and after call In Cod; For to the worker Cod himadf lend* aid.

Mountain

EURIPIDES

[485-406

*.<:.],

llippntytus,
frag. 41 $

Any

excuse will serve a tyrant. The Wolf and the Lamb


lest

Help thyself, and God will help th<*. GEORGE HERBERT, Jafuta Prudnntum ftfyo]

God

Beware

you

lose the substance

by

ALGERNON

helps those who help thcmnrive*. - . SIDNEY, Discount* on Cwmiwrnf


a?,

grasping at the shadow.

[1698], sec.

and BKNJAMIN FRANKMN, J*wr

The Dog and

the

Shadow
the Cat

Who shall bell the cat?


The Rats and
I will

Richard's Almanac [1755-1758] * Granting our wish one of Fate'i ftddcnt is! R, I.owru, [181^1891], Tun jokes J. Scenes from the Ufa of Blandd, *r." //, st. a

have nought to do with a man who can blow hot and cold with the

Beware, hate you

my

lord!

Beware
to

Icat

torn

Hoivrn

enough

hear

ANATOLK FRANCE, Th

your

pntyersi

Crim* of Syhwire Run-

same breath.

The Man and


Thinking to get at once
See Mark Twain, p. 764*). a See Sean O'Casey, p. 9813.
1

the Satyr the gold

nard[i88ij, pt. //, rh. 4 When the godi with to ptinfah swer our prayer*. OKIAX Wiuw,

Husband
See

[1895], act

An

they an tdral

all

John Dickiwon,

p.
it i*

4$ob,
told

and C,

Morris, p. 600 a. *So in the Libyan fabte

region the highest expectation. After all, it brought forth a mouse. PHAEDRUS [c. A.D. 81 IV, sn*:r See Horace, 1*43.
p.

mountain was in labor, sending forth dreadful groans, and there was in the

That once an eagle, iirlcken with a dart. Said, when he *aw the fashion of thr abaft, "With our own fcathcru, not by others' handn, Are we now amitten/' AK5cvujs [5*5-456 B.C.], Fragment
xjj (Pluroptrc'a tramlation)

76

THEOGNIS

THEMISTOCLES
1 Nothing endures but change.

THEOGNIS
fl.

c.

545

B.C.

From DIOGENES
for food

LAERTIUS,

One

finds

many companions
are very few.

bk. IX, sec. 8, Cratylus,

and PLATO,
to
all,

and drink, but in man's companions

a serious business a

^O2A
is

Although the logos


Z.

common

Elegies,

115

the

many

live as if

Even

to

wicked

man

derstanding.
divinity

they had private unFragment 2

gives wealth, Cyrnus, but to comes the gift of excellence.

few men
to
Ib.

Much

149
of

learning does not teach a man have intelligence.2 Fragment 40 Strife is the source and the master
all

Surfeit begets insolence, perity comes to a bad man.

when

pros16. 153

things.

The path up and down


the same.

Adopt the

character of the twisting

Fragment 53 is one and Fragment 60

of the nearby rock. Now follow in this direction, now turn a different hue.
Ib.

octopus, which takes on the appearance

Everything comes about by


strife

way

of

and

necessity.

Fragment 80

215

the

The
is

best of

all

things for earthly

men

twice into not possible to step river. fragment 91 Character is a man's guiding desIt is

same

not to be born and not to see the

tiny.

Fragment 119

beams of the

bright sun; but if born, then as quickly as possible to pass the 1 gates of Hades", and to lie deep buried.
Ib.

THEMISTOCLES
C.

528

- C. 462

B.C.

425
all

No man
Bright thought.
'

takes with

him

to

Hades
16.
as

his exceeding wealth. 2

725
a

youth

passes

swiftly 16.

Timing the lyre and handling the harp arc no accomplishments of mine, but rather talcing in hand a city that was small and inglorious and making it
glorious

985

and

great.

From PLUTARCH,
The wooden
wall
is

Lives,
8

HER ACLTTUS
C.

Themistocles, sec, 2

540 -C. 480

B.C.
still.
T

your ships.

I&.

10
i

All

is

flux,

nothing stays
IX, sac.
8,

From DIOGENES LAKRTIUS


6fe.

Strike,

but hear

me>
is

I&. a

and PLATO,

Cratylus,

402A
die

That fagk's fate and mine arc one, Which on the shaft that made him
of his Kxpiccl a feather

the most [Of his son] The boy all the Hellenes; for the of powerful Hellenes arc commanded by the Athe-

own,
to soar

Wherewith
Lady
Like a young

EDMUND WAUJRK

o high, [1605-1687], To a Sinking a Song of His Composing eagle, who has lent his plume
lie

wont

Athenians by myself, myself the mother, and the mother by boy's by Ib. 18 her boy.
nians, the
iSce
388b;

To

fledge

the

shaft

by which

he meets

his

Honorat dc Bueil, p. 3*8b; Swift, p. and Shelley, p. s68a. sScc Cfonfuciua, p. 7ia; Lao T/u, p. 7gb; and

doom,
See their own feathers pluck'd to wing the dart Which rank corruption destines for their heart.

Cardinal

Newman,

p. 598a.

This was TheraUtodes' interpretation to the Athenian* in 480 B.C. of the second oracle
conDelphi: "Safe shall the wooden wall tinue for thee and thy children." The account Book VII, sec. appear* in full In Herodotus,
at

THOMAS MOORK

[1780-185*!, Corruption
p. *ioa;

See Byron, p. 5558. *Scc Sophocles, p, 8$a; Bacon,


p. 588!);

Heine,

and

Yeats, p. 88jb.
of

4i-*43-

Harp-Player, p. 33; Rcclesiattrs y:tj, p. *8a; and I Timothy 6:7,


p. 55*.

See

Thf Song

the

*Said in reply to Eurybiadea, commander of


the Spartan
fleet,

when he

raised his staff as

though

to strike.

77

THEMISTOCLES
[Of two suitors for his daughter's hand] I choose the likely man in preference to the rich man;
I

AESCHYLUS
God's

mouth knows not how

to

want
than

man

speak falsehood, but he brings to pass 1 every word.

without money without a man.

rather

money

Prometheus Bound, L 1030

From PLUTARCH,
I

Themistocles, sec. 18
Lives,

On me
make me
Earth,

the tempest tremble.

falls. It

docs not

O
2

air

holy Mother and sun, behold me. I am


16.

have with

me two

gods, Persuasion
Ib. 21

wronged.
I

1089

and Compulsion. 1

The speech of man is like embroidered tapestries, since like them this too has to be extended in order to display
its

patterns, but

when

it is

rolled

up

it

conceals

and

distorts

them.
the sea

He who commands
mand
of everything. 2

29 has comX, 8

16.

pray the gods some respite from the weary task of this long year's watch that lying on the Atrcidac's roof on bended arm, dog-like, I have kept, marking the conclave of all the night's stars, those potentates blazing in the heavens that bring winter and summer to mortal men, the constellations, when they

From, CICERO,

Ad Atticum

wane, when they

rise.

[Upon being asked whether he would rather be Achilles or Homer] Which would you rather be a victor
in

Agamemnon,

I,

A great ox

stands on

my

tongue.

Ib.

36

Olympic games, nouncer of the victor?

the

or

the

an-

Wisdom comes

through

suffering.

From PLUTARCH, Apothegms,


Themistodes

She [Helen] brought to Ilium her Ib. 406 dowry, destruction.


the character of very few men honor without envy a friend who has Ib. 832 prospered. when man's to its life comes Only end in prosperity can one call that man
It is in

AESCHYLUS
525-456
I

B.C.

to

'

would

far rather

be ignorant than
Suppliants,
I.

knowledgeable of

evils.

The

453

'

"Reverence for parents" stands written among the three laws of most revered righteousness. 8
Ib.

happy.

4
I

Ib.

Alas,

am
is

struck a deep mortal blow!


Ib.

707

1343
than

Myriad laughter of the ocean waves. Prometheus Bound, L 89


For somehow
ease, to trust
this
is

Death
tyranny.
5

better, a milder fate

16.
first

1364
for

tyranny's dis16.

Zeus,

cause,

prime movn;
is

no

friends.

224

what thing without Zeus


mortals? 6

are the physicians of a mind diseased.4 Ib. 378

Words
Time

done among 16. 1485


16.

Do

not kick against the pricks. 7

as

he grows old teaches


Ib.
Andrians,
to

all

1624

things.
1

981

Said

*See Numbers a?:/?, p, 101, * Translated by EWTH HAMIITON.

to

the

when

money from them,

demanding
4

which they replied that they already had two great gods, Penury and Powerlessness, who hindered them from giving him money. a See Bacon, p. 3090; Mahan, p. 785^; and

proverbial exprcwion of uncertain origin


,

for enforced silence.

Sec Solon, p. 69* and note. *See Patrick Henry, p, 46gb,


See Acts xju*, p,
ijoa;

Qcamhe*,
Odt*
7^5.
II,

and Aratus,
7

p.
I,

^jjb;
174,

p. 1043.

Morison, p. 9983. 8 See Exodus ao:ra, p. ga. * See Milton, p. 34ga.

Also

In

PINDAX,

Pythian
\.

and KufcmiHKs, Bacchat,


p. 49b.

&*

Act* vy,

78

AESCHYLUS
I

PINDAR
Zeus, accomplishes to
restraint
1

know how men

in exile feed

on

all

grant grave

dreams of hope.

Agamemnon, L 1668

light.

and attainment of sweet deOlympian Odes XIII, last line

Good

fortune

is

and more than

god among men,


Bearers,

a god.

The Libation
as well as for

L 59

Seek not, my soul, the life of the immortals; but enjoy to the full the resources that are within thy reach. 2

Destiny waits alike for the free

man
103

Pythian Odes

III,

I 109

him

enslaved by another's
16.

might.

For a deadly blow let him pay with a deadly blow: it is for him who has done
a deed to suEer,
Ib.

They say that this lot is bitterest: to recognize the good but by necessity to be barred from it. 8 Ib. IV, 510
Creatures of a day, what is a man? is he not? Mankind is a dream of a shadow. But when a god-given brightness comes, a radiant light rests on

312
of

What

What

is

pleasanter than the

tie

host and guest?

Ib.

702

men, and a gentle

life.

His resolve
the best,

is

not to seem, but to be,


Against Thebes, I 592

Ib. VIII,

135

The Seven

PINDAR
C.

toilsome contests have been decided, good cheer is the best physician, and songs, the sage daughters of the Muses, soothe with their touch.

When

Water
fire

is

518-0. 438 B.C. best. But gold shines

Nemean Odes TV,


like

Words
deeds.

have

longer

life

blazing in

the night, supreme of

Ib.

than 10

lordly wealth.

Not
Olympian Odes
I,
Z.

showing
silence

every truth is the better for its face undisguised; and often

Hie days that are the wisest witnesses.

still

to

come

are

is

the wisest thing for a

man

to

Ib. 51

heed.

Ib.

V, 30

If any man hopes to do a deed without God's knowledge, he errs.

One

race there

Ib.

104

gods, but from draw our breath,

is of men, one of one mother we both Ib. VI, i

184 have many swift arrows in my which speak to the wise, but for Suivcr ic crowd they need interpreters. The skilled poet is one who knows much through natural gift, but those who have learned their art chatter turbuI

Do

not peer too

far.

Ib.

If one but tell a thing well, it moves on with undying voice, and over the fruitful earth and across the sea goes the bright gleam of noble deeds ever

unquenchable.

Isthmian Odes IV, I 67


not possible with mortal mind to search out the purposes of the gods. Fragment 61
It is

Icntly, vainly, " against the divine bird of Ib. If, TJcus. 150
I

will

not steep

my

speech in

lies;

the

test

of any

man
is

2 lies in action.

Ib.

IV, 27

The
1

issue

in

God's hands,
Ib. XIII,

O bright and violet-crowned and famed in song, bulwark of Greece, famous Athens, divine city! Fragment 76
*

147
off.

Translated by

RICHMOND LATTWORK.
i6oa;
Aris-

Do

not set your eyes on things far


///,

Pythian Odfs
*

See Ruripictas, p. 844.

Sec Euripides, p. 843. See Boethius, p. 148 a; Dante, p. Chaucer, p. 1652; and Tennyson, p. 6473. * See Homer, pp. 6$a and 64b, and
3

TriimUtcd by RICHMOND I.ATTIMORK.

tophanes, p. gib.

79

PINDAR
Unsung, the noblest deed will die. Fragment 120

PERICLES
there
is

no

evil for

none.

one who commits Dhammapada 9.124

What

is

God?
is

Everything.

All tremble at the rod, all fear death;

Fragment 1400
Convention
the ruler of
all.

making
kill

yourself the exemplar, do not Ib. or cause to kill. 10.129


little

Fragment 169
Hope, which most of
all

guides the

changeful mind of mortals.

This man of an ox: his his wisdom.


like

flesh increases,

learning grows old but not


Ib.
1 1 .1

52

Fragment 214

ANAXAGORAS
C.

500-428

B.C.
is

have not lived a holy life, have not acquired wealth in their youth, brood like decrepit herons in a pond where the fish have died, Ib. 1 1 .1 jj
Extract yourself from bad ways like an elephant stuck in the mud. 16. 23.327 Better to live alone; with a fool there is no companionship. With few desires live alone and clo no evil, like an ele-

Who

The

descent to Hades
place.

the same

from every

From DIOGENES

LAERTIUS, Anaxagoras 2

SUTTAPITAKAi
C.

JOO -C, 250


is

B.C. 2

phant

in

All that

is

the result of what

we
i .1

the forest roaming at Ib. 2


is

will.

have thought.

Dhammapada

Decay
things!
diligence!

Hatreds never cease by hatred; they cease by non-hatred; this is the primeval law.
16. i ,5

Work
l

inherent in all component out your salvation with


2

Mahaparinibbanasutta 6.7

scent of flowers does not go against the wind, not sandal, rosebay or jasmine; but the scent of the good goes against the wind; a good man is wafted
to all quarters.
If

The

go for refuge to the Buddha. go for refuge to the Doctrine, I go for refuge to the Order monks],
I
I

[of

Ib.

4.54

Traditional (liturgical), passim

men
self

one conquer a thousand thousand and if one conquer himalone, he is in battle supreme.
in battle,

PERICLES*
c.

Ib.

8.103

Wait
Time.

for that wisest of all counselors.

If one live a hundred years idle, without energy, better to live one day of steadfast Ib. 8.112 energy.

From PLUTARCH, Lnw,


PERICLES, sec. 18
Trees,

Think not lightly of evil, come to me." A waterpot


by

"It will
is

not

though
'

they
it

are

cut

and

filled

by

lopped, grow

up again

the fall of waterdrops; a fool is with evil, amassing it bit bit.


If in the

men
them
*

filled

are destroyed,
again.

quickly/* hut if is not easy to get


'

Ib. 33

Ib. 9.121

one
1

may

hand there be no wound hold poison in the hand. No


is

by T. Rim DA VIM, The lat words of the Buddha, Quoted by T, S, KUOT, The Cocktail P&rty [10,30], act //, by Sir Henry
Translated
Harcourt-Reilly. 'Pali Text Society,
p.

poison follows where there


Means "basket

no wound;

is one of the three "baskets" which form the Pali canon, the sacred of Theravada Buddhists. scriptures a Ancient Indian literary chronology is con-

of discourses." It

nigh Nlkoye. vol. and Samyutta Niknya, vol. i, p. 158, See THUCYDIDES. Funeral Speech of Purirla,
156,

p, 895.
*

The lopped

tree in
[

time

jectural.

ROBERT SOIITIIWKW, Turns

may grow

again.

-~

1501-1595 J, Time*

Co

by

80

SOPHOCLES

SOPHOCLES*
c.

How

dreadful knowledge of the truth

495-4053.0.
the

can be

Silence

gives

women.
Nobly
Befits
birth. 2

proper grace to Ajax, I. 293

When there's
The
tyrant drinks
is

no help in truth! Oedipus Rex>


a child of Pride

Z.

316

to live, or else nobly to die,

proud
all

16.

Who
480
for-

from his great sickening

Of
tune's

human

cup
Recklessness and vanity, Until from his high crest headlong He plummets to the dust of hope* 1
Ib.

ills,

greatest

is

wayward tyranny.
begets

Ib.

486
ever-

For

kindness

kindness
fades

more,

872

But he from whose mind

the

The

memory

Of

greatest griefs are those we cause Ib. 1230 ourselves.

benefits, noble

is

he no more.
Ib.

$22

Sleep that masters


I,

all.

Ib.

Let every man in mankind's frailty Consider his last day; and let none

675

Presume on his good fortune


find
Life, at his death, a
2

until

he

whom

How

proof hath taught of late so far only should we hate our

memory without
Ib,

foes

pain.

1529

As though we soon might love them, and so far Do a friend service as to one most like

For

God

The

Some day to cst men


In
find.*

prove our foe, since often-

hates utterly bray of bragging tongues. Antigone* [c. 442 B.C.],

I.

123

friendship

but

faithless

haven
Ib.

678

Our ship of State, which recent storms have threatened to destroy, has come safely to harbor at last.4
Ib.

Men
That
It is

of

ill

judgment

oft

ignore the
till

163

good
lies

within their hands,


lost
it.

they

have

Ib.

964

not righteousness to outrage brave man dead, not even though Ib. 1344 you hate him.

I have nothing but contempt for the kind of governor who is afraid, for whatever reason, to follow the course that he knows is best for the State; and as for the man who sets private friendI have ship above the public welfare no use for him, cither. Ib. 181
i See Proverbs x6:x$, p. *4b. Pride will have a fall. English proverb [c, 1509]. A variant is "Pride goeth before a fall" Pride goeth before, and shame cometh beTreatise of a Gallant [c. 1510] hynde. Pryde will have a fall; For pryde goeth before and shame cometh

Ships are only hulls, high walls are nothing, When no life moves in the empty passageways.
4

Oedipus Rex* I 56
*

to be,
*
3

Sophodcs said he drew men as they ought ami Euripides as they were. ARISTOTLE,
Sec
Kxiripiclcs, p. 85!),

Poetics, ch. 25

after.

and

note,
*

JOHN HBYWOOD, Proverbs

[1546],

though they will some day hate and hate as though they will some day ARMTOTLK quoting BIAS [c. 650 B.C.], love. H he tor ic II, /j Sec Publilius Syrus, p. i6a. * See Thucydidcs, p. 900, and Shakespeare, Coriolantu III, i, 198, p. 1896, Translated by DUDLEY Frrrs and ROBERT

They

love

as

pt, If ch. JTO See Solon, p. 6ga, and note. There is a saying among men, put forth of old, that you cannot rightly judge whether a

mortal's lot

is

good or

evil,

until

he

dies.

SOPHOCLES, Trachiniae, I. z 'Translated by DUDLEY Frrrs and


FITZGERALD.
*

ROBERT

See Alcaeus, p. 6ga.

81

SOPHOCLES

Nobody
bad news. 1

likes

the

man who
Antigone,

brings
I.

Even the pure immortals cannot escape


you,

277

And
Money: There's nothing in the world 2 Ib. so demoralizing as money.
295

mortal

man,

in

his

one

day's

dusk, Trembles before your glory.

How

dreadful

it

is

when

the right
16.

Antigone,

F.

781

(Ode
16.

III)

judge judges wrong!

323

Wisdom
There
is

1 outweighs any wealth.

Numberless are the world's wonders, but none More wonderful than man.
16. 333
It is

1050
is

no happiness where there


a

no

wisdom;

(Ode
is

I)

No wisdom
gods.

but in submission to the

a good thing
it

To
To

escape from death, but great pleasure bring death to a friend.

not

Big words are always punished, And proud men in old age learn to be
wise.
16. 1 347, closing lines

16.

437

Grief teaches the steadiest minds to 16. 563 waver.


All that

Death

is

not

the

worst;

rather,

in

vain

To

wish for death, and not to compass


it.

And

shall be, all the past, is his


is

and

Electra,

I 1008
for

[Zeus'sl.
II)

I6.6ii (Ode

prudent mind can

see

room

misgiving, lest he

who

prospers should

Show me

the

man who

keeps his house

one day

suffer reverse.3

in hand, He's fit for public authority. 8


16.

Trachiniae, I 296

660

They are not wise, then, who stand forth to buffet against Love; for Love
rules the

Anarchy, anarchy!
evil!

Show me

a greater

gods as he

will,

and me.4
16. 441

tumble and the great houses rain down, This is what scatters armies!
This
is

why

cities

16.

672

Reason

is

God's crowning

gift to

man.
684

16.

Knowledge must come through action; you can have no test which is not 16. 592 fanciful, save by trial. Rash indeed is he who reckons on the morrow, or haply on days beyond it; for tomorrow is not, until today is
5

The ideal condition Would be, I admit,


But
right since

past.

Ib.

'943
its

that

men

should be

War

never slays
course,

a
*

bad

man

in

by

instinct;

we

are all likely to go astray,

The

reasonable thing is to learn from those who can teach. 16.


4

But the good always!

Philoctetes, L
7 Stranger in a strange country.

436

720

Love, unconquerable

Waster of

men, keeper Of warm lights and all-night


In the soft fece of a
Sea-wanderer,
1

rich

Oedipus at Co/onus
vigil
1

[406 B.C.], /. 184

girl:

forest-visitor!

See Shakespeare, pp. 241 b and *88a. See I Timothy 6:10, p. 5 $b, and Plato, p.
See / Timothy 3:5, p.
*j$a.

94a.
8

*See Sophocles, Trachiniae, p. U7a; and Chaucer, p. i66a.

p.

Sab;

Virgil,

See Job z8;x8, p. i$b. See Epicurus, p. 10311. See Proverbs x6;xfl' p. *4b. * See Sophocles, Antigone, p. Haa. "See Proverbs a;;/, p. tfla, * Translated by Sm G*OKCK YOUNG. Sec Anacrcon, p. 7a. 7 See Exodus a;aa, p. 8a.
a

Translated by ROBKRT

82

SOPHOCLES

EURIPIDES

The good

befriend themselves.
at Co/onus,
I.

EMPEDOCLES
309
C.

Oedipus

490-0. 430

B.C.

The immortal
Gods alone have
All
neither age nor death!

At one time through love all things come together into one, at another time
through strife's hatred they are borne each of them apart. Fragment 17

other things
quiets.

almighty

Time
Ib.
Ib.

dis-

607
701

Athens, nurse of men.

The blood around men's


their thinking.

heart

is

Fragment 105

Not

to

be born surpasses thought and


best
is

speech.

The second
light

to

have seen the

EURIPIDES*
c.

485-4063.0.

And

then to go back quickly whence we Ib. 1224 came. 1

Never say that marriage has more of


joy than pain.

One word
Frees us of
life:
all

Alcestis* [438 B.C.], I 238

the weight and pain of


Ib.

A second wife
is hateful to the children of the a viper is not more hateful. Ib.

first;

That word
It

is

love.

1616

309

made our
fear. 2

hair stand

up in panic 16. 1625


disease.
*

sweet thing, for whatever time, to revisit in dreams the dear dead

we

have

lost.

16.

remedy too strong


tell lies is

for the

Oh,

if I

Tereus, frag. 51 4

Truly, to
ruin,

not honorable;
entails

with which to her Lord,


I'd call

had Orpheus' voice and poetry move the Dark Maid and

But when the truth

tremendous

you back, dear love, from the world below.

To

speak dishonorably

pardonable. Creusa, frag. 323


life,

is

Sons arc the anchors of a mother's

Phaedra, frag. 612

down there for you. Charon or the grim King's dog could not prevent me then from carrying you up into the fields of
I'd

go

To him who
tics.

is

in fear everything rusAerisius, frag. 58

light.

16.

358

Light be the earth upon you,


rest. 3

No

falsehood lingers

on into old age. Ib. frag. 59

lightly Ib. 462

God, these old nien!

How
And
You

No man

loves life like

him
write

that's

grow-

4 ing old.

they pray for death! How heavy they find this life in the slow drag of
days!
yet,

16. frag.
I

64

woman's vows
wave.
5

upon the
frag.

when Death

comes
will rise

near

Unknown Dramas,
J

694
1
,

them, will not find one walk with him,

who

and

See Thcognis, p. 773, and note. Sec Robert Graves, p. 10345. "The fragment* arc from the Everyman Edition of The Dramas of Sophocles. * Sec Euripides, p. 83!). 8 Sec Catullus, p. 1153; More, p. i78b; Bacon,
3

Sophocles said he drew men an they ought and Euripides as they were. ARISTOTLK, Poetics, ch 35 Translated by DUDLEY Frrrs and ROBERT
to be,
8

See

Anonymous,
p.

p.

i5ib;

Beaumont and
Richardson,

p.

aioa;

Shakespeare,

p.

*gga;

and

Keats,

p.

Fletcher, p. 8293.

31 Ob;

and

Robert

EURIPIDES
not one whose years are still a burden to him. 1 Alcesiis, L 669
I

know indeed what


do,
all

evil

intend to

You

love the daylight:

do you think
Ib. 691
I

but stronger than


is

my

afterthoughts

my fury,
upon mortals the greatMedea, 1. 2078
good,

your
father does not?

fury that brings


est evils.

Dishonor

will

not trouble me, once


Ib.

am

We

know the
clearly,

we apprehend

it

dead.

726

Today's today. Tomorrow, we may be ourselves gone down the drain of Eter2

but we can't bring it to achievement. 1 Hippolytus* [428 B.C.], /. 380

nity.

16-

788
8

There

mortal man, think mortal thoughts!


Ib.

is one thing alone that stands the brunt of

life

throughout
16.
it

799

its

course:

My
and

mother was accursed the night she bore me,


faint with envy of all the 16. 865 dead. 4
I

a quiet conscience.

426
435

In this world second thoughts,


are best.8

seems,

am

16.

You were

a stranger to sorrow: there16*

fore Fate

Love distills desire upon the eyes, love brings bewitching grace into the heart
of those he would destroy. I pray that love may never

has cursed you.


1

927

come

to

me

have found power in the mysteries of thought, exaltation in the chanting of the Muses; I have been versed in the reasonings of

with murderous intent,


in

Not

rhythms measureless and wild. fire nor stars have stronger bolts

than those of Aphrodite sent by the hand of Kros, Zero's child


ib.

men;
but Fate is stronger than anything I 16. 962 have known.

525

My

still

Time

tongue swore, but 4 unpledged,


that
I

my mind
16.

was 612
in

cancels

young pain.

16.

1085

Slight not what's near through aiming

Would

were under the

cliffs,

at what's far. 5

the secret
hiding-places of the rocks, that 3kius might change me to a winged
bird. 8
I

Rhesus
There

[c.

435 B.C.],

482

16*

732

no benefit man.
is

in the gifts of a

bad
618

Medea

[431 B.C.],
it

I.

When

love

is

in excess

brings a
16.

man
627
of

my way to the coast, apple-bearing Hesperian coast of which the minstrels sing,
where the Lord of the Ocean

would win

nor honor
nor any worthiness.

What

greater grief than the loss one's


16.

and fixes the solemn limit of Heaven which giant Atlas upholds.
*8ee Romans 7:19, p. $ia, and Ovhl, Translated by DAVID G*F,N. 'Second thoughts, thy say, arc DRY&EN, The Spanish Friar [i6Bi], act
Is
it

denies the voyager further sailing,

p.

iscju.

native land.
1

650

bwt.
II, AC.

See Sophocles, p. 8$a. See Edward Fitzgerald, p. 6$oa. 8 See Pindar, p. 79!).

so true that aecorut

thought* arc bent?

TNNYON,

* *

Sea ttrtams [1864]

See Job 5:5, p. i4a. See Pindar, p. 7ga, and note.

*SccSallust, p. 5b. 8 Sec Psalm $$;6, p, jgb.

EURIPIDES

There

the

streams

flow

with

am-

to hold your

brosia

hand victorious over the heads of those you hate?


is

by Zeus's bed of love, and holy Earth, the


yields

Glory
giver of life, rich blessedness. 1
I.

precious forever.

TheBacchae, L 877
Humility, a sense of reverence before the sons of heaven of all the prizes that a mortal man

to

the

Gods

Hippolytus,
I

742
gifts

care for riches, to

make

To

friends, or lead a sick

man back

to

might win,
these,
I

health With case and plenty. Else small aid

say, are wisest;

these are best.


Ib.

is

1150

wealth

For

daily

gladness;

once

man be

Yet do

hold that mortal foolish

done

who
sity.

strives against

With

hunger, rich and poor are all as one. Electra* [413 B.C.], I 427

Mad

the stress of necesHeracles, L 281

The company

of just

men

is

better than wealth

and righteous and a rich


1

A coward turns away, but a brave man's choice is danger.


Iphigenia in Tauris [c. 412 B.C.], I

estate.

Aegeus,

frag,

A
ing.

bad beginning makes a bad endAeolus,


will
1-

frag.

32
a

The day
for thieves.

is

for

honest men, the night


Ib.

Time
talker,

explain

it

all.

He

is

3026
su-

Mankind
preme

and needs no questioning before Ib. frag. 38 he speaks,

possesses

two
is

the whichgoddess Demeter, or Earth ever name you choose to call her by. It was she who gave to man his nourishment of grain. But after her there came the son of Semele, who matched her
blessings.
First of these

Waste not

fresh tears over old griefs.

Alexander, 1
"

frag.

44
his

The nobly born must nobly meet


fate. 2

Alcyrnene*

frag.

100

present
his
gift

by
to

inventing liquid

wine

as

thetic wife.

Man's best possession is a sympaAntigone? frag, 164

good
grief;

gift, suffering

man. For filled with that mankind forgets its from it comes sleep; with it
of

oblivion

the

troubles

of

the
for

clay.

There
ery.-

is

no other medicine
[c.

mis-

good men die their goodness does not perish, But lives though they are gone. As for the bad, All that was theirs dies and is buried
with them. 4

When

The Kacchac
Talk sense
you foolish.
the gods. 3
to
a

407 B.C.], L 274

Temenidae*
*

frag.

734

fool

and he
16.

calls

480
882
the

Slow but sure moves the might of


Ib.

What
is

is

wisdom? What
this:

gift

of

gods
held in glory like
1

Translated by MORRIS HICKEY MORGAN. Sec Sophocles, p. 8ia. If there be any good in nobility, I trow it to be only this, that it imposeth a necessity upon those which are noble, that they should not suffer their nobility to degenerate from BOKTHIOS ancestors. the of their virtues [A.P. 470-525], De Consolations Philosophiae III,
3

Translated by GILBERT MURRAY. Tramlaircl by WIMIAM ARROWKMITH. ,S<rc Ciroigc Herbert, p. 3250, and von Logan,

Doc DE LKVIS [1764-1830] Noblesse oblige. 8 Translated by MORRIS HICKEY MORGAN. 4 See Shakespeare, Julius Caesar ///, ii, 79,
p.

85506

Translated by MORRIS HICKEY MORGAN.

EURIPIDES

HERODOTUS
the Syracusans when the favor of the gods was equal for both sides. Epitaph for the Athenians Slain in Sicily

An

old

man weds

a tyrant, not a wife. Phoenix (quoted by ARISTOPHANES, Thesmophoriazusae ) , frag. 413

Every

man

is

like the

company he
Ib. 1 frag.

is

wont

to keep.

809

HERODOTUS
C.

Who knows
call

but

life

be that which
2 call life?
frag.

men

485-0. 425

B.C.

Men
eyes,

trust their cars less

than their
I,

death,

And

death what

men

Book

ch. 8

Phrixus*

830

Whoso

neglects learning in his youth, Loses the past and is dead for the future.
Ib. frag.

takes off her claim to re16, her garments. 1 with spect along

A woman

927

The gods
Visit the sins of the fathers
children. 4
Ib.

In peace, children inter their parents; violates the order of nature and causes parents to inter their children.

war

upon the frag. 970

i,8 7
[The Persians] arc deliberate about the
matters
It

judge

In a case of dissension, never dare to till you've heard the other side. Heracleidae 5 (quoted by ARIS-

accustomed to most important


1,

when they

arc drunk.

133

TOPHANES, The Wasps)

was a kind of Cadmean victory.2 1 166

he

Those whom God wishes 6 first makes mad.


These

to destroy,

Fragment

men won

eight victories over

For great wrongdoing there are great punishments from the gods, II r 120

Translated by MORRIS HXCKEY MORGAN. 'See Aristophanes, p. gga, and Montaigne,


p. 1900.
8
*

serious,

Translated by MORRIS HICKEY MORGAN.

you, though HORACE, Odes III, 6:z guiltless, The sins of the fathers arc to be laid upon the children. SHAKESPEARE, Merchant of Venice [1596-1597], HI, v, i 9 Translated by MORRIS HICKEY MORGAN.

See Exodus 20:5, p. ga. For the sins of your fathers

man insisted alwavs on being and never allowed himself a bit of fun and relaxation, he* would go mad or become unstable without knowing
If

it
It is better to

II,

17?
5*

must

suffer,

be envied than pitied. Ill $*


in

Knvy
start.

is

born

man from
III,

the

Latin version is: Quo* [or Quern] deus vult pcrdere prius dementat. In Boswell's Life of Dr. Johnson [1791]

The anonymous

So

(Everyman cd.), vol. a, pp. 441-443, this is quoted as a saying which everybody repeats but nobody knows where to find. Whom Fortune wishes to destroy she first makes mad. PUBLILIUS SYRUS [c. 4* B.C.],

Force has no place where there is need of skill. III. 227

From
1

the foot, Hercules. 4


and
of
Ktexx.tr*,

rv, 82
of

See Chaucer, p. lOHi,


Polynciccs
of

*<m*

Maxim
First

OtxUpu*

91 1
falls

and

descendant*
a

Cactmui,
victory
*uff<*r

When

on man the anger


his

of the gods,

possession

Thchc* and

fought for thr killed each other.


mc.inn
alike.

from

mind they banish underLYCURCUS


[fl.

Hence,
victor

Cadmean

ow

wbric

standing, For those whom

Sao

B.C.]

and vanquUhfd

God

He

to ruin has designed,

fits

for fate,

and first destroys their mind, DRYDEN, The Hind and the Panther
[1687], pt. Ill,
I.

See also Pyrrhui, p, 105!* ("Pyrrhic victory"). * Also in PINNA*. Pythian Ofai I, tfij. Kx fttdc, HcTCulcm, From Gftnw

Awn

the Gods would destroy they first mad. LONGFELLOW, The Masque of Pandora [1875], VI

Whom

HHtf

(Nocttts

Attuat

1,

/),

who

tfll*

how Pythagoras
from
the

deduced

make

the stature* of length of hit foot. See Anonymous, p. 1505.

Hrrtuln

86

HERODOTUS
It is the gods' custom to bring low all 1 things of surpassing greatness. Boofe VII, ch. 10

SOCRATES

AGIS
fifth

century B.C.

Haste in every business brings failures. VII, 10

ask

The Lacedemonians are not wont to how many the enemy are, but
are.

where they

When
has
refuge.

life is

so

burdensome, death
a

From PLUTARCH, Apothegms,

Agis

become

for

man

sought-after

VII, 46

SOCRATES*
469-399
B.C,

Circumstances rule men;


rule circumstances.

men do

not

VII, 49

Often when looking at a mass of


things for sale,

Great deeds are usually wrought at VII, 50 great risks.

"How many
of!"

things

he would say to himself, I have no need


LAERTIUS,

From DIOGENES
Having the fewest wants, est to the gods.
I

Not snow,

no, nor rain, nor heat, nor

bk. 2, sec.

night keeps them from accomplishing their appointed courses with all speed. 2 VIII, 98

25

am

near-

I&.2 7

The

man, and
This
power.

king's might is his tim is very long.

greater than hu-

VIII, 140
is

There is only one good, knowledge, 16. 31 and one evil, ignorance.

the

bitterest

pain

among
IX, 16

My
to

divine sign indicates the future


16. 3.2

men, to have much knowledge but no


In soft regions are born soft men.

me.
I

know nothing except


live that

the fact of

my
16.

ignorance.

IX, 122

Bad men

they

may
eat

PROTAGORAS
C.

drink, whereas good that they may live. 2

men

eat and and drink

485-0. 410

B.C.
all

From PLUTARCH, How a Young Man Ought to Hear Poems, 4

Man

is

the measure of

things.

Fragment

I am not an Athenian or a Greek, but a citizen of the world. 8

There are two


tion.

sides to every quesl

From PLUTARCH, Of Banishment


Much of Plato, especially in the Apology and Phacdo, is thought to be direct quotation from Socrates. See Plato, p. 930.

From DIOGENES LAERTIUS,


Protagoras IX, 51
It
I*
is

the lofty pine that by the storm offrncr twsed; towers fall with heavier < ranh
Hoar,
B,c:,],

*He used to say that other men lived to eat, DIOGENES LABRTIUS but that he ate to live.
[c. A.D.

soo], Socrates 14 See Moliere, p. 361 a.

Which higher

Horace (65-8

Odes

//,

10:0

The bigger they come, the harder they fall. Roam* FimiMMONS [t8<te-i<)i7] before his
bout with James J. Jeffries, a heavier man, in Kan Francisco (June g, 1899] * Neither tnow, nor rain, nor heat, nor gloom of night U)s thcHc couriers from the swift

FIELDmust cat to live and live to eat. ING [1707-1754], The Miser; act III, sc. Hi See Bacon, p. so8b; Thomas Paine, p. 4&7b;

We

and William Lloyd Garrison, p. 6isb. Diogenes, when asked from what
he came, replied, "I am a DIOGENES LAERTIUS world."
citizen
[c.

country of the
soo],

A.D.

Diogenes 6
I hold myself to be. BQSWELL, Life of Dr, Johnson [1791], Everyman Edition, vol. I, p. 511

completion
scription
City,

of

their

appointed

rounds.

In-

Citizen of the world, as

<m the Main Post Office, adapted from Herodotus

New

York

SOCRATES
Crito,
I

HIPPOCRATES
divulge, holding such things to
secrets.

owe

a cock to Asclepius; wil

be holy

you remember to pay the debt? From PLATO, Phaedo (Socrates last words

carry out this oath, and break it not, may I gain forever reputation among all men for my life
if

Now

DEMOCRITUS
C.

and
me.

for

my

art;

but

if I

transgress

it

and

forswear myself,

460

- C. 400

B.C.

may The

the opposite befall * Physician's Oath


is

Whatever a poet asm and a divine


fine. 1

writes with enthusi

inspiration

is

very

Healing sometimes

is

a matter of time, but it


1

also a matter of opportunity.

Fragment 18

Precepts,

cft/i
for

lies

In truth we know nothing, for truth in the depth. Fragment 117

Sometimes

give

your

services

By convention there is color, by convention sweetness, by convention bitterness,

nothing, calling to mind a previous benefaction or present satisfaction. And if there be an opportunity of serving
a stranger in financial is give full assistance to all such. For where there is love of man, there is
straits,

but in

reality there are

atoms
1.25

one

who

and

space.
is

Fragment
a

Word

shadow

of deed.

Fragment 145

HIPPOCRATES
C.
I

For some patients, though conscious that their condition is perilous, recover their health simply through their contentment with the
also love of the art.

460-400

B.C.

clepius,
all

swear by Apollo Physician, by Asby Health, by Panacea, and by the gods and goddesses,

them
self,

goodness of the physician. And it is well to superintend the sick to make them well, to care for the healthy to keep
well, also to earc for one's

own

making

them

witnesses, that I will carry out, according to ability and judg-

my

so as to observe

what

is

seemlv. Ib. c/i/6

my

ment, this oath and this indenture. hold my teacher in this art to

To

In

all

abundance there

is

lack.
16. ch.

parents; to make him partner in livelihood; when he is in need of money to share mine with him; to con-

own

equal

my
If for

my

the sake of a crowded audience

you

clo

bition

is

and

sider his family as own brothers, to teach them this art, if they want to learn it, without fee or inden-

wish to hold a lecture* your amno laudable one, and* at least

my

avoid

... I will use treatment to help the sick according to my ability and judgment, but never with a view to inture

all citations from the poets, for to quote them argues feeble industry. IbJch, 23

and wrongdoing ... I will keep pure and holy both my life and my
jury

difficult. 2

is short, the art long, timing is exact, experience treacherous, judgment

Life

Aphorisms,
illnesses
fitting.*
8,

sec. I,

houses I enter, enter to help the sick, and I will abstain from all intentional
I will

art

... In whatsoever

For extreme ments arc most


1

extreme

treat-

Ib. 6

and harm,
bodies of

especially

man

wrongdoing from abusing the


or free.
see or hear in

Translated by W. H, Vfta brcvfc at, an


I, t

JONM.
/><?

Ionga.-Sr.NfCA,

or

woman, bond
I shall

Brevitate Vltat

And

whatsoever

The

the course of tercourse with


i

lyf w> short, the craft QtAtiCKft, T/te Pttrlfamtnt

*
at

my

profession in
if it

my

in-

men,

be what should
I

not be published abroad,

will

never

1386], Art'i long, though time i* INC, The Rtn$ and the Book

Li

long to letnc. F<wl* ft8t>-

short.

BROWN-

Apparently the earliest reference to the mad-

ness or divine inspiration of poets.

Juris Doctor Johannes* Baptitta Bottiniu* See Goethe, p. 47?b, tad Longfellow, p. r**ob.
s

[ifM-ilty], XX,

See Shakespeare, l/amtet IV\

M, 9,

p. ,645.

THUCYBIDES

THUCYDIDESi
460 400 B.C. Thucydides, an Athenian, wrote the history of the war between the Peloponnesians and the Athenians; he
C.

else to look after this or that for

and

him; by the same notion being entertained by all separately, the common
so,

began at the moment that it broke out, believing that it would be a great war, and more memorable than any that had
preceded
it.

cause imperceptibly decays. 1 The History of the Peloponnesian War, bk. I, sec. 141
a demochands not of the few but of the many. But our laws

Our

constitution
it is

is

named

racy, because

in the

The History

War

of the Peloponnesian [431-413 B.C.], bk. I, sec. i

secure equal justice for all in their private disputes, and our public opinion welcomes and honors talent in every

With reference to the narrative of events, far from permitting myself to derive it from the first source that came
to hand,
I

branch of achievement, not for any sectional reason but on grounds of excellence alone.
all

did not even trust

my own

impressions, but it rests partly on what I saw myself, partly on what others saw for me, the accuracy of the report being

And as we give free play to in our public life, so we carry the same spirit into our daily relations with have no black looks or one another.

We

always tried by the most severe and detailed tests possible. My conclusions have cost me some labor from the want of coincidence between accounts of the

he enangry words for our neighbor if in his own way, and we joys himself abstain from the little acts of churlishness which, though they leave no mark, yet cause annoyance to whoso notes

same occurrences by

different

eyewit-

nesses, arising sometimes from imperfect memory, sometimes from undue or the other. The partiality for one side absence of romance in my history will, I fear, detract somewhat from its interest; but I shall be content if it is judged useful by those inquirers who desire an exact knowledge of the past as an aid to

them. Open and friendly in our private intercourse, in our public acts we

We

keep
ence;

strictly

within the control of law.


rever-

acknowledge the restraint of

arc obedient to whomsoever is set in authority, and to the laws, more offer protecespecially to those which

we

tion to the oppressed and those unwritordinances whose ten transgression

the interpretation of the future, which human things must rehissemble if it does not reflect it.
in the course of

brings admitted shame. Ifa. II (Funeral Oration of


Pericles),

My

37

tory has been

composed

to

be an

ever-

not the lasting possession,


an hour

showpiece of Ik 22

are lovers of beauty without exwithtravagance, and lovers of wisdom


is not but an opportunity for achievement; and poverty we think it no disgrace to acknowledge

We

out unmanlincss.

Wealth

to us

The great wish of some is to avenge themselves on some particular enemy, the great wish of others to save their
own
pocket. Slow in assembling, they devote a very small fraction of the time to the consideration of any public obmost of it to the prosecution of
ject,

mere material

for vainglory

but a real degradation to to overcome.

make no

effort

!& 4

But the bravest are surely those who


have the clearest vision of what is before them, glory and danger alike, and out to meet it. yet notwithstanding go
F. In

their

own
that

objects.
it is

Meanwhile each
will

fan-

cies that
lect,

no harm

come

of his neg-

the business of somebody


i

Translated by Sift RICHARD LIVINGSTONE. Rankc, p. $86a.

Quoted by President John

Kennedy

Frankfurt [June $5, 1963].

THUCYDIDES
secure our friends not by accept 1 ing favors but by doing them, The History of the Peloponne War, bk. II (Funeral Ora

ARISTOPHANES

We

Men make
ships without

the

city,

men

in

and not walls or them. 1

The

wn

mn War>
Syracuse)

History of the Peloponnebk. VII, 77 (Address

tion of Pericles), sec. 40

of Nicias to the Athenians at

In a word

whole

is

claim that our city as a an education to Greece.


I

This or the
death of a

like

was the cause of the

man

16.41
Fix your eyes on the greatness oJ as you have it before you day by day, fall in love with her, and when you feel her great, remember that this greatness was won by men with courage, with knowledge of their duty, and with a sense of honor in action

Greeks in

my

[Nicias] who, of all the time, least deserved such

a fate, for he had lived in the practice Ib. VIII, 86 of every virtue.

Athens

This was the greatest event in the


war, or, in

my

opinion, in Greek his-

tory; at once most glorious to the victors and most calamitous to the con-

quered.

They were beaten

at all points

So they gave their bodies to the commonwealth and received, each for his

and

altogether; their sufferings in every


great. They were totally their fleet, their army, ev-

way were
destroyed

own memory, praise that will never die, and with it the grandest of all sepulchers, not that in which their mortal bones are laid, but a home in the minds of men, where their glory remains fresh
to stir to speech or action as the occa-

and few out of many reerything turned nome. So ended the Sicilian expedition.
All
Ib, VIII,
is

87

comes by. For the whole earth is the sepulcher of famous men; and their story is not graven only on stone over their native earth, but lives on far away,
sion

the monument of Euripides, but the Macedonian land holds his bones, for it sheltered the end of his life. His country was Athens, the Hellas of Hellas, and as by his verse he
Hellas

gave exceeding delight, so for


receiveth praise.

many he

without visible symbol, woven into the stuff of other men's lives. For you now it remains to rival what they have done and, knowing the secret of happiness to be freedom and the secret of freedom a brave heart, not idly to stand aside from the enemy's onset. 2 16. 43
the glory of the woman who occasions the least talk among men, whether of praise or of blame.

Epitaph. Greek Anthology

[Loeb Classical Library],


bk.

VII

no. 4?

ARISTOPHANES
C.

450- 38$

B.C.

Great

is

For then, in wrath, the Olympian


cles

Peri-

16.45
For human nature
by firmness.
1

is

as surely
it is

made
awed
39

Thundered and lightened, and confounded Hellas Enacting laws which ran like drinking
2

arrogant by consideration as

songs.

16. Ill,
than

Acharnians [425 B.C.], I 530

When men drink,


successful

Rather

favors,

relations.
[c.

by conferring by accepting they [the Romans] established friendly The War with SALLUST, Catiline
p.

then they are rich and and win lawsuits and are happy and help their friends.

40 B.C.], 6 *See Simonides,

Quickly, bring
x

me

a beaker of wine, so

7ob,

and Brandeis,

p.

Scc Sophode*, p, 8 1 a. Translated by B. B. Rows.

ARISTOPHANES
that
I

may wet my mind and

say

You

something clever. Knights [424 B.C.], I 92 have all the characteristics of a


popular
voice,
politician:

Mankind, fleet of life, weak creatures of


tial

like tree leaves,


clay,

unsubstan-

horrible

shadows, wingless, ephemeral, wretched, mortal and dreamlike. 1 Birds, I 685

as

bad breeding, and a vulgar manner. 16. 217


the worse appear the better
I.

To make

reason. 1

Clouds [423 B.C.],

114 and
elsewhere

Somewhere, what with all these clouds, and all this air, There must be a rare name, somewhere How do you like "Cloud-Cuckoo-Land"? 2
. .
.

16.

817

Haven't you sometimes seen a cloud


that looked like a centaur?

Halcyon days.

16.
is

1594
short,
sits

Or

a leopard perhaps? bull? *

Or

a wolf?
16.

Or

A woman's
and
if

time of opportunity
she doesn't seize
it,

no one

346

Old men
time.3

are

children

for

second

16.

wants to marry her, and she for omens. watching


Lysisfrata [411

1417
There
is

B.C.],

Z.

596

This

is

what extremely

grieves us, that a

never fought Should contrive our fees to who for his native land

man who

no animal more

invincible

pilfer,

one

than a woman, nor fire either, nor any wildcat so ruthless.


16.

Never

to this day had oar, or lance, or blister in his hand.


4
'

1014

Wasps Let each man


knows,

[422 B.C.],
exercise

Z.

1117

the

art

he

16. 1431

These impossible women! How they do get around us The poet was right: can't live with 4 them, or without theml
I

16.

1038

You cannot
straight.

teach

crab

to

walk

Under every stone

lurks a politician- 5

Peace [421 B.C.], I 1083

Thesmophoriazusae [410 B,C,], Z. 530


There's

[On the

nightingale] Lord Zeus, listen to the little bird's voice; he has


filled

the whole thicket with honBirds [414 B.C.], I 223


Shall

nothing worse in the world than woman shameless save 16. /. 531 some other woman,
I

eyed song.
crack any of those old jokes,
fail

Bringing owls to Athens,


enemies.

16.

301
their

master, At which the audience never

to
i

Hie wise learn many things from


16.
all

laugh?
1

Frogs

[405 B.C.], I

375

Full of wiles, full of guile, at


in all ways,

times,

Sec Homer, p. C4b, and Pindar, p. ygb. * Translated by DUDLEY Frrrs. *See Shakespeare, Henry VI, Pt. I, I, ii,
p.

131,

Are the children of Men. 6


See Milton* p. * Translated by DUMJKY Sec .Shakrftpeare, Hamlet
1

16.

si^a.

451

Fm.
///,
if,

The appellation of Halcyon days, which was applied to a rare and bloodless week of repose. --GIBBON; Decline and Fait of the Roman
Empire [1770-1788], ch. 48 * Translated by DUDLEY Frrrs.
8

ami Antony and Cleopatra IV, *Sec Shnkc*p<-arc, p. 6ia.


*

xii,

400, p. &6$b, a, p, *88b.

Translated by B. B. RCX;R#, Sec Horace, p. ixoa. Translated by B. B. KOGKRS.

Imitated by Martial (see p. i3$b), A play on the proverb "Under every stone

lurks a scorpion/'

Translated by B. B. ROCXRS.

ARISTOPHANES
1 Brekekekex, ko-ax, ko-ax.

PLATO

XENOPHON
c.

Frogs,

I.

209 and elsewhen

43

-355 B c
-

savage-creating stubborn-pulling fel

low,

Uncurbed, unfettered, uncontrolled


speech, 2 Unperiphrastic, bombastiloquent.
16.

o:

Apollo said that everyone's true worship was that which he found in use in the place where he chanced to be.
Recollections of Socrates, bk.
eft.
I,

3, sec. i

837
lan-

The sea! The


I

seal

High thoughts must have high


guage.
8

Anabasis TV,

7,

24

I&.
living
is

1058
dying,

Who
Is

knows whether and breathing eating, and sleeping


ket?*

is

knew my son was mortal. 2 From DIOGENES LAERTIUS, Xenophon II, yj

a wool blan16.

1477
1482
has

ZEUXIS
400 B.C. Criticism comes easier than
fl.

Blest the

man who

possesses a
16.

Keen
I

intelligent

mind.
that

crafts-

am amazed
made a
friends.

anyone who

manship,

fortune should send for his

From PLINY THE ELOER,


Natural History

Plutus

[c.

388 B.C.], I 340


is

We

PLATO*
C.

say that poverty

the sister of
16.

428

348 B.C.
lie

549 Even if you persuade me, you won't 16. 600 persuade me.

beggary.

We
surge

who

of old left

of the

Aegean

the booming here in the mid-

pkm

of Bcbatana: farewell, renowned

man's homeland
pers.

is

wherever he pros16. 1151

AGATHON
C.

once our country; farewell Athens nigh to Kuboea; farewell, dear sea. 4 Greek Anthology III, io c
Eretria

448
is

Beloved Pan, and

all

400

B.C.

who haunt
the

This

only

power

to

denied to God; undo the past.

the inward

this place, give soul; and

ye other gods me beauty in may the outward

From ARISTOTLE, Nicomachean


Ethics, bk. VI, ch. 2

!>e at one. May I reckon the wise to be the wealthy, and may I have such a quantity of gold as none but the temperate can carry.

and inward man

AGESILAUS
444-400
If all

Dialogues, Phaedrun, sec. 379

B.C.

Friends have

all

things in

common.
Ifc.

men were
of valor.

just,

there

would be
*

no need

From PLUTARCH,
It is

Lives,

Thaltttu! Thalatu! Hail to thee, Sea, agetam and

net nail

that give an action its character and make it either good or bad. 16.

Agesttaus, sec. 23 circumstance and proper timing

HKINRICH Himr, (17^7-18^]- TJwtoite/ T/t6faH/, St. t


his son wa killed in baulc, Translated by BKNJAMIN Jowiitr. *On the Eretrian exilei *cu)ed in Persia by Darius.

When

36

Adopted
*
8

as a Yale College cheer.

Refers to Aeschylus. Translated by DUDLEY


p.

Frm.
and Montaigne,
p.

'Edited by J.W. MACKAU,, According to Tiraaioa, he (Pythagoras, 58*500 B.C.] originated the faying "Friends iharc
all

'See Euripides,

thingi."

DWCRNM UKKTIUI
I.

VIU, /o

86a,

Al*o in Euripides. Orest**,


See Sallust, p. i5b.

7^5,

PLATO

And
led

the true order of going, or being

away.

...

A man
own

should wait, and

by another, to the things of love, is to begin from the beauties of earth and

not take his mons him.

life until

God sum-

mount upwards for the sake of that other beauty, using these steps only, and from one going on to two, and from two to all fair forms to fair practices,
and from fair practices to fair notions, until from fair notions he arrives at the notion of absolute beauty, and at last knows what the essence of beauty
is.

Dialogues, Phaedo* 62

Must not all things at the swallowed up in death?

last

be
72

Ib.

much

Will you not allow that I have as of the spirit of prophecy in me as the swans? For they, when they per-

Dialogues,

Symposium 211

lustily

ceive that they must die, having sung all their life long, do then sing more than ever, rejoicing in the

Beholding beauty with the eye of the mind, he will be enabled to bring forth, not images of beauty, but realities (for he has hold not of an image but of a reality), and bringing forth and nourishing true virtue to become the friend of God and be immortal, if mortal man

thought that they are going to the god


2 they serve.

Ib.

85

The
a

he is engaged in partisan, when the dispute, cares nothing about

but is anxious rights of the question, of his own only to convince his hearers Ib* 91 assertions.
words are not only evil in themselves, but they infect the soul
False

may.

Ib.

212

Socrates is a doer of evil, who corrupts the youth; and who does not believe in the gods of the state, but has

with

evil.

Ib.

other new divinities of his own. Such is Ib. Apology 24 the charge*

soul takes nothing with her to the other world but her education and culture; and these, it is said, are of the

The

The
worth

life

which

is

unexamined

is

not

living.

Ib.

38

greatest service or of the greatest injury to the dead man, at the very beginning Ib. 107 thither. of his

journey
is

Kithcr death is a state of nothingness and utter unconsciousness, or, as men say, there is a change and migration of
the soul from this world to another, 1 Now if death be of such a na.
.

He who

of a calm and happy na-

ture will hardly feel the pressure or age, but to him who is of an opposite disposition youth and age are equally a bur-

ture,

say that to die is to gain; for eternity is then only a single night.
I

den.

The

Republic, bk.

I,
is

3^9-D
a phy-

No
he

Ib.

physician, insofar as

he

40

sician, considers his

own good

in

what

can happen to a good man, Ib. 41 either in life or after death.


evil

No

the good of his paprescribes, but


for the true physician
is

tient;

also a

The hour of departure has arrived, I to die, and you and we go our ways
to
live.

ruler
*

having the

human body
ayens
his

as a sub-

Which
is

is

better

God

only
Ib.

Sec Socrates, p, Syb. The Jalous swan, CHAXICKR,


I.

deth

that

knows.

42

singeth,

[1580-1386],

Man
to
1

open
Either

a prisoner who has the door of his prison

no right and run


\

Makes a swan-like end, Fading in music SHAKESPEARE, The Merchant of


Venice [1596-1597], /// * 44 -~ play the swan and die in music. Othello [1604-1605] V, a, ^45 See Shakespeare, p. *37a, and Byron, p.
will

The Parliament

of Fowls

the oul is immortal and we shall not die, or it jwrishe* with the flesh and we shall not know that we are dead. Live, then, MAUROIS AN DR a* if you were eternal. On the Mean[HHs-i<)<>7], From Wiu. DURANT,

ing of

'Lift [1932], p. jj.

See Socrates, p. 88a, for his last words.

93

PLATO
ject,

and

not a mere moneymaker. 1 The Republic, bk. I, 342-D


is

evils

no, nor the

human

believe

and then only

race, as I will this our


life

When
just
less

there

is

an income

tax,

the

man

will pay more and the unjust on the same amount of income.

State have a possibility of hold the light of day.

and

be-

The Republic,

bk.

V, 473-0

16.

343-D

that they
ting
it.

censure injustice fearing the victims of it, and not because they shrink from commit-

Mankind

may be

Let there be one man who has a city obedient to his will, and he might bring into existence the ideal polity about which the world is so incredulous.
Ib.

Ib.
is

344-C
Behold!
. .

502-8

The beginning
2 part of the work.

the most important


Ib.

human
den

beings living in an
. .

37/-B

underground
.

Like

ourselves

The judge should not be young; he should have learned to know evil, not from his own soul, but from late and long observation of the nature of evil in others: knowledge should be his guide, not personal experience.
Ib. Ill,

they see only their

own shadows,

or the shadows of one another, which the fire throws on the opposite wall of Ib. VII, the cave.

Everything that deceives to enchant.

409-6 may be said Ib. 413-0


.
.

Astronomy compels the soul to look upwards and leads us from this world to Ib. 529 another.
I

matician
ing.

have hardly ever known a mathewho was capable of reasonIb.

then, might we contrive lie to persuade if possible the rulers themselves, but failing that the Ib. 414-0 rest of the city? 3

How,

J32-E

one noble

Wealth is the parent of luxury and indolence, and poverty of meanness and 4 viciousness, and both of discontent.
IV, 4 22-A The direction in which education starts a man will determine his future
Ib.
life.

when he man when he grows old may for he can no learn many things 1 more learn much than he can run
Solon was under a delusion
said that a

much; youth
traordinary

is

toil.

the time for any exIb. 536-!)

Bodily exercise, when compulsory, does no harm to the body; but knowl-

Ib.
is

edge which
sion obtains

is

425-6

acquired under compulno hold cm the mind.


Ib.

be defined
man's?

the prime of life? May it not as a period of about twenty years in a woman's life, and thirty in a
Ib.

What

536-E

Let

early

education
will

V, 46o-E

amusement; you

be a sort of then be better


16. ? 37

able to find out the natural bent.

kings

Until philosophers are kings, or the and princes of this world have the

and power of philosophy, and political greatness and wisdom meet in one, and those commoner natures who
spirit

Oligarchy: government resting on a valuation of property, in which the rich have power and the poor man is

pursue either to the exclusion of the other are compelled to stand aside, cities will never have rest from their
Sec Hippocrates, p, 88b. Proverbial. Also in Laws VI, a. See Aristotle, p. g8b; Horace, p. laga; and Heywood, p, iSjb.
3
3 4
1

deprived of

it.

Ib. VIII,

$$o-C

Democracy, which is a charming form of government, full of variety and disorder, and dispensing a sort of equal2 ity to equals and uncquals alike,
Ib.
*
9

Loeb
Sec /

Classical Library translation. Timothy 6:xo, p. 55b, and Sophocles,

558-0

p, 8aa.

Sec Solon, j>. 08l>, See Aristotle, p. flKb,

94

PLATO Democracy
passes

The

despotism. Republic, bk. VIII,

into

Let us affirm what seems to be the

The people have always some champion whom they set over them and nurse into greatness. This and no other is the root from which a tyrant
. .

whether one is or is not, one and the others in relation to themselves and one another, all of them, in every way, are and are not, and appear to be and appear not to be. Dialogues, Parmenides 166
truth, that,

springs;

when he

first

appears he
Ib.

is

Well,
attend

my

protector.

565-0

respects like theirs;

full

whom

In the early days of his power, he is of smiles, and he salutes everyone

men

midwifery is in most but differs, in that I and not women, and I look
art of

after their souls

when they
is

are in labor,

he meets.

Ib.

566-D

and not

after their bodies:

and the

tri-

When the tyrant has disposed of foreign enemies by conquest or treaty, and there is nothing to fear from them,
then he is always stirring up some war or other, in order that the people may Ib. require a leader.

umph
mind

of

my

art

in thoroughly ex-

amining whether the thought which the


of the
a false idol or a noble

young man brings forth is and true birth.


Ib. Theaetetus

150

566-E

which are concerned with all things: one which uses, another which makes, a third which imitates them. Ib. X, 6oi~D
arts

There are three

[the philosopher] does not hold aloof in order that he may gain a repu-

He

but the truth is, that the outer form of him only is in the city: his mind, disdaining the littlenesses and
tation;

No human
tance.

thing
of

is

of serious imporIb.

604-0

The
If a

soul

man

is

immortal and
Ib.

imperishable.

6o8-D

person shows that such things as

wood stones, are also one,

and the

like,

being

many

we admit

that he shows

nothingnesses of human beings, is "flying all abroad" as Pindar says, measuring earth and heaven and the things which are under and on the earth and above the heaven, interrogating the whole nature of each and all in their entirety, but not condescending to anything which is within reach.
Ib.
I

the coexistence of the one and many, but he does not show that the many are one or the one many; he is uttering not a paradox but a truism.
Dialogues, Parmenides 129

173

would have you imagine, then, that

there exists in the mind of man a block of wax, which is of different sizes in different men; harder, moister, and hav-

The known
If

or kinds are severally by the absolute idea of

absolute

natures

knowledge.
these
a man, and the

does away with ideas of things and will not admit that every individual thing has its own determinate idea which is always one and the same, he will have nothing on which his mind can rest; and so lie will utterly destroy the power of reasoning.
Ib.

fixing his like difficulties,

134 attention on

Ib*

ing more or less of purity in one than another, and in some of an intermediate quality. Let us say that this tablet is a gift of Memory, the mother
. . .

of the Muses; and that when we wish to remember anything which we have
seen, or heard, or

thought in our own

minds,
tions
rial

we hold

the

wax

and thoughts, and


seal of a ring;

to the percepin that mate-

receive the impression of


is

them

as

from the

and that we
imprinted

remember and know what

135

You cannot conceive the out the one.


'Tramlauxl by
F.

many
Ib,

with-

as long as the image lasts; but when the image is effaced, or cannot be taken,

166

then

we

forget

and do not know.


Ib. 191

M. CORNKOWX

95

PLATO

DIOGENES THE CYNIC

Let us now suppose that in the mind of each man there is an aviary of all
sorts of birds

PHOCION
C.

402-317

B.C.

flocking together small apart from the rest, others in groups, others solitary, flying anywhere

some

Have
*

inadvertently said

some

evil

thing?

and everywhere.

We may suppose

From PLUTARCH, Apothegms,


Phocion,
sec.

10

that the birds are kinds of knowledge, and that when we were children, this a man receptacle was empty; whenever

The good have no need


cate.

of an advo16.

has gotten and detained in the enclosure a kind of knowledge, he may be said to have learned or discovered the thing which is the subject of the knowledge: and this is to know. Dialogues, Theaetetus 197
greatest penalty of evildoing namely, to grow into the likeness of bad

DIOGENES THE CYNIC


C.

4OO-C. 325

B.C.

[When asked by Alexander if he wanted anything] Stand a little out of

my sun.

The

From PLUTARCH,

Lives,

Alexander, sec. 24
Plato having defined

men.

Laws 728
all

man

to

be a

Of
You

the animals, the boy

is

the

most unmanageable.
are young,

!& 808
son, and, as the

my

years go by, time will change and even reverse many of your present opinions. Refrain therefore awhile from setting yourself up as a judge of the highest

matters,

16.

888

without feathers, Diogenes plucked a cock and brought it into the Academy, and said, "This is 2 On which account this Plato's man." addition was made to the definition: "With broad flat nails/' From DXOCENKS LAKRTTOS, Diogenes 6
two-legged

animal

And
ment

this

which you deem of no moall:

is

the very highest of

that

is

whether you have a right idea of the gods, whereby you may live your life
well or
ill.

[When asked what was the proper time for supper] If you are a rich man, whenever you please; and if you are a
8 poor man, whenever you can.

16.
I

ib.

of them who took up in his youth with this opinion that there are no gods ever continued until old age

Not one

am looking for an

honest man,'*
Ib.

The sun
but
is

too penetrates into privies,


It.

faithful to his conviction.

16.

not polluted by them. 5

*Said when an opinion he delivered pleaneU

IPHICRATES
419-348
B.C.

the people. 2 Seeing that the

human

race

fall*

into the
creatures,

family history begins with me, but yours ends with you. 1

My

From PLUTARCH, Apothegms,


Iphicrates a lphicrates, a shoemaker's son who became a famous general, said this to Harmodius of distinguished ancestry when he reviled him for his

same classification as the feathered we must divide the biped claw Into and feathered, PLATO [c. 408 -c, The Statesman *66-E 'The rich when he i* hungry, when he has anything to cat. Workt, bk. IV [1(48], ch. *4
*

frathcrlnw

548
the

B.C.],

poor

RAHKI.AIS,

The
light;
is

Attributed atoo to Aeiop. spiritual virtue of a

*acramcm U

like

although

it

mean

birth.

Curtius Rufus seems to be descended from himself. TIBERIUS. From TACTTUS, Annalt Xt, ax
I

not polluted* Tract on St. John, ch* $;ty The sun shineth upon the dunghill, and not corrupted. Lvtv, Suphuts [ 11579 J

pawes among the impure, it ST, AuoufriNK [A.D. 354-430],


is

am my own

ancestor [Moi, je suis

mon

an-

The
and

aun,

cfttre.]

ANDOCHE JUNOT [1771-1813]

itself

which patneih through pollution* remains as pure as before. BACON,

96

ANTDPHANES

ARISTOTLE

ANTIPHANES
C.

The
truth
fold.

least initial deviation


is

388-0. 311

B.C.

We

must have richness of soul. Greek Comic Fragments, no, 570

from the a thousandmultiplied later On the Heavens, bk. I, ch. 5


is

ARISTOTLEi
384-322
Liars
B.C.

In all things of nature there thing of the marvelous. Parts of Animals, bk.
All

somech. 5

I,

men by

nature desire knowledge. ch. i Metaphysics, bk. I,

when they speak

the truth are

not believed.

From DIOGENES LAERTIUS,


bk.

The final cause, then, produces mo1 Ib. ch. 7 tion through being loved. The
actuality of thought is life. Ib. XII, ch. 7

V,

sec.

17

Hope

is

a waking dream.

Ib. 18

It is of itself that

What
Beauty

soon

grows old?

Gratitude.
Ib.

thinks (since things), and

it is

its

is

the gift of God.

Ib. 19

on thinking.

the divine thought the most excellent of thinking is a thinking !& <>ft 9
-

Educated
the dead. 2

to uneducated

men are as much superior men as the living are to


Ib.

What is
I

and pursuit, is similarly every activity thought to aim at some good. Nicomachean Ethics, bk. I, ch. i

Every science and every inquiry,

and

a friend?

A single soul

dwellIb.

ing in two bodies.*


that

20

have gained this by philosophy: I do without being commanded what others do only from fear of the Ib. 21 law. 4

While both [Plato dear, piety requires us to above our friends. 2

and

truth]

are

honor truth 16- <* 6

One
mer.8

swallow does not make a sumM* ch 7


*

We
we
us. 5

should behave to our friends as would wish our friends to behave to


Ib.
is

fore

For the things we we can do them, we learn by doing Ib. II, ch. i them.

have to learn be-

Education
old ago.

the best provision for


Ib.

Time

wastes

things away, and

all

fail in many is possible to ways while to succeed is possible only in one way (for which reason also one^is to miss and the other difficult

It
.

things grow

old through time. Physics, bk. IV, ch. 12

easy the mark easy, to hit

it difficult).

Ib. ch.

Advancement of Learning [1605], bk. 11 Truth is as impossible to be soiled by any outward touch as the sunbeam. MILTON, The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce [1643] 1 Chiefly from The Basic Works of Aristotle, edited by RUJHARD MCKF.ON. This wed to be quoted "with great warmth" by Dr, Johnson, according to BOSWKLL
in his Life of Johnson [79*J.

,We must
1

as

second best

take

the least of the

evils.*

*& <*- 9

See Dante, p. i6*a. Amicus Plato, sed magis arnica veritas but dearer Mill is truth]. [Plato is dear to me, from a medieval life of Aristotle.

MELEACER Andrtgathos, my soul's half. Ho B.c:,J. From The Greek Anthology X.H, $* [fl. See Zero*, p. 1058; Cicero, p. nib; Horace, p. laob; and Donne, p. jjoGa. *Al*o attributed to Xrnocrates [sott-S 1 * BiC: -l
by Cicero. Sec Matthew
terfield, p. 4153,

'One swallow maketh not summer, JOHN HBYWOOD, Proverbs [1546]* P** *1' ch f One swallow proveth not that summer NORTHBROOKE, Treatise Against Dancis near.
-

Adapted

ing [1577] One swallow never makes a summer.


VANTES,
bk. Quixote, pt. I [1605], One swallow makes a summer, LOWELL, Fall, io6x

CER-

Don

II, ch. 4.

ROBERT

7: /a, p. 413,

am! I-ord Ches-

See

Homer,

p. 64*.

and

note.

97

ARISTOTLE

b
state
is

A man

is

the origin of his action. 1

A
a

not a mere society, having


place,

Nicomachean Ethics,
6fc. Ill,

ch. 3

Without
choose to
goods.

friends

live,

no one would though he had all other


16. VIII, ch. i

enjoy the things we ought and to hate the things we ought has the greatest bearing on excellence of character.
Ib.

To

established for the prevention of mutual crime and for the Political society sake of exchange. exists for the sake of noble actions, and not of mere companionship. Politics, bk. Ill, ch. 9
.

common

If liberty

by some,
mocracy,
all

and equality, as is thought are chiefly to be found in de-

X, ch.

If happiness is activity in accordance with excellence, it is reasonable that it should be in accordance with the high-

they will be best attained persons alike share in the government to the utmost. 1 16. IV, ch. 4

when

est excellence.

Ib. ch. 7

The

best

We
peace.

make war

that

we may
it

live in

formed by

political community is citizens of the middle class.

Ib.

16. ch.

1 1

With

regard to excellence,

is

not

Democracy

arises

out of the notion

enough to know, but we must try to have and use it. Ib. ch. 9

that those who arc equal in any respect are equal in all respects; because men
are equally free, they claim to
lutely equal.

Man

is

by nature a

political animal.
2

Politics, bk. I, ch. 2

16.
revolt in

be V,

absoch. i

Nature does nothing

uselessly.

Inferiors
Ib.

order

that

they

may be
which

equal,

He who
or

who

is unable to live in society, has no need because he is suffi-

be superior.

and equals that they may Such is the state of mind


16. ch. 2

creates revolutions.

cient for himself, or a god.

must be

cither a beast
Ib.

In revolutions the occasions may be but great interests are at stake. trifling
J6. ch. 3

The two
spire regard

qualities which chiefly inand affection [arc] that a

thing is your only one.


It is

own and

that

Well begun

is

half done/*

it

Ib. ch. 4
is lib-

is

your

Ib. II, ch.

the nature of desire

4 not to be

The
erty.

basis of a democratic state


16.
is

VI, ch. 2

satisfied,

and most men


it.

live

gratification of

form

is

not so

The beginning much to equalize

only for the of re-

Law
order.

order,

and good law


16,

is good VII, ch. 4

prop-

Evils

erty as to train the noble sort of natures not to desire more, and to prevent the

draw men together. 8


Rhetoric, bk.
I,

ch. 6

lower from getting more.

Ib. ch.

It is

this simplicitv that

makes the

Even when laws have been written


down, they ought not always to remain
unaltered.
Ib. ch. 8

uneducated more elective than the educated when addressing popular audiences. Ib. II, ch. 22
tragedy is the imitation of an action that is serious and also, as having

the Again, general good, and not merely what their fathers had. 16,
desire

men

in

They should
best.
i
9

rule

who

arc able to rule


Ib. ch. 11

magnitude, complete in itself with incidents arousing pity and


Sec Plato, p. 94b. Aristotle Is quoting a proverb, See Plato, p. 943, and note.
*
1

fear,

Sec Sallust, p. n6a.

On

God and nature do nothing


the Heavens, bk, I, ch. 4

uselessly.

Aristotle i* quoting a proverb.

ARISTOTLE
wherewith to accomplish its catharsis of such emotions. Poetics, ch. 6

MENCIUS

[When
aware of

described

by Hermodotus

as

"Son of the Sun"]


this. 1

My

valet

is

not

whole is that which has beginning, Ib. ch. 7 middle, and end.
Poetry is something more philosophic and of graver import than since
history,

From PLUTARCH, Apothegms,


Antigonus

statements are of the nature of universals, whereas those of history are


its

MENCIUS2
372-289
B.C.

singulars.

16. ch. 9
is

When

always preferable to an unconvincing possibility.


Ib. ch.

one by force subdues men,

likely impossibility

24

they do not submit to him in heart. They submit, because their strength is Boofe II, 1:3.2 not adequate to resist.

Misfortune shows those


1 really friends.

who

are not

There

man
Ethics, bk. VII, ch. 2

no attribute of the superior greater than his helping men to


is

Eudemian

practice virtue.

II, 1:8.5

DEMOSTHENES
C.

superior either narrow-mindedness or the


of self-respect.

The

man

will

not manifest

want
1:9.3

384-322

B.C.
is

II,

Every advantage in the past in the light of the final issue.

judged

give the throne to another man would be easy; to find a man who shall

To

First Olynthiac, sec.

benefit the

kingdom

is difficult.

Nothing is easier than self-deceit. For what each man wishes, that he also believes to be true. 2
Third Olynthiac,
sec.

Ill,

1:4.10

Never has a man who has bent himself been able to make others straight.
Ill, 2:1.5
is un[a] thing righteous, then use all dispatch in putwhy wait till next ting an end to it

19
If

You cannot have a proud and chivalrous spirit if your conduct is mean and
paltry; for whatever a man's actions are, Ib. 33 such must be his spirit.
I

you know

that

year?

Ill, 2:8.3

decline to buy repentance at the

The compass and


perfect
circles

square

produce

8 cost of ten thousand drachmas.

and

From

AULXJS GELLIXTS, Noctes Atticae, bk. I, eft. 8

sages, the

human

squares. By the relations are perfectly

exhibited.

IV,
is

1:2.1

ANTIGONUS
C.

382-

^Ol B.C.

But how many

my

ships do you reckon 4 to be worth? presence

root of the kingdom root of the state is in the family. The root of the family is in the person of its head. IV, 1:5
state.

The

in the

The

From PLUTARCH, Apothegms,


Antigonus
*

Sec Montaigne, p. igob. phraic "No man is a hero to his valet" has often been attributed to Madame do S6vign6, but on the authority of MADAME Aissfi (Utters, edited by Jules Ravenal, 1858)

The

In pr<rt{>crtiy

it
it

but in advmity
things,

very easy to find a friend, in the most difficult of all

it

belongs to
It is said

that

Madame Cornuel [1614-1694]. no man is a hero to his valet.

K**uru.rus,

fragment taj

That

Sue Cicero, p. inb; Publilius Syrus, p. i7a; Ovid, p. tstja; and John Hcyw<x>d. p, i84*>S*c Carsar, p. naa. * In reply to the courtesan Lais.
*

is because a hero can be recognized only by a hero. The valet will probably be able to

appreciate his like

GOETHE
ttl,

that is, his fellow-valet. [i749->8$s], SprOche in Prosa, vol.

p. *<>4

Hi* pilot had told him


in whips.

that the

enemy

out-

numtx-ml him

From The Chinese Classics, Vol. IX: The Works of Mencius, translated by JAMES LECGE.

99

MENCIUS
people turn to a benevolent rule downwards, and as wild beasts fly to the wilderness.
as water flows

The

Water indeed will flow indifferently to the east or west, but will it flow indifferently up or down? The tendency
of man's nature to good is like the tendency of water to flow downwards.

Book IV,
Benevolence
tion of
straight
is

1:9.2

the tranquil habitais


2

man, and righteousness IV, path.

his

There are none but have


to good, just as
all

110.2

wards.

this tendency water flows downBoofe VI, 1:2.2

The path of duty lies in what is near, and man seeks for it in what is remote.
IV, 1:11
Sincerity
is

From

the

feelings
is
is

proper

to for

it,

[man's nature]
practice of

constituted

the

what

good.

the

way

of Heaven.

VI, 1:6.5-6
Benevolence,
ety,

IV, 1:12.2

There are three things which are unand to have no posterity is the 1 IV, 1:26.1 greatest of them.
filial,

and

righteousness, propriknowledge arc not infused into

us from without.

VI,
is

1:6.7

Benevolence
righteousness
is

must be decided on what they not do, and then they are able to act with vigor in what they ought to
will

Men

man's mind, and man's path. VI, 1:1 1.1

The
else

great

do.

IV, 2:8

but to seek for the

end of learning is nothing lost mind. 1


VI, 1:11.4
themselves that honorable. Only they do

The great man does not think beforehand of his words that they may be sincere, nor of his actions that they may
be resolute does what is

All

men

have

he simply speaks and


right.

which is truly not think of it.


If a

VI,
shall

iiy.i
his

IV, 2:11
is

scholar have not faith

[in

The

great

man

he who does not


IV, 2:12

principles],

how

lose his child's-heart. 2

hold of things?

he take a firm VI, 5:12

Friendship with a man is friendship with his virtue, and docs not admit of

When
his

great office

assumptions of superiority.

Heaven is about to confer a on any man, it first exercises mind with suffering, and his sinews
toil

IV, 2:13.1

and bones with


There
is

VI, z;i$.2

you must do violence and injury to the willow in order to make cups and bowls with it ... you must in the same way do violence and injury to humanity in order to fashion from it benevolence and righteousness! [This,] alas! would certainly lead all men on to reckon benevolence and righteousness to be calamities. VI, 1:1.2
If

than to be greater delight conscious of sincerity on self-examina'

no

tion.

VII, 1:4.2

Kindly words do not enter so deeply


into

men

as a reputation for kindness.

VII, 1:14.1
belly winch are injured by hunger and thirst? Men's minds are also injured by them.
Is it

only the

mouth and

be without posterity ... is an offense against the whole line of ancestors, and terminates the sacrifices to them. MENCIUS, /&.
"Except ye be converted,
little

*To

VII

1:27.1

dom

and become a* children, ye shall not enter into the kingof heaven." But Christ of the
speaks

people are the most important element in a nation; the spirits of the land and grain are next; the sovereign is

The

child's-heart as a thing to be regained; speaks of it as a thing not to be lost.

Mencius

the lightest * The Chinese


heart'' is

*ages alwayi

LEGCE
See Book Vlt

JAMK

covery of "the old heart'*;

Vir, 3:14.1 cnd with the rethe idea of "a new


JAMIA Ucc*

unknown

to them.

Sec Book IV\ a;n.

1OO

CHUANG TZU

PYTHEAS

CHUANG TZUi
369-286
Great wisdom
is

B.C.

is generous; petty wiscontentious. Great speech is impassioned, small speech cantankerous. On Leveling All Things

dom

Were Tao and virwhat use would there be for charity and duty? Were men's natural instincts not lost, what need
. against itself. tue not destroyed,
.

would there be for music and ceremonies?


.
.

Destruction of the natural

lar,

Take, for instance, a twig and a pilor the ugly person and the great

integrity of these things for the producthis tion of articles of various kinds
is

beauty, and all the strange and monstrous transformations. These are all leveled together by Tao. Division is the same as creation; creation is the same as destruction. 16.
I

of

the fault of the artisan. Destruction Tao and virtue in order to introthis is the duce charity and duty
error of the Sages.

Horses' Hoofs

do not know whether

was then a

man dreaming I was a butterfly, or whether I am now a butterfly dreaming I am a man. 16.
All
things;

Banish wisdom, discard knowledge, and gangsters will stopl Opening Trunks, or A Protest

Against Civilization

men know

the utility of useful


utility

but they do not know the


This

of

futility.

Human World

He who

losing his self

pursues fame at the risk of is not a scholar.

For all men strive to grasp what they do not know, while none strive to grasp what they already know; and all strive to discredit what they do not excel in, while none strive to discredit what they do excel in. This is why there is chaos.
16.

The Great Supreme


Those who seek
of
to satisfy the

Cherish that which

is
is

mind

and shut

off that

which
is

within you, without; for

man bv hampering it with ceremonies and music and affecting charity and devotion have lost their original nature. Joined Toes
In the days of perfect nature, man together witn birds and beasts, and there was no distinction of their could know of the distinckind.
lived

much knowledge
"The

a curse.

On
[a]

Tolerance

prince keeps

tortoise care-

fully enclosed in a chest in his ancestral would this tortoise rather temple.

Now

be dead and have its remains venerated, or would it rather be alive and wagging
its tail

Who

in the

mud?"
alive
.
. ,

without knowledge, their virtue could not go astray. Being all equally without desires, they were in a state of natural integrity, the people did not lose their [original]
nature.

between gentlemen and Being all equally people?


tions

common

"It

would rather be
its tail

and

wagging "Begone!" cried Chuangtse. "I too will wag my tail in the mud." Autumn Floods

in the

mud."

PYTHEAS*
fl.

appeared, crawling for charity and limping with duty, doubt and confusion entered

And

then

when

Sages

330

B.C.

They smell

of the lamp. 2

must make merry by means of music and enforce distinctions by means of ceremony, and the empire became divided
men's
minds.

They

said

From PLUTARCH,
*

Lives,

they

Demosthenes
Sec Virgil, p. ufa, and note. Pytheas refer* to the orations of Demosthenes, who worked in an underground cave lighted only by a lamp. See Cardozo, p. go*b.
*

From The Wisdom


by

of China

and India,

ed-

ited

UN

YUTANC.

101

APEIXES

MENANDER
The
comes
truth sometimes not sought for
forth to the light.

APELLES
fl.

325 B.C.
line.
1

Not a day without a


ELDER,

The
PLINY THE
History

Girl

Who

Gets

Proverbial from

Flogged, frag. 433

Natural

This
alone.

is

living,

not to live unto oneself


in Love, frag. 508

XXXV,
2 last.

36
above his
16.

A cobbler should not judge

The Brothers

85

1 god from the machine.

ALEXANDER THE GREAT


356-323
B.C.

The
I

Woman

Possessed with a
2

Divinity, frag. 227


call a fig a

[At Achilles' tomb] youth, to have found herald of your glory!

a spade a spade. fig, Unidentified fragment 545


Ii>.

fortunate
as

Homer

the

Even God lends a hand to honest


boldness.8

572
is

From CICERO, Pro


If I

Archia 24

Marriage,

if

one

will face

the truth,

were not Alexander,

would be
Lives,

an

evil,

but a necessary

evil *

Diogenes.

16. 651
It is

From PLUTARCH,

not white hair that engenders


it.

Alexander 14

wisdom.
Health

639
two

MENANDER8
C.

and
life*

intellect

are

the

342
Lady

292

B.C.
to,

blessings of

We live, not as we wish


can.

but as

we
50

Moncstikoi {Single IJncs]

of Andres, frag.

The man who

runs

may

fight again. Ib.

Riches cover a multitude of woes. The Boeotian Girl, frag. 90

Whom

the gods love dies young. 4 The Double Deceiver, frag. 125

They spare the rod and RALPH VKMNINC, Afyjf*vtV.t


l

spoil the child.

and

Rrutlatiam

The

Latin form

ix

uu*tlly quoted; Dcus ex

At times discretion should be thrown aside, and with the foolish we should
play the
fool. 5

machina.
Atao in I.ITIAN, //rrmpfimuf, i*r. <IM. 'Also attributed to AiUfopharve* by
I.t*<:tAN,

Those Offered

for Sale, frag.

421

De Contcribcnd. ffitf, jt, The Macedonians air 4 rude and


pa<lf a padc. Apothffgmt, Philip af Mattdnn
I

clownish

The man who has never been flogged has never been taught. 6
The
*NulIa

l>cople that call

PLUTARCH,

think
call

Girl

Who

Gets Flogged, frag. 422

To
3 *

it good plain KngUitli, without fraud, a spade a spade, a bawd at bawd.

JOHN TAYI.O*, Thr Watrr Poet


'

dies sine linea.

Set Trrtncc,

*Ne supra crepidam sutor iuclicaret. The more common rendering is:
stick to

j>,

tot^a

am!

ProjK-rtiui,

Cobbler,

Marriage is n evil that m<Mi Monostikoi [Single I.intf\\ Mtttttt

mm
/

p
welcome,
V/irr-

TH*

your

last.

Loeb
*Also

Classical Library translation. in PLAUTUS, Bacchides IV> 7:18*

Those that God loves do not live long. GEORGE HERBERT, Jacula Prudentum f*nd cd.
See Wordsworth, p. 5163.

39, /;// He who flo will fight again, -Tmrt to [c. ir>5"St5], tt* fw/fa in I*<rrjwfrfi0fi

tatar t

December

ims

That itttne man that runnith awaic Male again fight an other claif. EftAMt% Ajwlhfxrru (154*),
cd by NIC;KOIA
C^cluy qui
uit <Jr

gives its favorites early death. BYRON, Childe Harold, canto IV [1818], st. to* B See Horace, p. i**b, and note. See Proverbs xy.zj, p. s*a, and Samuel
Butler, p. 3553.

Heaven

ItoA

bonne

Pcui combat tic dcrcchcf, (Who flics in gfwnl time

Can

fight

arvcw.)

Satyre

Mtnippj*

1O2

MENANDER
Conscience is a God to all mortals. Monostikoi [Single Lines]

ARATUS

The

goal of life

is

living in

agreement
LAERTIUS,

with nature.

From DIOGENES

EPICURUS
341-270
B.C.

bk. VII, sec. 87

CLEANTHES
C.

when we are, death has not come, and when death has come, we are not. From DIOGENES LAERTIUS,
Death
is

nothing to us, since

330-232

B.C.

For we are your offspring. 1

Hymn

to Zeus, L

bk. X, sec. 12$

Pleasure is the beginning and the end of living happily. Ib. 128
It
is

impossible to live pleasurably


justly, live wisely, well, and

Lead me, Zeus, and you, Fate, wherever you have assigned me. I shall follow without hesitation; but even if I am disobedient and do not wish to, I shall follow no less surely.

without living wisely, well, and

From EPICTETUS,

Enchiridion,
sec.

and impossible to

53

1 justly without living pleasurably.

Ib.

140

EUCLID
fl.

300
it

B.C.

ZENO
335-263
B.C.
is

Q.E.D. [Which
2

was necessary to
I,

demonstrate.]
a friend?"]

[When
Another

asked,

"What

Elements, bk.

proposition 5
Ib.
is

I.2

The

From DIOGENES LAERTIUS,


bk. VII, sec. 23 Qui fuit pcut rcvenir aussi; Qui meurt, il n'en est pas
ainsi.

8 bridge of asses.
I]

road to geometry. 4

[To Ptolemy

There

no

royal

From PROCLUS, Commentary on


Euclid, Prologue

(Who

flics

can also return;

Not so with him who dies.) PAUL SCARRON [1610-1660]


For those that fly may Which he can never do
fight again, that's slain.
pt.
I.

PYRRHUS
C.

318-272

B.C.

SAMUEL BUTLKR, Hudibras,

HI
343

[1678], canto },

He

that fights and runs away May turn and fight another day; But he that is in battle slain

Another such victory over the Ro5 mans, and we are undone. From PLUTARCH, Lives,
Pyrrhus, sec. 21

Will never

rise to fight again.

JAMES RAY, History of the


Rebellion [1752]

ARATUS
C.

For he

who

fights

and runs away

315

240

B.C.

May
But

live to fight another day; he who is in battle slain


rise

Can never

and

fight again.

From Zeus let us begin, whom we mortals never leave unnamed: full of
i Acts /;:a^ p. 503. Possibly the source of See also Aratus, p. 1043. Translated into Lttin as: Quod erat demonstrandum.

GOLDSMITH, The Art of Poetry on a New Han [1761]

But since the man

that runs

away

Liven to die another day, And cowards' funerals, when they come, Are not wept so well at home, Therefore, though the best is bad,

Pons asinorum

(i.e.,

too difficult for asses,

Stand and do the

best,

my

lad,

or stupid boys, to get over). * Often misquoted as "learning" rather than

A. E.

HOUSMAN [1859-1956], The Day of Battle


Sec Aristotle p. 973.

"geometry."
* Pyrrhus, king of Epirus, refers to the dearly bought victory at Asculum, 280 B.C. Hence the

i$ee Sophocles,
8

p.

Bab,

In

latin:

Alter ego,

phrase "Pyrrhic victory/' See p. 86 1> ("Cadmean victory").

also

Herodotus,

103

AKATUS
Zeus are
all streets and all gathering places of men, and full are the sea an harbors. Everywhere we all have need of Zeus. For we are also his offspring, 1

BION

CALLIMACHUS
C.

305-240
evil.

B.C.

Great book, great

Phaenomena,

sec, i

Fragment 359

One

THEOPHRASTUS
Time man can
is

of thy fate, Heraclitus, and wrung me to tears. 1


told

me

278 B.C. the most valuable thing


d.
2

Greek Anthology,
a

J.

W.

MAC*

KAIL, ed. [1906], sec. 4, no. 31

spend.

From DIOGENES LAERTIUS,


Theophrastus V,
sec.

40

This is the tomb of Callimachus that thou art passing. He could sing well, and laugh well at the right time over
the wine.

His

LACYDES
fl.

C.

241

B.C.
life

Epitaph. Greek Anthology [Locb Classical Library], bk. VII, no. 415

Own

[When

asked late in

why he was
fl.

studying geometry] learning now, when

If I

should not be should I be?


Lacydes, sec.

BION
280
B.C.
all ills.

From DIOGENES LAERTIUS,

Old age

is

the harbor of

From DIOCENKS
Wealth
is

I^VERTIUS, bk. IV, sec. 47


Ih.

THEOCRITUS*
C.

the sinews of affairs. 2

310-250

B.C.

48

Tis peace of mind, lad, we must find, and have a beldame nigh To sit for us and spit for us and bid all
ill

The

road to Hades

is

3 easy to travel.

Ifr.49

go by.

The Harvest Home, I 126

has not acquired a fortune; the Ib. 50 fortune has acquired him. 4

He

Oh

cricket

is

to cricket dear,

and ant

Though boys throw


sport, the frogs in earnest. 5

stones at frogs in
in sport,

for ant doth long,

do not die

but

The hawk's
o'

me

the darling of his fere, and the Muse and her song.

The Third Country Singing


Match,
I.

From PLUTARCH, Water and Land Animals 7


*

See

W,

31

J.

Cory, p. 7196,

Endless

Oh

money forms the lincw* of war,

to be a frog,

my lads,
The

from

care.

and live aloof Reapers, I 52

CICERO, Philippics V, 3:5


first called money the sinrws of seems to have spoken with special reference to the affairi of war, -PujrAaat, Livtt, Clcomcncs 37 Neither is money the staews of war (as it Is FHAKCII BACMN* Kutty* lfl*r>) trivially said).

He who

affairs

Thou'lt cut thy finger, niggard, a-split16. Z. ting caraway. 55

A great love goes here with


The
1

little

gift.*

Distaff,

I 24

Probably the source of Acts xj:z8, p. 5oa. Sec also Aeschylus, p. ?8b; Clean thes, p, iojb; and Dante, p. i6ib. Nothing is so dear and precious as time.
RABELAIS, Works, bk. V [1564], ch. 5 Remember that time is money. BENJAMIN

Of the True Greatncu of Kingdoms Money is the sinew of love a* welt a* of war, THOMAS FULLTJI, Gnomohgia, no. ;^3
See Rabelais, p. i8u, See Virgil p. u$b; Matthew ;;/;, 14, p, 4th; Shakespeare, pp. *$8b and t3b. A passage broad. Smooth, easy, inoffensive, down to Hell.

FRANKLIN, Advice to a Young Tradesman [1748]


See
8
*

Hemingway,

p. 10452.

Translated by J. M. EDMONDS. See Homer, p. 650.

MILTON, Par&diu Lett //, y;a *See Robert Burum, p, $iob, and Ingmoll,
P-

749See I/Estrange, p. 357*.

1O4

LEONDDAS

PLAITTUS

LEONIDAS OF

TARENTUM
fl.

Not by age but by


acquired.

capacity

is

wisdom
ii,
I.

274

B.C.

Trinummus,

act II, sc.

88

the season of sailing; for already the chattering swallow is come and the pleasant west wind; the meadows flower, and the sea tossed up with waves and rough blasts has sunk to silence. Weigh thine anchors and unloose thy hawsers, mariner, and sail
is

Now

You

are seeking a

knot in a bulrush. 1 Menaechmi, act II, sc. i, L 22

stone, while other. 2

In the one hand he is carrying a he shows the bread in the


Aulularia, act II, sc.
it,

L 18

with all thy canvas set: this I Priapus of the harbor bid thee, man, that thou

There are occasions when


doubtedly better to incur
loss

it

is unthan to

maycst

sail

forth to

all

thy trafficking.
J.

make

gain.

Greek Anthology,

W. MAC26
Patience
trouble.
is

Captivi, act II, sc.

ii,

L 77

KAIL, ed. [1906], sec. 6, no.

Rudens, act
little
it is

the best remedy for every II, sc. v, I. 71

ARCHIMEDES
C.
I

Consider the
trusts its life to

287-212
it!

B.C.

cious an animal

mouse, how sagawhich never eniv,

have found

From VITRUVIUS POLLIO, De


Architecture bk. IX, 215

one hole only.8 Truculentus> act IV, sc.


is

L 15

No

guest

so

welcome

in a friend's

house that he will not become a nuisance after three days. 4

Give

me

where to stand, and

will

move

the earth. 2

Miles Gloriosus,
act III, sc.
i

From PAPPUS OF ALEXANDRIA,


Collectio, sec. 11

bk.

VIII, prop.

10,

No man
Nothing

is

wise enough by
there

himself.
16.
iii

is

more

FABIUS MAXIMUS
275-203 B.C. To be turned from one's course by men's opinions, by blame, and by misrepresentation shows a man unfit to hold an office.3 From PLUTARCH, Lives, Fabius Maximus, sec. 5
C.

friendly to a
sc.
iii,

man
i

than a friend in need. 5


Epidicus, act III,

I 44

proverbial expression implying a desire to create doubts and difficulties where there really are none. It occurs in TERENCE, Andria V, 4:$*;
also in ENNIUS, Saturae 46.
8

See
I

Matthew

7:9, p. 413.

TITUS MACCIUS

PLAUTUS
254-184
B.C.
is

holde a mouses herte nat worth a leek, That hath but oon hole for to sterte to, And if that faille, thanne is al y-do. CHAUCER, The Canterbury Tales [c, 1387], The Wife of Bath's Prologue, I 572 The mouse that hath but one hole is quickly GEORGE HERBERT, Jacula Prudentum taken.
[1640]
that always trusts to one poor hole Can never be a mouse of any soul. POPE, Paraphrase of the Prologue [1714], L ao8 *Fish and guests in three days are stale. JOHN LYLY, Euphues [1579] Fish and visitors smell in three days. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, Poor Richard's Almanac

The mouse

What
is

is

yours

mine, and
act II, sc.

all

mine
L 48

yours.

Trinummus,
i

if,

Eureka! (Said when he found the principle of specific gravity.) * Said with reference to the lever. See Horace, p. ia*a. 4 See Shakespeare, Measure for Measure V, i,
5*9> p-

for 173; *A friend

in

need

is

friend

indeed.

HAZUTT, English Proverbs

105

POLYBIXJS

TERENCE
Charity begins at

There is no witness so dreadful, no accuser so terrible as the conscience that dwells in the heart of every man
History, bk. XVIII, sec. 43

home. 1

Andria (The Lady of Andros), I 635


I

am

man: nothing human

is

alien

to me. 2

MARCUS LICINIUS
CRASSUS
fl.

Heauton Timoroumcnos (The


Self-Tormentor), L 77

70 B.C. Those who aim at great deeds must


also suffer greatly.

Draw from others 3 may profit yourself. Time removes

the

lesson

that

16. 221 Ib. ^21


it

From PLUTARCH,

distress. 4

Lives, Crassus, ch. 26

Nothing

is

so difficult but that

may be found

out by seeking. 5

[PUBLIUS TERENTIUS AFER]


C.

TERENCE*
190- 159

Some people '


tttafcill?
f

ask.

"What

if

the sky
Ib. Ib.

Tin 719

B.C.

Extreme law
tice. 7

is

often extreme injusffe.

Moderation in all things. 2 Andria (The Lady of Andros), L 01


Obsequiousness begets friends, truth
hatred.*
Ib,

796
it

There becomes
tantly.

is

nothing so easy but that

difficult

when you
'

<k> it reluc-

Ib,
there's life, there's

68 126

#05

Hence
I

these tears. 4

16.

While

hope.*
Ib.

981
-

am

Davos, not Oedipus. 5


Ib.

194
I

iproxumus sum egnmet tnihi. tat them learn fust to show piety
Timothy
Sec Sir
31

at

homo.

love.

Lovers' quarrels are the renewal of 16


with occa-

$;y
aunt:

*Loeb Classical Library edition, sional changes in the translation.

ftrownr, p, 330*. nil u tnr .iltrnmn putn, Quoted by Ciorno in ## Offkili /, j.

Thoma*

Homo

hmnjni
alii*

Periclum ex
(A
aying,)

fad to

tihi

r|titxl

c*

nni

siet.

Ne quid nimis. See The Seven Sages,


3

and
8

p. 68b, Horace, p,

iaoa,

note.

Profit by the folly of other*. PUNY iitr, KIJUKR [A.D. 3-79], Natural Hututy XJ7//, */ 4 Diem adintere aegritudtarm hominttaiv (A

for

Obsequium amicos, vcritas odium parit. Hinc iliac lacrimae. The phrase is proverbial "That's the cause of it," and was often quoted, by Horace in Epistles I, xix, 41 and
Hence rage and

saying: Time heaU ait wnumh ^ Nil tarn difficile eit t{um qttarrrmh* trtvn
tigarl
*

fK^wiet.
i

others.
tears [Inde irae et lacrimae]. JUVENAL, Satires, bk, /, I. 168 Davos sum, non Oedipus. Amantium irae amoris integratlo cat. This was quoted by Winston Churchill in a menage
5

mine taelum nut? from the Oltifr. ficing asked by Alexander what in ihr Wfittcl they

Quid

Some

ainbai^ulori

dreaded mem, amwerecJ, th^( they feared int the nky should fall upon them, -AnniANtf*
[C. A,D.

IOO--170], ^Jk. /,

if

lun fiummuni

to Roosevelt.

jiaepr

itminu CM tndiiLt. See


tnju*ti<e,
dint'cmrfttr.

The
love.

Anonymoui

The
is

anger of lovers renews the strength of PUBLIUUS SYRUS [c. 4* B.C.], Maxim 34 fallyng out of faithful friends

I.attn, p, t,th,

Extreme law. rxircm? become % *talt proverb iit


[jo5*43
NK,

U miw
C:rit<>

of love.

renuyng RICHARD EDWARDS, The Paradise of

*<]
1

jt>*

Offidix I, |j
in

Extreme

Dainty Devices [1576] Let the falling out of friends be a renewing of affection. LYLY, Euphues [1579] The falling out of lovers is the renewing of love. ROBERT BURTON, Anatomy of Melancholy [16*1-1651], pt. Ill, sec. a

juwice

often
t

La

Mais

TMbaUe [M4]
'extreme Juntite

Jnjtmto. -~ RA; inj

aft IV. w.

wi unc extreme

jure. VoLTAttff, 0*rfi/Mr [jyiHJ, art ///, * Mcxlo Hceat vivere, ett <JKT*.

if.

Sec smith,

(Jictro,
p.
,

p.

ma,

ciy,

p.

40 tb, ami

<*iitt*

TERENCE
In
fact,

FLORUS
I

nothing

is

said that has

not
as

bid

him look

into the lives of

men

been said before. 1


Eunuchus,
I
I.

41 (Prologue)

have everything, yet have nothing;

though into a mirror, and from others to take an example for himself. Adelphoe (The Brothers), I 415
According as the

and although I possess nothing, still of 2 16. 243 nothing am I in want.


There are
vicissitudes in all things. 16. 276

man

is,

so

must you
16.

humor him.
It is

431

the

common

vice of

all,

in old
inter-

age, to
ests.
1

be too intent upon our

16.

833

don't care one straw.3

16. 411

Take care and say this with presence 16. 769 of mind. 4
wise fore arms.
is
I know when you

TUNG CHUNG-SHU*
C.

He

who

tries

everything be16.

179-0. 104
the ruler of

B.C.

789

He who

is

men takes

non-

the disposition of women: they won't; when you won't, they set their hearts upon you of
will,

action as his

way and considers impartreasure. He sits upon the tiality as his throne of non-action and rides upon the
perfection of his officials.

their
I

own

inclination.

16. 812

''

fan-lu

took to

my

heels as fast as I could.


16.
.

844

from a bad beMany a time ginning great friendships have sprung 16. 873 up.
.
.

When the first indications of error begin to appear in the state, Heaven sends forth ominous portents and calamities to warn men and announce the
fact.

16.

Fortune helps the brave. 5


Phorniio,
I.

203

LUCIUS ACCIUS
170-86
B.C.
fear.8

So many men, so many opinions; 6 16. 454 every one his own way.

Let them hate, so long as they

As they
ears. 7
*

say, I

have got a wolf by the


16.

506

LUCIUS ANNAEUS

See Ecclcsiatcs 1:9, p.

7a,

and Robert Bur-

FLORUS
fl.

ton, p. jjioa.

See II Corinthians 6:to t p. s$b, and Wotton, p. ^oob. Ego non floccl pcndere. Nor do they care a straw. CERVANTKS, Don Quixote, pt. X [1605], bk. ///, ch. p * Fac animo haec praesenti dicas. Literally, "with a present mind" equivalent to CAESAR'S
a

AJX 12J
is

Each year new consuls and proconsuls arc

made; but not every year

4 king or a poet born.

De Quditate

Vitae, frag. 8

pracsentia animi (De Bello Gallico V, 43, 4). 6 Sec Menander, p. losb, and Virgil, p. ngb.

PUNY THE YOUNGER says (bk. VI, letter jtf) that PUNY THE ELDER said this during the eruption of Vesuvius: "Fortune favors the brave." Quot homines tot scntentiae: suo quoque
mos. So

bk. III. The maxim Stoic philosophers.

CICERO quotes this in Tusculan Disputations, was a favorite with the

From
by

Sources of Chinese

Tradition, edited

WH.UAM THEODORE DE * Odcrint dum metuant.

BARY.

many heads
The

so

many

wits.

JOHN KEYGEORGE GAS-

WOOD, Proverbs So many men


COICNK,

[1546], pt. I, ch. so many minds.

From a lost tragedy. Frequently cited by Cicero and others. SUETONIUS (Gaius Caligula )o) says that the Emperor Caligula was fond of
quoting
it.

Glass of Government [1575] 7 A proverbial expression which, according to SUETONIUS, was frequently in the mouth of Tiberius Caesar.

See Machiavelli. p. 1773. 4 From this derived the proverb: Poeta nascitur, non fit (The poet is born, not made). See Ben Jonson, p.

HAN WU-TI

CICERO

HAN WU-TIi
157-87
B.C.
silk

MARCUS TULLIUS
CICERO
106-43
1

The sound

of

her

skirt

has

B.C.

stopped. the marble pavement dust grows Her empty room is cold and still. Fallen leaves are piled against the

How
Oh
ards!
2

long, Catiline, will

On

our patience?

you abuse In Catilinam I, i


standIb.

what times!

Oh what

doors.

Longing for that lovely lady

How

can
rest?

bring

my

aching heart to
2

He has departed, withdrawn, gone 8 Ifc, II, i away, broken out.


I

On

am

Roman

citizen. 4

the death of his mistress

In

Venem V,

57

HUAI-NAN
form
all

TZTJ8
B.C.

Law
arms. 5

stands

mute

Second century

the midst of Pro Milone IV, 11


in

Before heaven and earth had taken

Who gained by it? e


Ib.

Therefore
ginning.

was vague and amorphous. it was called the Great Be-

XII
to

32

The Great Beginning produced emptiness and emptiness produced the


. .

universe.

of heaven

The combined essences and earth became the yin


.

and yang, the concentrated essences of the yin and yang became the four seasons, and the scattered essences of the four seasons became the myriad creatures of the world.

the spur young, a delight to the old; an ornament in prosperity, a consoling refuge in adversity; they are pleasure tor us at home, and no burden abroad; they stay up with us at night they accompany u's when we travel, they are with us in our country visits. Pro Archia Poeta I, 2
studies

These

are

MELEAGER
fl.

Leisure with dignity. 7

De

Oratore

II,

62

95

B.C.

Morning Star, herald of dawn, and quickly come as the Evening Star, bringing again in secret her whom
Farewell,

History is the witness that testifies to the passing of time; it illumines reality*
vitalizes

daily

life,

memory, provides guidance in and brings us tidings of anIb. II,

thou takest away.4 Greek Anthology,

tiquity.
J.

36

W.

MAC-

KAIL, ed. [1906], sec. 2, no. 21

MARCUS TERENTIUS VARRO


116-27 B c< A sick man dreams nothing so dreadful that some philosopher isn't saying
*

law for the historian is that he shall never dare utter an untruth. The second is that he shall suppress
first

The

nothing that

is

true.

Moreover, there
mw-

*Quo
tra?

usque, Catilina, abutcrc paticntia

it.

Satires, frag.
Sixth emperor of the From Chinese Poems,

122
trans-

1 *

Han

temporal O moreil except, evaiit, erupit. Me wretched! I*t me curr to quctclnc nhaclnrt Effund yotir albld haunt*, lactiferous maid*!
8

*O

Abiit,

dynasty.

ARTHUR WALEY,
at

Oh, might
Depart,

vole to

lator.

of

*An anonymous work compiled Liu An (d. ias> B.C.).

be off, OUVJK*
crat

exccde,
the

WRNDM.L HOI.MCS, The AutoBrtakfat

tome umbrageoua clump, evade, crumpl


Table

the court
edited by
*

of

[x8$tl]

From Sources of Chinese Tradition, WILLIAM THEODORE DE BARY.


See Cicero, p.

Aestivation, ch, II
CIvis

Romamu
enim
leg

sum.
inter arm*.

8 Silent

*See Sappho, p. 690, and Housman, p. 8543. B

CuJ bono
*

ma;

and Descartes,

[fuerit]?

p.

Otium cum

dignltate.

110

CICERO
shall

be no suspicion of

partiality in his

would rather be wrong with Plato

1 writing, or of malice.

than right with such


Oratore
II,

men

De
The freedom
If a
it is

as these [the

62

Pythagoreans].

of poetic license. 2
Ib. Ill,

Tusculanae Disputationes
153

I,

17

philosophy, you leader of


first

life. 1

man

no

aspires to the highest place, dishonor to him to halt at the

Ib.

V, 2

Socrates was the

to call philoso-

second, or even at the third. Orator ad M.

Brutum 4

For just as some women are said to be handsome though without adornment, so this subtle manner of speech, though lacking in artificial graces, de3 Ib. 78 lights us.

phy down from the heavens and to place it in cities, and even to introduce it into homes and compel it to inquire about life and standards and goods and evils. 16. V, 4

The highest

good.

De

Ofliciis I, 2

Nothing quite new

is

perfect.

Brutus 71

Let arms yield to the toga, the laurel 16. I, 22 crown to praise.8

There were poets before Homer.


16.

Never
idle,

less less

idle

nor

alone than

than when wholly when wholly


16. Ill,
i

The aim

alone. 4

of forensic oratory

is

to

teach, to delight, to move.

Rome,

fortunately natal 'neath


5

De Optimo
The

Genere Oratorum 16

consulship!

Ue
good

my

Consultatu Suo
is

4 dregs of Romulus.

The
II, i

people's

the

Ad Atticum
While
there's
life,

law. 6

De

highest
III,

Legibus

there's

hope. 16. IX, 10


one's

He

used to raise a storm in a teapot. 7


16. 16
shifts of

What
home?
6 I like

is

more agreeable than

The
bility

Fortune

test

the

relia-

Ad
myself, but
I

Familiares IV, 8

of friends. 8

De

Amicitia

XVII
self. 9

won't say I'm as handsome as the bull that kidnapped Europa. De Natura Deorum I, 78
It was ordained at the beginning of the world that certain signs should pre7 figure certain events.
is

friend

is,

as

it

were, a second
16.

XXI

Give me a young man in whom there something of the old, and an old man
1

De
There
is

Adapted [1776] Kappa, rendered


3

vitae philosophia dux. as the motto

of

Phi

Beta

in

Greek

as:

Philosophia
life).

Divinations
8

I,

118

biou Kybcrnetes (Philosophy the guide to

Summum bonum.

nothing so ridiculous but


said
it.

some philosopher has


1

The

Sec Lucretius, p. 1143, nature of the good

and the highest good.

16. II,

119

8
*

See Poly bi us, p. icyb. Poet arum liccntiae libcriora. Sec Milton* p. <j45b, and Thomson, p. 4Hjb. In Romuli faccc. That is, the lowest order of

HORACR, Satires It, 6, 76 "Ccdant arma togae, concedat laurea laudi, He is quoting from his own poem De suis
temporibus, bh. 111. * See Samuel Rogers, p, soob. O fortunatam natam me consul c

Romaml

society.
6

The
unirna
est,

verse

Dum

spes

est.

Sec Terence, p. io8b; Gay, p. 40 ib; and Goldsmith, p. 4.173. * Quae cst domcstica sede iucundior? 7 Sec Thomas Campbell, p. 5jjHa, and note. Sec Varro, p. noa, and Descartes, p.

(X, /aa), Salus populi suprema cst lex. 1 Kxcitabat cnim fluctus in simpulo. A tempest in a teapot, Proverb
8

quoted disparagingly by Juvenal Quintilian (XJ, /, a./), and others.


is

Sec Aristotle, p. 993, and note. See Aristotle, p. 973.

1X1

CICERO
with something of the younj
so, a

LUCRETIUS

The
XI

die

is cast,

man may grow


are

old in

From PLUTARCH,
by nature
Ib.

Lives,

never in mind.

De

Senectute

Caesar, sec. 32

Old men
Old

garrulous

Go

on,

my

friend,

and

fear

nothing;

XVI

age: the

crown of

life,

our play's
Ib.

you carry Caesar and his fortune in Ib. 38 your boat

last act.

XXIII

The

Ides of

March have come. 2


16.63

POMPEY
[CNEIITS
More worship
1 ting sun.

POMPEIUS]
B.C.

[In answer to a question as to what sort of death was the best] sudden death. Ib.

106-48

came,

saw,

the rising than the

set-

From SUKTONHIS,

conquered. Lives of the

From PLUTARCH,
Pompey,

Caesars, Julius, sec, 37


Lives,

You
It
is

sec.

also,

Brutus

my

.son. 4

Ib. 82

A dead man cannot bite.

Ib.

77

men

that

not these well-fed long-haired I fear, but the pale and the
5

hungry-looking.

JULIUS CAESAR
100-44
All
B>c
-

From PLUTARCH,

Lives, Antony, sec* 21

Gaul

is

divided into three parts. 2 De Bello Gallico 1, i


believe

[TITUS LUCRETIUS
S 99-55 B,a Mother of Aeneas and his race, darof men and gods, ling nurturing Venus. De Rmim Natura (On the Ntfturc of Things) 6*. I, L i (In1

LUCRETIUS*
CARU

Men
wish.*
I

willingly

what

16. IJI,

they 18

love treason but hate a traitor. 4

From PLUTARCH,
Romulus,
I

Lives,
sec.

17
10

wished

my

wife to be not so

much

as suspected. 8

Ib. Caesar, sec.

vocafion)

I had rather be the first man among these fellows than the second man in

For thce the wonder working earth


puts forth sweet flowers.
Ib. 7

Rome.
Addressed to Sulla. See David Garrick, p. 4393. a Gallia est omnis divisa in partcs tres. 8 Fere libenter homines id quod
credunt.
1

16.

u
A

So potent was
to evil deeds. 7
Iatu
ale*
eat.

religion in persuading
Jfc,

201

volunt

See Demosthenes, p. 993. * Princes In this case do

Proverb quoted by Caciar HB he crossed the Rubicon, Al*o in StiCTONHii, Live* / thg CMMM, Julius. See Shakespeare, Juliu* CMWT /, H /ft,
t

p,

a.

hate

the

traitor,

Vcni,
Caesar'*

vidi,

vici.

though they love the treason. SAMUEL DANIEL, Tragedy of Cleopatra [1594], act IV, sc. i This principle is old, but true as fate,
Kings

Inscription

dbplayril

in

AIM
<Et

Pomic triumph,
in PLUTARCH, AtH>thr$nii,

tw, Brute,

may

love treason, but the traitor hate.

Catur. Sucumiui rcpom that Carw

fluid this in

DBKKER, The Honest Whore [1604!

Though
5

pi. I, act IV, sc, iv I love the treason, I hate the traitor.

PEPYS, Diary [March 7, 1667] See Dryden, p. 370!}.


Caesar's

Creek. See Shakeapeare, p. a^a, Thc reference J* to Brumi See Shakeapeare, p, *$$>.

and

Cjii.
(He
hi

Translated by

W. H,

I>.

Rotisi.

^Tantum
is

wife

must be above suspicion.

Traditional saying

religio potuit nwadcre maloium. referring to Agamemmm'a tacrifire of

daughter Iphigenia.)

112

LUCRETIUS

Nothing can be created from noth1

ing.

hearts! In

miserable minds of men! blind what darkness of life, in what


little

De Rerum
The

Natura, bk.

1,

L 155

ring on the finger becomes thin beneath by wearing, the fall of dripping water hollows the stone. 2 Ib. 314

great dangers ye spend this of years! a

span
I.

De Rerum

Natura, bk.

II,

14

Material objects are of two kinds, atoms and compounds of atoms. The atoms themselves cannot be swamped
force, for they are preserved in3 definitely bv their absolute solidity.

Thus the sum of things is ever being renewed, and mortals live dependent one upon another. Some races increase, others diminish, and in a short space
the generations of living creatures are like runners hand on the Ib. 75 torch of life. 2

by any

changed and

Ib.

518

On
light,

a dark

theme
all

trace verses full of

touching

the muses' charm. 4


Ib.

Never trust her at any time, when the calm sea shows her false alluring
smile.

933

Pleasant it is, when over a great sea the winds trouble the waters, to gaze

558 That fear of Acheron be sent packing which troubles the life of man from its
deepest depths, suffuses all with the blackness of death, and leaves no de16. Ill, 37 light clean and pure.

Ib.

from shore upon another's tribulation: not because any man's troubles are a delectable joy, but because to perceive from what ills you are free yourself is
5

pleasant.

Ib. II,

posse creari de nilo. Sec Shakespeare, p. aySb. *Anulus in digito subtcr tcnuatur habendo,
Stilicidi

For as children tremble and fear everything in the blind darkness, so we in the light sometimes fear what is no more to be feared than the things children in the dark hold in terror and
imagine
will

casus lapidem cavat.

See also the concluding lines of Book IV: Nonnc vitlcs ctiam guttas in saxa cadentis Umoris longo in spatio pertundere saxa? (Do you not see that even drops of water falling upon a stone in the long run beat a way

come

true. 3

Ib.

87

Therefore death is nothing to us, it matters not one jot, since the nature of the mind is understood to be mortal.4
Ib.

through the stone?) Drops of water hollow out a stone, a ring is worn thin by use. OVID, Ex Ponto IV, 10:3 Also in PLUTARCH, Of the Training of Children.

831

When
mortal
life.

immortal Death has


5

taken

Ib.

869

The drop

of rain

maketh

a hole in the stone,

HUGH not by violence, but by oft falling. LATIMKR, Seventh Sermon Itefore Edward VI
I

"549]

dost thou not retire like a guest sated with the banquet of life, and with calm mind embrace, thou fool, a rest

Why

The
ble.

soft

droppcs of rain percc the hard marI.YLY,

that
i

knows no care?

Ib.

938

JOHN

Euphues [1579]
Translated by CYRIL BAHJEY.
Insensate care of mortals!

And The
8 *

drilling drops that often doc redound, firmest flint doth in continuance wear.

Oh how

false the

EDMUND

SPENSER,
.

Amorctti [1595], sonnet 18

argument which makes thee downward beat thy DANTE, Divine Comedy [c. 1500], wings.
Paradise XI, x Et quasi cursorcs vitae lampada tradunt. * Sec Bacon, p. aoBa. * Nil igitur mors est ad nos ncquc pcrtinct

Translated by R. LATHAM. Translated by CYRIL BAILEY. It is a pleasure to stand upon the shore, and

to ace ships tost upon the sea: a pleasure to stand in the window of a castle, and to see a

hilum,

battle

and the adventures

thereof

below:

but

Quandoquidem natura animi mortalis habctur.

no pleasure

is comparable to the standing upon . the vantage ground of truth and to see the errors, and wanderings, and mists, and temthe vale below. FRANCIS BACON, pests, in
. .

Essays [/6aj], Of Truth

Translated by CYRIL BAHJBY. Mortalem vitam mors cum immor tails ademit. Translated by CYRIL BAILKY. See Horace, p. uoa, and Bryant, p. 574^.

113

LUCRETIUS

CATULLUS

No

less

more, who

long a time will he be no has made an end of life with

Now
thither
turns.

today's light.

he goes along the dark road, whence they say no one reCarmina III, L u
IV, 25

De Rerum

Natura, bk.

Ill,

But these things arc past and gone, 1


Let us live and love, my Lcsbia, and value at a penny all the talk of crabbed old men. Suns may set and rise again:
for us, there's

1092

What
From
choke

is

food to one,

is

to others bit16.

ter poison. 1

IV, 637

delights wells

the heart of this fountain of up some bitter taste to them even amid the flowers. 2
16.

when our
the

1133

night. Give

brief light has set, sleep of one everlasting me a thousand kisses. 2

one should guide his life by true principles, man's greatest wealth is to live on a little with contented mind;
if

But

V,
'

Poor Catullus, vou should cease your


folly.

VIII,

for a little

is

never lacking.
16.

But you, Catullus, be resolved and

V, 1117

firm.

16. 19
let

[Epicurus] set forth what is the highest good, towards which we all and pointed out the past, strive,

And

her not look to find

my

love,

whereby along a narrow track we may strain on towards it in a straight course.* 16. VI, 26

which by her fault has dropped like a flower on the meadow's edge, when it has been touched by the plow passing by. XI, 2 1 Over head and heels.3 9
as before;

my

love,

XX
to

GAIUS VALERIUS

Ah, what
cares away!

is

more blessed than

put
7

CATULLUS*
87 -c. 54
B.C.

XXXI,
is,

To whom am I to present my pretty new book, freshly smoothed off with


for

Whatever it is, wherever he ever he is doing, he smiles: it

is

whata mal-

dry pumice stone? To you, Cornelius: you used to think that my trifles

ady he has, neither an elegant one as I think, nor in good taste. XXXIX, 6

There
silly

is

nothing more

silly
'

were worth something, long ago.

laugh,
this age!

than a Ift. 16
ill-

Carmina

I,

/.

Oh
bred

How

tasteless sine!

May

it live

and

last for

more than
16.

it is!

XLUl
spring
brings

one century.

10
all

Now
warmth.*

back

balmy
j

Mourn, ye Graces and Loves, and

XLVI,
all

you whom the Graces love. My lady's sparrow is dead, the sparrow, my lady's
5

Catullus, the worst of

poets, gives

pet.
1

Ill,

Ut quod

ali cibus est aliis fuat acre venenum. What's one man's poison, signer, Is another's meat or drink. BEAUMONT AND FLETCHER, Love's Cure [1647], act Wf sc Translated by CYRIL BAH.EY.
*

[Marcus Tullius] his wannest thanks; he being as much the* worst of all poets as you are the best of all patrons. XLIX, 4
you
l Se<I hacc priiM sViv&mus, tnca

fuerr.
Ixitbia,

Soles occidcre ct redire

See Byron, p. 555a.

aiqur awomm pmvtmt:

Translated by CYRIL BAILEY. The highest good [summum


Cicero, p.
*

bonum].

See

Nobis cum seme! occUIit brcvi* hix Nox cst perpccua ima dormiendat. Da mi basia millr.
rick, p.
8

nib.

Translated by F.
Passer, deliciae
is

W.

CORNISH.
puellae.
II.
\

meae

Sec Campion* p. 3<>oa; Jonmm, p. joab; Her3*oa and 5213; and Fouch*, p. f,<wa.

This

Per caputque pcdrsquc.

also the

opening line of Carmina

lam vcr

cgelidos

rcfm

trpore*.

114

CATULLUS

SALLUST

He
he,

seems to

me

to

be equal to a god,
to surpass the

Wandering through many


and
over

countries

if it

gazes at you 1 sweetly laughing.

very again

may be, seems gods, who sitting

many

seas,

come,

my

opposite and hears


2

you you
i

brother, to these sorrowful obsequies, to present you with the last guerdon of

Carmina LI,

death, and speak, though in vain, to

What an eloquent manikin!


I

your

silent ashes.

Carmina CI,
brother, hail
Ifc.

LIU,
would
see
his

little

Torquatus,

And forever, farewell! x


But you
bics. 2

O my

and
10
iam-

stretching

baby hands

from

his

shall

not escape

my

mother's lap, smile a sweet smile at his father with lips half parted.

Fragment

LXI, 209
come; up, ye youths. Vesper from Olympus now at
evening
is

The
is

rise

[GAIUS SALLUSTIUS CRISPUS]


86-34
All our
B.C.

SALLUST

last

just

raising his long-looked-for

light.

LXII,
is

given by the gods more desirable than the fortunate hour? 3

What

power

lies

in both

mind and

body;

16.30

the mind to rule, the to the one we have in rather serve; body common with the Gods, the other with

we employ

Not unknown am I to the goddess [Venus] who mingles with her cares a
sweet bitterness.
It is not fit pared with gods.

the brutes.

The War with


[c.

Catiline
sec, i

LXVIII, 17 that men should be comlib.

40 B.C.],

The renown which

riches or beauty

141

What

woman

says to her ardent

confer is fleeting and frail; mental excellence is a splendid and lasting possession.

lover should be written in


4 running water.

wind and

16-

LXX

Leave off wishing to deserve any thanks from anyone, or thinking that anyone can ever become grateful.

Covetous of others' possessions, he his own.8 [Catiline] was prodigal of


Ib. 5

LXXIII,
If a

man
the

recalling

can take any pleasure in thought of kindnesses

Ambition drove many men to befalse; to have one thought locked in the breast, another ready on the 4 16- 10 tongue.

come

done.
It is difficult

LXXVI,

In truth, prosperity

tries

the souls
Ib.
i 1

suddenly to lay aside a Ih. 13 long-cherished love.


ye gods, grant
for
1

even of the wise. 6

To
that
is

like

me

this in

return
Ib.

and dislike the same things, indeed true friendship.**

my piety.
hate and
ask.
T I
I

26

lb.20
in the highest position there is 7 Ib. 51 the least freedom of action.
l *

Thus

love.

Why

do

so, perI feel it


i

haps you

know

not, but

and
1

am

in torment. 5

LXXXV,

Atquc in perpctuum, Crater, ave atquc At non cffugies mcos iambos.


Alicni appetcns, sui prof us us. See Euripides, p. 84b.

vale.

Sec Sappho, p. Ggb.

8 *

*
*

Saluputtium discrturnl Quid datur a clivis fclici optatius hora?


Sec Sophocles, p. 8$a.

BQuippc
fatigant.
re-

secundae

res

sapicntium
nolle,

animos

Odi

ct

amo. Quarc
fieri

id

faciam,

fortassc

'Idem

vellc

atque

idem

ca

demum

quids.
Ncscio, sed
scntio et excrucior.
703.

firma amicitia

est.

Sec Anacrcon,

p.

See Plato, p. cjab. *Ita in maxima fortuna minima licentia

est.

115

SALLUST

VIRGIL

On

behalf

of

their

children, their altars,

The
[c.

country, their their hearths. 1 War with Catiline

Ah

Corydon, Corydon, what madEclogues


II,

and

ness has caught you?

69

The
the
life

soul

is

40 B.C.], the captain and

sec.

59

With

Jove

begin.
is

Ib. Ill,

60

ruler of

of mortals. 2

A
on

sad thing
corn,

wolf
in

in the fold, rain

The War with Jugurtha


[c.

ripe

wind

41

i B.C.], sec

The
tellect,

splendid achievements of the inlike the soul, are everlasting,


16. 2

anger of Amaryllis. A snake Juries in the grass.

the trees, the Ib. So


Ib. 93
loftier
i

Let
strain.
2

us

raise

somewhat
the ages

Ib. TV,

city for sale finds a buyer! 8

and soon

to perish

if it

The
newed.

great

cycle of

is

rere-

^.35
Ib.

Now

the

Maiden

returns,

Punic

faith. 4

108

Golden Age; a new generation Ib. 5 now descends from heaven.8


turns the

Experience has shown that to be true

which Appius
every man fortune. 6
is

says in his verses, that the architect of his own


i

have made you [Priapus] of marble for the time being. 16. VII, 35

We

Speech to Caesar on the State, sec.

We
thing.*

are

not

all

capable of every.

vm,

61

VIRGIL [PUBLIUS VIRGILIUS

Draw Daphnis from


songs,

the town,
Ib.

m
6

draw Daphnis home.

MARC]

Hylax barks in the doorway.


Ib. 107

70-19

B.C.

A god

has brought us this peace. Eclogues I, L 6


great things with small.
Ib.

Your descendants
fruits.

shall

gather your Ib. IX; 50


Ib.

To compare
Happy
1

Time
minds.

bears

away

all

things, oven our


$1

23

old man!

7
libcris,

Ib.
pro
aris

46
focis

Pro patria, pro

atquc

Let us go road will be

singing; as far as
less tedious.

we

go: the
Ib.

(^
i

suis.

*Dux atquc impcrator mus est.

vitac

mortalium ani-

This
thusa.

last

labor

jjiant

im%

O
Ib.

Aie-

X,

Sec Speech to Caesar on the State (below). See also Shakespeare, p. 5$b; Tennyson, p. (>ij;ja; and Henley, p. 8i6a. Be the proud captain still of thine own fate. J. B. KEN VON [1858-1924], The Black Camel 'Jugurtha's remark as he looked back at Rome upon being ordered by the senate to leave
Italy.
4

What
dark, too,
1

if

Amyntas is dark? Violets are I/>. and hyacinths, ;S

Ab

a
*

love priwipium. Paulo maiora <;iiumu>!

Magnu* ah imcgto Mrntlorum rutcitttt nttto lum rtrdit ct Virgo, ridrunt Samml a irgru;
Iain nova fjrogcniri <,'!<

tlrmiuieur aim.

Punica

fide (treachery).

Appius Claudius Caccus, consul


Sce

in 307

ft.c.,

the earliest
c

Roman writer known The War with Jugurtha i


is

to us.

Interpreted by the Middle* Ag< at a prophrcy of ihc birth of Chritt. lUNtr, tico the linen in l*ur%aturw, tanlo 33, /. ?</,

(above) and

A phraw
orclo

altard from

tfit*

fine

Un<*

(Novw

Aristotle, p. g8a.

His own character


fortune.

the arbiter of everyone'*


[c.

PUBIJUUS SYRUS

42

B.C.],

Maxim

aS3

The brave man carves out his fortune, and CERevery man is the son of his own works. VANTES, Don Quixote, pt. I [1605], bh. /, eh. 4 See Bacon, p. 2oga.
7

Mrclorum) appears mi Ot<* rrvrrw* of thr Ctcat Seal of the thmrti Siatrn of America ilvc? dollar ccttificiiiri, icricf (first used on th<? r of *9X )Virgil supplied the Latin for other phrases of the Grtstt Krai, Srr p. 1174 .tml p.

upb.
Sec Shelley,
4
j>,

57b,

Fortunate senex!

Non omnia pmtutmu o Clarpcnt tua poma nr|Mitc"i

VIRGIL

Love conquers all things; surrender to Love. 1

let

us too
Ib.

rural

gods

Pan,

and old Sylvanus,


of

69

and the sisterhood

Nymphs.
II,
Z.

Utmost

[farthest]

Thule.

2
I,

Georgics

493

Georgics

L 30

This
ago;

life

the old Sabines


it,

knew long
16.

Remus knew

and

his brother.

Look with
ning.
3

favor

upon a bold beginIb. 4

532

Years grow cold to love.


16. Ill, 97
1 flying never to return. 16.

be

farmers, pray that your wet and your winters clear.

summers
Ib.

100

Time

is

284

Practice and thought might gradually

forge

many an

art.

Ib.

133

All aglow

is

the work. 2
Ib.

IV, 169

Thrice they tried to pile Ossa on Pelion, yes, and roll up leafy Olympus upon Ossa; thrice the Father of Heaven with his split the mountains apart 16. 281 thunderbolt. 4
Frogs in the marsh old lament.

sudden madness came down upon

the unwary lover


able, surely, if
give.
I

Death knew how

[Orpheus]

forgiv-

to for.

I&

488

mud

drone their
16.
all

378

shepherds' songs brash youth sang of you, beeclu* Tityrus, beneath the spreading

who once played


in

and

my

Not

every soil can bear

things.

16.

565 I
i

16. II,

109
they

Arms and the man

I sing.

4
I,

Ah
knew

too
their

fortunate

own good

farmers, fortune!

if

Aeneid, bk.

16.

Can
458
rage?

such heavenly minds yield to


Ib
-

"

May
valley

the countryside and the gliding streams content me. Lost to

So vast was the struggle to found the

fame,

let

me

love river

and woodland.
16.

Roman
deep."

state.

16.
lies

33
the

485

Night,

pitch-black,

upon
16.
6

the man who could search out 16. 490 the causes of things. 5

Happy

89

thrice four times blessed!

16.

And no
1

less

happy he who knows the

94

amor: et nos cedamus araori. Sec Sophocles, pp. Baa and Sab, and Chaucer,

Omnia

vincit

p. i6(a.
3

Ultima Thule.
phrase, designating a far-off land,

The

has

16. 150 Fury provides arms. You have suffered worse things; God an end to these also. will put v Ib. 199
it will be pleasant Perhaps some day 7 16. 203 this. even to remember

been in use since the Greek mariner Pythcas discovered in the fourth century B.C. an island he named Thule six days north of England, thought to be Iceland. See Seneca, p. i$ia, and

Thomson,

p. 4*9b.
1

The
FugU

organizer a

woman. 8

16.

364

Audacihus annuc coeptis. This phrase also (see note p. n6b) was of the Great adapted for use on the reverse Seal of the United States of America: Annuit Sec p. i IQD for the Latin on the face of
coeptis.

inrcparabilc tempus. Kcrvct opus. to in Eclo%uc$ Tityrus is also referred

I,

i.

Anna virumquc
()

cano.

the Great Seal. * See Homer, p. 66a.


causas. potuit rcrum cognoscerc The reference is apparently to the scientistphilosopher-poet Lucretius.
8

Sec Genesis x&, p. 5a.


*

Felix

qui

beatil tcrquc quaterque Forsan et hacc olim meminissc iuvabit. See Homer, p, 66b.

Dux

fcmina

facti.

117

VIRGIL

Her walk
dess.

revealed her as a true godAeneid, bk. I, I. 405


already
Ib.

The gods thought

otherwise. 1 Aeneid, bk. II,

/.

428

How happy those whose walls


rise!

437

Thrice would I have thrown my arms about her neck, and thrice the ghost

embraced

fled

from

are the tears of things; mortal1 Ib. ity touches the heart. 462
I

Here

my

grasp:

like a

fluttering breeze, like a faceting

dream.16,

793
57

make no

distinction

between TroIb.

accurst craving for gold!


16. Ill,

jan

and Tyrian.
aware of
its

574
2

A mind

own

rectitude.
16.

Rumor
1

flies,

Ib. 121

604

feel again
*

a spark of that ancient


I&.

As long as rivers shall run down to the sea, or shadows touch the mountain slopes, or stars graze in the vault of
heaven, so long shall your honor, your 16. 607 name, your praises endure.
I

flame

IV, 23
silent

Deep
wound.

in her breast lives the

16.
is

67
569
of

A woman
5

always a fickle, unstable


Ib.

have known sorrow and learned to


16.
is

thing.

aid the wretched.

630

Arise

from

my
it is

bones,

avenger
16*

you bid

Unspeakable, O Queen, me renew.

the sorrow
16. II, 3

these wrongs!

625

Thus, thus, world below. 6

Whatever it is, I fear Greeks even when they bring gifts, 3 16. 49

joy to pass to the 16. 660

Naked
shore.

in

death upon an

16.
evils,

From
tion.
I

a single crime
4

know

unknown V, 872
all

the na16.

Yield not to

but attack
16.

the

65

more
and
trace

shudder to say

boldly.

VI, 95

it.

16.

204
It is

Ilium home of the fatherland, gods, Troy walls famed in battle!

clay,

easy to go down into Hell; night the gates of dark Death stand
rethe*

wide; but to climb back again, to


one's steps to

16.

241

upper

air

Ucalcgon's

afire

next door. 5
16.

there's the rub, the task. 7


1

16,

126

We
been.

311 have been Trojans; Troy has


16.
is

Dis

aliter

Virgil

bk. Xf,
8 *

t.

vtaum. here translate* a<v, Sec p, 66a,


vetcris vestigia
p. ifiib.
<

HOMIUI,

O<ly*irv,

325

Fama

volat.

There
quished

but one safety to the vanto hope not safety.


16.

Agnosco

Mammae*.

See Dante*

*Varium

354

Our
1

foes will provide us with arms. 16. 391


mortalia

often changes; fooUxh the man who trust* her, FRANC.IS I OF FKANAK (1494 -1547],

Woman

mutabite temper frmina,

written by him with hi* ring on a window of the chateau of Chambord (BftANT#Mr., rfeuvro

V",

Sunt lacrimae rerum et mentcm

199)

tangunt.
conscious of rectitude, laughed to scorn the falsehood of OVID [43 report. B.C.-A.D. 18], Fasti, bk. 1V> 1. 3x1

*The mind,

La donna * mobile, ~ PIAVK, VMMM'S Rigoletto, Xtake't *ong


Sec Scott, p. 5i$b.
7

Libretto

of

"Quidquid
ferentis.
*

id

est,

timeo

Danaos

et

dona

Horresco referens.

umtn*, drtccmm Avcrni: Noctes atquc die* pau* atrt iantui Dili*; Scd rcvocare gradum superaaque evadcre ad
Sic, sic, iuvat ite *ut>

Fadlto

lam proximus
Ucalegon.

auras,

ardet

Hoc opus,
Sec Bion, p.

hie labor est, to*!), and note,

VIRGIL
Faithful Achates. 1

Aeneid, bk. VI, I 158 and elsewhere

descend from Jove; in ancestral Jove Troy's sons rejoice. Aeneid, bk. VII, L 219
If
I

We

Death's brother, Sleep. 2

16.

278

cannot bend Heaven,

shall

a hundred tongues, a hundred a throat of iron and a chest of lips, brass, I could not tell men's countless
I

Had

move

Hell.

16.

312
it
is

An To
I

old story, but the glory of


16.
is

sufferings.

The swamp
gods take oath.
Unwillingly

of Styx,

16. 298 the which by 16. 323

forever.

IX, 79

have died once

enough.
16.

140

left

your

Queen. That happy

land, 16. 460

cannot bear a mother's

tears.

16.

289

place, the green groves 16. 638 of the dwelling of the blest.

The
mind,

spirit within nourishes, and the diffused through all the mem-

Good speed to your youthful valor, l scale the stars! boy! y So shall you
16.
2 Fortune favors the brave.

641

bers, sways the

mass and mingles with


16.
his

the whole frame.

726
743

16.

X, 284

Each of us bears

own

Hell. 4
16.

8 Dying J * dreams of his sweet Argos. 16.782

Others, I take it, will work better with breathing bronze and draw living faces from marble; others will plead at law with greater eloquence, or measure the pathways of the sky, or forecast the
rising stars. Be it your concern, to rule the nations under law

Believe one
lieve

who

an expert. 4

has proved it. Be16. XI, 283

Roman,

His limbs were cold in death; his a groan, indignant, to spirit fled with 16. XII, 951 the shades below.

your proper

skill)

and

(this is establish the way

One composed

of many. 5

of peace; to spare the conquered


16.

and
847
883

Minor Poems, Moretum, I 104

5 put clown the mighty from their seat.

Give

me

handfuls of

lilies

to scatter.
16.

Death twitches my ear. ''Live," he 6 says; "I am coming." Minor Poems, Copa, L 38
Mactc nova virtute, puer, sic itur ad astra. See Dante* p. i6ib. * Audentes fortuna iuvat.
See Mcnander, p. loab, and Terence, p. lopa. Dulccs morions reminiscitur Argos.
1

There are two gates of Sleep. One is of horn, easy of passage for the shades of truth; the other, of gleaming white
ivory, permits
false
7

dreams to ascend to
16.

the upper

air.

893

Pravecl to the

Genius of the place. 16. VII, 136

Believe an expert; believe one who ha* had ST. BERNARD, Epistle xo6 experience. Believe the experienced Robert. Believe RobROBERT BURTON, Anatert, who has tried it.

Expcrto creditc.

1 Ficluff Achates. Proverbial for a trusty friend; Adult's w;u the faithful comrade of Aeneas. See Homer, p. Gia. 8 Arwas to (he ghost of Dido, who had killed

omy
*

of Melancholy [itei-iG$i], Introduction

herself
*Sce.
6

when he Marlowe,

left her.

on Adapted (E pluribus unum) for the motto the face of the Great Seal of the United States, adopted June *o, 1788. For the Latin Virgil
Great Seal, see p. supplied for the reverse of the iiGb and p. 1 173. Holmes Quoted by Justice Oliver Wendell in a radio address on his ninetieth birthday,

R pluribus unus.

p. ai^a,
;w(jb,

and note.

See Milton, p.

Quoted by DANIK
canto $o,
p. iiya.

in
I.

The Divine Comedy,

/'urgatori'0,
7

a/,

Sec

Homer,

March

8,

1931.

HORACE

[QUINTUS HORATIUS
FLACCUS]
65-8
B.C.
it,

HORACE

In Rome you long for the country; in oh inconstant! the country you praise the distant city to the stars. Satiresf bk. II, satire viz, I 28

How
man

comes

Maecenas, that no

living is content with the lot that either his choice has given him, or

chance has thrown

in his way, but each has praise for those who follow other paths? Satires, bk. I [35 B.C.], satire i, I. i

Happy the man who far from schemes of business, like the early generations of mankind, works his ancestral acres with oxen of his own breeding, from all usury free. 1
Epodcs
[c.

29

B.C.], II, $t.

The

story's
is

There

about you. 1 Ib. 69 measure in all things. 2 Ifc. 106

You

ask

diffuses all

me why a soft numbness my inmost senses with deep

rarely find anyone who can say he has lived a happy life, and who, content with his life, can retire from the world like a satisfied guest.* 16. 117

We

though with thirsty throat drained the cup that brings the 16. XIV, i sleep of Lethe.*
oblivion, as
I'd

But

if

you name

me among
I

the

lyric

And The

all

that tribe.4

bards, I shall strike the stars with exalted head,

my
,

16. w, 2

Odes, bk.

limbs of a dismembered poet. 5 16. iv, 62

[23 B.C.],
soul.8

&
16.

ode

lines

A man
Life

without a

flaw. 6

16. V 7 32

The half of my own

m, 8

nothing without hard work.

grants

to

us

mortals

16. ix,

No

ascent
itself

is

59

As crazy
woods. 7

Heaven

we

as hauling timber into the 16. x,

too steep for mortals. seek in our folly.

-37
Pale Death with impartial tread beats at the poor man's cottage cloor and at the palaces of kings. 16. iv, 13
Life's brief span forbids us to enter on far-reaching nopes. 4 Ifc, 15

34

Simplicity

and

charm. 8

16.

44

This used to be among my prayers. a piece of land not so very large,

which would contain a garden, and near the house a spring of ever-flowing water, and beyond these a bit of wood.
16. bk. II [30 B.C.), satire vi, I
i

What

slender

youth,

bedewed

with

O
1
a

10 nights and suppers of the godsl

16.

65

De
Est

te tabula,

modus

in rebus. See

The Seven

liquid odors, Courts thee on roses in sonic pleasant cave, btnd'st tho Pyrrha? For

whom

Sages, p.

68b.
3

ocles,
*

See Solon, p. Gga; Aeschylus, p. fflb; Sophp. 8ib; Lucretius, p. n$b; and Bryant,

In wreaths thy golden hair, Plain in thy neatness? n

16. v,
vii,

p. 574b.

Hoc genus omne. 8 Disiecti membra poetae. The


8 7

Never despair,
a

16.

37

reference

is

10

Orpheus torn apart by the Maenads.

Ad unguem

See Keats, p.

factus

homo.
Proverb
AJUSTOPHANKS,
to Virgil's

Animac dimldium meac* The reference h


ArUtotlc. p. 07 a. ami nrite. Vif ae minima birvi* *prm no

to

Carrying coals to Newcastle. Bringing owls to Athens


Birds,
8
I.

Virgil.
.Sec
*

3<>x

vctat inrrtharc

Molle atque facetum. This refers

poetry.
9

Hoc

erat in votis.

10

noctes cenacquc

dcuml

longam. Sec Dowfton, p, Hfjoa. 6 Translated by JOHN Nil (tctperandum.


11

MIUON

(ifioH

120

HORACE

Tomorrow once
Ocean
Sea.*

again
I,

we
vii,

sail

the

Cease your

efforts to find

where the
L 3

last rose lingers. 1

Odes, bk.

ode

last line

Odes,
In adversity even mind. 2

6fe. I,

ode

xxxvzzz,

Leave

all else

to the gods. 2
Ib. ix, 9

remember

to keep an
iii f

Cease to ask what the morrow will bring forth, and set down as gain each 3 16. 13 day that Fortune grants.
Seize the day, put

16. bk. II

[23 B.C.], ode

We
fold: 3

are

all

driven

into

the same
16.

25

no

trust in the

Whoever cultivates the golden mean 4


avoids both the poverty of a hovel and the envy of a palace. 16. x, 5
It is

morrow!

Ib. xi, last line

Happy,
they

thrice

whom

happy and more, are an unbroken bond unites


shall

ning

strikes.

the mountaintop that the light16. 11


stretch the
16. 19
fleetxz'v,

and whose love

know no sundering
16. xiii,

Nor does Apollo always


bow. 5

quarrels so long as they shall live.

17
5

Alas, Postumus, Postumus, the

fairer

daughter of a
in life

fair

mother!

ing years slip by.

16.
7

16. xvi, i

The pure

and

free

from

sin. 6

No lot is altogether happy.

16. xvi,

16. xxu", i

27

What
be to

restraint or limit should there

grief for

one so dear?
16. xxz'v, i

I hate the common herd of men and be sacred sikeep them afar. Let there lence: I, the Muses' priest, sing for girls and boys songs not heard before.

Grant me, sound of body and of mind, to pass an old age lacking neither honor nor the lyre. 7
16. xxxz, last lines

16. WE. Ill [23 B.C.], octet,

Li

Dark Care
Knight.
It
is

sits

enthroned behind the 16. 40


Ib.
is

sweet and honorable to die for


z'i,

grudging and infrequent worship16. xxxz'v,


i

8 per o r the gods.

one's country.9

13

Now is the time for drinking, now the time to beat the earth with unfettered foot. 9
16. xxxvif,
I hate. 10
i

The man who

tenacious of purpose

in a rightful cause is his firm resolve by the frenzy of his feli

not shaken from

MUtc

sectari, roaa

quo locorum
in arduis

Persian luxury, boy,

Sera moretur.
*

16. xxxvzzz, i
*

Aequam memento rebus

Cras ingcns iterabimus aequor. Translated by S. E. MORISON.


cetera.

a
1

Scrvare mentcm. Onmes codtra cogimur. Aurcarn quisquia mcdiocritatcra


Diliget.

PrrmiUe divis *Sce Matthew


*

6:34,

p.

4*a,

and Publilius
[c.

Keep
4* See
8

the

golden

mean.
toya

PUBULIXJS

SYKUS

Syruit, p. i2fb.
*

B.C.],

Maxim

Garpe diem, quam minimum credula

Sec

Romard,

p.

iB8a;

postcro. Spenser, p. aooa; and

The Seven

Sages, p. 68b; Terence, p. io8a;

and

Hen-irk, p. jjaob. () matre pulchra filla pukhrior. Integer vitac cclcrisque purus. *Not to be tuneless in old age!
[1840-1921],

47b. Ncque semper arcum


Voltaire, p.

DOBSON Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Parcus dcorum cultor et infrequens. Nunc eat bibcndum, nunc pcde libero puitellus.

Tcndit Apollo. Ehcu f ugaccs, Postumc, Postume, Labuntur anni.

'Nihilestab omni
Partc bcatum. Post equitcm scdet atra cura.

sanda

Ode on

the death of Cleopatra.

Dulcc

et

decorum

e*t

pro patria mori.

"

Porticos odi, puer, apparatus.

See Homer, p. 643.

121

HORACE
low
citizens clamoring for what is wrong, or by the tyrant's threatening countenance. 1 Odes, bk. Ill, ode Hi, I. i
I

have built a

monument more
Ill,

last-

ing than bronze.

Odes, bk.
I

ode

xxx,

shall

not wholly

die. 1

16.

Force without wisdom

falls
Ife.

of
zv,

its

age was worse than our their sons are more grandsires'. worthless than they: so in our turn we shall give the world a progeny yet more

own weight. Our sires'

65

We

I am not what I was in the reign of the good Cinara. Forbear, cruel mother 2 of sweet loves,

Odes, bk.

IV

[i 3 B.C.],

ode
16.

i,

I 3

The

centuries roll back

to the anii,

corrupt.
Skilled
in

Ib. vi,

46
5

3 cient age of gold.

39
16

the works

of both
16.

lan-

We

are but dust and shadow,


16.

guages.

viii,

v,

With you

should love to
die.2

live,

with

Many
eternal

brave

men
all

you be ready to

memnon; but
16. ix, last line

arc

lived before Agaoverwhelmed in

mous
than

Gloriously perjured, to all time.8

maiden
16. xi,

4 cause they lack a sacred poet.

night,

unwept, unknown, be16. ix%

fa-

25

35
i

It

is

not the rich


call

man you
'

should

fount Bandusian, more sparkling


4
glass.

16.

xiii,

1 would not have borne this in my hot youth when Plancus was consul. 5

16. xiv,

27

happy, but him who use with wisdom the hard blessings of the gods, to endure poverty, and who fears dishonor worse than death, and is not afraid to die for
properly

knows how

to

A pauper in the midst of wealth. 5


16. xvi,

cherished friends or fatherland.

28
It is

HMS
sweet to
let

the

mind unbend on
16.
xii\

He will through life be master of himself and a happy man who from day to day can have said, "I have lived: tomorrow the Father may fill the sky with black clouds or with cloudless sunshine." 7
1

occasion, 5

27

Non omnis mortar. Non sum qualta cram bonac

16. xxix,

41
I.

Sec Fabius Maximus, p. io0a.

Sub rcgno Cinarac. Dcftinc, dulcium Mater sarva Cupid i num. Mater aaeva Cupidfnum. - Ode# bk,
-

I,

xix,

a
3

Tecum

viverc atncrn,

tccum obeam

libens.

S<r Dowfton, p.

Hcjoa.

Hypermncstra. Swift chose Splendide mcndax (Gloriously perjured) as Gulliver's motto. 4 O fans Bandusiae splendidior vitro, B In my hot youth, when George the Third was king. BYRON, Don Juan [1819-18x4],
canto
7
i, st.

ifrc Milton, p. 3SJ4, and M,u,iul.i). p, r,<f(>h, The golden age, which ;i htiml (taditinn lun hitherto placed in th< pa*t, in hrfnre ui, C. H. SAINT SIMON [176** tHa&j, quoted by CAKIU* tn
Sartor Reset tus
4
t

lik.

lU

th.

a/a
inter opes inopg. potens sui

Magnus

Illc

famous white they hvcl, air Bo.< utterly forgotten for want o! wntet*! Tiiitw [A.O. c. 480 5*4], fa Cnmutfawnc Wttlt><
many,

How

Laetusque degct, cui licet in Dixisse "Vixi: eras vel atra


pater occupato Vel sole puro."

diem

sophuu //, 7 Sec Homer,


P.
ft!>7*>.

p, (i^b; Skotc,

f>

f,tf|a;

ami

Ilyron.

Nubc polum

Brave men

weix? living fxrfoic

And

Ag
tjuiie tiic

Tomorrow let my sun his beams display Or in clouds hide them; I have lived my day.

since,

extmiing valorous and


like

good deal
none.;

him

too,

hue

same

Cow LEV,

Discourse XI, Of Myself [1661], st. //

See Dryden, p. jCgb,

and Sydney Smith,

p,

But then they shone not on ctw poct'a page. BYRON, Don /wtn t canto I, st. ) 8 See Menandcr, p. IOR; Motuaignc, p. HJU; and Bacon, p. soya.

122

HORACE
I am not bound over to swear allegiance to any master; where the storm drives me I turn in for shelter.

You may

drive out Nature with a


still

pitchfork, yet she

will hurry back.

Epistles, bk. I, epistle x,

L 24

Epistles, bk.

I,

epistle

i,

I 14

the beginning of virto have got rid of folly is the " lib. beginning of wisdom.
tue,

To

flee vice is

They change their clime, not their disposition, who run across the sea.
Ib. xi,

and

27

41

Make money, money by


you can,
if

not,

fair means if 1 by any means money. 16. 66

has enough of things to use. If it is well with your belly, chest and feet, the wealth of kings can give you nothing more.
is

He

not poor

who

Ib.

xii,

4
19

The
beast. 2

people

are

many-headed Ib. 76
Ib.

Harmony

in discord.

16.

He who
Dare to be

has begun has half done.


wise; begin!
8
ii.

40

For joys fall not to the rich alone, nor has he lived ill, who from birth to death has passed unknown.
It
is

The

covetous

man

is

ever in want.
Ib.

56

Corinth. 2

9 not everyone that can get to


Ib.

I&. xvii,

36

Anger

is

a short madness.

Ib. 62

Once
cape,
it

word has been allowed cannot be recalled. 3


a

to es-

to yourself that every day is your last; the hour to which you do not look forward will come as a welcome
surprise. As for me, when you want a good laugh, you will find me, in a fine state, fat and sleek, a true hog of Epi-

Think

16. xvizi, 71
It is

your concern
is

when your

neighI&.

bor's wall

on

fire.

84
live

No poems

can please for long or

that are written

by

water-drinkers.
Ifc,

curus' herd. 4

Ib. fv, 13

xwc,

O imitators, you slavish herd!


1 Get money; still get money, boy, no matter BF.N JONSON, Every Man in by what means. His Humor [1598], act II, sc. Hi * Bclua rnultorum es capitum. PLAIO [c, 4^9-347 B.C.] describes the multitude as a "great strong beast." The Republic,

Ib.
1

19

bk. VI,

4H-B
multitude of the gross people, being a

Concordia discors. a A rendering of a Greek proverb, "It's not everyone that can make the voyage to Corinth/' which referred to the expense of the life there. There is but one road that leads to Corinth. WALTER PATKR, Marius the Epicurean [1885],
ch.
8

The
beast
()

of

many

heads.

ERASMUS [1465-1536],
many-headed multitude.

Adagia, no. xaa

weak

trust of the

SIR PHILIP SIDNEY, Arcadia [1590], bk. See Machiavclli, p. i77b, and Shakespeare, pp. 241 a, and aftpb. The beast oC many heads, the staggering

cmiSRum volat irrevocable vcrbum. written word, unpublished, can be destroyed, but the spoken word can never be recalled. HORACE, Ars Poetica [c. 8 B.C.], I. 589 It is as easy to recall a stone thrown violently from the hand as a word which has left your

14 Scinel

The

tongue.

MKNANDKR [34$-*$*

B.C.],

Fragment

multitude. MARSTON AND WKBSTKR, The Malcontent [1604], act lll> sc. Hi If there be any among those common objects of hatred I do contemn and laugh at, it is that great enemy of reason, virtue, and religion, the multitude one great beast and a monstrosSIR THOMAS ity more prodigious than Hydra.
. .

Four things come not back: the spoken word; the sped arrow; time past; the neglected oppor-

OMAR IBN AL-HALIF, Aphorism word once spoken revoked cannot be. ALEXANDER BARCLAY, Shyp of Folyj [1509], p. 108 Thoughts unexpressed may sometimes fall
tunity.

BROWNE,
Sir,

tteligio

Medici [1643],
is

//, x

back dead;

a great beast. Attributed to ALEXANDER HAMILTON [1757-1804] 8 See Plato, p. 94a, and note.

your people

But God Himself


they're said,

can't kill

them when

WILL CARLETON

[1845-191*],

The

First

*Scc Chaucer, p. i66b.

Settler's Story, st.

nr

125

HORACE

AUGUSTUS CAESAR
Let a play have
five

And

seek for truth in the groves of


Epistles, bk. II

acts,

neither

Academe. 1
[14 B.C.],
ii,

more nor less.


Epistles,

bk. Ill (Ars Poetica)

epistle

I.

45

I 189

Barefaced poverty drove ing verses.

me

to writ16. 51

Turn the pages


1 night and day.

of your

Greek models Ib. 268

The

years as they pass plunder us of


16.

one thing after another.

55

I have to submit to much in order to 2 pacify the touchy tribe of poets.

wins every hand who mingles with pleasure, by delighting and the same instructing the reader at

He

profit

time.

Ib.

343

16. 102

Sometimes
nods.2

even

good

old

Homer
16-

"Painters and poets/' you say, "have always had an equal license in bold invention/' know; we claim the lib-

359

We

As

in painting, so in poetry.

erty for ourselves to others.

and in turn we

give

it

16. 361

He has defiled
[c.

16. bk. Ill (Ars Poetica)

his father's grave. 16.

8 B.C.],

471

/.

was a wine jar when the molding began: as the wheel runs round why
It

AUGUSTUS CAESAR
63B.C.-AJD. 14
Quintilius Varus, give
4

does

it

turn out a water pitcher?


16. 21

mo

back
sec.

my
23

legions!

It is

when

become

struggle to obscure.
I

be brief that
16.

From SUETONIUS, Augustus,


More
haste, less speed.
is

25
78

16.

25
16.

Scholars dispute before the courts. 8

and the

case

is

still

16.

Well done
I

6 quickly done.

Foot and a half long words. 4


I6.

found

Rome

a city of bricks
'

97

left it

a city of marble.
I I

16,
all

and 28

Taught
poetry.

or untaught,

we

all

scribble
16.

After this time


in authority,

surpassed

others

The mountains
a

will

be
will

in labor,

117 and

ridiculous

mouse

forth. 5

be brought 16. 139


16. 16.
16.

had no more power than the others who were also my colRes Gcrtdc 34 leagues in office.
but

From

the egg. 6

147
148
173

whom

Young men, hear an old man to old men hearkened when he was

In the midst of things. 7

young.

8 praiser of past time.

From PLUTARCH, Apothegms,


Caesar Augustus
p, uBa, Quanclmjue bonu* dor ml tat Homerui. Homer himself, in a long work, may ilrcp. ROBERT HFRRICK, HuprrtVfcj [1648], no. 95
*

'Atque inter silvas Academi quaerere verum. a Genus irritabile vatum. 8 Grammatici certant et adhuc sub iudice li$
est.
*

Sec Hsieh Ho,

Sesquipedalia verba, Parturient monies, nascetur

ridiculus

mtis.

See Aesop, p. 76a, and note. e Ab ovo. Helen, the cause of the Trojan War, sprang from an egg engendered by Leda and the Swan
(Zeus).
7

In medias

res.

Laudator temporis

See Pope, p. 4ob. Ut pictura poenit. * Quintlli Van, legioncs wide! A Greek proverb, a familiar rendering of which is: Fejtina Icntc, A Latin proverb: Sac ceterUer fieri quidquicl fiat satis benc. See PubUIiu* Syru*. p. is 53, and
1

acti.

Anonymous,

p. 150*.

124

LIVY

PUBLILIUS SYHUS

LIVY [TITUS LIVIUS]

Many
it.

receive advice,

few

profit b;

Maxim
While we stop
to think,

140

We

59B.C.-A.D. 17 can endure neither our

we

ofter

evils

nor

their cures. 1

miss our opportunity.

Maxim
lose,

185

History, Prologue

Better late than never. 2


Ib. bk.

Whatever you can reckon of no account.


tuous. 1

you should

Maxim

191

IV,

sec.

23

For a good cause, wrongdoing

is vir-

Woe to the vanquished.8


16.

Maxim 244
iron

V, 48

You should hammer your


it is

when
262

Beyond the Alps

lies Italy.4

2 glowing hot.
is left

Maxim
is

Ib.

XXI, 30

What

when honor
a silent

lost?

Maxim 265

PUBLILIUS SYRUS*
fl.

fair exterior is

recommen-

first

century B.C.

dation.

Maxim 267
satisfied

As men, we
ence of death.

are all equal in the pres-

Maxim

Fortune is not one calamity.

with inflicting

Maxim 274
side,

He

doubly benefits the needy


6

gives quickly.

who Maxim 6
is

When

lar favor bears

Fortune is on our her company,


flatters,

popu-

Maxim 275

To do two
neither.

things at once

to do

Maxim
could
hardly
love

When
8

Fortune

she does

it

to

betray.

Maxim 277
is

A
wise. 7

god
loss

and be
is

Maxim 25
which
is

Fortune
the
glitter,

like glass

the brighter

the

more

easily broken.

The
at
all. 8

unknown

no

loss

Maxim 280
It
is

Maxim
is

38

more easy

to get a favor from


it.

good reputation than money. 9


It is well to anchors.
x *

more valuable

Fortune than to keep

Maxim 108
Maxim 119
the disease. 4

Maxim 282
There arc some remedies worse than

moor your bark with two

Maxim
5

301

Thc two
is

reasons for writing a history.

A
own
l
8

cock has great influence on his


dunghill.
eat

Pot ins sero

quam numquam.
to

Maxim 357
pro causa bona.
is

It
9

better

learn

late

than

never.

PUBMUUS

SYRUS,

Maxim

Honcsta turpitudo

864

When

the iron
whilst

Vae victis, *In conspectu Alpes habeant, quarum alterum


latus Italiae
sit.

WOOD, Proverbs [1546], pt,


Strike

hot, strike. I, ch. 3


is

JOHN HEYRABELAIS,
is

the

iron

hot,

Au-dela
[1797]

des

Alpes

est

I'ltalie.

NAPOLEON

bk. //[i5S4],rfc. 3* Nothing like striking while the iron

hot.

CKRVANTKS,

Don

Quixote, pt. II [16x5], bk. IV,

Commonly
lilius

by

PUNY

called Publius, but spelled Pubin his Natural History, 55,

ch. 71
*

sec.

799. Translated mainly

by DARIUS LYMAN.

*Marius
the

See Shakespeare, p. *6b. said, "I see the cure


pain."

is

not worth
Lives,

The numbers
mous,
CIS

are those of the translator.

PLUTARCH

[A.D.

46-1*0],

See Augustus Caesar, p.


p. i5<>a. * It is impossible to love
*

i4b, and Anonywise.

Cains Marius

and be

FRAN-

BACON, Essays [1597-1625], Of Love Sec Shakespeare, p. 74b. See Ecclesiastes 7:1, p. a8a, and Bacon, p. ao8b, A good name is better than riches. CERVANTES, Don Quixote, pt. [1615], bk. 11, ch. 53

The remedy is worse than the disease. FRANCIS BACON, Essays [x597-x6$5j, Of Seditions 1 find the medicine worse than the malady. BEAUMONT AND FLETCHER, Love's Cure [1647],
act III, sc.
8
ii

Every

hill.

is proud on his ownc dungJOHN HEYWOOD, Proverbs [1546], pt. t>

coclce

ch. ii

125

PUBULIXJS STOUS

Anyone can hold the helm when the


sea
is

Necessity knows
1

no law except

to

calm. 1

Maxim 358
too tensely strung
is

prevail.

Maxim
at

5^3

The bow
broken.

easil;

Maxim
if

38!

Nothing can be done and prudently. 2

once

hastily
55-7

Maxim

Treat your friend as come an enemy. 2

he might beMaxim 402

We

desire

nothing so
to have.

No

we ought not

pleasure endures unseasoned


8

much as what Maxim 559 who despise Maxim 571


arc just

by

variety.

Maxim 406

It is only the ignorant education.

The judge is condemned when the criminal is absolved. 4 Maxim 407


Practice
tors. 5
is

Do

not turn back

when you

the best of

all

instruc-

at the goal. 3
It is

Maxim
Maxim

580

Maxim 439
is

not every question that deserves


581

He who
Never
It is a

bent on doing

evil

can

an answer.

never want occasion.

Maxim 459

No man
himself so. 4

is

happy who

does not think

find your delight in another's

Maxim

584

misfortune.

Maxim 467

Never thrust your own


other's corn. 5

sickle into an-

bad plan that admits of no modification. Maxim 469 It is an unhappy lot which finds no
enemies.

Maxirn 593
the same shoe on

You cannot put


every foot.

Maxim 499

Maxim 596

The fear of death is more to be dreaded than death itself. 6

Every day should be passed as if it Maxim 633 were to be our last.

Maxim

51 1

Money
motion.

alone sets

all

the world in

A rolling stone gathers no moss. 7


Maxim 524 Never promise more than you can Maxim 528 perform. No one should be judge in his own case. 8 Maxim 4C
1

Maxim 656

should go to a pear tree for to an elm. 7 not Maxim 674 pears,


Proverbial attributed r> Synw, Necessity given the law and doc* not receive it* Maxim 309 See St. Augmtinr, p. 147*1, ancl notr
-

You

itself

if he will one day be your enemy, and your enemy as if he will one LABF.RIUS [105-43 B.C.], day be your friend.

Sec Shakespeare, p. Treat your friend as

And with mwwity,

The

tyrant's pica, coKiinrci hi*

MILTON, Paradise Loxt Sec William Pitt, p. 4c)6b.


3

[ttiftp],

dcvilUh drcd*. bk. IV. /. j$j

Fragment
See Sophocles, p. 81 a. See Cowper, p. 4583.

See Chaucer, p,

fifth,

*Whcn men

ar*

arrived

at

the

goal,

thcv

Mudex damnatur ubi noccm absolvitur motto adopted for the Edinburgh Review. s Practice makes perfect. Proverb
saying "Practice is everything" is Periander's. DIOGENES LAERTIUS [c. 300 A.D.], Periander 6 See Shakespeare, p. 2713.
rolling stone never ga therein mosse. JOHN HEYWOOD, Proverbs [1546], pt. I, ch. if The stone that is rolling can gather no moss.
7

should not turn hack, PLUTARCH [A.I>. 48 1*0], Of the Training of Children No man can enjoy happimt* without think-

The

SAMUM, JOHNION ing that he enjoys it. 1784], The Hambltrr 8 Did thrust a now in other*' corn hi*
pt, II,

The

BA*TA, Divine Week* and Work* Second Week Not prtauming to put my tickle in another
\

I)u

man's corn,
alpina,
p.
7

NICHOLAS YONOK, AfuiiVa Trans*

-THOMAS
8

TUSSER,

Five

Hundred Points

Good Husbandry
It is

of

Dedicatory (t^HS) Sec Horace, p. >m, am! Marcu*

KpM

AurrUw.

[1557]

i4b.

men

not permitted to the most equitable of to be a judge in his own cause. PASCAL

You may

as well

CKRVANTCI,

Don

[16*3-166*], Pense"es, ch. 4, i

expect prar* from an elm. Quixote, pt. II 1615], bk.

126

PUBLUJUS SYRUS
It is a very hard undertaking to seek to please everybody. Maxim 675

PROPERTIUS
Unless degree is preserved, the 1 place is safe for no one.
first

Look
log.

for a tough

wedge

for a tough

Maxim

1042

723 Pardon one offense, and you encourage the commission of many.

Maxim

Confession of our faults is the next Maxim 1060 thing to innocence.


I have often regretted my speech, Maxim 1070 never my silence. 2

Maxim 750
In
every enterprise consider where
out. 1

you would come


It takes a

Maxim 777 Maxim 780


till

Speech

is

a mirror of the soul: as a


so
is

long time to bring excel-

man speaks,

he.

Maxim

1073

lence to maturity.

No
tries.

one knows what he can do

he

Maxim 786
look for a defense against

DIONYSIUS OF HALICARNASSUS
c.

It is vain to

lightning.

Maxim 835
is

54 -c. 7 B.C.
is

The

contact with manners then

Everything

worth what
it.

its

pur-

chaser will pay for


half

Maxim 847

Better be ignorant of a matter than

know

it.

Maxim 865
makes
friends,

education; and this Thucydides appears to assert when he says history is philosophy learned from examples. Ars Rhetorica XI, 2

Prosperity
tries

adversity

them. 4
his

Maxim 872
tongue and he

SEXTUS AURELIUS

Let a fool hold


will pass for a sage.

Maxim 914
sell.

PROPERTIUS
54
B.C.

-A.D. 2

You need

not hang up the ivy branch


5

over the wine that will

Maxim 968
It is a

its

Never change when love has found home. Elegies I, i, 36

consolation to the wretched to


in misery.
6

The

seaman's story

is

have companions

plowman's of his

team of

of tempest, the bulls; the sol-

Maxim 995
1 In every affair, consider what precedes and EPICwhat follow* and then undertake it. TKTUS [c. A.D, Co]: That Everything Is to be Undertaken with Circumspection, ch. 15
8

dier tells his


tale of sheep.

wounds, the shepherd his 16. II, i, 43


pass his days in that
16.

Let each wherein his

man

skill is greatest.

46

What is worth in anything But ao much money as 'twill bring?


BurtRR, Hudibras,
I [1665], canto i t I, 465
pt.

See Pope, p. 402b. See Aristotle, p. 993, and note. "Good wine needs no bush.
*

though strength fails? Boldwin praise. In mighty to have had the enterprises, it is enough
ness
is

What

certain to

determination.8
SHAKKSPKARB,
I. 4 preface

16. x, 5

As You Like

It [1598-1600],

Epilogue,

Good wine needs neither bush nor To make it welcome. SIR WALTER SCOTT, Peveril of

the

Peak

New
I.e.,
fl

[i8a*], ch. 4 Bush: a shrub or branch, especially of ivy (perhaps as sacred to Bacchus) hung out at 'WEBSTER, vintners' doors, or as a tavern sign. International Dictionary, and ed. [1945].

JOHN RAY, English Misery loves company. Proverbs [1670] the It is a comfort to unhappy to have comSPINOZA, Ethics [1677], panions in misery. pt. 4, proposition 57, note * See Shakespeare, p. 67b. * Sim on ides said that "he never repented that he held his tongue, but often that he had spoPMITARCH [A.D. 46-1*0], Rules for the ken."
Preservation of Health
* si deficiant vires, audacia certe Laus crit: in magnis et voluisse sat See Mcnandcr, p.

good wine needs no advertising. 'Tis the only comfort of the miserable to have partners in their woes. CERVANTES, Don
Quixote, pt, I [1605], bk. Illf ch, xo

Quod

est.

127

PROPERTIUS
Let no one be willing to speak
the absent, 1
Elegies
ill

OVID

of

Every lover
has his camps. 1
Stay
2

is

a warrior,

II, xix,

32

and Cupid Amores I, ix, i


hence,
Ib. II,

Let each

man

own

way.

have the wit to go his 16. xxv, 38


the
heart

far

hence,

far

you
i,

prudes!

Absence
fonder.8

makes

grow

Ib. xxxiii, 43
is

to see; they come that 8 themselves may be seen. they

They come

Ars Amatoria

I,

something beyond the grave: death does not end all, and the pale ghost escapes from the vanquished 4 Ib. IV, vzi, i pyre.

There

99

convenient that there be gods, and, as it is convenient, let us believe


It is

there are. 4

Ib.

637

To be loved,

be lovable.
Ib. II,

ALBIUS TIBULLUS
c.

107

54 -c. 19

B.C.

Nothing
last

is

stronger than habit.

May

look on you

when my

hour comes; may I hold you, with my failing hand. 5

as I sink,

Perhaps too
to
theirs 5

my name

will

[the

names

345 be joined of famous

Ib,

Elegies
Jupiter
lovers. 6

I, i,

59
of

poets].

Ib. Ill,

laughs

at

the perjuries
Ib. Ill, vi,

Now

are fields of corn

339 where Troy


I, i,

once was.

Heroides

49

Jove the Rain-giver.

Ib. viz,

26

[Chaos]
6

rough, unordered mass of

things.

Metamorphoses

I,

OVID
[PUBLIUS OVIDIUS NASO]
43 B.C.-A.D.
C.

Your lot is mortal: not mortal is Ib. II, 56 what you desire. You will be safest in the middle. 7
Ii.
I

l8

137

is good faith that will yield to none, and ways without reproach, and unadorned simplicity, and blushing Amores I, in, 13 modesty.

Mine

am

Actaeon: recognize your masIb. Ill,

ter! 8

230

The
is
l

cause

is

hidden, but the result


Ib.
OVID, Art

well known. 9
l,ove
is

The

rest

who

does not know?

a kind of warfare.

IV, 387 Am*


field
t>r.

Ib. v,
1

25

atoria II, 3jj A ba tall as de

amor campo dc pluma [A


the ttrlfc of
love),

of

feathers

for

!,uu

Absenti nemo non nocuisse velit. See The Seven Sages, p. 68b. 8 Paddle ANONYMOUS, Haryour own canoe.

G6NCORA

[1571-16*7], Solfdad I * Procul hinc, procul cstc, never it 'Spectatum veniunt, vcniunt *pcirntur

tit

per's
*

Monthly [May 1854] * Semper in absentes felicior

ipsae.

aestus

amantcs.

souls survive this death. morphoses XV, I. i $8


8

Our

OVID, Meta-

Te spectem, suprema mihi cum venerit Te teneam moriens deficiente manu.

hora,

Periuria ridet amantum lupiter. Also in OVID [43 B.C.-A.D. c 18], Ars Amatoria

And for to e and cck for to b* aeye. CHAUCER, The Canterbury Tafa [c. 1587), The Wife of Bath's Prologue, 1, 552 To see and to be seen, BKN JONSON [15711657], Epithalamion III, 4 *Sce Tillotson, p. $66b, and Voltaire, p.
8

Forsitan ct nostrum

See Shakespeare, p.

nomcn mUcebitur

ixtfo.

8 7

Jove but laughs at lovers' perjury. DRYDEN, Palamon and Arcite [1680], bh. II,
1.

And
758,

Rudis indigestaque moles.

Medio

tutissimu* ihi.

and Amphitryon

[1600], act If

sc. ii

Cetera quis nescit?

Actaeon ego sum, dominum cogncwciie V<N truml 9 Causa laiet, vis et notiwim*.

128

OVID

SENECA

We
mies. 1
I

can learn even from our eneMetamorphoses IV, 428

PHAEDRUSi
fl.

C. A.D.

8
evil,

see

and approve

better things, but


16. VII,

follow worse. 2

20

greater

Submit to the present one befall you.


Fables, bk.
I,

lest

fable 2,

I.

31

The

gods have their

own
all

rules.

16. IX,

He
500
it.

was the author, our hand finished


16. 6,

20

Time

the devourer of

things. 16. XV,

That
234

it is

unwise to be heedless our-

selves while
ers, I will

we

are giving advice to othin a

have finished a work that neither the wrath of love, nor fire, nor the sword, nor devouring age shall be
I

And now

show

few

lines.

16. 9,

able to destroy.

16.

871

one returns with good will to the place which has done him a mischief.
16. 18, i
It has been related that dogs drink at the river Nile running along, that they 2 may not be seized by the crocodiles,

No

beginnings; comes too late when

Resist

the prescription the disease has


5

gained strength by long delays.

Remedia Amoris 91
a yields to business. If you seek be safe of out be love, busy; you'll way Ib. 143 then. 6

Love

16. 25, 3

Everyone

is

bound

to bear patiently

the results of his

own

example.
16.

Poetry comes fine-spun from a mind


at peace.
Tristia I,
x,

26, 12
said.
I.

39

Come
Tilings

of

it

what may,

as

Sinon

16. Ill, prologue,

27

So long as you are secure you will count many friends; if your life becomes clouded you will be alone. 7
16.
,

are not

always what they


16. IV, 2, 5
16.

seem. 8

To add

insult to injury,

V,

Whatever

tried to write

16.
It
is

was verse. IV, x, 26

purpose.

annoying to be honest to no Ex Ponto II, in, 14


that a
arts
it

LUCIUS ANNAEUS SENEC A*


8 B.C.-A.D. 65

What fools
It is

these mortals be. 5


Epistles i, 3

Note too
the
liberal

faithful

study of

and permits

humanizes character not to be cruel.


16. ix,

not the

but the
poor.
i

man who man who craves

has too

little,
is

47
Translated by

more, that

tb. 2, 2

1 Fas est et ab hoste doccri, Imitated from ARISTOPHANES, The Birds, 1. 370: People before this have learned from their enemies. *

HENRY THOMAS

RIIUBY [1816-

1878],

See
p.
I

Video meliora, proboque, deteriora scquor. Romans 7:19, p. 51 a, and Euripides,


4*>.

know and

pursue.

PETRARCH, Sonnet
in Life
[c.

love the good, yet, ahl the worst 335, Canzone ax t


1327]

in his Natural History VIII, sec, 148) and AELIAN In his Various Histories relate the same fact as to the dogs drinking from the Nile. "To treat a thing as the do the Nile" was a common proverb,
a

PUNY THE ELDER

(bk.

dogs
*

To Laura
*

signifying superficial

treatment

Sunt supcris sua jura. * Tfinpus edax rerum.


8

ea sunt quae videntur, See Longfellow, p. 6aob, and W. 8. Gilbert,


p, 766a.
*
eris.
B

Non semper

See Persius, p. ijjjb. Qui fincm quaeris amoris Ccdit amor rebus; res age, tutus Sec Aristotle, p. 998, and note.

Loeb Classical Library, Tanta stultitia mortalium

est.

See Shakespeare, p. 2$oa.

129

SENECA
Love of bustle
is

not industry.
Epistles 3, 5

was

shipwrecked

before

aboard.

I got Epistles 87, i

Live among men as if God beheld you; speak to God as if men were listen16. 10, 5 ing.

It is better, of course, to

know

useless

things than to

know

nothing.
16. 88, 45
will wish

The
erty.

best ideas

are

common

prop-

Ib. 12, 11

Do not ask for what you you had not got.

16.

95,

Men

do not care how nobly they

live,

but only

how long,

although

it is

within
live

the reach of every


long.

man

to live nobly,
Ib. 22,

but within no man's power to

17

arc mad, not only individually, but nationally. check manslaughter and isolated murders; but what of war and the much vaunted crime of slaugh16. tering whole peoples? 95, 30

We

We

great pilot can


is

sail

even when his


16. 30, 3

canvas

rent.

A great step towards independence good-humored stomach, one that


16.

is is

Man

is

a reasoning animal.

willing to endure rough treatment.

16.41,8
That most knowing
gossip.
It is quality rather

223, 3

Fire

is

of

the test of gold; adversity, of


Essays.

persons
16. 43, i

1 strong men.

Moral

On
16.

Providence

9 22

matters. 1

than quantity that 16. 45, a


of every
receives

Time

discovers truth.5

On

Anger

2,

You can tell the character man when you see how he
praise.

Whom
hate
I

they have injured thcv


Ib.

also

16. 52, 22

33

Nothing is so certain as that the evils of idleness can be shaken off by hard
work.
16. 56,
lost,

do not distinguish by the eye, but bv the mind, which is the proper judge of the man.
16.

On

the

Happy

Life 2, 2

Not

but gone

before. 2
16. 63,

There
*6
16.
1

is

no great genius without


Tranquillity of the

some touch of madness. 4

All art

is

but imitation of nature.

On

Mind
17, 10

Ib.6 5r3
It is a

heights of greatness.

rough road that leads to the 16. 84, 13


. . .

Sec Beaumont and Fletcher, p, 31 fib, Vcritaicm die* aperlt, Omnia trmpux revclat
reveala
all],

[Time
c.

T*KTW.UAN
thing*.
.....

[A.&,

c.

155-

*s$], Apalo%eticu* 7

say,

who has been able to pilot "Neptune, you shall never sink this ship except on an even keel/' has fulfilled

The

Time
* It
lit

reveal*

all

ERASMUS

(1465-

human

nature to hate (hone

whom

v<m

the requirements of his

art.8

have injured.
4** *1

TACITUS

[A.D,

M~9].

ARricola

16.85,33
See Anonymous, p. 151 a. Non amittuntur, sed praemittuntur. Not dead, but gone before. SAMUEL ROGERS, Human Life [1819] See Maseficld, p. 9470-9483. The mariner of old said thus to Neptune in a great tempest, "O Godl thou save me
11

Chi fa ingiuria mm prrdona mat {He never pardons tho*c he injure*]. ~ - Italian prmwrb The offender never pardon*. Gr.oncr Him-

BKRT, Jacula Prudcntum (1640) Forgiveness to the injured doe* belong; But they ne'er pardon who have done the

wrong,

DRYDKN,

mayest if thou wilt, and if thou wilt, thou mayest destroy me; but whether or no, I will steer my rudder
true."
ch.

MONTAIGNE, Essays [1580-1595], bk.

11,

16

* An ancient commonplace which .Seneca *ay* he quotes from ARISTOTLK, Probfamata ;o, /; "No excellent soul is exempt from a mixture of mad,

The Conquest of Granada [if>7<4 pi> M, a<t X, sr. ii

ness." It

is

also in PLATO,

Phwdrut

34 ;A.

130

SENECA

PLINY THE ELDER

great fortune

is

a great slavery.

Moral

Essays.

To

Polybius on

1 good mind possesses a kingdom. Thyestes 380

Consolation 6, 5

Light
great are

Wherever the Roman conquers,


he dwells.
16.

there

griefs are dumb.2

loquacious, but the


II, 3,

Hippolytus
Helvia on Consolation
7, 7

607

To

receives a benefit with gratitude repays the first installment on his

He who

CALIGULA
[GAIUS CAESAR]
A.D.

debt.

On
roll

Benefits, bk. II, 22, i


log,

12-41

You
yours.

my

and
7

will

roll

Would
single

that the
[to

Roman

people had

Apocolocyntosis, sec. 9

neck

cut off their head].

From SUETONIUS, Gains


Caligula, sec. 30

you seek Alcides equal? 1 except himself.


Hercules Furens
Successful
called virtue. 2

Do

None
i,

is,

i,

84
is
fl.

MANILIUS
first

and

fortunate

crime
Ibid.

century A.D.

255

come after many years when the Ocean will loose the chains of
age will
things, and a huge land lie revealed; when Tiphys 3 will disclose new worlds and Thule 4 no more be the ultimate. 5 Medea, I 374

An

snatched the thunderbolt from 8 heaven, then the scepter from tyrants.

He

Astronomica

I,

/.

104

As soon as we are bom we begin to and the end depends upon the be4 16. IV, 1 6 ginning,
die,

Good

sense

travels

on the well-worn paths;


is

genius, never.

And
as

that

why
is

the crowd, not

ONASANDER
fl.

altogether without reason,


great

so ready to treat

A.D.

49

men

lunatics.

CESARE

LOMBROSO

[1830-1909],

The Man

of Genius, preface

can be his parallel. LEWIS THEOBALD [1688-1744], The Double False' hood MASAnd but herself admits no parallel.
SINGER
3
*

See Dryden, p. 3683. 1 None but himself

man who has Vigor not yet grown old, and discretion in the man who is not too young. The General, ch. i, sec. 10
is

found in the

15^-1640], Duke of Milan, act IV, See Harington, p. sioa.


[

sc.

Hi

Envy
ful

men

Jason's pilot. Sec Virgil, p.

is a pain of mind that successcause their neighbors. Ib, ch. 42, par. 25

1173,

and Thomson, p. 49b.

Venicnt annis
Saccula sens, quibus Oceanus Vincula rerum laxct, et ingens Pa teat tellus, Tiphysquc novos Dciegat orbcs nee sit terris Ultima Thulc. Translated by S. E. MORISON.

PLINY THE ELDERS


A.D.

23-79

In comparing various authors with one another, I have discovered that


See Dyer, p. i<)fta. See Raleigh, p. ic)(>a. tonandi. Eripuit Jovi fulmen vircsque Adapted by A. R. J. TURGOT for the inscription on the Houdon bust of Franklin [1778] as:
1

As one much addicted to prophesies, and who had already voyaged beyond Thule (Iceland), Columbus was much impressed by the passage in S. K. MORISON, Admiral of Seneca's Medea. the Octan Sea [1942], vol. I, ch. 6. Next to these lines from Medea in an early
edition of Seneca's

Columbia's son
cat

tragedies that Ferdinand, there

belonged to is this anno-

tation in the son's hand:

patrcm mourn 1498 The prophecy was the Admiral in the year
per
I

Haec profctia impleta almirantem anno


.
.

Eripuit coelo fulmen, mox sceptra tyrannis. See Franklin, p. 42 la, note 3. * See The Wisdom of Solomon $:t), p. 37*. *With some alterations, translated by JOHN

ROSTOCK [1773-1846] and HKNRY THOMAS RU-EY


[1816-1878]. See also Pliny the Younger, p. i4ob.

fulfilled

by

my
$

father

1492], Ib. 1,

131

PLINY THE ELDER

some of the gravest and latest writers have transcribed, word for word, from former works, without making acknowledgment. Natural History, bk. I, dedication, sec. 22
is

he can do prompting of nature nothing 1 only, but weep, Natural History, bk. VII, sec. 4
walk nor
eat,

and

in short

at

the

With man, most


are occasioned

of his misfortunes
Ib.

2 by man.
is

soothed by oil, and this the reason why divers send out small

Everything

is

Indeed, what

there that docs not

quantities of

cause

it

from their mouths, besmooths every part which is


it

rough.*
It
is

Ib. II, far

234

appear marvelous when it comes to our for the first time? 8 How many things, too, arc looked upon as

knowledge

from easy to determine

quite impossible until they actually effected?

have been Ib. 6

a kind parent or a merciless stepmother.* ib. VII, i

man

whether she [Nature] has proved to

birth, cast
tions.8

alone at the very moment of his naked upon the naked earth, does she abandon to cries and lamentaIb. 2

Man

The human features and countenance, although composed of but some ten parts or little more* arc so fashioned that among so many thousands of men
there arc no two in existence

who
one

canan-

not

be

distinguished

from

other. 4

16. 8

To laugh, if but for an instant only, has never been granted to man before the fortieth day from his birth, and
then
it is

All

men

possess in

their bodies

poison which acts upon serpents; and the human saliva, it is said, makes them
take to flight, as though they had been touched with boiling water.' The same
substance,

looked upon as a miracle of


Ib.

precocity.*

the only one that knows nothing, that can learn nothing without being taught. He can neither speak nor
is

Man

moment it
It

said, destroys them the enters their throat. 5


it is

Ib.

15

does pouring oil on the sea make it and calm? Is it for that the winds, slipping oil, have no force, nor cause any waves? PLUTARCH [A.D. 46-120], Natural Quesclear

Why

the smooth

tions

IX

has been observed that the height of a man from the crown of the head to the sole of the foot is equal to the distance between the tips of the middle
See Tennyson, p. ffcob, See Burn*, p, 4<>ab, See Tacitiw, .Igrfrot* ?i>. p. 1401, *It is the common wonder of all men, how so among many million* of face* there should
9
1

Bishop Adain [A.D. 651] gave to a company about to take a journey by sea "some holy oil, saying, 1 know that when you go abroad you will meet with a storm and contrary wind; but do you remember to cast this oil I give you into the sea, and the wind shall cease immedi"
f

ately.'

bk.

IH

BEDE [673-735],
ch. 14

Eccesiastical History,

In JARED SPARKS'S edition of BENJAMIN FRANKLIN'S Works, vol. VI, p. M4, there are letters between Franklin, Brownrigg, and Parish on the stilling of waves by means of oil. a To man the earth seems altogether No more a mother, but a step-dame rather. Du BARTAS [1544-159], Divine Weeks and Works, First Week, Third Day >See The Wisdom of Solomon 7:3, p. 373. He is born naked, and falls a-whining at the first. -ROBERT BURTON, Anatomy of Melancholy [16*1-1651], pt. 10
/, sec. a,

be none alike. Si* THOMA* BHQWNIS, Retiglo Medici [1648 ],/>*. //, see. Of a thousand shaver*, two do not shave 10 much alike as not to be dliiin#uUhe<l. SAMUEL JOHNSON [1777]; from Boiwru,, /,/fr <>/ Dr. Johnson [1791], vol. U, p /ao
t

[Everymin

ed.]

See Montaigne, p.

ifjoo.
re-late*

*MADAMK

D'AB*ANTM

that

when

member

z,

subscc.

*This term of forty days is mentioned by ARISTOTLE in his Natural History.

Bonaparte was in Cairo h aem for serpent* detector (PsylH) to remove two serpents chat had been seen in his house, Her, having enticed one of them from his hiding place, caught it in one hand, below the jawbone, in such just a manner as to oblige the mouth to open, when, into the it, effect was like spitting magic the reptile appeared struck with instant death. vol. Memoirt, I, ch. jp

PLINY THE ELDER


fingers of the two in a straight line.

PETRONIUS

hands when extended


sec.

Natural History, bk. VII,

77
out

PERSIUS [AULUS PERSIUS FLACCUS]


A.D.

There
of Africa.

is

always something

new
to

34-62
the teacher of the
I.

Ib. VIII,

17
fall

The stomach
arts

is

When
down,
all

a building is about the mice desert it. 2

and the dispenser of invention. 1


Satires, prologue,

10

Ib. 103

Tell, priests,

what

is

gold doing in a
Ib. II,

Bears when first born are shapeless masses of white flesh a little larger than
mice, their claws alone being prominent. The mother then licks them
3 gradually into proper shape.

holy place?

69

Let them look upon virtue and pine because they have lost her.
16. Ill,

38
2

Meet the
Ib.

disease at

its

first

stage.

126

16.64

The agricultural population, says Cato, produces the bravest men, the
most
signs.

valiant soldiers,

and a
all

class of citi-

GAIUS PETRONIUS [PETRONIUS ARBITERS]


d, A.D.
c.

zens the least given of

to evil de-

66

16.
is

XVIII, 26
folly

He

has joined the great majority. 4


Satyricon, sec. 42

The best plan of others.

to profit

by the

Ib. 31

A man who is
what
is

always ready to believe


will never

A grain of salt being

added. 4
Ib.

told

him

do

well.

XXIII, 8

Ib.

43

is it that we entertain the belief that for every purpose odd numbers are the most effectual? 5

Why

One good

turn deserves another.

16.45

A man

must have

his faults.
16.

16.

Ib.
1

XXVIII, 23

Not worth

his salt.

57

Ex Africa semper aliquid novi. Quoted as a Greek proverb. This is alluded to by CICERO in his letters to Atticus, and is mentioned by AELIAN (Animated Nature, bk. VI, ch. 41). Compare the

My

heart was in

my

mouth.
16. 62
rarely con16. 94

Beauty and wisdom are


joined.
1

modern proverb: Rats desert a sinking ship. 8 Not unlike the bear which bringcth forth
In the end of thirty days a shapeless birth; But after licking, it in shape she draws, And by degrees she fashions out the paws, The head, and neck, and finally doth bring To a perfect beast that first deformed thing. I)u BARTAS, Divine Weeks and Works
[1578], First Week, First Day had not time to lick it into form, as a bear doth her young ones. ROBERT BURTON, Anatomy of Melancholy [1621-1651], Democritus to the Reader
I

Magister artis ingenique largitor venter. Sec Anonymous Latin, p. 1513. WYCHERLB*, Necessity, mother of invention. Love in a Wood [1671], act ///, sc. Hi Art imitates Nature, and necessity is the

published 1694] the proper parent of an art so nearly allied to invention. SHERIDAN, The
11658,

mother of invention. ern Memoirs [written


Sheer necessity

RICHARD FRANCK, North-

Critic [1779], act X, sc.


tt

ii

Cum grano salis [With a grain of salt]. Pompcy's antidote against poison was "to be
4

taken fasting, a grain of


8

salt

being added."

The god

Venienti occurrite morbo. A stitch in time saves nine. Proverb See Ovid, p. 1x93. Also in Publilfus Syrus, Maxim 866, Pliny calls PetronJus Titus in Natural History

delights

in

an

odd number.
75

X.XXVU,

8.

VIRCII, [70-19 B.C.], Eclogues Vlll,

See Shakespeare, p. s6yb, and Samuel Lover,


p.

See Tacitus, p. 1403. * Abiit ad plures. B See Petrarch, p. i6$a.

PETRONIUS

MARTIAL

The

studied spontaneity of Horace. 3


Satyricon, sec.
c

A name
tions. 1

illustrious

and revered by na-

Natural

curls.

The
Ifc.

Civil

126

War,

bk.

IX, 203

NERO
A.D.

Is the dwelling place of God anywhere but in the earth and sea, the air

and
ther

37-68

sky, for

and virtue?
deities?

Why

seek

we

fursee,

Whatever you
is

What an artist dies with

me!

whatever you touch, that


sec.

Jupiter.

From SUETONIUS, Nero,

49

The

2 very ruins have been destroyed.


Ifc.

LUCAN
A.D.
If

969

39-65

the victor had the gods on his side, the vanquished had Cato. 4

DIG CHRYSOSTOM*
A,D. C.

40 -C. 12O

The

Civil

War,

bk.

I,

128
I

There stands the shadow of a glorious name. 5 Ifc. 135


Pigmies placed on the shoulders of giants see more than the giants themIb. II, 10 (Didacus Stella) selves. 6

Diogenes: The man I know not, for am not acquainted with his mind. Fourth Discourse* On Kingship,
Idleness

C/L 17 and lack of occupation are the best things in the world to ruin the
foolish.

Thinking nothing done while any7 thing remained to be done.


16.

Tenth Discourse^

On Servants,
eft.

657
ex-

More was
istence. 8

lost

than mere

life

and

rupted

Ib.

VII, 639

praise fidelity; but the true friend pays the penalty when he sup9 ports those whom Fortune crushes.
all

We

completely they would for the greatest calamities than suffer no ill and be un-

Most men

arc so

cor-

by opinion rather be notorious

that

known.

Ifc.

ch. 6

Ib. VIII,
*Horatii curiosa felicitas. Crines ingenlo suo flexi.
8

48 5

MARTIAL* [MARCUS VALERIUS


MARTIALISJ
A.D. C.

40 -C. 104

Qual is artifex pcrco!

*Victrix causa deis placuit, sed victa Catoni.


8

magni nominis umbra. Pigmei gigantum humcris impositi plusquam


Stat

pure.

My poems 5
live/'

are naughty, but

my

life is
I,

Epigrams
Yes,

ipsi gigantes vidcnt.

"I'll

See Robert Burton, p. $ioa, and Sir Isaac Newton, p. 37^. The dwarf sees farther than the giant, when he has the giant's shoulder to mount on. COLERIDGE, The Friend [1828]
7 *

man would
too
late.

say so. Live today.


though

no sensible Tomorrow's life is


but
Ifc. 1
it

And

faith

i>rais'<l,

pttntah'tl.

that

supports

The

reference is to Caesar. Plus est quam vita salusquc


peril.
fides,

Such a* good

fate f0r*ak<**,

FusTCiHKft,

The

false

One

[1647], ntt 1,
*r.
i, I,

Quod
B

uj

"Cat poenas laudata


inquit,

dum

sustinet,"

Clarutn

ec

vcnorabilc

nmnen
Pomf>ey,

Gcntibus,
Cato'a tribute to thf
a

"Quos fortuna premit."

Mini

praised faith
scourge,

Is

her

own

when

it

sustains their

states

Whom

fortune hath depressed. BEN JONSON, Anglia 39, 3^7

Ktiam jxrirre ruinar. The reference i* to Troy. 3 Translated by J. W. Ctottotm. * Translated by DtimjtY Fma,
Lasciva est nobiji pagina, vita proba,

MARTIAL
good, some so-so, and lots plain bad: that's how a book of poems
is

QUINTILIAN
lives

Some

who

relives his past

with pleasure. 1 Epigrams X, 23

made,
I

my
I

friend.

Epigrams
I

I,

16

don't like you, Sabidius,

can't say
Ib. 32

Neither fear your death's day nor 2 Ib. 47 long for it.
Lucretia blushed,
aside. Brutus

why; But

can say

this:

don't like

1 you, Sabidius.

and put my book Exit Brutus. was there.


Ib. XI, 16

Stop abusing my some of your own.

verses,

or publish Ib. 91

Now

she'll read.

complain, friend Swift, of the length of my epigrams, but you yourself write nothing. Yours are shorter.
Ib.

You

You'll get running a burro.

no

laurel

crown

for out-

Ib. XII,

36
liv-

You're obstinate, pliant, merry, morose, all at once.

For

me

there's

no
Ib.

no
42

8 ing with you, or without you.

47
57

Conceal a

flaw,

and the world

will

imagine the worst.

Ib. Ill,

The country in
I

town. 4

Ib.

The bee is enclosed, and shines preserved in amber, so that it seems enshrined in its own nectar. 2
Ib.

know

these are nothing. 5


Ib. XIII, 2

IV, 32
but

TITUS VESPASIANUS
A.D. C.

41

-8l

They

praise those verses,


else.

read something

yes, Ib.

49

6 Friends, I have lost a day. From SUETONIUS, Titus, sec. 8

You ask what a nice girl will do? She won't give an inch, but she won't say
no.
Ib. 71
clays

Our

pass

by,

and

arc
Ib.

scored

QUINTILIAN [MARCUS FABIUS QUINTILIANUS]


A.D.

5 against us.

V, 20
Ib.

42-118

What's

wretched man?
pleases.
lives

A man
28
nolives

We
virtue. 7

the praise of give to necessity


Do? Institutionc Oratorio, bk. I, 8, 14

whom no man

A man who
where,

everywhere

Ib.

73

*Thus would
COWURY

double
it

For he that runs

my life's fading space; well, runs twice his race.

You puff the poets of other The living yon deplore.

days,

Spare me the accolade: your praise 4 Is not worth dying for. Ib. VIII, 69
Virtue extends our
1
fl

[1018-1667], Discourse XI, Of Myself, st. For he lives twice who can at once employ The proscnt well, and ev'n the past enjoy. POPK [1688-1744], Imitation of Martial a See Milton, p. j^Ka. anifficilis facilis fucuncliu accrbus es idem:

clays:

he

lives

two
*

Nee tecum possum


See Aristophanes, p. gib.

vivere

ncc

sine

tc.

Sec

Tom

Brown,
see

p, 3801).

Whence we

tombed preserved FRANKS BACON, Historic Vitae royal tomb.


Martin
\

ants enspiders, Hies, or forever in amber, a more than


et

Rus in urbe. Nos haec novimus

csse nihil.

own poems, The phrase was used by John Gay as epigraph for The Beggar's
Said of his

cent, /, cxpcr. too 18*3], Sylva Sylvarum> saw a Hie within a bcadc I

Opera
7

[1728].

Of amber

cleanly buried.

HF.WUOK [1591-* 67.4], ()n a Fly


Buried in
See Pope, p. jiob.

Amber

Amici, diem pcrdidi. In the additions of Hadrianus Julius to the Adages of ERASMUS, he remarks, under the head of Necessitate cdere, that a very familiar provhis was current among erb countrymen: Necessitatcm in virtutem commutarc [To make
necessity a virtue].

Nobii peteunt
*

See Ix)Uts

impuiamur. Edwin Thayei p. <


,

et

QUINTILIAN

PLUTARCH

A liar

should have a good memory. 1

A Roman
ing highly

divorced from his wife, behis friends,

De
Vain hopes
of those

Institutione Oratoria, bk. IV, 2, 91

blamed by

who

demanded, "Was she not chaste?


she

Was

not

fair?

Was
his

are often like the


Ib.

dreams
holding

out

shoe,

she not fruitful?" asked them

who

wake.

VI, 2, 30

For

it is

tion that

make

feeling and us eloquent. 2

force of imagina16.

whether it was not new and well made. "Yet/' added he, "none of you can tell where it pinches me." 1
Lives,

X,

7,

15

Aomihus Paulus,
it

sec.

who wish to appear fools, among among the wise seem


Those
ish. 3

wise
fool-

Where

the lion's skin will not reach,

you must patch

out with the


I&.

fox's. 2

16. 21

Lysander,

sec.

PLUTARCH
A.D.

Moral

habits,
far

induced
quicker

by
in

public

46-120
Sosius,

As geographers,

crowd into

the edges of their maps parts of the world which they do not know about, adding notes in the margin to the effect that beyond this lies nothing but sandy deserts full of wild beasts, and unapproachable bogs.* Lives, Aemilius Paulus, sec. 5

men's private lives, than the failings and faults of individuals are Ib. ij in infecting the city at large.
in the proverb, played Cretan 8 I&. 20 Cretan. against

practices, are their way into

making

As

it is

Perseverance
violence;

is

more

prevailing than

About Theseus began the


is

second Hercules."

saying, "He 16. 29

and many things which cannot be overcome "when they are towhen taken gether, yield themselves up Ifc. Scrtorius, sec. 16 little by little.

Thus maketh vertuc of ncccssitce. CHAUCER, Troilus and Criseyde [1372-1386], bk. IV, L x$86 Others made a virtue of necessity. RABELAIS,
Works, bk.
23 See Shakespeare, p. 2263. Make a virtue of necessity.

Good fortune will elevate even petty minds, and give them the appearance of
a certain greatness and stateliness, as from their high place they look down upon the world; but the truly noble and
resolved spirit raises
itself,

[1552], ch.

ROBERT BURTON,
pt.
Ill,

Anatomy of Melancholy sec. 3, member 4, sub sec.


I

[1621-1651], I

and becomes
t

He who

has not a good

memory should never

more conspicuous
and
ill

in
Ib.

times of disaster

the trade of lying. MONTAIGNE, Essays [1580-1595], bk. I, ch. 9, Of Liars II faut bonne mmoirc, apres qu'on a mcnti.

take

upon him

fortune.

F,vmencs

sec.

CORNEILLE, Le Menteur [1642], act IV, sc. v Liars ought to have good memories, ALGERNON SIDNEY, Discourses on Government [1698],
ch. a, sec. 75 9 Pectus est enim,

Authority and place demonstrate and the tempers of men, by moving every passion and discovering every
try
frailty.
Ife.

quod disertos facit. 8 A wit with dunces, and a dunce wit., POPE, Dunciad [1728], bk. IV, I. oo
fool

Demosthenes and Cicero,


sec. 3

wits,

with judges, amongst

fools a judge.
1

COWPER, Conversation [1782], /. 298 This man [Chesterfield], I thought, had been a lord among wits; but I find he is only a wit SAMUEL JOHNSON; from BOSWKLL, among lords. Life of Dr. Johnson [1791], vol, II, p. 15$ [Everyman ed.]
*

Medicine, to produce health, has to

The wearer known where the thoc wrings. GKOKUK HKRBKRT, Jacuia Prudentum [1640] I can tell where my own fhoe pine he* me,

CKRVANTFS,
ch. 5
*

Don

QuixQtn* pi, / (1605), bk.

W,

So geographers, in Afric maps,

The

With savage

prince

mtm

be a lion, but he muit tho

pictures

fill

downs Place elephants for want of towns. SWIFT, On Poetry, A Rhapsody [1735]
o'er unhabitable

And

their gaps,

know how to pity the fox. VEU.I, The Prince [5S*J


Cheat against cheat, considered notorious litri.
*

NICCQLO MACHIA-

The

Cretan*

were

136

PLUTARCH
examine disease; and music, to create harmony, must investigate discord.
Lives, Demetrius, sec.
It
is
i

Antiphanes said merrily that in a certain city the cold was so intense that words were congealed as soon as
spoken, but that after

a true, proverb, that if you live with a lame man you will learn to limp. Morals. Of the Training of

some time they

Children

thawed and became audible; so that the words spoken in winter were articulated next summer. 1
Morals.

The
and

very spring and root of honesty virtue lie in good education.


16.

Of Man's

Progress in Virtue

When
are
fair.

the candles are out


I&.

all

women

indeed desirable to be well descended, but the glory belongs to our


It is

Conjugal Precepts

ancestors.

16.

Nothing made
king's eye.
It is wise to

the horse so fat as the


16.

Like watermen, who look astern while they row the boat ahead.8 Ib. Whether 'Twas Rightfully Said, Live Concealed

be

The great god Pan


Ib.

silent

when

and better than though never so well. 1


requires,

occasion to speak,
16.
I

Why

4 is dead. the Oracles Cease to

Give Answers

An old doting fool, with one foot al16. ready in the grave.

am whatever was, or is, or will be; and my veil no mortal ever took up. 5 16, Of Isis and Osiris
For to err in opinion, though it be not the part of wise men, is at least Ib. Against Colotes human. 8
Pythagoras,
of this world.
Ib. Platonic Questions
Rabelais gives a somewhat similar account, referring to Antiphanes, in Works, bk. /P[i548],
chs. 55-56.
1

He
at

is

a fool

who

hand
All

to follow what

leaves things close is out of reach. 2

Ib. Of Garrulity men whilst they are awake are in one common world; but each of them,

when he was
it

asked what

time was, answered that

was the soul

when he
own.3

is

asleep,

in a world of his 16. Of Superstition


is

That

proverbial saying,

"Bad news

travels fast

and

far/' 4
14.

Of

Inquisitiveness

See Raspc (Baron Munchausen), p. 468a. When all candles be out, all cats be gray.

Spintharus, speaking in commendation of Kpaminondas, says he scarce


ever

JOHN HEYWOOD, Proverbs


s

[1546]. P*- I* ch.

Like

rowers,

who

advance

backward.

met with any man who knew more


less.

and spoke
1

16.

Of Hearing,
I,

sec.

Closed Hps hurt no one,


Better one bird

speaking may.
distich /a

CATO TUR O.NSOR


*

(1134-149 B.C.], bk, in hand than

ten

in

the

wood,
ch. xi

JOHN HUYWOOD, Proverbs


bird in the hand
-

[1546], pt. I,

One
wood,

A
A, air. *
4

is worth two in the LODGE, Rosalync [1590] bird in hand is worth two in the bush.

THOMAS Don

C;K*VANTKS,
ch. 4

Quixote, pt. I [1605], bk. IV,

feather in

hand is better than a bird in the GEORGE HERBERT, Jacula Pruden turn [164.0]
good.

Evil

aaytng attributed to Hcraclitus. new* fly faster still than

THOMAS KYD,

MONTAXCNE> Essays [1580-1595], Of Profit and Honor, bk. 111, ch. r Like the watermen that row one way and look another. ROBERT BURTON Anatomy of Melancholy [1621-1651], Democritus to the Reader * PLUTARCH says in Of Isis and Osiris that a ship well laden with passengers drove with the tide near the Isles of Paxl, when a loud voice was heard by most oC the passengers calling one Thanus. The voice then said aloud to him, "When you are arrived at Palodea, take care to make it known that the great god Pan is dead/' ELIZABETH BARRETT Great Pan is dead. BROWNINC [1806-1861], The Dead Pan, st. a6 8 1 am the things that are, and those that are to be* and those that have been. No one ever lifted my skirts; the fruit which I bore was the PROCLUS [A.D, c. 411-485], On Plato's Tisun. maeus (inscription in the temple of Neith at Sais,
>

Spanish

Tragedy [1594], act I

See Milton, p. 5503,

in Egypt) 8 See Anonymous, p. isob,

and Pope,

p.

4ojb.

137

EPICTETUS

EPICTETUSi
A.D. C.

(Only
\~*

5O-12O

the educated are free. Discourses, bk.

eft.

tional
is

the rational being only the irrais unendurable, but the rational endurable. Discourses, bk. I, ch. 2

To

use

The materials are indifferent, but the we make of them is not a matter of
Ib.

indifference.

When
make

you close your doors, and

darkness within, remember never to say that you are alone, for you are not alone; 2 nay, God is within, and your genius is within. And what need

Shall I show you the sinews of a philosopher? "What sinews are those?" A will undisappointed; evils avoided;

powers daily exercised; careful resolutions; unerring decisions.

Ib.

have they of light to see what you are 16. 14 doing?

What

is

the

first

business of one

who

No

thing great

is

created suddenly,

any more than a bunch of grapes or a If fig. you tell me that you desire a fig, I answer you that there must be time. Let it first blossom, then bear fruit, then ripen. I&. 15

practices philosophy? To get rid of selfconceit. For it is impossible for anyone

to begin to learn that

which he thinks
Ib.

he already knows.
practice it; and thing habitual,

17

Whatever you would make habitual, if you would not make a

Any one

thing in the creation


grateful

is suffi-

cient to demonstrate a Providence to a

do not practice it, but accustom yourself to something else.


Ib. 18

humble and

mind.
I

Ib.

16

Were

a nightingale,

would sing

like a nightingale; were I a swan, like a swan. But as it is, I a rational being,

am

Be not swept off your feet by the vividness of the impression, but say, "Impression, wait for me a little. Let

therefore I

must

sing

hymns

of praise to
Ib.

me

see

what you arc and what you

God.

resent. Let

me

try

you."
faults

repIb.

Practice yourself, for heaven's sake, in little things; and thence proceed to Ib. 18 greater.
It is difficulties that

There are some

which men

readily admit, but others not so readily. Ib. 21

show what men


16.

are.

Two
have

24
25

The good own will.

or

ill

of

man

lies

within his
Ib.

In theory there is nothing to hinder our following what we arc taught; but
in life there are
aside.

there is nothing good or evil save in the will; and that we are not to lead events, but to follow them. Ib. JIf T 10

ready

principles that

we should

always

many

things to draw us
16.

First say to yourself

be;

26

what yon would and then do what vou have to do,


Ib. *;

Appearances to the mind arc of four kinds. Things cither are what they appear to be; or they neither are, nor appear to be; or they arc, and do

not appear to be; or they arc not, and yet appear to be. Rightly to aim in all these cases is the wise man's task.
16.
Classical Library. Though in a wilderness, a alone. SIR THOMAS BROWNE,
fl

that to behave you ought you would at a banquet, As something is being passed around it comes to you; stretch out your hand,
in life as

Remember

27

Loeb

man

is

never

take a portion of it politely. It passes on; do not detain it, Or it has not come to you yet; do not project your desire to meet it, but wait until it comes in front of you. So act toward children, so to-

Rcligio

ward a wife, so toward


wealth.

office,

so toward

[164*],

Everyman

ed> p.

The

Kncheiridion, 15

138

EPICTETUS

JUVENAL
I

Where do you
high brow?

suppose he got that The Encheiridion, 22

wish

it, I

command

it.

Let

my

will

Everything one of which

has
it

two

by

ought to the other not. 1

handles by be carried and 16. 43

1 take the place of reason. Satires VI, I 223

We

are

now

a suffering the evils of

more deadly than long peace. Luxury, and avenges a the over broods city, war,
2 conquered world.

DECIMUS JUNIUS JUVENAL


A.D.
C.

16.

292

But who
selves?
3

is

50 -C. 130
starves.
2
I,

to guard the guards them-

Ib

347

Honesty
If

is

praised and

Satires

I 74
will

and incurable itch for and grows old in writing besets many,

An

inveterate

nature

refuses,

indignation
16.

their sick hearts.

16. VII, 51
virtue.
4

produce
All

verses. 8

79

Nobility

is

the one and only

the

doings

of

mankind,

their

16. VIII,

20

wishes, fears, anger, pleasures, joys, varied pursuits, form the motley subject 16. 85 of my book.

and

Count

to honor, lose what

it the greatest sin to prefer life and for the sake of living to

makes

life

worth having.
16.

Censure pardons the raven, but


ited
4 upon the dove.

is vis-

83

16- II, 63 in a

No
ment*

one becomes depraved


rhetorician,

mo-

once bestowed compeople that and all mands, consulships, legions,

The

16. 83

else,

now

concerns
for
6

itself

Grammarian,

geometri-

longs

eagerly

just

bread and circuses!

no more, and two things 16. X, 79


7

cian, painter, trainer, soothsayer, rope-

dancer, physician, magician everything. Tell the hungry


to
6 go to heaven; he'll go.

he knows little Greek


Ib. Ill,

Put Hannibal in the

scales.

16.

147

76
7

You

should pray
8

for a

Bitter poverty has

no harder pang
ridiculous.

a sound body.

sound mind in 16- 35 6

than

that

it

makes men

16. 152
It is

not easy for

men

to rise

whose
164

qualities arc thwarted

mean spirit, of a weak and petty mind! You may immediately draw proof of
this

For revenge

is

a always the delight of

by poverty.
16.

that

no one

rejoices

more

in re-

venge * than a woman.


16. XIII,
i

We
A
>

all

live in a state of

poverty,
rare bird

ambitious 16. 182

189

on

earth,

black swan.*
There
to

comparable to a 16. VI, 165

Hoc volo, sic iubco, sit pro rationc voluntas. sNunc patimur longac pads mala, saevior
arm is
Luxuria incubuit victumque uldscitur
bcni.
or-

thing.
1
1

a right and wrong handle to every- RA.WK, Travels of Baron Munchausen

785], fh.
*

w
alj>ct.

Probitai laudatur et
favorite

indignatio vemun. Si *I>at venlam corvU, vexat censura columbas

quotation of Linnaeus.
facit

Scd quid custodies t ipsos Custodes? a guardian to need a What an absurd idea 1 c >]' The Re " PIATO [c. ^*? guardianl
public, bk. Ill, * Nobilitas sola cst atque unica virtus.

nacuru mgat,

w~E

Nemo repente fuit turpissimui. Translated by GILBERT HIGHKT. Sec Racine, p


57 8b.

BSummum
dori,
*

crcdc ncfas

animam praefem

pu-

Et propter vitam vivcndi perdcrc causas.

?Nii

See Dryden, p. jfiBb. habct infelix paupenas

Pancm

et circenscs.

duriuft

In

sc

quam quod
Kara
avi

ridiculos homines facit.


in tcrri* nigroquc

Expcnde Hannibalcm. Mcns sana in corpore sano.


I-oclce,

aimUHma cycno

See John

p. 5753.

139

JUVENAL

PLINY THE YOUNGER

The
young.
1

greatest

reverence
Satires

is

due the
I.

Where
it 1

they

make

a desert, they call

XIV,

47

peace.

Agricola, sec. 30

CAIUS CORNELIUS

Fortune
opportune

favored

him ...
of his death.

in
Ib.

the

moment

TACITUS
c.
.

45

luster. 2

55 -c. 117 The images of the most illustrious families were carried before it [the bier of Julia]. Those of Brutus and Cassius were not displayed; but for that reason they shone with preeminent
A.D.
. .

PLINY THE YOUNGER^


A.D.

6l-105

Modcstus said of Regulus that he was "the biggest rascal that walks upon

Annals, bk.

Ill,

76

two

legs."
is

Letters* bk.

I,

letter

He had
aspired

no

talents equal to business, and Ib. VI, 39 higher.


this

There
say.

Well

nothing to write about, you then, write and let me know

day supported by precedents will hereafter become a precedent *


Ib.

What

is

that there is nothing to this write about; or tell me in the good old That's right. I am style if you are well
just
4 quite well.

XI, 24

Ib.

[Of Petronius] Arbiter of


It is

taste.*

An
tains

Ib.

XVI, 18

object in possession seldom rethe same charm that it had in


6

the rare fortune of these days that a man may think what he likes and
say

pursuit.

16.

H, J?

what he

thinks.
Histories, bk, I, i

He [Pliny the Elder] used to say that "no book was so bad but sonic fl good might be got out of it."
Ib. Ill 5

[Of Servius Galba] He seemed more important than a private citizen while he was a private citizen, and in the
opinion of
if he
all

This expression of ours. "Father of


family."
7

Ib.

he was capable of
ruled.

19

rule
Ib.

had not

49
to
1

That indolent but agreeable condition of doing nothing.*


the

The
the best
sion.*

Ih.
Briton*

desire for glory clings even

VIII, Q

men

longer than any other pasIb.

IV, 6
of the
Ib.

at the Galgacus, addreining Battle of the Grampian*, inferring to thf Ro-

mans.
Translated [1746) by Wit HAM NfttMoiit, Book VI, tetter /6 contain* the clmrripcUw of the eruption of Vesuvius, AD. 7<j, a* witnessed by Pliny the Elder, 4 This comes to inform vow that I am in a
3 *
t

The gods
6

are

on the

side

Sec Byron, p.

55b,

stronger.

17

Whatever
marvelous;
7

is

unknown

is

but

now

the

taken for limits of


sec.

Britain are laid bare.

Agncofa,
1

30

same,

perfect state of health, hoping you arc in the Circus Ay, that's the old beginning.
T/Itf /!<*!> At

COLMAN THE YOUNGKR,


art III. sc.
I
ii

/.&

(1797]*

Maxima

dcbetur puero reverentia.

Set Locke, p. syga, See Lord John Russell, p. 5670, * One precedent creates another. They soon accumulate and become law. JUNIUS, Letters
a

It has been must observe

a thousand tim*i observed,


it

and

once more,

[1769-1771], Dedication * Elcgantiae arbiter. 5 See Milton, p. 3383. 6 Decs fortioribus adesse. See Bussy-Rabutin, p. 3573; Boileau, p. 377!); Frederick the Great, p. 435a; and Gibbon, p.
466a.
7

we pass with happy prmpeu* pleasing than those, crowned with fruition. GOLDSMITH, The Vicar of Wakefield [1706], eh. 10
"There
lor,
7
is no book o bad," aid the bache "but something good may be found in it/'
j

the hours in view arc more


that

CKRVANIJKS, Don Quixote, pt, tl [16*5], ch, Paterfamilias*

Omne ignotum

pro magnifico.

8 Dolce far niente Italian proverb

[Sweet

doing' nothing).

140

PLINY THE YOUNGER


Objects which are usually the moour travels by land and by sea are often overlooked and neglected if
tives of

MARCUS AURELIUS

MARCUS AURELIUS ANTONINUS*


A.D.

121-l8o
mine, whatever
it

under our eye. put off from time to time going and seeing what we know we have an opportunity
they
lie
.
.

We

This Being
really
is,

of

consists of a little flesh, a little

of seeing

when we

breath,

and the part which governs.


Meditations
II,

please.

Letters, bk. VIII, letter

20

Thou
if
it

wilt find rest

from vain
life as

fancies

His only fault


fault.*

is

that

he has no Ib. IX, 26

thou doest every act in were thy last. 2

though Ib. 5

SUETONIUS
A.D. C.

Remember
life

70 -C. 140

than

liveth

no man loseth other which he liveth, nor other than that which he loseth.
that
that

Hail, Emperor, we who are about to die salute you. 2 Life of Claudius 21

[PUBLIUS
A.D.

HADRIAN AEHUS HADRIANUS]


76-138

16.14 Each thing is of like form from everlasting and comes round again in its
cycle.

Ib.

lived

Little soul, wandering, gentle guest and companion of the body, into what

longest-lived and the man, when they come to one and the same thing.

The

shortestdie, lose

Ib.

places will you

naked, no

go, pale, stiff, and 8 longer sporting as you did!

now

As for life, it is a battle and a sojourning in a strange land; but the fame Ib. 17 that comes after is oblivion.

Ad Animam Swnn

CHANG HENG*
A.D,

Waste not the remnant of thy life in those imaginations touching other folk, whereby thou contributest not to the

78-139
an egg, and the earth
Saying

common

weal.

Ib. Ill,

Heaven
is

is

like

like the yolk of the egg.

should be upright, not be 16. 5 kept upright.

A man

Never esteem anything as of advanbreak tage to thee that shall make thee lose or word thy self-respect. thy
16.

*Thc
be
*

is to greatest of faults, I should say, CARLYLE, Heroes and conscious of none.

Hero-Worship

[1841],

The Hero

as Prophet

Avc, Caesar, morituri te salutamus. Also rendered "te salutant": those about to die salute you. * Animula vagula blandula,

By
else

a tranquil

mind

mean nothing
16.

than a mind well ordered.

Hospe* comesque corporis, Quae nunc abibis in loca


Pallidula rigida nudula, Nee ut soles dabis iocos!

IV, 3
life
is

The

universe

is

change; our
it.

what our thoughts make


Death, like birth,
ture.
corps,
it
is

Ib.

Amclctte Ronsardelette,
mignonelcttc doucelettc,
trcschere hostesse de

a secret of

Naas
if

16. 5

mon

tu dtscen* la bas folbelette,


pasle,

Whatever happens

at all

happens

maigrelette,
le frold

seulette,

dans

Royaulme des mors.


RONSARD,

A son dme

should; thou wilt find this true, thou shouldst watch narrowly*
[dictated

on

his deathbed,

December
*

I6.io
Translated by MORRIS HICKEY
See Horace,
p. is6b.

MORGAN

[1859Syrus,

by

See Pope, p. 4<>4a*From Sources of Chinese Tradition, edited WILUAM THEODORE E BARY.

1910].

p.

i*ia,

and Publillus

MARCUS AURELIUS

How much time he gains who does not look to see what his neighbor says or does or thinks, but only at what he does himself, to make it just and holy. Meditations IV, 18
Whatever
hath
its

thee, live rationally, and part with life the ripe olive, excheerfully, as drops
tolling the season tree that matured it.

that bore

it

and the

Meditations IV, 48
In the morning, when thou art sluglet this thought be gish at rousing thec, to a man's am "I present: rising present

in any way beautiful source of beauty in itself, and is


is

complete in of it. So it
better for

praise forms no part none the worse nor the 16. 20 being praised.
itself;
is

work."

16.

V,

All that
verse,
is

is

in

harmony for thee, O Uniharmony with me as well.


right

A man makes no noise over a good deed, but passes on to another as a vine 1 to bear grapes again in season.
16.6
he
Nothing happens is not fitted by nature to bear.
Live with the gods.
to

Nothing that comes at the


for thee
is

time

too early or too late for me. Everything is fruit to me that thy seasons bring, Nature. All things come of thee, have their being in thee, and 16. 23 return to thee. 1

anybody which
16.
16.
a

zj

"Let

thine

saith the sage, 2

occupations be few/' "if thou wouldst lead a


16.

Look beneath the

surface; let not the

tranquil life."

24

several quality of a thing nor its 16. escape thee.

worth VI, j
tinder-

learned,

Love the little trade which thou hast and be content therewith.
16. 31

The
stands

and

controlling intelligence own nature, and what whereon it works.


its

it

docs,
16. 5

There is a proper dignity and proportion to be observed in the performance


of every act of
All
is

life.

16. 32

ephemeral

fame and the


16.

man, deem

not think that what is hard for for man; thee to master is impossible to but if a thing is possible and proper
it

Do

attainable

by tncc.
rfe.

famous

as well.

35

19

Search men's governing principles, and consider the wise, what they shun 16. 38 and what they cleave to.
of river of passing events, and strong is its current; no sooner is a thing brought to sight than
is

not good for the .swarm is Ih. $4 not good for the bee.
is

What

Time

a sort

it

is

place,

swept by and another takes its and this too will be swept away.8

One universe made up of all that is; and one God in it all, and one principle of being, and one law, the reason, shared by all thinking creatures, and one truth'. 16, VII, 9
It is

16.43 All that happens is as usual and familiar as the rose in spring and the crop in summer. 16. 44

those

who wrong him.2


little is

man's peculiar duty to love even Ife. 22

Very
life.

needed to make a happy lb 67

Mark how
estate of

fleeting

man
a

and paltry is the yesterday in embryo,


or ashes.

To change
him
before.

thy mind that sets thee right

and to follow is to Ix: none

tomorrow
1
fl

mummy

So

for

the hairsbreadth
Seneca,

of time assigned

to

the less the free agent that thou wast Ih.VllL 16


Ix)ok
1

Sec / Chronicles 39:14, p. 144. De Ira III, 6; tie Animi Tranquil-

to

the

essence

of

thing,

litatc i). 3 See Isaac

See

Matthew

A;J, p. ^oa.
p. tfo.

Watts, p. 3973.

*Sec Proverbs *i;*r,

142

MARCUS
whether

AURELIXJS

TERTTJLLIAN
See

it be a point of doctrine, of practice, or of interpretation.

how

these Christians love one

another. 1

Meditations VIII, 22

Apologeticus 39
you; the blood of Christians
Ib.

Be not
fused
in

We multiply whenever we are mown


down by
seed .2
is

careless

in

words,

nor

deeds, nor conrambling in


16. 51

5o

thought.

Think not disdainfully of death, but look on it with favor; for even death is
one of the things that Nature
wills.

Man

is

nation upon earth. In


soul though
try has its
jects of

one name belonging to every them all is one

16. IX, 3

many tongues. Every counown language, yet the sub-

wrongdoer is often a man that has left something undone, not always he 1 that has done Ib. 5 something.
Blot out vain pomp; check impulse; quench appetite; keep reason under its

which the untutored soul speaks

are the

same everywhere. Testimony of the Soul

Mother Church. 8

Ad

Martyras

own

control.

Ib.

Truth persuades by teaching, but does not teach by persuading. Adversus Valentinianos i
Truth does not blush. 4
I6. 3

All things are the

same

familiar in

enterprise, momentary in endurance, coarse in substance. All things now are as they were in the day of those

whom

we have

buried.
befall

16.

14

The virtues of the heathen, being devoid of grace, can only be looked upon as splendid vices.

Whatever may

thee,

it

was
It is to

De Came
be believed because
because
surd. 5
It is certain
it is

Christi
it is

preordained for thee from everlasting.


16.

ab-

X, 5

16. 5

DIOGENES LAERTIUS
fl.

impossible,

16.
1 Tcrtullian is sarcastically repeating what the enemies of Christianity are saying. Sec Emerson, p. 6o6b.

A.D. C.

2OO

Ignorance plays the chief part

men, and the multitude of words. 2

among

Cleobulus 4

Time
There
law.

is

the image of eternity. Plato 41


a written

is

and an unwritten
regulate our

quoties metimur a vobis; sanguis christianorum. This is often rendered as: The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the Church. The Church of Christ has been founded by shedding its own blood, not that of others; by enduring outrage, not by inflicting it. Persecu2

Plurcs efficimur,
est

semen

The one by which we

tions

have
it.

made
ST.

it

grow;

martyrdoms have
[A.D.
c.

constitutions in our cities is the written law; that which arises from custom is

crowned
letter 8s

JEROME
is

340-4*0],

The

blood of martyrs

the unwritten law.

16. 51

BKYKRUNCK,

Magnum Theatrum

the seed of Christians. Vitac Hu-

QUtNTUS SEPTIMITJS TERTULLIAN


A.D. C.
C) witness Christian.
*

manorum [1665] The seed of the Church, I mean the blood of THOMAS FULLER, Church primitive martyrs.
History of Britain [1665], pt.
a

bk. I

Domina mater
Vcrita*

ecclesia.

155-225
the
soul

of

naturally

Apologeticus 17
/Vaycr, p.
rjtjb,

Cyprian, p. i44a. non crubcsdt. Prorsus credibile est, quia ineptum est. 6 Certum est, quia impossibilc est. This is called "TertuUian's rule of faith." It
*
11

iSee St.

Sc*c;

Book of Common
th<

is
I
[

sometimes rendered
believe because
it is

as:

Credo quia impossibile

In
in,

not

multitude of words there wantcth Proverbs 10:19

expresses the

same

impossible]. St. Augustine idea in Confessions VI, 5, 7.

TERTULLIAN

ST.

AMBROSE

Out

of the frying pan into the

fire.

ST.

JOHN CHRYSOSTOM
A.D.

De Carne
One man's
religion

Christi 6

neither

harms
2

No

one can harm the

327-407 man who

does

nor helps another man.


It
is

himself no wrong. 1

Ad Scapulam

Letter to Olympia

certainly

no part of

compel religion. I must dispel vanity with

religion to 1

vanity.

Adversus Marcionem

IV 30
?

MARCELLINUS
A.D. C.

AMMIANUS

330-595
.

ST.

CYPRIAN
d. A.D.

Rose among thorns

258

History, bk.

XVI,

ch. 17

He
who

cannot have God for his father has not the Church for his
Unitate Ecclesiae [251], ch. 6
is

Mother. 2

De
There Church. 8

JULIAN [THE APOSTATE]


A.P. 332-363 You have conquered, Galilean. 2 From THEODORKT, Church

no

salvation

outside the Letter 73 [c. 256]

LONGINUS
A.D. C.
It

History

III,

20

21O-273

second line

frequently happens that where the is sublime, the third, in


rise still higher, is

ST.

AMBROSE
340

which he meant to 4 perfect bombast.

A.D. c.

307
live in the

On

When
Roman
live as

the Sublime, sec. 3

you arc at

Rome

style;

when you

arc elsewhere

Sublimity

is

the

echo of a noble
Ib. 9

mind.

they live elsewhere** Advice to St. Augustine,

From

In the Odyssey one may liken Homer to the setting sun, of which the grandeur remains without the intensity.
Ib.

JEREMY TAYLOR, Ductor Dnbitantium [1660]


I,

z,

fore his battle with Maxcrulu* at Saxa Kubra,

near Rome,

A,I>.
is

31*.

CONSTANTINE
A.D. c.

ERASMUS

288- 337
EITSEBIUS, Life of

In this sign shalt thou conquer. 5

ave by himself. injured 1465-1 53$]* Adagia Vicfoli, Galilaee, The Latin translation of the alleged dying
[

No

one

From
l

word* of the Kmperor. See Swinburne, p. 7749,


8 Si fucris

Constantine
De
calcaria in carbon arlum.

I,

28

Romar, Romano

vivito

mmc;

Si fucris alibi, vivito *iuit ibi.

Leap out of the frying pan into the fire. JOHN HEYWOOD, Proverbs [1546], pt. If, ch. $ *Habere non potcst deum patrcm qui ccclesiam non habet matrcm.
8

My mother* having joined inr at Milan* found that the church there did not fan on Saturday* a,t at Rome, and was at a lmi what to do. I
consulted
replied,
St.

Ambrose, of holy memory, who


at

See Tertullian, p. i4jb. Salus extra ecclcsiam non


St.

"When I am Saturday; when I am at


AUCUSTINE
[A.D.

Rome,

faxt

on

cat.

Milan, 1 do not. Follow the custom of the church where you are." - Si.
354-430], Keltic
to Januarlus Also Kfmtt* to Camat&nus

Augustine in De Baptismo, hence sometimes attributed to him. * The reference is to Lucan's style. * In hoc signo vinces. The alleged words of Constantino's vision be-

Quoted by

(Epistle a), sec. j$.


pistle 36), **c,

)z
a

When
Proverb

in

kome, do

the

Romaic

<!<>.-

144

ST.

JEROME

ST.

JEROME*
342-420
long
sought,
is

A.D. C.

friend

hardly

found, and with

difficulty kept.

Do not let your deeds belie your words, lest when you speak in church someone may say to himself, "Why do l you not practice what you preach?"
Letter 48

Letter

Love

is

affection has

not to be purchased, and no price. Letter 3


real.

The

friendship that can cease has


16.

Avoid, you would the plague, a who is also a man of busiclergyman ness. Letter 52 2
as

never been

fat

paunch

never

breeds

fine

It is easier to

mend

quicken love.

neglect than to Letter 7


of order.
16.
is

thoughts*
listener.

16.

Love knows nothing

No one cares to speak to An arrow never


it

an unwilling
lodges in a
16.

stone: often

recoils

The

upon the sender

fact

is

that

my

native land
it

of it

prey to barbarism, that in

men's only

God man

their belly, 2 that they live only for the present, and that the richer a
is

ject of

That clergyman soon becomes an obcontempt who being often asked


16.

is

the holier he

is

held to be.
16.

out to dinner never refuses to go.


best almoner is he back nothing for himself.
It
is

unstable pilot steers a leaking is ship, leading the blind 8 straight to the pit. The ruler is like the

An

The

who

keeps
Ib.

and the blind

worse

still

ruled.

16.

ignorance.

to be ignorant of your Letter 53

No
If

athlete

is

crowned but

sweat of his brow.


there
is

in the Letter 14

Even brute
birds

beasts

do not

fall

into the

and wandering same traps or


Letter 54

water in the stream, it is the fault, not of the chanLetter 17 nel, but of the source.
little

but

nets twice. 4

tress is inferred

Sometimes the character of the misfrom the dress of her


Ib.

You
tian.
4

are a Ciceronian, not a ChrisLetter 22


idle to play the lyre for

maids.

It is

an

ass.

The face is the mirror of the mind, and eyes without speaking confess the
secrets of the heart.

Letter 27

16.

Everything must have in seasoning of truth.

it

a sharp Letter 31

The

scars of others

should teach us
16-

caution.

While

truth

is

always bitter, pleasevilaoing.

When

the stomach

is full, it is

antness waits

upon

to talk of fasting.

easy Letter 58

Letter 40

The line, often adopted by strong men in controversy, of justifying the


means by the end. 6
i

Small minds can never handle great Letter 60 themes. 5

The Roman world


1

is

Letter 48

falling, yet

we

Cur ergo haec

ipse

non

facis?

Translated by W, H. FREMANTLE. *Scc Philippiw }''<?> P. 54l>.

"Sw Matthew
*

/$'"'*

p. 45 a -

ThU vm
A
Crock

aciriroiiied to

Jerome

in a

dream by

Christ the Judge, censuring him for loving the clajio more than the Fathers.

See Plautus, p. io6a. Translated by F. A. WRMJHT. ThU is a Greek proverb. Fat paunches have lean pates, and dainty bits Make rich the ribs, but bankrupt quite the wits.

proverb Jerome. See Matthew Prior,

frequently
p.

quoted

by
*
B

SHAKKSPKARK, Lovfs Labour's Lost, act I, sc. i, I. at


Translated by F. A. WRIGHT. Translated by W. J. COURTENAY.

ST.

JEROME

ST.

AUGUSTINE

hold our heads erect instead of bowing our necks. 1 Letter 60

KU K'AI-CHIH*
A.D. C.

544-406

Every day we are we are dying, and


selves eternal.

changing, every day yet we fancy ourIb.

Of

all

Early impressions are hard to eradifrom the mind. When once wool has been dyed purple, who can restore it to its previous whiteness? Letter 107
cate

ing is landscape painting, and next dogs and horses. High towers and pavilions are
definite things; they are difficult to execute, but easy to handle since they do

kinds of painting, figure paintthe most difficult; then comes

not demand insight.


Discussion of Painting

The
2

tired

step.

ox treads with a firmer Letter 112

[FLAVIUS VEGETIUS

VEGETIUS
fl.

Athletes as a rule are stronger than


their backers; yet the weaker presses the stronger to put forth all his efforts.

RENATUS]
A.D, c.

375
peace prepare

Let him
for war.3

who

desires

Letter 118

For they wished to

fill

the winepress

De Rei
ST.
Will
rider,'
is

Mffitari III, prologue

of eloquence not with the tendrils of mere words but with the rich grape
juice of
It is

AUGUSTINE
A.D.

good

sense.

Letter 125

^4-430
is

fault of Christianity that a 16. hypocrite falls into sin.

no

to grace as the horse

to the

bring against others to ourselves; we inveigh against faults which are as much ours as theirs; and so our eloquence
often

The charges we come home

De
limbs
is

Libert* Arbitrio [388-395;]

The weakness

of little children's innocent, not their souls.

Confessions [397-401]

I,

ends by telling against ourselves.

16.

Preferring to store her money in the stomachs of the needy rather than hide 3 it in a Letter 127 purse.
privileges of a few do not make common law.4 Exposition on Jona

To Carthage me resounded
loves.*
I

came, where
caldron

all

about
Ill
i

of dissolute
Ib.

was
He To

in love with loving.


it,

16.

The

ne'er considered

a* loth

look a gift

hor*e

in

the mouth.

Never mouth. 5
1
*

SAMUCI.

look

gift

horse

in

the
1

Btrrijut, Hti<ilbra< t pt, /

canto

it

L 489

From The

On
Romanus

the Epistle to the Ephesictns


orbis ruit.

Smo
957l-

Spirit of the Brush, translated by SAKANISHI [Wisdom of the East Series,


bell urn.

proverb quoted by St. Jerome Augustine after the latter criticized the elder Jerome. Translated toy F, A. WRIGHT.
to St.

An

old

Roman

QuI desfderat pacim, praeparn

In peace, like a wise man, h<r ha* provided for the needs of war. HORACK, Satlrn, bk, //
[30

We
See

.c/|, ii,

ut

paucorum non faciunt legem. exception proves the rule. Noli equi denies inspiccre donati. No man ought to look a given horse in the mouth. JOHN HEYWOOD, Proverbs [1546], pt. I,
Privilegia

war.

The
8

79
3838;

ahould provide in peace what we need in PuBLiutit SYRU* [i*t century ,.], Maxim

Robert

Burton,

f>,

sub;

Flntfon,

f>,

ch.

and George Washington, p, 4#tb. This is considered the mmi important

def-

5
gift

horse should not be looked in the mouth. CERVANTES, Don Quixote, pt. II [1615], bk. IV, ch. 6a

inition of the relation of grace to free will in the Middle Ages.

*To

Carthage then

came.--'!'.
I,

The Watte Land

[ig**J, ///,

8.

Kwtn,

and

146

ST.

AUGUSTINE

CLOVIS

come

In the usual course of study I had to a book of a certain Cicero.


Confessions
III,

ST.

VINCENT OF
LERINS
is

d. A.D. C.
faith

450

Give

me

chastity

and continence, but


Ib. VIII, 7
*

not just now.

[That catholic] which has been believed always, everywhere, and

by

all. 1

Commonitorium,

ch. 2

Take up,

read!

Take up,

read!

Ib. 12

Too late I loved you, Beauty so ancient yet ever new! Too late I loved you! And, behold, you were within me, and I out of myself, and there I searched for you. Ib. X, 27
Give what you command, and command what you will. Ib. 29

Every word almost was a sentence; 2 Ib. 18 every sentence a victory.

TSUNG PING8
A.D.

375-443

The
by

virtuous

man

follows the

Way
by a
also

the wise tales spiritual insight; this same approach. But the lovers of
landscapes are led into the sense of form. The virtuous
takes pleasure in this.

man

Hear the other side.2 De Duabus Animabus XJTV, 2


I would not have believed the gospel had not the authority of the Church moved me. Contra Epistulam Fundamenti [c.

Way
man

Then, are not the the virtuous and the wise pleasures of
similar to those of the lovers of land-

scapes?

Introduction to Landscape Painting

410], ch. 5

8 Necessity has no law. Soliloquiorum. Animae ad Deum 2 [c. 410],

LONGUS
A.D. third century

We make a ladder of our vices,


trample
those

if

we
3

same

vices

underfoot.

Sermons
Anger
is

a weed; hate

is

the

tree.

There was never any yet that wholly could escape love, and never shall there be any, never so long as beauty shall be, never so long as eyes can see, Daphnis and Chloe, proem, ch. 2

Ib.

58

He
a dog.

is

so poor that

The dove

loves

when

it

quarrels; the

he could not keep 16. *5

wolf hates when

it flatters.

Ib.
is

64

Rome
cluded. 4

has spoken; the case

con-

Ib. 131

CLOVIS
A.D.

465-511
if

He who
not
justify

created you without you will

God
victory

of Clotilda, 4
I

you grant

me

you without you.


glorious city of

Ib.

169

shall

The most
*

God.
I,

become a Christian. Legendary vow before battle

City of

God

[415],

preface

Tolle lege, tollc lege. What the bell seemed to say to Augustine at the moment of his conversion. When he opened the Bible, his eyes fell

iQuod semper, quod ubique, quod ab omnibus creditum est.

The
faith.
*

definition of the traditional articles of


refers to Tertullian.

on Hainan* /?;/a-/^ {p. 51!)), * Audi partcrm altcrum.


See Publilius Syrus, p. i*6b, and note, and Oliver Cromwell, p. s*8a. * Roma locuta est; causa finita est.

This

From The

Sine
1957]-

SAKANISHI

Spirit of the Brush, translated by [Wisdom of the East Series

* St. Clotilda,

wife of Clovis.

BOETHIUS

THE KORAN

BOETHIUS
A.D. C.

ST.

BENEDICTi
A.D.

470-525

480-543
establish a

In every adversity of fortune, to have been happy is the most unhappy kind of misfortune. 1 De Consolatione Philosophiae,
&*.
II, 4,

We are therefore about to


burdensome. Rule of

school of the Lord's service in which we hope to introduce nothing harsh or


St.

Who
he
is

Benedict, prologue

hath so entire happiness that not in some part offended with


Ife.

the condition of his estate?

MAGNUS AURELIUS
CASSIODORUS
A.D. C.

41
is

Nothing
thought
tate
tent.
is

is

miserable but what

and contrariwise, every eshappy if he that bears it be conso,


Ifc.

487- $83

He who

64
to

in future benefits recognizes a benefit that has al-

receives

hope

From

thee, great

God, we

ready taken place,

Ijistitutiones

spring,

thee

we tend
end. 2
Ib. Ill, 9,

He
27

is

invited to great things

who

re-

Path, motive, guide, original and

ceives small things greatly.

16.

can give law to lovers? Love is a greater law to itself. Ib. 12, 47

Who

GREGORY
A.D.

HSIEH HO*
fl.

540-604
that

A.D.

500
Six
Principles

[Concerning
painting]
spirit,

the

of

that through a vitalizing painting should possess the movement of life.


first is,

The

they were they have the faces of angels, and such should he the co-heirs of the angels in heaven, 2 From BEDK, Ecclesiastical His-

answered

Gicy Angles.]

It is well, for

tory of the

En$i$h People

II,

The second is,, that by means of the brush, the structural basis should be established.

ALI IBN-ABU-TALIB*
A*D. c,

602-661
friends
will
lias

that the representation should so conform with the objects as


is,

The

third

He who

has a thousand

not a friend to spare,

to give their likenesses.

And he who
the

has one

The

enemy

meet

fourth

is,

should be applied
characteristics.

coloring according to their

that

him everywhere. 4

Hundred Sayings

The

fifth

is,

tion, place

and position should be


is,

that through organizade-

THE KORAN*
A.D. C.

termined.
that by copying the an4 cient models should be perpetuated. Notes Concerning the Classisixth
fication of
1

The

610-652

Old Painting?

Sec Pindar, p. ygb; Dante, p. i6oa; Chaucer, p. iSsa; and Tennyson, p. 6473. 8 Translated by SAMUEL JOHNSON, and used as motto to The Rambler, no. 7 [1750]. From The Spirit of the Brush, translated

Turn, therefore, thy face towards the holy temple of Mecea; and wherever ye i Founder of Western monanklim. Traditionally quoted "N0n Angli ml Angeli" (Not Angles but angth), ihcwe wrr the* words of the Pope when he beheld two English
slave* in a

Roman alive market, All ibn-abu-Talib, son-in-law of


wa* for

Mohammed
hU courage
AJ>, 66*.

SHIO

by

SAKANISHI

[Wisdom

of

the

East

Series,

caliph, who called the Lion of God,


*

and fourth

wi

murdered

and Fujiwara no Teika,

*See Horace, p. i*4b; Ching Hao,


p.

p.

Translated by EMHUON. Translated [1734] by C*oacr

SAL*

[1897*.

'736]-

THE KORAN

ANONYMOUS LATIN

be, turn your faces towards that place.

Ch.2
Wherever ye
all

MISCELLANEOUS
[EARLY]
Whatever kind of word thou speakest

ANONYMOUS

be,

God

will bring

you
16.

back at the resurrection.

As

for

him who

the like shalt thou hear.


sical Library], bk.

voluntarily perform-

eth a good work, verily

God

is

and knowing.

grateful 16.

Greek Anthology \Loeb ClasIX, 382

Your God

God

one God; there is no but He, the most merciful.


is

Envy
Give

slays itself

by

its

own

arrows.

16.

X, 111

16.

true believers, take your necessary precautions against your enemies, and
either
ties,

me today, and take tomorrow. Quoted, and condemned, by St. Chrysostom


picture
is

go forth to war in separate paror go forth all together in a body.


Cft.

One

thousand words. 1

worth more than ten Chinese proverb


is tired.

On

the day of victory no one

Fight for the religion of

God.
16.

Arab proverb
Death is afraid of the heart of a lion.
I

him because he

has

men, respect women who have


16.

Arab proverb

borne you.

Wheresoever ye
take you, towers.

be, death will overalthough ye be in lofty 16.


ill

to the place of my birth, and '"The friends of my youth, where are they?" And echo answered, "Where Arab saying are they?"

came

cried,

God
anyone

lovcth not the speaking


in public.

of
16.

If only, when one heard That Old Age was coming

One
And

mercy he hath made for you the night and the day, that ye may rest in the one, and may seek to obtain provision for yourself of his abundance, bv Cft. 28 your industry, in the other.
his
If

Of

could bolt the door,


at

Answer "Not
refuse to

home"

meet him! Kokinshu (Collection of Ancient and Modern Poems')


*

(905]

God

should punish

men

according

what they deserve, he would not leave on the back of the earth so much Ch. 35 as a beast.
to

Can this world From of old


Always have been so sad, Or did it become so for the sake

God

ohligcth

no man

to

more than
perform.

Of me alone?

he hath given him

ability to

Ch. 65

ANONYMOUS LATIN
Ab urbe condita. Since the founding
[Rome].
Absit omen.
of

who

be unto those who pray, and are negligent at their prayer: who play the hypocrites, and deny necessarCh. 107 ies to the needy.
C) unbelievers, I will

Woe

the

city

Saying

not worship that which ye worship; nor will ye worship that which I worship. ... Ye have your religion, and I my religion. Ch. 109

May it not be an omen.


*

Saying

See Turgcnev, p. 688a. Translated by ARTHUR WALEY in Anthology of Japanese Literature, edited by Donald Keene
2

[1955]*

149

ANONYMOUS LATIN
Acta est tabula.

There

is

no accounting
curat lex.

for tastes.

The pky

is

over.

Proverb

Said at ancient dramatic per-

formances and quoted by Augustus on his deathbed


Actus non facit reum,
rea.
nisi

De minimis non
The law
trifles.
is

not

concerned

with Legal maxim

mens

sit

Deus

vult.
it.

The
intent

act
is

is

not criminal unless the


Legal

God wills
Dis

criminal.

maxim

Motto

of the Crusades [1095]

Ad To

astra per aspera.

manibus sacrum

[abbreviation

the stars through hardships.

DMS].
Sacred to the departed spirit (s).
Inscription

Motto
Adeste, fideles, Laeti triumphantes; Venite, venite in Bethlehem.

of Kansas

on tombstones

Divide et impera. Divide and rule. Ancient political

maxim

cited by

O come, all ye faithful.


Joyful

MACHIAVELLI
Errare

and triumphant.
ye,

come

O come ye to Bethlehem. Hymn, eighteenth century


.

humanum

est

To
Et

err is

human. 1

Saying

Anno

aetatis suae In the year of his age

Phrase

in Arcadia ego. 2 I too have lived in Arcadia.

Bis dat qui cito dat. He gives twice who gives promptly. 1

Inscription

on a tomb

in

a painting by
[c.

GUERCWQ

Saying

1623]

Caveat emptor. Let the buyer beware.

Proverb

Ex ungue leonem. From his tocnail [one can


lion.8

tell]

Cave canem. Beware of the dog. Proverb Cras amet qui nunquam amavit
quique amavit eras amet.

Saying

Finis coronat opus.

The ending crowns the work [in n Saying good or bad sense]
.

Tomorrow

let

him

love
let

who

has

Flagrantc delicto.

never loved and tomorrow has loved love. 2

him who
c.

"Red-handed."
Fluctuat nee mergitur.
It tosses

Saying

Pervigilium Veneris [A.D.

350], refrain

but doesn't sink.

Motto
Gatideamus
luvcnes
igitur,

Cucullus non facit monachum. The cowl does not make a monk.8

of Paris

Medieval proverb
Cuius regio eius
religio.

dum

sumus.

He who
the religion.

controls

the area controls

*$ee Plutarch, p. 157^ ami Pope, p. {ojib. This translation i now usually romidcml

Proverb

erroneous.

The

De

gustibus

non disputandum.

am am

in Arcadia
I

accepted translation i: I too that k, Even in Arcadia there

[Death],

*See Publilius Syrus, p. 1253, and Augustus Caesar, p. is4b. a See Parnell, p. 3982. 8 It takes more than a hood and sad eyes to

SCHDDONI [i56o-*6i6] wrote: "Et ego in Arcadia vixi," which Pouttin, Reynold!, and others used in their painting*, K. PANOFMCY
discusses the phrase in Philosophy

and History:

make a monk.

Albanian proverb

Essays Presented to E, Cauirer * See Herodotus, p. 86b.

1936].

150

ANONYMOUS LATIN
Let us
live

While young life

then and be glad


before us. Students' song
is

Piscem natare doces. You're teaching a fish to swim.


[c.

1267]

Saying
Post hoc, ergo propter hoc. After this, therefore because of this.
Definition of fallacy in logic

Habeas corpus.

You

are to produce the person


.

[of

the accused]

Legal

maxim
Saying

Hannibal ad portasl Hannibal is at the gates!

Primus inter pares.

The

first

In vino veritas. In wine is truth. 1 Proverb quoted by PLATO,

among

equals.

Saying

Pro bono publico. For the public good.


Requiescat RIP].
in

Saying
[abbreviation

Symposium 217
Ipse dixit. He himself [the Master] said
lus est ars boni et aequi.
it.

pace

May he

rest in peace.

Saying

Saying
Legal justice
is

Res iudicata pro veritate habetur. A matter which has been [legally]
decided
is

and the

the art of the good

considered true.

fair.

Saying
ncccssitas.
is

Legal
Salus populi

maxim

Mater artium
Necessity

the mother of invention. 2

suprema
is

lex.

The

people's safety

the highest law.


political

Saying

Legal and

maxim.

Mors ultima Death is the

ratio.

final

accounting.

Semper
Ever
Saying

fidelis.

faithful.

Nemo me impune lacessit. No one provokes me with


Motto
Nilul [or
of the

Motto of the U.S. Marine Corps


Sic

Crown

impunity. of Scotland

semper tyrannis.

Thus always to
Sit
tibi

tyrants.

Nc

quid] nimis.
terra

Motto
levis

of Virginia

Saying multa scd multum. Not quantity but quality [Not many but much]. 4 Proverb

Nothing

in excess.8

[abbreviation

Non

STTL].

May the

earth rest lightly


Inscription

on you.2

on tombstones
iniuria.

Orarc
orarc.

cst

laborarc,

laborarc

cst

Summum
Extreme
justice.*

ins

summa

To
pray.

[legal] justice is

extreme

in-

pray

is

to work, to

work

is

to

Legal

maxim

cited by Cicero t
2. 10.

Ancient motto of the Benedictine Monks


Purvis c glandibus qucrcus. Tall oaks from little acorns grow. 5

DeOfficiis
Tcstis unus tcstis nullus.

33

single witness

is

no

witness.

Legal

maxim

Pcrcant qui nostra ante nos dixcrunt. May they perish who have used our words before usSaying
i

Ubi benc
homeland.
i

ibi patria.
is

Where one
See Sce

happy, there's one's Saying


p. 7783.

Sec Akaeua, p. fya. Sec Pcnriitft. p. issb, and note. See The .Seven Sages, p. 68b.
See David Everett, p,
51*73.

John Wilkes Booth,

*Se,e Seneca, p. igoa.


8

Beaumont 831*; p. Euripides, Fletcher, p. giGb; and Richardson, p. 8aaa. 8 Sec Terence, p. io8b, and note.
a

and

151

ANONYMOUS LATIN

ONO NO KOMACHI

To

Urbi et orbi. the city


in pace.

ALCUIN
[Rome]

and

to

the

735-804

world.

Apostolic blessing
of

The

voice of the people

is

the voice

Vade

God. 1
Letter to

Go in peace.
End
Vae
victis!

Charlemagne
[A.D.

of confessional absolution

800]
little

Here
5, 48, as said

halt,
stay,

pray you,

make

Woe to the conqueredl


Quoted by LIVY,
by Brennus to the Romans
Volenti non fit iniuria. To a person who consents no injustice is done. Legal maxim

And know by my
shall be.

wayfarer, to read what I have writ, fate what thy fate

What
1

thou art now, wayfarer, worldI

renowned,
was: what
be.

am now,
I

so shall thou

CAEDMON
fl.

The

670

world's delight heart

followed with a
I,

Light was

first

Unsatisfied: ashes

am

and dust.
Epitaph
*
I

Through the Lord's word


day: Beauteous, bright creation!

His
Alcuin
loved.

Own

Named

was

my name:

learning

16.

Creation* The First Day

The

fiend with all his comrades

Fell then

from heaven above,


as long as three nights

LOTHAIR
and

Through
days,

795-855

The
to

The angels from heaven into hell; And them all the Lord transformed
devils,

times change and

we change

with them.8

From OWEN'S Epigrammata


[1615]

Because they his deed and word Would not revere. Ifc. The Fall of the Rebel Angels

ONO NO KOMACHI
Ninth century

BEDE [VENERABLE BEDE]


c.

The

flowers withered,

Their color faded away,

672- c. 73 5

While meaninglcssly
I

It

is

work

better never to begin a good than, having begun it, to stop. Ecclesiastical History of the

And

spent my days in the world the long rains were falling.

Kokinshu [905]
This night of no

English People, bk.

I,

ch.

23

moon
to

There
I rise

is

no way

meet him.

ST.
God
l

JOHN OF DAMASCUS
c.
is

in longing

700 -c. 760


I, ch.

a sea of infinite substance. 2

De
From
This
1870].
a

Fide Orthodoxa, bk.

the text of
is

BENJAMIN THORPE [178*-

popull, vox Del. Sec Pope, p. 4123. * Translated by HF.IJBN WADBICU,. Tempera mutantur, no* ct mutamur in iilis. Also quoted In HOMNSHRD, Chronicles of

*Vox

England
*

[1577].

of

God

the most frequently quoted definition in the Middle Ages. It is based on ST.
[c.

See Spenser, p. aoob. Translated by DONM.O

REIN?,.

From AnDon-

GREGORY OF NAZIANZUS

330-390], Oration 38.

thology of Japanese Literature, edited by ald Keene.

152

ONO NO KOMACHI

MURASAKI SHIKIBU
then waits for the answer, making moment that it cannot be much longer before something comes.
ble;

My breast pounds, a leaping flame, My heart is consumed in fire.


Kokinshu
So lonely My body

sure every
last,

am
is

At
I

frightfully late,

is

brought in

a floating

weed

Severed at the roots. Were there water to entice me,


I

note, still folded or tied exactly as one sent it, but so fingermarked and smudged that even the address
is

one's

own

would follow

it,

think.

16.

barely legible.

"The

family

is

CHANG YEN-YUAN
fl.

not in residence," the messenger says, giving one back the note. Makura no Soshi [c. 1002] 1

c.

850

an

The painters of today mix their brushes and ink with dust and dirt, and their colors with mud, and in vain smear the silk. How can this be called
painting? Discussion of the Six Principles of Painting*

someone with whom one is having keeps on mentioning some woman whom he knew in the past,
If
affair

rated,

however long ago it is since they sepaone is always irritated. 16.

MURASAKI SHIKIBU
c.

978- 1031

[The art of the novel] does not simply consist in the author's telling a story

CHING HAO
fl.

son.

925

about the adventures of some other per... It happens because the

who likes to study will in the end succeed. To begin with he should know that there are Six Essentials in painting. The first is called spirit; the
youth
second, rhythm; the third, thought; the fourth, scenery; the fifth, the brush, and the last is the ink.

storyteller's

own

experience of

men and

Notes on Brushwork

Resemblance reproduces the formal


aspect
spirit;

not whether for good or ill only what he has passed through himself, but even events which he has only has moved witnessed or been told of him to an emotion so passionate that he can no longer keep it shut up in his heart. There must never come a time, he feels, when men do not know about it.
things,
.
. .
. . .

of but neglects their objects, truth shows the spirit and sub-

Clearly then,

it

is

no part of the

stance in like perfection. He who tries to transmit the spirit by means of the formal aspect and ends by merely obtaining the outward appearance, will

storyteller's craft to describe only what is good or beautiful. Sometimes, of

course, virtue will

be

his theme,

may
will.

then

make such

play with

produce a dead thing.

Ifc.

But he is just as likely by numerous examples of vice and folly in the world around him, and about them he has exactly the same
struck

and he he to have been


it as

SET
One

SHONAGON
b.

feelings as

about the preeminently good deeds which he encounters: they are

966

writes a letter, taking particular trouble to get it up as prettily as possi1

important and must all be garnered in. Thus anything whatsoever may become the subject of a novel, provided only
that
i

it

From The

Sino

Spirit of the Brush, translated by SAXANISIU [Wisdom of the East Series,

happens in

this

mundane

life

Translated

Hieh Ho,

p. i48a.

thology of Japanese Literature, edited ald Keene.

by DONALD KEENF. From Anby Don-

153

MURASAKI SHIKEBU
and not in some
fairyland

ARCHPOET
Hell
is full

beyond our
1

of good intentions or de-

human

ken.

sires.

The Tale

of Genji

[c.

1000]

Attributed.

From

ST. FRANCIS DE

ST. ANSELM c. 1033- 1109


the greater than which cannot be conceived.2
is

SALES, Letter 74

God

SONG OF ROLAND
Eleventh century
Friend
phant.
2

that,

Proslogion, ch. 3

Roland,

sound

your
I.

oli-

ABU MOHAMMED KASIM BEN ALI HARIRI


1054-1122

La Chanson de Roland,
Roland
wise. 8
is

1070
is

valorous

and

Oliver
16.

We praise Thee, O God,


For whatever perspicuity of language

1093

Thou hast taught us And whatever eloquence Thou


spired us with.

HELOISE*
c,

hast in-

1101 -c. 1164

Makamat. Prayer

PETER ABELARD
glory must be, Those endless sabbaths the blessed ones

Riches and power are but gifts of blind fate, whereas goodness is the result of one's own merits. Letter 2, Hdloise to Abelard

what

their joy

1079-1142 and their

ARCHPOETB
Twelfth century

see!

Hymnus

Paraditensis

When
Let

Against the disease of writing one must take special precautions, since it is a dangerous and contagious disease. Letter 8, Abelard to Htloise*

me in

the hour is nigh me, the tavern die,

With

a tankard

by me**

Confessio

ST.

BERNARD
1091-1153
find

Sweeter tastes the wine to me in a tavern tankard Than the watered stuff my Lord Bishop Ib. hath decanted.
*

You

will

something more in
no.

Hell i* full of gtxxl meaning* and wishing*. OEORCF. HF.RBKRT, Jatuta Prudcntum [1651],

and stones you that which you can never learn from masters. 5 Epistle 106

woods than
will teach

in books. Trees

tya

I
i

have liberated

my soul. 6

16. 371

Translated by ARTHUR WAUKY. Sec Motoorl,

p. 455*>.

Hell is paved with good intention*. JOHN RAY, English Proverbs [1670) &AMUXI* JOHNSON [1775]; from Quoted by BOSWRU,, Johnwn [1791), vol. /, j/<r of Dr. p. 555 [Everyman *<J.J Hell ta paved with good intentions, not with bad ones. GRORCF, BKHNAHO SHAW [1855-1950],

This
logical derives

is

commonly

referred to as the onto-

argument for the existence of God, and from ST. AUGUSTINE, De Doctrina Christiana, bk. It ch. 7. It is also to be found in DESCARTES, Third Meditation,
3

Maxims for Revolutionists 9 Compagnon Roland nonncv


Roland c*t prcux A Roland for an
blow,
4

tic*

et

Oliver

votrc ottphunt.
nag*.

Oliver.

I.r.,

tit

quanta qualia aunt

Quae semper
* 6

ilia sabbata, celebrat supcrna curia.

between
8

for tat, referring to the Roland and Oliver.

blow for a drawn combat


a

Translated by JOHN

MASON NEALE
You Like

[1884],

See Hfloise, p. 154*). See Shakespeare, As

It,

pp.

and 24gb, and Wordsworth,


6

p. saga.

Liberavi aniraam

meam.

Sec Peter Abelard, p. t^a. Translated by HKMIN 6 In taberna mori ut sine vina proxima moricntis ori. See Waller Map, p. j$0b

ARCHPOET

ALAIN DE LILLE

Down

the broad way do

I go,

HENRY
Who
will free
*

II
from
this tur-

Wrap me in my vices
Than heaven

Young and

unregretting,

1133-1189

up,

Virtue all forgetting, Greedier for all delight


to enter in:

me

bulent priest?

Attributed

Since the soul in me is dead, Better save the skin.

MOSES BEN MAIMON MAIMON ID ES


[

Estuans Intrinsecus

1135-1204
Anticipate charity by preventing povthe reduced fellowman, either by a considerable gift, or a sum of money, or by teaching him a trade, or by putting him in the way of business,
erty; assist

GRATIAN
Twelfth century
Paintings are the Bible of the
1

laity.

Decretum,

pt. Ill

POEM OF THE
Twelfth century

CID*
how
I.

Were

so that he may earn an honest livelihood, and not be forced to the dreadful alternative of holding out his hand for charity. This is the highest step and the summit of charity's golden ladder.2 Charity's Eight Degrees

his lord

but worthy, God,

fine a vassal.

20

WALTER MAP [MAPES]


C.

Tints parted the one from the others Z. as the nail from the flesh. 375

1140-C. 121O

Who

serves a

good lord

lives

always

in luxury.

L 850
poor staying in one I 948

intend to die in a tavern; let the wine be placed near my dying mouth,8 so that when the choirs of angels come, they may say, "God be merciful to this
I

One would grow


place always.

drinker!"

De

Nugis Curidium

FREDERICK
1122-1190

ALAIN DE LILLE [ALANUS DE INSULIS]


d,

12O2
all

[BARBAROSSA]
An emperor is God and Justice.
subject to

Do
4

not hold as gold


Becket.

gold.

that shines as Parabolae

no one but

i a

Thomas &
Sec

Andrew Carnegie,
cst
sit

p. 7573.

ZINCGREF, Apophthegmata,
bk. I \i626]

From

Meum
Vinum

propositum in caberna mori; appositum morientis ori.


ut

Sec Archpoct, p. irj4b.


* Non teneas aurum totum quod splemlet aurum [All that glitters is not gold].

AVERROES
1126-1198
8 object and the intellect, Destructio Destructionum

This was considered a common proverb which had its roots in a Latin translation from ARISTOTI.K: Yellow-colored objects appear to be gold.
Elenchi, bk. I> ch, /

Knowledge

is

the conformity of the

CHAUCER, Hyt is not al gold that glareth. The House of Fame [1374-1385], bk. I, I. 372 But al thyng which that shineth as the
gold Nis nat gold, as that X have herd it told. The Canterbury Tales [c. 1387], The Canon's Yeoman's Tale, L 96* All is not golde that outward shewith bright. LYDOATE [c. *370-c. 1451]. On the Mutability
of

*AI> attributed by Gratian to SKRKNO, Bishop of MattUio, Letter 9. Translated by W. S. MF.RWIN.

GREGORY

The

chaste definition of cpistemology,

still

commented on today and used by the NeoThomiftts.

Human

Affairs

(note continues p. 756)

KAMO NO CHOMEI

FUJIWAJRA

NO
the tribes of birds sang. 1

KAMO NO CHOMEI
1153-1216
flow of the river is ceaseless and water is never the same. The bubbles that float in the pools, now vanishing, now forming, are not of long duration: so in the world are man and his dwellings. [People] die in the morning, they are born in the evening, like foam on the water.
its
.

While

all

Dream Song,
will:

st.

i 2

The

This was ever the world's distempered


Fools have always the wise.

mocked and spurned

These

shall

be judged according to their

lies.3

Lament, $t 2

Hojoki (An Account of

My
He who

Hut)

[1212]

The sun no longer shows His face; and treason sows His secret seeds that no
tect;

man

can de-

complies with the ways of the world may be impoverished thereby; he who does not, appears deranged. Wherever one may live, whatever work one may do, is it possible even for a

Fathers by their children are undone; brother would the brother cheat; the cowled monk is a deceit Might is right, and justice there is

The And

moment
Only
can one

haven for the body or Ib. peace for the mind?


to find a in a hut built for the
live

none.4

Millennium

moment
Ib.
I

FUJIWARA NO TEIKA
1162-1241
In the expression of the emotions originality merits the first consideration.
. The words used, however, should be old ones. . The style should imitate the great poems of the masters of former times.
. .
.

without
is

fears.

My

body

like a drifting cloud


I

ask for nothing,

want nothing.
Ib.

WALTHER VON DER


VOGELWEIDE
c.

1160

1230

Now the summer came to pass


And
flowers through the grass

Joyously sprang,

Non omne quod


BIEL
77,
[d.

discard every last phrase of the sentiments and expressions written by men of recent times. . One should impregnate one's mind with a constant study of the forms of 5 expression of ancient poetry.
. .

One must

fulget est

1495], Expositio
is

aurum. GABRIEL Canonis Messe, lecture


[d.

derived

from WILLIAM OF AUVERCNE

poetry.

There are no teachers of Japanese But they who take the old
as their teachers, steep their in the old style, and learn their

1949].

This
as

the Latin version closest to the

proverb commonly known. Gold all is not that doth golden seem.
St.

poems minds

SPENSER, Faerie Quecne, bk. II [1590], canto 8t 14 All that glisters is not gold

words from the masters of former time

who

of

Often have you heard that told. SHAKESPEARE, Merchant of Venice * II, M- *ii> * fy [159^-15971 All is not gold that glisters. CERVANTES,

them will fail to write poetry? Guide to the Composition of Poetry*

Don

Quixote, pt. II [1615], bk. Ill, ch. 33 All is not gold that glistcneth. MIDDLETON, Fair Quarrel [1617], act V, jc, * All, as they say, that glitters is not gold.
[1687],
*

D6 der turner Jtoracn was, Und die blumcn dur daz graft
Wttnneclachen sprungen, Aeda die vogele aungen.
See

Sumer

is

\cumcn

in, p, 10833,

DRYDEN, The Hind and the Panther


/.

azj Translated

by DONALD KEENE. From An-

thology of Japanese Literature, edited by Donald Keene.

Translated by MARCARF.I RICUKY. Translated by JETHRO Bnwu.. "See Horace, p. 1*40, and Hlrh Ho, p. 1482. From Sources of Japanem Tradition, allied
*

by WILLIAM THEODORE DE BAXY [1958].

HARTMANN VON AUE

ALFONSO X

HARTMANN VON AUE


c.

1170-1215

Where Where

there

is
is

darkness, light; and

there

He who

helps in the saving of others, Saves himself as well. Poor Henry

O divine Master,
grant that

sadness, joy.

HERBERT VON FRITZLAR


fl.

C.

121O
fifth

I may not so much Seek to be consoled as to console; To be understood as to understand; To be loved as to love; For it is in giving that we receive;

It is

The

cart has

no place where a

wheel could be used.

Saying

in pardoning that we are pardoned; and It is in dying that we are born to eternal life. Attributed

EIRE VON
fl.

REPKOW
122O
first,

have sinned against

my

brother the
-words

C.

ass.

Dying

He who

comes

eats

first.

Sachsenspiegel [1219-1233]

MAGNA CARTA
No
1215 freeman shall be taken, or imprisoned, or outlawed, or exiled, or in

ST.

FRANCIS OF ASSISH
c.

1181-1226

Praise to thee,
creatures,

my

Lord, for

all

thy

any way harmed, nor will we go upon him nor will we send upon him, except

by the

legal

Above

judgment of
will

his peers or

by

Who

Brother Sun brings us the day and lends us his


all

the law of the land.

Clause 39
sell,

To none

we

to

light.

The Song
Love
is

of Brother Sun and of All His Creatures [1225]

delay, right or justice.

none deny or Clause 40

TOMMASO
c.

DI

CELANO

he, radiant with great splen-

dor,

And

speaks to us of Thee,

Most
Ib.

High.

Where
there
is

1185-0. 1255 Day of wrath and doom impending, David's word with Sibyl's blending, Heaven and earth in ashes ending! *
Dies Irae

there

is

charity

and wisdom,

Where
there

neither fear nor ignorance. there is patience and humility,

is

Where

neither anger nor vexation. there is poverty and joy, there is

[ALFONSO THE WISE]


Had
I

ALFONSO X

neither greed nor avarice. Where there is peace and meditation, there is neither anxiety nor doubt. The Counsels of the Holy Father
St. Francis.

1221-1284 been present at the

would have given some useful hints

creation, I for

Admonition 27
of

the better ordering of the universe. 2 Attributed


i

Lord,

Dies irac, dies ilia Solvet sacclum in favilla,

make me an instrument
peace.

Your
sow

Testc David Translated by

cum Sibylla. W. J. IRONS. This

has been at-

Wncrc
love;

there

is

hatred let

me

Where Where Where


a

tributed also to St. Gregory and St, Bernard. S CARLVLE says, in his History of Frederick the Great, bk. H, ch. 7, that this saying of

there is injury, pardon; there is doubt, faith;

there
by

about Ptolemy's astronomy, "that it seemed a crank machine; that it was pity the Creator had not taken advice/' is still rememAlfonso

is

Translated

despair, hope; LEO SHERURY-PIUCE.

bered by mankind

this

and no other of

his

many

sayings.

157

RUTEBEUF

FREIDANK

RUTEBEUF
d.

Upon

their

Lord and Master feed. 1


Juncta Sint

1280

Sacris Solemniis

What became
With whom
I

of the friends I had was always so close

Gaudia

(Matins

hymn
st.

for

Corpus Christi),
Angelicus)

6 (Panis

And loved

so dearly?

La Complainte Rutebeuf
Friendship
is

O saving Victim, opening wide


foes press on from every side. Thine aid supply, Thy strength stow.2

dead:

They were

And

friends who go with the 1 wind, the wind was blowing at my door.
16.

The Our

gate of heaven to

man

below,
be-

Verbum
(hymn
Hostia)
Christi),

for

Supernum Prodiens Lauds on Corpus


5

st

(O

Salutaris

ST.

THOMAS AQUINAS
1227-1274

Lord Jesu, blessed Pelican. Adoro Te Devote


pointed for
Jesu

(hymn

ap-

Sing, my tongue, the Savior's glory, Of His Flesh the mystery sing; Of the Blood, all price exceeding, Shed by our immortal King. 2

the

Thanksgiving

after Ma$s),$t.

6 (Pie Pellicane

Domine)

Pange, Lingua (hymn for Vespers on the Feast of Corpus


Christi),
st.

Three things are necessary for the of man: to know what he ought to believe; to know what he ought to desire; and to know what he ought
salvation
to do.

Down
Newer

in adoration falling,

Lo! the sacred Host we hail; Lo! o'er ancient forms departing,
rites
all

Two Precepts
common

of Charity [1273]
for the

Law: an ordinance of reason


good, made by care of the community.

of grace prevail;
defects supplying,

him who has


[1273]

Faith for

WTiere the feeble senses fail. Ib. st 5 (Tantum Ergo)

Summa Thcohgica
Concerning which consists

Thus Angels' Bread

is made The Bread of man today: The Living Bread from Heaven With figures doth away:

blessedness perfect in a vision of God. 3


16.

Reason
the world,

in

man

is

rather like

God

in

O wondrous gift indeed!


lowly
1

The poor and

may

See Dowson, p. 8goa.

Opuscule n De Rcgno Beware the man of one book.* Quoted by ISAAC D'ISRAKL in
t

Pange, lingua, gloriosi Corporis mystcrium Sanguinisque pretiosi,

Curiosities of Literature

[1791-

Quern in mundi pretium


Fructus ventris generosi

Rex effudit gentium. Translated by EDWARD CASWALL [8i4-*878]. Now, my tongue, the mystery telling
Of the glorious Body

FREIDANK
fl.

c,

1250
Saying

The Hymnal
Pange,
lingua,
gloriosi

sing. of the Protestant

New brooms sweep well


i

Episcopal Church proelium certaminis [Sing, my tongue, the glorious battle]. VEKANTIUS HONORXUS CUBMENTIANUS FORTUNATUS, Bishop of Poitiers [fl. c. 600].

Translated by J. D. CHAMBF.HS [1805-1893]. Man did cat angels' food, P$alm 78:*; 3 Translated by EDWARD OAJWAU,,

Probably the origin of the jihrajw "beatific


vision."
*

Cave ab nomine unlu*

librl.

18

MEISTER ECKHART

DANTE

MEISTER ECKHART
c,

1260-1327
can most readily preDirections
for

In silence

man

x art my master and my authou art he from whom alone I thor; took the style whose beauty has done

Thou

serve his integrity.

me honor.
The Divine Comedy.
canto
All

the

Inferno,
I,
I.

Contemplative Life
wise and powerful a masthe more directly is his work created, and the simpler it is. Of the Eternal Birth

85

The more

hope abandon,
all distrust

ye

who
left

enter

here! 2

ter,

16. Ill, 9

Here must
all

be

behind;
16.

cowardice must be ended.

14

not always think so much about what one should do, but rather what one should be. Our works do not ennoble us; but we must ennoble our Work and Being works.

One must

There
air,

wailings so that at

and loud sighs, lamentations resounded through the starless


first it

made me weep;

horrible language, tongues, strange words of pain, tones of anger, voices loud and hoarse, and with these the

DANTE ALIGHIERI
1265-1321
In that part of the book of my memory before which is little that can be read, there is a rubric, saying, "Incipit Vita Nova/' La Vita Nuova [1293] 1

sound of hands, made a tumult which that air forever is whirling through a whirlwind. dark, as sand eddies in 16.22
This miserable state is borne by the wretched souls of those who lived without disgrace and without praise,

Love hath so long

possessed

me

for his

16-34
Let us not speak of them; but look,

own And made


Love with

his lordship so familiar.


16.

and pass on.3 These


alive.

16. 51

wretches,

who

never

were
16.

delight
lady's

discourses

in

my
.

64
fire

mind Upon my

admirable
of

Into the eternal darkness, into


. , gifts intellect.

Beyond the range

human

and into

ice.

3' 4

16.
live in desire.

87

Convito. 2 Trattato Terzo, I

Without hope we
came

In the middle of the journey of our life I came to myself within a dark

Ib.

IV, 42

wood where the straight way was lost.3 The Divine Comedy [c, 13101320]. Inferno,* canto
I,
Z.

into a place void of

all light,

which bellows like the sea in tempest, 5 when it is combated by warring winds. I6.V7 28
in the cold season their wings bear the starlings along in a broad, dense wicked spirflock, so does that blast the

And as he, who with laboring breath has escaped from the deep to the shore, turns to the perilous waters and ga7.es,
16.

As

22

is

Translated by DANTE GABHIKL ROMKTTI. Translated by CIIARI.KS LYM.I.. The first line jtte> in The Divine Comedy, Purgatorio II,

//a,

Virgil. I,asciatc ogni speranza, voi ch'entrate. Traditional translation.

Nel we//o del cummin di nostra vita Mi ritroval per una nelva oscura,

Translated by JOHN AITKEN CARLYLE,

The

Temple
*

Classics [1900].

Che
*
lc<*

la diritta via era sraarrita,

Tntiwlated by JOHN D. SINCI.AIR 11958]. unotherwise noted.

Sec Housman, p. 8538, and Frost, p. 9*7Translated by JOHN AITKEN CARLYLE, The
Classics [1900].

Temple

159

DANTE
its.

Hither, thither, downward, upward,

Already

had

fixed

my

look on

his;

it

drives

them. 1 The Divine Comedy. Inferno,


canto V, L 40
is

and he

rose upright with breast and countenance, as if he entertained great

scorn of Hell. 1

quickly kindled in the gentle heart, seized this man for the fair form that was taken from me,

Love, which

The Divine Comedy.


Necessity brings

Inferno,
I.

canto X,

34

him [Dante]

and the manner still hurts me. Love, which absolves no beloved one from
loving, seized

not pleasure.
If

here, 16. XII, 87

me

so strongly with his


seest, it

charm
leave

not

fail

that, as

thou

does not
16.

thou follow thy star, thou canst of a glorious haven.


16.

me yet. 2 What sweet


them
is

100
So

thoughts, what longing


16.

led

to the woeful pass.8

my conscience chide mo not, ready for Fortune as she wills.


He
listens well

XV, 55 I am
I6.

113

9i
99

who

takes notes.
I6.

There

Than

no greater sorrow to be mindful of the happy


16. 121

time
In misery.4

fair

request should be followed by


16.

the deed in silence.

XXIV, 77

A Galeotto was the book and he that wrote it; that day we read in it no far16. 137 ther. 5
I fell as a

Consider your origin; you were not born to live like brutes, out to follow
virtue

and knowledge.
16.

XXVI, n8

dead body

falls.

If I

16.

Last line

thought

my

answer were to one

who would
this

ever return to the world,

Pride, Envy, and Avarice are the three sparks that have set these hearts

on

fire.

16.

VI, 74

flame should stay without another none ever returned alive from this depth, if what I hear is true, I answer thee without fear

movement; but since

But when thou


world,
I

shalt

be

in the sweet

pray thee bring


6

me

of infamy."

16.

XXVII, 60
to sec

to

memory.

men's 16. 88

And

thence

we came
Ib*

forth,

3 again the stars,

XXXIV,

159

that are of good understanding, note the doctrine mat is hidden under the veil of the strange verses!
16. IX, 61
li, di gift, di su li mena. Francesca of Rimini tells of the love she and Paolo, her brother-in-law, bore one another and of its tragic end when her husband surprised and stabbed them. Translated by JOHN AITKEN CARLYLE, T/KJ

Ye

run over better waters the little vessel of my genius now hoists her sails, as she leaves behind her a sea so cruel. 16. Pwrgatorio,* canto I, /. i

To

1
a

Di qua, di

He
life.
*

goes seeking liberty, which

is

so

dear, as

he knows who

for

it

renounces

Translated by JOHN
Ctcusics [1901]

16. 71 AmtuN CA*m.K, The

Tempi*

Temple
*

Classics [1900].

Translated by LONGFELLOW. Nessun maggior dolorc

Dante speak* of Farina ta, head of ihr Ubcrti family, leader* of the GhlbcUinc faction in
Florence.
felioe

Che
See

ricordarsi

del

tempo

Nella miseria.
Pindar, p. yob; Boethlus, p, Chaucer, p. 1653; and Tennyson, p. 6473, 8 Galeotto fu il libro e chi lo scrisse:
i48a;

Cxnxnt Guido da MomefcUro, the farwnn OhibclHnc warrior, addre*tt* Dante. This passage in Italian in the? epigraph for T. S. ELIOT, The Lwe Swi/f #/ /. Alfred ?rufrork [1917].

Quel giorno pifc non vi leggemmo avante. Ciacco (Hog), noted for his gluttony, entreats

Dante.

E quindi tutimmo a rivcdcr Ic a idle. Translated NORTON by CHARUI* ELIOT [190*], unless otherwise noted.
*

DANTE

O
how
fault!

bitter a sting to thee

conscience, upright and stainless, is a little

To a greater force, and to a better nature, you, free, are subject, and that creates the mind in you, which the
heavens have not in their charge. Therefore if the present world go astray, the cause is in you, in you it is to

The Divine Comedy.


For to
to lose time
is

canto

Purgatorio, III, L 8

him who knows most. The Infinite Goodness


it

most displeasing 16. 78 has such wide


it.

be sought.

The Divine Comedy.

Purgatorio,

canto XVI, I 79

arms that

takes whatever turns to

16. 121

me

Unless, before then, the prayer assist which rises from a heart that lives

Everyone confusedly conceives of a good in which the mind may be at rest, and desires it; wherefore everyone
strives to attain to
it.

16.

XVII, 127

in grace:

what

avails the other,

which

is

not heard in heaven?

16. IV, 133

Love kindled by virtue always kindles


another, provided that outwardly.
its

"Why

is

thy mind

so

entangled/'

16.

flame appear XXII, 10

said the Master, 1 "that thou slackenest thy pace? What is it to thee what they

whisper there? Come after me and let the people talk. Stand like a firm tower that never shakes its top for blast of 16. V, 2 10 wind."

me

Less than a drop of blood remains in that does not tremble; I recognize the signals of the ancient flame. 1
16.

XXX, 46

Go

right

on and

listen as

thou goest.
ft.

45

the more malign and wild does the ground become with bad seed and untilled, as it has the more of 16. 118 good earthly vigor,

But

so

much

[Beatrice]

who

shall be a light be-

tween truth and

intellect.

stars.

16.
It

Pure and disposed to mount unto the 2 16. XXXIII, 145

VI, 45

was now the hour that turns back the longing of seafarers and melts their hearts, the day they have bidden dear friends farewell, and pierces the new traveler with love if he hears in the distance the bell that seems to

The glory of Him who moves everything penetrates through the universe, and is resplendent in one part more and in another less.8
16.

Paradise* canto

I,

mourn the
i

dying day

16. VIII,
this

great flame follows a little spark. 16. 34


in

3 day the daily manna, without which, in this rough desert, he backward goes, who toils most to go I&* XI, 13 on.

Give us

And
The

His will

is

our peace. 5
16. HI,

85

greatest gift that

God

in His

way

naught but a Worldly renown breath of wind, which now comes this and now comes that, and changes
is

bounty made in creation, and the most conformable to His goodness, and that which He prizes the most, was the freedom of the will, with which the crea1

name because
C)

it

changes quarter.
16.

100
a

Men die dramma Di sangue m'e rimaso, che no treml; Conosco i segni dell' antica fiamraa.
Puro c
clisposto a salire alle stelle.

born to fly upward, wherefore at a little wind dost thou so H>< XII, 95 fall?
race,
*

human

See Virgil p. u8b. See Virgil, p. ugb. See Acts 17:28, p. 50*, and Aratus, p. io4a. * Translated by JOHN D. SINCLAIR. 8 E'n la sua volontade c noetra pace. See T. S. EHot, p. ioo4a.

Virgil.

TramIat<rd by JOHN
Sctr

I>.

SINCLAIR.

Matthew,

<$://, p.

4ob.

161

DANTE
tures

WILLIAM OF OCKHAM

with intelligence, they all and they alone, were and are endowed. The Divine Comedy. Paradiso, canto V, I 19

my

mind,

verily

this

is

queer and

crazy thing to do!

Tsurczurc-Gusa (Essays in Idleness)


[c.

1340]

Thou

shalt prove

of another's bread and

how salt is the taste how hard is the


stairs.

way up and down another man's


Ib.

XVII, 58

One should write not unskillfully in the running hand, be able to sing in a pleasing voice and keep good time to music; and, lastly, a man should not
refuse a
little

Overcoming

me

with the light of a

wine when

it

is

pressed
16.

smile, she [Beatrice] said to me: "Turn and listen, for not only in my eyes is

upon him.

Paradise."

Ib.

XVIII, 19

Therefore the sight that is granted to your world penetrates within the Eternal Justice as the eye into the sea; for though from the shore it sees the bottom, in the open sea it does not, and
yet the bottom conceals it.
is

However gifted and accomplished a young man may be, if he has no fondness for women, one has a feeling of something lacking, as of a precious wine 16. cup without a bottom.

To

sit

alone in the lamplight with a

book spread out before you, and hold


intimate converse with men of unseen sueh is a pleasure begenerations

there but the depth


Ib.

XIX, 73
life.

The experience

of this sweet

yond compare,

16.

Ib.

XX, 47

Like the lark that soars in the air, singing, then silent, content with the last sweetness that satiates it, such seemed to me that image, the imprint ID. 73 of the Eternal Pleasure.
first

A certain recluse, I know not who, once said that no bonds attached him to this life, and the only thing he would 16. regret leaving was the sty.

The

night that hides things from us.


16.

PHILIP VI [PHILIP OF V A L O
129 3-1 350

ft ]

XXIII, 3

the color that paints the morning and evening clouds that face the sun I saw then the whole heaven
suffused,
16.

With

He who
me.*

loves

mt%

let

him

follow

XXVII, 28

The Love
the other

that

stars.*

moves the sun and 16, XXXIII, 145

WILLIAM OF OCKHAM
1300-1 348
plurality must not be asserted without necessity.8 Quodlibeta Septcm \c.
1

YOSHIDA KENKO
1283-1350
while away the idle hours, seated the livelong day before the ink slab, by jotting down without order or purpose whatever trifling thoughts pass through
l
*

To

Translated
Kccnc.

thalojty of

by DONAH* KriNF. From An' Japanese Literature, edited by Donvac utiive,

aid
*

Qui m'aimr

See Chaucer, p. 1653. L'esperienza di qucsta dolcc vita. L'amor chc muove !1 sole e 1'altre See Aristotle, p, 975.

stclle.

"Translated by A, C. CROMHII, Thii i* the original itttemcnt of "Ockham'* razor/' The more familiar form, "Entitle* fthoulc! noi be introduced multiplied beyond neceaiUy/' W4 in the seventeenth century by folm Ponce o! Cork.

PETRARCH

CHAUCER

[FRANCESCO PETRARCA]
1304-1374

PETRARCH*

By hook

or by crook. 1 Controversial Tracts

[c.

1380]

Who
A
life.

overrefines his
grief.

argument brings

himself to

This Bible is for the government of the People, by the People, and for the 2 Attributed [1382] People.

To Laura

in Life, canzone 11
to a

good death does honor

whole

WILLIAM
OF

WYKEHAM

To Laura

in Death, canzone 16

To be
is

able to say
little.

how much you


Ib.

love

to love but

137
vir-

Rarely do great beauty and great tue dwell together. 2

1324-1404 Manners maketh man. Motto of his two foundations, Winchester College and New College, Oxford

De

Remedies, bk. II

CHARLES V OF FRANCE
1337-1380
I

EDWARD

III

speak Spanish to God, Italian to


to

1312-1377 Honi soit qui mal y pense. 3 Motto of the Order of the Garter
Let the boy win his spurs. Said of the Black Prince at the
Battle of Crfoy [1345]

women, French

men, and German

to

my horse.

Attributed

GEOFFREY CHAUCER*
c.

1343-1400

To

rede,

and drive the night away. The Book of the Duchess [1369],
1.49

JOHN BARBOUR
c.

Soun

1316-1395

And

ys noght but eyr ybroken, every speche that ys spoken,

Ah! Freedom is a noble thing! Freedom makes man to have liking.

Freedom

all

solace to

man
[c.

gives;
Z.

lie lives at ease that freely lives.

The Bruce

1375],

225

iThe phrase has been said to derive from the custom of some manors where tenants were authorized to take firebote by hook or by crook; that is, so much of the underwood as may be cut with a crook, and so much of the loose be collected from the boughs timber as
may
by means of a hook. Quoted by Skelton, Heywood, Spenser, and others.
this phrase in the Supposedly, Wycliffe used of the Bible translation his of general prologue editor could not find it in [1388]. However, this the 1850 edition collated from all the Wycliffe MSS. by Josiah Forshall and Sir Frederick Madden. The closest sentence is: If this book
*

JOHN WYCLIFFE
c.
I

1320-1384
end the truth

believe that in the

will conquer.

To

the

A
*
ft'

[1381].

Duke of Lancaster From J.R. GREEN,

be wel understanden, it is profitable bothe to and lustisis goostly govcrnours and bodily lordis, and comyns also.
See

Short History of the English People, ch. 5


translated
e.

Webster,

p.

547a;

Garrison,

p.

6>6a;

Chaucer

amor non
a 8

Sonnet See p. i#4b.


evil thinks.

88

[In

Vita],

and Parker, p. 657b. aux femmes, Je parle espagnol a Dieu, italien a mon chefrancos aux hommes, et allemand
I jncoln, p. 6$)a; val.
*

S*c Petronius, p. i3Sb,


Evil to

From

him who

of Geoffrey Chaucer,

the text of F. N. ROBINSON, and ed. [1957]-

The Works

CHAUCER

Lowd

or pryvee, foul or fair,


air.

A fol can not be stille.


II,

In his substaunce ys but

The Parliament
I 765

of Fowls,

The House

of 1385], bk.

Fame [1374-

Venus clerk, Ovide, That hath ysowen wonder wide The grete god of Loves name.
Ib. Ill,

1 574 with Now welcome, somer, thy sonne softe* That hast this wintres wcdcrs ovcrshake.
Ib.

680

1487

Hard

is

the herte that loveth nought

In May.

But the Troian gcstcs, as they fellc, In Omer, or in Dares, or in Dite, Whoso that kan may rcdc hem as they
write.

The Romaunt

of the
[c.

Rose
Z.

Troilus

1380],

85
If

and Criscydc

[c.

1385],
/,

bk.

I,

145

The

tyme, that

But goth, As watir that doun renneth ay, But never drope retourne may.
Nakid
as a

may not and may never

sojourne, retourne,

no love
if

is,
is,

And
381

love

God, what fclo I so? what thing and which is

he?
Ib.
If love

be good, from whenncs conicth s my woo?


Ib.

worm was
was

she.
his face.

Ib.

454
819

400 (Canticus

Troili)

As round

as appil

A fool may ek a wys-man oftc gidc.


Ib.
16.

630

So that the more she yaf awey, The more, ywis, she hadde alwey.
Ib.

Ek som tyme
1159
faste,

it is

craft to

seme

fle

Fro thyng whych

in effect

men huntc
Ib.

7^7
un-

A ful gret fool is he,

ywis,
is.

Unknowc,
Ifc.

unkist,
4

and

los*t,

that

is

That bothe riche and nygard

809 wynd, o wynd, the wcder gynneth


sought.
clcre.

Ib.

The
Tli'

lyf so short,

the craft so long to

Ih. II, 2

lerne,

Til crowes feet be


y<3.

assay so hard, so sharp the conqueryinge.

growen under youre Ifc. 403


an huge rayn!
for to slcpcn innel Ib. HI, 696

The Parliament
For out of olde
feldes, as

of

Fowls
i

Lord, this

is

[1380-1386], I

This were a wcder

men

Cometh

al
8

this

ncwc corn

fro ycr

seyth, to

ycre;

And

out of olde bokes, in good feyth,


al this

Cometh
lere.

newe

science that

men

nought good a slq>yng hound to Ih. 764 For I have seyn, of a ful misty morwc Folowen ful often a myric somVrts clav.
It is

wake. 5

Ib. 22

I/).

Nature,
1

the vicairc

of

the

almyghty
Ib.

lorde.

379

Right quake.
1

as

an

aspcs

Icef

she

Ib.
t

gan to 1200

Chaucer, and probably others, translated the French Roman de la Rose by Guillaumc dc Lorris (begun in 1437) and Jean dc Meun (continucd c. i77), a See Hippocrates, p. 88b, and note.
3

Sec Prmtcrhs ug:tt p, afib. In a somer scsun, whan Iir wan the vmnc.

Vision of Piers
fairly

WILLIAM LANCUND [c. ij^o-c, X4f>oJ, The Plowman, />m/^u* 3 The Canticw Tntill (,Vog / Troi/ui) i<
;

close rendn-ing of

Petrarch** Sonnet

88

John

his

Bartlctt quoted this line at the head of preface to the Ninth Edition of Familiar

Quotations [1891].

(In Vita), tfamar nun t. * Sec Homer, p. f4b, antl wur, 8 Sec Dickcm, p.

164

CHAUCER
For of fortunes sharpe adversitee worste kynde of infortune is A man to han ben in prosperitee,
Go,
this,
litel

6
bok, go, litel myn tragedye. 1 Troilus and Criseyde,
bk.

The

V,

Z.

And

1786

it

1 remembren, whan it passed is. Troilus and Criseyde,

bk. Ill, I

1625
it

yonge, fresshe folkes, he or she, In which that love up groweth with

Oon

ere

it

herde,

at

tothir
16.

out

youre age, Repeyreth horn fro worldly vanyte,


16.

wente. 2

IV, 434

1835

Ek wonder
But manly
scvcne;

last

in towne.

but nyne nyght nevere Ib. 588


world on
a
six

O
To

moral Gower,
the.

this

book

directe

16.

1856

sette the
8

and
Is

Whan
And
synge, that the

that the
I

month

of

May
to

And

if

thow deye

comen, and that

here the foules

martyr,

hevene!

16.

go to 622

floures

gynnen

for

For tyme
be,

ylost

may

nought recovered
16.

sprynge,

1283

Farewel

my

bok,

and
of

my
[c.

devociounl
1386],
Z.

They
For

take

it

wisly, faire,

and

softe. 4

The Legend

Good Women
36

Ib.
lie

V, 347
16.
6

that naught n' assaieth, naught

That, of al the floures in the mede, Tlianne love I most thisc floures white

u' achevcth. 5
Paraclis stood

784
817
831

formed in her yen.

and rede, Swiche as men callen daysyes


toun.

in

our

16.

16.

41

Trewc

as stiel.

16.
16.

Whan

that

Aprill

with

his

shoures

soote

This sodeyn Diomede.


Ye, fare wcl
al

1024
7
1 Off with you down where you want HORACE [65-8 B.C.], Epistles I, xx, $ Little book, you will go without OVID [43 don't mind to the city.

the snow of feme ycre!


16.

to go,

1176
lite;

me

Kk

grot effect
is

men
al,

B.C.-A.D.

write in place

18],

Tristia I,

i,

Tli' entente

and nat the

lettres

Vade salutatem pro me,


book, to bear
4o-c. 104],

liber

space.
* Set-

Ib.
p.
79!);

1629
i4&a;

my

greetings].
I,

[Go forth, my MARTIAL [A.D. c.

Epigrams

70

Pindar,

Bocthius,

p.

Dane?, p. i5oa: and Tennyson, p. 6473, a Wfiit in at the tone care and out at tothcr. JOHN HKYWOOD, Proverbs [1546], pt. II, ch. 9 All is uneven,
rt

Go now, my little book, to every place Where my first pilgrim has but shown his face. JOHN BUN VAN, Pilgrim's Progress [1678],
Apology
Go,
little

Bookl

From

this

my

solitude

Ami

everything SHAKESPKAH.K,

is

left at six

and seven.
ii, t.

Richard II [1595-1596]*
act II, sc.

lac

Ixrt

Don

CERVANTES, things go at sixes and sevens, Quixote, pt. I [1605], bk. IV, ch. 3
-

Things
SMITH,

KiK
Say,

<*

at sixes

and

sevens.

GOLDI

Thf

(tootl'N&tured

Man

[1768], art

everything Kither at sixes or at sevens?

why

is

on the Waters go thy ways. ROBERT SOUTHEY, Lay of the Laureate [1815], L'Envoi These lines of Southey's and the next two were quoted by BYRON in Don Juan [1818], canto I f stanza aaa f which ends: The four first rhymes are Southey's, every line:/ For God's sake, readerl take them not for mine!
I cast thee

*Thc

W.S. GILBERT, 1LM.S. Pinafort Moon [1878], act U, Fair proverb is: Fair and softly goes far.

Go Go

forth, forth,

my

little

bookl pursue thy way;

and please the gentle and the good. WORDSWORTH, Memorials of a Tour on

See Shakespeare, p. 4b. Sfw Hey wood, p. 184!), and note, a Sec Dante, p. i6*a. 7 Sec Villon, p.

the Continent [18x0] Go, little book, and wish to all Flowers in the garden, meat in the ball. R. L* STEVENSON, Underwoods [1887],

Envoy

CHAUCER

The droghte

of

March hath perced


Tales

to

Clerk ther was of Oxenford also.

the roote.

The Canterbury Tdes.


[c. 1387]. Prologue, I. i

The Canterbury

Prologue, I 285

As leene was his hors as


For

is

a rake.
16.

And

foweles maken melodye, That slepen al the nyght with open ye, (So priketh hem nature in hir cor-

smale

hym
heed

287 was levere have at his beddes


clad in blak or reed,
his philosophic, or fithele, or

ages);

Thanne longen
grimages.

folk

to

goon on

pil-

Twenty bookes, Of Aristotle and

16. 9

Than

robes riche,

gay

He was

a verray, parfit gentil knight. 16. 72


as

He

was

fressh as

is

the

month
16.

of

May.

92

He koude
dyte.

songes make, and wel en16.

he was a But philosophre, Yet hadde he but litcl gold in cofre. 16. 293 And gladly wolde he lerne, and gladly
teche. 1
16.

sautrie, al be that

95

308
nas,

And

Curteis he was, lowely, and servysable, carf beforn his fader at the table.

Nowher

so bisy a

man

as

he ther
than
lie

And

yet

he semed

bisior

was.

16.99
Ful weel she soong the service dyvyne, Entuned in hir nose ful semely; And Frenssh she spak ful faire and
fetisly,

16. 321

For he was Epicurus owcnc sonc.2


16.
It

336
345

snewed
drynke.

in

his

hotis

of mete and
16.

After the scole of Stratford atte Bowe For Frenssh of Parys was to hir un-

He

was

good

fclawc. 3
litcl

16.

395

knowe.

16.
if

122

His studic was but

on the

Bible.

16.

438

She wolde wepe,

that she saugh a


if it

mous
Kaught
in

a trappe,

were deed or
16.

in phisik is a cordial, Therefore he lovecle gold in

For gold

special. 16.

bledde.

144

443

And

tiberon

heng a brooch
first

of gold ful

worthv womman al hir lyve, Ilousbondcs at clurchc dore she hadde

She was

On

sheene, which tier was

write a

crowned

fyve.

Ift.

499
lie

A,

This noble cnsamplc to his sheep

And

after

Amor vincit omm'd. 1


16.

yaf,

160

That

first lie

wroghtc, awl afterward he


Ih.

His palfrey was as broun as

is

a bcryc. 16. 207

taughte.
If gold ruste,

496
500

what
loore

shal iren do?


16.

Frere ther was, a wantownc and a

merye.

16.

208

But

Cristes

and

his

apostles
it

He knew
toun,

the

taverncs

wel

twelve
in

every

He
1

Somwhat he
esse,

Iipsed 7 for his

240 wantown-

16.

taughte, but
selve.

first

he folwccl

hym527

lb.

To make

his Englissh swcetc

upon
16.

his

tonge.
*See Virgil,
p.

264

See Pope, p. * Sec Horace, Rpiates iv, tj, p, 8 If he b<t not fellow with the bc*i kinj?, ihou sliali fiml him the !>< king of grnxj fellow*,
S!iAKtsiFAR>', A'mp;

Henry V [1598

lOcKi). art

V>

ufa.

sc. ii,

I.

a$9

166

CHAUCER

And

yet he hadde a

thombe of The Canterbury


Prologue,
fyr-reed

gold. Tales.
I.

Now

up,
welle.

now doun,

as

boket in a
Tales.
I.

563

The Canterbury
For
pitee herte.

The
1533

That hadde a
face.

cherubynnes
Ib.

Knight's Tale,

624

renneth

soone

in
Ib.

gentil

Wei
And

loved he garleek, oynons, and eek


lekes, for to

1761

Cupido,

drynken strong wyn, reed


Ib.

as

Upon

his

shuldres

wynges hadde he
it is

blood.

634

two;

And blynd he

was, as

often scene;

And whan that he wel dronken hadde


the wyn,

bowe he bar and arwes brighte and


kene.

Than wolde he
Latyn.

speke no

word but
Ib.

637

Ib. 1963 under the The smylere with the knyf Ib. 1999 cloke.

Whoso shal telle a tale after a man, He moot reherce as ny as evere he kan
Everich a word, if it be in his charge, Al speke he never so rudeliche and
large,

Up

roos

the

sonne,

Emelye.

Myn

be the
gloriel

travaille,

up roose Ib. 2273 and thyn be the


Ib.

and

2406
2683

Or Or
For

ellis

untrewe, fcyne thyng, or fynde wordes new. 16. 731

he moot

telle his tale

And was

al his chiere, as in his herte,

Ib.

What

is

this

world? what asketh

men

May

wol have no slogardie anyght.

to have?

The scsoun priketh every gentil herte, And maketh hym out of his slep to
sterte.

Now

with his love,

now
any

in his colde

grave Allone, withoutcn

compaignye.
Ib.

Ib.

The

Knight's Tale, I 1042


Ib.
clay.

2777

Ech man

for hymself.

1182

The

bisy larkc, mcssager of

This world nys but a thurghfare ful of wo, And we been pilgrymes, passing to and
fro.

Ib.

1491

Dccth

is

an

May, with
grene,

alle

thy

floures

and thy

soorc.

endc of every worldly Ib. 2847

Welcome be

than,

faire,

frcsshe
Ib.

May.
1510

Jhcsu
BIcssc

Crist,
this

and
hoiis

seiyntc

Bencdight,

from every wikkccl


Miller's Tale, I

That "fecld hath


hath cres."
1

even, "

and the wodc


Ib.

wight.
Ib.

The
of

3483
large

1522

And

broghtc
quart.

myghty
she,

ale

a
Ib.

In allusion to the proverb: An honest miller hath a golden thumb. "The- proverb also occurs in the Latin form: Campus habct lumen, et habct nemus auris

3497
the

"Tehee!"

quod
to.

and

claptc
Ib.

wyndow
Yet
in
Ib.

3740

acumen.
Ficldes have cies and woodcs

have cares.

JOHN HEY WOOD, Proverbs

[1546]. ptsigt.

eh.

our asshcn olde is fyr yrckc. 1 The Reeve's Prologue, I 3882

Wodc

has crys, fclde has

King Edward

and the Shepherd,


Walls have
pt.

MS

The

fc.

1300]

ears,

CERVANTES,

Don

grettcste clerkes wisest men. 2


16.

been noght the

Quixote,
*

[1615], ch. 43

The

Reeve's Tale, I 4054

Woods have tongues


As walls have ears. TENNYSON, Idylls of the King, Balm and Balan [1885], I. 533

p. 44 a. This proverb goes back to Heraclitus. The greatest Clerkes be not the wisest men. JOHN HEYWOOD, Proverbs [1546], pt. II, ch, $
8

Sec

Thomas Cray,

167

CHAUCER
1 Thurgh thikke and thurgh thenne.

As well over

hir

housbond

as hir love."

The Canterbury
So was hir
joly whistle

Tales.

The

Reeve's Tale. I 4066

The Canterbury Tales. The Wife of Bath's Tale, I. 1037


Looke who that
is

wel ywet.
Ib.

moost vertuous

4155

alway,

She

is

mirour of

alle curteisye. 2

Ib.

The Man

of Law's Tale, I 166

For in the
Is

sterres, clerer

writen,
rede,

God

than is glas, woot, whoso koude it


16.

Pryvee and apcrt, and most cntcndeth ay To do the gentil dcdcs that he kan; Taak hym for the grettcst gentil man.
16.

1113
gentil

The

deeth of every man.

That he
194
582

is

gentil

that

dooth
16.

Sathan, that evere us waiteth to bigile.


16.

1170 For thogh we slcpc or wake, or rome, or


ryde,

dedis. 1

In his

owene

grece
16.

made hym frye.8 The Wife of Bath's


I

Ay

flecth

the tyme,
2

it

nyl
9

no man
I 128

abyde,
16,

Prologue,

I.

487
Love

The Clark

$ Tale,

What

thyng we may nat

Therafter wol

we

lightly have, crie alday and crave. 16.

is noght oold as whan that it is newe. 16. 857

517

Greet prees at market maketh deere ware, And to greet cheep is holde at litcl
prys.
16.

This flour of wyfly pacicnce.

16. 9 1 9

stormy peple! unsad and evere untrcwcl 16. 995

522

No wedded man

And
But

for to se,

and eek

for

be

seye.

so hardy be t'assaillc His wyvcs pacicncc, in trust to fyncle

16.552
yet
I

Grisildis, for in ccrtein

he shal
Ih.

faille!

hadde alwey
I

a coltes tooth.

1180

Gat-toothed
weel.

was, anil that bicam


16.

me
601

It is

To

take a
16.

no childes pley wyf withontc avyscment.


i

A womman cast hir shame Whan she cast of hir smok. 5


As thikke
Ib.

away,
16.

The Merchant's 'TdTc, L


$

jjo

782

Love

is

blynd.

Ih.
Ib.

1598 1682

motes in the sonnc-bccm. The Wife of Bath's Tale, I 868


as
lady,

My wit is thynnc.
be,

Ther nys no werkman, whatsocvcre he

"My
1

lige

"Wommen

generally," quod he, desiren have sovereynetcc

That may bothe werke wcl and


ily;*

hast-

Du BARTAS, Through thickc and thin. Divine Weeks and Works [1578], Second Week, Fourth Day * Call him bounteous Buckingham,
The mirror
of
all

This wol be doon at leyser


Tlicrfore

parfitly." ri. 1832

courtesy,

bihovcth

hire

ful

SHAKESPEARE, Henry VIII [1613], act II, se. i, L $$


Proverbial.
1

long

spoon
5ce Goldsmith, p. See John Heywmxl. p. i8b and note. Proverbial. Sec .ShaJcctpc'at**, assKh, p,
S*e

grease. Proverbs [1546], pt. I, ch. xx

Frieth in her

own

JOHN HEY WOOD,


4

The
till

and
Itry-

best way were to entertain him with hope, the wicked fire of lust have melted him in
grease.

note.

his

own

SHAKESPEARE,

Windsor [1601], act II, sc. if I. 60 *See Ovid, p. i*8b. 5 See Herodotus /, 8, p. 86b.

M erry

PubHHut

Syruu, p.

Wives of

t6b, and John

WCMK!, p. i8aa.

Ease and speed in doing a ihlng; do not givr the work Jawting *Udity or ncacmm of beauty. PUITAJUIH [A,, 46-ito] Life of Pericles
f

168

CHAUCER
That
shal ete with a feend. 1

HUSS
Ful wys is he knowe! l
that

The Canterbury

Tales.

The
602

kan hymselven

Squire's Tale, L

Men

loven of propre kynde newefan16.

The Canterbury Tales. The Monk's Tale, I. 3329

gclncsse.

610

He

But

if

Fy on possessioun a man be vertuous withal.


Ib.

was of knyghthod and of fredom flour. Ib. 3832

686

Patience

is

an heigh

16,

The

vertu, certeyn. Franklin's Tale, L 773

For whan a man hath over-greet a wit, Ful oft hym happeth to mysusen it.
16.

The Canon Yeoman's


Prologue, L 648

Servant in love, and lord in manage.


Ib.
It is

793

My

sone, keep wel thy tonge, thy freend.


Ib.

and keep

agayns the proces of nature.


Ib.

The Manciple's
is

Tale, L 319

1345

Trouthe

is

the hyeste thyng that


16.
is

men
1479

Thing that
gooth.

seyd,

is

seyd;

and

forth
Ib.

it

maykepe.
For dronkcnesse

355

Of manncs wit 16. The Pardoner's


Mordre wol
faille.*

verray sepulture and his discrecioun.

Tale, L
it

558

For the proverbe seith that "manye smale makcn a greet/' 2 16. The Parson's Tale, I 361
Reule wel
rede.
thyself, that other folk canst
it is

out,

ccrtcyn,

wol nat
L 1776

16.

The

Prioress's Tale,

And
The

trouthe thee shal dcliverc,


dredc.

no
6
16

Truth

[c.

1390],

Z.

Tins

may wel be rym

dogerel. 16. Chaucer's Tale of Sir Thopas, L 2115

wrastling for this world axeth a


fal.

16.

Proverbial.

Hcc must have a long spoon, shall cat with the dcvill. JOHN HKYWOOD, Proverbs [1546],
in.
II,

EUSTACHE DESCHAMPS
c.

1345-0. 1406
Ballad refrain

ch. 5

have a long spoon that must cat with the devU. SHAKESPEARE, Comedy of Errors
[iftoa -1593], act
*
II.

He must

Who

will bell the cat? *

IV, sc. Proverbial, Also in

Hi,. I.

64
Priest's Talc,

The Nun's
is

Better honor than shameful wealth. 4


16.

4*4* and 4*41* How easily murder


HI,
I.

discoveredl
[

SHAKE-

SPEARE,
,fc.

Titus Andronicus a#
will

1595-1 594 ]

&M

J'

Truth
[
|

hid long.
r>9<>"r>97]

come to light; murder cannot be SHAKESPEARE: Merchant of Venice

JOHN HUSS
O holy simplicity!
1

*rt

"> M*

">

l>

Murder, though it have no tongue, will speak With most miraculous organ.
SHAKESPEARE,

Last words, at the stake


See

Hamlet
act II,

[1600-1601],
sc.
ii,

L 630

Murder

will out.

CERVANTES,

Don

Quixote*

The Seven Sages, p. 68a. The proverb goes back to St.


small

Augustine. Sec

pt. I [1605]. bk. lllt ch. 8 Carcasses bleed at the sight of


er.

also Hesiod, p. 67b.

the murder-

Many

make

a great.

JOHN HEY WOOD,

ROBERT BUR-ION, Anatomy

[1621-1651], pt. 1, sec. Other sins only speak;

of Melancholy i member a, subscc. $

murder shrieks
of

out.

JOHN

WEBSTER,
it

Duchess

Malfi

Proverbs [1546], pt. I, ch. xi a Qui pcndra la sonnette au chat? Copied by La Fontaine. * Mieux vaut honneur que hontcusc richcssc.
6 (>

act IV, sc.

sancta simplicitasl

169

THE PRIMARY CHRONICLE

CHARLES D'ORLEANS

THE PRIMARY CHRONICLE*


1377
the Slavs and the Krivchians then said to the peoples of Rus: "Our whole land is great and rich, but there is no order in it. Come to rule and reign over us." Annal for the years 860-862: Invitation of the Varangians

What canst thou see elsewhere which thou canst not see here? Behold the heaven and the earth and all the
elements; for of these arc
ated.
all

The Chuds,

things cre-

Imitation of Christ,
bk.
I,

ch. 20
is

No man

ruleth safely

but he that

willingly ruled.

Ib.
is

Novgorod Then we went to Greece, and the


Greeks led us to the edifices where they worship their God, and we knew not whether we were in heaven or on earth. For on earth there is no such splendor or such beauty, and we are at a loss how
to describe
ice
is
it.

to

out of sight, quickly 16. 23 First keep the peace within yourself, then you can also bring peace to
also
is

And when he

he out of mind. 1

others.

16. II, 3
is

Love
gentle,

swift, sincere, pious, pleasant,

We only know that

God

dwells there
fairer

among men, and

their serv-

than the ceremonies of

patient, faithful, prudent, long-suffering, manly and never seeking her own; for wheresoever a man scckctn his own, there he falleth from
strong,
love.
2

other nations.

16. Ill, 5

Annal
It is

for the year 987; Vladimir's Christianization of Russia

the Russians' joy to drink; we cannot do without it. 16.

CHARLES P'ORL^ANS
1394-1465
dving of thirst by the side of the fountain.8 Ballades, 2
I

am

THOMAS
How
world. 2

A KEMPIS

1380-1471
swiftly passes the glory of the

The

season has shed


chill

its

mantle of

wind and

and

rain.*

Rondeaux, 63
All

Imitation of Christ

[c.

1420],
ch. 3

by
and
f

myself,

wrapped

in

my

bk.

I,

thoughts,
lation),
I.

Be not angry

others as you wish


to be.

that you cannot make them to be, since


as

in

The Pishm

o/

JP/<rr.T

Plowman*
CER-

/??ty

ed.

1550,

you cannot make yourself

you wish Ib. 16


8

Man

appoint*, ind Cod ditappoimn.


|

disposes. 16. 19 iThe earliest of the Russian chronicles or annals, begun in 1040 and continued through
1118 by various annalists, gives the record of Russian history since A.D. 852. It was copied
several times
icles

Man

proposes, but

God

VANTES, Don Quixtttf, /if. // *fJ$|. bk. /P, ch. 5* Sec Proverbs t6:g p. stfb. 1 Out of Gooor, nyght, out of mynd.
,

as

the

and incorporated into later chronbeginning. These quotations are


1377,

And out of mind a* ftcxm at out of right, FW.KE GRKVIUJB [1334-1618], Sannrt tf Per from cw, fer from hertc, Quoth Hcmlyng. HMWYNC. Prmwrbx, MS [c. 1310]
I <lo perceive (hat the old provcrbis be not alwaic* trew, for I do fmdc that the ahtrnce of my Naih. doth brceclc in me the more continual!

from the Laurentian version, copied in translated by Samuel Cross.


2

O quam

cito transit [usual

form;

sic transit]

gloria

mundi.
addressed to the Pope in the cereelevation.

The words mony of his


*

remembrance of him. I*AI>Y ANN 2Uu>N, to lady Jane Cornw&ltis [ifhj] 8 See / Corinthians /j.y ami 7, p, 5*b.
8 Jc meur cic soif en ctu*t Wilbur, p. loftoa.
*

tetter

la

fontuinc, Src

This expression appears earlier in The Chronicle of Battel Abbey, p. 37 (Lower's trans-

Ix:

temps
vent,

a IaiM4

De

dc

jfroidure et

cm mamcuu de pluie.

CHAKLES D UKU&AJNS

And

building castles in Spain and in France. 1 Rondeaux, 109

There's no good speech save in Paris. 1 Le Grand Testament, Ballade des Femmes de Paris

JOHN FORTESCUE
c.

But pray God that he absolve us

all!

Cod-idle
I

1395-1476
and no wull. 2 Laudibus Legum Angliae ch. 10 [1471],
Ib. 19

Moche

crye

know all

De

except myself. Ballade des Menus Propres

8 Comparisons are odious.

GABRIEL BIEL
To
d. 1495 be crushed in the winepress of

HENRY
Kingdoms
are but cares,

VI

1421-1471
State is devoid of stay; Riches are ready snares, And hasten to decay. From SIR JOHN HARINGTON,

passion.

Expositio Canonis Missae, lectio 52

Always
rather to

in

these

matters

desiring
Ib. 53

be taught than to teach.

Nugae
1769]

Antiquae

[published

No
You

one conquers

who

doesn't fight.
Ib.

78
86

FRANCOIS VILLON
1431 -c. 1465

get

what you pay

for.

Ib.

Ah God! Had
In the days of

but studied
4

ALDUS MANUTJUS
1450-1515
Talk of nothing but business, and
dispatch that business quickly.

my foolish youth.
the

Le Grand Testament, 26
But where
5

are

snows of yester-

year?
16. Ballade des

Dames du Temps Jadis


die.
d,

Placard on the door of the Aldine Press, Venice, established about

In this faith

will to live

and

Ib. Ballade de

VHomage
Notre

Dame

CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS
1451-1506

Translated by NORBERT GUTERMAN. Thou shalt make castels thanne in Spayne, And dremc of Joye, all but in vayne.

The Admiral [Columbus]

says here

JEAN Hose
lated
3

[c,

MEUN, The Romaunt of the i77] /rflg. B f I. 3575, transby CHAUCER


I>K

great cry,

but

little

wool.

CERVANTES,
ch. 13

Don

Quixote, pt.

that today and ever thereafter they had the savor of the very mild breezes, that that the mornings was a great delight, hear to was nightonly thing wanting
i II n'est a Mais

[1615], bk.
i,

HI,
I.

and no wool. All cry Itudibras, pt, / [1663], canto

SAMUEL
833

BUTLER,

priez

bon bee que de Paris. IMeu que tous nous

vcuille ab-

was a well-known phrase in the fourteenth century, and has been repeated by nxany, including Lydgate, Shakespeare, and Swift.
*

ThU
H6 Au

soudrc.

Dieul

si

j'eussc

tudi

temps de Mais ou sout

jcunesse folk. les ncigcs d'antan?

ma

to the Knowledge of Rare 1847] in Introduction and Valuable Editions of the Greek and Latin
Classics [1803], vol, 1, p. 436,

sje connais tout, fors moi-mftme. * Pro tali numismate tales merces. Quoted by THOMAS FROCNALL DIBDIN [1776-

Sec Chaucer, p. 1653.

171

COLUMBUS
ingales. Says he, "The weather was like April in Andalusia." Journal of the First Voyage,
It is certain, Lord Princes, that when there are such lands there should be

September

16, 1492

profitable things without number; but tarried not in any harbor, because

I I
I

"Thanks be
miral;
Seville,

to
is

God/'
soft
as

"the

air
it is

says the Ad in April in

sought to see the most countries that


could, to give the story of

them

to

Your

and

a pleasure to

be in

it

so fragrant

it is."

16. October 8, 1492 Here the people could stand it no longer and complained of the long voyage; but the Admiral cheered them as

Highnesses. Journal of the First Voyage, November 27, 1492

And I say that Your Highnesses ought not to consent that any foreigner
does business or sets foot here, except Christian Catholics, since this was the end and the beginning of the enter-

best he could, holding out good hope oi the advantages they would have. He added that it was useless to complain,

he had come [to go] so had to continue

to the Indies, and it until he found

them, with the help of Our Lord. ft. October 10, 1492

should be For the enhanceof the Christian religion, nor should anyone who is not a good Christian conic to these parts. 1
prise, that
it

ment and

glory

Ii.

At two hours after midnight appeared the land, at a distance of 2


leagues. They handed all sails and set the treo, which is the mainsail without

The Admiral
given

ordered the lord to be

things, and he and all his folk rested in great contentment, believ-

some

bonnets, and lay-to waiting for daylight Friday, when they arrived at an island of the Bahamas that was called in the 7 Indians tongue Guanahanf.
16.

sky,

ing truly that they had come from the and to see the Christians they held themselves very fortunate.
Ib.
I

December

22, 2492

October

12,

1492

The Admiral
held so
river,

says that

he never be-

declared to Your Highnesses that the gain of this my Enterprise should be spent in the conquest of Jeruall

along the beautiful and green, and different

fair a thing: trees all

from ours, with flowers and fruits each according to their kind, many birds and
little

salem; and Your Highnesses smiled and said that it pleased you, and that even

without
sire.

this

you had that strong deJh,

December

birds

which sing very sweetly. 16. October 28, 1492

26, 1492

The
against

eternal

The two Christians met on the way many people who were going to their towns, women and men, with a firebrand in
customed. 2
the hand, [and] herbs to drink the smoke thereof, as they are ac16.

[Columbus]
all,

Cod had given him and strength courage and other things of much
forth
Indian*
in-

wonder which God had showed


ed.
I

November

6,

1492

made dgan which they called tohacos, and haled the *moke. He iwyi that the Spaniards
taking
it

*5i) describes the procc**.

The

are

*BARTOLOMfi DE LAS CASAs [1474-1566] made an abstract of Columbia's Journal of the First Voyage (El Libro de la Prlmcra Navtgacitn) which is the nearest thing to an original journal that we have. The quotations have been selected by SAMUEL ELIOT MORJSON from his translation and edition of Journals and Other Documents on the Life and Voyages of Christopher

Columbus

"The

am

[1963],

certain

reference

in

history
ch.

to

smoking tobacco. Las Casas, Historia

Hitpaniola, "though I don't or profit they find In It." Kquemeling' Ruccantutnt, chap, xxvii (<m Cuba) says "with uncut tobacco leave* they make little bullets that the Spaniard* call /#atmu, stwl which are imoked without a pipe.*'-- SAM ufct EUOT MO*ION, Journal* and Other flwuwtnts on the Life and Voyages of Chrittopher Columbus *Here may be found the fir*t sugge*tion of the exclusive colonial policy that Spain and other nations followed. SAM w,i, F.UQT on WON, Journals and Other Documents <m th* Lift and

up

in

know what tae

46 (1951

Voyagts of Christopher Cotumbu*

172

COLUMBUS
towards
age.

him and

for

him on

that voy-

Journal of the First Voyage,

February 14, 1493


observe/' says the has miraculously been shown, as may be understood by this writing, by the many signal miracles that He has shown on the voyage, and for me, who for so great a time was in the court of Your Highnesses with the opposition and against the opinion of so many high personages of your house''Of this voyage,
it

Your Highnesses will leave no greater memorial; and may they ponder this, that no prince of Castile is to be found, nor have I found one in word or writing, who has ever gained any land outside of Spain; and Your Highnesses have won these vast lands. Journal of the Third Voyage, May 30-August 31, 1498*
I have come to believe that this is a mighty continent which was hitherto unknown. I am greatly supported in

Admiral, "that

this

hold,

against me, alleging this undertaking to be folly, which I hope in Our Lord will be to the greater

who were

all

view by reason of this great river [Ozama], and by this sea which is
16.

fresh.

glory of Christianity, which to some slight extent already lias happened."


16.

I have always read that the world, both land and water, was spherical, as

March

15,

1493

the authority and researches of Ptolemy and all the others who have written on
this subject

most beautiful, of a thousand and all accessible, and filled with trees of a thousand kinds and tall, and they seem to touch the sky; and I
All are

demonstrate and prove, as

shapes,

moon and other from east to are made that experiments west, and the elevation of the North
do the
eclipses of the

am

told that they never lose their foli-

age, which I can believe, for I saw them as green and beautiful as they are in

Star from north to south, Letter to the Sovereigns

on the

Third Voyage, October 18, 1498

Spain,
Letter to the Sovereigns
First

on the
15-

Your

Highnesses

have

an

Other

March
reassured

Voyage, 4, 1493

February
l

World

they have been and have lost this fear, they arc so artless and so free with all they possess* that no one would believe it
It is true that after

can be which such great wealth can be drawn.

here, by which our holy faith so greatly advanced and from


16.

I should be judged as a captain who went from Spain to the Indies to con-

without having seen it. Of anything they have, if you ask them for it, they
never sav no; rather they invite the person to share it, and show as much love as if thcv were giving their hearts.
16.

quer a people numerous and warlike, whose manners and religion are very different from ours, who live in sierras and mountains, without fixed settlements, and where by divine will I have
placed

under the sovereignty of the

they know neither sect nor idolwith the exception that all believe that the source of all power and goodness is in the sky, and thcv believe very firmly that I, with these ships and peoand in this beple, came from the sky,

And

atry,

King and Queen our Lords, an Other World, whereby Spain, which was reckoned poor, is become the richest of
countries.

Letter to

Dona Juana

de Torres,
2

October i$oo

lief

they everywhere received me, after 16, they had overcome their fear,
* This letter, the first and rarest of all printed Americana, describes the scenery and the natives

iThe abstract of the Third Voyage by Bartolomd dc Las Casas is less detailed than that Translated by SAMUEL ELIOT of the First. MORISON and MILTON ANASTOS. Columbus is coming from the Indies as a
prisoner to Cadiz.

of Hispaniola.

COLUMBUS

MALORY
Let the
street

The tempest was


rated
night,

terrible

and sepa-

me

from

putting desperate straits, with nothing to look forward to but death. Each was certain the others had been destroyed. What man ever born, not excepting Job, who would not have died of despair, when in such weather seeking safety for my son,

[other] vessels that every one of them in

my

height of the houses.

be as wide as the Notebooks

No member needs so great a number of muscles as the tongue; this exceeds all the rest in the number of its movements.
16.

my

brother, shipmates, and myself,


[access
I,

we
will

sleep, so life

As a well-spent day brings happy well used brings happy


fb.

death.

were forbidden

to]

the land
for

and the harbors which and sweating blood,


Spain?

by God's had won

SEBASTIAN BRANT
The world wants
1457-1521 to be deceived.
1

Lettera Rarissima to the


Sovereigns, July j, 1503

(Fourth Voyage)"
I

Ship of Fools [Narrenschiff;

came
I

and now

to serve you at the age of 28 have not a hair on me that is

SIR

THOMAS MALORY
fl.

and exhausted. All that was left to me and my brothers has been taken away and

not white, and

my body

is

infirm

1470

The noble

1 history of the Sangreal,

sold, even to the cloak that I wore, without hearing or trial, to my great

dishonor.

16.

and of the most renowned Christian king, first and chief of the three best Christian and worthy, King Arthur, which ought most to be remembered

Weep
truth
this

for

me, whoever has


I

charity,

and

justice!

did not

come on

among us Knglish men tofore all other Christian kings. For it is notoriously
the universal world that there be nine worthy and the best that ever were, That is to wit three paynims, three Jews, and three Christian mim. As for the paynims they were the
.
. .

voyage for gain, honor or wealth, that is certain; for then the hope of all such things was dead. I came to Your Highnesses with honest purpose and sincere zeal; and I do not lie. I humbly beseech Your Highnesses that, if it
please
will

known through

help

God to remove me hence, you me to go to Rome and on


16.

other pilgrimages.

Hector of Troy the second Alexander the Great; and the third Julius Caesar. And as for the three the first was Duke Joshua Jews ... the second David and the
first
.
.

LEONARDO DA VINCI
1452-1519
Iron rusts from disuse, stagnant water loses its purity, and in cold weather becomes frozen: even so does inaction sap the vigors of the mind.

third Judas Maccabacus the said Incarnation have


.

And
of
.
.

sith

been three

noble

Christian

men ...
.

whom
.

was first the noble Arthur. The second was Charlemagne and the third and last was Godfrey of Bouil.
.

lon.

Notebooks

[c.

1500]

Le Mortc
[1485] by
fc.

fArthur.

Preface

Whoever

in

discussion adduces au-

WII.UAM CAXTON
first

thority uses not intellect

but memory.
16.

2422-1491], the

Eng-

lish printer

ality.
1

Intellectual passion drives out sensuJ6,


Translated by MILTON ANASTOS. X

alry,

For herein may be seen noble chivcourtesy, humanity, friendliness,


Grail

*The Holy

74

MALORY
hardiness,
love,

friendship,

cowardice,

murder, hate,

virtue,

and

sin.

Do

after

the good and leave the evil, and it shall bring you to good fame and renown. Le Morte d' Arthur, preface

Wherefore I liken love nowadays unto summer and winter; for like as the one is hot and the other cold, so fareth
love nowadays; therefore all ye that
lovers call

be

Whoso

pulleth out this sword of this


is

stone and anvil, of all England.

rightwise king born 16. bk. I, ch. 5

unto your remembrance the month of May, like as did Queen Guenever, for whom I make here a little mention, that while she lived she was a true lover, and therefore she had
a

And with that the king saw coming toward him the strangest beast that ever he saw or heard of; so the beast went to the well and drank, and the noise was in the beast's belly like unto
the questing of thirty couple hounds; but all the while the beast drank there was no noise in the beast's belly: and
therewith the beast departed with a great noise, whereof the king had great marvel. Pellinore, that time Iking,
.

good end.

Le Morte
bk.

d'

Arthur,

XVIII, ch. 25
you
it is

And
well

my

therefore, said the king, wit heart was never so heavy as

now, and much more I am sorrier for my good knights' loss than for the loss of my fair queen; for queens I might have enow, but such a fellowship of good knights shall never be together in

followed the questing beast.

no company.
I

16.

XX,

16.

19
shall curse

you with book and bell


16.

In the midst of the lake Arthur was ware of an arm clothed in white samite, that held a fair sword in that hand,

and candle. 1

XXI,

Through

this

man

[Launcelot]

and

16.25
Always Sir Arthur lost so much blood it was marvel he stood on his feet, but he was so full of knighthood that knightlv he endured the pain. 16. IV, 9
that

[Guenever] hath all this war been wrought, and the death of the most noblest knights of the world; for through our love that we have loved together is my most noble lord skin.
16. 9

me

What, nephew,
wind
in that door?

said the king, is the * 16. VII, 34


is

For as well as I have loved thee, mine heart will not serve me to see thee, for through thee and me is the flower of
kings and knights destroyed.
16.
visage,

The
sorrow

joy of love thereof,

too short, and the

Then

Sir

Launcebt saw her


greatly,

and

what

cometh
16.

but he wept not

but sighed.
16. 11

thereof, dureth over long.


It is his

X, 56

day. of

I6.yo

Thou
that

Sir

thou

Launcelot, there thou liest, were never matched of

The month

May

was come, when

earthly knight's hand.

And thou were

lusty heart beginneth to blossom, every ' and to bring forth fruit; for like as herbs and trees bring forth fruit and flourish in May, in likewise every lusty heart that is in any manner a lover, springeth and flourisheth in lusty deeds.

For it givcth unto all lovers courage, that lustv month of May.
16.

the courteoust knight that ever bare shield. And thou were the truest friend to thy lover that ever bestrad horse. And thou were the truest lover of a sinful man that ever loved woman. And thou were the kindest man that ever struck with sword. And thou were the
l The reference is to the ceremony of excommunication, current since the eighth century, performed with bell, book, and candle.

XVIII, 2?

Sec Shakespeare, p.

See Shakespeare, p. 236*).

MALORY
came among goodliest person that ever And thou were the press of knights. meekest man and the gentlest that ever ate in hall among ladies. And thou were to thy mortal foe the sternest
knight that ever put spear in the
rest.

MACHIAVELLI

Our
This

plesance here
false

is all

vain glory,
transitory.

world

is

but

Lament

for the

Makers,

sr.

DESIDERIUS ERASMUS
1465-1536
alone that stays the fugue of Youth "and beats off louring Old
It is folly

Le Morte d' Arthur, bk. XXI, ch. 13

JOHN SKELTON
I say,

Age,

The

Praise of Folly [2509]

1460-1529 thou mad March hare. 1


Replication Against Certain Young Scholars

c.

They may
six

hundred

with an army of syllogisms; and if I do not


attack

me

recant, they will proclaim

me

a heretic. 16.

A peck of troubles.
Apothegms
[1542]

He

2 ruleth all the roost.

Why Come
The wolf from

Ye Not
3

to Court,

I 198
the door.
Ife.

FERNANDO DE ROJAS
c.

1531

Old proverb says, That bird is not honest That filleth his own nest4

Goods which
goods.

1465 -c. 1538 arc not shared are not

La
use of riches
is

Celestijia, act I

The

better than their


Ife.
is

Poems Against Garnesche


Maid, widow, or wife.
Philip Sparrow

possession.

II

The first step towards madness think oneself wise.


Riches do not

to
Ib.

make one

rich
Ib.

but

WILLIAM DUNBAR
c.

busy.

IV

1465-0. 1530
art the flower of Cities

London, thou
all.

London,

refrain

No one is so old that he cannot live yet another year, nor so voting that he Ift. cannot die today.

Gem

of all joy, jasper of jocundity.


Ib. st. 3

When God

wounds from on high he


remedy.
closes,
Ift.

will follow witli the

When

one door

fortune will
Ib.

Timor Mortis conturbat me. 5 Lament for the Makers**


(Makaris)
l

usually open another.

XV

[c.

1508] refrain
JOHN HRYWOOD,

Mad

as

March
pt. rost,

hare.
',

Proverbs [1546],

NICCOL6 MACHIAVELLJi
There
take in
1

ch.

Rule the

JOHN HEVWOOD, Proverbs


rost.

[1546], pt. I, ch.

5 Her that ruled the

THOMAS HKYWOOD,

History of Women [ed. 16x4] Rules the roast. JONSON, CHAPMAN, MARSTON,

1469-1527 nothing more difficult to hand, more perilous to conduct,


is

Eastward

Ho

[1605], act

Kvcry

Country
c*cl.]

hath

it*

MachiavrI,
fiftf*].
/>,

.Sm
a./

sc.

ii

woolfe from the durrc. JOHN HEYWOQD, Proverbs [1546], pt. 11, ch. 7
the
*

*To Kecpc

THOMAS BROWNK, Rdi%w Mfdici


[Everyman

It is a foul bird that filleth his

JOHN HEYWOOD, Proverbs [1546], * Fear of Death hath me in thrall.


6

own nest. pt. H, ch. 5

Out of his surname they have coined an epithet for a knave, and out of his Ohmthn name a synonym for the Devil, MACAULAY,
Machiavelli [ 181*7] Sec Butler, p. jjjjja.

Makers: poets.

MACHIAVELLI

more uncertain in its success, than to take the lead in the introduction of a new order of things.
or

cannot be depended upon in time of The Prince, ch. 17 adversity.


prince being thus obliged to know to act as a beast must imitate the fox and the lion, for the lion cannot protect himself from traps, and the fox
well

The Prince*

ch. 6

how

From
it

this arises

the question whether

better to be loved rather than feared, or feared rather than loved. It


is

cannot defend himself

might perhaps be answered that we should wish to be both: but since love and fear can hardly exist together, if we must choose between them, it is far safer to be feared than loved. 2 16. 8

One must
nize
traps,

therefore

from wolves. be a fox to recoglion

and

to

frighten
16.

wolves.

When
their

honor

The chief new as well

foundations of all states, as old or composite, are

men live

their property nor touched, the majority of 16. 19 content.

neither
is

good laws and good arms; and as there cannot be good laws where the state is not well armed, it follows that where they are well armed they have good
laws.
16. 12

There are three classes of intellects: one which comprehends by itself; another which appreciates what others comprehend; and a third which neither comprehends by itself nor by the showing of others; the lent, the second
useless.
first is
is

prince should therefore have no other aim or thought, nor take up any other thing for his study, but war and
its
is

the most excelgood, the third is


16.

22

organization and discipline, for that the only art that is necessary to one
16.

no other way of guarding oneself against flattery than by letting


is

There

who commands.

14

Among
despised.

other evils which being unit

men understand that they will not offend you by speaking the truth; but when everyone can tell you the truth,
you
lose their respect.
16.
is

armed brings you,

causes you to

be
16.

23

Where
difficulties

the willingness

great, the

But

my

intention

being

to

write

cannot be

great.

16.

26

something of use to those who understand, it appears to me more proper to go to the real truth of the matter than

and many have imand principalities agined republics which have never been seen or known
to its imagination;

God is not willing to do everything, and thus take away our free will and that share of glory which belongs to
us.

16.

Whoever
give that
it

to exist in reality; for


far

how we

live

is

so

laws,

removed from how we ought to live, that he who abandons what is done for what ought to be done, will rather
bring about his
ervation.

all

found a state and must start with assuming men arc bad and ever ready to
desires to

display their vicious nature, they may find occasion for it.

whenever

own

ruin than his pres16.

Discourse

Upon

the First
I,

Ten
ch. 3

15

Books of Livy, bk.

The

prince

who

relies

upon

their

The

1 people resemble a wild beast,

words, without having otherwise provided for his security, is ruined; for friendships that are won by awards, and not by greatness and nobility of soul, although deserved, yet arc not real, and
i

which, naturally fierce and accustomed to live in the woods, has been brought
up, as it were, in a prison and in servitude, and having by accident got its liberty, not being accustomed to search
for
its

Translated by W. K. MARRIOTT. Sec Accius, p. logb.

food,

and not knowing where to

Horace, p. isga, and note.

177

MACHIAVELLI
conceal itself, easily becomes the prej of the first who seeks to incarcerate i
again.

MORE

SIR

THOMAS MOREi
1478-1555
itself
is

Discourse

Upon

the First
bk.
I,

Ten
16

They wonder much


which
should
in

Books of Livy,

to hear that gold, so useless a


thing,

ch.

CHARLES
This
is

VIII

1470-1498
our gracious
will. 1

everywhere so much esteemed, that even men for whom it was made, and by whom it has its value, should yet be thought of less value than

be

it is.

Royal Order of March 12, 1497

Utopia [1516].

Of

Jewels and

Wealth

NICHOLAS COPERNICUS
1

They have no
for they consider

lawyers

among them,
is

them

as a sort of peoit

473" 1 543
Sun him-

Finally
self at

we

shall place the

ple whose profession matters.

to disguise

the center of the Universe. All is suggested by the systematic procession of events and the harmony of the whole Universe, if only we face the facts, as they say, "with both eyes
this

fb.

Of Lmv and
Magistrates

open."

De

Revolutionibus Coelestium

Orbium

Plato by a goodly similitude declareth, why wise men refrain to meddle in the commonwealth. For when they see the people swarm into the streets/ and
daily

LUDOVICO ARIOSTO
Nature made him, and then broke
the mold.8

wet to the skin with rain, and yet cannot persuade them to go out of the rain, they do keep themselves within their houses, seeing they cannot remedy

the folly of the people. 2 Ib. Concerning the Best State of a Commonwealth

Orlando Furioso [1532], canto X, st. 84

little

wanton money, which burned

out the bottom of his purse. Works [c. 1550], p. 195

MICHELANGELO
(BUONARROTI)
1474-1564
marble wastes, the more the statue grows. Sonnet
the

Tins

is

a fair tale of a tub told of his

election.8

Confutation of Tyndale's

The more
If it

Answers
For

(15:32)

men

use,

if

be true that any beautiful thing the pure and just desire of man from earth to God, the eternal fount of Sonnet all, such I believe my love.
raises

turn, to write it in doth us a good turn


dust. 4

have an evil marble: and whoso


tltcv

we

write

it

in

Richard 117 and His Miserable

End
i

The power

[2543!

of one fair face

love sublime, for it heart from low desires.


I

makes my has weaned my Sonnet


God's peculiar
Ib.

live

and

love

in

light.
1

Canonized by Pope Piui Xt [xgss]. Sec Robert Whittiwon, f>, 7#a, 8 In the modern phraur, "not wmo enough to come in out of the rain." *A tale of a tub fe a cock-and-bull ory. Jonson used it a* the title of a comedy [1655].

and Swift bon plaisir. * Translated by JOHN F. DOBSON. 8 Natura il fece, e poi ruppe la stampa.
Tel
est notre
*

a the title of a satire [1696], See Sophocles, p. 8ja, and note. Words writ in water*. Gcoitcx CHAPMAN

See Byron, p.

559-c- 16154], Revtng* far Honor, act, V, sc. ii L'injur* se grave en tt&ai: ct le blenfait

178

MORE
See

LUTHER

me
I

safe

up:

for

my
of

coming

down,

can shift for myself. On ascending the scaffold.


History

A mighty fortress our God, A bulwark never failing.


is

From

FROUDE,

England

[1856-1870]
This hath not offended the king. As he drew his beard aside upon placing his head on the block. From BACON, Apothegms, no. 22

Our helper He amid the flood Of mortal ills prevailing. 1 Hymn, Ein' Feste Burg

[1529]

can only be taught by the rod and with blows will not lead to much good; they will not remain pious any longer than the rod is behind them. The Great Catechism. Second

What

ROBERT WHITTINTON
c.

Command
Peace
tice;
is

[1529]

1480-0. 1530
a

more important than all jusand peace was not made for the

More

is

man
I

of angel's wit and

singular learning;

know

not his fellow.

sake of justice, but justice for the sake On Marriage [1530] of peace.

For where
lowliness

is

the

man

of that gentleness,

time requireth, a man of marvelous mirth and pastimes; and sometimes of as sad
affability?

and

And

as

must
die.

Justice is at last
is

come

temporary thing that to an end; but the

conscience

eternal

and

will

never
Ib.

a gravity; a

man

for all seasons. 2

Passage composed for schoolboys to put into Latin

Superstition, idolatry,

and hypocrisy

have ample wages, but truth goes a-Table Talk [1509], 53 begging.

MARTIN LUTHER
1483-1546 were an art to overcome heresy with fire, the executioners would be the most learned doctors on earth.
If it

For where God built a church, there 2 the Devil would also build a chapel Thus is the Devil ever God's ape.
. .
.

Ib.

67

To
Here
I

the Christian Nobility of the German States [1520]


I

is the greatest blasphemy God, and the highest idolatry upon earth, an abomination the like of which has never been in Christendom since

The Mass

of

cannot do otherwise. 3 Speech at the Diet of Worms, April 18, 1521


stand,

the time of the Apostles.

Ib.

171

There

is

no more

lovely,

friendly and

The mad mob does not ask how it could be better, only that it be different. And when it then becomes worse,
must change again. Thus they get bees for flies, and at last hornets for
it

charming relationship, communion or company than a good marriage. 16. 292


*

Ein' feste

ein gute

Er

hilft

burg is unser Gott, wehr und waffen. uns frei aus aller not,

bees.

Whether
s'cscrit

Soldiers

Can

Also

Be

in a State of
en 1'onde [An injury
benefit
[c.
is is

Grace [1526]
water].

engraved in metal,
in

itzt hat betroffen. Translated by FREDERICK HENRY HEDGE [1853]. Great God there is no safety here below; Thou art my fortress, thou that seem'st my foe. FRANCIS QUARLES [1592-1644], Divine Poems

die uns

but

written

JFAN

See Psalm 46:1, p. iga.

BKRTAUT

1611] All your better deeds shall be in water writ, BEAUMONT AND FLETCHER, but this in marble. Philaster [1620], act V, sc. Hi
l

Where God hath a temple, the Devil will ROBERT BURTON, Anatomy of have a chapel. Melancholy [1621-1651], pt. Ill, sec. 4, memfl

ber

i,

subsec, i

Sir

Thomas More.
ich, ich

Sec Ben Jcmson, p. ^o^b.

Hier steh'
Inscribed

kann nicht anders.


at

on

his

monument

Worms.

sooner is a temple built to God but the GEORGE HERDevil builds a chapel hard by. BERT, Jacula Prudentum [1640] Sec Defoe, p.

No

179

LUTHER
theologian is born by living, nay not by thinkdying and being damned,
ing, 6 or speculating. 6 reading,

RABELAIS

ST.
Teach

IGNATIUS LOYOLAi
1491-1556
us,

Table Tdk, 352

good Lord, to serve Thee


deservest:

as

Thou

Reason
faith has:

is

it

the greatest enemy that never comes to the aid of

spiritual things,

but

more frequently
all

than not

the divine struggles against


that
Ib.

To To To To

Word,

treating with contempt emanates from God.

and not to count the cost; and not to heed the wounds; toil and not to seek for rest; labor and not ask for any reward Save that of knowing that we do Thy
give
fight
will.

353

Prayer for Generosity [1548]

If I had heard that as many would set on me in Worms as there are tiles on the roofs, I should none the less have ridden there. Luthers Sammtliche Schriften

devils

PHILIPPUS AUREOLUS

PARACELSUS
c.

1493-1541

[1745],

XVI, 14

Every experiment is like a weapon which must be used in its particular

remains a fool his whole life long Who loves not women, wine, and Attributed * song.
It

He

way
strike.

spear

to

thrust,

club to
a man when to

who
ion.

Experimenting requires knows when to thrust and

strike, 2

makes a

difference

whose ox
9

is

each according to need and fashChirurgi$che Bucher [1605]


I

Works [1854

ed.]

vol.

LXII,

FRANCIS
All
is

OF FRANCE

P-449

1494*1547
lost save

honor.8

HUGH LATIMER
1485-1555
Play
the
shall this

Letter to his mother after defeat


at Pavia,

February 23, 1525

man, Master Ridley; we day light such a candle, by

FRANCOIS RABELAIS
c.

1494-1553

God's grace, in England, as I trust shall never be put out. 8 Addressed to Nicholas Ridley
[1500-1555] as they -were being burned alive at Oxford for heresy, October 16, 1555.* From R. GREEN, A Short History /.
of the English People , ch. 7
i First

Break the bone and suck out the substantific marrow.


Garganttta and Pantagrud* hk. I [2532], prologue

To

laugh

is

10.

proper Rabelais to the Reader


. . .

to

man. 5

6 Appetite comes with eating but the thirst goes away with drinking.
1

mentioned in Wandsbecker Bothcn, no.


is

16. ch. 5

75
*

This

the farmer, included in

the moral of the fable of the lawyer, and the fanner's ox, which was

Founder of the Society of Jesus. Translated by HENRY M. PAcnmn.

NOAH WEBSTER* American

Spelling
i,

Book

[1802], entitled The Partial Judge. See 11 Esdras 14:25, p. 360, and note

p.

98 ib.

*See Latimer and Ridley in the might Of Faith stand coupled for a common

flight!

WORDSWORTH
Ridley

[1770-1850], Ecclesiastical Sonnets, pt. 11, no. 34, Latimer and

perdu for* I'hcmnrur. words writtrn were: De toutes choses ne m'eat demeur4 <{ue 1'honneur et la vie qui cst saulv6. The letter is In DULAURK, Histoirc Civile, Physique et Morale de Paris [18*1-18*5]. * Translated by SIR THOMAS URQIMART and PETKR ANTHONY MOTTKUX [1655-1694]. B Pour ce que rire eat Jc propre d<* t'hotnmc. My appetite comes to me while eating. MONTAIGNE, Essays [1580-1595], ///, 9
est

Tout

The

actual

ISO

RABELAIS

War
of

begun without good provision


for going through

money beforehand

that has patience anything.

He

may compass

with

it is but as a breathing of strength and blast that will quickly pass away. Coin is the sinews of war. 1 Gargantua and Pantagruel bk. I,

Gargantua and Pantagruel bk. IV, Rabelais to the Reader,

We
deed. 1
Devil.*

Rableais to the Reader, ch. 46

0/1.48 will take the good will for the


16.

be able to rule over others, that have not full power and
shall
I

How

49
the

Speak

the

truth

and

shame

command

of myself? 2

16. 52

entereth not into a malicious mind, and science without conscience is but the ruin of the soul. 16. II [1534], 8

Do what Wisdom

thou

wilt. 8

16.

57

16. [1552], author's prologue Plain as a nose in a man's face. 8

16.

Like hearts of oak. 4

16.
[critics]
.
. .

Go
you

hang

yourselves

shall never

want rope enough. 5


16.

Subject to a kind of disease, which at that time they called lack of money. 4 16. II, 16

Looking

as like

...

as

one pea does


16. ch, 2 16.
us.

like another. 6

So much is a teems himself.

man

And
It is

worth

as

he
16.

es-

7 thereby hangs a tale. meat, drink, and cloth to

29
1
1

A good
Then

16. 7
BARTAS, Divine Weeks and Works [1578], Second Week, Third Day, pt. II You must take the will for the deed. SWIFT, Polite Conversation [1738], Dialogue a
*

crier of

green sauce.

16. 3

The

will for

deed I do accept.

Du

I began to think that it is true which is commonly said, that very the one half of the world knoweth not 16. 32 how the other half liveth. 5

While you

live,

tell

truth

and shame the

This

flea

which

have in mine

ear.

16. Ill [1545],

SHAKESPEARE, Henry IV, pt. lt act III, sc. i, I. 58 I'd tell the truth, and shame the devil.
devill

SAMUEL JOHNSON; from BOSWELL, jBoswelVs Life


of Johnson [1791],
cd.]
vol.
I,

Oh
those

thrice

and

four
16.

times

happy

p.

460

[Everyman

who

plant cabbages!

IV

[1548], 18

Which was
1

7 performed to a T.

Truth being truth, Tell it and shame the devil. BROWNING, The Ring and the Book [1868-1869], III, The Other Half-

16.41
Sec Bion,
is
j>.

Rome
9

H>4b,

and

note.

See Shakespeare, p. asob. As clear and as manifest as the nose in a man's

8 He*

himself,

most powerful who has power over SKNX<:A [8 B.C.-A.D. f>$] Epistles 90, 34

face.
*

ROBERT BURTON, Anatomy of Melancholy

[163*1-1651], pt. Ill, sec. 3,

member

4,

sub sec. /

See Mansingcr, p. 3150. * Fais ce quc voudraa,

See Garrick, p. 4$9a.


to

*Sec Shakespeare,

p. S4ib.

Or that eternal want of pence, Which vexes public men.


TENNYSON, Will Waterproof's Lyrical Monologue [1842], $t. 6
*Se<' Herbert, p, j^fja,

They were suffered they had haltered FULLER, The Historic of


till

have rope enough

THOMAS themselves. the Holy Warre [1639],


he'll

bk. 5, ch. 7

Give a
himself.

man enough rope and


is

hang

As lyke as one pease


iSgb,

to another.

Proverb LYLY,

See Montaigne, p.
7

and Voltaire,

p.

They
could manage this matter to a T. STBRNK, Tristram Shandy, bk, II [1760], ch. 5 You sec they'd have fitted him to a T. SAMUKL JOHNSON; from BOSWELL, Life [1791] You will find it shall echo my speech to a T. THOMAS MOORK [1779-1852], Address for the Opening of the New Theatre of St. Stephen

say

we

are

We

Almost as like as eggs. SHAKESPEARE, The Winter's Tale


[1608-1611], act /, sc. ii, I. i)o like another. CERVANTES, Don Quixote, pt. 11 [1615], bk. lll> ch. X4

As one egg

is

IV,

''Also in Shakespeare, i f 60, p, *igb.

Taming of the Shrew

181

RABELAIS
I

HEYWOOD
While between two
to the ground. 1
stools

am

draw the

going to seek a grand perhaps; 1 curtain, the farce is played.


Alleged
last -words.

my
I,

tail

go

From

Proverbs, pt.

ch. 2

MOTTEUX,

Life of Rabelais

He

that will not

when he may,
I6.
3

JOHN HEYWOOD2
c.

When he would he shall have nay. 2


The
fat is in the fire.
16.

1497 -c. 1580

All a green willow, willow, willow, 3 All a green willow is garland.

When
The

the sun shineth,

make

hay.
Ib.

my

The Green Willow


The
wealth is loss of dirt, As sages in all times assert; The happy man's without a shirt. 4 Be Merry Friends
loss of
slide,
5 let

tide tarrieth

no man.3

16.
Ib.

Fast bind, fast find. 4

And

Let the world

the world go;

fig for care,

and

while I at length debate and beat the bush, There shall step in other men and catch the birds.* Ih.

a fig for woel

If I can't pay,

And

why I can owe, death makes equal the high and


16.

Wedding is destiny, And hanging likewise.


Happy man, happy
1

Ifc.

low.

dole. 7
situ

Ib.

Haste maketh waste.


Proverbs [1546], pt.
I, eft.

Between two

stools

one
f

on the ground.
Bodleian
[c.

2
*

Proverbcs del

itain t

MS

Good

to

be merry and

wise.

16.

H* that will not when he itwy, When he will he thai have nay,
I

Beaten with his

own

rod,

16.
16.
<

ROBERT BURTON. Anatomy


choly (1681-1051]* ber y t subscc, 5
/;f,

<>/

Melan-

lilt tec. a,

Look
1

ere ye leap. 7

Sec Chaucer,

p. ittKb.

Je m'en vais chercher un grand peut-trc;

Time nor

tide

tarrieth

no man.

tircz le ridcau, la farce est joude.

GRKFNF, Disputations

(ityjaj

His religion, at best, is an anxious wish; like that of Rabelais, "a great Perhaps." GARLYLK,
Essays, Burns.

Hoist up sail while g*k doth laic, Tide and wind may no nun's pleasure. Roawtr $0mtiWM,t., St. Peter's
C.o

The grand perhaps. Blougram's Apology


fl

BROWNING,
first

Bishop

m ptu hit
tide.
<

Nac man tan

tcthrr

time or

i *$ 5 ] \ BURNS,

printed in the earliest collection of English colloquial sayings. The selection here given is from the edition of 1874 (a reprint of 1598), edited by JULIAN SHARMAN. See also Oxford
1546,
is

JoHN HEYWOOD'S Proverbs,

Tarn O'Shanttr [1787] * Dry sun, <hy wind;


Safe hind, safe find.

THOMAS
of

Tiwrit.

.HI

nttnttrrtl

frrintt

Good Husbandry

Dictionary of English Proverbs, compiled by WILLIAM G. SMITH and revised by PAW, HARVKY

Fast hind, fast find;

[and ed., 1948], and A Dictionary of the Prmvrbs in English in the i6th and xyth Centuries, compiled by MORRIS
8

A proverb never
5 It

*ta!f in thrifty
,

SIIAKIJU*! Aftf

mi tut. Mrtrtmnt t>f Venue

The

earliest

PALMER THXKY [1950]. known of the "willow"

songs.

ihi

See Shakespeare, p. 2763, 4 This line is the theme of many poems. 5 Let the world slide. Townfley Mysteries
[14*0].

proverb whi<h Hrnry

is

rcpoiied

to have uttered at the *i*ge of Orleans: Shall I beat the bmh and another uke the hint?
ft

fif holt*

Let the world


8

slide.

SUAKESPKARE,

of the Shrew [1593-1594], Induction,

Taming
i,
I.

The Hanging and wiving KO bv demim. haui for Women [i^tj Murriage and hanging go by deitiny; macthc*
|,

sc.

arc

In

wikked haste

is

no

profit.

GHAUOIR,

Canterbury Tales
T

Thou

[c. 1387], Mtlibce, 2*40 shouldst have looked before thou hadst

made in heaven, Ronmi mny of M riant hoty [K>xi-%i mrmbtr f> xubstrf, 5 7 Happy man be hit dole,
t

/>/.

Ht'pioN, .Inut///, iw. a,


-

SHAKEN
},
f

ARI-,

leapt.

Ho

JONSON, CHAPMAN, MARSTON, Eastward

[1605], act V, sc. i See Samuel Butler, p. 3533.

art HI, Merry Wives of Windsor (ifkio-iffot sc. w I, 6ft and Winter's Talc [iOoc^-if}ti] act 1,
sc.
if,
/,

/6j

182

HEYWOOD
God never send'th mouth but he sendeth meat. 1
Proverbs,

Now
after

for

good
to

luck, cast

an old shoe
I,

me.
is

Proverbs, pt.

ch. 9
Ib.
fair

pt

I,

ch.

Better

bow than break.

hard beginning maketh a good


Ib. will to like, 2

It hurteth

not the tongue to give

ending.

words. 2

Ib.

Like

Ib.

Two

heads are better than one.


Ib.

When
larks.

the sky falleth

we

shall

have
16.

A short horse is soon curried.


Ib. 10

More
heart

frayd then hurt.


is

Ib.

Nothing

impossible to a willing
Ib.

To

tell tales

out of school.

Ib.

Let the world wag, and take mine Ib. 5 ease in mine inn.8

To hold with the hare and run with Ib. the hound.
Neither
fish

Hold

their noses to grindstone. 4


Ib.

nor

flesh,

nor good red


Ib.

herring.

A sleeveless errand. 5

Ib. 7

All

is

8 well that ends well.

Ib.

Reckoners without their host must Ib. 8 reckon twice. 6

Of
end, 4

good beginning cometh a good


Ib.

Cut my coat

after

my

cloth. 7

Ib.

When

the steed

is

The
1

nearer to the church, the further


Ib. 9

stable door. 5

stolen, shut the Ib.

from God. 8

Clod sendeth and giveth both mouth and the THOMAS TUSSER, Five Hundred Points meal,
of

in her
Ill

She looketh mouth.

as butter

would not melt


Ib.

Good Husbandry [1557] God sends meat, and the


JOHN TAYLOR, Works

Devil sends cooks.

weed groweth

fast.

Ib.

[1630], vol. //, p.

85

And he

The holy prophet Zoroaster said, The Lord who made thy teeth shall
i

hoc bread.

give Persian couplet


1

that strives to touch the starre, Oft stombles at a strawe. SPENSER, The Shepheardes Calender
C'579]' Jriy*
l-

97

Sec Homer, p. 65b.

Rather

to
is

bow than break

is

profitable;

"Like to like" is quoted by Aristotle in Rhetoric /, //, aj. See Robert Burton, p. 511 b. * Shall 1 not take mine ease in mine inn? SHAKKSPKARK, Henry IV\ pt. 1 [1597-1598],
act ///,
4

Humility
8

a thing commendable. of Cristyne [1590] Fair words never hurt the tongue. JONSON,

The Moral Proverbs

CHAPMAN, MARSTON, Eastward


sc. i

Ho

[1605], act
erit

IV>
[If

sc.

in,

I.

91
the

Si

finis
is

bonus
good,
[147*],

est,

hold one another's noses to the grindROBERT BURTON, Anatomy of Melstone hard. ancholy [6i-if>si], pt, in, sec. i, member 3 8 Chaucer and Shakespeare use the phrase. Sending every one of her children upon some she terms it. sleeveless errand, as JOSEPH

And

end

all

will

totum bonum be good].


67

Gesta

Rornanorum
t

tale

See Shakespeare, Troilus and Cressida, act IV, sc. v I. 223, p. *6gb, and All's Well That Ends Well, act IV, sc. iv, I. 35, p. *7oa, and note. 'See Plato, p. 94*; Aristotle, p. g8b; and

AtmuoN, The Spectator, no. 47 [April


(referring to April

S4, 1711]

Horace, p. i$a.

He
7

rcckoneth
relic of

Fool errands) without his Hostesse,

Who
The

Love

that well his warke beginneth, rather a good cnde he winneth.

knoweth no

LYLY, Kuphues [1579] the Sumptuary Laws. One of the earliest [1530] instances occurs in the interlude of Godly Queene Hester. *Qui est pres dc I'lglise cst souvcnt loin de

lawcs.

GOWER, Confessio Amantis


[c. 1586-1390] cheval est enable dounke ferme fols Testable [When the horse has been stolen, the Les Proverbes del shuts the stable]. fool
1

Quant

Ic

Dicu (He who is near the Church is often far Les Proverbes Communs [c. 1500] from God]. To Kcrke the narrc, from God more farre, Has bcnc an old sayd sawe.

Vilain

[c.

1303]

Ewyl weed ys sonc y-growc.


[c.

MS

Harleian

1490]

(note continues p. 184}

L8 3

HEYWOOD
It is a

That

is

dear collop cut out of th' own

Better
flesh. 1
I,

is

half a loaf than

no bread.
I,

Proverbs, pt.

ch.
1

u
Ib.

Proverbs, pt.

ch. 10

Nought venture nought have.


Children and fools cannot
lie. 2

Beggars should be no choosers.


Ib.

Merry

as a cricket.

Ib. 1

Ib.

To

rob Peter and pay Paul. 2

Ib.

All

is fish

that

comcth

to net. 3
Ib.

A man

may

well bring a horse to the

water,

Who

is

worse shod than the shoe4

But he cannot make him drink without Ib. he will.8


Kinde
4

maker's wife?

Ib.

One good

turn asketh another.


Ib.

will creep

where

it

may

not
Ib.

go.

The

cat

would eat
feet. 5

fish,

and would
Ib.

not wet her

A dog hath a day. A hair of the dog that bit


But

Ib.
us. 5

Ib.

Rome

was not built in one day.


Ib.

friend

is

in deed, never known

till

man

have
Ib.

Ye have many

strings to your

bow. 6
ib.

need. 6

New broom
Burnt child

swecpeth clean.
Ib. II,
fire
i

Children learn to creep ere they can


learn to go.
Great weeds do grow apace. Richard III [1595-1593], act II,

Ib.
SHAKESPEARE,
sc,

drcadcth.

7 8

Ib. 2

There

is

no

fool to the old fool.

w,

/.

13

An ill weed grows apace. An Humorous Day's Mirth


1

GEORGE CHAPMAN,
[1599]

Ib.

God knows thou

art a collop of

my
/,

flesh.

All
V,

is

not

gospel

that

thou

dost
Ib.

SHAKESPEARE, Henry sc. iv, I. 18


8

VI

[1591],

pt,

act

speak.

Rob

Peter,

and pay Paul.

ROBERT BUR-

A
yOHa.
*

fool's bolt

is

soon shot. 9
i(ir,a

IbCHbeii,

3
p.

TON, Anatomy of Melancholy [1681-1651], Democritus to the Reader Give not Saint Peter so much, to leave Saint Paul nothing. GEORGE HERBERT, Jacula Prudenturn [1640] "To rob Peter and pay Paul" is said to have had its origin in, the reign of Edward VI when the lands of St. Peter at Westminster were appropriated to raise
Paul's in London.

'See Chaucer, p.

ami

W.
and

S.

T!s an

old saw, Children

fooles spcakc*
to
net. --

true.

I/vtY,
fish

Rndymitm
they get

"All's

\ ir<M | that romefh

TUSSKR,

Five

Hundred Point*

of

(ItMtd

Hus-

money

for the repair of St.


is:

The French form


saint Pierre
3

of the proverb

Decouvrir

pour couvrir saint Paul.

will drink

You may bring a horse to the river, but he when and what he plcascth. GKORCK HERBERT, Jacula Prudentum [1640] * You know that love Will creep in service when it cannot go.
5

bandry [1557], February Alntwrt * Him that makci shoe* go barefoot himself. ROBKRT BURTON, Anatomy of Melancholy [i(>ai -i()f,i], Democrihis to thr Header B Old receipt booki adviwrd that an inebriate should drink sparingly in the morning gome of the same kind of liquor which he had drunk
to excess
*

the night before. See Aristotle, p. <$a. 7 Brend child fur drcdth,

SHAKESPKARE, Two Gentlemen of Vcrona [1594-1595]* act IV, sc, ii, L ro Cat lufat visch, ac he nclc his feth wete.
[c.

Quoth Hendyng,
Proverbs of llendyn$,
8

MS
t

[c.

*S*o]

MS
6

Trinity College, Cambridge See Shakespeare, Macbeth 1,

1x50]

There is no foot like an otd fool. LVI.Y, Mother Bornbie [*5<)8], att lV xr.
in frequent une thereafter. Sottes bolt is tone ihotc*.

JOHN 11, and


<>j

Two

Laws

Rb. vii, 44, p. RICHARD HOOKKK, strings to his bow. Ecclesiastical of Polity, ok. V [1597], ch. ffo

Proverbs

Hendyng,

MS

[c.

1330]

184

HEYWOOD

A woman

hath nine

lives like a cat.

The more

the merrier.
Proverbs, pt. II, ch. 7

Proverbs, pt. II, ch. 4

A penny for your thought.


You cannot
trees.

Ib. for

It is better to

be
Ib.

see the

wood

the
16.

An old man's darling than a young man's


warling.

You

stand in your
tat.
1

own

light.

16.

Be the day never


Evermore
at
1

last

they

so long, ring to evenIb.

Tit for
2

Ib.
if

song.
cheese. 2
I

Three may keep counsel,


away.

two be
Ib. 5

The moon

is

made
side

of

green
Ib.

Small pitchers have wide

ears.3

know on which

my

bread

is

Ib.

buttered.

Ib.
th' ear.

Many hands make light work.


Out
sun. 4

Ib.

The wrong sow by

Ib. 9

of God's blessing into the

warm
Ib.

An
good.
8

ill

wind that bloweth no


I

man

to
Ib.

There
smoke. 5

is

no

fire

without

some
Ib.
Ib.
Ib.

For when took an ell. 4

gave you an inch, you


Ib.

A cat may look on a king.


Have ye him on the
6

hip.
of. 7

Would ye both eat your cake and Ib. have your cake? 5
Every
us
all.

Much

water goeth by the mill


Ib.

man

for himself

and God

for
Ib.

That the miller knoweth not

Though he
the poke. 7
i

love not to

buy the

He must
doth drive.

needs go

whom

the devil
Ib.

pig in Ib.

Set the cart before the horse,


is

Ib.

Be the day short or never so long, At length it ringeth to evensong.


Quoted
at the stake by
field

Two
away.

a corruption of Tant pour tant. may keep counsel when the third's

[1555]

(FoxE,

Book

George Tankerof Martyrs


the

[1563]* ch. 7)

SHAKESPEARE, Titus Andronicus [15931594], act IV, sc. it, I. 145 Three can hold their peace if two be away. GF.QROE HERBERT, Jacula Prudentum [1640] s The have ears. SHAKESPEARE, Pitchers
of the Shrew [i 593-1 594], act IV, sc. ivf 52, and Richard III [1598-1593], //, *v, $7 GEORGE wide ears. Little pitchers have

They wold make me believe that was made of grcene cheese. JOHN Pistle to the Christian Reader [15*9]
a *

FRITH,

moon A

It is

Taming
1.

Except wind stands as never it stood, an ill wind turns none to good. THOMAS TUSSER [15*4-1580], A

De-

HERBERT, Jacula Prudentum [1640] 4 Thou shalt come out of a warme sunne into Gods blessing. LYLY, Euphues [1579] Thou out of Heaven's benediction comest

Winds scription of the Properties of wind that profits nobody. 111 blows the SHAKESPEARE, King Henry VI [1591], pt. lllt act //, sc. t/> /. 55 Fatstaff. What wind blew you hither, Pistol?
Pistol
to good.

Not the

ill

wind which blows no man

To

the

warm

sun.

SHAKESPEARE,

King Lear [1605-1606],


act II, sc.
ii,
Z.

SHAKESPEARE, Henry

IV

168

There can no great smoke arise, but there must be some fire. LYLY, Euphues [1579]
7

See Shakespeare, p. *3*a. More water glideth by the mill Than wots the miller of. SHAKESPEARE, Titus Andronicus [15931594], act 11, sc.
i, I.

*Give an inch, JOHN WEBSTER [1580-16*5], Sir Thomas Wyatt have and cake eat "Wouldst thou both thy GEORGE HERBERT, The Size [1633] it?
Every Devil for
ber 3
7

pt. II, act V, sc. take an ell. he'll

[1597-1598]* iiif 1. 87

man
all.

for himself, his

own
sec.

ends,

the
of

ROBERT BURTON, Anatomy


i,

85 The miller sees not all the water that goes by his mill. ROBERT BURTON, Anatomy of Melancholy [16*1-1651], pt. Ill, subsec. t
sec.

Melancholy [16*1-1651], pt. Ill,

mem-

3t

member

4,

TUSSER, Five

For buying or selling of pig in a poke. Hundred Points of Good Hus-

bandry [1557], September Abstract

HEYWOOD
This hitteth the nail on the head.
Proverbs, pt. II, ch. 11
as

BRADFORD

SIR

THOMAS WYATT
c.

1503-1542

Enough

is

good

as a feast.

16.

JULIUS
d.

Forget not yet the tried intent Of such a truth as I have meant; My great travail so gladly spent, Forget not yet!

1555

Do
little

you not know, my son, with what is world the understanding

Forget Not Yet

ruled? 2

And

To

a Portuguese monk wfto sympathized with the Pope's burdens of office

wilt thou leave me thus? Say nay, say nay, for shame!

The Appeal

My

CHARLES
1500-1558

V3

Fortune hath somewhat the nature of a woman; if she be too much wooed,
she
is

the farther

off.

lute, awake! perform the last Labor that thou and I shall waste, And end that I have now begun; For when this song is sung and past, My lute, be still, for I have done. The Lover Complaineth the Unkindness of His Love

From FRANCIS BACON, Advancement of Learning, bk. II


Iron

They

flee

from

me

that sometime did

hand

in a velvet glove.

me seek.
The Lover Showcth How He Is Forsaken of Such a$ He Sometime Enjoyed

Attributed to Charles

by

THOMAS CARLYLE, Day Pamphlets, 11


I

Latter-

make war on the


Said

living,

not on the

dead.
advised to hang Luther's corpse on the gal-

JOHN KNOX
1505-1572

when

A man
1

with

God

is

lows [1546]

always in the

majority.

GREGORY
To
Quoted
in

XIII*

Inscription

on Reformation

Monument, Geneva,
zerland

1502-1585
the greater glory of God. 5

The Canons and


of

Decrees of the Council Trent [1542-1560]

JOHN BRADFORD
1510-1555
familiar story, that, on seeing evildoers taken to tlic place of execution,

FERDINAND
1503-1564
Let justice world perish.

The

he was wont to exclaim: "But

for

be

done,

though

the

From MANLIUS, Loci Communes, II, 290


l

there goes John Bradford/' is a universal tradition, which has overcome the lapse of time. 2

the grace of

God

biographical notice, Parker Society


edition,

Pope from 1550 to 1555. 2 An ncscis, mi fili, quantilla prudentia wun1

The Writings

of

John Bradford

dus regatur? a See Lomonosov, p. 4$4b, *Pope from 1572 to 1585, Ad maiorem Dei glorlam. Motto of the Society of Jesus.
o

Un homme

avcc Dicu cut toujours dans la

majority.

Fiat iustitia, et pereat

mundus.
p.

See Sir

Thomas Browne,

Sec Phillips, p. 6594, There but for the graar of God goes God. Anonymous saying, attributed to ORSON WEU.ES, among othcr$
*

l86

VAUX

RONSARD

SIR

THOMAS VAUX
alone;

MARY TUDOR
When
I

1510-1556 none is like Companion

am

Unto the mind


For

1516-1558 dead and opened, you

shall find "Calais" lying in

my

heart. 1

many
speech,

have

been

harmed

by

From HOLINSHED,

Chronicles

[1577], III, 1160

Through
I

thinking, few or none. Of a Contented Mind [1557]

loathe that I did love, In youth that I thought sweet,


I

AMBROISE PARt
1517-1590
treated him,

As time requires for my behove, Methinks they are not meet. The Aged Lover Renounceth
Love,
st.

God

cured him. 2
favorite saying

His

But

age, with his stealing steps, Hath claw'd me in his clutch. 1

JOACHIM DU BELLAY
1522-1560
France, mother of the and of laws.8
arts,

of arms,

RICHARD GRAFTON
d.

Les Regrets [1559],

IX

1572

Happy he who
voyage made.*

Thirty days hath November, April, June, and September, February hath twenty-eight alone, And all the rest have thirty-one. 2 Chronicles of England [1562]
1

like Ulysses a glorious Ib.

XXXI

PIERRE DE RONSARD
When
1524-1585 you are old, at evening candlelit,

Quoted

by

First
sc.
i,

Clown
I 77

in

SHAKESPEARE,

Hamlet, act V,

*Junius, Aprilis, Scptmq; Nouemq; triceno*, tTnum plus reliqui, Fcbrus tenet octo vicenos, At si bissextus fuerit supcradditur unus. WILUAM HAMUSON, Description of to HOLINSHED'S Britain, prefixed Chronicles [1577]

Beside the fire bending to your wool, Read out my verse and murmur, "Ronsard writ

This praise for "


tiful
c

me when

was beauI,

Thirty days hath September, April, June, and November, February has twenty-eight alone, All the rest have thirty-one;
Excepting leap year
that's

Sonnets pour Helene, The Ides are on The Nones the


besides

43

the time

the fifteenth day, seventh: all other

months

When

February's days are twenty-nine. The Return from Parnassus [1606]


i

Have two days


*

Thirty days hath September, April, June, and November; All the rest have thirty-one,
Excepting

less for Nones and Ides, Sec Browning, p. 665b.

Je

8
*

February alone,
twenty-eight, in fine,

Which hath but

le soignay, Dicu le gu6rit. France, mere des arts, des armes et des lois. Heureux qui, coramc Ulysse, a fait un beau

voyage.
B

Till leap year gives it twenty-nine. Common in the New England states

Quand vous

serez bien vieille,

au

soir

la

Fourth, eleventh, ninth, and sixth,

Thirty days to each affix; Kvery other thirty-one Kxotpt the second month alone. Common in Chester County, Pennsyl-

chandellc, Assisc aupres du feu, devidant et filant, IMrez, chantant mes vers, en vous 4merveillant:

"Ron sard me
belle."

c616brait

du temps que

j'&ais

Compare

vania, among the friends the old Latin class mnemonic:

In March, July, October, May,

Translated by HUMBERT WOLFE. See the adaptation by YEATS: When you are old and gray and full of sleep (p. 87Qb).

187

RONSARD
Live now, believe me, wait not
till

ELIZABETH

to-

GABRIEL MEURIER
1530-1601

morrow; Gather the roses of life today. 1 Sonnets pour H6l&ne,


Gather, gather your youth: Just like this flower, old age Your beauty will wither. 2

He who
I,

excuses himself accuses him-

43

self.

Tresor des Sentences

WILLIAM STEVENSON
Cassandre
I

Odes

J,

17.

c.

1530-1575

THOMAS TUSSER
c.

1524-1580
make good
a year.

At Christmas play and


cheer,

cannot cat but little meat, My stomach is not good; But sure I think that I can drink With him that wears a hood. Gammer Gurton's Needle
[c.

1573!,

drinking song,

For Christmas comes but once

act II

Hundred Points of Good Husbandry [1557], The Farmer's

Daily Diet

Back and side go bare, go bare, Both foot and hand go cold;
But,
belly,

God
it

send thec good

ale

Such mistress, such Nan, Such master, such man.3


16. April's Abstract

enough,

Whether

be new or old.
16. refrain

Sweet April showers

Do spring May flowers.


16. April's

HENRI ESTIENNE
Husbandry
If

1531-1598
youth but knew, and old age only Lc$ Pr4miccs [1594] could. 2

Who goeth
Tis merry

a-borrowing
16. June's Abstract

Goeth a-sorrowing.
in hall

God
lamb.*

tempers the wind to the shorn


Ib.

Where

beards

wag

all.

16. August's Abstract

ELIZABETH
The
to
all;

PIETER BRUEGEL
c.

use of the sea neither can a

and
title

air is

common

to the ocean

1525-1569
is

Because the world


I

so faithless,

go

my way in mourning,
Inscription in

MOLIKRE, The

belong to any people or private persons, forasmuch as neither nature nor public use and custom permit any possession
thereof.

Misanthrope [1568]
iVivcz, si m'en croyez, n'attemlez A. demain: Cucillcz des aujourcThui Ics roses dc la vie. See Horace, p. ma; Spenser, p. ooaj and
Herrick, p. $aob.
3

To

the Spanish Ambassador [2580]


is

My

care

like

my shadow
flies

in

the

sun Follows me flying


it.

when

pursue

Comme
8

Cucillcz, cucillcz votrc jcuncssc: a ccttc flcur, la viclllcssc

On
1

the departure of Alcnqon

Fera tcrnir votrc bcaute". Tel maltre, tel valet. Attributed to CHEVALIER BAYARD by Cimber. * Merry swithe it is in hallc, When the beards 'wavcth allc. Life of Alexander [1312] 8 dat de werelt is soe ongctru

Qui

s'excusc, s'accuso.

Om

Dacr

om gha

ic in

den

ru,

See Shakespeare, pp. 831 st ant! 2373. a Si jeuncwre Jtavait, *i virUlrvvr fKmvair. Translated by NofcBftin (it'lFRMAN. * Dicu mcsurc Ic froUl i la brcbis tomluc, Sec Laurence Sterne, p.

l88

ELIZABETH

MONTAIGNE

I know I have the body of a weak and feeble woman, but I have the heart and stomach of a king, and of a king of England too; and think foul scorn that Parma or Spain, or any prince of Eu-

And what
That
I

believe,

the word did make and take it. 1


S.

it,

From

CLARKE, Marrow of EcHistory


[ed.

clesiastical

pt. II, Life of

Queen

1675], Elizabeth

rope, should dare to invade the borders of my realm. Speech to the troops at Tilbury

MICHEL EYQUEM DE MONTAIGNE^


Man
fickle,

on the approach
[1588]

of the

Armada
in sooth is a marvelous vain, and unstable subject.

I am your anointed Queen. I will never be by violence constrained to do


I thank God I am endued with such qualities that if I were turned out of the Realm in my petticoat I were

Essays* bk. I [1580], ch.

anything.

The
is

thing of which

have most

fear

fear. 4

Ib. 17

He who
would
live.

able to live in any place in Christen-

at the

should teach men to die same time teach them to


Ib.

dom.

19

From CHAMBERLIN,
I will

Sayings of Queen Elizabeth

would
I

let

death

seize

whilst

am

setting

my cabbages.

upon me 6
Ib.

make you

shorter

by the head.
Ib.

20

The daughter of debate, that eke disIb. cord doth sow. 1


[To the Countess of Nottingham]

value of life lies not in the of days, but in the use we make length of them: a man may live long, yet get
little

The

from

life.

Whether you

find satistale

God may

forgive you, but

never can.
History of

faction in life depends not of years, but on your will.

on your

Ib.

From HUME,

My desire is
1

therefore that the parent


direc-

England Under the House


of Tudor, vol. II, ch, 7

be very circumspect in choosing a


Answer
on

Though God hath raised me high, yet this I count the glory of my crown: that I have reigned with your loves. The Golden Speech [1601]
Semper cadem [Ever the samel. Motto
I

being asked her opinion of Christ's presence in the Sacrament, "Translated by CHARLES COTTON [1656-1687], revised by HAZLITT and WIGHT. *This book of Montaigne the world has endorsed by translating it into all tongues. EMERSON, Representative Men [1850], Montaigne *C'est dc quoy j'ay le plus de peur que la
peur. See Proverbs 3:35,
p.

Wellington,

p.

5063;

a$b; Bacon, p. *o7b; Thoreau, p. 68 ib; and

am no

lover of

only desire that corded in a line or two, which shall


briefly express

pompous title, but my name may be re-

Roosevelt, p. 971 a.
8 1

have taught you,

my

dear

flock, for
I

above

thirty years

how

to live,

and

will

my name, my virginity, the years of my reign, the reformation of religion under it, and my preservaTo
her ladies, discussing her

in a very short time how to die. SANDYS [1561-1689], Anglorum Speculum

show you SIR EDWIN

Sec Tickell, p. 4oob.

tion of peace,

Teach him how to live, And, oh still harder lesson! how to die. BEILBY PORTEUS [1731-1808], Death, 1. 3x6
In teaching me the way to live taught me how to die. GEORGE POPE MORRIS [i 80^-1864], My Mother's Bible, st, 4 *Je veux que la mort me trouve plantant mcs choux. Translated by FLORIO [1603]. See Rabelais, p. i8ia, and Voltaire, p.
It

epitaph

Twas God the word that spake lie took the Bread and brake
x

it, it;

Mary Queen

of Scots.

189

MONTAIGNE
I would rather commend for having a well-composed and temperate brain than a full-stuffed head. 1

tor

whom

What

truth

is

that,
is

which

mountains bound, and world beyond them? l

these a lie in the

Essays, bk.

I,

ch.

25

Essays, bk. II, ch. 12


Life is a dream ... we sleeping Ib. wake and waking sleep. 2

If you press me to say why I loved him, I can say no more than it was because he was he and I was I. 2

Nothing is so we least know.


have himself.

16.37 believed what as firmly


16. 31

How many
known
tion! 3

worthy

men

have we
reputa16. 16

to

survive

their

own

A wise man never loses anything if he


16.

One may be humble


I

38
in
it

out of pride. I6.i 7

We

should reserve a storehouse for


3

find that the best virtue I

and wholly free, wherein we may hoard up and establish our true liberty, and principal retreat and solitude. 16. 39
ourselves, altogether ours,

some

tincture of vice,
is

have has 16. 20


is

Saying
other.

one thing, and doing

an-

16*3*

The greatest thing in the world know how to be sufficient unto


self.*

is

to
16.

one-

There never were in the world two opinions alike, no more than two hairs or two grains; the most universal qual4 ity is diversity.
I

To know how and all my art. 5

^-37
even to

to live

is all

my

calling

16. II [1580], o

will follow the right side


fire,

the

Virtue can have naught to do with ease ... It craves a steep and thorny
path.
16. 11
I

but excluding the


16.

fire if I

am.
i

[1595],

When

play

with

my

cat,

who

knows whether I do not make her more 16. 12 sport than she makes me?
and cobblers same mold. The same reason that makes us wrangle with
souls of emperors are cast in the
.

I speak truth, not so much as I would, but as much as I dare; and I dare a little the more, as I grow older.

16, 2

The

Few men have been admired by own domestics. 5


Every
the

their
16.

man

neighbor

causes

war

betwixt
16.

human

bears the whole condition, 6

stamp of
16.

princes.

This idea

is

more

clearly conceived

6 by a question, "What do I know?" which I employ, with the device of a

It [marriage] happens as with cages: the birds without despair to get in, and those within despair of getting out. 7

pair of scales.

16.
1

16. 5
ve>itc* que res montagnr* borncnt, qul mensonge qui ic ticnt ati dela? *!A vie est un aongc m*ui vcilkma dor-

Man

is

certainly stark

not make a worm, and yet he making gods by dozens.


*

mad; he canwill be
16.

QucIIc

cst

mam*
gaa.
*
4

ct vcillants

dormons.
861),

fl

Plut6t la tfite Men faite que bicn plcine. Translated by FLORIO. Parce que c'e"tait lui; parce que c'e*tait moi.
faut r&erver une arriere boutique toutc

Sec Kuripideft, p.

ami AriKtophnncn,

p.

* 11 se

notre.
4

La

plus

grande chose du mondc,


soi.

See Bentley, p. 3863. Sec Pliny, p. ijib. 6 See Antigonus, p, <$b. 'Chaque homme porte la

farm cnttfrc

cic

c'est

de

savoir dtre
8

Mon
Que

metier et
sais-je?

mon

art, c'cst vivre,

1'humalne condition, * 1 myself have loved a lady and pursued her with a great deal of under-age protestation, whom some three or four gallant* that have en-

MONTAIGNE
All the world

WILLIAM

knows

me

in

and

my book in me.
to

my

book,

Essays, bk. Ill, ch. 5

I have never seen a greater monster or miracle in the world than myself. Essays, bk. Ill, ch. 1 1

Tis so much
only
is

so

be a king, that he by being so. The strange

Men are most apt to believe what 16. they least understand.
I have here only made a nosegay of culled flowers, and have brought nothing of my own but the thread that ties

conceals and our sight is there broken and dissipated, being stopped and filled by the prevailing light. 1
luster that surrounds

him

shrouds him from

us;

them

16. 7
I

together.

16. 12

moreover affirm that our wisdom


for the

itself, and wisest consultations, most part commit themselves

There is more ado to interpret interpretations than to interpret the things,

to the
Ib. 8

conduct of chance.

and more books upon books than upon all other subjects; we do nothing but 16. 13 comment upon one another.
For truth
to
sorts.
itself

Not because
because
tion
it is

Socrates said so, 3 but

in truth

my own

disposi-

and perchance to some excess I look upon all men as my compatriots, and embrace a Pole as a Frenchman, making less account of the national than of the universal and common
bond. 4
Ib. 9

be spoken at

all

has not the privilege times and in all


16.

Sits

man
her her

still sits

he on never so high a throne, a 16. on his bottom.


little

Let us a

permit Nature to take

There is no man so good, who, were he to submit all his thoughts and actions to the laws, would not deserve
hanging ten times in
his life. 16.

own way; she better understands 16. own affairs than we,

A
will

little folly is

desirable in

him

that
16.

I have ever loved to repose myself, whether sitting or lying, with my heels as high or higher than my head.

not be guilty of stupidity. 5

16.
I

do not understand;

joyed would with all their hearts have been glad to have been rid of. Tis just like a summer bird-cage in a garden: the birds that are without despair to get in, and the birds that are within despair and arc in a consumption for fear they shall never get out. JOHN WEBSTKR,

amine.

I pause; I exInscription for his library

The White Dwil

[iGia], act

[WILLIAM THE SILENT]


1533-1584

WILLIAM

1,

$c.

ii

Wedlock, indeed, hath oft compared been To public feasts, where meet a public rout Where they that are without would fain go And they that are within would fain go out.
SIR

in,

JOHN DAVIKS

[1569-1036], Contention Betwixt a Wife, etc.


*G5a,

My God, have mercy on my soul and on my poor people. 2 Last 'words as he fell under an
assassin's bullets
1 1

See Emerson, p. 608 a. 1 Sec Shakespeare, p.


p.
f>r sa. >t

and Tennyson,

am but
stuff,

a gatherer
at

and disposer of other


value.
SIR

men's
flatter

my
to

best

HENRY
Archi-

themselves with their great actions, they arc not so often the result LA ROCHKFOUof great design as of chance. <:MIU> [1613-1680], Maxim 57 Sec Socrates, p. 87!).

"Although men

WOTTON, preface
tecture [1624] John Bartlett

The Elements

of

*Sec dc Montesquieu,
6

p.

4Mb.
Horace, p. iaab, and

Sec Menander, p.

loftb,

used this passage as an epigraph for the fourth edition of Familiar Quotations [1864], It was the only quotation from Montaigne in that edition. * Men de mon amc ct de Dieu, ayez piti

note.
L

mon

pauvre peuple.

GILBERT

MARY STUART
Fain would
I
I, but I dare not; I dare, and yet I may not; may, although I care not, for pleasure

SIR

HUMPHREY GILBERT
c.

1539-1583
by
sea as

We
by

are as near to heaven


*

land!

when

play not.

From HAKLUYT,
vol.

Fain

Would

Voyages, Ill [1600], p. 159

[attributed]

WILLIAM GILBERT
1540-1603
In the discovery of secret things and in the investigation of hidden causes, stronger reasons arc obtained from sure

SIR

EDWARD DYER
c.

1540- 1607
is;

My mind to me a kingdom

Such present joys therein I find That it excels all other bliss That earth affords or grows by kind: Though much I want which most would have, Yet still my mind forbids to crave. Rawlinson Poetry

experiments and demonstrated arguments than from probable conjectures and the opinions of philosophical speculators of the common sort. 1

De Magnete

[1600]

MS

85, p.
still

17

JAN ZAMOYSKI
The
govern.
2

Some have
crave;
I little

too

much,

yet

do
king

1541-1605 but reigns,

docs

not

have, and seek no more:

They

are
I

but poor, though much they

Speech in the Polish Parliament


[1605], referring to

have,

King

Sigis-

And

am

rich

with

little store:

mund III

They poor, I rich; they beg, I give; They lack, I have; they pine, I live.
Ib.
l

The way

to

heaven out of
distance.
SIR

all

places

is

of

[MARY QUEEN OF
S

MARY STUART
COTS
my
1

like length

and

THOMAS MORE,
In

Utopia [1516]
Gilbert, on the last day of his life, was seen in his tiny pinnace Squirrel with a book in hand, probably More's Utopia which inspired his last utterance. He was homeward

1542-1587

my

end

is

beginning.

Motto

bound from Newfoundland, which he had just taken possession of in the name of the Queen
[August 1583]. "Do not
fcarl

Lord
rhce;

my
my

God,
clearest

have

trustee!

in

Heaven

Jcsu
is

one,

now

set

me

as near,"

He

free.

said, "by water as by land!" LONGFELLOW, Sir Humphrey Gilbert

In prison's oppression, in sorrow's obsession,

[1849],

st.

6 1

See James T. Fields, p. 6790.


a

This poem became popular as a song, altered


to

thus:

weary for thec. With sighing and crying bowed down


as dying,
I

My mind

me

kingdom

is;

Such perfect joy therein I find, As far exceeds all earthly bliss That God and Nature hath assigned. Though much I want that most would have,
Yet
still

adore thee,
free! *

implore thee, set

me
of

Prayer written in her


1

Rook

my mind

forbids to crave.
etc.
is,

Devotion before her execution


Translated by P. F. Mont LAV, Thiers adopted th<* epigram ;n the motto for hi journal National?, which he established with Mignet and Carrel hi 1850. 8 Translated by SWINWRNK. O Homine I)eu! speravi in ic;

My mind

BYRD, Psalmsf Sonnets, to me an empire

[1588]

While grace affordeth health, ROBERT SOUTHWELL [c. 1561-1595],


Content and Rich
See Seneca, p.

192

DU BARTAS

CERVANTES
Only that he may conform

GUILLAUME SEIGNEUR DU BARTAS


DE SALLUSTE,
1544-! 590 Oft seen in forehead of the frowning
skies. 1

To

tyrant custom.

Divine

Weeks and Works, Second Week, Third Day, pt. 2


no
faith
is

Who Who

breaks his faith,


16.

held

Divine
[*
],

Weeks and Works First Week, Second


beneath the
fir-

with him.

Fourth Day, bk. 2

Day
For where's the
state

well lives, long lives; for this age


years, days, 16.

of ours

mament
That doth ment?
excel
2

the bees for govern16. Fifth Day, pt. i


16. Sixth

Should not be numbered by and hours.

These lovely lamps, these windows of


the soul. 3

Day

My lovely living boy, My hope, my hap, my love, my 1


joy.

life,

my
16.

Or almost
wind,

like a spider,

who, confined

In her web's center, shakt with every

Out

of the
breast. 2

book of Nature's learned


16.
flesh,

Moves
Stir

in an instant if the buzzing fly but a string of her lawn canapie. 4


16.

Flesh of thy bone.

nor yet bone of thy


16.

Living from hand to mouth.


16.

Second

Week
5

First

Day, pt. 4
16.

MIGUEL DE CERVANTES
1547-1616

In the jaws of death.


(>

care mi Jcsu! nunc libera me. In dura catena, in misera pocna, Disidcro tc.

You are as much


Throne.

as

King by your own any Monarch

Fireside, in his

Languondo, gcmcndo,
1

ct

gcnuflcctcndo,

Don

Adore, implore, ut libcres mel See Milton, p. 3393. 3 So work the honeybees, Creatures that by a rule in Nature teach The act of order to a peopled kingdom.
SIIAKKSPKARK, King
9

Quixote de la ManchaP [1605-1615] author's preface,


as not

p. xix
1 was so free with him mince the matter. 4

to

Henry V [1598/.

p. xx
their

if>oo], act I, sc. if,

/#;

The windows
[

of

A'wfl Richard 111


*

SHAKFSPEARK, eyes. 1 598-1 595 ] t act V> sc. Hi, I. xiy

mine

They can expect nothing but


labor for their pains. 5
1

Much like a subtle spider which doth sit In middle of her web, which sprcadcth wide; If aught do touch the utmost thread of it
She
feels it instantly

p. xxiii

My
My
life,

fair sont joy,

my

my

food,

my

all

the world.

on every

side.

SIR

JOHN DAVIKS, The Immortality

of

SHAKKSPEARE, King John [1596-1597], act 111, sc. ivf I. io)


3 The book of Nature is that which the physician must read; and to do so he must walk over the leaves. PARACELSUS [1495-1 541]. From Encyclopaedia Britannica (xxth ed.), vol. XX,
t>-

Our

And And

the Soul [1599] souls sit close and silently within, their own webs from their own entrails spin; when eyes meet far off, our sense is such

That, spider-like, we feel the tendcrest touch, DRYMKN, Marriage a la Mode [1673],
act II, sc.
i

749 Translated in 1700-1703 by PETER

ANTHONY
arc those

The

spider's touch, how exquisitely finel Feels at each thread, and lives along the line.

MOITKUX [1660-1718]. Page numbers of the Modern Library Giant edition.


*

POPK,
8

An

Rssay on

Man

[1733-1734], epistle I, /. 3/7

You

See Shakespeare, p. 73b. mince matters, MOLIERE,


i

Tartuffe
(la-

[1667], act /, sc.

Out of the jaws of death. .SIIAKUPI-.ARK, Twelfth Ni%ht [1598-1600], act III, sc. iv, I. 396
Sec Tennyson, p. 6523.

Nothing

is

to

be gotten without pains

Old Proverb bor). Sec Shakespeare, p. a67b.

193

CERVANTES

Time out of mind. 1

Don
Which
of
I

Quixote, pt. I [1605], bk. I, ch. i, p. 4

You're leaping over the hedge before you come to the stile. Don Quixote, pt. I, bk. Ill,
ch. 4, p. 117

my
By

have earned with the sweat brows.2 I, 4, p- 22

Paid

him

in his

own

coin.

-119

a small

sample we may
3

judge of
p.

the whole piece.

25

Put you

in this pickle.

The famous Don Quixote de la Mancha, otherwise called The Knight 1 of the Woeful Figure.
Ill, 5, p.

I, 5>

P- 3

126

Can we
good thing?

ever have too

much
I, 6,

of a
p.

You
skin.

are

come

off

now

with

whole

37 The charging of his enemy was but the work of a moment. I, 8 7 p. 50 I don't know that ever I saw one in II, 2, p. 57 my born days.

and can see much more in and things underground,


Fear
is

sharp-sighted,

the

skies.

Ill, 6, p.

131

Those two
Thine. 4

fatal

words,

Mine and
II,

A finger in every pic, p. No better than she should be.8


.

233

3, p-

63
of

Ifc.

The
Love.

eyes

those

silent

tongues

65
a face like a benediction.
II,
5

And had

That's the nature of women not to love when we love them, and to
.

P-

69

love

when we

love

them

not. 4

Ib.

There's not the least thing can be said or done, but people will talk and
find fault.
6
7

You may go
111

whistle for the rest.


/>

*34

pa

70
72

luck,

you know, seldom comes


*35

alone. 5
p.

Without
It is

wink of

sleep.

a true saying, that a

man must
92

Why
chase?

do you lead

me

a wild-goose
p- 136

peck of salt with his he knows him.


eat a

friend, before
Ill, i, p.

Kxpericncc, the universal


Sciences.

Mother
7,
/>.

of

HI,
but that, and
let

240
148

Thank you

for nothing.
8

p.

94

Give

me

the world
/>.

No
To
and

limits but the sky.

rub, there 111 stick.


Ill,

give the devil his due.

p.

Sing away sorrow, cast away care. IH T 8,>. 153

SIIAKKSPKARK, Romeo out o' mind. ' *> sc iv 7 Juliet [1594-1595]' a See Genesis y.xg, p. 6a. How cam'st thou in this pickle? SHAKE-

Of good
^

natural parts,

and of a
/>

libi

>

eral education.

54

SPEARE, The Tempest [ifln], act V, ,sr. i, * See Boilcau, p. 3771). 5 The more familiar translation. o Take wife, or cowl; ride you, or walk:

/.

atf/

El Caballcro tic la Triu> Figura. More aca* The curately translated by TOIA* SMOLLETT Knight of the Sorrowful Countenance.

Doubt not but tongues

have their talk. LA FONTAINE, The Miller, His Son, and


will

No pic Uttlc finger


3

was baked at OaitlewwKl but her Ths rirTIIA<,KFIIAY was In it.


(

the

Donkey [1694]
I, sc.
i

Do you
talking?
7

think

you could keep people from


iv,

ginians [1857-1859], fh. 5 8 An old proverb. You are no better than you ahouli!

tx*.

MoLifcRK, Tartuffe [1667], act

BEAUMONT AND Funrctim, The


[MtfJ, act
4

Cttxt-tunb

See Shakespeare, Cymbelinc III,

103, p.

W,

sr,

Modern

saying:

The

sky's the limit,

See George Bernard Shaw, p. KjGa. Sec Shakespeare, p, 11652.

194

CERVANTES
Let every
ness.

man mind

his

own
I,

busi-

Don

Quixote, pt.

bk. Ill,

ch. 8, p. 157

Let us forget and forgive injuries. Don Quixote, pt I, bk. IV,


ch. 3, p.
I

Those who'll play with pect to be scratched.


Raise a hue and
cry.

cats

must
p.

ex-

must speak the


truth.

truth,

159
16.

254 and nothing


p.

but the

255

More knave than

fool.

Tis the part of a wise man to keep himself today for tomorrow, and not venture all his eggs in one basket.
III, 9, p.

IV, 4, p. 261
Here's the devil-and-all to pay.

162
I

IV, 10, p. 319


begin to smell a rat. proof of the pudding
tell
is

The

16.

ease of

my

burdens, the

staff of

my life.
Within
a stone's throw of
it.

p.

163

The
eating.

in the
p.

322
that

p. i jo

Let none presume to


the pen
is

me

The

very remembrance

of

my

former
to

misfortune proves a

new one

me.
174 177
to a

1 preferable to the sword. 2 P-3 5

Ill, 10, p.

Absence, that

common

cure of love.
p.

no striving against the There's stream; and the weakest still goes to the wall. IV, 20, p. 404
nor can

From

pro's

and con's they


disputing.

fell

warmer way of
Little said
is

p. 181
1

The bow cannot always stand bent, human frailty subsist without
lawful recreation.

some

soon amended.
catches no

p.

184
Ib.

close

mouth

flies.

IV, 21, p. 412 It is not the hand but the understanding of a man that may be said to
write. 2
Pt. II [1615], bk. Ill, author's

Thou

hast seen nothing yet.


Ill, 11, p.

190
Ib.

preface, p. 441

Between

jest

and

earnest.

love and hers have always been purely Platonic. p. 192


'Tis
ill

My

the head aches, bers partake of the pains.3

When

all

the

mem-

of a

man
I

talking of halters in the house that was hanged. p. 195


is

Youngsters read it, grown men understand it, and old people applaud it.
Ill, 3> P-

4*4

My memory
times
forget
I

so bad that

many
16.

my own name! 'Twill grieve me so to the shall cry my eyes out.


Ready

History
so far as
truth
1

is

in a

it

a sacred thing, contains truth; for where


it

manner

heart that
p.

is,

the supreme Father of

may

197

to split his sides with laughIll, 13, p.

ing.

208

See Edward Bulwer-Lytton, p. 6oib. Scholars' pens carry farther, and give a louder Sra THOMAS BROWNE, report than thunder.

Religio Medici [164*],


*

My
life.

honor

is

dearer to

me
IV,

than
z,

my
226

Cervantcs's left

Everyman ed. t p. 70 hand was maimed for

life

p.

On

the word of a gentleman, and a


p.

by gunshot wounds in the battle of Lepanto. 8 When the head is not sound, the rest cannot Du BARTAS, Divine Weeks and Works be well.

Christian.

236
252

[578]
For
let

our finger ache, and


healthful

it

indues
to that sense

Think before thou


1

spcakcst.

IV,
Often rendered:

Our other Of pain.

members even
Othello

3, p.

SHAKESPEARE,

[1604-1605],
I.

Ixrast said soonest

mended.

act III, sc. ivf

14$

195

CERVANTES
also

be said

to be, at least, in as

much

Marriage

is

a noose.

as concerns truth.

Don

Quixote, pt.
eft.

II, bk. Ill,

Don

Quixote,

pt

II,

bk. Ill,

19, p. 564

eft.

3, p.

465

Every man is as Heaven made him, and sometimes a great deal worse.
Ill, 4, p.

There are only two families in the world, the Haves and the Havc-Nots. Ill, 20, p. 574
preaches quoth Sancho; that's understand,

468

There's

no sauce

in the world like


III, 5, p.

He

well

that
all

lives

well,
I

hunger.

473

the divinity
p.

He
I

casts a sheep's eye at the

wench.

575

P-474
ever loved to see everything

the square.

p.
I

upon 475
Ib.

Love and War are the same thing, and stratagems and policy are as allowable in the one as in the other.
111,22, p. 580
private sin is not so prejudicial in this world as a public indecency.
Ill, 22, p.

Neither will
laughingstock,

make myself anybody's


all

Journey over

the universe in a
fatigue

map, without the expense and

582
Ib.

of traveling, without suffering the inconveniences of heat, cold, hunger, and


thirst.

There

is

no love

lost, sir.

Ill, 6, p.

479

Come back sound, wind and

limb.
p.

Presume to put

in her oar.

p.

480
16.

587

The
than

fair sex. 1

Patience, and shuffle the cards.

A little

in one's

own pocket

is

better

Ill, 2?,/>.

592
tell

in another man's purse. Tis good to keep a nest egg. Every little makes a mickle. 2 Ill, 7, p. 486

much

Tell me thy company, and thee what thou art*

I'll

P-

594

Remember the old saying, heart ne'er won fair lady."


Forewarned forearmed.

"Faint 501

Tomorrow

will

be a new

clav.

Ill,
I

26,

/>.

628

Ill, 10, p.

can see with half an

t ye.

p.

502
Ib.

Ill,

29, p. 632

As well look
of hay, 8

for a needle in a bottle

Great persons are able to do grcnt kindnesses. Ill, 52, p. 662


1

Are we

to

mark
4

this

day with

white

There

is

no hate

lost

between w.

MID-

or a black stone?

p.

503

The very pink


I'll

of courtesy.
Ill, 13, p.

DLE-TON [1580-1687], The, Witch, act IV, *r. i*;.' 3 But patience, cousin, and ihufflc (he cards, till our hand is a stronger one. SIR WALTER

521

SCOTT, Qucntin fturward (18*9], fh. B Cut the fiercest quarrel* *hort

turn over a
c

new leaf.

With
p.

"Patience,

gentlemen,

and

shuffle."

524

He's

muddled

fool, full of lucid


Ill, 18, p.

W. M, PRAED [1802-1839], Quince, st. 5 Men disappoint me so, I disappoint myself


so,

yet

courage, patience, shuffle

the cards.

intervals.

556

*That
STEELE,

sex which

is

The

Spectator,

therefore called fair. no. 302, February 15,

1712 a See Hesiod p. Gyb,


3

and note.

MARGARET FW,U:R Omou [1810-1850], tetter to the Reverend W, //. Charming 'Tell me what you eat, and I will tell you what you are, AMHM.MK BRII.I.AI-.SAVARIN [1755-18*6], La Physiologic tin Go&t, aphorism 4

A A

needle in a haystack.
red-letter day.

"Don

Quixote.

Show me your garden and \ *hall tell you what you are, AI.FKKD ADSIIN, The Garden That I Love [1905]

196

CERVANTES
1 Honesty's the best policy. Don Quixote, pt II, bk.

CAMDEN

He ...
Ill,

got the better of himself,

and

that's the best


for.

kind of victory one


II, bk.

ch. 33, p.

666

can wish

honest man's word is as good as his bond. IV, 34, p. 674

An

Don

Quixote, pt.

IV,

ch. 72, p.

924

blot in thy scutcheon to

all

fu-

turity.

IV, 35, p. 681 not stir sticks to the pot.


best
2

Every man was not born with a silver IV, 73, p. 926 spoon in his mouth.
Ne'er look for birds of this year in the nests of the last. 1 IV, 74, p. 933

They had
though
it

the

rice,

IV, 37, p. 691

There

is

strange

charm

in

the

Good
is

wits jump;

word to the wise


p-

enough.
is

692

thoughts of a of an estate,

good legacy, or the hopes


which wondrously allevimen would other-

Diligence tune.

the mother of good forIV, 38, p. 724


has, so

ates the sorrow that

wise feel for the death of friends.

What
of.

man
calls

much

he's sure
p.

P-934
For
if

7*5

he like a

madman

lived,

The pot

the kettle black.


Ib. p.

At
727

least

he

like a

wise one died.

Mum's
I shall

the word.8

IV, 44, p. 729


IV, 62, p. 862

p. 935 (Don Quixote's epitaph) Don't put too fine a point to jour

wit for fear

it

should get blunted.

be

as secret as the grave.

The

Little
is

Gypsy (La

Gitanilla)
as

Now

blessings light

on him that

first

as marble to pleases, but enduring


tain.

My
2

heart

wax molded

she
re-

invented this same slcepl It covers a man all over, thoughts and all, like a cloak; 'tis meat for the hungry, drink for the thirsty, heat for the cold, and
cold for the hot. Tis the current coin that purchases all the pleasures of the world cheap; and the balance that sets and the shepherd, the fool and the

Ik

CHARLES IX
1550-1574
Horses and poets should be fed, not overfed.* Saying

king the wise man even.

IV, 68, p.

WILLIAM CAMDEN
1551-1623

The

ass will carry his load,

but not a

double load; ride not a free horse to IV, 71, p. 917 death.

My

friend, judge not me, Thou seest I judge not thee.

dead thought it working for a 4 beforehand. am I because horse, paid


I

Betwixt the stirrup and the ground I asked, and mercy found.

Mercy

Ib.
1 1 hold the maxim no less applicable to public than to private affairs, that honesty is always

Remains Concerning Britain. Epitaph for a man killed by horse falling from his
receive your lucre one minute before it is due a Micawber is to tempt Providence to make EDMUND GOSSE, Gossip in a Library of

GKORCE WASHINGTON, Farethe best policy, writ AddrfM [1796] LAURENCE STERNE, TrisGreat wits jump.

you.

tram Shandy, vol. Ill [1761-1768]* ch. 9 The Merry SHAKESPEARE, Cry "mum." Wives of Windsor [ 1 600-1 Go i], art V, sc. ii, I. 6
* It is a heartrending delusion and a cruel snare to be paid for your work before you acfinit. As soon as once your work is

[1891],
*

Beau Nash

For

Time

will teach thee

soon the truth,

There are no birds in last year's nestl LONGFELLOW [1807-1888], It Is Not Always May, st. 6
a a

complish

See Byron, p. 559b.

ished you ought to be promptly paid;

but to

Equi

et poetae alendi,

non saginandi.

197

AUBIGNE

RALEGH

THEODORE AGRIPPA
D'AUBIGNfi
1552-1630

Magna
will

Carta is such a fellow that he have no sovereign. Debate in the Commons

Each Each

of us aspires to worth, of us desires it

[May

17, 1628]

And

1 desires it for himself.

Six hours in sleep, in law's grave study


six,

Pieces 6pigrammatiques 49

Four spend in prayer, the


ture
fix.

rest

on Na-

More exquisite than any autumn rose. 2

other

is

the

Translation quoted by

COKE; from

The Pandects

Les Tragiques. Les Feux

(Digests of Roman Civil Law, sixth century). De in lus Vocando

SIR
Reason
reason.
.

EDWARD COKE
1552-1634
is

SIR
else

WALTER RALEGH
c.

the

life

of the law; nay, the

1552-1618

common law
.
.

itself is

nothing

but

Like to an hermit poor in place obI

The

law,

which

is

perfec-

tion of reason.8
First Institute [1628]

mean

The
dence.

gladsome

light

of

To
jurispru-

spend my days of endless doubt, wail such woes as time cannot recure,
shall ever find

scure, to

16. epilogue
is

Where none but Love

For a man's house

his castle, et

me out.
The Phoenix Nest
[i

domus sua cuique tutissimum refuThird Institute [1644] gium*

593]. Sonnet

The house
his castle

of everyone

is

to

him

as

and

fortress, as well for his

defense against injury and violence as


for his repose.

As you came from the holy land Of Walsinghame, Met you not with my true Love By the way as you came? As "You Came from the Holy

Semayne's

Ccn>e. 5

Report 91

Land
But
true love
is

[c.

2599],

$t.

They [corporations] treason, nor fee outlawed nor excommunicate, for they have no souls.
Case of Button's Hospital 10 Report 32
1

cannot commit

a durable

fire,

In the

mind
itself

ever burning,

Never

sick,

From

never old, never dead, never turning.


Ib.st. ii

Chacun au bicn aspire, Chacun le bien d&ire,


Et
le desire sien.

If all

the world and love were young,


truth in every shepherd's tongue,

And

Une

rose d'automne est plus qu'unc autrc

exquise.
8 Let us consider the reason of the case. For SIR JOHN nothing is law that is not reason. POWELL, Coggs v. Bernard, a Ld. Rayrn. Rep.

These pretty pleasures might To live with thec, and be thy

me move
love.

The Nymph's Reply


sionate

Shepherd
to
to

'to the Pas(printed in

p.
*

?n
One's home is the safest refuge to everyone. Pandects [6th century], lib, //, tit, IV, De in
I
i

England's Helicon, 2600),


Seven
hours
to

$t.

law,

Mtmhing slumber
all

I us Vocando

seven;

in

mine own house am an emperor


will

Ten

the world allot, and

to heaven.

And

defend what's mine. MASSINCER, The Roman Actor [1629],


act If sc.
ii

Sm WIU.IAM

JoNr.s Ji74<>-i7<tfl

*An answer to GHKISTOPIIHI MARIOWK, The Passionate Shepherd to His Lttve (ace p. am).

198

RALEGH
Fain would
I

SPENSER

climb, yet fear

to

fall.
J

Written on a windowpane

Our mirth the music of division, Our mothers' wombs the tiring houses
be

Our

The

and passions are most like to floods streams, shallow murmur, but the deep are

Where we

are dressed

for

this

short

comedy.

dumb. 2
Sir

Walter Ralegh

to the

Queen
st.
i

From ORLANDO GIBBONS, The First Set of Madrigals and Motets [1612].

On

the Life of

Man

[c.

1599],

Silence in love bewrays

more woe

words, though ne'er so witty; beggar that is dumb, you know, Ib. st. 5 Deserveth double pity.

Than

hath triumphed over time, [History] which besides it nothing but eternity hath triumphed over.
History of the

World

[1614],

preface

Go, Soul, the body's

quest,

Upon

a thankless arrant:

Whosoever, in writing a modern


follow truth tory, shall
heels,
it

his-

Fear not to touch the best, The truth shall be thy warrant: Go, since I needs must die, And give the world the lie.

may

too near the out his teeth. strike haply


Ib.

The

Lie (printed in FRANCIS

DAVISON, Poetical Rhapsody, 1608; manuscript copy traced


to 1595),
st, i

whom

and mighty eloquent, just, none could advise, thou hast perthou suaded; what none hath dared,
hast done;
all the world hath cast out of the hast flattered, thou only world and despised. Thou hast drawn

Deathl

and

whom

Give

me my
staff

scallop shell of quiet,

My My scrip of
And

of faith to walk upon,


joy,

immortal

diet,

My bottle of salvation, My gown of glory, hope's

true gage

far-stretched greatness, together all the of all the pride, cruelty, and ambition man, and covered it all over with these

thus Til take' my pilgrimage.

Diaphantus [1604]. The Passionate Man's Pilgrimage


I

two narrow words, Hie jacetl Ib, bk. V, pt. I, ch. 6, conclusion

Mcthought
Laura

saw
to

the

grave

where
Spenser

lay.

Vem>s

Edmund

Even such is time, that takes in trust Our youth, our joys, our all we have, And pays us but with age and dust; Who in the dark and silent grave, When we have wandered all our ways,
Shuts up the story of our days.

Shall I, On a rock or in a cell?

like a hermit, dwell

Poem

And from which


dust,

earth,
raise

and

grave,
I

and

What
heart

is

our
thin

life? a

play of passion,
wrote, "If thy
all."

The Lord

shall

me

up,

trust.

UJuder
fails*

Queen Elizabeth
climb not at

thee,

TuoMAf

version of

one of his

earlier

HIU.KR, Wtnthifis of England [lOGs] "See Scmca, p. 151 1>. sono labi Altiissiina quaeque flumina minimo The deepest rivers flow with the least sound]
-

Bible in the Gatehouse at Westminster.

death in poems, found at his

his

Qrisms
Where

(Urn-mis [ist century


.stream

A.I).],

Vll, 4,

the

runneth

smoothest,

the

LYI.Y, Kuplntrs and his water to deepest. land [1580] Smooth iuu the water where the brook VI [if>9 1 ]' P L deep. --SHAKhm ARK, Henry

EDMUND SPENSER
1552-1599
that strives to touch the stars Oft stumbles at a straw.

He

tut III,

,ir.

*',

5?

'lake

heed

of

still

waters,

the

quick

pas

away.
[1640]

GKOMMK

HERBERT,

Jacula

Prudcntu*

The Shepheardes Calender


[i579].[uZy,
Z.

99

199

SPENSER
Fierce

wars and faithful loves moralize my song, 1

shall

And

painful pleasure turns to pleasing


pain.

The

Faerie

[1590], introduction, st i

Queene

T/re Faerie

Queene, bk.
canto io,
st.

Ill,

60

gentle knight was pricking on the 16. bk. I, canto i,$t. i plain,

How
Be

over that same door was likewise


writ,

A bold bad

man.

Ib.

37

Her angel's face As the great eye of heaven shined


bright,

and everywhere Be "16. 11, 54 which on was writ, Another iron door, 16, Be not too bold:2
bold, be bold, bold. 1

And made
place.

sunshine in the shady


16. 3,
perils

Dan

Chaucer, well of English


filcd,

undc-

On
For

Ay me,
The
l

how many
2

do enfold
daily Ib. 8, i

righteous

man,

to

make him

Fame's eternal beadroll worthy to 16. IV [1596], 2, 32 be filed.


all

that nature

by her mother wit


16. 10, 21

Could frame
111

in earth.

Sleep after

port after stormy seas, Ease after war, death after life does
toil,

greatly please.

16. 9,

40

can he rule the great, that cannot 16. V, 2, 43 reach the small.
will not mercy unto others show, can he mercy ever hope to have? 8 16. VI, i, 42

All for love,

and nothing

for reward.
16. II, 8, 2

Who
How
The
For

Gather therefore the Rose, whilst yet


prime,

is

gentle

mind by

gentle
is

deeds

is

known.
will

For soon comes age, that


deflower:

her pride

Gather the Rose of


time. 4

love, whilst yet is 16. 12, 75

a man by nothing wrayed, As by his manners.

so well be16. 3, i

That here on
ness.

earth

is

no sure happi16. 21,


i

Her

birth

was of the

womb

of morning

dew. 5

16. Ill, 6, 3

And
All

violets blew, all the sweetest flowers, that in the

Roses red and

The ever-whirling wheel Of Change; the which all mortal


doth sway.

things

16. VII, 6, i

forest grew.

16.

Wars and

alarums unto nations wide.


16. 3

that grows,

in

this

delightful

garden

Should happy be, and have immortal 16. 41 bliss.

That Squire of Dames.


l

16. 8,

But times do change and move contin4 16, 47 ually. For deeds do die, however nobly clone,
p. 4flffl>, ami Clhaimlng, p. 5 Jockey of Norfolk, tx* not too bold, For Dickon thy master i* bought and notcl. SHAKKSPKAXX, Richard ///, art T, nc. Hi, L j5 Forbear, said I; be not too bold. Your fleece Is white but 'iK too cold. CRASH AW, Hymn of the Nativity, L 50 Write on your d<x>r* the staying wine ami old, "Be bold! be bold!" and cvetywhcw- "Be bold; Be not too bold!" I,ONC*'KU.OW, Morituri Saltttamus [i7r>l See Matthew 1:7, p, <joa, and Pope, j. .ji*b, <See Ixuhair I, p. iijab.

44

*$ce Danton,
3

moralized his song. POPE, Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot [1735], /. 340 a Ay me! what perils do environ The man that meddles with cold iron! SAMUEL BUTLER: Hudibras, pt. / [1663], canto 111, L t * These lines are cut on Joseph Conrad's
gravestone at Canterbury. *See Horace, p. isia; Ronsard, p. i88a; and Herrick, p. gsob. B The dew of thy birth is of the womb of the

And

morning,

Book

of

Common

Prayer,

Psalter,

Psalm 1/0:3

2OO

SPENSER

FLORIO

And

thoughts of
decay,

men do
in

as

themselves
for

But wise words taught


to run,

numbers

Tell her the joyous time will not be stayed Unlesse she do him by the forelock
take. 1

Recorded by the Muses, live for ay. The Ruines of Time [1591], I- 400
Full
little

Amoretti [1595]. Sonnet 70

The woods
Echo

shall to

me

answer, and
Z.

my
18

knowest thou that hast not


is,

ring.

tried,

What hell it To lose good


ter spent;

in suing long to bide: days, that might be bet-

Epithalamion [1595], Behold whiles she before the


stands

altar

Hearing the holy priest that to her

To To To

waste long nights in pensive discontent;

And

speaks blesseth her with his two

happy
223

speed today, to be put back tomorrow; feed on hope, to pine with fear and
sorrow,

hands.

lb.

Ah! when

will this

long weary day have

Mother Hubberds Tale

And
[1591],

end, lend
love?

me

leave to

come unto my
Ib.

278

895

To To
To

fret

thy soul with crosses and with

For of the soul the body form doth


take:

cares;

eat thy heart through comfortless


despairs;

For soul is form, and doth the body make.

An Hymne
ride, to

in

Honour

of Beautie

fawn, to crouch, to wait, to


run,

To

spend, to give, to want, to be undone. Unhappy wight, born to disastrous


end,
cloth his life in so long

For

all

that fair
is

is, is

That

sign

to

[1596], L 132 2 nature by good; know the gentle


Ib.

blood.

139

Sweet Thames! run


Song.
3

softly,

till I

end

my

That

tendance
lb.

spend,

903
I

Prothalamion [1596], refrain


was promised on a time

What more
ture,

felicity

can

fall

to

crea-

Than

to enjoy delight with liberty.

To have reason for my rhyme; From that time unto this season,
of
I

Muiopotmos;
I

or,

The Fate
Z.

received nor

the Ruttcrflie [1591],

209

rhyme nor reason. Lines on his promised pension.


thies of

From THOMAS FULLER, WorEngland [1662]

hate the day, because


sec
all

To

Icndcth light things, and not my love to


it

see.

Daphnaida

[1591],

Z.

407

JOHN FLORIO
c.

Death slew not him, but he made death


his ladder to the skies.
is

1553-1625

A;i Epitaph

upon

Sir Philip
Z.

Sidney [1591],

20

the paradise of women, England the purgatory of men, and the hell of Second Frutes [1591] horses. 4
*

Though

not least. 1 Colin Clouts Come


last

Take Time by the

forelock.

THAIJSS

[c.

636-

c.

Home Again

546 B.C.] "Sec Shakespeare, p. *7ib. 8 Sweet Thames, run softly

till

end

my

song,

Sec Shakespeare, pp. g5& and lust, not least in honor or applause. POPK, The Duntiad [1738], bk. lVt I tfj
1

The

Sweet Thames, run softly, for I speak not loud or long. T. S. EUOT, The Waste Land [19**], pt. III *Sce Robert Burton, p.

2O1

FLORID
Praise the sea;

LYLY
as feeling her care,

on shore remain. Second Frutes

and the greatest as not exempted from her power.

Laws

HENRI

IV OF

FRANCE

of Ecclesiastical Polity [1594], bk. i

1553-1610 I want there to be no peasant in my realm so poor that he will not have a
chicken in his pot every Sunday. Attributed
Paris
is

That to live by one man's will became the cause of all men's misery.
Ifc,

JOHN LYLY
c.

well worth a Mass. 1

1554- 1606

Attributed

Be
Let
costly.

Let

my

ing point.

white panache be your rallyAttributed battle cry


I of England; attributed to HENRI IV or SULLY

thy
1

valiant, but not too venturous. attire be comely, but not

Euphues: The Anatomy of

Wit
39
the

The

wisest fool in Christendom.

[1579], Arber's reprint, p.

Of James

edge blunt whetstone.

The

finest

is

made
2

with
Ib. p.
Ib. p.

47
65

GEORGE KEITH, FIFTH EARL MARISCHAL


1553-1623
Thai half thame say. 8
said.

Delays breed dangers.


It

seems to

me

are in
say thai? Let

some brown

(said she) that you Ib. p. 80 study,

Quhat

Many
oaks. 8

strokes overthrow

the

tallest

16. p. 81

Family motto, Mitchell Tower, Marischal College, Aberdeen, Scotland, founded in 1593

Let

me

stand to the

main chance.4
Ib. p.

104
i 1

It is a

world to

see.
is

Ib. p,

FULKE GREVILLE,

LORD BROOKE

clear conscience

a sure card.
Ib. p.

207
rise

1554-1628 Oh wearisome condition of humanity! Born under one law, to another bound. Mustapha [1609], V, 4

Go

to

bed with the lamb, and


lark. 5

with the

Euphues and His England, [1580], p. 229

comely old

man

as

RICHARD HOOKER
1554-1600
there can be no less acknowledged than that her seat is the bosom of God, her voice the harmony of the world. All things in heaven and earth do her homage the very least
1

busy as a bee. 'Ib. p. 252

See Shakcapcare, p.

Of Law

Periculum in mora,

Latin proverb

See Shakespeare, p, 3143.


All delays are dangcroui in war. DRYDFN. Tyrannic Love [1669]* act /, tr. i * Many strokes, though with a little axe, Hew down and fell the hard*rtimbcr'<i oak. SHAKPSPKARK, Henry VI [iflfji], pt. ///, \ i, L 14 act //,

Paris vaut blen unc messe. Attributed also to Henri's minister Sully, Ralliez-vous mon panache blanc.
8

See Franklin, p. 4ssa.

They

say.

What
the

say they? Let


in

them

say.

Motto over
Shaw's

fireplace

George

Bernard

*Scc Butler, p, 3533. To rise with the lark and go to bed with the lamb. BRKTON, Court And Country (1618) Rise with the lark, and with the lark to bed.
5

home

JAMKS

H URDU [1763-

Sot], TAtf Village Curate.

2O2

LYLY
Maidens, be they never so
yet being fair they are nate.
foolish, fortu-

SIDNEY

My

dear,

my

better half.

commonly

The
his,

Arcadia, bk. Ill

Euphues and His England p. 279


are so sharp that you cannot only look through a millstone, but

My true-love hath my heart,


By
I

and

have

Your

just

exchange one for the other

eyes

given:

hold his dear, and mine he cannot


miss,

clean through the mind,

glad that my sweet tooth in his head.


I

am

289 Adonis hath a


Ib. p. Ib. p.

Ib. p.

There

never

was

better
Ib.

bargain

308

driven.

Sonnet

rose

is

sweeter in the

bud than
314

full-blown. 1

Cupid and my Campaspe play'd At cards for kisses: Cupid paid. Alexander and Campaspe
[1584], act III, $c. v

Ring out your bells! shows be spread For Love is dead.


1

Let

mourning
Ib.

Song

Leave me,

Love, which readiest but

to dust,

How

And

thou,

at heaven's gates she claps her wings,


till

my

mind, aspire to higher

things; Grow rich in that


rust:

which never taketh


but fading pleasure Ib. Sonnet

The morn not waking

she sings. 2
16.

V,

Whatever
brings.

fades,

8 Night hath a thousand eyes. Maides Metamorphosis III, i Marriages are made in heaven and

Sweet food of sweetly uttered knowledge.

consummated on earth.4 Mother Bombie [1590], act IV,

The Defense
sc.
i

of Poesy [written
c.

1580]

SIR PHILIP SIDNEY


1554-1586
High-erected thoughts seated in the heart of courtesy. 5 The Arcadia [written 1580], bfe. I
6 Ib. panied' with noble thoughts, l The rose U fairest when 'tis budding new. S>TT, Lady of the Lake [1810], canto III,
tt.

unto you with a tale which holdeth children from play, and old men from the chimney corner.
16.
I never heard the old song of Percy and Douglas that I found not my heart moved more than with a trumpet.

He cometh

They

arc never alone that are accom-

16.

"Fool!" said

my muse

to

me, "look
x

in

Sec Shakespeare, p. $gob. *On the tan thou gazest, my were heaven to look at thcc with

star;

would

Greek

Anthology,

edited

many eyes. by J.W. MACKAIL,

thy heart, and write." Astrophel and Stella [1591]

With how

sad steps,

Moon, thou
a
Ib.

9,7
Sec Bourdillon, p. 8af>a. Ix* manages se font au del, et se consommcnt *ur la tcrre. French proverb &*e Hey wood, p. i8$l>.
* If

climb'st the skies!

How
Have

silently,

and with how wan

facel 2
I

Are made
riage
[
i

marriages in heaven, they should be happier.

caught

my hcav'nly jewel. 8
Ib.

THOMAS
594]

SOUTHFJRNK,

The

Fatal Marheart.

Second Song

Great
*

thoughts
1

come from

the 737

VAtiVf.NAHcu*.*

1715-1747]!

Maxim
is

l lx>ok, then, into thine heart and write. LONCFKUX>W, Voices of the Night [1839], prelude Wordsworth begins a sonnet with these two

He

never

is

alone that

noble

thoughts.

accompanied with BKAUMONT AND FI.KTGHF.R,


sc.

lines [1802],

Quoted by SHAKESPEARE in Merry Wives


Windsor, act JIT,
sc.
iiif

of

Cure

[1647], act ///,

Hi

I 45

203

SIDNEY

TICHBORNE

Thy
mine.

necessity

is

yet greater than

Which though
naught

it

profit the

professor

Said on the battlefield of Zut-

Yet

it is

phen [September

22, 1586] on giving his water bottle to a dying soldier

passing pleasing to the world. The Spanish Tragedy, act

IV,

sc.

ii,

L jo

THOMAS LODGE
Love
in

FRANCOIS DE MALHERBE2
1555-1628
a rose, she lived as roses do, the 3 space of a morn.

1558- 1625 like a bee bosom my


his sweet,

c.

Doth suck

And

Rosalind [1590]

Consolation & Monsieur du


P6rier [1599]

GEORGE PEELE
c.

And
flowers

the fruits will outdo what the have promised.4 Pri&re pour le roi Henri le Grand
[1605]
writes
will

Fair and

fair,

1558-0. 1597 and twice so fair,


of Paris [1584]

As

fair as

any may be. The Arraignment

What Malherbe
forever.

endure

Sonnet & Louis XIII [1624]

merry, merry, merry roundelay Concludes with Cupid's curse: They that do change old love for new, Pray gods, they change for worse!

My

THOMAS KYD
1558-1594

His golden locks time hath to

silver

What

outcries call

me

from

my

naked

turned; time too swift,


ceasing!

swiftness

never

bed?

The Spanish Tragedy*

[1594], act II, sc. v f L i

His youth 'gainst time and age hath


ever spurned,

O
O O

eyes,

no
no

eyes,

but fountains fraught

But spurned

in vain;

youth waneth by

with
life,

tears;
life,

increasing.

but

lively

form

of

Polyhymnia [IJQO]. The Aged

death;
world,

Man-at-Anm,
of public

st.

no world, but mass


filled

His helmet
bees,

now

shall

make

a hive for

wrongs,

Confused and
misdeeds.

with murder and


Ife.

And

lovers'

sonnets

turned

to

holy

Ill,

if,

Hieronymo, beware: go by, go by.


Ib. Ill, xzf, 3
1

psalms,

man-at-arms must

now

serve on his

Why
And
1

then I'll fit you, 6 say no more. When I was young, I gave my mind
plied

And

knees, feed on prayers, which are age his 16. 2 alms.

myself to

fruitless

poetry:

More

a
8

often quoted as See Boilcau, p. 3770.

"Thy

need."

CHIDIOCK
c.

XI C H BORNE*
is

Et rose, die a vcu cc quc vivent Ics roses, L'cspacc d'un matin, * Et Ics fruits passcront la promesse des flours. * This play was undoubtedly the most popular drama of its time, outstripping Shakespeare and the other Elizabethans.
8
I.

1558-1586
but a
frost

My
My My
1

prime of youth
cares; feast of joy
is

of

crop of corn
life,

is

but a dish of pain; but a field of tares;

w,

Quoted by T. S, EUOT in The Waste Land, followed by "Hieronymo's mad againe."

He was

executed for an attempt on Queen

Elizabeth's

204

TICHBORNE

CHAPMAN
I will neither yield to the song of the siren nor the voice of the hyena, the tears of the crocodile x nor the howling

And

all

my

good

is

but vain hope of

gain:

The day is past, and yet I saw no sun; And now I live, and now my life is
done.
Tichborne's Elegy [1586]

of the wolf.

Eastward Ho, act V,

sc. i

For one heat,


another,

all

know, doth drive out

GEORGE CHAPMAN
c.

One

1559-1634
least
is

Promise

2 passion doth expel another still. Monsieur d'Olive [1606], act V, sc. i

is

most given when the

said.

To
Hero and Leander [1598]

world.3

put

girdle

round

about

the

Love

calls to war;

Bussy d'Ambois [1607],


act
I, sc. i

Sighs his alarms, Lips his swords are, The field his arms.
Ib. Epithalamion Teratos, refrain

Speed

his plow.

16.

Young men
but old
fools.

thinlc old men are fools; men know young men are

So our lives In acts exemplary, not only win Ourselves good names, but doth to others give

Matter for virtuous deeds, by which we


live.

All Fools [1605], act

V,

$c. i

16.
is

keep

Keep thy shop, and thy shop will thee. Light gains make heavy
1

Who

to himself

law no law doth


is

purses.

need. Offends no law, and

a king indeed.
16. II,
i

Eastward

Ho 2

[1605], act

I,

sc.

Why, do
man, be

nothing, be like a gentle.

Give

me

a spirit that

on

this

life's

idle

Make ducks and


16.

drakes with shillings.

rough sea Loves f have his


wind,

sails fill'd

with a lusty
his

Only

few industrious Scots per-

Even

till

his

sail-yards

tremble,

indeed arc dispersed over the haps, face of the whole eartn. But as for

who

masts crack,

And

his rapt ship

run on her side so


keel

them, there arc no greater friends to Englishmen and England, when they arc out on't, in the world, than they
arc.

low

That she drinks water, and her


plows air. Conspiracy of Charles,

And for my own part, I would a hundred thousand of them were there [Virginia]; for we are all one countrymen now, ye know, and we should find ten times more comfort of them there 16. Ill, ii than we do here- 8
*

Duke

of
i

Byron [1608], act

III, sc.

We
i

have watered our horses in Helicon.

May-Day
These
crocodile

[1611], act III,


tears.

sc.

in

Quoted

by

BENJAMIN

FRANKLIN

in

Poor

ROBERT

Richard's Almanac [1755]. By Chapman, Jonson, and Marston. * This in the famous passage that gave offense to Jame* I and caused the imprisonment of the authors. The leaves containing it were canceled and reprinted, and H only occurs in a few of RICHARD HKRNE SHEPHERD the original copies.

Anatomy of Melancholy [1681-1651], sec. 2, member a, subsec. 4


SIR
a

BURTON, pt. HI,

She's false, false as the tears of crocodiles.

JOHN SUCKLING [1609-1642], The Sad One,


Sec Shakespeare, p. See Shakespeare, p.

act IV, sc. v

205

SULLY

BACON
Knowledge
is

MAXIMILIEN DUG DE SULLY*


Tilling breasts that feed France. 2

power [Nam

et

ipsa

scientia potestas est]. 1

1559-1641 and grazing

are

the

two
For
III
all
is

Meditationes Sacrae [1597]. De Haeresibus

knowledge

and
itself.

wonder
is

Economies Roydes,

(which

the seed of knowledge)

an

impression of pleasure in

ROBERT GREENE
1560-1592
Sweet are the thoughts that savor of
content;
thors.
If a

The Advancement
Time, which
is

of Learning [1605], bk. I, i, 3

the author of au16. zv, 12

The

quiet

mind is richer than a crown. Farewell to Folly [1591], st. i


is.

he

mind content both crown and


Ib. 2

will begin with certainties, end in doubts; but if he will be content to begin with doubts he shall end in certainties. 16. v, 8

man

shall

kingdom

For there is an upstart crow, beautified with our feathers, that with his
hide,

heart wrapped in a player's supposes he is as well able to bumbast out a blank verse as the best of you; and being an absolute Johannes fac fotum, is in his own conceit the 4 only Shake-scene in a country.
tiger's 8

Antiquitas saeculi juventus mundi. times are the ancient times, when the world is ancient, and not those which we account ancient ordine

These

from

retrogrado, by a computation ourselves. 2


jej
is

backward
Ib.

a rich storehouse for

The Groatsworth
Hangs
in

of

Wit

[1592]
of

the glory of the Creator and the relief of man's estate. Ib,, 11
It [Poesy]
1

the

uncertain

balance

was ever thought to have

proud time. Friar Bacon


Hell's

and

Friar

Bungay
16.

[acted 1594], act III

broken loose.*

IV

FRANCIS BACON*
1561-1626
I

have taken

all

knowledge to be

my

See Proverbs 3^:5, p. *6a. Knowledge is more than equivalent to force. SAMUKX, JOHNSON, Hansels [1759], rh. As In the little, so In the great world, reason will tell you that old age or antiquity is to be accounted by the farther distance from the beginning and the nearer approach to the end the times wherein we now Jive being in propriety of speech the moil ancient aince the world's creation. - GF,O;K HAKKWIU.. An A po logic or Declaration of the Power and Providence of God in the Government of the World

province. Letter to Lord Burleigfi [1592]

[iO7]
For a old age i that |>eriod of life most remote from infancy, who does not see that old age in this universal man ought not to be ought in the times nearest hi* birth, but in those most remote from it? PAJK;AI. [ifiugi66J. Preface to the Treatise on Vacuum It is of remark that a thought which worthy is often quoted from Hands Bacon occurs in
<

The monuments of wit monuments of power,


1 Sec

survive the

Essex's Device [1595]


Henri IV of France,
et
p.

aoa.

pAturagc sent les deux mamclles dont la France est alimente'e.

*Labourage
8
*

[Giordano] Kruno's
in 1584:
I

Owa

<lt

Cenere, published

See Shakespeare, p. *i$b. First known literary reference to Shakespeare. See Milton, p. 3463.
If parts allure thee,

the notion that the later limes are more aged than the earlier. WKKWKI.I,, Philosophy of the Inductive Stience* \iHvj],
vol. //, p,

mean

think

how Bacon

shined,

We

brightest, meanest of mankind. POPE, Essay on Man, epistle IV, I. a/ See Walton, p. 3360.
wisest,

The

And

ty# are Ancient* of the earth, in the morning of the times.

TENNYSON, The Day Dream

[184*], L' Envoi

206

BACON
some
cause
participation
it

of

doth

raise

and

divineness, beerect the mind

Lucid intervals and happy pauses.


History of King Henry VII
[1622], III

by submitting the shews of things to the desires of the mind. The Advancement of Learning,
bk. II,
iv,

Nothing

is

terrible

De Augmentis

except fear itself. Scientiarum, bk. II, Fortitudo [1623]

They
there
is

are

ill

discoverers

no

land,
sea.

when they can

that think see


16. vzi, 5

nothing but
atre of

Riches are a good handmaid, but the worst mistress. 16. Antitheta

But men must know that


man's

in this the-

Hope

is

good breakfast, but

it is

God and

life it is reserved only for angels to be lookers on. Ib. xx, 8

bad supper,

Apothegms [1624], no. 36


Like strawberry wives, that laid two or three great strawberries at the mouth of their pot, and all the rest were little
ones.
Sir

We are much beholden to Machiavel


and others, that write what men do, and not what they ought to do.
Ib. xxi, 9

16.

54

Amice Pawlet, when he saw too


haste

All

good moral philosophy


to religion.

much
wont

made

in

is

but the 14

any matter, was

handmaid

16. xxii,

to say, "Stay a while, that

we may

There are and can be only two ways of searching into and discovering truth. The one flies from the senses and particulars to the most general axioms
.

16. 70 Alonso of Aragon was wont to say in commendation of age, that age appears to be best in four things old wood

make an end the

sooner."

this

way

is

now

in fashion.

The

other derives axioms from the senses

best to burn, old wine to drink, old friends to trust, and old authors to
read. 2

and particulars, rising by a gradual and unbroken ascent, so that it arrives at the most general axioms last of all. This
is

97 Cosmus, Duke of Florence, was wont

16.

the true way, but as yet untried. Noviwi Organum [1620]

There are four classes of Idols which beset men's minds. To these for distinction's sake I have assigned names
calling the first class, Tribe; the second, Idols the third, Idols of the the fourth, Idols of the
16.

to say of perfidious friends, that "We read that we ought to forgive our enemies; but we do not read that we ought 16. 206 to forgive our friends."

Cato
acts

said the best

way

to keep

good

in

memory was
. .
.

to refresh

them
247

Idols of the of the Cave;

with new.

16.

Market-Place; Theatre.

My essays
What
is

come home

to men's

Aphorism 39
16*

business and bosoms. Essays, dedication [1625 edition]

Nature, to be commanded, must be


obeyed.
I

and would not

truth? said jesting Pilate, 8 stay for an answer.


16.

do
I

plainly

that

am

129 and ingenuously confess guilty of corruption, and do

Of Truth

renounce
reed. 1

all defense. I beseech your Lordships to be merciful to a broken

NU terribile nisi ipse timer. See Montaigne, p. i80b and note. See Webster, p. 314^ Old friends are best. King James used to call for his old shoes; they -were easiest for his feet.
1

On

being charged by Parliament with corruption in the exercise of


his office [1621]

SELDEN, Table Talk [1689], Friends See Goldsmith, p. 45<>b. Old books, old wine, old Nankin

blue.

HENRY AUSTIN DOBSON [1840-1991]. Rondeau, To Richard Watson Gilder


3

See Isaiah 36:6, p. gab.

Sec John *8:$8, p. 4gb.

2O7

BACON

No pleasure is comparable to the standing upon the vantage-ground of


truth.

ointments are more durable than those


of flowers. 1

Essays,
Essays,

Of

Praise

Of Truth
go

Men
other.
1

fear death as children fear to

In charity there
16.

is

no

excess.

in the dark; and as that natural fear in children is increased with tales, so is the
Ib.

Of Goodness and Goodness


of Nature

Oj Death

If a

man be
it

gracious

and courteous
is

Revenge is a kind of wild justice, which the more man's nature runs to, the more ought law to weed it out.
Ib.
It

to strangers,

shows he

a citizen of

Of Revenge
(after

the world,2 and that his heart is no island cut off from other lands, but a 16. continent that joins to them. 3
in excess caused the desire of knowl4 edge in excess caused man to fall

was a high speech of Seneca

The

desire of

the manner of the Stoics), that "The good things which belong to prosperity are to be wished, but the good things
that belong to adversity are to be admired." 16. Of Adversity

power

the angels to

fall;

16.
I had rather believe all the fables in the legends and the Talmud and the Alcoran, than that this universal frame
is

Prosperity

is

Testament; adversity
the

the blessing of the Old is the blessing of


16.
fears

New.
is

without a mind.

16.

Of Atheism

Prosperity

not without

many
is

little

philosophy inclineth man's

and

and adversity out comforts and hopes.


distastes;

not withIb.

mind to atheism, but depth in philosophy bringeth men's minds about to re5

Prosperity doth best discover vice, but adversity doth best discover virtue.
16.

ligion.

16.

Virtue
fragrant crushed. 2

is like

when they

most precious odors are incensed or


Ib.

Travel, in the younger sort, is a part of education; in the elder, a part of experience. He that traveleth into a country before

He that hath wife and children hath given hostages to fortune; for they arc impediments to great enterprises, cither of virtue or mischief.
16.

he hath some entrance into the language, gocth to school, and not to travel. 16. Of Travel
Princes arc like to heavenly bodies,

Of Marriage and
are

which cause good or evil times, and which have much veneration but no
rest.

Single Life
mistresses,

16.

Of Empire
and Publiliun

Wives

young men's

companions for middle men's nurses.

age,

and old
16.

*$ec Ecclfsiastes

;;/,

p.

sHa,

A good name is like a precious ointment; it filleth all around about, and will not easily away; for the odors of
1

Syrus, p. 1253. 8 See Socrates, p. ftyb.


8 *

See Donne, p. 50flb. Pride still is aiming at the blest abodes; Men would be angels, angel* would be god*. Aspiring to be gods if angels fell,

See Lucretius, p. 1 1 3b. As aromatic plants bestow No spicy fragrance while they grow; But crushed or trodden to the ground, Diffuse their balmy sweets around.

Aspiring to be angels

men rrbd.
POP*!.

ALEXANDER
5

Kssay on Man,

little skill

in antiquity inclines a
sctidy

man

to

The good

GOLDSMITH, The Captivity [1764], are better made by ill, As odors crushed are sweeter still.

act /

Popery; but depth in that about again to our religion.

brings
State

him

THOMAS

FUI.I.KR.

SAMUEL ROGERS, Jacqueline

The Holy State and the Profane The True Church Antiquary
st.

[1814],

Sec Shelley, p.

208

BACON
Fortune
is

like

many

times,

if

the market, where can you stay a little, the


Essays,

There is no excellent beauty that hath not some strangeness in the proportion.

price will

fall.

Of Delays
in a state

Essays,

Of Beauty

Nothing doth more hurt


than that cunning

God Almighty
den. 1

first

planted a gar16.

men

pass for wise.

Of Gardens
is

Ib.

Of Cunning

He
little

that

commands the

sea

at great

so true to thyself, as thou be not false to others. 1 16. Of Wisdom for a Man's Self
It
is the nature of extreme self-lovers, they will set an house on fire, and it

Be

liberty,

and may take as much and as of the war as he will. 2 16. Of the True Greatness of

Kingdoms
are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be 16. Of Studies chewed and digested.

as

Some books

were but to roast

their eggs.

Ib.
kill

Cure the
tient.

disease

and
Ib.

the pa-

Of
16.

Friendship

Riches are for spending.

Reading maketh a full man, conference a ready man, and writing an exact

Of Expense
beyond the
observa-

man.
Histories
witty; the

16:

There

is

wisdom

in this

make

men

wise;

poets,
logic 16.

rules of physic. tion, what he finds

man's

own

mathematics,

subtile; natural

good of and what he

philosophy,

finds hurt of, serve health.


16.

is

the best physic to preof

and

deep; moral, grave; rhetoric, able to contend.


greatest
is

The
Of Regimen
. .
.

vicissitude

of

things

Health

Intermingle

jest

with earnest. 2 16. Of Discourse

amongst men and religions.


16.
I

the vicissitude of sects


Vicissitude of Things
.

Of

Nature is often hidden; sometimes overcome; seldom extinguished. 16. Of Nature in Men

man look sharply and attentively, shall see Fortune; for though she is 8 blind, she is not invisible.
If a

he

bequeath my soul to God. body to be buried obscurely. For my name and memory, I leave it to men's charitable speeches, and to foreign nations, and the next age. From his mil [1626]
.

My

16.

Of Fortune

The

world's a bubble,

and the

life

of

man
iSee Genesis a:8t p. 5b. Divina natura dedit agros, ars humana aedificavit urbes [Divine Nature gave the fields,

is

Chiefly the mold of a man's fortune 16. in his own hands. 4

Young men arc fitter to invent than to judge, fitter for execution than for counsel, and fitter for new projects than for settled business.
16.

Of Youth and Age


a
rich

VARRO [116the cities]. Rustica III, i See Shakespeare, p. 2&5b. Gardens were before gardeners, and but some SXR THOMAS BROWNE, hours after the earth. The Garden of Cyrus [1658], ch, I

human

art

built

87 B.C.],

De Re

Virtue
plain set.
*

is

like

stone
16.

best

Of Beauty

See Cowley, p. J58a, and Cowper, p. 457 b See Themistodes, p. 78a; Mahan, p. 785^
p. ggSa,

and Morison,

Sec Shakespeare, p. asga. 'Sec Mcnandcr, p. io*a, Horace, p. issb, and

He
sort,

that

is

be said
such as

to

note.

least
is

master of the sea, may, in some be Master of every country; at are bordering on the sea. For he

Fortune is painted blind, with a muffler afore her eyes, to signify to you that Fortune is V [1598-1600], blind. SHAKKSPKARK, Henry
act 111, sc. vi t
*
t.

and end War, where, when, and on what terms he pleaseth, and extend his JOSEPH GANconquests even to the Antipodes.
at liberty to begin

31

DER,

The Glory
in the

of

Her

Sacred Majesty Queen

See Sallust, p. ii6a, and note.

Anne

Royal Navy [1703]

209

BACON
Less than a span. 1

DANIEL

From
The World
[1629]

foul to

fair,

from better hap to


by Turns
[c.

worse.

Who

Times
2

Go

then to frail mortality shall trust But limns on water, or but writes in
dust.
16.

1595],
St.
1

What

then remains but that should cry

we

May For May


But

never was the


is full

month

of love,

of flowers;

still

rather April, wet by kind, For love is full of showers.

For being born, and, being born, to


die? 3
Ib.

Love's Servile Lot

As
sciences,

I in

hoary winter night stood shiverI

Books must follow


sciences books.

and not

ing in the snow,

Surprised was

with sudden heat which


to glow;

Proposition touching amend-

made my heart

ment

of laws

And

lifting

up

a fearful eye to view

what

fire

was near

SIR

JOHN HARINGTON
1561-1612

pretty Babe all burning bright did in the air appear.

The Burning Babe

[written

Treason doth never prosper: what's the


reason?

With
call it trea-

this

he vanished out of

sight,

and

For

if it

prosper, none dare

son. 4

Epigrams.

Of Treason
like

And

shrunk away, straight I called unto mind that it Ib. was Christmas Dav.
swiftly

The

readers

and the hearers


writers
I? for

my

books,

But yet some


digest;

cannot
I

them
a

SAMUEL DAN IEL


1562-1619
Carc-charmcr Sleep, son of the sable Night, Brother to Death* in silent darkness
born. 1

But what care


feast
I

when

make
it,

would

my
16.

guests should praise

not

the cooks.

Of Writers

Carp at Other Men's Books

Who

Sonnets to Delia [1592]

Make me

to say,

when

all

my

griefs are

ROBERT SOUTHWELL
c.

1561-1595

Times go by turns, and chances change by course,


1

gone, "Happy the heart that sighed for such a oncl" 16. Sonnet: I Must Not Grieve

In

Whose

span.

life is a bubble, and in length a WILLIAM BROWNE, Britannia's Pastorals

Let others sing of knights and paladins aged accents and untimely words, Paint shadows in imaginary lines
1

[1613], bk, /, song See Sir John Davics, p. 301 a,

and The
p,

New

Care-charmer a!eep
misery,

xweei

ease
hto

in

restlm

England Primer,
fl

p, 10896. p,

The
Catullus,
nr,a; Keats,

Sce

Sophocles,

833;

More, p.
p. 5863.

1785; Shakespeare, p. sgga; and


line

captive's song, Balm of the


felicity,

liberty,

and
ht'.ut,

freedom's
chief

bruised

man's
life
Is

*This
actly the

frequently occurs

in

almost

ex-

Brother of quiet death, when


t(x>

t<x>,

same shape among the minor poems of the time: "Not to be born, or, being born, to die." WILLIAM DRUMMOND, Poems [1656] See Theognis, p. 773, and note.
*

long!

BARTHOLOMEW Cm* MS, FidcMa More Chaste Than Kind |i&cj(i)


See Homer, p. 643; Virgil,
pearc, p, sftja;
j.
119:1;

Shakes-

See Seneca, p. 1313,

and

Shelley, p.

5(18:1.

210

DANIEL

GALILEO
Shake hands
vows,
forever,

Which

well the reach of their high wits

cancel

all

our

record.

Sonnets to Delia. Sonnet: I Must Not Grieve

And when we meet

at

any time again,

These

are

the

arks,

the trophies,

Be it not seen in either of our brows That we one jot of former love retain.

Now

at the last

erect,

gasp of love's latest

That

fortify thy

name

against old age. Ib.

breath,

When

his pulse failing, Passion speech-

less lies,

And

for the
ear,

few that only lend their


the world.
st.

When

Faith

is

kneeling by his bed of


is

death,
is all

That few
This
is

And Innocence
97

closing

up

his eyes,
all

Musophilus [1599],
the thing that
I

Now

if

thou wouldst, when

have

do.

was born to Ib. st 100

given

him

over,

From death

to life thou might'st

him

Unless above himself he can Erect himself, how poor a thing is man! To the Countess of Cumberland
[C.

yet recover,

Poems

[1619]- Idea

The

coast was clear.

l6oo],

St.

12

Nymphidia [1627]

Love

is

a sickness

full of

woes,

Had

in

him those brave

translunary

All remedies refusing.

Hymen's Triumph [1615]

things That the first poets had. Said of MARLOWE.

To Henry

LOPE DE VEGA
1562-1632
pure love, complete agreement. Fuente Ovejuna, 1 act

Reynolds,
[1627]

Of

Poets and Poesy

Harmony

is

for love

is

For that fine madness


tain

still

he did

re-

I,

I 381

Which

Kxcept
lord.

for

God, the King's our only


Ib.

a poet's rightly should possess #> brain,

1701

MICHAEL DRAYTON
1563-1631 Fair stood the wind for France.

GALILEO GALILEI
1564-1642
Philosophy
is

The Rdlad
() t

book
st.
i

mean the

written in this grand which universe

of Agincourt [1606"),

stands continually
it

when shall Knglislimcn With such nets fill a pen, Or Knglund breed again
Such
a

open to our gaze, but cannot be understood unless one first learns to comprehend the language and

King Harry?

Ib.

15

characters in which it is interpret the in the language of written It is written. mathematics, and its characters are triangles,
circles,

Since there's no help, come

let us kiss

and other geometrical

and part more Nay, I hnvc clone: you get no me,

of

And

am

with all glad, yea glad


so cleanly
I

my
free.

without which it is humanly figures, a single word impossible to understand is wandering one without of it; these, about in a dark labyrinth.
l

II

heart,

Saggiatore

[1623]

That thus
>

myself can

Translated by ANCKI. FORKS and MURIKI. KrrtEt. From Spanish Drama [i9<te].

on the i The Assayer in The Controversy Comets of 1618 [1960], translated by STILLMAN DRAKE and C. D. O'MALLEY.

211

GALILEO

MARLOWE
By
shallow
rivers, to

But

it

does move!

whose

falls

From ABB&

IRAILH,

Ouerelles

litteraires [1761], vol. Ill, p.

49

Melodious birds sing madrigals. 1 The Passionate Shepherd


to his

Love

CHRISTOPHER

MARLOWE
1564-1593

And And
I

will

make thce beds of roses thousand fragrant posies. 1


16.

Our swords
us.

shall play the orators for

Tamburlaine the Great

[c.

1587],

And

count religion but a childish toy, hold there is no sin but ignorance. 2

pt. I,

I 328

The Jew

of Malta

[c.

589],

Accurst be he that

first

invented war.
16.

prologue
Infinite riches in a little

664

room. 3
16. act
I, so.
i

And

ride in

triumph through Persepolis, Ib. 759


us
of

Nature that framed

our

Excess of wealth
ele-

is

cause of covetous16. 2

ness.
regi-

ments, Warring within our breasts for

Now will

show mvself
fool.

to

have more
4

ment,

of the serpent than tnc dove;

that

is,

Doth teach
minds:

us

all

to

have aspiring

more knave than


friar

16. II, 3

whose faculties can comprehend The wondrous Architecture of the


souls,

Our

world:

And measure
course,
Still

every wandering planet's


infinite,

Barnadine: Thou hast committed but that was in Barabas: Fornication another country; And besides, the wench is dead. 16. IV, i

And

climbing after knowledge always moving as the


Spheres,

restless

My

Will us to wear ourselves and never


rest,

Until

we reach the

ripest fruit of

men, like satyrs grazing on the lawns, Shall with their goat feet dance the antic hay. Edward II [1593^ act I T $c. i
over loved that loved not at
*
first

all,

That

The

perfect bliss and sole felicity, sweet fruition of an earthly crown.


16.

Who
sight?

869
1
T

Hero and Lcander [2598]


shallow rivers, to whose falli Melodious birds sing madrigals; There will we make our ptli of rose*, And a thousand fragrant (xisici. StiAKf.WttARF., Merry Wives of Windsor
[1600-1601], act III,
IK.
i\
/.

Tamburlaine,

the

Scourge

of
16.

God

To

must

die.

4641
love;

Come
That

live

with me, and be


hills,

my

And we

will all the pleasures prove


a
9

/7 [sung

and fields, valleys, groves, Woods or stcepy mountain yields. 2

by Evans]
See Wilde, p. 8393.

The
1

Passionate Shepherd to his

Love
pur
si

[c.

1589]

Here lyeth muche rychnewc in tytrll space. JOHN HEYWOOI>, The four* PP [i 5*1 -15*$] See Matthew 10:16, p. 4x3, * Quoted in SHAKKSPF.AKK, As You Like It,
*

muove!

act

///,

sc.

v,

I.

8*
first

attributed to Galileo immediately after he was forced to recant his views on the earth's motion before the Inquisition in 1635. 3 See Ralegh, p. xg8b, and Donne, p. goGa.

The remark

None

ever loved but at

night they loved,

GKORCK
Alexandria
I

CHAPMAN,

The

Blind

Reggar

ttf

[1598] saw and loved.

GIBBON, Memoirs [1796]

212

MARLOWE
Like untuned golden strings
are,
all

women
will

Her

lips

suclc

forth

my

soul;

see,

where

it flies!

long time lie untoucht, harshly jar. Vessels of brass oft handled
shine.

Which

The
Oh, thou
air

Tragical History of Doctor Faustus, sc. xiv


art fairer

brightly

than the evening


stars.

Hero and Leander


Live and die in Aristotle's works.

Clad in the beauty of a thousand

Ib.

The

Tragical History of Doctor


sc. i

Faustus [published 1604],

Pray for me! and what noise soever ye hear, come not unto me, for nothing can rescue me. 16. xvi

Unhappy
rer,

spirits that fell

with Lucifer,

Conspired against our God with Luci-

Now
And

hast thou but one bare hour to


live,

And

are forever

damned with

Lucifer.
16. in

then thou must be damned perpetually!

Why
And

this

is

hell,

nor
I

am

Think'st thou that


of

who

out of it: 1 saw the face


I

God,

still, you ever-moving spheres of Heaven, That time may cease, and midnight Ib. never come.

Stand

Am

tasted the eternal joys of Heaven, not tormented with ten thousand
hells,

2 lente, lente currite noctis equi: The stars move still, time runs, the

clock will strike,

In being deprived of everlasting bliss?


16.

The
O,

Devil will come, and Faustus must

be damned,
Til leap

Hell

hath
scribed

no

limits,

nor

is

circumare
is

up

to

my

God!

Who

pulls

me down?
Sec, sec where Christ's blood streams in the firmament!

In one self place; for where


hell,

we

And where
be, 1

hell

is

there

must we ever 16. v

One drop would


drop: ah,

my

save my soul Christ!


little

half a
Ib.

soul,

be changed into

water-

And
All

the world dissolves, every creature shall be purified, places shall be hell that is not
all

When

And

drops. fall into the ocean

ne'er to

be

found.

Heaven.

16.

My God! my God!
me!
Ill

look not so fierce on


Ib.

Have not me?

made

blind

Homer

sing to
16. vi

burn
is

my

books!
that

Ib.

Cut

the branch
is

might have

Was
And

this the face that

launched a thou-

grown

full straight,
8 Apollo's laurel bough,

sand ships, burnt the

And
topless

burnfcd

towers

of

Il-

That
1

sometime

grew

within

this

ium? 2 Sweet Helen, make


kiss,
Virgil,
p. ;t4aa
3
j>.

me

immortal with a

learned man. Once he drew With one long kiss my whole

Ib.
soul through
[1853],
st.

My
and
icftHb: aiul

lips.

Robm

p, 345:1;

ncja; Browne, p. s^oa; Milton, Kliot, p. 1 00711; Sartre, p.

TENNYSON, Fatima
a

Run
At

I.owdl, p. 1070?),

slowly, slowly, horses of the night. si, quern mails, Cephalum complcxa

Was

thin fair face the

Why

thr

Gmiani
i:,

ramc, quoth she, sacked Troy? All's Well that Ends Well
fta.*)],

tenercs,

Glainaros "lente currite noctis equi."


*

act I,

sc.

Hi,

I.

75

Ovm [43 B.C.-A.D. 18], Arnores Sec Shakespeare, p. a88b.

I,

xiii,

3$

213

SHAKESPEARE

6
base
passions,
fear
is

SHAKESPEARE*
1564-1616

WILLIAM

Of

all

most
ii,

accurs'd.

Henry VI, Part


She's
beautiful
a

I,

V,

18

Hung be

the heavens with black, yield day to night!

and

therefore

to

be

King Henry
Fight
till

VI

woo'd,

[1591], Part act I, sc. i, I.


I,
ii,

I,
i

She

is

woman,
is

therefore to be won. 1

V,
For what

in,

78

the
2

last gasp.

12 7

wedlock forced, but a

hell,

Expect Saint Martin's summer, halcyon


days.
I,
ii,

131

Glory
Till

is

like a circle in the water,

Which

never ceaseth to enlarge


it 1,

age of discord and continual strife? Whereas the contrary bringcth bliss, And is a pattern of celestial peace. V, v, 62

An

itself,

by broad spreading
nought,

disperse to
ii,

Whose large
purse.

style

133

Agrees not with the leanness of his

Unbidden

guests

Are often welcomest when they are II, ii, 55 gone.

King Henry VI, Part


sc.

II, act I,
i,

L 112

Between two hawks, which


higher pitch;

flics

the

Tis not
like,

my

speeches that you do mis-

Between two dogs, which hath the deeper mouth; Between two blades, which bears the
better temper; Between two horses,

But

'tis

my

presence that doth trouble


I,
i,

ye.

Rancor

will out.
I

141

which doth bear

Could
I'd

come near your beauty with


in your

him

best;
girls,

Between two
riest eye;
I

which hath the merspirit of

my nails set my ten commandments


face.
I,

111/144

have, perhaps,

some shallow

Blessed are the peacemakers

judgment;

But

on earth. 2 II i, 34

in these nice sharp quillets of the

law,

Now, God be
ing souls

prais'd,

that to believ-

Good

faith, I

am no
in

wiser than a daw. II, iv, 12

Gives light in darkness, comfort in despair!


II,
II,
i,

66
55

111 note

you

my

book of memory.
II, iv,

101

God

defend the

right!

ifi,

Just death, kind umpire of men's miseries* II, v, 29 Chok'd with ambition of the meaner

Sometimes hath the brightest day a


cloud;

And

sort.
8 Delays have dangerous ends.

II, v,

123
33

after summer evermore succeeds Barren winter, with his wrathful nip-

III,
1

ii,

ping cold: So cares and joys abound, as seasons


fleet
II r iv, i
'tis the spring, and weeds are shallow-rooted; Suffer them now and they'll ' o'ergrow

the text of W. J. CRAIG, Oxford University Press. The dates and order, about which there is much conjecture, are those which Sir

From

Now

Edmund Chambers

(William Shakespeare, 1930)

thinks most probable. * See Aristophanes, p. gib. 8 See Lyly, p. aosb.


All delays arc dangerous in war. Tyrannic Love [1669], act I, sc. i

the garden.
DRYDKN,
*See Titus Andranicus, p.
3

III,

i,

31

See Matthew y:^

p, 4oa,

SHAKESPEARE
In thy face I see of honor, truth, and loyalty. Henry VI, Part II, III, x, 202
Sir,

The map

ther's house, and this day to testify

he made a chimney in the bricks are


it.

my

fa-

alive at

What

stronger breastplate than a heart untaintedl


is

Henry VI, Part II, IV, ii, 160 Thou hast most traitorously corrupted the youth of the realm in erecting a grammar-school; and whereas, before, our forefathers had no other books but the score and the tally, thou hast
caused printing to be used; and, conand digtrary to the king, his crown, a built hast thou paper-mill. nity,

Thrice

he arm'd that hath

his quar-

rel just,

And he but
steel,

naked, though locked up in


is
ii,

Whose

conscience with injustice 1 Ill, rupted.

cor-

232

He

dies,

and makes no

sign.
Ill, in,

IV,

viz,

35

29

Beggars mounted run


death.*

their

horse to
III, act I,
I.

Forbear to judge, for we are sinners


all.

King Henry VI, Part

Close up his eyes and draw the curtain


close;

sc. iv,

12 j

And

let us all to meditation.


III,
iii,

O
31

heart wrapp'd in a woman's tiger's hide! 2 I, iv, 137


is

The gaudy,
day
Is

blabbing, and remorseful

To weep
grief,

to

make

less

the depth of II, i, 85


turn
II,

crept into the

bosom

of the sea.

The
i,

smallest

worm

will

IV,
Small
things

trodden on.
Didst thou never hear

being ii, 17

make

base

men
IV,

proud.
z,

106

That things
cess?

ill

got had ever bad suc-

True

nobility

is

exempt from

fear.

IV,
I

i,

129

And happy always was it for that son Whose father for his hoarding went to
hell?

will

make

it

felony to drink small

beer. 8

IV,
first

ii,

75
86

Thou

setter 8

kings.

II, ii, 45 of down and plucker up II, i, 37

The

thing

we

do, let's kill all the

lawyers.
this a

IV,

ii,

And what makes much lenity?

robbers bold but too


II, vi,

22

lamentable thing, that Is not of the skin of an innocent lamb should

My
Not
Nor

crown

is

in

my

heart, not

on

my

be made parchment? that parchment, being scribbled o'er, should undo a IV, ii, 88 man?

head; deck'd with diamonds and Indian


stones, to be seen:
tent;

my

crown

is

call'd con-

And Adam was

a gardener.*

IV, 0,146
Sec Milton, p. 337 a 5kr Mnlthfw 7:1* p. 41*. Doth it not allow vilely in
-

crown

it is

that seldom kings enjoy.


Ill,
i,

62

Set a beggar

me

to desire $mall
pt-

a gallop.

on horseback and he ROBERT BURTON, Anatomy

will ride

beer? King Henry Sec Othello, p.

/F [1597-1598!.
superfluity

U,

1,

^b.
small
beer.

That
<>f

qtientUmablc

ancholy [1681-1651], pt. II, sec. a, Set a beggar on horseback, and he'll outride BOHN, Foreign Proverbs, German the Devil.
a

member

of Mela

IX>tii.Aft

The Tragedy JfcMotD [1803-1857],


i,

the Till
ja, p. afisb;

*$ce ttamltt V. and KipHng, p.

Bacon, p. aogb;

See Robert Greene, p. so6a. Proud setter up and puller


711,
tff,

down

of kings.

Jfr.

157

215

SHAKESPEARE

To be

Tis a happy thing the father unto many sons. Henry VI, Part III, III, &, 104

When
him.

The lamb

the lion fawns upon the lamb, will never cease to follow
III,

Like one that stands upon a promontory,

Henry VI, Part

IV,

What
And,

And

spies

far-off

shore where

he

pomp, and dust?


is

rule, reign,

vizi, 49 but earth

would

live

Wishing
eye.

tread, his foot

we how we

can, yet die

we
27
13

were equal with his Ill, ii, 135

must.

V, V,

ii,

Every cloud engenders not a storm.


iii,

To

Yield not thy neck fortune's yoke, but let thy dauntless

What
The

though the mast be

now blown

mind
Still

ride

in

triumph

over

all

mis-

overboard, cable broke, the holding anchor


lost,

chance.

Ill, Hi,

16

And
For

half our sailors swallow'd in the


flood?
lives

how can
home,

tyrants

safely

govern

Yet
So

Unless abroad they purchase great alliance? Ill, iii, 69

our pilot

still.

V,
this

iv,

part

we

sadly

in

troublous

Having nothing, nothing can he


Ill,
iii,

lose.

To meet

152

world with joy in sweet Jerusalem. V,v, 7


ne'er spend their furv '

Lives like a drunken sailor on a mast, Ready with every nod to tumble down.
Ill, iv,

Men

on a

child.

V,v T?7
He's sudden head.
Suspicion
if

98

thing corncs in his

Hasty marriage seldom provcth well. IV, i, 18


Let us be back'd with
the seas

V,
haunts
the

v,

86

always

guilty

God and

with

mind;

The

thief doth fear each


cer.
1

Which he hath
nable,

given for fence impreg-

bush an offiV, vi, 11


'

This word "love/ which greybeards


divine.

call

And

with their helps only defend ourselves:

V,

vi,

81

In them and in ourselves our safety


lies,

Now
Made

is

the winter of our discontent

glorious

IV,

summer by
III

this

sun of

i,

43

York.

What
It

fates impose, that men must needs abide; boots not to resist both wind and
tide.

King Richard

[1592-2593],
I,

act

sc.

z\

/.

IV,

iii,

57

Grim-visaged war hath smoothed his wrinkled front. I, i, 9

Now

join your hands, and witli your hands your hearts. IV, vi, 39

To

lie capers nimbly in a lady's chamber the lascivious pleasing of a lute.


I,
i,

For many

men

12

that

stumble at the
danger lurks IV, vii, 11

threshold

This weak piping time of peace.


that
I,
i,

Are well

foretold

24
71

within.

No

beast

so

fierce

but knows

some

quickly trodden out, Which, being suffered, rivers cannot IV, viii, 7 quench.
little fire is

touch of

pity.

I, ii,

Look,

how my

ring encompasscth thy

finger,

2l6

SHAKESPEARE

Even

so thy breast encloseth

my

poor

So wise so young, they


1

say,

do never
i,

live

heart;

long.

Wear both

of them, for both of are thine.

them
204
I

Richard
Off with his head!
2

III, III,

79

Richard

III, iv,

75

III, I,

ii,

Was Was

ever

woman

in

this

humor

am

not in the giving vein today.


sons of

woo'd?
ever

woman

in this

humor won?
I, ii,

The

Edward

sleep in

229

bosom.3

ii, 115 Abraham's IV, Hi, 38

IV,

Fram'd

in the prodigality of nature.

grievous burden

was thy birth to

The world is grown so bad, That wrens make prey where eagles
dare not perch. 1
I, iii,

me; Tetchy and wayward was thy infancy. IV, iv, 168

70

An

honest tale speeds best being plainly


told.
iv,

And thus With odd


writ,

clothe

my

naked villany

359 365
432

old ends stol'n forth of holy


a saint

Harp not on that string.

IV,

iv,

And seem
devil.

when most

play the

Relenting fool, and shallow changing

woman!
Is

IV,

iv,

I, iii,

336
351
the chair empty? is the sword unsway'd? the king dead? the empire unpossess'd?

Talkers are no good doers.


I, iii,

Is

have passed a miserable night,


full

IV,

iv,

470

So

of

ugly

sights,

of

ghastly
faithful

dreams, That, as I
I

Thus far into the bowels of the land Have we march'd on without impediment. V, ii, 3
True hope
Kings
t

am

Christian

man, would not spend another such

is

swift,

and

flies

with swal-

night, Though 'twere to


days.

buy a world of happy


I, iV,

low's wings;
it

2
it

makes gods, and meaner creal XT'*

tures kings.

V,

ii,

23

Lord, Lord! methought, what pain

was

to

drown:

The
Give

king's

name

is

What

dreadful noise of waters in

mine

a tower of strength. V, iii, 12

cars!

me

another horse! bind up

What

ugly sights of death within mine


I

my
178

wounds!

V,

iii,

eyes

Methought
wracks;

saw

thousand fearful
that
fishes

O
My

coward conscience, afflict me!

how

dost thou

V,

iii,

180

thousand
upon.

men

gnaw
21

conscience hath a thousand several


tongues,
a several every tongue brings in
tale,

I, iv,

The kingdom
Sorrow
breaks

of perpetual night.

And
47

I
seasons

to,

And
*

and

every tale
lain-

reposing

condemns me for a vilV, iii, 194

hours,

Makes the night morning, and the


noontide night.
I, iv,

76
35

A little too wise, they say, do ne'er live long. MIDDLETON [1580-1687], The Phoenix, act 1,
i

sc.
a

parlous boy.
*

II, iv,

roll, p.

See Pope, p. 4043.

See Colley Gibber, p. 744a. See Luke i6:aa t p. 47a.

and Lewis Car-

217

SHAKESPEARE

By the apostle Paul, shadows tonight Have struck more terror to the soul of
Richard Than can the substance of ten thousand soldiers. Richard III, V, iff, 217
Conscience
use,
is

Be not thy tongue thy own shame's


orator.

The Comedy
111

of Errors III,

if,

10
evil

deeds word.

are doubled

with

an
ff,

Ill,

20

but a word that cowards


to keep the strong in

back-friend, a shoulder-clapper.

IV,
Give

if,

37

Devis'd at awe.

first

me

your hand and

let

me
a

feel

V,

iff,

310

pulse.

IV,
clamors
of

fv,

your 54

horse!

a horse!

my kingdom
V,

for a
iv,

The

venom

jealous

horse!
I

woman
Poison more deadly than a
tooth.

mad
V,

have

set

my

life

upon

a cast,

dog's
f,

And
I

stand the hazard of the die. think there be six Richmonds in the
I will

69

Unquiet meals make

ill

digestions.

field.

V,

fv,

>

'>

74
vil-

The

pleasing punishment that


bear.

women

One

Pinch, a hungry Ican-fac'd


a

lain,

The Comedy

of Errors [15921593], act I, sc. i, L 46

A A
A

mere anatomy,
teller,

mountebank,
a

threadbare juggler, and


needy, hollow-cy'd, wretch,

fortune-

We

may

pity,

though not pardon thee. *> *> 97

sharp-looking

Why,

headstrong liberty is lash'd with woe. There's nothing situate under heaven's
eye

A living-dead
Sweet mercy

man.
is

V,

f,

238

nobility's true badge.

Titus Andronicus [1593-1594],


act
I, sc.
z, /.

But hath
sky.

his

bound, in

earth, in sea, in
II,
i,

119

15

Every

why hath

a wherefore. 1
II,
zf,

These words are heart

razors to

my

wounded
1,1,314

45

He

lives in

fame that died

in virtue's

There's no time for a man to recover his hair that grows bald by nature.
II,
ii,

74
83

I, f, 390 These dreary dumps. 1 I, 392 She is a woman, therefore may be


i'

cause.

What

he hath scanted
in wit.

men

in hair,
II,
fz,

woo'd;

he hath given them


feast.

She

is

woman,
you

therefore

may be
II,
z\

won. 2

82

Small cheer and great welcome makes a

merry

Ill,

i,

26
69
s3

What

cannot

as

you

would

achieve,

There

is

something in the wind.

You must
i,

m,
We'll pluck a crow together.

perforce accomplish as you


II,
i,

may.

106

m,
sion.
i

i,

The And
Tut!
1

eagle suffers little birds to sing.


is

not careful what

they

mean
fv,

For slander lives upon succession, Forever housed where it gets possesIll,
z,

thereby.
I

Iv,

82

have done a thousand dreadful


-

105

things

Sec King Henry Vf p. For every why he had a wherefore. BUTLER, Hudibras, pt. I [1663], canto

SAMUKL
x,

And doleful dump* chf mind oppress. Homeo and Juliet, act IV, sc, v, I, 139
*Sec King Henry VI, Pait
/,

p.

218

SHAKESPEARE
As willingly
I'll

as

one would

kill

fly.
i,

And
141
It

thereby hangs a

tale. 1

Titus Andronicus V,

The Taming
was the
friar

of the

not budge an inch.

IV,

Shrew x, 60

The Taming
[

of the Shrew 593- 1 594\> Induction, i,

As he forth walked on
Sits

of orders grey, his way. 2

*3

And

if

the boy have not a woman's


of

as

gift

To rain a shower An onion will do

IV, i, 148 one new-risen from a dream. IV, 1,189


a way to Hll a wife with kindIV, 1,211

commanded

tears,

This

is

well for such a shift.

ness.

No
In

profit ta'en;

grows where

is

124 no pleasure

I&.

Kindness in women, not their beauteous looks,


Shall

brief, sir, affect.

study what

win

you most Act I, $c. i, I. 39

my love.
shall

IV,

ii,

41

Our
For

purses
'tis

be proud, our

gar-

There's small choice in rotten apples.


I, i,

ments poor:
the

mind that makes the body


sun breaks through the
peereth
in

137

To

seek their fortunes further than at

And
So

rich; as the

home,

darkest clouds,

Where

small experience grows.


I,
,

honor
habit.

the

meanest
in,

5*

IV,
pray, since

173
so

Nothing comes withal.

comes

amiss,

so

I,

money U 82
9

Forward,
far,

we have come

And do

And be
as

it

do in law, Strive mightily, but eat and drink


as adversaries
friends.
I

moon,

or sun, or
call

what you
a rushfor

please:

An

if

I, ii,

281

you please to
I

it

candle,

must dance barefoot on her wedding


for
hell.

Henceforth me.

vow

it

shall

be so
IV,
v,

12

And,

your love to her, lead apes in


II,
z,

He

that

33

giddy thinks the world turns round. V, n, 20


is

Asses are

made

to bear,

and so arc you, II, i, zoo


be married
II,
i,

A woman
bled,

mov'd

is

like a fountain trou-

Kiss

me, Kate, we Sunday.

will

o'

Muddy,

ill-seeming,

thick,

bereft

of

beauty.

V, 11,143
as

318
i,

Old fashions please me

Such duty
prince, Kven such a

the

subject

owes the
to her hus-

best.
III,

81

woman oweth
I will

Who

woo'd

in haste

and means to wed


III,
ii,

band.

at leisure, 1

11

Bid

me
ear.

discourse,

V, ii, 156 enchant thine


[1593],
of
Z.

Such an injury would vex

a saint.
Ill,
ii,

28

Venus and Adonis


Love
is

145

little

2 pot and soon hot.

a spirit

all

compact

fire,

IV,

i,

Sec Rabelais, p. i8ib. Elsewhere in Shakes-

peare.

Congrcve*, p. 39 ib, and Cabell, p. g4gb. * H* in a Htilc chimney, and heated hot in a moment. - I.ONCFKIXOW, The. Courtship of Miles

Stundhh

(i8r,H]

THOMAS PERCY [1728-1811] composed The Friar of Orders Grey of various fragments of ancient ballads found in Shakespeare's plays. See Anonymous, p. io84b.

21 9

SHAKESPEARE

Not

gross to sink, but light,


aspire.

and
I.

will

Time's glory
kings,

is

to

calm

contending

Venus and Adonis,


O!

149

To unmask

What

a war of looks was then beZ. tween them. 355

falsehood, and bring truth to light. The Rape of Lucrece, L 939

Like a red morn, that ever yet betoken'd Wrack to the seaman, tempest to the
field.
I.

For greatest scandal waits on greatest


state.
Z.

1006

To

see sad sights

moves more than hear


Z.

453
531
after

them

told.
Ilion.

1324

The

owl, night's herald.


like

Z.

Cloud-kissing

Z.

1370

Love comforteth
rain,

sunshine
Z.

Lucrccc swears he did her wrong. 1

799

The

text

is

old, the orator too green.

1462 Home-keeping youth have ever homely


wits.

Z.

For he being dead, with him


slain,

is

beauty

The Two Gentlemen of Verona [1594-2595], act I $c. z, Z. 2


I
I

And, beauty dead, black chaos conies 1 I. again. 1019

have no other but a woman's reason: think him so, because I think him
so.
I, zi, 23 do not love that do not They

The

grass stoops not, she treads


light.

on
Z.

it

so

1028
Julia:

doth of itself persuade The eyes of men without an orator. The Rape of Lucrece [1594], Z. 29
Beauty
itself

show

their love.

Lucetta: O! they love least that let

men
,

know their

love.

I,

This silent war of lilies and of roses, Which Tarquin view'd in her fair face's
field.
Z.

71

Those that much covet are with gain so


fond,

Since maids, in modesty, say "No*' to that Which they would have the proffcrcr construe "Ay." I, if, 53

For what they have not, that which they possess They scatter and unloose it from their

O! how this spring of love rcscmbkth The uncertain glory of an April clay!
I, iff,

84

bond, i\nd so, by hoping more, they have but less. I 134 Dne for all, or all for one we gage.2 I 144

unseen, inscrutable, invisible, As a nose on a man's face, 2 or a weathercock on a steeple! II, f, 145
jest

lie

makes sweet music with


ell'd stones.

th* cnaiuII, vff,

28
is

Who
Dr

buys a minute's mirth to wail a week?

That man that hath no man,


If

a tongue,

say,

sells eternity to get a toy? For one sweet grape who will the vine 1 213 destroy?

with his tongue he cannot win a

woman.

III,

z,

04

Rxtreme fear can neither fight nor


Z.

fly.

230
258

Except I be by Silvia in the night, There is no music in the nightingale.


Ill,
1

f,

\11

orators

are

dumb when

178
A'mg

beauty
Z.

Somc

villain

hath done

pleadcth.
1

me

wrong.

See Othello, p. $743. See Dumas, p. 5g8b.

Leaf [1605-1606], /, 11, 186 See Frankte and johnny, p. noib. *Sce Rabelais, p. 18 ib.

22O

SHAKESPEARE

Much

is

The Two Gentlemen

the force of heaven-bred poesy. of Verona


III,
ii,

And men
ment which

sit
is

down

to that nourish-

called supper.
I,
i,

72

Love's Labour's Lost

237
soul.

Who is Silvia? what


That
all

is

she,

That unlettered small-knowing

our swains commend her? Holy, fair, and wise is she; The heaven such grace did lend her, That she might admired be.

I,i,

251

child of our
or,

grandmother Eve, a
I, i,

female;

for

thy more sweet under-

standing, a

woman.

263

iv, a, 40
Alas,

Affliction

how

may one day


sit

love can

trifle

with

itself!
iv,

and

till

then,

smile again; thee down, sorrow!

TV,
Black

190
Devise, wit; write, pen; for
I

1,1,312

men

are

pearls

in

beauteous

am

for

ladies' eyes.

V,

ii,

12
x

whole volumes in
Beauty
is

folio.

I, ii,

194

How

use doth breed a habit in a man!

bought by judgment of the by base


sale of

V,

iv, i

Spite of cormorant devouring Time. Love's Labour's Lost [15941595], act


I, sc.
i,

Not

eye, utter'd

tongues.

chapmen's II, i, 15

I 4
i,

A man
Well

of sovereign

parts

he

is

es-

Make

us heirs of
all

teem'd;
all eternity. I,

fitted

in arts, glorious in arms:


ill

Why,

delights

arc

vain; but that


in-

Nothing becomes him


well.

that

he would
II,
i,

most vain Which, with pain purchased doth


herit pain.
I,
i,

44

A merrier man,
Within the
I

72

Light socking light doth light of light


beguile.
I,
i,

limit of becoming mirth, never spent an hour's talk withal.


II,
i,

77

66

Study

is

like the heaven's glorious sun,

Your

wit's too hot, it speeds too fast,


'twill tire.
II,
i,

That
Small

will

not be deep-search'd with


continual
plodders
ever

vSaucy looks;

have

Warble,

child;

make

passionate
Ill,

my
i,

sense of hearing.

won,
Save
base books.
authority

from

others'

Remuneration! O!

that's

the Latin
Ill,
i,

word
godfathers
of heaven's
fixed star,

for three farthings.

143

Iliesc

earthly

very beadle to a

humorous

sigh.
Ilf,
i,

lights

That give a name to Have no more profit

185

every of their shining

This wimpled, whining, purblind, way-

Than

nights those that walk and wot not what

ward boy,
This
senior-junior,

giant-dwarf,

Dan

they are,

I, i,

84

Cupid;

At Christmas I no more desire a rose Than wish a snow in May's newfangled But
1

Regent of love-rimes, lord of folded

The

arms, anointed sovereign of sighs and


groans,
all loiterers

mirth; like of each thing that in season I, i 10 5 grows.


9

Liege of

and malcontents.
Ill,
i,

189

CiMtom

[A,D,

PLUTARCH almost second nature. the Preservation of 4fl~ia0], Rules for


iA

Health, J8

hath not fed of the dainties that are bred of a book; he hath not eat

He

221

SHAKESPEARE
paper, as
ink.
it

were; he hath not drunk


ii,

feast

Moth: They have been of languages, and

at a great

stolen

the

Love's Labour's Lost IV,

25

scraps.

Many

can brook the weather that love not the wind. IV, ii, 34
are book-men.

You two

IV,

ii,

35

Costard: O! they have lived long on the alms-basket of words. I marvel thy master hath not eaten thcc for a word; for thou art not so long by the head as
ier

These are begot in the ventricle of memory, nourished in the womb of pia mater, and delivered upon the mellowing of occasion.

honorificabilitudinitatibus; thou art easswallowed than a flap-dragon.

Love's Labour's Lost V,

i,

39

IV,

ii,

70

By heaven,
taught
choly.

do

love,

me

to rime,

and

to

and it hath be melanJTV,


iii,

In the posteriors of this which day, the rude multitude call the afternoon.

V,i, 9 6
Taffeta
phrases, silken terms precise, Three-pird hyperboles, spruce affectation,

13

The heavenly

rhetoric of thine eye.

IV,
cree:

iii,

60

Young blood doth not obey an old de-

Figures pedantical.

V,
you
a

ii,

407

We cannot cross the cause why we were


born.

Let
lower.

me

take

button-hole

V,
truth of
it
is

ii,

IV,

705

iii,

217

For where is any author in the world Teaches such beauty as a woman's
eye?

The naked
shirt.

have no V, ii, 715


the

A
is

jest's

Learning

but an adjunct to IV,

ourself,
iii,

Of him

prosperity lies in the car that hears it, never in


it.

312

tongue

But

Lives not alone

love, first learned in a lady's eyes, immured in the brain.

Of him mat makes

V,

ii,

869

When
And And

IV,
It

iii,

327
333

adds a precious seeing to the eye.

IV
As sweet and musical
As bright Apollo's
hair;
lute, strung

>

*>

Do

daisies pied and violets blue, lady-smocks all silver-whites cuckoo-buds of yellow hue paint the meadows with delight,

The cuckoo
with his
all

then, on every tree,


for thus sings he,

Mocks married men;

And when Love


the gods

speaks, the voice of

Makes heaven drowsy with the harIV, iii, 342 mony.

Cuckoo; Cuckoo, cuckoo: O word of fear, Unpleasing to a married ear, V, \ 902

When
And

From women's
rive:

eyes this doctrine I de-

icicles hang by the wall. Dick, the shepherd, blows his

nail,
still

They They

sparkle
are

the right Promethean


the
arts,

And Tom bears logs into the hall, And milk comes frozen home in
pail,

fire;

the

books,

the

academes, That show, contain, and nourish all the world. IV, iii, 350

When
Then

blood
nightly

is

nipp'd and ways be

foul,

sings

the staring owl,

Tu-who;
Tu-whit, tu-who

drawcth out the thread of his verbosity finer than the staple of his arV, i, 18 gument.

He

While

a merry note, greasy Joan doth keel the pot.

V,

ii,

920

222

SHAKESPEARE

When
And And And

aloud the wind doth blow, coughing drowns the parson's


all
sit

My
Too

only love sprung from


hate!
early seen

my

only

saw,

unknown, and known


Juliet I, v,

brooding in the snow, Marian's nose looks red and raw, When roasted crabs hiss in the bowl. Love's Labour's Lost V, ii, 929

birds

too

late!

Romeo and
trim

142

Young Adam Cupid, he

that shot so

The words

of

Mercury

are harsh after

When
He

the songs of Apollo.

V,

ii,

938

King Cophetua lov'd the beggarmaid. 1 II, i, 13


jests

A pair of star-cross'd lovers.


Romeo and
Saint-seducing gold.
act
I,

at

scars,

that never felt a

Juliet

[1594-1595],
prologue,
I.

wound. But, soft! what

light

through yonder
is

window
sc.
i,
I.

breaks?

220

It is

the east, and Juliet

the sun!
II, H, *

One One
I

burns out another's burning, 1 pain is lessen'd by another's anI, ii, 47 guish.
fire

She

speaks, yet she says nothing.


II,
ii,

12

will

make

See!

thee

think thy swan


I,
if,

crow.

92

For

proverb'd with a grandsire I, iv, 37 phrase,


I
I, iv,

am

how she leans her cheek upon her hand: O! that I were a glove upon that hand, That I might touch that cheek. II, ", 23

We burn daylight.
I

43

Romeo, Romeo! wherefore

art

thou

Mercutio: O! then, I sec Queen Mab hath been with you ... She is the fairies' midwife, and she

Romeo? 2 Deny thy father, and


Or,
if

refuse thy name; thou wilt not, be but sworn my

comes
In shape no bigger than an agate-stone On the forefinger of an alderman, Drawn with a team of little atomies Athwart men's noses as they lie asleep.

love,

And

I'll

no longer be a Capulet
II, ">

33
call

What's

in a

name? That which we

a rose

I
True,
I

>

53

By any

other

name would

smell
II,
ii,

as

talk of dreams,

sweet.

43

Which

are

the

children

of

an

idle

brain,

Begot of nothing but vain fantasy.


I, *v,

For stony limits cannot hold love out. II, 67


,

97

At lovers'

perjuries,
8

They
For you and
2
I

say,

Jove laughs.
fair

II,
I

ii,

92
too 8 , 9

are

past our dancing


I,

clays/
It

v,

35

In

truth,

Montague,

am
II,

fond.
i

.seems she hangs

upon the cheek of

See Ballads, p, io87b,

night Like a rich


jewel in an Kthiop's ear;
rich for use, for earth too
I, v,
p. 205!),

HENRY
of

Death
lows:

and Tennyson, p. f>48a. FIKI.DINC burlesqued this in Life and Tom Thumb the Great [1730] as fol-

Beauty too
dear!
*

49

Hwiramunca:
wherefore art thou

Tom Thumb! Tom Thumb! Tom Thumb? Act II, sc. iii
laughs
at
lovers'

$<*

BKAUMONT days arc done. AND <D Fu.fuii.it. Tint Scornful Lady [ifnG], act V, sc. Hi
9

Chapman,
dancing

Sec Tibullus, p. i*8a.

My

And Jove but

perjury.
11,

DRYDKN, Palamon and Arcite [1680], bk. act I, $c. it 1. 758, and Amphitryon [1690],

223

SHAKESPEARE
Fll prove more true those that have more cunning to

Than

So loving-jealous of his liberty. Romeo and Juliet II,

ii,

176
such

be

strange.

Romeo and
swear That tips with
I

Juliet II,

ii,

100

Good
That

night, good night! parting sweet sorrow,


I shall

is

Romeo: Lady, by yonder


silver all

blessed

moon

say

good night

till

it

be

morrow.
these fruit-tree

II,

ii,

184

Virtue

itself

turns vice, being misap-

tops
Juliet:

O! swear not by the moon, the inconstant moon, That monthly changes in her circled
orb,
vari-

And

plied; vice
fied.

sometime's by action digniII, iii, 21


his

Care keeps
eye,

watch in every old man's

Lest that thy love prove likewise


able.
II,
ii,

107

And where
lie,

care lodges, sleep will never

Or,

if

not swear at all; thou wilt, swear by thy gracious


is

Do

self.

Which
It
is

the god of

my

idolatry.
II,
ii,

112

II, iii, 35 Wisely and slow; they stumble that run fast. 1 II, iii, 94 One, two, and the third in your bosom. II, iv, 24

Too

too rash, too unadvis'd, too sudden; like the lightning, which doth cease to be
it

flesh, flesh,

how

art

thou

fishified!

II, iv,

41

The

very pink of courtesy.

H,

*v,

Ere one can say

63

lightens.
II,
ii,

118

This bud of love, by summer's ripening


breath,

gentleman, nurse, that loves to hear himself talk, and will speak more in a minute than he will stand to in a

month.
flower
II,

II, iv,

May

prove a beauteous next we meet.

when
ii,

156 9

121

These

violent

delights

have

violent
II, vi\

ends.

Love goes toward love, as schoolboys from their books; But love from love, toward school with
heavy looks.
II,
ii,

Therefore love moderately; long love doth so; 2 Too swift arrives as tardy as too slow.
II, vi,

156

14

O!

for a
this

falconer's voice,

Here comes the


foot

To

lady:

O! so
the

lure

tassel-gentle

back again. II, ii, 158


7

light a

Will

ne'er
flint.

wear out

everlasting
II, vi,

How

silver-sweet

sound

lovers

16

tongues

by night,
Like softest music to attending ears II, ii, 165
I

Thy head
egg
is full

is

as full of quarrels as
III,
Ill,
i,
t

an 23

of meat

A word and a blow. 4


No,
'tis

i,

44

would have thee gone; And yet no further than a wanton's


I

not so deep as a well, nor so

bird,

Who
And

lets it

Like a

hop a little from her hand, poor prisoner in his twisted


silk

*Sec Chaucer, p. iCga. 'See Anonymous, p. io34b, and Hcrrick, p.


3*oa.
It's

gyves,

of meat,
to

as full of good-nature a* an egg's RICHARD BJUNJU.KY SHKIUDAN, A

full

with a
again,

thread plucks

it

back

Scarborough [1777], aft

UL

Trip

sc,

iv

blow, Progress [1678], pt. I

*Word

and

BUNYAN,

Pilgrim's

224

SHAKESPEARE
wide
you
as a church-door; but 'tis enough, ask for me tomorrow, and

Past hope, past cure, past help!

'twill serve:

Romeo and
Tis an
ill

Juliet

IV,

i,

45

shall find

me a grave man, Romeo and Juliet III,


plague
o'

i,

101

own

both your houses! They have made worms' meat of me. Ill, i, 112

fingers.

cook that cannot lick his IV, ii, 6

Apothecary:
will,

poverty, but not consents.

My

my

O!

am

Romeo:

Fortune's fool.

Ill,

i,

142

will.

pay thy poverty, and not thy V, z, 75

Gallop apace, you fiery-footed steeds, Towards Phoebus' lodging. Ill, ii, i

The strength Of twenty men.


The time and my
wild,

V,

i,

78

When he shall die,


Take him and cut him out
stars,

in little

intents are savage-

And he
That

will

make

the face of heaven so

fine
all

the world will be in love with

More fierce and more inexorable far Than empty tigers or the roaring sea. V, iii, 39

night,

And pay no

worship to the garish sun. Ill, ii, 21


to
is

Tempt not

a desperate

man.

V,

iii,

59
82

He
Upon
his
sit.

One
was not born brow shame
shame: asham'd to
Ill,
ii,

writ with book.


oft

me

in sour misfortune's

V,

iii,

91

How

when men

are at the point of

death

Romeo, come forth; come fearful man:


Affliction
is

forth,

thou

Have they been merry!


Is

V,

iii,

88

enamor'd of thy

And thou

art

wedded

parts, to calamity.
Ill,
iii,

crimson

Beauty's ensign yet in thy lips and


is

in

thy

Adversity's sweet milk, philosophy.


Ill,
iii,

And
54

cheeks, death's pale flag


there.

not advanced

V,

iii,

94

O! here

Hang up

philosophy!
Juliet.
iii,

Unless philosophy can make a


Ill,

Will

set

up

my

everlasting rest,

And
From

shake the
stars

56
6

yoke of inauspicious
Eyes,

The

lark,

the herald of the morn.


Ill, v,

Night's

candles

are

burnt

out,

and

this world-wearied flesh. look your last! Arms, take your last embrace!

V,
true apothecaryl drugs are quick.
is

iii,

109

jocund day Stands tiptoe on the misty mountainHI, v, 9 tops.


Villain

Thy

V,

iii,

119

and he be many miles asunder.


Ill, v,

82

See what a scourge


hate,

laid

upon your
kill

Thank me no
Is

no prouds.
there

thankings, nor proud HI, v >

me
1

That heaven
joys

finds

means

to

53

with love.

V,

iii,

your 292

no

pity sitting in

the clouds,

For never was a story of more woe

That

sees into the

bottom of

my

grief?

Than

this of Juliet

Ill, v,

198

and her Romeo. V, iii, 309

225

SHAKESPEARE

The

purest
afford

treasure

mortal

times

Where'er
can,

wander,

boast

of

this

Is spotless reputation.

Though
[1595-1596], act 1 9 sc. i, L 177
II

King Richard

lishman. 1

banish 'd, yet a true-born Eng-

Richard

II,

I,

iii,

308

Mine honor
one;

is

my

life;

both grow in

Take honor from me, and


done.

my

tongues of dying men Enforce attention like deep harmony.

The

life

is

'I, i>

^2
The
setting
close,

II,

i,

We
The

were not born to sue, but to com-

sun,

and music at the


is

mand.
daintiest last, most sweet.

I,

i,

196

As the

last taste of sweets,

sweetest

to

make the end


f,
f,
little

last,

m, 68
zii,

Writ

in

remembrance

more
II,

than
z,

Truth hath a quiet breast.

96

things long past.

22

How long a

time

lies

in

one

word!

I, in,

213

Whose manners
nation

Report

of fashions in
still

proud

Italy,

our tardy apish

Things sweet to
sour.

taste prove in digestion


I, Hi,

236

Limps

after in base imitation.


II,
f,

21

Must

not serve a long apprentice-

hood

For violent
selves;

fires

soon burn out them-

To

foreign passages,

Having

my
I

and in the end, freedom, boast of nothing

else

Small showers last long, but sudden storms are short. 34

But that

was a journeyman to grief? I, m, 271

This royal throne of kings,


ter'd isle,

this scep-

All places that the eye of heaven visits

This

earth

of

majesty,

this

scat

of

Are to a wise
havens.

man

ports

and happy

Mars,

Teach thy necessity to reason thus; There is no virtue like necessity. 1 Think not the king did banish thcc, But thou the king. I, Hi, 275 For gnarling sorrow hath less power
to bite

This other Eden, denii-paraclise. This fortress built bv Nature for herself

Against infection and the hand of war, This happy breed of men, this little
world,

This precious stone set


sea,

in

the silver

The man
light.

that mocks at

it

and
I,

sets it

Which
Or
as a

serves

it

in the office of a wall,

m, 292

moat defensive

to a house,

O! who can hold a fire in his hand By thinking on the frosty Caucasus?

Against the envy of

less

happier lauds.

This blessed

plot, this earth, this realm,

Or cloy the hungry edge of appetite By bare imagination of a feast? Or wallow naked in December snow By thinking on fantastic summer's
heat? O, no! the apprehension of the good Gives but the greater feeling to the worse. I 9 f,
1

this England, This nurse, this teeming

womb

of royal

kings,

Fcar'd by their breed and famous by


their birth.
II,
-

j,

40

*A
f'7<M]

stern, a

JOHNSON;

true-born Knglinhmiin. from Boswn.i., Lift of Dr.


[1701]-

SAMIW.

Johnwn
of

294

Scc Quintilian, p. 1356, and note.

The True-born Kntfishmnn


satire

by Daniel Defoe,

226

SHAKESPEARE
England,

bound
sea,

in

with

the trium-

Let's talk of graves, of

worms, and

epi-

phant

taphs;

Whose

rocky shore beats back the envious siege

Make

dust our paper, and with rainy

eyes

Of watery Neptune.
Richard
II, II,
i,

Write sorrow on the bosom of the


61
Let's
earth;

That England,

that was

wonl

to con-

choose
wills.

executors

and
II, III,

talk
ii,

of

Hath made
self.

quer others, a shameful conquest of


II,
i,

Richard

144

it-

And And

nothing can
death, that small
earth

we

call

our

own but

65

A
The

lunatic lean-witted fool,


privilege.
II,

model

of the barren to our

Presuming on an ague's
ripest fruit
first falls.

1,115
i,

Which

serves as paste

and cover
us
sit

bones.
II,

154

For God's
ground

sake,

let

upon the

Each substance
shadows.
I

of a grief hath twenty


II,
ft,

14
so

And

tell

sad stories of the death of

count
in
a

myself
soul

in

nothing

else

kings:

happy
As
remembering

How

some have been depos'd, some


slain in war,

my

friends.

II, Hi,

good 46

Some haunted by
depos'd,

the ghosts they have


their

Evermore thanks, the exchequer of the


poor.
II,
I'M,

Some

poison'd

by
for

wives,

some

65

Grace

me no

grace, nor uncle

me no
87

sleeping All murder'd:

kill'd;

within the hollow

crown

uncle.

II, in,

That rounds the mortal temples of a


king

The

Which

caterpillars
I

of the
to

have sworn

away.

commonwealth, weed and pluck II, in, 166

Keeps Death his court.

Ill,

ii,

152

Things past redress


past care,
I

are

now

with

me
171

Comes at the last, and with a little pin Bores through his castle wall, and farewell king!
Ill,
ii,

II, in,

169

see thy glory like a shooting star Kail to the base earth from the firma-

He
The

is

come

to

open

ment

II, iv,

19
21

purple testament of bleeding war. Ill, iii, 93

1 Plating the bitter bread of banishment.

0! that As
is

were

Ill,

i,

as great

Not

all

the water in the rough rude

my

grief, or lesser
I

than

my
I

Or

that

could forget what


I

name, have

sea

been,

Can wash
king.
()!

the balm from an anointed


Ill,
ii,

Or not remember what

must be now*
III,
iii,

54
re-

136

call

back yesterday, bid time


Ill,
is
ii,

turn ?

69

And my
grave,

large

kingdom

for

little

The

worst

death, and death will have


III,
',

little

little

grave,

his day.

03

an obscure grave. Ill, iii, 153

Of comfort no man
See Ivaiah ,}0;a<i, p. jja, 8 See Thoma* Hey wood, p.
*

speak:

And there at Venice gave His body to that pleasant country's


earth,

227

SHAKESPEARE

And

his

pure soul unto his captain


colors

For

now

hath time

made me

his

num-

Christ,

Under whose
long.

he had fought so Richard II, IV, z, 97

My

bering clock; thoughts are minutes.

Richard
This music mads me: more.

II,

Peace

shall

fidels.

and ingo sleep with Turks IV, i, 139

let it

V, v, 49 sound no V, v, 61
is

So Judas did to Christ: but he, in

Found

twelve, truth in all

but one;

I,

in twelve

Mount, mount, up on high, Whilst my gross


here to
die.

my

soul!

thy seat

flesh sinks

God

thousand, none. save the king! Will no

downward, V, v, 112
life,

man
IV,
i,

say,

To

live a

barren sister

all

your

amen?

170

Now

is

this

golden crown like a deep


filling

Chanting faint hymns less moon.

to the cold fruit-

well

A
But

Midsummer-Night's Dream
i,l.

That owes two buckets


other;

one anin

[1595-1596], act I>sc.


earthlier

72
vir-

happy
*

is

the rose

distilled,

The

emptier
air,

ever

dancing

the

Than

that which withering on the


lives

gin thorn

The

other down, unseen and full of

Grows,

and

dies, in single blessedI,


i,

water:

ness.
full of tears

That bucket down and


I,

am

76

Drinking my griefs, whilst you mount IV, f, 184 up on high.

For aught that Could ever hear by

could ever read,

talc or history,

The

course of true love never did run

smooth.

I, i,

132

You may my
pose,

glories

and
still

my
am

state de-

But not

my

griefs;

those.

I king of IV, f, 192

Swift as a shadow, short as any dream, Brief as the lightning in the collicd
night,

That, in a spleen, unfolds both heaven

Some

of you with Pilate


1

wash your

and

hands,

And
pity.

earth, ere a man hath

power to

say,

"Be-

Showing an outward

hold!"

IV,

z,

239

The

A mockery king of snow.


As
After

IV,

z,

260

jaws of darkness do devour it up: So quick bright things come to confusion. I, z, 144

in a theatre, the eyes of men, a well-grac'd actor leaves


stage,

the

Love looks not with the the mind,

eyes,

but with

Are

idly

bent on him that enters next,


his prattle to

And

therefore
blind. 2

is

wing'd Cupid painted


Ir
i,

Thinking

be tedious.

234
and

V,

ii,

23

The most lamentable eomedy, and


most
1

How sour sweet music is

cruel

death

of

Pyramus
I,

When
So
is it

time

is

broke and no proportion

Thisby.
See Wordsworth, p. *$ce Chaucer, p. i68b,
I

iz' t

1 1

kept! in the music of men's lives.

and

Merchant

of

V,v,
I

42

Venice, p. 4533.

wasted time, and now doth time waste me;


1

have heard of reason* manifold Love must nerd* be blind, But this the best of all I hold His eyes are in his mind. GouRRiDGK* Reason for Love's

Why

See

Matthew

27:34, p. 44b.

Rtindness

[iHa8J

228

SHAKESPEARE
Masters, spread yourselves.

Yet mark'd
fell:

where the bolt of Cupid

Midsummer-Night's Dream
i, a,

16

It fell

upon

a little western flower,

This

is

Ercles' vein, a tyrant's vein.


I,
,

Before

milk-white,

now

purple

with

love's

43
55

wound,
call
it,

And

maidens

Love-in-idleness.
9

I'll

speak in a

monstrous

little
*>

voice.
{i >

A
I'll

Midsummer-Night

s
II,

Dream
i,

163

am

slow of study.
us, every

I, ii,

70

put a girdle

round about the earth


II,
i,

That would hang


son.
I

mother's I, ii, 81

In forty minutes. 3

175
the

For you in
world:

my
it

respect

are

all

will aggravate voice so that I will roar you as gently as any sucking

my

Then how can

be said
is

am

alone,

dove;

will

roar

you

as

'twere
I,

nightingale.

any ii, 85

When
I

all

the world

here to look on

me?

A proper man, as one shall sec in a summer's day; a most lovely, gentleman-like man. I, ii, 89
Over
over dale, 1 Thorough bush, thorough brier, Over park, over pale,
hill,

know

a bank

II, i, 224 whereon the wild thyme

blows,

Where

oxlips

and the nodding

violet

grows Quite over-canopied with luscious woodbine,

With
f,

sweet musk-roses, and with eglansleeps Titania

Thorough

flood,

thorough

fire.

tine:

II,

There

some time

of the

I must go seek some dew drops here, And hang a pearl in every cowslip's

night, Lull'd in these flowers with dances


delight;

and

ear.
I

II,

i,

14

that merry wanderer of the night. I jest to Obcron, and make him smile When I a fat and bean-fed horse beguile, Neighing in likeness of a
foal: filly in a gossip's

am

And

there the snake throws her


ell'd skin,

enam-

Weed
Some

wide enough to wrap a

fairy in.
i,

II,

249

to kill cankers in the musk-rose

And sometimes
bowl,

lurk

buds,

Some war with

rere-mice

for

their

In very likeness of a roasted crab.

i>

43

To

leathern wings, make my small elves coats.


II,
ii,

once I sat upon a promontory, And heard a mermaid on a dolphin's back Uttering such dulcet and harmonious
vSince

The clamorous
At our quaint

owl, that nightly hoots,


II,
ii,

and wonders
spirits.

breath, That the rude sea grew

You
civil

at her

spotted tongue,

snakes

with

double

song,

And

certain stars shot madly from their

To hear
And
In
*

spheres the sea-maid's music.


II,
i,

Thorny hedge-hogs, be not seen; Newts, and blind-worms, do no wrong; Come not near our fairy queen.
II,
>

149

the imperial votaress passed on,


fancy-free.

here? Night and silence! who Weeds of Athens he doth wear.


is

maiden meditation,
Sec Grulxr, p. 9523.

II,
1

ii,

70

Sec

Chapman,

p. 205!).

229

SHAKESPEARE

As

The

a surfeit of the sweetest things deepest loathing to the stomach


1

ear of
is

brings.

man hath not seen, 1 man's hand not able to taste, his tongue to conceive, nor his heart to report, what my
dream
was.

Midsummer-Night's Dream
in
ladies,
is

lion

To bring among

God
is

Midsummer-Night's Dream IV, i, 218


garlic, for

shield

us!

thing, for there

most dreadful not a more fearful


a

Eat no onions nor


to utter sweet breath.

we
zi,

are

IV,

44

wild-fowl than your lion living.

The
HI,
i,

lunatic,

the lover, and the poet,

3*

calendar, a calendar! look in the almanack; find out moonshine.

One

Are of imagination all compact: sees more devils than vast hell can
hold, is, the
frantic,

That
Sees

I",
Bless thee, art translated.

madman; the
beauty
in

lover, all as

',

55

Bottom!

bless thee!
Ill,
i,

thou

Helen's

brow

of

124

Egypt:

2 Lord, what fools these mortals be!


III,
if,

The
115

Doth
And,

in a fine frenzy rolling, poet's eye, heaven to earth, from glance from earth to heaven;
as imagination bodies forth forms of things unknown,

So we grew together,
Like
to
a

double

cherry,

seeming

The

the

But Two'

parted, yet an union in partition;


lovely
berries

poet's

pen
airy

molded
she

on

stem.

Ill, n,
little,
is

one 208

Turns them to shapes* and gives to

A local habitation and a name.


Such
That,
It tricks
if it

nothing

Though
I

she be but

fierce.
if,

hath strong imagination,

III,

325

would but apprehend some

have
let

a reasonable

sic:

us

bones.

good ear in muhave the tongs and the IV, i, 32

joy,

comprehends some bringcr of that


joy;

Or

Truly, a peck of provender: I could dry oats. Mcthinks I have a great desire to a bottle of hay: good hav, sweet hay, hath no fellow.

How

munch your good

in the night, imagining some fear, easy is a bush supposed a bear!

V,

i,

IV,
I

i,

36

V, Very tragical mirth. The true beginning of our end. 2 V,

i,

57
111

i,

have an exposition of sleep come IV, i, 44 upon me.

The
ows.

best in this kind arc but shad-

My

Obcron! what visions have I seen! Mcthought I was cnamor'd of nn ass. IV, i, 82
never heard So musical a discord, such sweet thunI

V, 1,215
and of a good V, i, 232

very gentle beast, conscience.

der.
I

IV,

i,

123

All that I have to say, is, to tell you that the lanthorn is tile moon; I, the man in the moon; this thorn-bush, my

thorn-bush; and this doc,

mv
"

dog.

have had a dream, past the wit of


to say

V,

i,

263 272

man

what dream

it

was.

Well
it

roared, Lion!

V,

i,

IV,

211
*

The
1

eye of

man hath not


4oa.

heard, the

This passion, and the death of a dear


8 1

Sec King Henry IV, p. See Seneca, p. isgb.

See / Corinthians 3:9, p. jjaa. we the beginning of my end.

MAMINCP.R,

The

Virgin Martyr [16**], act 1X1, sc. Hi

230

SHAKESPEARE
friend,

would go near

to

make

man

look sad.

A
With

I am Sir Oracle, And when I ope my lips

let

no dog
I,
i,

Midsummer-Night''s Dream V, i, 295


help
of
a

bark!

The Merchant
I

of

Venice

93

the

surgeon, he

do know of these,
I,
i,

might yet

recover,

and prove an ass. V, i, 318

That

therefore only are reputed wise

For saying nothing.

95

epilogue, I pray you, for your 1 play needs no excuse. Never excuse.

No

V,

i,

363

Fish not, with this melancholy bait, For this fool-gudgeon, this opinion. I, i, 101

The

iron tongue of midnight hath told twelve; Lovers, to bed; 'tis almost fairy time.

V,
If

i,

372

we shadows have

offended,

Gratiano speaks an infinite deal of nothing, more than any man in all Venice. His reasons are as two grains of wheat hid in two bushels of chaff: you shall seek all day ere you find them,
and,

Think but this, and all is mended, That you have but slumber'd here While these visions did appear. V, ii, 54

when you have them, they are not worth the search. I, i, 114
In

my

school-days,

when

had

lost

one

Your mind

is

tossing

The Merchant

on the ocean. of Venice [15961597], act I, $c. i, I 8

shaft, I shot his fellow of the selfsame flight

The

selfsame

way with more advised


and by advenI,
i,

watch,

To
I

find the other forth,

My
Nor

ventures are not in one bottom


trusted, to one place.
I, i,

turing both, oft found both.

141

42

They

are as sick that surfeit with too

Nature hath fram'd strange fellows in her time. I, i, 51 You have too much respect upon the
world:

much

as they that starve

with nothing. Ir ", 5

Superfluity
hairs,

comes sooner by white


lives longer.
I, ii,

They
I

lose

it

that do buy

it

with

much
74

but competency

care.

I, i,

If to

do were

as easy as to

know what

hold
stage,

the world but as the world,

Gratiano;

were good to do, chapels had been churches, and poor men's cottages
princes' palaces.
I,
ii,

where every man must play a


a sad one.
fool.
I,
i,

13

part,*

And mine
Let

77

me

play the

I, i,

79
is

brain may devise laws for the blood, but a hot temper leaps o'er a cold decree. I, ii, 19

The

Why

should a man, whose blood


within,

He
horse.

warm

doth nothing but talk of his I, ii, 43

Sit like his grandsire cut in alabaster?

I fear

he

i,

83
losopher
full

There are a sort of men whose visages Do cream and mantle like a standing
pond.
*

when he grows

of

prove the weeping phiold, being so unmannerly sadness in his


will
I, ii,

I,

i,

88

youth.

51

Sc Mcurier, p. i88b, and King John, *Scc As You Like It, p, 48b.

p,

God made him, and


him
pass for

therefore let
I, ii,

a man.

59

231

SHAKESPEARE

When he is best, he is a little worse than a man, and when he is worst, he is little better than a beast. The Merchant of Venice I, zz, 93
I

With bated
Say
this.

breath

and

whispering

humbleness,

The Merchant
I'll

dote on his very absence.


I, zz,

seal to
is

118

And

say there

I, zzz, 124 such a bond, much kindness in the

of Venice

My
man
he
is
is

meaning
to

in saying

he

is

good
that

Jew.
father
are,

I, zzz,

153

have you understand


but

me
I,

Abram! what these Christians


hare"

sufficient.

zzz,

15

boards, Ships men: there be land-rats and water-rats,


land-thieves

are

sailors

but

Whose own
suspect

dealing teaches
I,

them
161

and water-thieves.
I, zzz,

The
1

thoughts of others.

iff,

22

like

Yes, to smell pork; to eat of the habitation which your prophet the Naza-

not mind,

fair

terms and a
I,

villain's
zzz,

180

conjured the devil into. I will buy with you, sell with you, talk with you, walk with you, and so following; but I will not cat with you, drink witn you, nor pray with you. What news on the Rialto? I, m, 34

rite 1

Mislikc
sun.
If

me

not

for

my

complexion,
II,
z,

The shadow'd

livery of the burnished


i

Hercules and Lichas play at dice Which is the better man, the greater

throw

How
I

fawning publican he looks! hate him for he is a Christian.


like a
I, zzz,

May

turn by fortune from the weaker

hand*

II,
is

z,

32

42

O
An

hcavcnsl this

my

tnic-bcgottcn
II,
if,

If I
I

can catch him once upon the hip, 2 will feed fat the ancient grudge I bear him. I, iff, 47

father.

36
54
71

honest, exceeding poor


of

man.
II,
',

If I

Cursed be forgive him.

my

tribe,
I,
zzz,

The
52
prop.

very

staff

my
'

age,

my

very

II,' zz,

The

devil can cite Scripture for his pur-

It is a

wise father that knows his


II,

own
83

pose.

I,

zzz,

99

child,

zz,

goodly apple rotten at the heart. O, what a goodly outside falsehood hath! I, zzz, 102
is

And

the

vile
fife.

squealing

of

the
II,

wryv,

ncck'cl

30

For sufferance
tribe.

the badge of

all

our

Who riscth
down?

from

a feast
sits

Witli that keen appetite that he

You

call

me
upon

II, vf,

misbeliever,

cut-throat
All tilings that are,

dog,

And
Shall

spit

my

Jewish gaberdine. I, zzz, 112


in a

Are with more


joy'd. I low like a

spirit

chased than ena prodigal

bend low, and

bondman's

younker or

The

key,

scarfed bark puts

from her native

That hoc shall be called a Nazarite, The Geneva Bible [irtffl-irfio], Matthew a:aj The Geneva version of the Bible is the one
1

bay, Ilugg'd and embraced by the strumpet

wind!

Shakespeare was familiar with. 8 See Hey wood, p. 1853, and Venice lVf it $34, p. 3353,

How
With

like the prodigal

The Merchant

of

doth she return, over-weather d ribs and ragged

sails,

232

SHAKESPEARE
Lean, rent, and beggar'd by the strumpet wind! The Merchant of Venice II, vi, 12

hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions?

The Merchant
If

of Venice III,

i,

62

But love
see

is

blind,

and

lovers

cannot

The

pretty follies that themselves commit. II, vi, 36


I

Must

hold a candle to

my

shames?
II, vi,

us, do we not bleed? if do we not laugh? if you poison us, do we not die? and if you wrong us, shall we not revenge? ni, i, 6 5

you prick

you

tickle us,

41

The

villainy

Do it A golden mind
dross.

that hazard all in hope of fair advantages:

Men

cute, and it shall go better the instruction.

you teach me I will exehard but I will


Ill,
it
i,

76

stoops not to
II,

show
viz,

of

18

would not have given

for a wilderIll,
i,

erness of monkeys.

130
it
is

Young

in limbs, in

judgment

old.

II, viz,

71

There's something not love,


I

tells

me, but

My

daughterl daughter!
ducats!

O my

ducats!

O my

would not
yourself,

lose you;

and you know


quality.
Ill, n,

Fled with a Christian!


the law!

O my
ducats,

Christian

Hate counsels not in such a

4 44

Justice!

my
two

and
bags

my
of

Makes
Fading
Tell

a swan-like end,
Ill,
ii,

sealed

daughter! bag,
ducats,

in music. 1
is

sealed

me where

Of double

ducats, stol'n

from

me by
15

Or in

fancy bred, the heart or in the head?


Ill,

my daughter!
The
I

II, vizi,

How begot, how nourished?


Reply, reply.
ii,

fool

multitude,

that

choose by
II, ix,

63

show.
will
spirits

20

not

jump

with

common

In law, what plea so tainted and corrupt But, being seasoned with a gracious
voice,

And

rank
tude.

me

with the barbarous multiII, ix,

Obscures the show of

evil?
Ill,
ii,

32

75

Let none presume To wear an undeserved dignity. Ol that estates, degrees, and offices Were not derived corruptly, and that clear honor

There

is

no

Some mark
parts.

vice so simple but assumes of virtue on his outward


Ill,
ii,

81

Thus ornament

Were
Some

purchas'd by the merit of the wearer. II, ix, 39


there be that shadows
a
kiss;

To

is but the guiled shore a most dangerous sea. Ill, ii, 97

The seeming

Such have but

shadow's

bliss.
II, ix,

To
66

truth times put on entrap the wisest.

which

cunning
ii,

III,

100

How
As

Let him look to his bond,


III,
I
i,

all the other passions fleet to air, and rashdoubtful thoughts,

49

am

a Jew.

Hath not

And
a

Jew eyes?
*

embrac'd despair, shuddering fear, and green-ey'd Ill, ii, 108 jealousy.
and
note.

'Sec

Dream,

Chaucer, p. i68b; p. aaftb, and note.

Midsummer-Night's
See Plato, p. ggb,

233

SHAKESPEARE

An

unlesson'd
tis'd;

girl,

unschooled, unpracis

The
It

Happy

in this, she

not yet so old


of Venice
ii,

But she may learn.

quality of mercy is not strain'd, droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven Upon the place beneath: it is twice
bless'd;

The Merchant

III,

160

It blesseth

him

that gives

and him
it

that
be-

Here are a few of the unpleasant'st words That ever blotted paper. Ill, ii, 252

takes:

Tis mightiest comes


crown;

in the mightiest;

The throned monarch

better than his

Thou
But,

cairdst

me

dog before thou hadst


a
dog, beware

a cause, since I
fangs.

am
I

my
6
fa-

His scepter shows the force of temporal power,

Ill, Hi,

The

attribute to
sit
1

Thus when
I ther, mother. 1
fall

shun

into

your Charybdis, your Ill, v, 17


Scylla,

Wherein doth
kings;

awe and majesty, the dread and fear

of

But mercy
It is

Some men
pig;

there are love not a gaping


if

Some, that are mad


cat.

they behold a IV, , 47

is above this scepter'd sway, enthroned in the hearts of kings, It is an attribute to God himself, And earthly power doth then show likest God's

A harmless
Bassanio:

When

mercy seasons
justice

justice. Therefore,

necessary cat.
all

IV,

i,

55

Jew,

Do

men

kill

the things

Though
this,

be thy

pica,

consider

2 they do not love? Shylock: Hates any man the thing he would not kill? IV, i, 66

That

in the course of justice,

none

of

us

What! wouldst thou have a


sting thee twice?

Should see salvation:


serpent
i,

we do

pray for
all

IV,

mercy,

69

And
The

that

same prayer doth teach us

weakest kind of fruit Drops earliest to the ground. IV,

The

to render

deeds of mercy.

i,

115

The Merchant

of Venice

hold opinion with Pythagoras That souls of animals infuse themselves

To

IV,

if

184

To

do

a great right,

do

a little wrong.

Into the trunks of men.*


I

IV,

i,

216

IV,

i,

132

never knew so young a body with so old a head. 4 IV*, i, 163


1 Scylla to port, and on our starboard beam Charybdis, dire gorge of the salt sea tide. HOMER, Odyssey, bk. XII, I. a^a Scylla guards the right side; implacable ChaVIRGIL, Aeneid, bk. ///, 1. 420 rybdis the left.

A
I

Daniel come to judgment! yea, a Daniel! IV, 'i, 223


elder art thou than

low much more


thy looks!

TV,
tire

i,

251

Is

it

so nominated in

bond?
IV,
i,

Scyllam cupiens vitare Charybdim [You fall into Scylla in seeking to avoid CharybPHILIPPE GUALTIER, Alexandreis [c. 1300], dis].
}ox ' Sec Oscar Wilde, p. 84ob. * Clown: What is the opinion of Pythagoras concerning wild- fowl? Malvolio: That the soul of our grandam might haply inhabit a bird.
1.

Incidis in

260
263

Tis not

in the

bond.

IV,

z,

bk.

V,

For herein Fortune shows herself more kind Than is her custom: it is still her use
STKAFFORD [1595-1641].
Karl of
1

tetter

*He
staid

is

Twelfth-Night [1598-1600], IV, ii, young, but take it from me, a very-

commending

the

Ormond

to

Charles I for appointment as


//,
ii,

foitncilor

head,

THOMAS WKNTWORTH, EARL OF


2-3.4

See Measure for Measure

59,

p. ssyob.

SHAKESPEARE

To

let

the wretched

man

outlive his

Here we
Creep

will sit,

and

let

the sounds of

wealth,

music
in our ears: soft stillness

To view

with hollow eye and wrinkled

and the

brow

An

age of poverty.

The Merchant
I

of Venice
i,

night Become the touches of sweet harmony. Sit, Jessica: look, how the floor of

IV,
have a daughter;

268
Is

heaven
thick inlaid with patines of bright gold: There's not the smallest orb which thou

Would any of the stock of Barabbas Had been her husband rather than a
Christian!

IV, IV,

behold'st
z,

296
324

But
Still

in his

motion

An

upright judge, a learned judge!


z,

quiring to ubins.

like an angel sings, the young-eyed cher-

A
A
I

second Daniel, a Daniel, Jew! Now, infidel, I have thee on the hip. 1

Such harmony
But, whilst this
cay

is

in

immortal

souls;

muddy

vesture of de-

IV,
Daniel,
still

z,

334
that

Doth

say

I;

a second Daniel!

grossly close it in,

we cannot
of

hear

thank thee, Jew, word.

for teaching

me
z,

it.

The Merchant
I

Venice
i,

IV,

341
take

V,

54

You

take my house the prop


sustain

when you do

am

That doth

never merry music.

when

hear sweet

my

house; you take

V, no music
in

z,

my life When you do


I live.

The man
self,

that hath

69 him-

take the means whereby

IV,
is

z,

370

Nor
Is

is

not mov'd with concord of sweet


for

He

is

well paid that

well satisfied.

sounds,
fit

treasons,

stratagems,

and

IV,

z,

416

spoils;

Lorenzo: The moon shines bright: in such a night as this Troilus mcthinks mounted the Troyan
.
.

The motions

of his spirit are dull as

And

night, his affections dark as Erebus:

walls,

Let no such

man be

trusted.

And

sigh'cl his soul toward the Grecian tents,

V,

z,

83

that night. Crcssid lay ' In such a night Jessica: Did Thisbc fearfully o'ertrip the dew, And saw the lion's shadow ere himself, And ran dismay'd away. Lorenzo: In such a night Stood Dido with a willow in her hand Upon the wild sea-banks, and waft her
*

Where

How

far that little

candle throws his


in

beams!

So shines a good deed


world. 1

a naughty

V,

i,

90

How many
are

things by season seasoned

To

their right praise tion!


is

and true V,

perfecz,

107

love

conic again to Carthage. In such a night Jessica: Medea gathered the enchanted herbs That did renew old Aeson. V, z, i
I

To

This night methinks


sick.

but the daylight V, z, 124

light wife

band.

doth make a heavy husV, z, 130

low sweet the moonlight


this
1

sleeps

upon

bank!
(

These blessed candles of the night. V, Z, 220


i

5>c<

Hc*yw<wtl, p. i8>a I, rii, jj, p. ajaa.

and The Merchant of

Sec

Matthew

4oa,

and

William

Bradford, p. 3193.

235

SHAKESPEARE
For new-made honor doth forget men's names.

Which
I

is

the

side

that

must go

withal?

King John [1596-1597], act


sc.
i,

I,

am

with both:
in
their rage,

each army hath a


I

L 187

hand;

Sweet, sweet, sweet poison for the age's


tooth.
their

And

having hold of

Bearing

213 birthrights proudly on


I,
z,

both, They whirl

asunder

and

dismember
III,
i,

me.
Bell,

King John
shall

326
12

their backs,

To make
here.

hazard of

new

fortunes
II,
x,

book and candle

not drive
Ill,
iii,

70
82

me back. 1
Look,

For courage mounteth with occasion.


II,
i,

who comes

here! a grave unto a


Ill, iv,

soul.

17
2

The

hare

of

whom
dead

the
lions

proverb

Death, death: O, amiable lovely death!


III, iv,

Whose

goes, valor plucks

25

beard. 1

II,

by the i, 137
194

Grief

fills

the

room up

of

my

absent

child,

A woman's will.

II, i 9

Lies in his bed, walks

up and down

Saint George, that swing'd the dragon, and e'er since


Sits

with me,
Puts on his pretty looks, repeats his words, Remembers me of all his gracious
parts, Stuffs out his

on
is

his horse

door.

back at mine hostess' II, i, 288

the half part of a blessed man, Left to be finished by such a she; And she a fair divided excellence,

He

vacant garments with his


Ill, iv, 93

form.
Life
is

Whose
'Zounds!

fullness

of perfection

lies
i,

in

as tedious as a twice-told tale,3

him.

II,

437

Vexing the

dull ear of a

drowsy man. Ill, iv, 108

I was never so bethump'd with words

When

Fortune means to

men most
a threatenIll, iv,

Since I first call'd dad.

my

brother's father
II,
i,

466

Sod, )ks upon them with


ing eye.
4

Mad

world!
tion!

mad

kings!

mad

119

composiII, z, 561

scepter

snatch'd

with

an

unruly

That smooth-fac'd gentleman, tickling Commodity, Commodity, the bias of the world.

hand Must be as
gain'd;

boisterously maintain'd as

And he

that stands

>

*>

573

upon

slippery

I will instruct

my

sorrows to be proud;
his

place Makes nice of no vile hold to stay

him
135
80
if

For

grief

is

proud and makes

owner
i,

up.

Ill, iv,

stoop.

Ill,

68

Thou wear
shame,

a lion's hide! doff

As quiet
for

as a

lamb.

IV,

it

And hang
The
1

a calf's-skin

limbs.

on those recreant Ill, i, 128

To gild refined gold, to paint the lily, To throw a perfume on the violet, To smooth the ice, or add another hue
Unto the rainbow,
1

sun's o'ercast with blood: fair day, adieu!

or with taper-light

So hares may pull dead lions by the beard. KYD, The Spanish Tragedy [1594] L , 772

3 *

See Malory, p. i75b, and note. See Whitman, p. yoaa. See Homer, p. 66b. See Publilius Syrus, p.

236

SHAKESPEARE

To
Is

seek the beauteous eye of heaven to


garnish,
I

I do not ask you cold comfort. 1 beg

much

wasteful and ridiculous excess.

King John V,
11

vii,

41

King John IV,

ii,

This

England
shall,

never

did,

nor

never

oftentimes excusing of a fault Doth make the fault the worse by the
excuse. 1

And

IV,

ii,

30

Lie at the proud foot of a conqueror. V, vii, 112

We

cannot hand.
is

hold

Come
mortality's

the three corners of the world in


shall

strong IV, ii, 82

arms,

And we

shock them. Nought shall

There

no

sure
life

foundation set on
achieved

blood,

No

us rue, If England to itself

make

do

rest

but
vii,

true.

certain

by
IV,

others'
ii,

V,
So shaken
as

116
care.

death.

104
a

we

are, so

wan with
I,

Make haste;

the better foot before.2

King Henry IV
70
Part
I,

[1597-1598],
sc.
z,
I.

IV,

act

ii,

Another lean unwash'd

artificer.

In those holy fields


ii,

IV,

201

Over whose
feet

acres walk'd those blessed

oft the sight of means to do ill deeds Makes ill deeds done! IV, ii, 219
'

How

Which

fourteen

hundred

years

ago

were nail'd

For our advantage on the

bitter cross.
I,
i,

Heaven take my
keep
I

soul,

my bones!

and England IV, Hi, 10

24

am

amaz'd, methinks, and lose

my

way

Among

the thorns and dangers of this world. IV, tii, 140


'

Unthread the rude eye of

Unless hours were cups of sack, and minutes capons, and clocks the tongues of bawds, and dials the signs of leaping houses, and the blessed sun himself a fair hot wench in flame-color'd taffeta, I see no reason why thou shouldst be so superfluous to demand the time of the
day.
I,
ii,

rebellion,

And welcome home


faith.

again

discarded

V,

iv,

11

Diana's foresters, gentlemen of the shade, minions of the moon.


I,
ii,

The day

shall not

To

try the fair adventure of

be up so soon as I, tomorrow.

29

V,
'Tis

V,

21

purse snatched on

of

gold

most

resolutely

Monday

night and most

strange

that

death

should

dissolutely spent

sing.
I

on Tuesday morning. 1, ii, 38


I,
ii,

tie cygnet to this pale faint swan, Who chants a doleful hymn to his own
death. 3

am

Thy
So

quips and thy quiddities.


51

V,
elbow-room.

vii y

20

far as
it

where
credit.

Now my soul hath


1 See
2

coin would stretch; and would not, I have used my I, ii, 61

my

V,
Meurier, p.
i88b,

vii,

28

Old father antick the


I

law.

I,

ii,

69
82
and

and

A MidsummerBROWNING,

am

as

Night's Dream, p. 23ia.

melancholy as a gib cat, or a


I,
II,
i,

Put

forward your best


-

footl

Respectability [1855], st 3 3 See Plato, p. gjb, and note.

lugged bear. ^See The Tempest,


William Bradford, p.

ii,

10, p.

agSb,

237

SHAKESPEARE
I would to God thou and I knew where a commodity of good names were to be bought.

And

as

the soldiers bore dead bodies

by.

He

call'd

them untaught knaves,

un-

Henry IV, Part


O! thou hast damnable
art

I, I,

ii,

92

indeed able to corrupt a

iteration, saint.
I,
ii,

and
101

mannerly, To bring a slovenly unhandsome corpse Betwixt the wind and his nobility. Henry IV, Part I, I, iii,
42

Now am
truly,
little

I,

if

man
than

better

should speak one of the


I,
'tis
ii,

So pester'd with a popinjay.


I,
iii,

50

wicked.

105

God

save the mark!

I,

iii,

56

Tis
a

man

my vocation, Hal; to labor in his vocation.

no
I,

sin for

And but

He would
ff,

for these vile guns, himself have been a soldier.


I,
iii,

116

63

There's neither honesty, manhood, nor good fellowship in thee.


I, ii,

To put down
rose,

Richard, that sweet lovely


this

And

154

plant

thorn,

this
J,

canker,
iii,

Bolingbroke.

know you all, and will a while uphold The unyok'd humor of your idleness:
I

176
194

Sink or swim.

I, iii,

Yet herein

Who

will I imitate the sun^

doth permit the base contagious


his

To

O! the blood more stirs rouse a lion than to start a hare!


I, iii,

clouds

To smother up
world,

beauty from the


to

197

By heaven methinks
leap

it

were an easy

That when he please again


self,

be him-

To
Or

pluck bright honor from the palefac'd

Being wanted, he may be more wonder'd at,

moon,

dive into the

By

Of

breaking through the foul and ugly mists vapors that did seem to
strangle

Where

bottom of the deep, fathom-line could never touch

And

the ground, pluck up drowned honor by the


locks.
I, iii,

him.
If all

20 j

To
You

sport

the year were playing holidays, would be as tedious as to work.


,

Why, what
This
proffer
I

fawning

candy deal of courtesy greyhound then did


I,
iii,

217

me!

251

tread

upon

my patience.
I,

know

a trick

worth two of

that.
II,
i,

Hi,

4
If

40

Came

there a certain lord, neat, and trimly dress'd, Fresh as a bridegroom; and his chin

the rascal have not given me medicines to make me love him, I'll be

hanged.
I'll

II,
I'll

ii,

20

new-reap'd,

starve ere

rob a foot further.

Show'd like a stubble-land at harvesthome. He was perfumed like a milliner, And 'twixt his finger and his thumb he
held

II, ii, 24 would be argument for a week, laughter for a month, and a good jest It

forever.

II,

ii,

104

pouncet-box, which ever and anon He gave his nose and took 't away
again.

Falstaff sweats to death

And

lards the lean earth

as

he walks
II,
ii,

33

along.

119

238

SHAKESPEARE
this nettle, danger, this flower, safety.

Out

of

we pluck
II,
iii,

That reverend
years.

uity, that father ruffian,

Henry IV, Part


I

I,

that grey iniqthat vanity in Henry IV, Part I 9 II, v, 505


vice,

could brain

him with
are,

his
II,

lady's

fan.

m, 26

Constant you

If sack and sugar be a fault, God help the wicked! If to be old and merry be a sin, then an old host that I

But yet a woman: and

lady closer; for I well believe Thou wilt not utter what fhou dost not

No

for secrecy,

know

is

damned:

many
it

to

be

fat

be to be

hated, then Pharaoh's lean kine are to be loved. II, iv, 524

know;

And

so

far

will

trust

thee,
II,

gentle
fix,

Banish plump Jack, and banish


the world. Play out the pky.
II, iv, II, iv,

all

Kate.

123

534
539

A Corinthian,
boy.
I

a lad of mettle, a good


II, iv,

13

not yet of Percy's mind, the Hotspur of the North; he that kills me some six or seven dozen of Scots at a breakfast, washes his hands, and says to his wife, "Fie upon this quiet life! I want work/' II, iv, 116

am

O, monstrous! but one half-pennyworth of bread to this intolerable deal


of sack!
II, iv,

597

Diseased
forth

nature

oftentimes

breaks

In strange eruptions.
I

Ill,

i,

27

plague of

all

cowards,

I say.

am

not in the

roll of

common men.

II, xv,

129
Glendower:
Hotspur:
I

m,
can
call spirits

i,

43

There live not three good men unhanged in England, and one of them is fat and grows old. II, iv, 146

from the

vasty deep.

Why,
they

so can

I,

or so can any
call for
i,

You

care not

who

sees

your back:

call

man;
But
will

you that backing of your


plague upon such backing!

friends?

come when you do

them?
I

Ill,

53

II, iv,
I
tell

168
I

have peppered two of them. ...


thee what, Hal,
if I tell

Than one

thee a
II, iv,

lie,

had rather be a kitten and cry mew, of these same metre balladIll, i, 128 mongers.

spit in

my face;

call

me horse.
216
Tis

Mincing poetry:
like the forc'd gait

of a shuffling
Ill,
i,

Give you a reason on compulsion! If reasons were as plenty as blackberries, I would give no man a reason upon
compulsion,
I.

nag.

133

But

in the

way of

bargain,

mark you
a hair.
i,

me,
Fll cavil

II, iv,

267
285

on the ninth part of

Mark now, how


you down.

a plain tale shall put


II, iv,

Ill,

138

A deal of skimble-skamble stuff.


Ill,
I
i,

doth gravity out of his bed at II, xv, 328 midnight? A plague of sighing and grief! It blows a man up like a bladder.
II, iv,

What

153

understand thy kisses and thou mine,


that's a feeling disputation.
Ill,
.
. .

And

i,

204

370
do

it

must speak in passion, and in King Cambyses' vein.


I

I will

II, iv,

429

still, ye thief, Lady Percy: and hear the lady sing in Welsh. Hotspur: I had rather hear Lady, my brach, howl in Irish. Ill, i, 238

Lie

'39

SHAKESPEARE

A good mouth-filling oath.


Henry IV, Part
I, III,
i,

To
258

the latter end of a fray and the be-

ginning of a feast
Fits a dull fighter

They

surfeited with

honey and began


of

To

loathe

the
a

taste

sweetness,

whereof

a little
little
is

Henry IV, Part Greatness knows itself.


I

and a keen I, IV,


IV,

guest.
ii,

86

Hi,

74

More than
much. 1

by much too
Ill,
is
fx,

could be well content


of

71

was but as the cuckoo Heard, not regarded.

He

in June,
Ill,
ii,

To entertain the lag-end With quiet hours.


it.

my life
V,
V,
i,

23

75

Rebellion lay in his way, and he found


i,

My near'st and dearest enemy. 2


Ill,
if,

28

123

The end

of life cancels

all

bands.
III,
if,

Never yet did insurrection want Such water-colors to impaint his cause.
I

157
in-

An

have not forgotten what the


is

would

it

side of a church

made

of,

am
iff,

all well.

> *> 79 were bed-time, Hal, and V, f, 126

peppercorn, a brewer's horse.


III,

Honor
8

pricks

me
off

on. Yea, but

how

if

honor prick

me

when

come on?
No.

Company,
been the
I

villanous

company, hath
Ill, in,

how

then?

Can honor

set to a leg?

spoil of me.
flesh

10

have more

than another man,


III,
iff,

and therefore more

Or an arm? No. Or take away the grief of a wound? No. Honor hath no skill in surgery, then? No. What is honor? a
word.

frailty.

What

is

187

The

very life-blood of our enterprise.

trim reckoning! died o' Wednesday.

that word, honor? Air. A hath it? he that

Who
it?

Doth he
No.
It
is

feel it?

IV,

f,

28
our

No. Doth he hear

insensi-

Were To
set

it

good

the

exact wealth

of

all

ble then? Yea, to the dead. not live with the living? No.
traction will not suffer
it.

But

will

it

Why?

DeI'll

Therefore

states

All at one cast? to set so rich a main On the nice hazard of one doubtful

none of it: honor is a mere scutcheon; and so ends my catechism. V, f, 131


Suspicion all our lives shall be stuck full of eyes; For treason is but trusted like the fox. V, if, 8

hour?

IV,

f,

45

Baited like eagles having lately

As

full

bath'd; of spirit as the


.

month

of

And
I

May,
Let

gorgeous as the sun at midsummer. IV, i, 99


his beaver on.

me tell

the world. 1
of
life
is

V,

ii,

65

The time

short;

saw young Harry, with

To spend

IV,
the sun in This praise doth nourish agues.

f,

104

that shortness basely were too V, ii, 81 long.


stars

Worse than

March
f,

Two

sphere.

keep not their motion in one V, iv, 65


slave of life,

IV,

no
134

But thought's the

and

life

Doomsday

is

near; die

all,

die merrily.

IV,

f,

And

time's fool; time, that takes survey of all the

The

cankers of a calm world and a long IV, ii, 32 peace.

world,
1 I'll

tell

the world.

SHAKESPEARE, Measure
II, iv,

^See
a

A Midsummer-Nights Dream,
Hamlet It
ii,

for
p.

Measure [1604-1605],
tell

154

See

180, p. 2583.

the [1835], pt. II

Ay,

world!

BROWNING, Paracelsus

240

SHAKESPEARE

Must have a stop. O! I could prophesy, But that the earthy and cold hand of
death
Lies

Remembered
friend. 1

knolling

departing
i,

on

Henry IV, Part


tongue.
I,
I

II, I,

100

my

Henry IV, Part

V,

iv,

81

am

not only witty in myself, but


is

the cause that wit

in other
I,

men.2
ii,

This earth, that bears thee dead, Bears not alive so stout a gentleman. V, iv, 92

10

A rascally yea-forsooth knave.


I, ii,

40

Thy ignominy
grave,

sleep with thee in the


in thy epitaph!

You
Your
in you,

lie

in your throat.

But not remember'd


I

lordship,

I, ii, 97 though not clean past

V,

iv,

100

could have better spar'd a better man.

V,

your youth, hath yet some smack of age some relish of the saltness of time. I, ii, 112

iv,

104
120
It is the disease of not listening, the malady of not marking, that I am troubled withal. I, ii, 139 but not I am as as lord, my poor Job,

The
tion. 1

better part of valor

is

discreiv,

V,

Thy

Full bravely hast thou flesh'd maiden sword. V, iv, 132

so patient.

I,

ii,

145
201
dry

Lord, Lord,
to lying!
I'll

how

this

world

is

given

V,
sack,

We
youth.

that are in the vaward of our


I,
ii,

iv,

148

purge, and leave

cleanly.

and live V, iv, 168


conjec-

Have you not a moist

eye,

Rumor
Blown by
tures,

hand, a yellow cheek, a white beard, a


decreasing leg, an increasing belly?
I,
ii,

is

a pipe

surmises, jealousies,

206
210
hol-

And
That

of so easy

and

so plain a stop

Every part about you blasted with


unantiquity.
I,
ii,

the

blunt

monster

with

counted heads,

For
wavering
multilaing

The

still-discordant

my voice, I have lost it with and singing of anthems.


I, ii,

tude,

2
it.

215

Can

play upon

King Henry TV [1597-1598],


Part
II,

induction,

I.

15

was always yet the trick of our English nation, if they have a good thing, to make it too common.
It
I,
ii,

Even such a man,


less,

so faint, so spiritI

244

So

dull, so

Drew

dead in look, so woe-begone, Priam's curtain in the dead of

were better to be eaten to death with rust than to be scoured to nothing with perpetual motion. I, ii, 249
I

night,

And would

have told him half his Troy was burn'd. Act I, sc. i, I. 70

can get no remedy against this con-

Yet the first bringer of unwelcome news Hath but a losing office, and his
tongue Sounds ever
1 It

sumption of the purse: borrowing only lingers and lingers it out, but the disease
is

incurable. 8

I, ii,

267

Who
Eating the
1 See

lin'd himself
air

with hope,
supply.
iii,

on promise of
I,

after as a sullen bell,


Sophocles, p. 8sa, and Cleopatra IT, v, 85, p. a88a. 3 See Samuel Johnson, p. 4330.
8

27
and

show'd discretion the best part of valor. BEAUMONT AND FLETCHER, A King and No
[1619], act 11,
sc.
iii

Antony

King
3

See Horace, p. isga, and note.

See Rabelais, p. 18 la.

241

SHAKESPEARE

A habitation giddy and unsure


Hath he
that buildeth

A man can
a death.
I,

die but once;

we owe God
III,
zz,

on the vulgar
II,

heart.

Henry IV, Part


in,
I

II,

253

Henry IV, Part


Past and to

come seem

best;
I,

things
z'z'z,

present worst.

108

which way the stream of time doth run And are enforced from our most quiet
see

We

A poor lone woman.

II,

i,

37

By

sphere the rough torrent of occasion.

Away, you scullion! you rampallian! you fustilarian! I'll tickle your catasII, z, 67 trophe. He hath eaten me out of house and home. II, i, 82
Let the end try the man.
II,
zz',

We
To
I

IV, z, 70 ready are to try our fortunes


last

the

man.

IV,

zz,

43

may justly say, with the hook-nosed fellow of Rome, "I came, saw, and overcame." * IV, zzz, 44

52

play the fools with the time, and the spirits of the wise sit in the clouds and mock us. II, n, 155

Thus we

That

polish'd perturbation! golden care! keep'st the ports of slumber open

wide

To many

a watchful night!

indeed the glass Wherein the noble youth did dress themselves. II, zzz, 21

He was

IV,
See, sons,

V,

22

And let the welkin


Is it

roar.

II, iv,

181

How quickly nature falls into When gold becomes her object!
Thy
2

what things you

are!

revolt

many

not strange that desire should so years outlive performance? II, zv, 283

IV,

v,

63

wish was father, Harry, to that


thought.
'IV, v, 91

O
thee,

sleep!

gentle sleep!

Before thy hour be ripe. 8

IV,

v,

Nature's soft nurse,

how have

95

frighted

Commit
The
oldest
sins

That thou no more


lids

wilt weigh

my
III,

the

eye-

down

ways.
senses in forgetfulness?
i,

newest kind of IV, v, 124

And
With

steep
all

my

His cares are

now all ended.

V,

zz,

5
to

appliances

and
that

This

is

means
Ill,
i,

the English, not the Turkish


succeeds,

boot.

court;

29
a

Not Amurath an Amurath


But Harry Harry.

Uneasy

lies

the

head

wears
Ill,
i,

V,
V,
I

zz,

47

crown.

31

God! that one might read the book of fate. Ill, z, 45 There is a history in all men's lives.
Ill,
z,

How

ill

white hairs become

a fool

and
53

jester!

v,

80

Master Shallow, sand pound.

owe you

a thou-

V,
fire,

v,

78
as-

Death,
tain to

as

the Psalmist saith,


shall die.
Ill,
Ill,

is
zz,

cer-

O!
1
2

for a

Muse

of

that would

all; all

cend
41
zz,

Most

forcible Feeble.

181

We
night.
1 18],

have heard the chimes at midIll,


if,

See Julius Caesar, p. Men's thoughts are much according to their inclination, their discourse and speeches accord-

231

Sleep,

most gentle sleep. Metamorphoses, bk. II,

OVID [43
I.

B.C.-A.D.

ing to their learning and infused opinions. FRANCIS BACON, Essays [1597-1625], Of Custom and Education
o

624

See Blake, p. 4880.

242

SHAKESPEARE

The

brightest heaven of invention!

King Henry

[1598-1600], Chorus, I. i

Or may we cram
Within
That did
this

Tis ever common That men are merriest when they are from home. Henry V, I, ii, 271

wooden

the

very

Now
And

all
fire,

the youth of England are on

casques
affright the air at

Agincourt? 1. 12

silken dalliance in the


lies.

wardrobe
Chorus,
i

II,

And whipp'd
Hear him
affairs,

Consideration like an angel came, the offending Adam out act I, sc. i, I. 28 of him.
debate
say
it

England! model to thy inward greatness,

What

of

commonwealth
all in all
I,
i,

You would
study.

hath been

his

body with a mighty heart, mightst thou do, that honor would thee do, Were all thy children kind and natural! II, Chorus, 16
Like
little

41

That's the

humor

of

it.

II,
if

ir

63

Turn him
loose,

to

any cause of policy,


of
it

The Gordian knot

he

will

un-

went
finer

He's in Arthur's bosom, to Arthur's bosom. A'

ever

man made a

Familiar as his garter; that,

when he
is still.

end and went away an

it

had been

The

air,

speaks, a chartered libertine,

I
The
state of

i>

45

Therefore doth heaven divide

any christom child; a' parted even just between twelve and one, even at the I saw him turning o' the tide: for after fumble with the sheets and play with flowers and smile upon his fingers' ends,
1 knew there was but one way; for his nose was as sharp as a pen, and a' babII, Hi, bled of green fields.

man

in divers functions,

Setting endeavor in continual motion; To which is fixed, as an aim or butt, Obedience: for so work the honeybees,

As cold

as

any stone.

II, Hi,

26

Creatures that by a rule in nature teach The act of order to a peopled kingdom. I, , 183

Trust none;

For oaths are straws, men's

faiths are

And

wafer-cakes, hold-fast is

the

only

dog,
II,

my

duck.

w, 53

The

singing masons building roofs of


gold.
I, it,

198

Many
To one

things,

having

full

reference
contrari-

unto the breach, dear once more; Or close the wall up with our English

Once more
friends,

consent,

may work

ously;

dead! In peace there's nothing so becomes a

As many arrows, loosed several ways, Fly to one mark; as many ways meet in one town; As many fresh streams meet in one salt
sea;

man
As modest stillness and humility: But when the blast of war blows in our
ears,

Then
Stiffen

As many
ter;

lines close in the dial's cen-

imitate the action of the tiger; the sinews, summon up the


fair

blood,

So

may a thousand actions, once afoot, End in one purpose, and be all well
borne

Disguise
rage;

nature with hard-favor'd


eye a terrible aspect.
ill,
i,

Then lend the

Without

defeat.

1,1

243

SHAKESPEARE

And
I

sheath'd their swords for lack of

A little touch
There
is

argument.
see

Henry V,

III,

i,

21

Harry in 'the night. Henry V, IV, Chorus, 47


of

you stand like greyhounds in the


slips,

some
evil,

soul

of

goodness

in

Straining upon the start. afoot:

The game's
upon
this

things

Would men

observingly

distill it out.

IV,

i,

Follow

your charge

spirit;

and

When
i,

blood

is

their argument.

Cry "God
I

for Harry! Saint George!"


all

England and
Ill,

IV,
Every subject's duty
every subject's soul
is
is

z,

151

31

the king's; but

ale,

would give and safety.

my

fame

for a
Ill,

pot of
ii,

his

own.
IV, 1,189

14

Men
He

of few words are the best men.


Ill,
ii,

40

Must

What infinite heart's ease kings neglect that private men


kings that privates have
save

maintain his argument as well as any military man in the world. Ill, ii, 89
will
I

enjoy!

And what have

not too, Save ceremony,

general
idol
1

cere-

know

the disciplines of wars.


Ill, U,

156

thought upon one pair of English


legs

mony? And what art thou, thou mony?

cere-

What
Of

kind

of

god

art

thou,

that

suffer'st

more
than do thy worship-

Did march three Frenchmen.


Ill, vi,

mortal
pers? are

griefs

161
181

We are in God's hand.


That
island of

What

Ill, vi,

England breeds very


Ill, vii,

thy rents? comings-in?

what

are

thy

ceremony! show

me

valiant creatures: their mastiffs are of

but thy worth. JV, i, 256

unmatchable courage.

155

'Tis

not the balm, the scepter and the


ball,

Give them great meals of beef and iron and steel, they will eat like wolves and fight like devils. Ill, vii, 166

The
The

sword, the mace, the crown imperial,

The hum
That the

intertissued
pearl,

robe

of

of either

army
of

stilly

sounds,

gold

and

fix'd sentinels

The
Fire

secret

whispers
fire,

almost receive each other's


their

watch: answers
battle

The The

farced

title

throne he

sits

running 'fore the king, on, nor the tide of


this

and through

pomp
That beats upon the high shore of
world,

paly flames

Each
Steed

sees

the other's umber'd

face:

threatens steed, in high and boastful neighs Piercing the night's dull ear; and from

No, not all mony,

these, thrice-gorgeous cere'

Not Can

these, laid in bed majestical, sleep so soundly as the wretched


all

the tents

slave,

The

armorers,
knights,

accomplishing

the

Who

with a body fnTd and vacant


to rest,

With busy hammers

closing rivets up,

mind Gets him


1

cramm'd with
IV,
idle.
i,

dis-

Give dreadful note of preparation. IV, Chorus, 5

tressful bread.

2 80

Sometimes rendered:

244

SHAKESPEARE

God
Possess

of battles! steel

my

soldiers

hearts;

them not with them now


sense of reckoning,

fear;

take from

The

if

the opposed

numbers
Pluck their hearts from them.

Nice customs curtsy to great kings. Henry V, V, iz, 291 He hath indeed better bettered expectation than you must expect of me to tell you how.

Much Ado About Nothing


f,

Henry V, IV,
But
1
if it

309

[1598-1600], act

I, sc.

i, I.

15

am

be a sin to covet honor, the most offending soul alive.


IV,
Hi,

How much
28

better

is it

to

weep

at joy
i,

than to joy at weeping.

I,

28

very valiant trencher-man.


I,
i,

This day

is

call'd

the feast of Crispian:

52

He

that outlives this day, and comes


safe

There's a skirmish of wit between

home,
a-tip-toe

them.

I,

z,

Will stand nam'd.

when

64

this

day

is

He
40
of

wears his faith but as the fashion


I,
is
i,

And

rouse
ian.

him

at the

name

of CrispHi,

of his hat.
lady, the gentleman your books.
I see,

76

IV,

not in
I,
z,

We

few,

we happy

few,

we band

79

brothers;

For he today that sheds his blood with

What! my dear Lady


you yet
Shall
living?
I

Disdain, are
I, z,

me
Shall

123

be

my

brother.
is

IV,

in,

60

never see a bachelor of threeI,


z",

saying sel makes the greatest sound."

The

true,

"The empty
IV,

ves-

score again?

209

In time the savage bull doth bear the


zv,

72

yoke.

I,

z,

271

There is occasions and causes why and wherefore x in all things. V, z, 3

Benedick the married man.


I,
I
i,

278

By
venge.

this leek,
I

will

most horribly

re-

eat

and

eat, I swear.

>

*>

49
72

could not endure a husband with a beard on his face: I had rather lie in the woollen. II, i, 31

All hell shall

stir

for this.

V,

i,

As merry

as

the day

is

long.

naked, poor, and mangled Peace, Dear nurse of arts, plenties, and joyful
births.

The

V,
do
but

if,

34

II, z, 52 not grieve a woman to be over-mastered with a piece of valiant dust? to make an account of her life to

Would

it

Grow

like savages

as soldiers will,

a clod of

That nothing
blood.

meditate

on
59

wayward marl?
I

II,

ir

64

V,

ii,

For these fellows of infinite tongue, that can rime themselves into ladies' favors, they do always reason themselves
out again.

I have a good eye, uncle: church by daylight.

can see a
II,
i,

86

Speak low,

if

you

speak love.
II,
i,

104

V,
is,

ii r

162
Friendship
ill

is

constant

in

all

other

My
spoil

comfort

that old age, that

layer-up

of beauty,

can do no more

upon

my face.

V,
p. 2i8a.

if,

246

things Save in the office and affairs of love: Therefore all hearts in love use their

iSee TTie Comedy of Errors,

own

tongues;

245

SHAKESPEARE
Let every eye negotiate for
itself

Everyone can master a grief but he


that has
it.

And

trust

no agent.

Much Ado About Nothing


11,1,184

Much Ado About Nothing


III, n,

28
i

She speaks poniards, and every word


if her breath were as terrible as her terminations, there were no living near her; she would infect to the north

Are you good men and

true?
III,
fix,

stabs:

To be

a well-favored

man

is

the

gift

star.

II,
is

i,

257

of fortune; but to write by nature.


If

and read comes


Ill,
x'ix,

14

the perfectest herald of joy: were but little happy, if I could say
Silence
II,

they make you not then the

better

how much.
It

men you
They
filed. 1

answer, you may say they are not the took them for. Ill, in, 49
that touch

2 keeps on the windy side of care.


II,

^ 328
x,

pitch will be deHI, fix, 61

There was a that was I born.


I will tell

star

danced, and under


II,
3

The

fashion wears out

more
Ill,

apparel
z'z'z,

351

than the man.

147
talk-

He

II, x, 406 you my drift. was wont to speak plain and to

good old man,

sir;

he

will

be

ing: as they say, the wit is out.

When

the age

is in,

Ill, v,

36

the purpose.

II, in,

19

O! what

Sigh no more, ladies, sigh no more,

were deceivers ever; One foot in sea, and one on shore; To one thing constant never.
II,
xxx,

Men

may
ing

do!

men dare do! what men what men daily do, not know-

what they do! IV, i, 19 O! what authority and show of truth


sin cover itself withal.

65

Can cunning
For
it

IV,
so
falls

i,

Sits

the wind in that corner?

35

out
prize not to the

II,

iff,

108
will

That what we have we


worth

Bait the hook well:


bite.

this

fish
II,
ixx,

121

Shall quips and sentences and these paper bullets of the brain awe a man from the career of his humor? No; the world must be peopled. When I said I would die a bachelor, I did not think I

Whiles we enjoy and lost,

it,

but being lack'd

Why,
The

then

we

rack the value, then

we

find
virtue that possession
ours.

would not
IV,
x,

should live

till I

were married.
II, iii f

show us Whiles it was

219

260

From

sole of his foot,

the crown of his head to the he is all mirth.

Masters, it is proved already that you are little better than false knaves, and it will go near to be thought so shortly.

HI,

',

IV,
IV,

if,

23

He
and

his

hath a heart as sound as a bell, tongue is the clapper; for what

Flat burglary as ever was committed.


if,

54

his heart thinks his

tongue speaks.
III,
zz,

Thou
lasting
1

wilt

be condemned into
this.

ever-

12

redemption for

1 2

See Longfellow, p. 6233. The windy side of the law.


iv,

IV,
Twelfth-Night
[1607-

ii,

60

He

[1598-1600], ///,
3

183
drift.

with.

We

that toucheth pitch shall be defiled thereApocrypha: Ecclesiasticus 13:1

know your
iii,

Coriolanus

1608], ///,
4

114

defile;

This pitch, as ancient writers do report, doth so doth the company thou keepest.
pt.
1,

See Malory, p. 1753.

King Henry IV [1597-1598],

II,

iv,

460

246

SHAKESPEARE
that he were here to write

me
80
ij

O, how
day world!

full of briers is this .working-

down an

ass!

Much Ado About Nothing


IV,
ii,

As You Like

It I,

iii,

12

Patch

griefs

with proverbs.
air,

Beauty provoketh thieves sooner than


gold.
I, iii,

i,

113

Charm

ache with words.

and agony with

V,

i,

26

We'll have a swashing and a martial


outside,

For there was never yet philosopher That could endure the toothache paV, i, 35 tiently.

As many other mannish cowards have.


I, iii,

123
life

Some

of us will smart for

Hath not old custom made more sweet

this

it.

V,

i,

108

Than

1 though care killed a cat, thou hast mettle enough in thee to kill care. V, i, 135 1

What

pomp? Are not woods More free from peril than the envious
that of painted
these
court?
II,
i,

was

not

born
of his

under

Sweet are the uses of adversity,

riming

planet.

V,

Which,

like

the toad, ugly and venom-

ii,

40
91

ous,

The trumpet
Done

own

virtues.

Wears

his head; yet a precious jewel in

V,
V,

ii,

And

to death by slanderous tongues.


Hi, 3

Fleet the time carelessly, as they did in the golden world. As You Like It [1598-1600],
act
I, sc. i,
I.

our life, exempt from public haunt, Finds tongues in trees, books in the running brooks, Sermons in stones, and good in every 1 II, i, 12
this

thing.

>

126
the

Always the dullness of the fool whetstone of the wits. I,

is
ii,

The

little

foolery that wise

men
I,

59 have 97

The big round tears Cours'd one another down his innocent nose In piteous chase. II, i, 38
"Poor deer/' quoth he, "thou maFst a
testament

makes a

great show.
said:

ii,

Well
trowel.

that was laid on with a

I,ii,ii3
heart's desires

Your

be with you!
I,
ii,

214
263

As worldlings do, giving thy sum of more To that which had too much/' II, *> 47

One

out of suits with fortune.


I,
ii,

Sweep on, you

fat

and greasy

citizens.

H>

*>

55

My pride

fell

with

my

fortunes.
I,
ii,

And He
269
this,

that doth the ravens feed,


for the

Hereafter, in a better world I shall desire more love and


of you.

than

knowledge I, ii, 301


I,
ii,

Yea, providently caters row, Be comfort to my age!

spar-

II, Hi,

43

Though

look old, yet

am

strong and

Heavenly Rosalind!
1

306

lusty;

Let care kill a cat, We'll laugh and grow fat. Shirburn Ballads [1585], 91 JONSON: Hang sorrow, care'll kill a cat. Every Man in His Humour [1598], /,

For in my youth I never did apply Hot and rebellious liquors in


blood.
i
ii,

my
47

II, Hi,

See
5;

St.

Bernard, p. i54a, As You Like It III,


p. 5093.

and Wordsworth,

247

SHAKESPEARE
Therefore my age Frosty, but kindly.
is

as a lusty winter, It II, Hi,

And And And

so,

from hour to hour we ripe and

ripe,

As You Like

52

then from hour to hour


rot;
1 thereby hangs a tale.
-

we

rot and

Thou

art

not for the fashion of these


will sweat

times,

Where none
tion.

but

As You Like
for

It II,

vii,

26

promoII, in, 59
in a

My

lungs began to
cleer,

crow

like chanti-

Ay,
fool I:

now am I in Arden; when I was at home,

the more
I

better place: but travelers


tent.
If

was must be conII, iv, z 6


slightest
into,

That

fools

should be so deep-contemintermission
II, vii,
II, vii,

plative,

And I did laugh sans An hour by his dial.


If ladies

30

you remember'st not the


folly

Motley's the only wear.

34

That

ever love did

make thee run

be but young and

fair,

Thou hast not

lov'd.

II, iv,

34
53

They have
I

the gift to

know

it.

We
Thou
ware
I

that are

true lovers

run into
II, iv,

II, vii,

37

strange capers.

must have
I

liberty

speakest wiser than thou art


II, iv, 57 be ware of mine own

Withal,

as large a charter as

the wind,
II, vii,

To blow on whom
The "why"
church.
is

of.

please.

47

shall ne'er
till I

wit,

break

my

shins against

plain as

way

to parish
II, vii, 52

it.

II, iv,

59

Under the greenwood

tree

But whate'er you are

Who loves to lie with me,


And
turn his merry note Unto the sweet bird's throat,
hither:

That in this Under the


boughs,

desert inaccessible,

shade

of

melancholy

Come hither, come hither, come


Here
shall

Lose and neglect the creeping hours of


time;
If ever
If ever

he

see

No enemy
But winter and rough weather.
II, v, i

you have look'd on better days, been where bells have knoird to

church,
If ever sat at
If ever

can suck melancholy out of a song as a weasel sucks eggs. II, v, 12


I

And

any good man's feast, from your eyelids wip'd a tear, know what 'tis to pity, and be

Who
And

doth ambition shun,


loves to live
i'

pitied,

the sun,
gets.
II, v,

Let gentleness
be.

my
'

strong enforcement
II, vii,

And

Seeking the food he eats, pleas'd with what he


I

109
120

True
38
12

is

it

that

we have seen
evils,

better

days.

II, vii,

m.et a fool
fool.

i'

the forest,
II, vii,

motley

Oppress'd with two weak hunger.

age and

II, vzi, a 32

And

then he drew a dial from his

poke, And looking on it with lack-luster eye, Says, very wisely, "It is ten o'clock; Thus may we see," quoth he, "how the

( \And
1

All the world's a stage,


all

the
2

men and women

merely

players:
V

world wags."
a

II, vii,
SIR

20

See Rabelais, p. i8ib. See The Merchant of Venice, p. 2313. The world's a theatre, the earth a stage,
a

wags the world. Ivanhoe [1819], ch. 37

So

WALTER

SCOTT,

Which God and Nature do with actors fill. THOMAS HEYWOOD, Apology for Actors
[1612]

248

SHAKESPEARE

They have
trances;

their

exits

and

their

en-

Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans


everything.

And one man


parts.

in his

time plays

many

As You Like

It II, vii,

139

His acts being seven ages. At first the infant Mewling and puking in the nurse's

Blow, blow, thou winter wind! Thou art not so unkind As man's ingratitude. II,

viz,

174
5
10

And

arms. then the whining school-boy, with


his satchel,

These

trees shall

be

my

books. 1
Ill,
,

And

The

fair,

the chaste, and unexprcssive


Ill,
ii,

shining morning face, creeping like


snail

she.
It

Unwillingly to school.
lover,

And

then the

goes

much

against

my

stomach.
Ill,
ii,

Hast any philosophy in


herd?

thee,

Sighing
lad

like furnace,

with a woful bal-

shep2i

He
Then
a

that wants
is

Made

to his mistress* eyebrow. soldier,

content,

money, means, and without three good friends.


Ill,
zz,

25

Full of strange oaths, and bearded like

the

am

a true laborer:
I

earn that

eat,

parcl,

Jealous in honor, sudden


quarrel,

and quick

in

get that

wear,

owe no man

Seeking the bubble reputation

man's happiness, glad men's good, content with

no

hntc, envy of other

mv
III,

harm,
fi,

Kven
In

in the cannon's mouth. And then the justice, fair round belly with good capon

78

From

No

the east to western Ind, HI, w, 94 jewel is like Rosalind.


is

linU

With
Full

This
verses.

the

eyes severe and beard of formal

very '

false

gallop
III,
,

of

iao

cut,

of

wise

saws

and

modern

in-

stances;

Awl

so he plays his part.


shifts

The

sixth age

Let us make an honorable retreat; though not with bag and baggage, yet with scrip and scrippage. Ill, 270
,

Into the lean and slippered pantaloon, With spectacles on nose and pouch on
side.

O, wonderful, wonderful, and most wonderful, wonderful! and yet again wonderful! and after that out of all
whooping.
Ill,
ii,

202

His youthful hose well sav'd, a world too wide For his shrunk shank; and his big

Answer

me

in

one word.

maulv voice. Turning ;u;ain toward

Do
childish
treble,

you not
I

know

ant n

woman?

when
I

think,

must speak,
III, a,

Awl

pipes whistles in his sound. List scene of


all,

do desire we may be better


'

stranii,

That ends
tory,
Is

this

strange

eventful

his-

gers.
jftfct/ucff;

III,

276

What

stature

is

she of?

vrnwi
ion,

childishness,

and mere

obliv-

Orlando: Just as high as

my

heart.
ji,

Ill,

286
with

Time
Uir
4tr
iMtlft'i
.1

travels

in

divers

paces
Yuu

nur

filrttwt

Mtum.tfftiN,

on which all the pail* A tlamr **f

divers persons.
*&<*
i,

Ill tell
j>,
iij.j;i;

you
4
it

who Time
Lihtr It 11,

#t,

Bernard,

/a;

ami Wmdsworth,

p,

$<><)&,

249

SHAKESPEARE
ambles withal,

who Time

trots withal,

who Time
stands
still

gallops withal, withal.

and who he
ii,

As You Like
Every one fault
till

Men are April when they woo, December when they wed: maids are May when they are maids, but the sky
changes when they are wives. As You Like It IV,
y 153 an hath affection unknown bot-

his fellow fault

328 seeming monstrous came to match it.


Ill,
ii,

It III,

My
tom,

377

like the

bay of Portugal.

Everything about you demonstrating


a careless desolation.
I

IV,

z,

219

Ill,

ii,

405

The
Is

would the gods had made Truly, thee poetical. Ill, iii 16
t

horn, the horn, the lusty horn not a thing to laugh to scorn.

IV,

ii,

17

The wounds
That
love's

invisible

Chewing
fancy.
Ill, v,

the food of sweet and bitter

keen arrows make.

IV,
is

z'z'z,

103

30

"So so"
so so.

good, very good, very ex-

Down on your knees,


And thank
man's
I

cellent good:

and yet

it is

not;

it is

but
30,

heaven, fasting, for a good


love.
Ill, v,

V,
fool doth think

z,

57

The
fool.

am

the wise
falser

man knows

wise, but himself to be a


is

he

than vows made in wine.


III, v,

V,

z,

35

73

a melancholy of mine own, compounded of many simples, extracted from many objects, and indeed the sundry contemplation of my travels,
It is

which, by often rumination, wraps in a most humorous sadness.

me
16

sooner met, but they looked; no sooner looked but they loved; no sooner loved but they sighed; no sooner sighed but they asked one another the reason; no sooner knew the reason but they V, ii, 37 sought the remedy.
But, O! how bitter a thing it is to look into happiness through another

No

IV,
I

z,

had rather have

a fool to

merry than
sad.

experience

to

make me make me
IV,
i,

man's
It

28

Farewell, Monsieur Traveler: look you lisp and wear strange suits, disable

V, eyes! 48 was a lover and his lass, With a hey, and a ho, and a hey
z'z,

That

the benefits of your own country, be out of love with your nativity, and almost chide God for making you that
all

nonino, o'er the green corn-field did pass, In the spring time, the only pretty
ring time, birds do sing,

When
Sweet

countenance you are; or I will scarce think you have swam in a gondola. IV, i' 35
I'll

hey ding a ding,

ding;
lovers love the spring.

V,
beasts,
fools.

iii,

18

warrant him heart-whole.

IV,

z,

51
are

Here comes a which in


ill-favored

all

pair of very strange tongues are called

Very good
out,

they

orators, will spit;


is

when they
and
for

lovers

lacking

God warn

An
own. 1

us!

matter, the

thing,

sir,

cleanliest shift

to kiss.

V, zv, 36 but mine V, zv, 60

IV,

z,

77

have died from time to time, and worms have eaten them, but not
for love.

Men

Rich honesty dwells

like a miser, sir,

IV,
IV,

z,

no
151

in a poor house, as your pearl in your foul oyster. V, zv, 62


i

Forever and a day.

"A poor

thing but mine

own"

is

the popular

i,

version.

250

SHAKESPEARE

"The retort courteous." "the "the reply churlquip modest." "the reproof valiant" ish." "the countercheck quarrelsome." "the lie circumstantial," and "the lie As You Like It V, iv, 75 direct."
.

Is it a

world to hide virtues in?

Twelfth-Night

I,

iii,

142

that have it; give and those that are fools, let them use
their talents.
I, v,

God

them wisdom

14

Your

"if"

is

the only peacemaker;

much

virtue in "if."

V,

iv,

108

draught above heat makes him a fool, the second mads him, and a third drowns him. I, V, 139

One

uses his folly like a stalking horse, of that he shoots his wit. V, iv, 112

He

and under the presentation


If

Tis beauty
white
Nature's
laid

truly blent,

whose red and

own sweet and cunning hand


on
:

music be the food of love, 1 play on; Give me excess of it, that, surfeiting, The appetite may sicken, and so die. That strain again! it had a dying fall: O! it came o'er my ear like the sweet sound That breathes upon a bank of violets, Stealing and giving odor!
Twelfth-Night [1598-1600],
act
I, sc. i,
1.

Lady, you are the cruel'st she alive, If you will lead these graces to the
grave

And leave
Make me

the world no copy.


I, v,

259

And

call

a willow cabin at your gate, upon my soul within the


I, v,

house.

289

spirit of love!

how

quick and fresh

Holla your
hills,

name

to

the reverberate

art thou,

And make
air

the babbling gossip of the


I, v,
I, v,

That, notwithstanding thy capacity Receiveth as the sea, nought enters


there,

Cry

out, "Olivia!"

293

Of what
But

validity

falls

into

and pitch soe'er, abatement and low


is

Farewell, fair cruelty.

309

mistress mine!

where

are

price, Even in a

minute: so full of shapes


is

ing?

you roamII, in, 42

fancy,

That

it

alone

high fantastical.
I,
i,

Journeys end in lovers meeting, Every wise man's son doth know. 9
is

II,

iii,

46

When my
I

tongue blabs, then eyes not see.


sure care's an

let
I,

mine
H, 61

not hereafter; What Present mirth hath present laughter.


love?
'tis

am

enemy

to

life.
I, iii,

Let them hang themselves in their

own
I

What's to come is still unsure: In delay there lies nd plenty; Then come kiss me, sweet and twenty, Youth's a stuff will not endure.
II,
iii,

straps.

I,

Hi,

13

50
I

am

a great eater of beef, and I bethat does harm to my wit.


I, iii,

He
do
it

does

it

with a better grace, but


II,
i,

more

natural.

91

92

Is

there no respect of place, persons,


x

Wherefore

are these things hid?


I, iii,

nor time, in you?

II, Hi,

100

135

Sir

Toby: Dost thou think, because


art virtuous, there cakes and ale?
shall

!See Antony and Cleopatra II, v, i, p. a88a. RICHARD Is not music the food of love? BRINSLEY SHERIDAN, The Rivals [1775], II, See Rabelais, p. i8ib, and note.
fl

thou

be no

more

iSee Acts 10:34, p. soa, and note.

251

SHAKESPEARE

Clown: Yes, by Saint Anne; and ginger shall be hot f the mouth too.
Twelfth-Night
II,
zxi,

124

concealment, like a worm i' the bud, Feed on her damask cheek: she pin'd in

But

let

My
These

purpose

is,

indeed, a horse of
II,
iff,

that color.

And
She

184
6

thought, with a green and yellow melancholy,


sat like Patience
grief.

most
If ever

brisk

and

giddy-paced
II, zv,

on

monument,
II, zv,

times.

Smiling at
I

thou shalt
it

Twelfth-Night
love,

112

In the sweet pangs of

remember me;

am

For such as Unstaid and


ture

am

all

true lovers are:

skittish in all motions else Save in the constant image of the creais

And

all the daughters of house, all the brothers too.

my

father's

II, zv,

122

Here comes the trout that must be


caught with
tickling.
I

That

belov'd.

II, v,

II, iv,

15
I

25

An

Let still the woman take elder than herself, so wears she to
level

may command where


Be not

adore.
II, v,

116
are

him, So sways she


heart:
For, boy,
selves,

afraid of greatness:

some

in her husband's
praise our-

born

great,

some
however we do
are

greatness, and have greatness thrust upon them.


II, v,

some achieve

159
yel-

Remember who commended


more giddy and unand
29

Our

fancies
firm,

thy

More

longing, wavering, sooner lost


are.

low stockings, and wished to see thee ever cross-gartered. II, v, 168
Foolery,
sir,

worn,

does walk about the orb


shines everywhere.

Than women's
Then,
let

II, iv,

like the sun;

it

thy love be younger than thy-

self,

III, f, 44 This fellow's wise enough to play the

Or thy
For

women
flower

affection cannot hold the bent; are as roses, whose fair


fall

fool,

And

to do that well craves a kind of


wit.
Ill,
Ill,
i,
z,

68

Being once displayed, doth


hour.

that very
II, iv,

Music from the spheres. 1

122

36

How

apt the poor are to be proud.


Ill,
i,

The

spinsters

and the

knitters in the

141

sun,

Then westward-ho!
O! what

And

Ill,

z,

the free maids that weave their thread with bones, Do use to chant it: it is silly sooth, And dallies with the innocence of love, Like the old age. II, zv, 44

148

a deal of scorn looks beautiful


lip.

In the contempt and anger of his


Ill,
z,

159

Love sought
is

is

good, but giv'n unsought


Ill,
z,

Come away, come


And
I

better.
like

away, death,

170
a

in sad cypress let


fly

me

be

laid;

Fly away,

away, breath;

am

You will hang Dutchman's beard.


*The music
51
231.

an

icicle

on
ii,

Ill,

slain

by a

fair cruel

maid.
II, xv,

30
i,

of the spheres.

Pericles V,

Duke:
Viola:

And

what's

blank,

my

her history? lord. She never told

Theory

phrase that stems from the Pythagorean (sixth century B.C.) of the music or harof the spheres.

mony

her love,

See Sir

Thomas Browne,

p. 3303.

252

SHAKESPEARE
Let there be
gall

enough in thy
III,

ink.

Set honor in one eye


other,

and death

i'

the

Twelfth-Night

ii,

54

Laugh
I

yourselves into stitches.


Ill,
ti,

And
75
31

will

look on both indifferently.


Julius Caesar
I,
ii,

86

think

we do know the sweet Roman


Ill, iv,

hand.
This
is

Well, honor is the subject of my story. I cannot tell what you and other men

Think
I

of this
as lief

very

midsummer madness.
Ill, iv,

life;

but, for

my

single

62

self,

had

not be as

live to
I

be
I,
ii,

More

matter for a

May

morning. Ill, fv, 158


Ill, fv,

In awe of such a thing as

myself.

92

He's a very

devil.

304
380

Stemming
versy.

it

with hearts

of
I,

contro-

Out
I'll

of

my lean and

low

H 109
7

ability
Ill, fv,

lend you something.

Why, man, he doth


world

bestride the narrow

Than

hate ingratitude more in a man lying, vainness, babbling drunkenness,


taint of vice

Or any

whose strong
Ill, fv,

cor-

ruption Inhabits our

frail

blood.

Like a Colossus; and we petty men Walk under his huge legs, and peep about To find ourselves dishonorable graves. Men at some time are masters of their
fates: !

390

As the old hermit of Prague, that never saw pen and ink, very wittily said to a niece of King Gorboduc, "That that is, is." IV, ii, 14

The
But

fault,
stars,

dear Brutus,
that

is

not in our
are underI,
ii,

in

ourselves,

we

lings.

134

Thus the
his revenges.

whirligig of time brings in

Upon what meat doth


feed,

this our

Caesar

V,

i,

388

When

That he
Let

is

that I was and a little tiny boy, With hey, ho, the wind and the
rain;

grown so

great?

I, if,

148

me
fat;

have

men

about

me

that are

A foolish

thing was but a toy, For the rain it raineth every day. 1

Sleek-headed men, and such as sleep o'


nights.

V,

f,

404

Yond

Cassius has a lean and hungry


2

A surgeon to old shoes.


Julius Caesar [1598-1600],

look;

He
I, sc. i,l.

thinks too

much: such men


I,

are

act

26

dangerous.

w, *9 X

As proper men
neat's leather.

He reads much;
as

ever trod

upon I, f, 27

He

is

a great observer,

and he looks
I, if,

of men. Quite through the deeds

Have you not made a universal shout, That Tiber trembled underneath her
banks, To hear the replication of your sounds Made in her concave shores?
I,f, (4 8

200

Seldom he
sort

smiles,

and smiles in such a

As

if

he mock'd himself, and scorn'd


at anyM,

his spirit

That could be moved to smile


thing.
1

Beware
1
2

the ides of

March.2

I,

ii,

18

I,

204

Parodied by the Fool in King Lear,


See Julius Caesar, p. iiaa.

p. 2783.

See Sallust, p. n6a. 2 See Julius Caesar, p.

nsb.

SHAKE SPEARE
But, for

my own

part, it

was Greek to
if,

O conspiracy!
Sham'st thou to show thy dangerous

me. 1
Julius Caesar I,

288

Yesterday the bird of night did sit, Even at noonday, upon the marketplace,

When

brow by night, evils are most

free?
i,

Julius Caesar II,

77

Let's carve
I, Hi,

him

as a dish

fit

for the
for

Hooting and shrieking.

26

gods,

So every bondman in
bears

his

own hand

Not hew him


hounds.

as

carcass

fit
i,

II,
tell

173
flat-

The power
O! he
sits

to cancel his captivity.


I, iff,

joi

But when I He says he


tered.

him he hates

flatterers,

does, being then

most
II,
iy

high in

all

the people's
offense in

hearts:

And

that which
us,

would appear

His countenance, like richest alchemy, Will change to virtue and to worthiness.
I, iii,

157

207 Enjoy the honey-heavy dew of slumber. II, i, 230 You are my true and honorable wife, As dear to me as are the ruddy drops That visit my sad heart. 1 II, i, 288

The abuse
joins

of greatness

is

when

it dis-

Think you
sex,

am no

stronger than

my
296

Remorse from power. II, i, 18 Tis a common proof, That lowliness is young ambition's ladder,

Being so father'd and so husbanded?


II,
it

When

beggars die, there are no comets

seen;

Whereto
face;

the climber-upward turns his


attains the

The heavens

themselves blaze forth the death of princes. II, if, 30


die

But when he once

upmost ^/Cowards i*
his

many

times before their

He

round, then unto


back,

the

ladder

turns

The
Of
It

deaths; valiant never taste of death but

once.
all

Looks in the clouds, scorning the base


degrees

the wonders

that

yet have

heard,

By which he
Which,

did ascend.

II,

f,

21

Therefore think him as a serpent's egg hatch'd, would, as his kind, grow mischievous, And kill him in the shell. II, i, 32
a dreadful thing
all

seems to should

me most
fear;

strange that

men

Seeing that death, a necessary end,

Will come when

it

will

come.
II,
if,

32

Between the acting of

Antony, that revels long o' nights,


II,
ii,

And

116
keep
9

the
is

first

motion,

the interim

How
But
I

hard

it

is

for

women
as

to

Like a phantasma, or a hideous dream: The genius and the mortal instru-

counsel!

II, iv

am

constant
true-fix'd

the

northern

ments Are then in council; and the state of man, Like to a little kingdom, suffers then The nature of an insurrection.
II,
i,

star,

Of whose
There
is

and resting quality


in the firmament.
III,
i,

no fellow

60
76

63

Speak, hands, for me!


1

Ill,

i,

This geare is Greeke to me. Supposes I [1573]

GASCOIGNE,

Dear

as the

ruddy drops that

warm my

heart.

THOMAS GRAY, The Bard

[1757], I,

iii,

12

254

SHAKESPEARE

Et

tu, Brute!

The good
Julius Caesar III,
i,

is

oft

interred

with their
ii,

77
cry

bones. 1
Julius Caesar III,

Some

to the

common

pulpits,

and

79

out,

"Liberty,

freedom,

and

enfranchiseIll,
z,

For Brutus So are they

is

all, all

an honorable man; honorable men.


Ill,
ii,

ment."

79

88

many ages hence Shall this our lofty scene be acted o'er, In states unborn and accents yet unknown!
Ill,
z,

How

that the poor have cried, Caesar hath wept; Ambition should be made of sterner
stuff.

When

in

Ill,

ii,

97

mighty Caesar! dost thou lie so low? Are all thy conquests, glories, triumphs,
spoils, Shrunk to this little

judgment! thou art fled to brutish


beasts,

And men have


But
yesterday

lost their reason.


Ill,
ii,

measure?
Ill,
i,

no

148
163

the

word

of

Caesar

The

choice and master


age.

spirits of this

might

Ill,
last,

z,

Have stood

against the world;

now

lies

Though

not

least in love. 2
Ill,
z,

189 O! pardon me, thou bleeding piece of


earth,

he there, And none so poor to do him reverence.


Ill,
ii,

124

If you have tears, prepare to shed

them
>

That

am meek

now.

and gentle with these


See what a rent the

HI,
envious
Ill,

174

Thou

butchers; art the ruins of the noblest

man
254

made.

Casca 180 ,
all.

That ever

lived in the tide of times.


Ill,
z,

This was the most unkindest cut of


Ill,
ii,

188

Cry "Havoc!" and


war.

let slip

the dogs of
Ill,
z,

273

Great Caesar fell. O! what a fall was there,

my

countryfell

Romans,
hear

countrymen,
cause; hear.

me

for

my

and and be

lovers!
silent,
ii,

men;
I, and you, and down, Whilst bloody treason

Then

all

of us

that you

may
I

Ill,
less,

13

flourished

over

Not
1

that

loved Caesar

but that
zz,

us.

HI,

ii,

194
I

loved

Rome more.

Ill,

22

What
1

private griefs they have, alas!


Ill,
ii,

As he was valiant, I honor him; but, as he was ambitious, I slew him. Ill, zz, 27
If any, speak; for him have fended. I pause for a reply.
I

know not.
come
not, friends, to steal hearts:
orator, as

217

away your

of-

am no

Brutus

is;

But, as you
36

know me

all,

a plain blunt
Ill,
ii,

HI, H,
Friends,
I

man.
For
I

220

Romans, countrymen, lend


ears;

me

have neither wit, nor words, nor

your

corne to bury Caesar, not to praise

worth, Action, nor utterance, nor the power of


speech,

him.

The
2

evil that

men do

lives after

them,

To
i

stir

men's blood:

on.
*See Julius Caesar,
See Spenser, p.
p. ii2b. oia, and King Lear, p. s76b.

only speak right III,ii,225

See Euripides, p. 8sb.

255

SHAKESPEARE

Put a tongue
In every

If not,

why

then, this parting was well


Julius Caesar

wound move
stones
of

of Caesar, that should

made.

V,

f,

117

The

Rome

to

rise

and
232

The

O! that a man might know end of this day's business, ere


come.

it

mutiny.
Julius Caesar III,
ff,

V,

i,

123
yet!

When
It

love begins to sicken and decay, useth an enforced ceremony.


tricks in plain
faith.

Julius Caesar!
spirit

thou art mighty

Thy

There are no

and simple IV, ff, 20


IV,
Hi,

walks abroad, and turns our swords In our own proper entrails.

An
I

itching palm.

10

V,

fff,

94

The

last of all

the

had rather be a dog, and bay the moon, Than such a Roman. IV, Hi, 27
I'll

Romans,

fare thee

well!

V,

Hi,

99
68

This was the noblest


afl.

Roman

of

them
v,

use you for


laughter,

my

mirth, yea, for

my
49

V,
was

When you are waspish.


There
For
I
is

IV,
in

Hi,

His So mix'd in
life

gentle, and the elements him that Nature might

no

terror,

Cassius,

your

stand up

And
For

threats;

say to

all 1

the world, "This was a

arm'd so strong in honesty That they pass by me as the idle wind, Which I respect not. IV, Hi, 66

am

man!"
cold,

V,

v,

73

this relief

much

thanks;

'tis

bitter

friend should bear his friend's infirmities,

And I am

sick at heart.

Hamlet [1600-1601], act


sc.
i,

I,

But Brutus makes mine


they are.

greater than

I 8

IV,

Hi,

85

Not a mouse

stirring.

I,
it,

f,

10

All his faults observ'd, Set in a notebook, learn'd, and conn'd

Thou
But

art a scholar;

speak to

Horaf,

tio.

I,

42

IV, Hi, 96 by rote. There is a tide in the affairs of men, Which, taken at the flood, leads on to
fortune;

in the gross ion,

and scope of

my

opin-

This bodes some strange eruption to our state. I, i, 68

Omitted,
Is

all

the voyage of their

life

bound

in shallows

and

in miseries.

Whose

sore task

IV,

Hi,

217
it

We

must take the current when


serves,

Does not divide the Sunday from the week. I, f, 75


This sweaty haste

Or lose our ventures.

IV,
is

iff,

222

Doth make the night


the day.

joint-laborer with
I,
i,

The deep
talk,

of night

crept

upon our

77

And
But

nature must obey necessity.

In the most high and palmy state of


Hi,

IV,
bees, leave

225

Rome,

little

for your words, they rob the

Hybla

The

ere the mightiest Julius graves stood tenantless and

fell,

the

sheeted dead

And

them honeyless. V, i, 34 Cassius! and farewell, forever, Forever, If we do meet again, why, we shall
smile;

Did squeak and gibber


streets.
1

in the

Roman
I,
f,

113

See Hamlet 1, ii, 187, p. 2583. 2 See Clement Clarke Moore, p. 541 a.

SHAKESPEARE

The moist star Upon whose influence

Tis not alone


Neptune's emmother,

my
suits

inky

cloak,

good

Was

pire stands sick almost


eclipse.

Nor customary
to

of solemn black.

doomsday with Hamlet I, i, 118

Hamlet
But
I

19

ii,

76

And then it started like a guilty thing Upon a fearful summons. I, i, 148 The cock, that is the trumpet to the
morn.
I,
i,

have that within which passeth


suits

show;

These but the trappings and the


of woe.

I, if,

85

150

Whether in sea or fire, in earth or air, The extravagant and erring spirit hies

persever In obstinate condolement

To

is
'tis

a course

Of impious
grief:

stubbornness;
a
will

unmanly
to

To
It

his confine.

I,

i,

153
It

faded on the crowing of the cock.


say that ever 'gainst -that season
Saviour's

shows

most

incorrect

Some

comes

heaven, heart unfortified, a

mind
*

impatient.
I,
fi,

Wherein our

birth

is

cele-

92

The

brated, bird of

0! that

this too

too solid

flesh

would

dawning singeth
no
spirit

all

night

melt,

And
.

long; then, they say,

Thaw and
can walk

resolve itself into a dew;

Or
His

that the Everlasting

had not

fix'd

abroad;
nights
are

The

wholesome; then no

canon God!
weary, able
to

'gainst

self-slaughter!

God!
stale,
flat,

planets strike,

How

and

unprofit-

No

fairy takes,

nor witch hath power to


is

charm, So hallow'd and so gracious


time.
I,

Seem
the
i,

me

all

the uses of this world.


I,
ii,

129

157

But, look, the


clad, Walks o'er the

morn dew

in russet

mantle

and gross in nature Things Possess it merely. That it should come


rank
to this!
I, ff,

136
this,

of yon high eastI, I,


f,

ern

hill.

166
2

So excellent a king; that was, to

The memory be green. 1 With one auspicious and one


eye,

ii,

dropping

Hyperion to a satyr; so loving to my mother That he might not beteem the winds of heaven
Visit her face too roughly.
I,
ff,

With mirth
In

in funeral

and with dirge

139

in marriage,

equal scale weighing delight and


dole.
I, if,

Why,
As
if

she would hang on him,

11

So much for him.

By
I, ii,

increase of appetite what it fed on.

had grown
I, if,

143

25
Frailty,

thy

name

is

woman!
I,
ff,

little

more than

kin,

and

less

than

146
149

kind.

I, if,
'tis

65

Like Niobe,

all tears.

I,

if,

Thou

know'st
die,

common;

all

that live

must

A
I,
ff,

beast,

that wants discourse of reaI,


it
ff,

Passing through nature to eternity.

son.

150

72

It is

not nor

cannot come to good.


-

Seems, madam! Nay, "seems."


1

it is;

know not
1

1,8,158
and
"sul-

Alternative readings are "sallied"

See

Thomas Moore,

p. 541!).

lied."

257

SHAKESPEARE

A truant disposition.
Hamlet
Thrift,
thrift,
I,
ii,

Too
169
the
funeral

oft before
clos'd, in the

their buttons

be

dis-

Horatio!

And

morn and

liquid

dew

of

bak'd meats

Did

coldly furnish forth the marriage


tables.
I

youth Contagious blastments are most immiHamlet I, iii, 36 nent.

Would
Ere
In
I

had met

my

dearest foe

in

Do

not, as

heaven

Show me
day.
I,
ii,

had ever seen that

some ungracious pastors do, the steep and thorny way to heaven,
like a

180
185
2
all,

Whiles,

pufFd and reckless

liber-

my mind's
a

eye, Horatio.

tine,

I,

ii,

He was
I

man, take him for all in shall not look upon his like again.
I,
fi,

Himself the primrose path of dalliance


treads,
1

And
187

recks not his

own

rede. 2
I, iii,

47
59

Season your admiration for a while. I, ii, 192


In the dead vast and middle of the
night.
I,

Give thy thoughts no tongue.


I, in,

Be thou
gar;

familiar,

but by no means vulhast,

U,

198

Arm'd

at points exactly, cap-a-pe.


I, ii,

Those
200

friends

thou

and

their

Distara Almost to jelly with the act of

adoption tried, Grapple them to thy soul with hoops of


steel.
I,

Hi,

61

fear.

I, ii,

204
231

Beware
entrance to a quarrel, but, being in, Bear 't that th' opposed may beware of
thee.

countenance more in sorrow than in


anger.
I,
,

Of

While one with moderate


tell

haste might
I, ii,

Give every
voice;

man

thy ear, but few thy


censure, but reserve

a hundred,

237

Hamlet: His beard was grizzled, no? Horatio: It was, as I have seen it in his
life,

Take each man's

A sable silver'd.
Give
it

I, ii,

an

understanding,

but
I, ii,

239 no

thy judgment. Costly thy habit as thy purse can buy, But not expressed in fancy; rich, not
gaudy;
3

For the apparel

oft proclaims the

man.
65

tongue.
All
I
is

249 254

I, iii,

not well;
play.
will rise,
I, ii,

doubt some foul

Neither a borrower, nor a lender be; For loan oft loses both itself and
friend,
iSee Bion, p. io4b, and Macbeth
p. 28$b.
2

Foul deeds

Though

all

the earth overwhelm them,


I, ii,

II,

iii,

as,

to men's eyes.

256

The
If

maid is prodigal enough she unmask her beauty to the moon;


chariest
itself

Wei oghte a preest ensample for to By his clennesse, how that his sheep
live.

yive,

shold
1387],
I.

CHAUCER, Canterbury

Tales
rede,

[c.

Virtue

'scapes

not

calumnious
of

prologue,

504

strokes;

And may you better reck the Than ever did the adviser.

The canker
spring

galls

the infants

the
3

ROBERT BURNS [1759-1796], Epistle to a Young Friend


See Lyly, p. aoab. Neat, not gaudy. Wordsworth [1806]

iSee Henry IV, pt. 2 See Julius Caesar V,

I,

HI,

ii,

723,

p.

2403.

CHARLES LAMB,

letter

to

v, 73, p.

58

SHAKESPEARE

And borrowing

dulls the

edge of hus-

do not

set

my

life

at a pin's fee.

bandry. This above all: to thine


true,

Hamlet

I,

iv,
cliff

own

65

self

be

The
That

dreadful

summit of the

And

it

must

follow, as the night the

beetles o'er his base into the sea.


I, iv,

day, Thou canst not then be false to any

70

man. 1

Hamlet

I,

in,

75

And makes

My fate cries out,


each petty artery in this
lion's nerve.
I, iv,

'Tis in

And you
it.

my memory

lock'd,
I, in,

yourself shall

keep the key of

body As hardy as the Nemean

81

85

speak like a green girl, Unsifted in such perilous circumstance. I, Hi, 101
Springes to catch woodcocks.
I, in,

You

Unhand me, gentlemen, By heaven I'll make a ghost


I

of

him
84
of

that lets me.

I, iv,

Something is rotten in the Denmark.


I

state
I, iv,

90

115

When

could a tale unfold whose lightest

the blood burns, the soul Lends the tongue vows.

how

prodigal

word

Would harrow up
I, in,

thy soul, freeze thy


like stars, start

116

Be somewhat
presence.

scanter of your

maiden
121

young blood, Make thy two eyes,


their spheres,

from

I, iii,

Thy
i

knotted and combined locks to


part,

The
But

air bites shrewdly.

I,

iv,

to

my mind

though

am
it is

And
native
a cus-

each particular hair to stand an


end,

And

here to the manner born

Like quills upon


tine.

the fretful porpenI,

tom More honor'd

v,

15

in the breach than the


I, iv,

observance.

14

And duller shouldst thou be than the fat weed That rots itself in ease on Lethe wharf.
I, v,

Angels and ministers


us!

of grace defend
I, iv,

32

39

O my prophetic soul!
My uncle!
I, v,

Be thy

Thou
That

intents wicked or charitable, com'st in such a questionable

40

shape
I will

O
speak to thee.
I, iv,

Hamlet! what a
virtue, as it

falling-off

was
I>

there.

42

v > 47

What may this


That thou, dead
plete steel
Revisit'st

mean,

But
comthe
fools

corse, again in

Though lewdness
heaven,

never will be mov'd, court it in a shape of


to a

thus

the

glimpses
2

of

So

lust,

though

radiant

angel

moon, Making night hideous;


of nature

and we

link'd, Will sate itself in a celestial bed,

And prey on

garbage.

I, v,

53

So horridly to shake our disposition With thoughts beyond the reaches of


our souls?
See Bacon, p. aoga. makes night POPE, The Dunciad, bk.
3 1

In the porches of mine ears.


I,

v,

I, iv,

51

63

Cut
hideous.

off
sin,

even in the blossoms of

my

And

ALEXANDER
I.

HI

[1728],

166

Unhousel'd, disappointed, unanel'd,

259

SHAKESPEARE

No

reckoning made, but sent to

my
on

ac-

By

indirections find directions out.

count

Hamlet

II,

i,

63
his

With

all

head. 1

^my
'

imperfections

my
70

Hamlet

Ungarter'd,
ankle.

and

down-gyved

to
II,
z,

I, v,

80

Leave her to heaven,

And

This

is

to those thorns that in her


lodge,

bosom
v,

the very ecstasy of love.


II,
z,

102

To

prick

and

sting her.

I,

86

Brevity

is

the soul of wit.

II,

zz,

90 95
'tis

The glowworm shows


near,

the matin to be

More

matter, with less art.


is

II, n,
'tis

That he
pity;
I,

mad,

'tis

true;

true

And

'gins to pale his uneffectual fire.


v,

89

And
Or

pity

'tis 'tis

true.

II,

ii,

97

While memory
In
this

holds a seat

Find out the cause of

this

effect,

distracted

globe.

Remember

thee!

rather say, the cause of this defect, For this effect defective comes by
cause.
II,
,

Yea, from the table of


Fll

my memory
fond records.
I, v,

101

wipe away

all

trivial

96

Within the book and volume


brain.

of

my
103
vil-

I, v,

Doubt thou the stars are fire; Doubt that the sun doth move; Doubt truth to be a liar; But never doubt I love.
II,
ii,

villain, villain, smiling, lain!

damned

115

Polonius:
lord?

Do

My
At

meet it is I set it down, tables That one may smile, and smile, and be
a villain; least sure it

you know me, my


well;

Hamlet: Excellent
fishmonger.

you are a
II,
ii,

Fm

may be

so in
I,

mark.

Denv, 106
all

173

There's ne'er a villain dwelling in

To be honest, as this world goes, is to be one man picked out of ten thousand.
II, n,

179

Denmark,
But he's an arrant knave.
There are more things
in
I, v,

123

heaven and

Than

earth, Horatio, are dreamt of in your philosoI, v,

Hamlet: For if the sun breed mag1 gots in a dead dog, being a god kissing Have you a daughter? carrion Polonius: I have, my lord. Hamlet: Let her not walk i' the
sun.
Still

phy.

166

II,

ii,

183

To put an

antic disposition on.


I, v,

harping on

my

daughter.
II,
if,

172

190

Rest, rest, perturbed spirit!

I, v,

182

Polonius:
lord?

What

do you read,

my
195

The time
spite,

is

out of

joint;

cursed

Hamlet: Words, words, words.


I

That ever

was born to

set it right!
I, v,

II,

ii,

188

They have

a plentiful lack of wit.


II,
ii,

Your

bait of falsehood takes this carp

204

And

of truth; thus do

we

of

wisdom and
assays

of
of

Though method in

this
't.

be madness, yet there is II, iz, 211


fools!
II,
ii,

reach, With windlasses


bias,
1

and with
and
note.

These tedious old


1

227

See

Homer,

p. 640,

In some editions, good.

260

SHAKESPEARE

The
earth.

indifferent

children

of
ii,

the

They

are

the

abstracts

and

brief

Hamlet
in

II,

235
over

Happy
happy.

that

we

are

not
II,
if,

chronicles of the time: after your death you were better have a bad epitaph

than their

ill

236
Use every
259

report while you

live.
ii,

Hamlet

II,

There is nothing either good but thinking makes it so. II,

or bad,
ii,

man

after his desert,

555 and
561

who

should 'scape whipping?


II,
ii,

shell,

nite

God! I could be bounded in a nutand count myself a king of infispace, were it not that I have bad
II, H,
I

O! what a rogue and peasant skve


I.

am

dreams.

263

What's Hecuba
uba,

to

584 him or he to HecII,


ii,

Beggar that thanks.

am,

am

even poor in
II,
ii,

286

That he should weep

for her?
II,
ii,

This goodly frame, the earth, seems to me a sterile promontory; this most
look you, this brave o'erhanging firmament, this majestical roof fretted with golden fire, why, it appears no other thing to me
air,

593
pate

Who
Plucks

calls

me
my

villain? breaks

my
it
ii,

excellent canopy, the

across?
off

beard and blows


II,

in

my
607

face?

But

but a foul and pestilent congregation


of vapors.

What

man!

How noble

a piece of work
in reason!

I am pigeon-liver'd, and To make oppression bitter.

lack gall
ii,

is

how

II,

infinite

613

in faculty! in form, in moving, how express and admirable! in action how like

an angel! in apprehension
god!

how
II,

like a
ii,

The play's the thing Wherein I'll catch the conscience of the king. II, ii, 641

317

And
nor

yet, to

me, what

is

this quintes-

sence of dust?

man

delights not
II,

woman
is

neither.

me; no, ii, 328

With devotion's visage And pious action we do sugar o'er The devil himself. Ill, i, 47 To be, or not to be: that is the question:

There
natural,

if

something in this more than philosophy could find it out. II, ii, 392

Whether
suffer

'tis

nobler in the

mind

to

am

The
Or

but

mad

the wind

is

north-northwest: southerly I know a


II,

when hawk
405

slings

and arrows of outrageous

from a handsaw. 1

fortune, to take arms against a sea of troubles,

ii,

They say an old


child/*

man

is

twice a
ii,

And by

opposing end them?

To

die: to

II,

413

sleep;

One fair daughter and no more, The which he loved passing well.
II,
ii,

No
The

more; and, by a sleep to say

we

end 435
heartache and the thousand natushocks That flesh is heir to, 'tis a consummaral

Come,
ity.

give us a taste of your qualII,


ii,

460

tion

play, I remember, pleased not the million; 'twas caviare to the general.
1
2

The

Devoutly
sleep;

to

be wish'd. To
to

die,

to

To

II,

ii,

465

sleep: perchance there's the rub;

dream:

ay,

heron. See Aristophanes, p. 91 a.

For in that sleep of death what dreams may come,

26!

SHAKESPEARE

When we
coil,

have shuffled

off this

mortal
re-

Be thou as chaste as ice, as pure as snow, thou shalt not escape calumny.
Hamlet
I

Must

give us pause.

There's the

III,

i,

142

spect

That makes calamity of so long life; For who would bear the whips and
scorns of time,

the proud oppressor's wrong, man's contumely, The pangs of dispriz'd love, the law's
delay,

The

have heard of your paintings too, well enough; God has given you one face, and you make yourselves another. Ill, i, 150

O! what a noble mind


thrown:

is

here

o'er-

The
office,

courtier's, soldier's,

scholar's, eye,
Ill,
i,

The

and the spurns That patient merit of the unworthy


insolence of
takes,

tongue, sword.

159

The
The

glass of fashion

and the mould of

When

he himself might

his

quietus
fardels

form,
observ'd of
all

make With a bare bodkin? who would


bear,

observers!
Ill,
i,

162

Now

see that noble

and most sovereign

grunt and sweat under a weary life, But that the dread of something after

To

reason,

Like sweet bells jangled, out of tune

The

death, undiscover'd country from whose

and harsh.
OI woe
is

Ill,

i,

166

bourn

me,
I

No

traveler returns, 1 puzzles the will,

To have
what

seen what
I see!

And makes
have

us rather bear those

ills

we

have seen, see Ill, i, 169

Than

fly

to others that

we know not
of

of?

Thus conscience does make cowards


us
all;

And
Is

thus the native hue of resolution

Speak the speech, I pray you, as I pronounced it to you, trippingly on the tongue; but if you mouth it, as many of your players do, I had as lief the towncrier spoke my lines. Nor do not saw
the
air

too
all

sicklied o'er with the pale cast of

much with your hand,


and
as
I

but use

thus; torgently: for in the very

thought,

And

enterprises of great pith

and mo-

rent, tempest,

may

say

ment With this

regard their currents turn

And

awry, lose the

name

of action.

whirlwind of passion, you must acquire and beget a temperance, that may give it smoothness. Ol it offends me to the soul to hear a robustious periwig-pated
fellow tear a passion to tatters, to very to split the ears of the groundlings, who for the most part are capable
rags,

Hamlet

III,

i,

56

Nymph,
Be
all

in thy orisons
Ill,
i,

my

sins

remember'd.

89

To
Rich
gifts

the noble

mind wax poor when


to a nunnery.

would have such a fellow whipped for o'erdoing TermaI

nothing but shows and noise:


of
it

inexplicable

dumb-

gant;
givers
Ill,
Ill,

out-herods Herod.

Ill,

if,

prove
i,

unkind.

100

Get thee

i,

124
I

What

should such fellows as

do

Suit the action to the word, the word to the action; with this special observance, that you o'erstep not the modesty of nature. Ill, ii, 20

crawling between heaven and earth? are arrant knaves, all. Ill, i, 128 *See Song of The Harp-Player, p. ga, and

We

hold, as 'twere, the mirror up to nature; to show virtue her own feature,

To

note.

scorn her

own image, and the

very age

262

SHAKESPEARE

and body
pressure.
I

of the time his

form and
III,
ii,

The

lady doth protest too


thinks.

much,
III,
ii,

rne-

Hamlet

25

Hamlet

242

have thought some of nature's journeymen had made men and not made

Let the galled jade wince, our withers


are unwrung.
Ill,
ii,

256
1

them
No;

well, they imitated

humanity
Ill,
ii,

so

abominably.
let

38

Why,

let

the stricken deer go weep,

The

hart ungalled play;

the candied tongue lick absurd

For some must watch, while some must


sleep:

pomp,

And

crook the pregnant hinges of the

So runs the world away.


Ill,
ii,

knee

287

Where

thrift

may

follow fawning.

HI,

0,

65
re-

You would pluck out the


'

heart of
III,
ii,

my

A man

that fortune's buffets and

mystery.

wards

Hast ta'en with equal thanks.


Ill,
ii,

Do you think I am played on than a pipe?


Hamlet:

easier
Ill,

389 to be
393

ii,

72

They
That
In

are not a pipe for fortune's finger

you see yonder cloud that's almost in shape of a camel?


Polonius: By the mass, camel, indeed.

Do

To sound what stop me that man


is not passion's wear him

she please. Give


slave,

and
is

'tis

like

and

I will

Hamlet: Methinks
sel.

it

like a

wea-

my
I

heart's core, ay, in

my

heart of

Polonius: It

is

As

heart, do thee.
this.

Hamlet: Or
Polonius:

like

backed like a weasel. a whale?


like a whale, 2
III,
ii,

Something too much of Ill, ii, 75


88

Very

400
408

My
As Vulcan's

imaginations are as foul


stithy.
Ill,
ii,

They

fool

me
is

to the top of

my bent.
ii,

Ill,

The chameleon's

dish: I eat the air,

By and by

easily said.

promise-crammed; you cannot feed caIll, ii, 98 pons so. Nay, then, let the devil wear black, for I'll have a suit of sables.
Ill,
ii,

Ill, ii, 411 Tis now the very witching time of

night,

When

churchyards

yawn and

hell itself

138
I

breathes out

There's hope a great man's

memory
ii,

Contagion to
will

this world.

Ill,

ii,

413

may

outlive his life half a year.


Ill,

141

speak daggers to her, but use none. Ill, ii, 421

Marry,

this

is

means

mischief.

miching mallecho; it Ill, ii, 148

O!

Ophelia: Tis

brief,

my lord.
love.
Ill,
ii,

A brother's murder!
^65

offense is rank, it smells to heaven; It hath the primal eldest curse upon 't,

my

Hamlet: As woman's

Ill, Hi,

36

Now

might
ing;

do

it pat,

now he
so

is

pray-

Where

love

is

great, the

littlest

doubts

are fear;

And now And so


3-See

I'll

do

't:

and

he goes to
Ill, Hi,

When

little fears

grow

great, great love

heaven;
I

grows there.

HI,

am

ii,

183
Cowper,

reveng'd.
p.

73

Wormwood, wormwood.
Ill,
ii,

458a.

193

2 See Aristophanes, p. 91 a, and Antony and Cleopatra IV, xii, a, p. s88b.

263

SHAKESPEARE

With

all

his crimes

broad blown,
III, Hi,

as

flush as

May.
Hamlet
81

Virtue

For in the fatness of these pursy times itself of vice must pardon -beg.

Hamlet
Assume
a virtue,
if

III, iv,
it

153

My

words fly up, my thoughts remain below: Words without thoughts never to heaven go. Ill, Hi, 97

you have

not.

Ill, iv,

160

Refrain tonight;

How
dead!

now! a

rat?

Dead,

for a ducat,
Ill, iv,
Ill, iv, III, iv,

And that shall lend a kind of easiness To the next abstinence: the next more
easy;

23

False as dicers' oaths.

45
48
this

For use almost can change the stamp of nature. Ill, iv, 165
I

A rhapsody of words.
See,

must be

cruel, only to

be kind.

what
brow;

a grace
curls;

was seated on

Hyperion's
self,

the front of Jove him-

Ill, iv, 178 For 'tis the sport to have the enginer Hoist with his own petar.
Ill, iv,

206

An

eye like Mars, to threaten and com-

mand,

station like the herald

Mercury

New-lighted on a heaven-kissing hill. A combination and a form indeed, Where every god did seem to set his
seal,

By Or

Diseases desperate grown desperate appliance are reliev'd, not at all. 1 IV, iii, 9
"

To

give the world assurance of a

man.
55
it's

A man may fish with the worm that hath eat of a king, and eat of the fish that hath fed of that worm.
IV,
iii,

29

Ill, iv,

At your age The heyday in the blood


humble.

We go to gain
That hath name.
in

little
it

is

tame,
Ill, iv,

patch of ground, no profit but the

68

IV,

iv,

18

O
If

shame! where
lious hell,

is

thy blush? Rebel-

How
And
If

all

occasions do inform against

me,
spur

thou canst mutine in a matron's


bones,
virtue
fire:

my

dull revenge!

What

is

man,
be
as

To flaming youth let And melt in her own


shame

wax,

his

chief

good and market of

his

proclaim no

When
And

the compulsive ardor gives the

charge, Since frost itself as actively doth burn,

time Be but to sleep and feed? a beast, no more. 2 Sure he that made us with such large
discourse,

reason panders will.

Ill,

iv,

82

A king of shreds and patches. 1


Ill, iv,

102

Looking before and after, gave us not That capability and godlike reason To fust in us unus'd. IV, iv, 32

Lay not that


soul.

flattering unction to
Ill,

your iv, 145


to

Of

Some craven scruple thinking too precisely on the event.


IV,
Rightly to be great
iv,

40

Confess yourself to heaven;

Repent what's
come.
1

past;

avoid what

is

Is
1

not to
2

stir

without great argument,


that only
sleep and [1819-1891],

Ill, iv,

149

A A

See Hippocrates, p. 88b.

wandering minstrel I thing of shreds and patches.

The unmotived herd

feed.
[1885],

W.

S.

GILBERT,

The Mikado

JAMES RUSSELL Under the Old Elm, pt.

LOWELL
VII,
st.

264

SHAKESPEARE

But

When honor's at the stake.


So

greatly to find quarrel in a straw

A very riband

in the cap of youth.

Hamlet IV,
iv,

viz,

77

Hamlet IV,
It spills itself in fearing to

53

Nature her custom holds,


Let shame say what
it will.

full of artless jealousy is guilt,

be

spilt.

IV,
19

viz, 1

88

IV,

v,

should I your true love know From another one? By his cockle hat and staff, And his sandal shoon. 1 IV, v, 23

How

gardeners,

no ancient gentlemen but and grave-makers; 1 they hold up Adam's profession. V, z, 32


There
is

ditchers,

He is dead and gone, lady, He is dead and gone;


At
his

Cudgel thy brains no more about

it.

V,
Has
ness,

i,

61

At

grass-green turf, his heels a stone. IV, v,

head a

29
43

this fellow no feeling of his busithat he sings at grave-making?

We know what we are, but know not


what we may be.
IV,
v,

V,

i,

71

Custom hath made


erty of easiness.

it

in

him
that

a propz,

coach! Good night, ladies; good night, sweet ladies; good night, IV, v, 72 good night.

V,
. . .

Come, my

73

politician

one

would
z,

circumvent God.

V,
his quiddities

84

When
But

sorrows come, they

come not
IV,
v,

Why
lawyer?

single spies, in battalions. 2

may Where be

not that be the skull of a

78

have done but greenly, In hugger-mugger to inter him.

We

his quillets, his cases, his tenures, his tricks? V, z,

now, and
104 145

One
84
a

that was a

woman,

sir;

but, rest
z,

IV,
There's

v,

her soul, she's dead.

V,

such

divinity

doth

hedge

king,

That treason
would.3

an but peep to what


IV,
v,

How absolute the knave is! we must speak by the card, or equivocation will
undo
us.

it

V,

z,

147

123

There's rosemary, that's for remem-

brance

and

there

is

pansies, that's

The age is grown so picked that the toe of the peasant comes so near the heel of the courtier, he galls his kibe.
V,
z,

for thoughts.

IV,

v,

174

150

O! you must wear your rue with a I would give you some violets, but they withered all
difference. There's a daisy;

Alas! poor Yorick. I knew him, Horatio; a fellow of infinite jest, of most

excellent fancy;
his

when my
1

father died.
is

IV,

v,

181

Sir
a

Ophelia Walter Ralegh.

quoting a version of a

he hath borne me on back a thousand times; and now, how abhorred in my imagination it is!

poem by

my
lips oft.

See Cervantes, p. 1940.


tread

gorge rises at it. Here hung those that I have kissed I know not how

One woe doth

upon another's

heel,

So fast they follow.

Thus woe

Hamlet IV, vii, 164 succeeds a woe, as wave a wave.

Where be your gibes now? your gambols? your songs? your flashes of merriment, that were wont to set the
table

HERRICK, Sorrows Succeed [1648]

on a

roar?

Not one now,

to

mock

Woes They
8

cluster; rare are solitary woes; love a train, they tread each other's heel.

your own

Now
tell
1

EDWARD YOUNG, Night Thoughts [17421745],

grinning? quite chapfallen? get you to my lady's chamber, and her, let her paint an inch thick, to
King Henry
and
note, p.

See

Montaigne,

p.

Night HI, I. 63 igia, and Tennyson,

See Francis Bacon, p. 2ogb, and


ii,

p.

VI, pt. II, IV,

'146,

SHAKESPEARE
this favor she must come; make her Hamlet V, i, 201 laugh at that.

Not

a whit,

we defy

augury; there's a

To what base uses we may return, Horatio! may not imagination trace the noble dust of Alexander, till he find it stopping a bung-hole?

special providence in the fall of a sparrow. 1 If it be now, 'tis not to come; if it

Why

be not to come, it will be now; if it be not now, yet it will come: the readiness
is all.

V,

i,

222

Hamlet V,

ii,

232

A hit, a very palpable hit.


This
fell

V,
V,

ii,

Imperious Caesar, dead and turn'd to


clay,

295
350
353

sergeant, death,
ii,

Might stop a hole


away.

to keep the

wind
i,

Is strict in his arrest.

V,

235
flesh

Report
I

me

and

my

cause aright.

And May violets

Lay her i' the earth; from her fair and unpolluted
x

>

>

am more

an antique

Roman

than a

spring!

V,

z,

260

ministering angel shall

my

2 sister be.

V,
Sweets to the sweet: farewell!

i,

263

V,
I

i,

265

thought thy bride-bed to have deck'd, sweet maid, And not have strew'd thy grave.

Dane. V, ii, 355 God! Horatio, what a wounded name, Things standing thus unknown, shall live behind me. If thou didst ever hold me in thy heart, Absent thee from felicity awhile, And in this harsh world draw thy

breath in pain,

V,

i,

267

To

tell

my story.
silence.

V, V,

ii,

358
372

Though
ous.
I

am
I

Yet have

not splenetive and rash in me something dangerV, i, 283

The rest is

ii,

Now
And

cracks a noble heart.

Good

night,

sweet prince,
flights of angels rest!

lov'd Ophelia: forty thousand brothers

sing thee to thy

V,

if,

373

Could

not, with all their quantity of love,

O proud death! 2
What
feast
is

toward in thine eternal

Make up my sum.
Nay, an thou'lt mouth,
111 rant as well as thou.

V,

i,

291
of

cell?
I will

V,

ii,

378

make

a Star

Chamber matter
of

V,

i,

305

it.

Let Hercules himself do what he may, The cat will mew and dog will have his
day.

The Merry Wives


[1600-1601], act

Windsor
i,

I, sc.

L 2

V, 1,31 3
a
divinity

She has brown


like a

hair,

woman.

There's

that

shapes

our
ties is

and speaks small I, i, 48


possibiliI,
i,

ends,

Rough-hew them how we


I

will.

Seven hundred pounds and goot gifts.


I

65

V,
once did hold
it,

ii,

10

as our statists do,

A baseness
It did

my

had rather than forty shillings I had Book of Songs and Sonnets here.
I,
i,

to write fair.
service.

V,

ii,

33

205
30

me yeoman's
FitzGerald,
p.

"Convey," the wise

it

call.

"Steal!"
I, iff,

V,
1

fi,

36

foh! a fico for the phrase!


iSee Matthew 10:2$,
Pope, p. 4o8a.
3

See

6290,

and

Tennyson,

p.

4aa,

and Alexander

p. 6503. 2 See Sir

Walter

Scott, p. 519!).

See Donne, p. go8a.

266

SHAKESPEARE
I

am

almost out at heels.

luck
of

lies

in

The Merry Wives

Windsor
I, iii,

is

divinity in

odd numbers. odd numbers,

There

either in na-

32

tivity,

1 chance, or death.

Thou
Here

art the

Mars of malcontents.
I, Hi,

The Merry Wives


Better a
little

of

111
deal of heartbreak.

Windsor V,i>*

will

be an old abusing of God's


I,
iv,
i,

patience and the king's English.


5

chiding than a great V, iii, 10

Dispense with
thy head now.

trifles.

That the
II,

47
in

Property was thus appall'd, self was not the same;

Faith, thou hast

some crotchets
II,
i,

Single nature's double

name
call'd.

Neither two nor one was

158
Reason, in

The Phoenix and


itself

Why, then the world's mine oyster, Which I with sword will open.
II, u, 2

the Turtle [1601], I 37

Saw

division

confounded, grow together.

L 41

This

is

the short and the long of


II,
ii,

it.

The chance

62

Like a fair house man's ground.

built

upon another II, if, 229


II,
ii,

of war. Troilus and Cressida [16011603], prologue, L 31

have had

my

labor for

my

travail.
i,

Better three hours too soon than a

Act

I, sc.

L 73

minute too
I

late.
tell

332
his

Women
Things

cannot
is.

what the dickens


Ill,
ii,

won

are angels, wooing: are done; joy's soul lies in


I, ii,

name

20

die doing.

capers, he dances, he has eyes of youth, he writes verses, he speaks holi-

He

Men

prize the

thing ungain'd

310 more
313

than

it is.

I, ii,

day, he smells April and

May.
Ill,
ii,

71

The How many


sail

being smooth, shallow bauble boats dare


3
I,
iii,

sea

O, what
faults

world

of
in

vile

ill-favor'd

Looks

handsome
year!

three

hundred
Ill, iv,

Upon her patient breast. The heavens themselves,


and
Insisture,
this center,

34

the planets,
place,

pounds a

32

A woman would run through fire and


water for such a kind heart.
Ill, iv,
I

Observe degree,
form,
Office,

priority,

and

course,

proportion,
all

season,

106

and custom, in

line of order.
I,

have a kind of

alacrity in sinking.

in,

85

in,

v,

13

O! when degree

is

shak'd,
all

As good luck would have

it.

Which
86
19

is

the ladder to
is sick.

high deiii,

Ill, v,

signs,

A man of my kidney.
[He]

Ill, v, 1

The

enterprise

I,

101

what
too.

curses all Eve's daughters, of IV, ii, 24 complexion soever.

Take but degree away, untune that


string,

And, hark! what discord


thing meets
iSee
p. 5893.
2
3

follows; each

Wives may be
This
1 is

merry, and yet honest

IV,
the third time;
I

if,

no

Pliny,

p.

igsa,

and

Samuel

Lover,

hope good
Don

luck would have it. CERVANTES, Quixote, pt. I [1605], bk. I, ch. 2
ill

As

See Cervantes, p. iggb. See Publilius Syrus, p. i26a. See Publilius Syrus, p. ia7b.

267

SHAKESPEAHE
In mere oppugnancy: the bounded waters

To
worse.

fear

the

worst

oft

cures

the

Should

lift

their

bosoms higher than

Troilus

and Cressida

III,

ii,

77

the shores

And make
Then

a sop of all this solid globe.

Troilus

and Cressida
includes

All lovers swear more performance than they are able, and yet reserve an
ability that they never perform;

I,

Hi,

109
in

everything

itself

more than the perfection


discharging one.
less

of ten,

vowing and

power,

Power into

will, will into appetite;

than the tenth part of Ill, ii, 89

And
So

appetite, an universal wolf, doubly seconded with will power,

and

For

to

be

wise,

and

love,

Must make

And last eat up

perforce a universal prey, himself. J, Hi, 119

Exceeds man's might; that dwells with Ill, ii, 163 gods above.
If
I

be

false,

or swerve a hair

from
it-

Like a strutting player, whose conceit Lies in his hamstring, and doth think it
rich

truth,

When When
And And

time

is

old and hath forgot

self,

To

hear

the

wooden

dialogue

and

waterdrops have worn the stones

sound
'Twixt his stretch'd footing and the I, Hi, 153 scaffoldage.

of Troy, blind oblivion swallow' d cities up, mighty states characterless are

And
To

in

such indexes, although small


is

grated

pricks their subsequent volumes, there

To dusty From false


in love

nothing,
to false,

yet

let

memory,

among

false inaids

seen

The baby Of things

figure of the giant

mass
I, in,

Upbraid
343

my

falsehood!

when they have

said "as false

to come. 1

wears his wit in his belly, and his guts in his head. II, i, 78

Who

As air, as water, wind, or sandy earth, As fox to lamb, as wolf to heifer's calf, Pard to the hind, or stepdame to her
son";

Modest doubt

is

call'd

Yea,

let

them

say, to stick

the heart of
III,

The beacon
searches

of the wise, the tent that

"As
II,
ii,

falsehood, false as Cressid."

ii,

191

To

the bottom of the worst.

Time
15

Tis mad

hath, back,

my

lord, a wallet at his

idolatry
II,
ii,

Wherein he
56

To make
god.

puts alms for oblivion.


Ill, Hi,

the service greater than the


Perseverance, dear

145
to

He
pride
his
I

that
is

my

lord,
is

is

proud

eats

his

own

glass, his

up himself; own trumpet,


II, Hi,

Keeps honor bright: to have done,

own

hang
Quite out of fashion, like a rusty mail In monumental mockery.

chronicle.

165

am

giddy,

expectation

whirls

me

round.

imaginary relish is so sweet That it enchants my sense.

The

150 For honor travels in a strait so narrow Where one but goes abreast.
Ill, Hi,

Ill, Hi,

in, a, ^7

154

Words pay no
iSee Cicero, p.
p. 53$a,

debts.

Ill,

ii,

56

Time

is

like a fashionable host,

ma,

and Thomas Campbell,

and note.

That slightly shakes by the hand,

his parting guest

268

SHAKESPEARE

And
'

with

his
fly,

arms outstretched, as he

The end crowns

1
all,

would
in

And
welcome ever

that

old

common
it.

arbitrator,

Grasps

the comer:

And

smiles, farewell goes out sighing.

Time, Will one day end


TroiZus

Troilus and Cressida III,

Hi,

168

223 Words, words, mere words, no matter from the heart. V, iii, 109
v,

and Cressida TV,

Beauty, wit,

High

birth,
service,

vigor

of bone,

desert in

Hector

is

dead; there

is

say.

no more to V, x, 22
is

Love, friendship, charity, are subjects


all

world! world! world! thus

the

To envious and calumniating time. One touch of nature makes the whole
world kin.
Ill,
iii,

poor agent despised.

V,
be able

x,

36

Love

all,

trust a few,

171

Do wrong
enemy
friend

to none:

for thine

And give to dust that is a little gilt More laud than gilt o'er-dusted.
Ill,
iii,

Rather in power than use, and keep thy

178

Under thy own


for silence,

life's

key: be check'd

My
And

mind
I
it.

is

troubled, like a fountain

But never tax'd


All's

stirr'd;

myself see not the

bottom of
Ill, Hi,

Well That Ends Well 2


I,

for speech.

314
It

[1601-1603], act

jc.

i,

I 74

You do

as

chapmen

do,

That

were all one should love a bright particular

Dispraise the thing that you desire to IV, i, 75 buy.

star

And

think to

wed

it,

he

is

so above
I> i,

me.

As many

farewells as be stars in heaven.

97

IV,

iv,

44

The hind
lion

that would be mated by the


I, i,

And

sometimes we are
selves
will

devils to
frailty of

our-

Must die

for love.

103

When we

tempt the

our

My
Oft

friends

were poor, but honest.3


I,
iii,

203
oft

powers,

Presuming on

their changeful potency.

IV,

iv,

95

expectation there
it

fails,

and most
II,
i,

Where most
They

promises.

145
i

The

kiss

you take

is

better than

give.

you IV, v, 38

say miracles are past.


II,
iii,

Fie,

fie

upon

her!

A young man
marr'd.

married

is

man
II,

that's

There's language in her eye, her cheek, her lip, Nay, her foot speaks; her wanton spirits look out At every joint and motive of her body.

iii,

315

The web
yarn,

of our
ill

life is

of a mingled

good and

together.

IV,

iii,

83

IV,

v,

54
is

iSee Anonymous, p. i5ob; All's Well That Ends Well IV, iv, 55 and note, p. ayoa; and
Herrick, p. gaoa. See IV, iv, 35, p. 7oa. 8 Though I be poor, I'm honest.
fl

What's past and what's

to

come

And

strew'd with husks formless ruin of oblivion.

THOMAS

MIDDLETON, The Witch


v,

[c.

1627], ZJ7, a

IV,

165

See Anonymous, p.

SHAKESPEARE
There's place and means for every
alive.

man

Setting

it

up to
it

fear the birds of prey,


till

And
All's

let it

keep one shape,

custom

Well That Ends Well


IV,
Hi,

make

379

Their perch, and not their

terror.

All's well that end's well: still

the
is

fine's

the crown; Whate'er the course, the end

the
iv,

re-

nown. 1
I

IV,

35

Measure for Measure II, i, j The jury, passing on the prisoner's life, May in the sworn twelve have a thief or two
Guiltier than

am

man whom

cruelly scratched.

Fortune hath V, ii, 28

him they
sin,

try.

II,

i,

19

Some

Praising what is lost Makes the remembrance dear.

and some by virtue fall. II, i, 38 Great with child, and longing
rise

by

V,

in,

19
of

for stewed prunes.

II,

i,

94

The

inaudible time. 2

and

noiseless

foot
Hi,

This will

last

V,
late,

41
car-

When nights are longest there.


His face him.
is

out a night in Russia,


II,
i,

Love that comes too


ried.

144
167

Like a remorseful pardon slowly

the worst thing about


II,
i,

V,

Hi,

57

All impediments in fancy's course Are motives of more fancy. V, in, 216

Condemn
of
it?

the fault, and not the act


II,
ii,

But

Spirits are not finely touch'd to fine issues.

37 ceremony that to great ones 'longs, Not the king's crown, nor the deputed

No

Measure

for

Measure
I, sc.

1605], act

[1604i, I 35
115

The

sword, marshal's
judge's robe,

truncheon,

nor

the

Good

counselors lack

no

clients.
I, ii,

Become them with one


grace

half so

good a
ii,

And
I

Is

by the nose. I, Hi, 29 hold you as a thing ensky'd and sainted. I, iv, 34 A man whose blood very snow-broth; one who never
liberty plucks justice
feels

As mercy

does. 1

II,

59

Why,

all

the souls that were were for-

And He

once; that might the vantage best have took, Found out the remedy. How would you
be,

feit

The wanton
sense.

stings

and motions of the


I, iv,

If

He, which
should

is

the top of judgment,

57
oft

Lut judge you

Our doubts are traitors, And make us lose the good we


By
might win, 3 fearing to attempt.
I,
iv,

II, ii, 73 you are? The law hath not been dead, though it hath slept. II, ii, 90

as

O!
78

We
1

must not make


law,

To have

a scarecrow of the

it is excellent a giant's strength; but

it

is

To

See Anonymous, p. 1500; Heywood, p. 1830; and Troilus and Cressida IV, v, 223, 2690. All's Well All's well that ends well yet.

tyrannous use it like a giant.

II,

ii,

107

But man, proud man,


Drest in a
sur'd,
little

That Ends Well Vf


3

i,

25

How

W.

noiseless falls the foot of time! R. SPENCER [1769-1834], Lines to Lady A.


I, vii,

Most ignorant
iSee

of

brief authority, what he's most as-

Hamilton 8 See Macbeth

The Merchant

of

Venice

IV,

i,

184,

44, p.

p.

270

SHAKESPEARE
His glassy essence, like an angry ape, Plays such fantastic tricks before high heaven As make the angels weep. Measure for Measure II, ii, 117

A
To

kneaded
spirit

clod;

and the delighted


or to reside

bathe in

fiery floods,

That

in

the captain's but a choleric


is flat

In thrilling region of thick-ribbed ice; To be imprison'd in the viewless winds, And blown with restless violence round

word,

Which

in the soldier

about
blasphemy. II, ii, 130

The pendant world.


Measure for Measure
III,
i,

116

It oft falls out,

To have what we would


not what we mean.

have,

we speak
118

The
That

weariest
life

and most loathed worldly


and imprison-

II, iv,

age, ache, penury,

The

miserable have no other medicine


Ill, Ill,
art,
i,

ment

But only hope.

Be absolute

for death.

Can lay on nature, is a paradise To what we fear of death. Ill, i, 127


The hand that hath made you fair hath made you good. 1 Ill, i, 182
Virtue
fearful.
is

z,

A breath

thou

Servile to all the skyey influences.


Ill,
i,

bold,

Thou
But, as
it

Dreaming
youth

hast nor youth nor age; were, an after-dinner's sleep, on both; for all thy blessed
aged,

and goodness never Ill, i, 214

this dejected

There, at the moated grange, resides Mariana. 2 Ill, i, 279


is

Becomes
alms

as

and doth beg the


art old

This news

old enough, yet


Ill,
ii,

it

is

every day's news.

249

Of

palsied eld;

and when thou

and

He who

the sword of heaven will bear


as

rich,

Thou

Should be

hast neither heat, affection, limb,

holy as severe.

To

nor beauty, make thy riches pleasant.


Ill,
i,

in, a, 283
O, what

may man

within

him

hide,
a,

32

Though

angel on the outward side!

The

sense of death
sion,
1

is

most

in apprehen-

in,

293

And the

poor beetle, that we tread upon,

In corporal sufferance finds a pang as great As when a giant dies. Ill, i, 76


If I
I

take those lips away, Take, That so sweetly were forsworn; And those eyes, the break of day, Lights that do mislead the mom:

But

my

kisses

bring again, bring again;

must
in

Seals of love,
die,

but

seal'd in vain, seal'd

will

encounter darkness
it

in vain B
as

a bride,
Ill,
i,

IV,

f,

And hug

my arms.
of hell.

81

1 2

See Spenser, p. aoib.

The cunning livery


Ay, but to where;
die,

Ill,

i,

93

"Mariana in the moated grange" motto used by TENNYSON for the poem Mariana [1830]. 3 This song occurs in act V, sc. ii, of FLETCHER'S Bloody Brother [c. 1616], with an additional
stanza:

and go we know not

Hide,

Which

To

lie

in cold obstruction

and to

hide those hills of snow, thy frozen bosom bears,

rot;

This sensible warm motion to become


Publilius Syrus, p. ia6a.

tops the pinks that grow Are of those that April wears! But first set my poor heart free, Bound in those icy chains by thee.

On whose

271

SHAKESPEARE

Music

oft

hath such a charm

To make bad
to harm. 1

good, and good provoke


i,

Your daughter and the Moor are now making the beast with two backs.
Othello
I, x,

117
59

Measure for Measure IV,


Every true man's apparel
thief.
I
fits

16

Keep up your bright swords,

for the
I,
ii,

your
ii,

dew will

rust

them.

IV,
a kind of burr;
I

46
193

The

am

shall stick.

wealthy curled darlings of our na68 tion. I,


,

IV,

Hi,

We would, and we would not.


IV,
iv,

You
37

of law shall yourself read in the bitter letter

The bloody book


own

forted residence 'gainst the tooth of

After your

sense.
I

I, tii,

67

time

Rude am
V,
V,
i,

in

my

speech,
I, in,

And

razure of oblivion.

12

And

little

bless'd with the soft phrase

Truth is truth To the end of reckoning.


Neither maid, widow, nor wife.

of peace.
i,

81

45
173

Little shall I grace my cause In speaking for myself. Yet, by your


I will

V,

i,

They
And,

say best

men

are

molded out of

Of

gracious patience, a round unvarnish'd tale deliver my whole course of love.


I, xri,

faults,

88

for the most,

become much more


V,
i,

the better

A maiden never bold;


Of spirit
tion

For being a

little
is

bad.

440

so

still

and

quiet, that

her moI, Hi,

What's mine
is

yours,

mine. 2

and what is yours V, i, 539


i,

Blush'd at herself.
Still

94

question'd
life

me

the story of

my

Horribly stuff'd with epithets of war. Othello [1604-1605], act I, sc.


I.

From
That

14

year to year, the battles, sieges, fortunes


I

fellow almost

damn'd

in a fair wife.

have pass'd.
I

I, in,

129

Wherein

spake of most disastrous


accidents

The bookish

theoric.

I,

i,

24
43

chances,

We cannot all be masters.


And when he's
old, cashier'd.

Of moving
field,

by
i'

flood

and

I,

i,

Of
I,
i,

48

hair-breadth 'scapes deadly breach.

the imminent
I, in,

134
141

In following him,

follow but myself. l,i, 58


heart upon
I,
i,

Hills

whose heads touch heaven.


I, iii f

But

will

wear

my
at.

my
64
88
not

And

of the Cannibals that each other


eat,

sleeve

For daws to peck

The Anthropophagi, and men whose

An
Is

old black

ram
I,
i,

Do grow

heads beneath their shoulders.


I,
iii,

tupping your white ewe.

143

You
serve

are

one of those that


the devil bid you.

will

God if

My story being done,


She gave

me

for

my

pains a world of

I,
i See Congreve, p. 39 ib, 9 See Plautus, p.

i,

108

sighs:

and

note.

She swore,

in faith, 'twas strange, 'twas

passing strange,

272

SHAKESPEARE

Twas

pitiful, 'twas wondrous pitiful: She wish'd she had not heard it, yet she

am
;

not merry, but


thing
that
I

The
She

I do beguile am, by seeming otherwise.

wished

Othello

II,

i,

122

That heaven had made her such


she thank'd me,

man;

was

ever

fair

and never

And bade me,


lov'd her,
I

if

had

a friend that

Had
lago;

proud, tongue at will and yet was never


loud.
*

should but teach him


story,

how
her.

to tell

my
this

II,

i,

148

To

suckle

fools

and chronicle

And

that would hint I spake:

woo

Upon
I

small beer. 1

Desdemona:

most lame and impoI

She lov'd
pass'd,

me

for

the dangers

had
pity

tent conclusion

II,

i,

160

And

loved her that she did


is

You may
If it

relish

him more
to die,

in the solII,
i,

dier trian in the scholar.

them.
This only
the witchcraft I have us'd. Othello I, iii, 158
a divided duty.
I, iii,

165

were
to

now

Twere now
Base

be most happy.

do perceive here

181

To mourn
gone
Is

a mischief that

is

past and

II, i, 192 being in love have then a nobility in their natures more than is native to them. II, i, 218

men

the next way to draw on.

new

mischief

Egregiously an ass.
I

II,

i,

321

I, Hi,

204
208

have very poor and unhappy brains


II,
iii,

The

robb'd that smiles steals something

for drinking.

34
57

from the

thief.

I, Hi,

Potations pottle deep.

II,

iii,

Our

bodies are our gardens, to the


wills are gardeners.
I, iii,

which our

souls

324
345

all; and there be must be saved, and there be souls must n'ot be saved. II, Hi, 106

Well, God's above

Put money

in thy purse.

Silence that dreadful bell!

it

frights the
II,

X
The food
that to
cious as locusts, as bitter at coloquintida.
I,

in,

isle

him now is as lusshall be to him shortly


iii,

From

her propriety.
are

iii,

177

But men

men; the best sometimes


II, Hi,

354

forget.

243
this

Framed

to

make women
flood.

false.
I,
iii,

Thy honesty and love doth mince


404
17
matter. 2
II, Hi,
II,
i,

249

The

enchafed

Reputation,

reputation,

reputation!

One

that excels the quirks of blazoning II, i, 63 pens.

have lost my reputation. I have lost the immortal part of myself, and what remains is bestial. II, iii, 264

O!

You are pictures out of doors, Bells in your parlors, wildcats in your
kitchens, Saints in your
injuries,

Reputation

is

an

idle

and most

false

devils

being

imposition; oft got without merit, lost without deserving. II, Hi,

and 270

offended,
Players in your housewifery, wives in your beds.

and houseII,
i,

O
1

thou invisible

thou hast no

name

spirit of wine! if to be known by, let


II,
',

109

us call thee devil!


See

iii,

285

For

am

nothing

if

not

critical.

King Henry

VI, pt. II

IV,

it,

75, p. 8153.

II,

i,

119

See Cervantes, p. 19313.

273

SHAKESPEARE

O
emy

in their

God! that men should put an enmouths to steal away their

Poor and content


enough.
Think'st thou I'd

is

rich,

and
iii,

rich

Othello

III,

172

brains; that

we

ance, revel, ourselves into beasts.

should, with joy, pleasand applause, transform

make

a life of jeal-

Othello

To
II, Hi,

ousy, follow

still

the

293

changes

of

the

Good wine
if it

is

be well used.
villain.

good familiar creature II, Hi, 315


II, in,

moon With fresh


in
Is
I

suspicions?

No;

to

be once
iii,

Play the

345

doubt once to be resolved.

Ill,

177
par-

How

poor are they that have not patience!

humbly do beseech you of your don


Ill,
If I
iii,

What wound
grees?

did ever heal but by deII, in,

For too much loving you.


212

379

Excellent wretch!
soul

Perdition catch
I

my
love

But

do love thee! and when


is

Though

do prove her haggard, that her jesses were rny dear

thee not,

heart-strings, I'd whistle her off


Ill,
iii,

and

let

her

Chaos

come again. 1

down
iii,

the

99

Men

should be what they seem.


Ill, in,

To
126

wind, prey at fortune.


I

Ill,

260

am

declin'd
Ill,
iii,

Speak to me as to thy thinkings, As thou dost ruminate, and give thy

Into the vale of years.

265

The

worst of thoughts worst of words.


in

O
That we

curse of marriage! can call these delicate crea-

Ill, Hi,

131
dear

Good name

man and woman,

And

my
Is

tures ours, not their appetites. I

had rather be

lord,

Who

the immediate jewel of their souls: steals my purse steals trash; 'tis something, nothing; 'Twas mine, 'tis his, and has been slave to thousands; But he that filches from me my good

a toad,

And live upon the vapor of a dungeon, Than keep a corner in the thing I love
For
others' uses.
Trifles light as air
Ill,
iii,

268

name
Robs

Are to the jealous confirmations strong As proofs of holy writ. Ill, iii, 323

me
him,

of that which not enriches

Not poppy, nor mandragora, 1


Nor
the drowsy syrups of the world, Shall ever medicine thee to that sweet
all

And makes me
O!
It is
,

poor indeed.
Ill,
iii,

155

sleep

beware, my lord, of jealousy; the green-ey'd monster which doth

Which thou
I

ow'dst yesterday.
Ill,
iii,

mock
it

331

The meat

feeds on; that cuckold lives

swear

'tis

better to be

much
Ill,

abus'd
iii,

in bliss

Than but

to

know

't

a little.

Who,

certain of his fate, loves not his

337
is

wronger;
But, O!
o'er

He
tells

that

is

what damned minutes

he

robb'd, not wanting


't

what

stol'n,

Who
a

Let him not know


yet doubts; suspects, yet
Ill,
iii,

and

he's
iii,

not

dotes,

robb'd at
2

all.

Ill,
I,

soundly loves!
See Venus and Adonis, p. 22oa.

343
2873.

165

iSee Antony and Cleopatra


See Publilius Syrus, p. i2sa.

v, 4, p.

274

SHAKESPEARE

O! now,

forever

But

jealous souls will


so;

not be answer'd
jealous
for

Farewell the tranquil mind; farewell content! Farewell the plumed troop and the big wars That make ambition virtue! O, farewell! Farewell the neighing steed, and the
shrill

They
But

are

not

ever

the
a

cause,
jealous for they are jealous;
'tis

monster

Begot upon

itself,

born on
Othello

itself.

trump,

III, zv,

The
The

158

spirit-stirring

drum, the ear-piercing

royal banner, and all quality, Pride, pomp, and circumstance of glori-

To

beguile one.

Tis the strumpet's plague many and be beguil'd by IV, z, 97


IV,
i,

And,

ous war! you mortal engines, whose rude

They laugh that win.

123

throats

The immortal

Jove's

dread

clamors

counterfeit, Farewell! Othello's occupation's gone! Othello III, Hi, 348

turn'd to stone; I strike it, and it hurts my hand. O! the world hath not a sweeter creature; she might
heart
is

My

lie

by an emperor's side and


tasks.

command
IV,
i,

him

190

Be

sure of

it;

give

me

the ocular proof.


Ill, Hi,

O, she will sing the savageness out of


a bear.

361

IV,
it,

i,

198

No hinge nor loop


To hang a
doubt on.
Ill, in,

But yet the pity of

lago!

O!

lago,
i,

366

the pity of
Is

it,

lago!

IV,

205

On

this

the noble nature

horror's

head honors accumulate.


Ill, Hi,

Whom
The

passion could not shake?

whose

371

solid virtue

Take

To be
But

world! note, take note, direct and honest is not safe.


Ill, Hi,

378

shot of accident nor dart of chance, Could neither graze nor pierce? IV, i, 2 7 6

denoted a foregone conclusion. Ill, Hi, 429


this

understand a fury in your words,

But not the words.


Steep'd

IV,

ii,

31

me

Swell, bosom, with thy fraught,

in poverty to the very lips.

For

'tis

of aspics' tongues!
Ill, in,

IV,
But,
alas!

B,

49

450

to

make me

A fixed
To

Like to the Pontick

sea,

icy current and compulsive course Ne'er feels retiring ebb, but keeps due

Whose

figure for the time of scorn point his slow and moving finger at. IV, ii, 52

on

Patience, thou cherubin.

young and

rose-lipp'd

IV,

zz,

62

To

Even

the Propontic and the Hellespont, so my bloody thoughts, with violent pace, Shall ne'er look back, ne'er ebb to

O thou weed!
Who
art so lovely fair

and

smell'st so

humble love, Till that a capable


Swallow them up.

sweet That the sense aches at thee, would thou hadst ne'er been born.

and wide revenge Ill, Hi, 454


hands not hearts.
Ill, iv,

IV,

zz,

66

O
And

Our new

heraldry

is

that such heaven! thou'dst unfold,

companions

48

put in every honest hand a whip

SHAKESPEARE

To

lash the rascals

world.

naked through the Othello IV, ii, 141

An

Unkindness may do much;

honorable murderer, if you will; For naught I did in hate, but all in Othello V, ii, 293 honor.
I

And

his
life,

unkindness
taint

may

defeat

my
159

have done the


they know

state
't;

some

service,

and

But never

my love.
by
x

IV,

ii,

No more

of that.

pray you, in your

The poor
tree,

soul sat sighing

a sycamore

letters,

When you
late,

shall these

unlucky deeds

re-

Sing

all

a green willow;

Her hand on her bosom, her head on


her knee,
Sing willow, willow, willow.

Speak of

me

as I

am; nothing extenuin malice:

Nor
IV,
iif,

ate, set

down aught

then,

41
i,

must you speak

It

makes

us, or it

mars

us.

V,
V,
i,

Of one
4
14

that lov'd not wisely but too

well;

Every way makes

my gain.

Of one not

He

hath a daily beauty

in his life.

V,
This
is

i,

19

the night

That

either
quite..

makes
as

me

or fordoes

me
128

easily jealous, but, being wrought, Perplex' d in the extreme; of one whose hand, Like the base Indian, threw a pearl

away
Richer than all his tribe; of one whose subdu'd eyes Albeit unused to the melting mood, Drop tears as fast as the Arabian trees Their med'cinable gum. V, ii, 338
In Aleppo once,

V,

i,

And smooth
Put out the
light:
If
I

monumental

alabaster.

V,
light,

ii,

and then put out the


thou flaming minis-

quench
ter,

thee,

Where
Beat
I

malignant and

turban'd the

can again thy former light restore, Should I repent me; but once put out thy light,
I

Turk
a

Venetian

and

traduc'd

state,

Thou
I

cunning'st pattern
is

of excelling

took by the throat the circumcised


dog,
thus.

nature,

know not where

that Promethean

And smote him

V,

ii,

354

heat That can thy light relume.


It is

V,

ii,

My love's
More richer than my
tongue.
I,

the very error of the moon; She comes more near the earth than she was wont, And makes men mad. ii, 107

King Lear [1605-1606], act


sc.
i,

I 79

Now, our
Although our

joy,

She was

as false as water.

V,

ii,

132
side,

last,

not

least.

I,

^ 84

Curse his better angel from his

Nothing will come of nothing.

2
I,
i,

And
Here

fall
is

to reprobation.

V,

ii,

206

92

my

journey's end, here

is

my
sail.

Mend
Lest you

your speech a

little,

butt,

And
1

may mar your


p. 201 a,

fortunes.
I,
i,

very sea-mark of

my

utmost

96
111,

V,ii, 2 66
See
* See Troilus

iSee Spenser,
if

and Julius Caesar

John Heywood, p. i8aa. and Cressida III,

189, p. 255a.
2

ii,

191, p. s68b.

See Lucretius, p. uga.

276

SHAKESPEARE
Lear: So young, and so untender? Cordelia: So young, my lord,
true.

and
108

King Lear

I,

i,

Come
Kill

wrath.

not between the dragon and his I, i, 124

Truth's a dog must to kennel; he must be whipped out, when Lady the brach may stand by the fire and stink. King Lear I, iv, 125

Have more than thou showest,


Speak
less
less

thy physician, and the fee bestow I, i, 166 Upon the foul disease.

Lend

than thou knowest, than thou owest.


I, iv,

132

want that glib and To speak and purpose not.'


I

oily art,
I,
I,
i,

227

Ingratitude, thou marble-hearted fiend, More hideous, when thou show'st thee
in a child,

still-soliciting eye.

i,

234

Than

the sea-monster.

I, iv,

Time

283
it

shall unfold

what plighted cun-

ning hides;

How

tooth sharper than a serpent's


is

Who

covers faults, at last

shame them
I,
I,
i,

derides.

282

To have

a thankless child!
I, iv,

The

312

infirmity of his age.


in

i,

296

Who

the lusty stealth

of

nature

Striving to better, oft wefl.

we mar
of

what's

I, iv,

371

take

More composition and fierce quality Than doth, within a dull, stale, tired

The son and


bitch.
I

heir

mongrel
II,
ii,

23

Go

bed, to the creating a whole tribe of


fops.
I, ii,

have seen better faces in

my

time

Than

11

stands on any shoulder that I see II, ii, 99 Before me at this instant.

We

have seen the best of our time:

A good

man's fortune

may grow
II,

out at
>

machinations, hollowness, treachery, and all ruinous disorders, follow us disI, ii, 125 quietly to our graves.

heels.

164

Fortune, good night, smile once more; II, 0> *8o turn thy wheel!
Hysterica passiol down, sorrow! Thy element's below.

This

is

the excellent foppery of the

world, that, when we are sick in foroften the surfeit of our own tune we make guilty of our disbehavior asters the sun, the moon, and the stars;
as if

thou climbing
II, iv,

57
for

That

sir

which serves

and

seeks

we were
and

villains

by

necessity, fools

gain,

by

heavenly

compulsion,

knaves,

thieves,

dominance, terers by an

spherical predrunkards, liars, and adulenforced obedience of planI, ii,

teachers

by

And follows but for form, Will pack when it begins to

rain,

And

leave thee in the storm.


II, iv,

79

etary influence.

129

Nature in

you stands

on the very verge


II, iv,

Edgar

Of her
[Enter Edgar] comes, like the catastrophe

confine.

149

and pat he of the old comedy:


Bedlam.

Necessity's sharp pinch!

II, iv,

214

my

cue

is

villainous

melancholy, with a sigh like

Tom
I, ii,

o'

Our

basest beggars

149

Are in the poorest thing superfluous: Allow not nature more than nature
needs,

That which ordinary men are fit for, am qualified in, and the best of me is
I, iv,

Man's

life is

cheap as

beast's.
II, iv,

diligence.

36

267

277

SHAKESPEARE
Let not women's weapons, waterdrops, Stain my man's cheeks! King Lear II, fv, 280
I

O! that way madness lies; let me shun that. King Lear III, fv, 21
Poor naked wretches, wheresoe'er you
are,

have

full

cause of weeping, but fhis

heart Shall break into a hundred thousand


flaws

That bide the pelting of


storm,

this

pitiless

Or

e'er 111

weep.

How shall your


fool!
I

houseless heads

and un-

shall

go

fed sides,

mad.
Blow, winds, and rage! blow!
craclc

II, fv,

287

Your loop'd and window'd raggedness,

your cheeks!

From

defend you seasons such as these?


Ill, fv,

You
Till

cataracts

and hurricanoes, spout


steeples,

28

you have drench'd our drown'd the cocks!


fires,

Take physic, pomp; Expose thyself to feel what wretches


feel.

You

sulphurous and thought-executing

Ill, fv,

33

Pillicock sat

on

Pillicock-hill:
Ill, fv,

Vaunt-couriers to oak-cleaving thunderbolts,

Halloo, halloo, loo, loo!

75

Singe shaking thunder, Strike flat the thick rotundity o' the world!

my

white head!

And

thou,

all-

Out-paramoured the Turk.


III,fv, 91
Is man no more than this? Consider him well. Thou owest the worm no silk,

Crack nature's molds, at once

all

germens

spill

That make
I

ingrateful

man!
Ill,
ii,

the beast no hide, the sheep no wool, the cat no perfume. Ha! here's three on 's are sophisticated; thou art the
thing
itself; unaccommodated man is no more but such a poor, bare, forked

tax not you, you elements, with unkindness. Ill, ff, 16

animal

as

thou

art.

poor, infirm, weak, and despis'd old

lendings!
'Tis a

Come; unbutton
naughty
night to

Off, off, here.


Ill, fv,

you

man.
she

Ill,

ii,

20

105
113

There was never yet fair woman but made mouths in a glass.
Ill,
ff,

swim

in.

Ill, fv,

35
37

will

be the pattern of
I

all

patience.
Ill,
xi,

am

man
Ill,
ii,

green mantle of the standing Ill, fv, 137 pool. But mice and rats and such small deer Have been Tom's food for seven long
year.
Ill, fv,
is

The

More

sinn'd against than sinning.

142

59

The

prince of darkness

a gentleman. 1
Ill, fv,

The

art

of our necessities
vile

is

147
151

strange,

That can make

things

precious.
Ill,
ff,

Poor Tom's

a-cold.

Ill, fv,

70

He

that has and a


hey,

little

tiny wit,

Child Rowland to the dark tower came, 2 1 The Devil is a SHELLEY, Peter gentleman.
Bell the Third [1819], pt. II, st. 2 3 Child Roland to the dark tower
SIR

With
rain.

ho,

the wind and the


his fortunes

WALTER

Must make content with


Though the
1

SCOTT,

The Bridal

of

came. Triermiin

rain

it

raineth
Ill,

And
every
ff,

day.
*See Twelfth-Night V,
i,

76

Dauntless the slug-horn to my lips I set, blew. "Childe Roland to the Dark Tower came." BROWNING, Childe Roland to the Dark

404, p.

Tower Came

[1855],

st.

34

278

SHAKESPEARE
His word was still, Fie, fob, and fum, I smell the blood of a British man. King Lear III, iv, 185
that trusts in the tameness of a wolf, a horse's health, a boy's love, or a whore's oath. Ill, vi, 20

Show scarce down


Hangs

so gross as beetles; halfway

He's

mad

one that gathers dreadful trade!

samphire,

Methinks he seems no bigger than his

The

head. fishermen

that

walk

dogs and all, Tray, Blanch, and Sweetheart, see, they

The little

upon the

beach

bark at me.
Is

Appear

Ill, vi,

65

there any cause in


hearts?

makes these hard


I

nature that Ill, vi, 81


I

like mice, and yond tall anchoring bark Diminished to her cock, her cock a

am

buoy Almost too small

tied to the stake, the course.


vile jelly!

and

must stand
vii,

for sight.

The mur-

Ill,

54
83

muring surge, That on the unnumber'd


chafes,

idle pebbles

Out,

Ill, vii,

The

Cannot be heard

lowest and most dejected thing of


fortune.

so high.

King Lear IV,


IV,
Ay, every inch a king.

vi,

12

IV,

i,

worst is not, So long as we can say, "This is the worst." IV, i, 27

The

Nature's above art in that respect.


vi,

87

IV,
't,

vi,

no

As

to wanton boys, are gods; They kill us for their sport.


flies

we

to the

The wren

goes

to

and the small

gilded fly Does lecher in

my sight.
IV,
vi,

IV,

i,

36

Let copulation thrive.

115

You

are not worth the dust which the

Give
tion.

me

rude wind Blows in your face.

apothecary,

IV,
will
sliver

ii,

30
dis-

an ounce of civet, good to sweeten my imaginaIV, vi, 133


see

She that herself branch

and

A man may
with no eyes.
thief.

how

this

world goes

From

her material sap, perforce must wither


to deadly use,

Look with thine ears: see how yond justice rails upon yon simple
Hark, in thine ear: change places; is the justice, which is the thief? IV, vi, 154
and, handy-dandy, which

And come
vile;

IV,
vile

ii,

34

Wisdom and

goodness to the

seem

Through
IV,
ii,

tatter'd clothes small vices

do

Filths savor but themselves.

appear;

38

Tigers, not daughters.


It
is

IV,

ii,

39

Robes and furr'd gowns hide sin with gold,

all.

Plate

And

the strong lance of justice hurtless


breaks;
it

the

stars,

The
Our

stars

above

us,

tions.

govern bur condiIV, iii, 34


is

Arm

in

rags,
it.

a pigmy's straw does

pierce

IV,

vi,

169

foster-nurse of nature

repose.

IV,

iv,

12

And,

Get thee glass eyes; like a scurvy politician,

How fearful
And The
dizzy
'tis

To

see the things

to cast one's eyes so low!

seem thou dost not. IV, vi, 175

crows and choughs that wing the

When we
come

are born,

we

cry that

we

are

midway

air

279

SHAKESPEARE

To

this great stage of fools.

King Lear IV,


Then,
IV,

vir

187
192

That ebb and flow by the moon. King Lear V, in, 8

kill, kill, kill, kill, kill, kill!

vi 7

Upon such sacrifices, my Cordelia, The gods themselves throw incense.


V,
iii,

Mine enemy's dog, Though he had bit me,


stood that night Against my fire.

20

should have

The

gods are
vices

just,

and of our pleasant

IV,

vii,

36

Make

instruments to plague us.

Thou

art

soul

in bliss;

but

am
The wheel
is

V,

iii,

172

bound

come

full circle.

Upon

a wheel of

fire,

that

mine own

V,

iii,

tears

176

Do scald like molten lead.


IV,
I vii,

Howl, howl, howl, howl! Q! you are


46

men Had
That
I

of stones:
so
vaults

am a very foolish fond old man, Fourscore and upward, not an hour
or less; And, to deal plainly, I fear I am not in

your tongues and eyes, I'd use


heaven's

them

should

crack.
iii,

more

She's gone forever.

V,

259

my

perfect mind.

Her

voice was ever soft,

IV,

vii,

60

Gentle, and low, an excellent thing in

Pray you now, forget and forgive.

woman.

V,
is

iii,

274

And my

poor fool

hang'd! No, no, no

Men must endure Their going hence, even as their coming


hither:

Why should
life,

a dog, a horse, a rat,

have

Ripeness

is all.

V,
let's

And thou no
,

breath at

all?

Thou'lt

come no more,
Never, never, never, never, never! Pray you, undo this button.

We two
When
And

Come,

away

to prison;
i'

alone will sing like birds

the
I'll

cage:

V,

iii,

307

thou dost ask

me

blessing,

kneel down, ask of thee forgiveness: so we'll


live,

Vex not

his ghost:

O!

let

him

pass;

he

hates

him
this

That would upon the rack of


world
Stretch

tough

And

pray,

and

sing,

and

tell

old tales,

and laugh

him out

longer.

V,

iii,

315

At gilded
rogues

butterflies,

and hear poor


we'll talk with

The weight
obey;

of this sad time

we must we ought we
that

Talk of court news; and

them

Speak what we

feel,

not what

who wins; who's in, who's out; And take upon's the mystery of things, As if we were God's spies: and we'll wear out, In a wall'd prison, packs and sets of great ones
A11 our great fray ... gotten between us quite.
X
is

Who

too, loses and

The

to say. oldest hath borne most:

are young, Shall never see so

much, nor

live so
iii,

long.
First

V,
shall

325

Witch: When meet again

we

three

forgiven and forHEYWOOD, Proverbs

Second Witch:
done,

In thunder, lightning, or in rain? When the hurlyburly's

[1546], pt. II, ch.

280

SHAKESPEARE

b
seated heart knock at
use
of

When

the battle's

lost

and won.
act
i,

And make my
I, i

my

Macbeth
Fair
is

[1605-1606],
sc.
is fair:

ribs,

I.

Against

the

nature?

Present

foul,

and foul

fears

Hover through the fog and


Banners
flout the sky.

filthy air.
I,
i,

Are
12
If

less

than horrible imaginings.

Macbeth

I, iii,

134

I, ii f

50

sailor's

wife had chestnuts

in her

chance will have me king, why, chance may crown me,


stir.

Without my

I, iii,

143

lap,

And

munch 'd,
munch'd:
thee,

"Aroint

and munch'd, and "Give me," quoth I: witch!" the rump-fed


It
iif,

Come what come may,


Time and
the hour runs through the
I, iii,

roughest day.

146

ronyon

cries.

Nothing

in his life
it;

Sleep shall neither night nor Hang upon his pent-house lid.

Became him
day
death

like the leaving

he died
in his

As one that had been studied

I, in, 19 Dwindle, peak, and pine. I, in, 23 So foul and fair a day I have not seen. I, fff,

To throw away

the dearest thing he


trifle.

ow'd, As 'twere a careless

I, iv,

38

If

And

you can look into the seeds of time, say which grain will grow and which will not,
I,
iii,

To

There's no art find the mind's construction in the


face:

Speak.

58

He An

was a gentleman on
absolute trust.

whom

built

I, iv,

11

And to be king Stands not within the prospect of belief. I, iff, 73


The
earth hath bubbles, as the water
has,

Glamis thou art, and Cawdor; and shalt be What thou art promis'd. Yet do I fear
It
is

And
That

these are of them.

I,

iii,

79

To

thy nature; too full o' the milk of kindness 1 catch the nearest way.

human
I, v,

16

Or have we

eaten on the insane root


I,

The
can

takes the reason prisoner?


iff,

That croaks the


84
our
us
be-

raven himself is hoarse fatal entrance of Dun-

And
The

oftentimes,

to

win

Under
its

us

to
tell

my

battlements.

Come, you

spir-

harm,
instruments
truths,

of

darkness

That tend on mortal thoughts! unsex

Win

us
tray

with
's

honest

And
trifles,

me here, fill me from


top fuU
direst

the crown to the toe

to

In deepest consequence.

Of
I, iif,

cruelty;

make

thick

my

123
act

As happy prologues to the swelling

Of
If

the imperial theme.


I

I,

iif,

128

am Thane
why do
I

of

Cawdor:

blood, Stop up the access and passage to remorse, That no compunctious visitings of nature

good,

yield to that sugges-

Whose

tion horrid

image doth unfix

my

The thunder o your words has soured the RICHARD milk of human kindness in my heart. BRINSLEY SHERIDAN, The Rivals [1775], act III,
1
sc,

hair

iv

281

SHAKESPEARE
Shake my fell purpose, nor keep peace between The effect and it! Come to my
Besides, this Duncan his faculties so meek, hath

Hath borne
been
So

woman's

And

breasts, milk for gall, take ing ministers.

my

you murderI, v,

clear in his great office, that his virtues


like angels

Will plead
38

trumpet-tongu'd

Macbeth

against

Nor heaven peep through the blanket of the dark, To cry, "Hold, hold!" I, v, 54
Your
face,

The deep damnation of his taking-off; And pity, like a naked new-born babe,
Striding the blast, or heaven's cherubin, hors'd

my

thane,

is

as a

book where
I,

Upon
Shall

the sightless couriers of the

air,

men

blow the horrid deed in every


I

May read strange matters.


Look
like the

v,

63

eye,

innocent flower,
't.

That tears shall drown the wind. no spur

have

But be the serpent under

To

prick the sides of

my

intent, but
it-

I,

v,

66

only Vaulting ambition, which o'erleaps


self

Duncan:
seat;

This castle hath a pleasant


the
air

And

falls

on the other.

Nimbly and sweetly recommends itself Unto our gentle senses. This guest of summer, Banquo:

Macbeth
I have bought Golden opinions from

I,

vii,

16

The temple-haunting
prove

martlet, does ap-

all sorts

of peo-

ple.

I, vii,

32
"I

By

his

lov'd

mansionry

that

the

heaven's breath Smells wooingly here: no jutty, frieze, Buttress, nor coign of vantage, but this bird

Letting

"I

dare

not"
i'

wait upon

would/' Like the poor cat

the adage. 2
I, vii,

44

Hath made

his

pendent bed and proI

creant cradle:

Who

dare do all that may become a man; dares do more is none. I, viz, 46

Where
The
If it

they most breed and haunt, have observed

air is delicate.

I, vi, i

Nor time nor place Did then adhere.


I

I, viz,

51

were done when


'twere well

'tis

done, then

How
I

have given suck, and know tender 'tis to love the babe that
milks me:
it

It

were done quickly;


tion

if

the assassina-

would, while
face,

was smiling in

my

Could trammel up the consequence, and catch

Have

pluck'd

my
you

nipple from his boneI

With

less

his surcease success; that


be-all

but

this

gums,
so
as

blow Might be the


here,

And

dash'd the brains out, had


to this.
fail
I,

and the

end-all

sworn Have done

vii,

54

But here, upon


time,

this

bank and shoal of


come.
I, vii, i

Macbeth: If we should Lady Macbeth:


1

We

fail!

We'd jump

the

life

to

This even-handed

justice.

I, vii,

10

And he shall send his angels with a great sound of a trumpet. Matthew 24:31 * See John Heywood, p. 1843, and Measure for Measure 1, ivf j8, p. syoa.

282

SHAKESPEARE

But screw your courage

to the s ticking-

Which

gives the stern'st good-night.

And

place, we'll not

Macbeth
fail.

II,

zz,

4
12

Macbeth

The attempt and not the deed


I,

vii,

59 65

Confounds

us.

II,

zz,

Memory,

the warder of the brain.


I,
vii,

Had he not resembled

My
I

father as

he

slept

had done
II,

't. zz,

Away, and mock the time with


show:

fairest

14

False face must hide what the false heart doth know. I, vii, 81

had most need

of

blessing,
II, cry,

and
zz,

"Amen"
Stuck in

my

throat.
I

33

The moon

is

down.

II,

z,

There's husbandry in heaven; Their candles are all out. II, i, 4

Methought no more! Macbeth does murder

heard a voice

"Sleep

sleep!" the inno-

Merciful powers! Restrain in me the cursed thoughts that nature Gives way to in repose. II, i, j

cent sleep, Sleep that knits up the ravel'd sleave of


care,

Shut up
In measureless content.
Is this

II,
I

z,'

16

a dagger which

see before

me,

death of each day's life, sore labor's bath, Balm of hurt minds, great nature's second course, Chief nourisher in life's feast.
.

The

The handle toward my hand? Come,


let
I

H,zz, 3 6

me

clutch thee:

Glamis
Shall

hath

murder'd

have thee not, and yet I see thee still. Art thou not, fatal vision, sensible To feeling as to sight? or art thou but A dagger of the mind, a false creation, Proceeding from the heat-oppressed
'

sleep,

and
shall
zz,

therefore
sleep

Cawdor no more, Macbeth


II,

sleep

no more!

43

brain?

II,

z,

33

one half-world Nature seems dead; and wicked dreams abuse


o'er the

Now

Infirm of purpose! the daggers. The sleeping and the dead Are but as pictures; 'tis the eye of

Give

me

childhood

The

That
Will

fears a
all

curtain'd
brates

sleep;

witchcraft

cele-

painted devil.

II,

zz,

53

Pale Hecate's offerings.

II,

z,

49

Thou
Hear not

sure and firm-set earth,

great Neptune's ocean wash blood Clean from my hand? No, this my
this

steps, walk, for fear

my

which way they

hand

will rather

The multitudinous

The

very stones prate of about. 1

my

wherez,

Making the green one

seas incarnadine, red.


II,
zz,

61

II,

56

The bell invites me. Hear it not, Duncan; for it is a knell That summons thee to heaven or to
hell.
It

The primrose way to the everlasting bonfire. 1 II, zzz, 22


It [drink]

provokes the desire, but


II,
zzz,

it

II,

z,

62

takes

away the performance.


34
delight in physics pain.
II,
zzz,

was the owl that


bellman,
For the stone

shriek'd, the fatal

The labor we
shall cry

out of the wall.

56
47,

Habakkuk 2:11 See Luke 19:40,

!See Bion, p.
p.

io4b,

and Hamlet

I,

Hi,

47b.

p. 258b.

283

SHAKESPEARE
Confusion
piece!

now hath made

his master-

Have so incens'd what


I

that

am

reckless

Most

sacrilegious

murder hath broke

do to spite the world.

ope

Macbeth
So weary with
fortune,
disasters,

III,

i,

108

The

Lord's anointed temple, and stole

thence

tugg'd with
life

The life
Shake

o'

the building!

Macbeth
off

That
II, Hi,

would
it

set

my
on
't.

on

any

72

chance,

this

downy

sleep,
II,

death's
Hi,

To mend

or

be

rid

counterfeit. 1

83
this

Ill,

i,

112

Had
I

I but died an hour before chance had liv'd a blessed time; for, from

this

Things without all remedy Should be without regard: what's done is done. Ill, ii, 1 1

instant,

We
renown and grace
is

have scotch'd the snake, not


it.

kill'd
ii,

There's nothing serious in mortality,


All
is

Ill,

but

13

toys;

is

dead,

The wine
lees
Is left this

of life

drawn, and the mere

in his grave; After life's fitful fever he sleeps well;


is

Duncan

vault to brag of.


II, Hi,

98

Treason has done his worst: nor steel, nor poison, Malice domestic, foreign levy, nothing Can touch him further. Ill, ii, 22

Who

can be wise, amaz'd, temperate and furious, Loyal and neutral, in a moment? No man. II, Hi, 115

Then be thou
flown

jocund. Ere the bat hath

His

cldister'd flight, ere, to black ate's summons

Hec-

In the great hand of God I stand, and thence Against the undivulg'd pretense I fight Of treasonous malice. II, in, 137

The

shard-borne beetle with his drowsy

hums
Hath rung
shall

night's

yawning

peal, there
Ill,
ii,

be done

To show an unfelt sorrow is an office Which the false man does easy.
II, Hi,

A deed

of dreadful note.

40

143
of

seeling night, Scarf up the tender eye of pitiful day,

Come,

falcon,

towering

in

her

pride
at

And

with

thy

bloody

and

invisible

place,

hand
and
12

Was
I

by a mousing owl hawk'd


kilTd.

Cancel and tear to pieces that great

II, iv,

bond

Which
must become For a dark hour
But
be
a borrower of the night or twain. Ill, i, 27
is

keeps

me

pale! Light thickens,

and the crow

Makes wing

to the rooky

wood.
Ill,
ii,

To be thus
to

nothing;
Ill,
i,

46

safely thus.

48

Now
To

Murderer:

are men, my liege. Macbeth: Ay, in the catalogue ye go for men. Ill, i, 91
I

We

spurs the lated traveler apace Ill, Hi, 6 gain the timely inn.
I

But now
fined,

am

cabin'd,
fears.

cribb'd,

con-

am

Whom the vile blows and buffets of the


world
1

one,

my liege,

bound in To saucy doubts and

Ill, iv,

24

Now

See Homer, p. 64a, and note.

And health on both!

good digestion wait on appetite, Ill, iv, 38

SHAKESPEARE

Thou canst not say I did Thy gory locks at me.


The
I

it:

never shake
III, iv,
Ill, iv,

deed without a name. 1

Macbeth IV,
50
62

i,

49

Macbeth
air-drawn dagger.

Be

bloody, bold, scorn


of

and

resolute; laugh to

drink to the general joy of the whole


table.
Ill, iv,
I

The power
born
Shall

man,

for

none

of

woman
i,

89

harm Macbeth.
Pll

IV,
assurance

What man dare,


Approach thou
bear,
like the

79

dare:

rugged Russian

But yet
sure,

make

double

The arm'd
tiger,

And
rhinoceros, or the
that,

take a

bond

of fate.

IV,

i,

Hyrcan

83

Macbeth
til

shall never

vanquish 'd
to high

be un-

Take any shape but


nerves
Shall never tremble.

and

my

firm

Great Birnam

wood

Dunsinane
IV,
i,

Ill, iv,

99

hill

Shall

come against him.2

Hence, horrible shadow! Unreal mockery, hence! Ill,

92

iv,

106

Show

his eyes, and grieve his heart; Come like shadows, so depart.

Stand

not

upon the order of your

IV,

i,

no
117

But

going, go at once.

What!
Ill, iv, 1

will

the line stretch out to the

19

crack of

doom?

IV,
IV,
traitors.

i,

It will

have blood, they say; blood will have blood: Stones have been known to move and trees to speak. Ill, iv, 122

The
Our

weird

sisters.

i,

136

When
fears

our actions do not,

do make us

IV,

it,

Macbeth: What is the night? Lady Macbeth: Almost at odds with morning, which is which. Ill, iv, 126
I

He wants
Angels

the natural touch.

IV,
are

ii,

bright
fell.

still,

am

in blood

brightest

though the IV, Hi, 22

Stepped in so far, that, should I wade no more, Returning were as tedious as go o'er.
Ill, iv,

Pour the sweet milk of concord into


hell,

136

Double, double

toil

and

trouble;

Uproar the universal peace, confound All unity on earth. IV, iii, 98 Give sorrow words; the grief that does
not speak Whispers the
bids
it

Fire burn and cauldron bubble.

IV,

i,

jo

Eye

Wool

of newt, and toe of frog, of bat, and tongue of dog.

o'er-fraught heart and break. IV, iii, 209

All
i,

IV,
Finger of birth-strangled babe, Ditch-deliver'd by a drab. IV,

14

Did you say all? O hell-kite! All? What! all my pretty chickens and their

my pretty ones?

dam
i,

30

At one

fell

swoop?
like

IV,
a

iii,

216

By

the pricking of

my thumbs,
this

Something wicked Open, locks,

way comes.
IV,
i,

Malcolm: Dispute it Macbeth: But I must also feel

I shall
it

as a

man. do man:

so;

Whoever

knocks!
secret, black,

44

1
2

See
Till
I

Ann

Radcliffe, p. 5013.
to

How

now, you
night hags!

and midIV,
i,

Birnam wood remove

Dunsinane
V,
iii,

cannot taint with fear.

48

Macbeth

285

SHAKESPEARE
I

cannot but remember such things were That were most precious to me. Macbeth TV, Hi, 219
Out,

And

damned

spot! out, I say!

V,
Fie,

i,

my

lord,

fie!

soldier,

38 and

with some sweet oblivious antidote Cleanse the stuff'd bosom of that perilous stuff Which weighs upon the heart? Therein the patient Doctor:

Must

minister to himself.

afeard?

V,

i,

40

Who
man
him?
to

would have thought the old have had so much blood in V, i, 42


of Fife had a wife: where

Macbeth: Throw physic to the dogs; Til none of it. Macbeth V, Hi, 40
I would applaud thee to the very echo, That should applaud again. V, Hi, 53

The Thane
is

Hang The

out our banners on the outward


is still,

she now?

V,
hand.

if

46
56

walls;

All the perfumes of Arabia will not

cry
tle's

"They come"; our


V,

cas-

sweeten this

little

V,

i,

strength
v, i

Will laugh a siege to scorn.

Those he commands move only in

command,
Nothing
title

My fell of hair
now
does he feel his

in love;

Would
stir

at a dismal treatise rouse


I

and
full

Hang

loose about him, like a giant's

As

life

robe

were in 't. with horrors.

have supp'd

V,v,

Upon
The

a dwarfish thief.

V,

ii,

19

devil

damn

thee black, thou cream-

She should have died hereafter; There would have been a time
a word.

for such

fac'd loon

Where
Thou
I

gott'st

thou that goose look? V, in, 11


boy.

Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow,

lily-liver'd

V,

iff,

15
of

Creeps in this petty pace from day to


day,

have

liv'd

long enough:

my way

life Is fall'n

And

that which should


age,

into the sere, the yellow leaf; l accompany old


love,

To the last syllable of recorded time; And all our yesterdays have lighted
fools

The way
Life's

to dusty death. Out, out, brief

candle!

As honor,
I

obedience, troops of
in their

but a walking shadow, a poor


struts

friends,

player

must not look to have; but,


stead,

That

and

frets his

hour upon the


it is

stage,

not loud but deep, mouthhonor, breath, Which the poor heart would fain deny, and dare not. V, in, 22
Curses,

And

then
fury,

is

heard no more;
idiot,
full

a tale

Told by an

of

sound and

Signifying nothing.
I

V,

v,

17

Macbeth: Canst thou not minister to


a

mind

diseased,

'gin to

Pluck from the


row,

memory

a rooted sor-

And

be aweary of the sun, wish the estate o' the world were now undone. V, v, 49
Blow, wind! come, wrack!

Raze out the written troubles of the


brain,
1

At

least we'll die with harness

See Byron, p.

back.

on our V, v, 51

286

SHAKESPEARE

Why
On

should

play the

Roman

fool,

The

demi-Atlas

of

this

earth,

the

and die mine own sword? Macbeth V,


charmed
life.

arm

And burgonet
vii, vii,

30
41

of men. Antony and Cleopatra

I, v,

23

I bear a

V,

Where's

my

serpent of old Nile?


I, v,

And be

these juggling fiends

no more

25
3J

believ'd,

A morsel for a monarch.


When

I, v,

That palter with us in a double sense; That keep the word of promise to our
ear

My salad
I

days,
I, v>

was green in judgment.


73
ignorant of ourselves,

And

break

it

to our hope.

V,
V,
first

vii,

48
the
53

Live to be the show, and gaze


time.

o'
vii,

We,

the Beg often our own harms, which


wise powers

Lay on, Macduff, And damn'd be him that


"Hold, enough!"

cries,
vii,

V,

62

Deny us for our good; so By losing of our prayers.

find

we

profit
i,

II,

You
The
triple

shall see in
pillar

him
world trans-

of the

Epicurean cooks Sharpen with cloyless sauce his appetite.

form'd
Into a strumpet's fool. Antony and Cleopatra [16061607], act I, sc. i, I. 12 There's beggary in the love that can be reckon'd. I, i, 15

II,

i,

24

No
The

worse a husband than the best of

men.
barge she sat
throne,

11,11,135
in, like a burnish'd

Let

Of

in Tiber melt, and the wide arch the rang'd empire fall! Here is my
space.
are clay.
I, i,

Rome

Burn'd on the water; the poop was beaten gold,


Purple the
sails,

and

so perfumed, that

The winds were

love-sick with
flutes

them;
kept

Kingdoms

33
1 1

the oars were silver, Which to the tune of


stroke,

In nature's infinite book of secrecy

A little I
I

can read.
life

and made The water which they beat to follow


faster,

I,
figs.

ii,

love long

better than

As amorous of their
I,
,

strokes.

For her

34
It

own

On

A Roman

the sudden thought hath struck him.


I,
ii,

beggar'd

person, all description.


II,
ii,

199

90

Age cannot wither


stale

her,

nor custom

Eternity was in our lips and eyes, Bliss in our brows bent. I, iii, 35

Her

infinite variety; other

women

cloy

The

O!

appetites they feed,

but she makes


for
vilest

And

my oblivion is a very Antony, I am all forgotten. I, Give me to drink mandragora. 1


That
I might sleep out time

hungry
90
.

iii,

Where most
things

she

satisfies;

this great

gap of
I,

Become themselves
holy priests Bless her when she
is

in

her,

that

the

My Antony is away. O happy horse, to bear


Antony!
i

v,

riggish.
II,
ii,

the weight of I, v, 21

243

have not kept

my

square; but that to

See Othello III,

iii,

331, p. 274^.

come

287

SHAKESPEARE
Shall all

be done by the rule. Antony and Cleopatra

Sometimes we see a cloud


II, Hi,

that's drag-

onish;

Music,

moody food
1

Of

us that trade in love.


it

II, v, i

A A A

vapor sometime like a bear or lion, tower'd citadel, a pendant rock, forked mountain, or blue promontory

be honest, Though To bring bad news. 2

it is

never good
II, v,

85

With

Come, thou monarch of the Plumpy Bacchus, with pink


Ambition,

vine,

upon 't. Antony and Cleopatra IV,


Eros;

trees

xii,

2
is

eyne!

Unarm,
120
22

the long day's

task

II, vii,

done,

And we must sleep.


Ill,
i,

IV,
death,

xii,

35

The

soldier's virtue.

But
into
't

I will

be

Celerity is never more admir'd Than by the negligent. Ill,

A bridegroom
vii,

in

my

and run
IV,
xii,

24

As

to a lover's bed.

We have kiss'd away


Kingdoms and
provinces.

99
in;

O sun!
Burn the
in, via, 17
great sphere

thou mov'st

He

wears the rose


Ill, xi,

The
20
I

darkling stand 2 varying shore o' the world.

Of youth upon him.

IV,

xiii,

10

Men's judgments
outward

are

parcel of their fortunes, and things

Do draw
them,

the

inward

quality

after

dying, Egypt, dying; only here importune death awhile, until Of many thousand kisses the poor last I IV, xiii, 18 lay upon thy lips.
is

am

O! wither'd
Ill, xi,

the garland of the war,


is fall'n;

To
I

suffer all alike.

31

The
Are

soldier's

pole

young boys
the odds
is

and
found you
as

a morsel, cold

girls

upon
116
182

level

Dead
Let's

Caesar's Trencher.
III, xi,

now with men;

And

have one other gaudy night.


Ill, xi,

gone, there is nothing left remarkable Beneath the visiting moon.

IV,
Let's

xiii,

64

Now he'll

outstare the lightning. furious Is to be frightened out of fear.

To be

do
ion,

it after

the high

Roman

fash-

And make
194
be-

death proud to take us.

III, xi,

IV,

xiii,

87

To

business that
time, go to
't

we

love

we

rise

And

To do
with delight.
IV,
zv,

great that thing that ends all other

it is

And

20

Which
His

deeds, shackles accidents,

infinite virtue!

com'st thou smiling

change.
legs

and bolts up V, ii, 4

from

bestrid the ocean; his rear'd

The The

world's great snare uncaught?

arm
17
Crested the world; his voice was propertied

IV,
shirt of

vizi,

Nessus

is

upon me.
IV,
x,

As
56
ii,

all

the tuned spheres, and that to

iSee Twelfth-Night,
2

I,

i,

i, p.

2513.

friends; *See Aristophanes, p. 91 a, and Hamlet HI,


400, p. 26$b.
2

See Sophocles, p. 8*a, and pt. II, I, i, IQO, p. 4ib.

King Henry IV,

In some editions,

star.

SHAKESPEARE

But when he meant


the orb,

to quail

and shake

As she would catch another Antony


In her strong toil of grace.

He

was

as

rattling thunder. For his

Antony and Cleopatra V,

ii f

348

bounty,

There was no winter


'twas

in

't,

an autumn

The gods
Corn
for the rich

sent not

men

only.

That grew the more by


lights

reaping; his de-

Coriolanus [1607-1608], act I, sc. i, I 213

Were

dolphin-like, they show'd his back above The element they liv'd in; in his livery Walk'd crowns and crownets, realms and islands were As plates dropp'd from his pocket. Antony and Cleopatra V, ft, 82

They threw their caps As they would hang them on the horns o* the moon, I, i, 218 Shouting their emulation.
All the yarn she spun in Ulysses* absence did but fill Ithaca full of moths.
I, Hi,

93

The bright day is And we are for the dark.


Antony
Shall

done,

Nature teaches beasts to know their


ii,

V,
forth,

192
I

friends.

II,

i,

be brought drunken
shall see

A cup
and

of hot wine with not a drop of


't.

allaying Tiber in

II, i t II,
i,

52

Some

squeaking

Cleopatra

boy

my
217

My

gracious silence, hail!

194

greatness

the posture of a whore.

V,

if,

himself stuck not to call us the 2 II, ft, 18 many-headed multitude.

He

a dish for the gods, if the devil dress her not. V, ii, 274
is

A woman
I

Bid them wash their

faces,

And keep
I

their teeth clean.


II, in,

have

65

Immortal longings in me. V, ii, 282 If thou and nature can so gently part,

thank you for your voices, thank you, Your most sweet voices. II, Hi, 179

The

stroke

of

death
is

is

as

a lover's

The mutable,
Hear you
this

rank-scented many.
III,
i,

pinch,

65

Which

hurts,

and

desir'd.

Triton of the minnows?


Ill,
8
i,

V,
Dost thou not see
breast,

if,

296

mark you
His absolute "shall"?

my

baby

at

my

88

That sucks the nurse

What is
asleep?

the city but the people?

V,

III, i t

198

11,311

Now

boast thee, death, in thy possession


lies

His nature

He
Or

too noble for the world: would not flatter Neptune for his
is

A lass
First

unparallel'd.
. . .

V,

trident,
ii,

317

Jove for

's

Guard: Charmian, is this well done? Charmian: It is well done, and fitting

heart's his

power to thunder. His mouth:


tongue
i,

What

his breast forges, that his

must vent.

Ill,

254

for a princess Descended of so many royal kings. 1

V,
1

ii,

327

The beast With many heads

butts

me away.4
IV,
i,

of the soldiers seeing her, angrily said unto her: Is that well done Charmian? Very well said she again, and meet for a princess descended

One

1 See Lovelace, p. 358!).


2

of so many noble kings. Plutarch's "Lives" [1579]

Sm THOMAS NORTH,

See Horace, p. 1233, and note, See Sophocles, p. 81 a. *See Horace, p. issa, and note.

289

SHAKESPEARE
0! a
kiss
exile,

Nothing emboldens
sweet
as

sin

so

much

.as

Long

as

my
x

my
in,

re-

mercy.

venge!

Corioknus V,
icicle

44

Timon

of Athens III, v, 3

Chaste as the

You

That's curdied by the frost from purest snow, And hangs on Dian's temple.

fools of fortune, trencher-friends, time's flies. Ill, vi, 107

We have seen better days.


0! the
fierce

IV,

ii,

27
30

V,

iii,

65

wretchedness that glory

wants nothing of a god but etera heaven to throne in. and nity

He

brings us.
I

IV,

ii,

am

V,
They'll give

iv,

25

Misanthropes, and hate mankind. 1 IV, m, 53

him death by

inches.

Life's uncertain voyage.

V,

i,

207

V,
If

iv,

43
'tis

See, where she comes apparel'd like the


spring.

you have writ your annals


there,
like

true,

Pericles [1608-1609], act I,


sc.
i, Z.

an eagle in a dovecote, I That, Fluttered your Volscians in Corioli: Alone I did it. V, 7,114

12

Few
The

love to hear the sins they love to


act.
I,
i,

92

Thou

hast done a deed whereat valor

will

weep.

V, 7,135

sad companion, dull-eyed melanI, ii, 2 choly.


.
.

He shall have a noble memory.


V,v, 155
'Tis

not enough to help the feeble up,


to support

But

him

after.

I Third Fisherman: Master, marvel how the fishes live in the sea. First Fisherman: Why, as men do aland; the great ones eat up the little
.

Timon
I call

of Athens [1607-1608], act I, sc. i, I. 108

ones. 2

II,

i,

29

Lest the bargain should catch cold

the gods to witness. 2


I,
i,

and
138
themselves
I, ii,

starve.

wonder men dare with men.


is

trust

Cymbeline [1609-1610], act I, sc. iv, I. 186

45

Hath

his bellyful of fighting.


II,
i,

Here's that which


sinner,

too weak to be a
left
I,

24

Hark! hark! the lark at heaven's gate

Honest water, which ne'er


the mire. 3

man
ii,

i'

sings,

60

And Phoebus

'gins arise,

Immortal gods, I crave no pelf; I pray for no man but myself: Grant I may never prove so fond, To trust man on his oath or bond.
I,
ii,

His steeds to water at those springs

On

chalic'd flowers that

lies;

64

And winking Mary-buds begin To ope their golden eyes: With everything that pretty is,

Men

shut their doors against a setting


sun.
I, ii,

My lady sweet, arise.


As chaste
as

II, Hi, II, v,

22
13

152

unsunn'd snow.

Every man
is

has his fault, and honesty


Ill,
i,

Some

med'cinable. griefs are


Ill,
ii,

his.
1

30
iSee Moliere, p. 3613.
2

33

See Byron, p. 5603.


call

8 1

heaven

and

earth

to

witness.

Men

Deuteronomy 4:16 8 Inscribed on the drinking fountain in the market square of Stratford-on-Avon,

the
3

small.

lived like fishes; the great ones devoured ALGERNON SIDNEY, Discourses on
[1698], ch. 2, sec. 18

Government

See Lyly, p, aoga.

290

SHAKESPEARE

OI

for a horse with wings!

When
III, u,
Ill, in,

'forty winters

shall besiege

thy

Cymbeline

49

brow,

The game is

And
up.

107

dig deep trenches in thy beauty's


field.

Sonnet

2,

Slander,

Whose

edge is sharper than the sword, whose tongue


of
Nile,

Thou
Calls

art

thy mother's glass, and she in


April
of
3,

thee

Outvenoms all the worms whose breath


belie

back the lovely


prime.

her
/.

Sonnet

Rides on the posting winds and doth


All corners of the world.
I

Music

to hear,

why

hear'st

thou music

sadly?
Ill, xv,

35
103

Sweets with sweet war not, joy delights


in joy.

have not

1 slept one wink.

Sonnet

8,

Z.

III, iv,

Everything that grows

Weariness

Can

snore upon the


sloth

flint

when

resty

Holds in perfection but a little moSonnet 15, /. i ment.


Shall
I

Finds the down pillow hard.


III, vf,

compare thee to a summer's

day?

33

Thou

art

more

lovely

and more temperdarling buds

An angel!
An
Society
is

or, if

not,
Ill, vz,

ate:

earthly paragon!

42
12

no comfort
IV,
IV,
ii,

Rough winds do shake the of May,

To one

not sociable.
I

And summer's
date.

lease

hath all too short a Sonnet 18, I. i


shall

wear not
ii,

My dagger in my mouth.
Fear no more the heat

But thy eternal summer


78

not fade. L 9
for fight,
foil'd,

o' the sun, the furious winter's rages; Thou thy worldly task hast done, Home art gone, and ta'en wages. Golden lads and girls all must,

Nor

The painful warrior After a thousand victories, once from the books of honor Is
thy
quite,

famoused

razed

And
258

all

As chimney-sweepers, come to

toil'd.

dust.
ii,

the rest forgot for which he Sonnet 25, I. 9


disgrace with

IV,

When
I
all

in

fortune and

Quiet consummation have; And renowned be thy grave! IV,

men's eyes

ii,

280

And

alone beweep my outcast state, trouble deaf heaven with my bootless cries.

Sonnet 29,1.1

Fortune brings in some boats that are not steer'd. IV, iii, 46

Hang

there -like

fruit,

my

soul,

Till the tree die!

V,

v,

264
in-

From

fairest

creatures

we

desire

written they bear strong evidence of all being in 1588-1589. They were published [1609] by Thomas Thorpe, who wrote the dedication: TO THE ONLIE BEGETTER OF THESE INSUING SONNETS MR. W. H., ALL HAPPINESSE AND THAT ETERNITIE

crease,

PROMISED

That thereby
die.

beauty's rose might never


2

Sonnets
1

[published 1609], i,

1.

See Cervantes, p. ig4a. sonnets were written definitely before and 1598, according to Meres's Palladis Tamia,
2

BY OUR EVER-LIVING POET WISHETH THE WELL-WISHING ADVENTURER IN


SETTING

The

FORTH

according to Leslie Hotson in Mr.

W. H.

[1964]

T.T.

SHAKESPEARE
Desiring this man's scope,
art,

and that man's

Of

outlive this powerful princes, shall Sonnet 55, Z. i. rime.

With what
least;

most enjoy contented

Like as the waves

make towards the

Yet in these thoughts myself almost despising,

pebbled shore, So do our minutes hasten to their end.

Sonnet 60,

1.

Haply

think on thee.

Sonnet 29,
wealth brings That then I scorn to change with kings.

I.

Time doth
youth

transfix the flourish set

on

For thy sweet love remembered such

And

delves

the

parallels

in

beauty's
Z.

brow.

my

state
Z.

When
The

13

have seen by Time's

fell

hand

defac'd

When
I

to the sessions of sweet silent


of things

thought

age.

rich-proud cost of outworn buried Sonnet 64, Z. i


I

summon up remembrance
past,

When

have seen the hungry ocean

sigh

the lack of

many
new

a thing

gain

Advantage
i

on

the

kingdom
win

of

the

And
But

sought, with old woes times' waste.


if

wail

my

dear
I.

Sonnet 30,

And

shore, the firm soil

of the watery

main,
Increasing store with loss,
store.

the while

think on thee, dear

and

loss

with
Z.

friend, All losses are restor'd

5
I
i

and sorrows end.


Z.i 3
I
i

Tir'd with
cry.

all

these, for restful

death
Z.

Sonnet 66,

Full

many
seen.

a glorious morning have Sonnet 33, L


silver

And
And And

art

made

tongue-tied by authority.
Z.

Roses have thorns, and

fountains

mud;
Clouds and
eclipses stain

both

moon

simple truth miscall'd simplicity, captive good attending captain ill.


Z.

11

and sun,

And loathsome
bud.
All

canker lives in sweetest

No

longer

mourn

for

me when

am

dead
faults.

men make

Than you
Sonnet 35,
Z.

shall hear

the surly sullen


I

bell

Be thou the tenth Muse.


Sonnet 38,
1.

Give warning to the world that


fled

am

From

this vile world,

with

vilest

worms
Z.

For nimble thought can jump both sea and land. Sonnet 44, L 7
Against
that

to dwell.

Sonnet 71,
in

That time of year thou mayst


behold

me

time

when thou

shalt

strangely pass,

When
Upon

yellow leaves, or none, or few,

And

scarcely greet

me

with that sun,


it

do hang
those boughs which shake against the cold, 1 Bare ruin'd choirs, where late the sweet
birds sang.

thine eye, When love, converted from the thing was, Shall reasons find of settled gravity.

Sonnet 73,

Z.

Sonnet 49,

Z.

Clean starved
i

for a look.

Not marble, nor the


ments

gilded

monuSee Byron, p.

Sonnet 75,

Z.

202

SHAKESPEARE

Who
Than

is it

that says most? which can say that you alone Sonnet 84, L i

When

proud-pied April, dress'd in

all

more
this rich praise

his trim, Hath put a spirit

are you?

thing.

of youth in everySonnet 98, Z. i


lose their dear

Farewell! thou art too dear for

my

pos-

Sweets grown
delight.

common
friend,

Sonnet 102, L 12 you never can be


first

And

sessing, like enough

timate.

thou know'st thy esSonnet 87, Z. i

To me,
old,

fair

In sleep a king, but, waking, no such Z. matter. 14

For

you were when e/d, Such seems your beauty


as

your eye

still.

Ah! do not, when


this sorrow,

my heart

hath 'scap'd

Sonnet 104,

Z.

Come

in the rearward of a conquered

When
I

in the chronicle of wasted time

woe; Give not a windy night a rainy morrow,

see descriptions of the fairest wights,

And

beauty making beautiful old rime, In praise of ladies dead and lovely

To

linger

out a purposed overthrow. Sonnet 90, Z. 5

Then,

knights, in the blazon of sweet beauty's


of
foot,

best,

They

that have power to hurt

and

will

Of hand,
brow,
I

of

lip,

of eye, of
ex-

do none, That do not do the thing they most do show,

see their antique


press'd

pen would have

Who, moving
stone,

others, are themselves as

Even such a beauty


now.

as you master Sonnet 106, Z. i

Unmoved,
slow.

cold,

and

to

temptation
Z.

Sonnet 94,

Not mine own


soul

fears,

nor the prophetic


things

They

are the lords

and owners of
of
their

their

Of the wide world dreaming on

faces,

Others

but

stewards
flower
it
is

excel-

Can

to come, yet the lease of


trol,

my

true love con-

lence.

The summer's

to the

summer

sweet, Though to itself

a confined doom. Supposed as forfeit to The mortal moon hath her eclipse endur'd,

only live and die.


Z.

And

the sad augurs


presage;

mock
,

their

own
as-

Lilies that fester smell far

worse than
Z.

weeds. 1

14
14
i

Incertamties
sur'd,

now crown

themselves

The

hardest knife ill-used doth lose his


edge.

Sonnet 95,
a winter hath

And

Z.

of endless peace proclaims olives


age.

Sonnet 107,
I

Z.

How

like

my

absence
Z.

been.

Sonnet 97,
I

From you have


spring,
1

been absent in the


which most

was false of heart, seem'd absence my flame to Though Sonnet 109, Z. i qualify.
O! never say that

That
of things, those

is

my home

of love:
I

if

have

As in the nature

admirably
so

the lives of men, those that are most the opposite, blooming, are soonest turned into in

flourish, most swiftly fester or puwhile others last: trefy, as roses, lilies, violets,

rang'd,

Like

him

that travels,

return again.
Z.

PLINY
ch. i$

[A.D. 23-79],

Natural History, bk. XVI,

Alas!

'tis

true I have

gone here and

there,

293

SHAKESPEARE

And made

myself a motley to the view, Gor'd mine own thoughts, sold cheap what is most dear, Made old offenses of affections new. Sonnet no, Z. i

Enjoy 'd
Past

no

sooner

but

despised

straight;

To what
Let

My nature is subdu'd
it

reason hunted; and no sooner had, Past reason hated, as a swallow'd bait, On purpose laid to make the taker

works

in,

like

the dyer's
I.

mad:
in pursuit, and in possession Had, having, and in quest to have,

hand.

Sonnet in,

Mad

so;

ex-

me

not to the marriage of true

treme;

minds

A
is

bliss in

Admit impediments. Love

not love

proof
joy

and prov'd,
propos'd;

a very a

woe;
Before, a

Which
O, no!

alters when it alteration finds, Or bends with the remover to remove:


it is

behind,

dream.
All this the world well knows; yet knows well

an

ever-fixed mark,
is

none
to

That looks on tempests and


It is

never

shaken; the star to every wandering bark, Whose worth's unknown, although his height be taken. Love's not Time's fool, though rosy lips and cheeks

To shun

the heaven that leads

men

this hell.

Sonnet 129
nothing
like the

My

mistress' eyes are

sun;

Coral
If

is

far

more red than her

lips'

Within

his

bending

sickle's

red:

compass

come; Love alters not with


weeks,

snow be white, why then her

breasts

his brief hours

and

are dun; If hairs be wires, black wires

But bears it out even to the edge of doom. If this be error, and upon me prov'd, I never writ, nor no man ever lov'd, Sonnet 116

her head.

grow on Sonnet 130, Z. i


is

When my
lies.

love swears that she

made
she
Z.

of truth, I do believe her, though I

know

Sonnet 138,
I

What

potions have

drunk of Siren

Two

loves
spair, like

have of comfort and de-

tears,

Distill'd

within.

from limbecks foul as hell Sonnet 119, Z. i


ill!
Z.

Which
Poor

two

spirits

still.

do suggest Sonnet 144,


of

me
Z.

O benefit of
And
Grows
fairer

soul,

the

center

my

sinful
Z.

ruin'd love,
far greater.

when

it is

built

anew,
Z.

earth.

Sonnet 146,

than at

first,

more

strong,
11

Tis better
teem'd,

to

be

vile

than

vile

es-

So shalt thou feed on Death, that feeds on men, And Death once dead, there's no more
dying then.
Past cure
care,
I
Z.

When

13

not to be receives reproach of Sonnet 121, Z. i being.


of spirit in a waste of

am, now Reason

is

past

The expense
shame
Is

And
For
I

frantic-mad with evermore unrest.

lust in action;

and

till

action, lust
full

Sonnet 147,
have sworn thee
fair,

Z.

Is perjur'd,

murderous, bloody,
rude,
cruel,

of

and thought

blame,
Savage,

extreme,

not to

Who

thee bright, art as black as hell, as dark as


night.
Z.

trust;

13

294

SHAKESPEARE

You pay a great deal too dear for what's given freely. The Winter's Tale [1610-1611], act I, sc. i, I 18

For the life to come, I sleep out the thought of it. The Winter's Tale TV, ii, 30
Jog on, jog on, the footpath way, And merrily hent the stile-a: A merry heart goes all the day,

Two
And

lads

that thought there was


as today,

no

more behind But such a day tomorrow


to

Your sad

tires

in a mile-a.

We
And

be boy eternal. I, ii, 63 were as twinn'd lambs that did


i' the sun, bleat the one at the other:

frisk

what

Was

we chang'd
innocence for innocence.
I, ii,

IV, ii, 133 For you there's rosemary and rue; these keep Seeming and savor all the winter IV, Hi, 74 long.
Daffodils,

6j 116
the

Paddling palms and pinching


Affection!
center:

fingers.
I, ii,

That come before the swallow and take

dares,

The winds

of

March with
do
is

beauty.

thy

intention

stabs

IV,

in,

118

Thou

dost

make

possible things not so

What you
Still

betters

what

done.
r

held,

Communicat'st with dreams.


I, ii,

When
139 169

He makes
ber.

a July's day short as

Decem-

IV, iii 135 do wish you I dance, you wave o' the sea, that you might ever do
that.

I, ii,

Nothing but

IV, IV,

Hi,

140

sad tale's best for winter. have one of sprites and goblins.
II,
x,

Lawn
I

as

white as driven snow.


Hi,

220

24

The

silence

often

Persuades

when

pure innocence speaking fails. II, n, 41


of

we

love a ballad in print, a-life, for then are sure they are true.

IV,

Hi,

262
his

The

It is a heretic that

makes the
in
't.

fire,

self-same sun that shines court

upon

Not
I

she which

bums

II, in,

115
that

am

feather

for

each wind
II, Hi,

Hides not his visage from our cottage, but Looks on alike. IV, Hi, 457
I'll queen it no inch further, But milk my ewes and weep. IV,

blows.

153

What's gone and what's past help Should be past grief. Ill, ii, 223
1

Hi,

462

Exit, pursued

by a

bear. 1
III, in,

57

Prosperity's the very bond of love, Whose fresh complexion and whose

This
prove

is

fairy-

gold,

boy, and

'twill

heart together
Affliction alters.

so.

IV,

Hi,

Ill, Hi,

127

586

Then comes

in the sweet o' the year.

IV,

ii,

Let me have no lying; it becomes none but tradesmen. IV, Hi, 747

A
fles.
1

snapper-up
is

of unconsidered

tri-

To purge

melancholy.

IV,

ii,

26

IV,
There's time enough for that.

Hi,

792 128

perhaps the most famous stage direction in English.

This

V,

Hi,

295

SHAKESPEARE

He hath no drowning mark upon him; his complexion is perfect gallows. The Tempest [1611-1612],
act
I, sc.
i,
I.

Allaying both their fury, and


sion,

my
ii,

pas-

With
Full

its

sweet

air.

33

The Tempest

I,

389

Now
longs

would
sea

of

give a thousand furfor an acre of barren


I

ground.
I

I,

i,

70
73

would

fain die a dry death.


*>
*,

What seest thou

fathom five thy father lies; Of his bones are coral made: Those are pearls that were his eyes: Nothing of him that doth fade, But doth suffer a sea-change Into something rich and strange. 1

else

I
The
vance.

H,

In the dark backward and abysm of time? I, w, 49

394

fringed curtains of thine eye adI, if,

405
4^8

By telling

of

it,

Made such a sinner of To credit his own lie.


Your
tale, sir,

his

memory,
I,
,

100

Make

Lest too light winning the prize light.


ill

I,

would cure

deafness.
I,
ii,

106

Was dukedom
The
Instinctively

My library
large enough.
I,
,

There's nothing temple: If the ill spirit have so

can dwell in such a

Good
109
147

fair a house, things will strive to dwell with


I,
ii,

't.

454
10

He
2

receives

comfort

like

very rats have quit

cold porII,
i,

it.

I,

ridge.

ii,

the

commonwealth
all

Knowing
me,

lov'd

my

books, he furnish'd

would by con-

traries

Execute
library with

From mine own


that
I

volumes

things;

for

no kind of
of magisriches,

traffic

Would

prize above

my dukedom.
I,n, 166

admit; no

name

trate;

Letters should not

be known;

From
I

the still-vexed Bermoothes.


I,
,

229

And

poverty, use of service, none; contract, succession,


tilth,

be correspondent to command, And do my spiriting gently.


will
I, ti,

297

Bourn, bound of land, none;

vineyard,
oil;

You
Is, I

taught

me

language; and

my

profit

No No

use of metal, corn, or wine, or

occupation;
pure.
3

all

men

idle,

all;

on't

And women
to curse: the red plague
1

too,

but innocent
II,
z,

and
154

know how
rid you,

For learning

me your language!
I, it,

The

last three lines are

inscribed on Shel41,

ley's gravestone.

363

See King John,


is

V,

vii,

p.

2370,

and

Come

unto these yellow sands, And then take hands:

William Bradford,
* It

p. giga.

Curtsied when you have, and kiss'd The wild waves whist Foot it featly here and there.
*>
>

a nation, would I answer Plato, that traffike, no knowledge of Letters, no intelligence of numbers, no name of magistrate, nor of politike superioritie; no use of service, of riches or povertie; no contracts,

hath no kinde of

no

successions,

no

partitions,

no occupation but

375

idle;

This music crept by


ters,

me upon

the wa-

respect of kindred, but common, no apparel but naturall, no manuring of lands, no use of wine, corne, or mettle. MONTAIGNE,

no

Essays, bk.

I [1580],

ch. 30,

Of the Canniballes

206

SHAKESPEARE

What's past

is

prologue.

Our
II,
i,

revels

now

are ended.

These our

The Tempest
Open-eyed Conspiracy His time doth take.

261

actors,

As
II,
i,

I,

foretold you,
like

were

all spirits
air;

and
vi-

Are melted into

309 27
42

air,

into thin

And,

the baseless fabric of this

very ancient and

fish-like smell.
ii, a,

sion,

The

cloud-capp'd towers, the gorgeous


palaces,

Misery acquaints a bedfellows.


I

man

with strange
II,
ii,

The solemn
self,

temples, the great globe


it

it-

shall laugh myself to death.


II,
ii,

Yea,

all

which
this

inherit, shall dissolve;

167

And,

like

insubstantial

'Ban, 'Ban,

Ca

pageant
are such
little

Caliban,

faded,

Has

new
For

master

Get a new man.


II,
ii,

Leave not a rack behind.


stuff

We

197

several virtues

As dreams
life

are

made

on, and our

Have

lik'd several

women.
Is

rounded with a

Ill,
.

i,

42

sleep.
i,

Here's my hand. Ferdinand: Miranda: And mine, witn my heart in't. Ill, i, 89
.
.

The Tempest IV,

148

With

foreheads villainous low.

IV,
I'll

i,

252

Moon-calf.

break

Ill,
fish

ii,

25

my

staff,

Thou deboshed
Keep
a

thou.

Bury it certain fathoms in the earth, And, deeper than did ever plummet
,

in, a, 30

sound,
Til

good tongue

in your head.
III,
ii,

drown

my book.

V,

i,

54

41

Where
There

the bee sucks, there suck I

Flout 'em, and scout 'em; and scout


'em, and
flout 'em;
1

Thought

is free.

Ill,

if,

133

In a cowslip's bell I lie; I couch when owls do cry. On the bat's back I do fly

He that

dies pays all debts.


Ill,
ii,

143

summer merrily: Merrily, merrily shall I live now Under the blossom that hangs
After

The

isle is full

of noises,

bough.

on the V, i, 88

Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight, and hurt not. Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments hum about mine ears; and sometimes voices, That, if I then had wak'd after long

O brave new world,


That has such people
in't!

Will

V, i, 183 Let us not burden our remembrances

With

a heaviness that's gone.

V,

i,

199
15

sleep,

Will make

me sleep

My ending
again.
Ill,
ii,

is

despair.

Epilogue,

I.

146

A kind
Of
excellent

No

man's pie

is

freed
[1613], act
sc.
f, Z.

dumb

discourse.
III, Hi,

From his ambitious finger. i King Henry VIII


38

I,

52

Do not give dalliance


Too much
1

The
IV,
i,

force of his

own

merit makes his


I, i,

the rein.
is

51
75
1

way.

64

Thought

free.

Twelfth-Night

I,

Hi,

Written by Shakespeare and Fletcher.

297

SHAKESPEARE

Heat not a furnace for your foe That it do singe yourself. Henry VIII, I,
If I

so hot

Press not a falling

man

too

far. 1
ii,

Henry VIII,
i,

III,

334

140

Farewell!

long farewell, to

all

my

chance to talk a

little

wild, forgive
I,

me; had it from


mirror of

greatness! This is the state of

man: today he puts

my
all

father.

iv,

26

forth

The

The
courtesy.
II,
i,

53

Go

with me, like good angels, to


end; as the long divorce of steel
falls

my
on

And
The

tender leaves of hopes; tomorrow blossoms, bears his blushing honors thick

upon him;
third day
frost;

And,

comes a
thinks,
is

frost,

a killing

me,

Make

of your prayers one sweet sacri-

And, when he
full surely

good easy man,


nips
his

fice,

And

lift

my soul to heaven.

II,
II,

i,

75

His

greatness
root,

a-ripening,

This bold bad man.

ii,

44

And
Like

then he
tui'd,
little

falls, as I

do.

have ven-

Tis better to be lowly born, And range with humble livers in con-

wanton boys that swim on


in a sea of glory,

Than

tent, to

bladders,

be perk'd up

in

a glist'ring

This

many summers
beyond blown pride
far

But

grief

my

depth:

my

high-

And wear

a golden sorrow.
II,
iii,

19

For

all

I would not be a queen i the world. II,

At length broke under me, and now has left me, Weary and old with service, to the mercy

iii,

45

Orpheus with

his lute

made

trees,

Of

a rude stream, that

must

forever
I

And Bow

the mountain-tops that freeze, themselves when he did sine. ng.


Ill,
i,

hide me.

Vain pomp and


hate ye:
I

glory of this world,

feel

Heaven

is

above

all

yet;

there

sits

a
Is

my

heart

new

open'd. O!

how

wretched
that poor
favors!
is,

judge

That no king can

man

that hangs

on

princes'

corrupt.

Ill,

i,

99

And
And

'tis

'Tis well said again; a kind of good

There
deed to say

betwixt that smile


of princes,
fears

we would
and
their

aspire to,

well:

That sweet aspect


ruin,

yet words are

no deeds.
Ill,
ii,

153

More pangs and

than wars or
falls like

What
I

And then to breakfast with Ill, ii, 203 appetite you have.
all

women
fer,

have;
falls,

And when he

he

Luci-

have touched the highest point of

Never to hope again.

Ill,

ii,

352

my greatness;
And from
glory,
I

that full
to

meridian

of

my

A peace above all earthly dignities, A still and quiet conscience.


Ill,
ii,

haste

now

Like a bright
ning,

setting: I shall fall exhalation in the eve-

my

380 384

A load would
1

sink a navy.

Ill,

ii,

And no man

see

me more.
Ill,
ii,

To

'Tis a cruelty load a falling man.

224

Henry Vlll,

V, Hi,

298

SHAKESPEARE

DAVIES

And

sleep in dull cold marble.

He
ii,

was

a scholar,

and a

ripe

and good

Henry VIII,
Cromwell,

III,

434

one;

By

I charge thee, fling away ambition: that sin fell the angels.

Exceeding wise, fair-spoken, and persuading;

Lofty and sour to


not; But, to those

them

that lov'd

him
him

in,

a,

441

men

Love

that sought

thyself last:

cherish those hearts

sweet as summer.

that hate thee; Corruption wins not more than honesty.


Still

Henry VIII, IV,

ii,

51

To

dance attendance on their lordships'


pleasures.

in

thy

right

hand
:

carry

gentle

V,

if,

30

peace,

To
Let

silence envious tongues fear not.


all

be

just,

and

Nor

shall this
as

peace sleep with her; but

when
wonder
dies,

the ends thou aim'st at be thy


if

The

bird of

the maiden

country's,

Thy

God's, and truth's; then


fall'st,

thou

O Cromwell!
a blessed martyr!
Ill,
if,

phoenix, Her ashes new-create another heir As great in admiration as herself.

Thou

fall'st

V,
444

v,

40

Had

Wherever the bright sun of heaven


shall shine,

but serv'd

my God

with half the


in

zeal 1
I serv'd

His honor and the greatness of his


king,

my

he would not

mine

name
Shall be,

age

and make new nations.

Have

left

me

naked to mine enemies.


Ill, n,

V,v, 5 i

456
of

An
Is

old

man, broken with the storms


to lay his weary bones
little

Some come

to take their ease

And

sleep an act or two.

state,

come
ye;

Epilogue,

I.

among

Give him a

earth for charity.

Good friend, for Jesus' sake forbear To dig the dust enclosed here;
21
Blest

IV,

ii,

be the
stones, curst be

man

that

spares

these

gave his honors to the world again, His blessed part to heaven, and slept in
peace.

He

And

he that moves

my

bones.

IV,
IV,
a

ii,

So

may he him!

rest; his faults lie gently


ii,

29 on
31

Shakespeare's epitaph

He was

man
IV,
ii,

JOHN DAVIES OF HEREFORD


c.

Of an unbounded stomach.
33

1565-1618
Husband for Wife
'tis

Men's

evil

manners

live in brass; their

1 Beauty's but skin deep. Select Second

virtues

We write in water.2
1

Sir

Thomas

Overburie's

IV,

ii,

45
deep.

[1616],

VI
but skin

Had
As

served

God

as well in every part

My

I did serve my king and master still, scope had not this season been so short,

*A11 the beauty of the world,


[$d ed.,

Nor would have had

the

power

to

THOMAS CHURCHYARD, Death


2 See
p. 1780;

of

do me ill. Morton

RALPH VENNING, Orthodox Paradoxes 1650], The Triumph of Assurancef p. 41

Sophocles,

Bacon, p.

p. 8ga; Sir Thomas More, ioa; and Keats, p. 586a.

a dangerous temptation comes to us gay colors that are but skin-deep. MATHEW HENRY [1662-1714], Commentaries,

Many
fine

in

Genesis, III

299

CAMPION

WOTTON
Then blooms each
thing, then maids dance in a ring, Cold doth not sting, the pretty birds do
sing.
jug-jug,

THOMAS CAMPION
1567-1620

My

sweetest
love,

Lesbia

let

us

live

and

And though
reprove,

the sager sort our deeds

Cuckoo,

pu-we,

to-witta-woo!

Let us not weigh them. Heaven's great lamps do dive


Into their west, and straight again
vive,
re-

Summer's Last Will and Testament [1600]. Spring, st. i

From

winter,

plague
16.

and

pestilence,
refrain

good Lord,
Brightness
falls

deliver us!

Autumn,
air;

But soon as once set is our little light, Then must we sleep one ever-during
1

from the

night.

From ROSSETER'S A Boofe


[1601].
St.
1

My

Sweetest

of Airs Lesbia,

Queens have died young and Dust hath closed Helen's eye. I am sick, I must die. Lord, have mercy on us!

fair;

Ib. Adieu! Farewell Earth's Bliss!

Never love unless you can


Bear with
all

the faults of man.


[c.

Never Love
There
is

1617],

st.

SIR

HENRY WOTTON

a garden in her face


roses

Where

and white
is

lilies

grow;

heavenly paradise

that place

Wherein
There
buy,

all

pleasant fruits do flow.

1568-1639 Love lodged in a woman's breast Is but a guest. A Woman's Heart [1651]

cherries

grow which none may


do
cry.
st.

Till "cherry-ripe" themselves

happy is he born and taught, That serveth not another's will; Whose armour is his honest thought,

How

Cherry-Ripe

2
[c.

1617],

And

The Character

Those

cherries fairly

do enclose

simple truth his utmost skill! of a Happy Life


[1614],
st.
i

Of orient pearl a double row,8 Which when her lovely laughter


shows,

Who God
More

They look
snow.

like

rosebuds

fill'd

with
st.

Ib.

And With

doth late and early pray, of his grace than gifts to send, entertains the harmless day
a well-chosen book or friend.
Ib.
st.

The summer hath his joys, And winter his delights; Though love and all his pleasures
but
toys,

are

Lord of himself, though not of lands; And having nothing, yet hath all. 1
Ib.
st.

They shorten tedious nights. Winter Nights [c. 1617],

You meaner
st.

beauties of the night,


light;

That poorly satisfy our eyes More by your number than your

THOMAS NASHE
1567-1601
Spring, the sweet spring, pleasant king;
2

You common

What
rise?

people of the skies, are you when the sun shall

is

the year's

On

His Mistress, the Queen of Bohemia,* $f. j


6:10,

JSee Catullus, p. ii4b, and note. "Cherry-ripe" was a familiar

iSee // Corinthians
street

p. 530,

and Ter-

cry

of

ence, p. ioga.
2

the time. See Herrick, p. gaoa. 3 See Herrick, p.

This was printed with music


East's

as early as 1624,

in

Sixth

Set

of

Books,

and

is

found

in

many

manuscripts.

3OO

WOTTON

DEKKER

He To

first

live

deceased; she for a little tried without him, liked it not, and

THOMAS HEYWOOD
c.

1570-1641
of

died.

Within the red-leaved table

Upon

the Death of Sir Albert

my

heart.

Morton's Wife [1651]

A Woman
I will

Hanging was the worst use a could be put to.

man
God!

Killed with Kindness [1607], act II, sc. 3


Ib.

The

walk on eggs.

IV, 6

Disparity Between Buckingham and Essex [1651]


is

To undo

An

ambassador

to lie abroad for the

an honest man sent commonwealth. 1 Wottonianae Reliquiae [1651]

God! that it were possible back yesthings done; to call


1

terday!

That Time could turn up

his

swift

The

scab of churches.2

itch of disputing will prove the

To

sandy glass, untell the days, and to redeem these


hours.
Ib.

A Panegyric to King Charles


SIR
What

Pack clouds away, and welcome day,

With

night

we banish sorrow.
i

JOHN DAVIES
1

Pack Clouds Away [1630], st


hold he loves

1569-1626 can we know? or what can we

me

best that

calls

me

Tom.
Hierarchie of the Blessed Angels

When

discern, error chokes the

windows of the mind? Nosce Teipsum [1599], st. 15


soul hath power to

Seven

cities

warred for

Homer

being
his
Ib.

dead,

know my
things,
is

know

Who

living

had no roof to shroud

all

head. 2

Yet
I

know I'm one


kings,
least

she blind and ignorant in all: of Nature's little

THOMAS DEKKER
1572-1632
This age thinks better of a gilded fool Than of a threadbare saint in wisdom's Old Fortunatus [1600] school.

Yet to the
thrall.
I

and

vilest things

am

Ib.
life's

st 44

know my
span;
8

a pain, and but a


is

Honest labor bears a lovely


sense

face.
I, sc. i

know my

mock'd in

ev'ry

Patient Grissell [1603], act

And

thing: to conclude,

know myself

The best of men


That
e'er

man,

wore earth about him, was a


meek, patient, humble, tran-

Which
*In a
that
this

is

a proud, and

yet a wretched
16.
st.

sufferer,

thing.
letter to Velserus [1612]

45
says

soft,

Wotton

quil spirit,
i See Shakespeare, p. *27a, a Seven cities strive for the

"merry definition of an ambassador ... I had chanced to set down at my friend's, Mr. Christopher Fleckmore, in his Album." 2 He directed that the stone over his grave be inscribed: Hie jacet hujus sententiae primus auctor: DISPUTANDI PRURITUS ECCLESIARUM SCABIES. Nomen alias quaere [Here lies the author of this
phrase: "The churches." Seek
itch for disputing is the sore of IZAAK his name elsewhere].

learned root of
Ithaca,
Pylos,

Homer:
Smyrna,
Chios,

Colophon,

Argos,

Athens.

Through

UNKNOWN (Greek Anthology, bk. VI, epigram 298) Seven wealthy towns contend for Homer dead, which the living Homer begged his
bread.

WALTON, Life
8

of

See Bacon, p.

Wotton [1651] sioa, and note.

THOMAS

SEWAJKD [1708-1790],

On Homer

301

DEKKER

JONSON
That old bald
cheater,

The

first

true

gentleman

that

ever
I

Time.
I, sc. i

breathed.

The Poetaster
pt.

[1601], act

The Honest Whore,

[1604] (in collaboration with THOMAS MIDDLETON), act I,


sc.

Farewell, thou child of

my

right hand,

and

joy!

My

sin

was too

much hope
First

of thee,

lov'd boy.

We are ne'er like angels


dies.

our passion Ib.pt. II [1630],!, 2


till

On My
1603];

Son

[written c.

in

Epigrams [1616]

Cast away care, he that loves sorrow Lengthens not a day, nor can buy to-

Rest in soft peace, and, ask'd, say here doth lie

morrow;

Money
it,

is

trash,

and he that

will

spend

Ben Jonson his best piece of poetry: For whose sake, henceforth, all his vows
be such, As what he much.
loves

Let him drink


it.

merrily, fortune will send

may

never like too


16.

The Sun's Darling


collaboration with

[1656]

(in

Of

all

JOHN FORD)

tyrant;

and of

wild beasts preserve me from a all tame, a flatterer.

Sejanus [1603], act

I
si-

BEN JONSONi
1572-1637

Calumnies are answered best with


lence.

As sure

as death.

Volpone [1606], act

II, sc. 2

Every

Man
he

in his

Humour
i

[1598], act II, sc.

Come my

Celia, let us prove,

As he brews, so
It

shall

drink.

16.

While we can, the sports of love; Time will not be ours forever,

must be done

like lightning. 16.

He
IV, 5

Spend not then

at length our good will sever. his gifts in vain;

Art hath an enemy called Ignorance. Every Man Out of His Humour
[1599], act
I,

Suns that set may rise again, But if once we lose this light, Tis with us perpetual night. 1
Song,

sc.

To

Celia [1607!

There

shall

be no love lost.

16. II, j

True happiness
Consists

Still to be neat, still to be drest, As you were going to a feast.

not

in

the

multitude

of

Epicene-, or,

Woman
sc. i

friends,

The Silent [1609], act I,

But

in the worth

and

choice.
III,

Cynthia's Revels [1600], act

Give

me

a look, give

me

a face,

sc.

Now

Queen and

huntress, chaste and


is

fair,

the sun

laid to sleep,

That makes simplicity a grace; Robes loosely flowing, hair as free, Such sweet neglect more taketh me

Seated in thy
State in

silver chair,

wonted manner keep:

Than They

all

the adulteries of art:

strike

mine

eyes,

but not

my
16.

Hesperus entreats thy light, Goddess, excellently bright.


SIR JOHN YOUNG, EpiBen JonsonI (Which was done at the charge of Jack Young, who, walking there when the grave was
1

heart. 2

The

dignity of truth

is

lost

with

much

rare

protesting. Catiline's Conspiracy

taph.

[1611], act III, sc. 2

covering, gave the fellow 18 pence to cut

it.

1 2

JOHN AUBREY [1626-1697], Brief

Lives)

See Catullus, p. 1 140, See Herrick, p. 3oa.

and note.

3O2

JONSON
Truth
is

the

trial

of itself

It

could not withered be.

And needs no other touch, And purer than the purest gold,
Refine
it

ne'er so

much.
Truth [161 5],
st.
i

But thou thereon didst only breathe, And sent'st it back to me; Since when it grows and smells, I

On

Preserving the sweetness of proportion and expressing itself beyond expression.

Not

swear, of itself,

but thee.
Forest.

The Not

To

Celia,

st.

The Masque

Reader, look,
of

Hymen

[1616]

at his picture,

but his book.

Underneath this stone doth lie As much beauty as could die;

the portrait of Shakespeare the First Folio prefixed to

On

Which in life did harbor give To more virtue than doth live.
Epitaph on Elizabeth, Lady Epigrams [1616]

Soul of the age!

The

applause, delight, the

wonder

of

Follow a shadow,

it still flies

you;

My

Seem

to

it fly it,

will pursue:

our stage! Shakespeare, thee by


lie

rise;

I will

not lodge

So court a mistress, she denies you; Let her alone, she will court you. The Forest [1616]. Follow a Shadow, st. i

Chaucer or Spenser, or bid Beaumont

little

Thou

further, to make thee a room; art a monument, without a

Whilst that
sold,

for

which
every

all

virtue

now

is

tomb,

And

art alive
live,

still,

while thy book doth

And

almost
gold.
1

vice

almighty

And we have
1

wits to read,

and

praise to

Ib. Epistle to Elizabeth,

give.

Countess of Rutland

To the Memory of Beloved, the Author, IVfc William Shake-

My

God
To

wisheth none should wreck on a

speare [1623]

strange shelf: him man's dearer than to himself.


16.

Marlowe's mighty

line.

Ib.

To

Sir

Robert Wroth

And though thou


less

hadst small Latin and


16-

Drink to

only with thine eyes, And I will pledge with mine; Or leave a kiss but in the cup And Til not look for wine. 2 The thirst that from the soul doth Doth ask a drink divine;

me

Greek.

Call forth thundering Aeschylus.

Ib.

He
rise

was not of an age but for

all

time. 2
Ib.

But might I of Jove's nectar sup, 1 would not change for thine.
Ib.
I

Who
st. i

casts to write a living line,

must
Ib.

sweat.

To

Celut,

sent thee late a rosy wreath, Not so much honoring thee


it

For a good poet's made,


born. 3

as

well

as

Ib. Ib.

As giving
irThe

hope that there


mighty, nay, almighty gold.
[1782-1785], ode
. .
.

Sweet Swan of Avon!


IV

flattering,

WOLCOT, To Kien Long


See Irving, p. 55<>b.
2
if
it

Those that merely


think,
a-See
3
3

talk

and never

And Drink to me with your eyes alone. and fill you will, take the cup to your lips PHILOwith kisses, and give it so to me.
[c. A.D.

STRATUS

181-250],

letter 24

William Basse, p. 3190. See Robert Whittinton, p. i7ga. See Florus, p. iogb.

303

JONSON
That
live in the

DONNE
Or
snorted

wild anarchy of drink. 1

we

in the seven sleepers'

[1640]. An Epistle, to One that asked to answering be sealed of the Tribe of Ben

Underwoods

den?

The Good Morrow, st i * And now good morrow to our waking


souls,

In small proportions
see,

we

just beauties

Which watch
fear;

not one another out of

And

in short measures life

may

perfect

be.
Ib.

For

love, all love of other sights controls,

To

the Immortal

Memory
Sir

of

Sir Lucius

Gary and

Henry

And makes one


where.

little

room, an every-

Morison
players have often mentioned it as an honor to Shakespeare that in his

The

Let sea-discoverers to new worlds have


gone,

writing

(whatsoever he penned)

he

never blotted out a line.

My

answer

hath been, thousand."

"Would he had
or,

blotted a

Let maps to other, worlds on worlds have shown, Let us possess one world, each hath
one, and
is

one.

16. st. 2

Timber;

Discoveries

Made

My
And

face in thine eye, thine in appears, true plain hearts


rest,

mine

and Matter [1640] I loved the man [Shakespeare] and do honor his memory, on this side idolatry, as

Upon Men

do in the faces

much

Where

can we find two better hemi-

as any.

Ib.

spheres

Greatness of name in the father ofttimes overwhelms the son; they stand too near one another. The shadow kills the growth: so much, that we see the
grandchild come more and oftener to be heir of the first. Ib.

Without sharp North, without declinIb. st. 3 ing West?


Go, and catch a falling star, Get with child a mandrake root, Tell me, where all past years are,

Or who
Teach

cleft

the Devil's foot.

Though
must be

the most be players, some


Ib.

me

to hear

mermaids

singing.

spectators.

Song,

st.

Talking and eloquence are not the same: to speak, and to speak well, are two things. A fool may talk, but a wise

And
Lives a

swear
true,

No where
woman
and
fair.

man speaks.

Ib.

Ib.

st.

Though

she were true,

when you met


letter,

JOHN DONNE2
1572-1631
I

her,

And

last, till

wonder by and I
till

my

troth,

what thou,
False,
i

you write your Yet she Will be ere I come, to two, or


Farewell

three.

Did,

we

lov'd?

were we not wean'd

Ib. st. 3

then? But suck'd on country pleasures, childtill

ishly?
1

See Dryden, p. j$8b. They never taste who always drink; They always talk who never think.

Love (p. Quotations through goya) are from Songs and Sonnets, composed c. 1590-1601, published posthumously. The Songs and Sonnets were written, by Donne before the turn of the century, according to Ben Jonson "ere he was twenty-five years old," but there is no evidence to show the exact
to

MATTHEW PRIOR
a

[1664-1721],

Upon

date
[1936]
a

of

their

composition.

JOHN HAYWARD,
Selected Prose

Passage in the Scaligerana See Izaak Walton, p. 3251), and Carew, p.

John Donne, Complete Poetry and


See T.
S. Eliot, p.

looia.

304

DONNE
have done one braver thing Than all the Worthies did; And yet a braver thence doth spring, Which is, to keep that hid. The Undertaking, st.
I

Must

die at last,

'tis

best,

To

use

my self in jest
feign'd deaths to die.

Thus by
i

Song,

st. i

But he who loveliness within Hath found, all outward loathes, For he who color loves, and skin,
Loves but their oldest clothes.
Ib.
st.

And

Yesternight the sun went hence, Ib. yet is here today.

st.

But think that we Are but turn'd aside

to sleep.
16.
st.

And dare love that, and say And forget the He and She.
Busy old
fool,

so too, Ib. st 5

When

died
as

As often

last, and dear, from thee I go.

die
st.

The Legacy,

unruly Sun,

Why dost thou thus,


Through windows, and through tains call on us?
cur-

Oh
All

do not

die, for I shall


so,

hate
i

women

when thou art gone. The Fever, st.


had
I loved thee, face or name. st.

Must
Love,

to

thy motions lovers'

seasons
st. i

run?
all

The Sun
alike,

Rising,

Twice
Before

or thrice
I

no season knows, nor


Tis
true,

knew thy
'tis

Air and Angels,


day;

clime,

Nor

hours, days, months, which are the Ib. rags of time.


all

She is all states, and Nothing else is.


For

O wilt thou therefore rise from me? Why should we rise, because 'tis light?
Did we lie down, because 'twas night? Love which in spite of darkness brought
us hether

what though

it

be?

princes, I, 16.

st.

God

me

sake hold your tongue, and let


love.

Should in despite of light keep us


gether.

to-

The Canonization,

st.

Break of Day,

st.

The Phoenix
By

riddle hath

more wit
All Kings, and all their favorites, All glory of honors, beauties, wits,

We

us, we two being one, are it. So to one neutral tiling both sexes fit, die and rise the same, and prove

The sun
Is elder

itself,

which makes times,

as

Mysterious by

this love.

Ib. st. 3

they pass,

As well a well-wrought urn becomes

by

a year,

When

thou and

now, than it was I first one another


to their destruction

The
I

greatest ashes, as half-acre tombs. Ib. st. 4

saw:
All other things,

am two fools, I know, For loving, and for saying so In whining poetry.
The
Triple Fool,
st. i

draw, Only our love hath no decay; This, no tomorrow hath, nor yesterday,

Who

Running,

it

never runs from us away,


first, last,

are a

little

be.

wise, the best fools Ib. st. 2

But

truly keeps his

everlasting
st. i

day.

The
Sweetest love, I do not go, For weariness of thee, Nor in hope the world can show

Anniversary,

A fitter love for me;


But since
that

Send home my long strayed eyes to me, Which (Oh) too long have dwelt on
thee.

The Message,

st.

35

DONNE
Tis the
year's midnight,

and

it is

the

day's.

A Nocturnal
St.

Our eye-beams twisted, and did thread Our eyes, upon one double string;
So to entergraft our hands,
as yet

Upon

St. Lucy's

Day, being the shortest day,


1
is sunk: hydroptic earth

The The

world's whole sap

the means to make us one, And pictures in our eyes to get Was all our propagation.
all

Was

general

balm

The
That
subtle

th'

Extasy,

I.

hath drunk, Whither, as to the bed's-feet,


shrunk,

knot,

which

makes
Ib. L
lies.

us

life

is

man.
Else a great Prince in prison

64
68

Dead and

enterr'd; yet all these

seem

to

Ib.

I.

laugh,

Compared with me, who am


taph.

their epiIb.

Love's mysteries in souls do grow, But yet the body is his book.
Ib.
I

For
In

every dead thing, love wrought new alchemy. For his art did express

I am whom

I 71

long to
ghost,

talk with

some old

lover's

quintessence even from nothingness, From dull privations, and lean empti-

Who
To

died before the god of love was Love's Deity, st. i born.

He
Of

ness ruin'd me,

and

am

absence, darkness, which are not.


live

re-begot death; things Ib. st. 2

rage, to lust, to write to, to

com-

mend,
All
is

the purlieu of the god of love.


Ib.
st.

Come

with me, and be

my

love,

And we will some new pleasures prove Of golden sands, and crystal brooks, With silken lines, and silver hooks. The Bdt* st. i
Dull sublunary lovers' love

Who
That

ever

comes

to shroud

me, do not

harm Nor question much


subtle

wreath

of

hair,

which

crowns

my arm;
must not
'tis

The

(Whose

soul

is

sense) cannot admit

mystery, the sign you touch,

Absence, because

it doth remove Those things which elemented it,

For

my

Viceroy to that,
being gone,

outward soul, which then to heaven


this to control,

Valediction Forbidding

Mourning, st. 4 Our two souls therefore which are one, 2 Though I must go, endure not yet A breach, but an expansion,
Like gold to airy thinness beat.
Ib. st.
If

Will leave

And

keep these limbs, her provinces,

from

dissolution.

The

Funeral,

st.

A
6

bracelet of bright hair

about the
Relic,
st. i

bone.

The

they be two, they are two so As stiff twin compasses are two, Thy soul the fixt foot, makes no show To move, but doth, if the other do.
Ib.
1

Take heed of loving me.

The
So,
so,

Prohibition,
last

st. i

break
sucks

off

this

lamenting

st.

kiss,

Included by Izaak Walton in The Compleat Angler [1653], ch. $, as "made by Dr. Donne, and made to shew the world that he could make soft verses, when he thought them fit and worth
his labor."

Which

two

souls,

and vapors
st.
i

both away.

The

Expiration,

See Marlowe, p. aiaa, 2 See Aristotle, p. gya.

and Ralegh,

p.

ig8b.

Ah
As well

cannot we

as cocks

and

lions

jocund be,

306

DONNE
After such pleasures? 1 Farewell to Love,

As
st.

souls
taste

unbodied, bodies unclothed

must be,

Love built on beauty, soon


dies.

as beauty,

To

whole

joys.

Elegy XIX, Elegy


II,

To His
to

Mistress
Z.

The Anagram, I 27
I

Going

Bed

33

Nature's lay
love.

idiot,

taught

thee to

Elegy VII, Nature's Lay Idiot, L i

And new philosophy calls all in doubt, The element of fire is quite put out; The sun is lost, and the earth, and no
man's wit

The Alphabet
Of flowers.
16. Z. 9 She, and comparisons are odious. 2 Elegy VIII, TAe Comparison,
I.

Can

well direct
it.

him where
confess

to look for

And

freely

men

that

this

world's spent, When in the planets,

and the

firma-

54

Sir,

more than
souls;

kisses,

letters

mingle

ment They seek


this

so

many new; then

see that

For, thus friends absent speak. Verse Letter to Sir

Henry Wotton, 1. 1
[1602]

Is crumbled out again to his atomies. Tis all in pieces, all coherence gone; All just supply, and all relation:

John Donne, Anne Donne, Un-done.


Letter to His

Prince, subject, Father, Son, are things


forgot.

Wife

No

spring,

nor summer beauty hath

An Anatomy
Z.

of the

such grace, As I have seen in one autumnal face. Elegy IX, The Autumnal, L i

First Anniversary of the

World. The Death of


[i

Mistress Elizabeth Drury

61 1] ,

205
pure,

The heavens
should
I

rejoice

in

motion,

why

Her

and eloquent blood


distinctly

Spoke in her cheeks, and so


wrought,

Abjure

my

so

much

lov'd variety.

Who
The

Elegy XVII, Variety, L i ever loves, if he do not propose


right true

That one might almost


thought.

say,

her body

end of

love, he's

one

that goes

To

sea for nothing but to


sick.

make him
I

The Progress of the Soul The Second Anniversary of the Death of Mistress Elizabeth Drury [1612], Z. 244

Elegy XVIII, Love's


Progress,
I.

am

a little

world

made cunningly
[written after

Of

elements, and an angelic sprite.

The Not

Sestos and Abydos of her breasts of two lovers, but two loves the
nests.
16.

HoZy Sonnets

1610],

V,

Z.

L 61
flesh

Those

set our hairs,

but -these our

upright.

Elegy XIX,

To

At the round earth's imagin'd corners, blow Your trumpets, angels, and arise, arise

Hi's Mistress

Going

to Bed,

I.

24
27
to

From death, you numberless infinities 16. VII, Z. i Of souls.


All

O my America! my new-found
Full nakedness!
thee,
1 See
2

land.
16.
Z.

whom

war,

dearth,

age,

agues,

All

joys

are

due

tyrannies,

Despair, law, chance, hath slain.


16.
If
Z.

Gogarty, p. 9453.

See Fortescue, p. 1713.

poisonous minerals, and

if

that tree,

307

DONNE

Whose

fruit threw death on else immortal us, If lecherous goats, if serpents envious Cannot be damn'd; alas; why should I be? Holy Sonnets IX, I i

do nothing upon myself, and yet


Devotions XII

am mine own executioner.


The flea, though he does all the harm he can.
kill

none, he
Ib.

Death be not proud, though some have


called thee

Mighty and dreadful,


so,

for thou art not

an island, entire of itself; 1 a piece of the continent, a every clod a be washed if part of the main;
is

No man
man

is

For those

whom

thou think'st thou

dost overthrow,

Die not, poor death, nor yet canst thou kill me. Ib.X,l.i

away by the sea, Europe is the less, as well as if a promontory were, as well as if a manor of thy friends or of thine

own

Thou

and desperate men.

art slave to fate, chance, kings, Ib. I. 9


past,

were; any man's death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind; and therefore never send to know for

whom

the bell

tolls;

it

tolls

for thee.
Ib.

XVII

One

short sleep
nally,

we wake

eter-

And

death shall be no more; death,

thou shalt

die.

Ib.

/.

13

What
Batter

if

this present

were the world's


16. XIII,
Z.

Now God comes to thee, not as in the dawning of the day, not as in the bud of the spring, but as the sun at noon to illustrate all shadows, as the sheaves in harvest, to fill all penuries,
all

last night?

occasions invite his mercies,

and

all

times are his seasons.


heart, three-person'd God; you As yet but knock, breathe, shine, and Ib. XIV, I i seek to mend.
for

my

Sermon
Poor intricated
soul!

III [1625]

Riddling, per-

plexed, labyrinthical soul!

Show me,

Sermon XLVIII [1628/9]

dear Christ,

Thy
Ib.

spouse, so

bright and clear.

And what

is

XVIII,

I.

Since

am coming

gling as death? winding sheet?

Who

so intricate, so entanever got out of a

Sermon LIV [1628]


is

Where,
I shall

to that holy room, with thy choir of saints forever-

What

gnashing

not a comfort,

more,

be made thy music; as I come tune the instrument here at the door, And what I must do then, think here
I

what gnawing of the worm is not a ticka marriage ling, what torment is not bed to this damnation, to be secluded eternally, eternally, eternally from the
sight of

before.

Hymn
St.

to

God My God,
[-written

in

My
I

God? Sermon

LXXVI

[after

1622]

Sickness
I

after

1610],

Whilst

my

physicians

by

their love are

throw myself down in my chamber, I call in and invite God and his angels thither, and when they are there,

and

grown
Cosmographers, and
lie

I their

map, who
Ib.
st.

I neglect God and his angels, for the noise of a fly, for the rattling of a coach, for the whining of a door.

Flat
I

on

this bed.

diligence as

observe the physician with the same he the disease.

Sermon LXXX, At the Funeral of Sir William Cokayne 11626]

When my mouth
1

shall

be

filled

with

Devotions [written 1623],

VI
308

See Bacon, p. 2o8b.

DONNE
and the worm shall feed, and feed upon me, when the ambitious man shall have no satisfaction if the
dust,

PEACHAM
'Mongst
all

these

stirs

of discontented

sweetly

strife,

poorest alive tread upon him, nor the poorest receive any contentment in being made equal to princes, for they shall be equal but in dust. Death's Duel (last sermon) *
[1630]

O, let me lead an academic To know much, and to think ing, know

life;

for noth-

Nothing to have, yet think we have enow. Discontent of Men with Their Condition
Moderation is the silken string running through the pearl chain of all virtues.

RICHARD BARNFIELD
1574-1627

The

waters were his winding sheet, the


sea

was made for his tomb; Yet for his fame the ocean sea, was not sufficient room. Epitaph on Hawkins [1595]

Christian Moderation, introduction

As

Death borders upon our birth, and our cradle stands in the grave. 1 2 Epistles. Decade III, epistle
There is many a rich stone laid up in the bowels of the earth, many a fair pearl laid up in the bosom of the sea, that never was seen, nor never shall
be. 2

it fell

upon a day

In the merry month of May, Sitting in a pleasant shade Which a grove of myrtles made. Poems: In Divers Humours
[1598],

Ode

King Pandion he

is

dead,
Ib.

All thy friends are lapp'd in lead.

Contemplations, bk. IV, The Veil of Moses

Every one that


Is

flatters

thee

JOHN
c.

MARSTON
Epitaph

no friend in

misery.

1575-0.1634

Words are easy, like the wind; Faithful friends are hard to find.
Every man will be thy friend Whilst thou hast wherewith to spend; But if store of crowns be scant,

3 Oblivioni sacrum.

HENRY PEACHAM
c.

No man will supply thy want. He that is thy friend indeed, He will help thee in thy need.
If

16.

Affect not as
Ib.

music and sweet poetry agree. Ib. To His Friend, Mr. R. L.

JOSEPH HALL, BISHOP OF NORWICH


1574-1656
So
little in his purse, so

ambition to have well-furnished libraries, yet keep their heads empty of knowledge; to desire to have many books, and never to use them, is like a child that will have a candle burning by him all the while he
is

1576-0. 1643 some do that bookish be stored with books and

sleeping.

The Compleat Gentleman


[ifea]
his
1 See

much upon

back.
Portrait of a
1

The Wisdom

Poor Gallant

They

of Solomon 5:13, p. gfa. the light give birth astride a grave,

Called by his Majesty's household the Doctor's Own Funeral Sermon. Preface to the first edition [1632]

gleams an instant, then it's night once more. SAMUEL BECKETT, Waiting for Godot [1958] a See Thomas Gray, p. 4400.
3

Sacred to oblivion.

309

BURTON

ROBERT BURTON
1577-1640
All

my

joys to this are folly,


1

Women wear the breeches ... in a word, the world turned upside downward.
Anatomy
of Melancholy. Democritus to the Reader

Naught so sweet as melancholy. 2 Anatomy of Melancholy [16211651].


I

The Author's

Abstract

would help
3
Ib.

others, out of a fellow-

Like Aesop's fox, tail, would have cut off theirs.


his

when he had
all

lost

his fellow foxes


Ib.
Ib.

feeling.

Democritus to the Reader

All poets are mad.

They

lard their lean books with the


16.

Every

man

hath a good and a bad

fat of others' works. 4

angel attending on

We
been
mer.
best.
I
.

said. 5
. .

can say nothing but what hath Our poets steal from HoOur story-dressers do as
last is

him in particular, all his life long. Ib. pt. I, sec. 2, member i, subsec. 2
scholars of old, may to melancholy men 7

much; he that comes

commonly
Ib.

That which Pythagoras said to his be forever applied

fabis obstinate,
2, subsec. i
art,

say with Didacus Stella, a dwarf standing on the shoulders of a giant 6 may see farther than a giant himself.
Ib.
It
is

eat

no beans.
Ib.

member

Cookery

is

become an

a noble

most

our style bewrays

true, stylus us. 7

virum

arguit, Ib.

science; cooks are gentlemen. Ib. subsec. 2

No

rule

is

so general,

which admits
Ib. subsec. 3
nobility. Ib. subsec. 6

Old

friends
for

on a sudden

become toys and

bitter

enemies
offenses. 8

not some exception.


Idleness
is

small

an appendix to

Ib.

Penny wise, pound

foolish.

Ib.

iSee Fletcher, p. There's not a string attuned to mirth But has its chord in melancholy. HOOD [1799-1845], Ode to Melancholy a Burton's Anatomy of Melancholy, he said, was the only book that ever took him out of bed two hours sooner than he wished to rise. SAMUEL JOHNSON; from BOSWELL, Life of Dr.

Why doth one man's yawning another yawn?


Ib.

make

member

3, subsec. 2

They do not

live

but linger.
Ib. subsec. 10

Johnson [1791]
If the reader has patience to go through his volumes, he will be more improved for literary conversation than by the perusal of any twenty other works with which I am acquainted.

is a perpetual rack, or [Desire] horsemill, according to Austin [St. Augustine], still going round as in a ring. Ib. subsec. 11

BYRON
3

sessed

A fellow-feeling
119, p. sjSb.

[1807],

in MOORE'S Life.

[The rich] are indeed rather pos1 by their money than possessors.
Ib. subsec. 12

makes one wondrous kind.

GARRICK, Prologue on Quitting the Stage [1776] *See Shakespeare, King Henry IV, pt. I, II,
iif

5
6

See Terence, p. loga. See Lucan, p. i34a, and Newton, p. 37 gb.

not that they are loath to lay a rope, they would be hanged forthwith, and sometimes die to
it

Were

out

money on

Le

style c'est

1'homme meme [The

style is

save charges.

Ib.
to live like a wretch

the man himself]. GEORGE- Louis LECLERC DE BUFFON, Discours sur Ic Style, on admission to the French Academy [1753] 8 See Pope, p. 4o4a.

A
and
1

mere madness,
die rich.

Ib.

See Bion, p. 1040.

310

BURTON
not here omit those two main and common dotages of human plagues kind, wine and women, which have infatuated and besotted myriads of peoI

may

by nature

all as one, all alike, us naked; let us wear theirs

if

you see and they


differ-

our clothes, ence?"

and what

is

the

ple;

they go commonly together. Anatomy of Melancholy, pt.


sec. 2,

Anatomy
I,

of Melancholy, pt. II,


sec. 2,

member

member

3, subsec. 13

Who
cheap,
it

All our geese are swans. 1


Ib. subsec.

cannot give good counsel? Tis costs them nothing.


16.

14

member

are proud in humility; proud in that they are not proud. 2 16.

They

Many

things happen between the


1
lip.

cup and the

16.

can make majors and every year, but not scholars.

We

officers

All places are distant from heaven 16. member 4 alike. 2

16. subsec. 15

The commonwealth
their

of

Venice in
inscription:

Hinc quam
patet.

The

calamus saevior ense worse than the sword. 3 pen 16. member 4, subsec. 4
sic
7

armory
is

have

this

that city which in time of 3 peace thinks of war."

"Happy

See one promontory (said Socrates of old), one mountain, one sea, one river,

16.

member 6

and see
his

all. 4

16. subsec. 7

Every man, as the saying is, can tame a shrew but he that hath her. 16.
Tobacco, divine, rare, superexcellent tobacco, which goes far beyond all the panaceas, potable gold, and philosopher's stones, a sovereign remedy to all

One was
hell;

never married, and that's another is, and that's his


16.

plague.
Aristotle said melancholy others are most witty.
16. sec. 3,

men
i,

of

all

member
the

subsec. 3

but as it is commonly diseases abused by most men, which take it as tinkers do ale, 'tis a plague, a mischief,
.
.

Seneca
pleased

thinks

gods

are

when they

see great

men

well con-

tending with adversity.


16. pt. II, sec. 2,

a violent purger of goods, lands, health, hellish, devilish and damned tobacco, the ruin and overthrow of body and
soul.
16. sec. 4,

member
subsec.

i,
i

member

2, subsec. 2

dom

Machiavel says virtue and riches settle on one man.


16.

sel-

"Let

me

not

live/' said Aretine's

An-

tonia, "if I
2

had not

rather hear thy dis-

member

course than see a play."


16. pt. Ill, sec. i,

As

he
all

said

in

Machiavel,

omnes
are
1

member
subsec.

i,
i

eodem
ceived
1

patre nati,

Adam's

sons, con-

and born

in sin, etc.

"We

Birds
gether.
4

of

feather

will

gather

to-

Every man thinks his own geese swans. DICKENS, The Cricket on the Hearth [1845], Chirp the Second See Matthew Arnold, p. 7153.
t

16. subsec. 2

lip.

3 8

See Coleridge, p. 526a. See Bulwer-Lytton, p. 6oib.

Pyrrhus was used to say that Cineas had taken more towns with his words than he with his arms. PLUTARCH [A.D. 46-120], Pyrrhus

bk. X f epigram 32. A very ancient proverb, sometimes attributed to Homer. Though men determine, the gods do dispose; and ofttimes many things fall out between the ROBERT GREENE, Perimcdes cup and the lip. the Blacksmith [1588]
2 3
*

There is many a slip 'twixt the cup and the PALLADAS [fl. AJ>. 400], Greek Anthology,

Thomas Browne, p. 3303. blade of grass is always a blade of grass, whether in one country or another. SAMUEL JOHNSON, in MRS. PIOZZI'S Anecdotes of Johnson
*

See Sir

See Gilbert, p. igaa, and note. See Vegetius, p. i46b, and note.

[1786]

See Homer, p. 66b, Birds of a feather flock together. WITHER, Abuses [1613], 72

GEORGE

11

BURTON
cord nor cable can so forcibly draw, or hold so fast, as love can do with a twined thread. 1

FLETCHER

No

THOMAS WARD
1577-1639

Where

to elect there

is

but one,
take
that or

Anatomy

of Melancholy, pt. Ill,

sec. 2,

member

Tis Hobson's choice


none. 1

i,

subsec. 2

enlarge or illustrate this power is to set a candle in the sun. 2 16.

To

England's Reformation [1630],


en.

and

effect of love

WILLIAM HARVEY
1578-1657
both to learn and to teach anatomy, not from books but from dissections; not from positions of philosophers but from the fabric of nature. De Motu Cordis et Sanguinis
I profess
*

[Quoting Seneca] Cornelia kept her in talk till her children came from
school,
jewels."

"and these/'

said she, "are


'

my
Ib.

Diogenes struck the father when the son swore. Ib. subsec. 5
a paradise for women and hell for horses; Italy a paradise for horses, hell for women, as the diverb

England

is

[1628]

JOHN FLETCHERS
1579-1625 Drink today, and drown all sorrow;

goes.

16. sec. 3,

member
is

i,

subsec. 2

For "ignorance
votion," as
all

the mother of deIb.

You

shall perhaps

not do't tomorrow.

the world knows.

The

fear of

some divine and supreme


in obedience. 4
16.

Rollo, Duke of Normandy [1639] (in collaboration with JONSON and others) , act II, sc. 2

powers keeps

men
is

And he
1

that will to bed

Falls with the leaf in October. 4

go sober
16.
of

One

religion

as true as another.
16.

Thomas

Steele

Hobson wrote in The

Spectator,

[1544-1631], no. 509 [Octo-

whom

ber

14, 1712]:

Be not

solitary,

be not

idle. 5

Last
1

Words
HOWELL,
rant and

Mr. Tobias Hobson, from whom we have the was a carrier the first in expression
.
.
.

One

hair of a

woman
of

can draw more than

hundred

pair

oxen.

JAMES

out hackney-horses. He lived in Cambridge, and observing that the scholars rid hard, his manner was to keep a large stable of horses, with boots, bridles, and whips.
this Island

who

let

Letters [1621], bk. II, 4

When
into

man came
stable,

She knows her man, and


swear,

when you

led

the

for an horse, he was where there was great

Can draw you

to her

with a single hair.

DRYDEN, Persius [1693], satire V, I. 346 See Pope, p. 4040. Like his that lights a candle to the sun. ANDREW FLETCHER [1655-1716], Letter to Sir
2

choice, but he obliged him to take the horse which stood next to the stable-door; so that every customer was alike well served according to his chance, and every horse ridden with the same justice. From whence it became a proverb, when what ought to be your election was forced
to say Hobson's Choice. Anatomical Disquisition on the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals, translated from the Latin by ROBERT WILLIS [1847]. 3 See also BEAUMONT AND FLETCHER, p. $i6a. *The following well-known catch, or glee, is

Walter Aston And hold their farthing candle to the sun. EDWARD YOUNG, Satire Vll [17*5-17*8], I. 56 And hold their glimmering tapers to the sun. GEORGE CRABBE, The Parish Register [1807], pt. If Introduction
See Algernon Sidney, p. 3622. See Florio, p. 20 ib. * The fear o' hell's a hangman's To haud the wretch in order.
3

upon you,
2

An

formed on

whip

this song: goes to bed, and goes to bed sober, Falls as the leaves do, and dies in October; But he who goes to bed, and goes to bed mel-

He who

ROBERT BURNS [1759-1796], Epistle to a Young Friend


5

low, Lives as he ought to do,


fellow.

and

dies

an honest

See Johnson, p.

312

FLETCHER
Three merry boys, and three merry
boys, And three merry boys are we. 1 As ever did sing in a hempen string

MIDDLETON

Go

to grass. The Little

French Lawyer [1647]


MASSINsc.

(in collaboration -with

GER)

act IV,

7
tools.

Under the

gallows tree.

RoKo, Duke of Normandy,


act III f sc. 3

There

is

no

jesting

with edge

Ib.

Let's meet,

and either do or

die. 1

woman,

perfect traction

woman! what

dis-

The

Was meant

to mankind when thou wast made a devill Monsieur Thomas [1639],


act III, sc.
i

Island Princess [1647], act II, sc. 4

Hence, all you vain delights, As short as are the nights

Wherein you spend your

Man

is

his

own

star,

and the soul that

can

There's naught in this But only melancholy; sweetest melancholy!

folly! life sweet

Render an honest and a

Commands
fate.

all

perfect man light, all influence, all


falls early,

Melancholy

[The Nice Valour,


1647]

Nothing

to

him

or too late.

Our Our

acts our angels are, or good or ill, fatal shadows that walk us still.

THOMAS MIDDLETON
1580-1627
Better the day, better the deed.3

The

Honest

collaboration with [1647] ( three other authors), epilogue

by Man's Fortune

Michaelmas Term [1607],


act III, sc. i

That

soul that can

Since the worst

comes to the worst.4


Ib. Ill,

Be honest

is

the only perfect man. 2


Ib.

Weep no
Sorrow

calls

more, nor sigh, nor groan, no time that's gone;

got over the Devil's back (that's by knavery), is spent under the 5 Ib. IV, i belly (that's by lechery)
is
.

What

Violets plucked, the sweetest rain

Makes not fresh nor grow again. 3 The Queen of Corinth

[1647]

See Burns, p. 4Q6a. This expression is a kind of common property, being the motto, we believe, of a Scottish family. SIR WALTER SCOTT [1771-1832], review of

(in collaboration with MASSINGER and a third author) , act III, sc. 2

THOMAS CAMPBELL'S where it appears (pt. us do or die!


2

Gertrude
Ill,
I.

of

Wyoming,
let

37):

Tomorrow

Of

all

the paths lead to a woman's

This

poem

is

frequently

likelihood attributed to
1645]-

and with some WILLIAM STRODE [160*p.

love
4 Pity's the straightest.

See

Robert
better

Burton,
the

gioa,

and

Milton,
deed.

of Malta [1647] (in collaboration with MASSINGER),

The Knight
I, sc. i

p. 334b.
3 The MATHEW

day,

the

worse

HENRY

[1662-1714],

Commentaries,

act
1

Three

merry

men be

we.

PEELE,

Old

Wives' Tale [1595] 3 See Pope, p. 4ogb. See The Friar of Orders Gray, p. io8sa. * THOMAS SOUTHERNE, Pity's akin to love.

Oroonoko

[1696], act 11, sc. i


love.

the day the better the deed. DICKENS, Edwin Drood [1870], ch. 10 * If the worst comes to the worst. Discovery of the Knights of the Poste [1597] 6 What is got over the Devil's back is spent under the belly. RABELAIS, Works, bk. V [155?], ch. ii

Genesis, III The better

For pity melts the mind to Alexander's Feast [1697], ' 9 6

DRYDEN,

what

EDWARD YOUNG, Pity swells the tide of love. Night Thoughts [1742-1745], Night III, I. 107

was in the right to insinuate that got over the Devil's back is spent under LE SAGE, Gil Bias [1715-1735], his belly. bk. 8, ch. 9
Isocrates
is

3*3

MIDDLETON
As true
as I live.

WEBSTER
Mingle, mingle, 1 mingle may.
mingle,

you

that
sc.

The Family

of Love [1608], act V, sc. 3


wits
16.

The Witch,

act

V,

Have you summoned your


woolgathering?
*

from

V, 5

MATTHEW ROYDON
c.

By my

faith the fool has feathered

his nest well. 2

You knew
Girl [1611], act
sc.
all
I,
j

The Roaring
That
sicken
disease of
avarice. 8

1580- 1622 who knew not Astrophil?

And

which

old

men
16. as
16.
I

(That I should live to say I knew, have not in possession still!)

Of him you know

Beat

all

your feathers as
stands.

flat

down

pancakes.

As the case

The Old Law

[1656], act II,


16.

sc. i

Things known permit me to renew; his merit such, cannot say, you hear, too much. The Phoenix Nest [^593]; An Ekgy, or Friend's Passion for His Astrophil (on the death of Sir
Philip Sidney)

On his last legs.

V,

As old Chaucer was wont to say, that broad famous English poet. More Dissemblers Besides

sweet attractive kind of grace, A full assurance given by looks, Continual comfort in a face,

Women [1657], act I, sc. 4


Tis a
4

stinger.

16. Ill, 2

The lineaments of Gospel books; trow that countenance cannot lie. Whose thoughts are legible in the eye.
I

Ib.

honest words have suffered corruption since Chaucer's days! No Wit, No Help, Like a

How many

Woman's
By many
Anything
a

[1657], act
accident.

II, sc. i

Was never eye, did see that face, Was never ear, did hear that tongue, Was never mind, did mind his grace,
That ever thought the travel long, But eyes, and ears, and ev'ry thought,

happy

16.

IV,

Were with

for a Quiet Life. Title of play [1662]

his sweet perfections caught. Ib.

This was a good week's labor. Anything for a Quiet Life, act V,
sc.

JOHN WEBSTER
1580-1625
not old wine wholesomest, old pipold wood burn toothsomest, pins old linen wash whitest? Old brightest, soldiers, sweethearts, are surest, and old
Is

There's no hate lost between us,

The Witch [mitten


Black
l

c. 1627], act IV, sc. 2

lovers are soundest. 2

spirits

and white, red

spirits

and

boration with sc. 2

Westward Hoe [1607], in collaDEKKER, act II,

understanding has forsook me, and is CERVANTES, Don Quixote, pt. [1605-1615], bk. IV, ch. 38 a We will feather oure nestes ere tyme may us A Merye Enterlude Entitled Respublica espie. [1553], 1/7, 6 3 So for a good old-gentlemanly vice I think I must take up with avarice.

My

gone a-woolgathering,

saw him

now

going the

way

of all
Ib.

flesh.*

Call for the robin redbreast

and the

wren,
1

These
sc.

lines
i.

He

'as

BYRON, Don Juan [1819-1824], canto i, st. nx6 had a stinger. FLETCHER, Wit With[1639], act IV, sc. i

act IV,

was, in
2
3

all

are introduced into Macbeth, According to Steevens, "the song probability, a traditional one."

out

Money

See Bacon, p. aoyb. See Samuel Butler, p.

314

WEBSTER
Since o'er shady groves they hover, with leaves and flowers do cover friendless bodies of unburied

MASSINGER

And weave but


The

nets to catch the wind. 1

And The

Devil's

Law Case

[1623],

song

men.

The White
But keep the wolf to men,
For with
again.

Devil [1612], act V,


sc.

SIR

THOMAS OVERBURY
1581-1613

far thence, that's foe

Give me, next good, an understanding

his nails he'll dig

them up
16.

wife,

By

nature wise, not learned


art.

Prosperity doth bewitch men, seeming


clear;

A Wife
all

much by
[1614]
his

He

disdains

things

above

But

seas do laugh, rocks are near.

show white, when Ib. V, 6

reach, and preferreth all countries before his own. 2

An

Affectate Traveller [1614]

Glories, like glowworms, afar off shine


bright,

BISHOP RICHARD
to near have neither heat

But look'd
nor

CORBET

light.
sc.

Duchess of Malfi [1623], act IV,


2

Farewell, rewards

1582-1635 and fairies,8


st.

Of what

Good
is't

fools

make such

vain keep-

housewives now may say. Farewell to the Fairies,

ing? Sin their conception, their birth, weeping:

Who of late for cleanliness,


Finds sixpence in her shoe?
Ib.

Their life, a general mist of error, Their death, a hideous storm of terror.
Ib.
I

Nor

too

much wealth nor

wit

come

to

thee,

death hath ten thousand several doors For men to take their exits. 1 Ib.

know

So much of either may undo thee. To His Son, Vincent Corbet

PHILIP MASSINGER
1583-1640

Heaven-gates are not so highly arch'd As princes' palaces; they that enter
there

Be
rise.

wise;
fall;

Soar not too high to


4

but stoop to
act
I, sc.

Must go upon

their knees.

Ib.

Duke

of

Milan [1623],
govern

Ferdinand: Cover her face; mine eyes dazzle; she died young. Bosola: I think not so; her infelicity Ib. Seem'd to have years too many.

He

that

would

others,

first

should be

Master of himself. 5

The Bondman
Is

[1624], actl,

sc. 3

Vain the ambition

Who
To
1

of kings

To be nobly born
now
a crime.

seek by trophies and dead things leave a living name behind,


to let out life.

The Roman Actor


1 Since

[1629], act

I,

Death hath a thousand doors

sc. i

MASSINGER,
sc.

Very

Woman

[1655],

act

V,

in a net I seek to hold the wind.

Death hath so many doors to let out life. FLETCHER AND MASSINGER, The Custom of the Country [1647], act H> 3C 3
-

WYATT, Sonnet, Whoso List to Hunt [c. 1557] 2 See Shakespeare, As You Like It IV, i, 35, 5oa; Canning, p. 5o6b; and W.S. Gilbert, p.
p. 768a.
3 *

The thousand doors SIR THOMAS BROWNE,


pt. I, sec.

that lead

to

death.
[1642],

Religio Medici

44

See Kipling, p. 8773. See Mather, p. s87a. See Rabelais, p. 181 a,

and note.

3*5

MASSINGER

TIRSO DE

MOLINA
is

Whose wealth Arithmetic cannot number.


The Roman
Grim
death. 1
to

There
I,

method

in
1

man's wicked-

ness
sc.

Actor, act

It

grows up by degrees.

16.

IV, 2

King and

No

King [1619], act V, sc. 4


gentle

A New Way

Pay Old Debts.


Title of Play [1632]

Upon my

buried body

lie lightly,

earth. 2

JACQUES DU LAURENS
I

The Maid's Tragedy


act

I, sc.

[1619], 2

1583-1650 do not attack fools, but

foolish-

The

devil take the hindmost!

ness.

Satires [1624]

Philaster [1620], act

Whistle, and

she'll

come

FRANCIS BEAUMONT^
1584-1616 things have Done at the Mermaid! that have been So nimble, and so full of As if that everyone from

to you.3

Wit Without Money


Calamity
is

[1639], act IV, sc. 4

What

we

seen

man's true touchstone. 4


in

heard words
subtle flame,

Four Plays
of

One. The Triumph Honour [1647], sc. i


that should not say

whence they
in a

Though
it.

say

it

came,

Had meant
jest,

to

put

his

whole wit
the rest

Wit
ably
c.

at Several Weapons (probin collaboration with


[c. sc. 2

And resolv'd to Of his dull life.

live a fool,

WILLIAM ROWLEY
1642]), act
II,

1585-

Letter to

Ben Jonson

[1640]

BEAUMONT AND
FLETCHERS
FRANCIS

TIRSO DE MOLINA [FRAY GABRIEL


TELLEZ]
1584-1648 honor I conquered him. Through For these peasants carry their honor in their hands so that they may constantly consult it; this same honor that once felt so much at home in the city but
his

BEAUMONT 1584-1616 JOHN FLETCHER 1579-1 6254


good a man has two irons
It is always

When

The
As cold
as

in the fire. Faithful Friends [c. 1608], act I, sc. 2

cucumbers. Cupid's Revenge [1615], act

I,

now

has taken refuge in a more rural

sc. i

setting.

EZ Burlador de
Kiss
till

Sevilla

the

cow comes home. Scornful Lady [1616],

(The
III,

act III,
sc.

Rogue
sc.
5

of

Seville)

act

i
i-

See Milton, p.

Beaumont and Fletcher below. 8 Of whose partnership JOHN AUBREY [16261697] said, "There was a wonderful consimility of fancy. They lived together not far from the playhouse, had one wench in the house between them, the same clothes and cloak, &c." *Also on p. 3isb.

* See also

2 *

See Juvenal, p. i^ga, and Racine, p. 3780. See Euripides, p. 8gb, and note. ROBERT Whistle, and I'll come to ye.
etc.

BURNS [1759-1796], Whistle,

*See Seneca, p. 1300. 5 Translated by ROBERT O'BRIEN in Spanish Drama [1969]. This is the original Don Juan
play.

SELDEN

HOBBES

JOHN SELDEN
1584-1654
is a roguish thing. For Law a measure, know what to trust to; Equity is according to the conscience of him that is Chancellor, and that is larger or narrower, so is as

They

that govern the

most make the

least noise.

Equity

Table Talk. Power


Syllables govern the world.

we have

16.

Never hand.

tell

your

resolution
16.

before-

Wisdom

Equity. Tis all one as if they should standard for the measure we call a "foot" a Chancellor's foot; what an uncertain measure would this be! One Chancellor has a long foot, another a short foot, a third an indifferent foot. 'Tis the same thing in the Chancellor's conscience.

make the

Wise men
times.

say nothing in dangerous 16.

Pleasure

is

nothing

else

but the
16.

inter-

mission of pain.
Preachers say,
do.

Pleasure

Do

as I say, not as I 16. Preaching

Table Talk [1689]. Equity

A
their

king

is

a thing

men have made

for

Humility
practice; to hear.

is

and

a virtue all preach, none yet everybody is content 16. Humility


is

sakes, for quietness' sake. Just is as in a family one appointed to

own

man

buy the meat.

16.

Of

a King

'Tis not the drinking that blamed, but the excess.

to

be
16.

JOHN FORD
1586-1639

Commonly we say a judgment falls upon a man for something in him we


cannot abide.

Judgments Ignorance of the law excuses no man; not that all men know the law, but because 'tis an excuse every man will plead, and no man can tell how to refute him. 16. Law

16.

Diamond cut diamond. The Lover's Melancholy


act
'Tis Pity She's a

[1629],
I, sc. i

Whore.
Title of Play [1633]

No man

is

the wiser for his learning.


16.

THOMAS RAINBOROUGH
The
hath a

Learning
a 16.

Wit and wisdom


man.

are

born with

1648 that he poorest


life

d.

is

in

England

Few men make themselves masters of the things they write or speak. 16.
Take
the
air

to live as the greatest he. In the Army debates at Putney

[October 29, 1647]

a straw
is.

and throw
see

it

up

into

you may
is

by that which
16.

THOMAS HOBBES
1588-1679

way the wind


Philosophy
tion.

Libels
discre-

nothing
1%.

but

The

condition of

man ...

is

a con-

Philosophy

dition of war of everyone against everyone.

Marriage

is

a desperate thing.
16. Marriage

Leviathan [1651], pt

I, eft.

Thou

little

thinkest

what a
16.

little

1 foolery governs the world.

men's counters, they do but reckon with them, but they are
are wise

Words

the

Pope
wisdom

Behold,

my
is

son,

with

how

little

money of fools. The privilege of


living creature

16.

absurdity; to
is

which

the

world

governed.

AXEL

OXENSTIERN

no

subject but

man
16.

[1583-1654]

only.

317

HOBBES
Sudden glory is the passion which maketh those grimaces called laughter.
Leviathan, pt.
I,

BRADFORD

ch. 6

The
over
all

secret thoughts of a

man

run

things, holy, profane, clean, ob-

scene, grave, or blame.

and

light,

without shame
Ib. 8

Or make pale my cheeks with care 'Cause another's rosy are? Be she fairer than the day, Or the flow'ry meads in May, If she be not so to me, What care I how fair she be? Fair Virtue [1622]. Sonnet 4, $t.
I

[In a state of nature]


letters;
all,

No
is

arts;

no

no

society;

and which

worst of

continual fear and danger of violent death; and the life of man, solitary,
poor, nasty, brutish,

she love me, this believe, will die ere she shall grieve; when I woo-, If she slight
If

me

and

short.

can scorn and let her go; For if she be not for me,

16. 13

What
'Twas
I

care I for

whom

she be?
16. st.

The Papacy
sitting

is

not other than the

Ghost of tiie deceased Roman Empire, crowned upon the grave thereof. Ib. pt. IV, ch. 47

The

that beat the bush, bird to others flew.

A Love
Though

Sonnet [1622],

st.

11

The
ceeds

of ancient authors pronot from the reverence of the

praise

On

dead, but from the competition and mutual envy of the living.
16.

I am young, I scorn to flit the wings of borrowed wit. The Shepherd's Hunting [1622]

Review and Conclusion


as

HONORAT DE BUEIL,
MARQUIS DE RACAN
1589-1650
Nothing
in the world lasts

Such truth
profit

opposeth no man's
is

nor pleasure

to

all

men

wel16.

come.
I

am

about to take

my

last voyage, a

great leap in the dark.

Last -words

JOHN WINTHROP
1588-1649 For we must consider that we
be a
1 upon a hill. The are so that us, people upon

Coming of Spring The good effect of Fortune may be short-lived. To build on it is to build on
sand.2

Save eternal change. 1 Odes. The

Poesies Diverses

shall

city

eyes of all
if

WILLIAM BRADFORD
1590-1657
3 They knew they were pilgrims. Of Plymouth Plantation [1620-

we

shall

deal falsely with our

God

in this
so cause

work

we have undertaken, and

Him

to withdraw His present help from us, we shall be made a story and a byword

1647], ch. 7
will of

through the world.

of Christian Charity [1630], a sermon delivered on board the Arbella

Model

So they committed themselves to the God and resolved to proceed.


16.

Being thus arrived in a good harbor, and brought safe to land, they fell upon
Rien au monde ne dure Qu'un 6ternel changement. See Heraclitus, p. 77b, and note. 2 Le bien de la fortune est un bien pe"rissable: quand on batit sur elle, on batit sur le sable. 8 It was owing to this passage, first printed in 1669, that the Mayflower's company came eventually to be called the Pilgrim Fathers.
1

GEORGE WITHER
1588-1667
Shall

wasting in despair Die because a woman's fair?


I
1

See

Matthew

5:14, p. 4oa.

BRADFORD
their

HERRICK
Betwixt this day and that, by fate be
shin,

knees and blessed the

God

of

Heaven who had brought them over the vast and furious ocean, and delivered them from all the perils and miseries thereof, again to set their feet on the firm and stable earth, their proper element.

For

whom
again.

your curtains
1

may be drawn
Shakespeare [c. 1616]

On Mr. Wm.

Of Plymouth Plantation, ch. 9 Our fathers were Englishmen which came over this great ocean, and were
ready to perish in this wilderness.
16.

WILLIAM BROWNE
1591-1643
Underneath
Sidney's
this sable hearse

Lies the subject of all verse:


sister,

The
trious

loss of

... honest and

indus-

men's

lives

any

price.
it

cannot be valued at 16. 12

Death,

ere.

Pembroke's mother. thou hast slain another

Fair and fearn'd

Time

shall

But

pleased
daily,

God

to visit us then

and good as she, throw a dart at thee. Epitaph on the Countess of

with death

so general a disease that the living were scarce able 16. to bury the dead.

and with

Pembroke [1621]
There
is

no season such

delight can

bring,

Cold comfort to
lies. 1

fill

their

hungry

bel-

As summer, autumn, winter, and the


spring.

16. 13

Variety

Behold, now, another providence of God. A ship comes into the harbor.
16.

ROBERT HERRICK
1591-1674
I

Thus out

of small beginnings greater

things have been produced by His hand that made all things of nothing,2 and gives being to all things that are; and,

sing of brooks, of blossoms, birds,

and

bowers:

Of
I

April,
ers.

May, of June, and

July flow-

one small candle may light a thousand, so the light here kindled hath shone unto many, yea in some sort to
as

sing

of

Maypoles, Hock-carts, waswakes,

sails,

our whole nation.8

16. 21

Of

bridegrooms, brides, and of their


bridal cakes.

WILLIAM BASSE
died
c.

Hesperides [1648]. Argument of

His Book

1653
lie

What
more

is

a kiss?

Renowned

Why

this, as

some

ap-

Spenser,

a thought

prove:

To

nigh learned Chaucer; and rare Beau-

The
Bid

sure,

sweet cement, glue, and lime


Ib.

of love.

Kiss

mont,
little

lie

nearer Spenser; to

make room

me

to live,

and

I will live

For Shakespeare in your three-fold fourfold tomb. To lodge all four in one bed make a
shift

Thy Protestant to be, Or bid me love, and I will

give

A loving heart to
Cherry

thee.
16.

To Anthea

Until Doomsday; for hardly will a


1

fift,

I cry, ripe, ripe, ripe,

See Shakespeare, pp. a$7b and sg6b. 3 See Dryden, p. gSya. 8 See Matthew 5:15, p. 4oa, and Shakespeare, Merchant of Venice V, if 90, p. 235!).

Full and fair ones; come and buy! If so be you ask me where
1

See

Ben Jonson,

p. 30313.

319

HERRICK

They do grow,

answer, there,
lips

Let's kiss afresh, as

when we

first

be-

Where my Julia's

do

smile;
*

gun.
Hesperides.

There's the land, or cherry-isle. Hesperides. Cherry Ripe


It is the
fight.

To Anthea:

Aft,

My
And

Anthea!

end that crowns


2

us,

not the

Gather ye rosebuds while ye may,

Ifc.

The End

Some

asked

how
to

pearls did grow, and

where?

Old Time is still a-flying, this same flower that smiles today Tomorrow will be dying. 1
Ib.

Then spoke I To part her


there

my

To

girl

lips,

and showed them

the Virgins to Much of


to see

Make
Time

The

3 quarelets of pearl. Ib. The Rock of Rubies,

and the Quarrie of Pearls

Fair daffodils, You haste away so soon. Ib.

we weep

To

Daffodils

Her

sweet disorder in the dress Kindles in clothes a wantonness. Ib. Delight in Disorder
deserving note, In the tempestuous petticoat,
careless shoestring, in

A
As
if

pretty feet, like snails, 2 little and


out,

did creep

then,

they played at bo-peep,


in agairi.

Did soon draw


Ib.

A winning wave,
A
I

To

Mistress Susanna Southwell

Her
tie

eyes the

glowworm lend

thee,

whose

see a wild civility,

The shooting stars attend And the elves also,

thee;

Do more
Is

bewitch

me

than when

art

Whose little
16.
Ib.

eyes

glow
befriend thee. Piece to Julia

too precise in every part. 4

Like the sparks of

fire,

You

The Night

say to me-wards -your affection's


little,

strong; Pray love me

so

long. Ib. Love

you

love

me

shift, each thing his turn does hold; New things succeed, as former things

Thus times do

Me Little, Love Me Long


'twixt the

Ib.

grow old. Ceremonies


Ib.

for

Candlemas Eve
mad.
for

Night makes no difference


Priest

Joan as

and Clerk; my Lady is as good


Ib.

Made

us nobly wild, not

No

the Difference t th Dark


i'
y

dark. 6

Ode

Ben Jonson
the
frolic

Outdid the meat,


wine.

outdid

16.

Give

me

kiss,

and to that

kiss

Then

add a hundred more: thousand to that hundred: so kiss


on,
7

score; to that twenty,

Attempt the end, and never stand


doubt;

to

Nothing's so hard but search will find it out. Ib. Seek and Find

To make

Get up, sweet

Slug-a-bed,

and

see

that thousand up a million. Treble that million, and when that is

The dew

bespangling herb and tree. Ib. Corinna's Going a-Maying


sin,

done,
See Campion, p. gooa. a See Shakespeare, Troilus and v, 223, p. sGgb, and note. See Anonymous, p. 150!). 3 See Campion, p. $ooa. * See Jonson, p. 30b. 5 See Anonymous, p. 10840. 6 See Plutarch, p. 1370. 7 See Catullus, p. n4b.
'

Tis
Cressida

IV,

fable, song, or fleeting shade, All love, all liking, all delight

Nay, profanation to keep in. So when or you or I are made

Ib.

^See Wisdom of Solomon, p. j6b; Horace, p. i2ia; Spenser, p. aooa; and Ronsard, p. i88a. 2 See Suckling, p. 35ob.

320

HERRICK
Lies

QUARLES

drowned with us

in endless night. 1

My heart keeps
Stay for

empty

in thy tomb.

Hesperides. Corinna's Going

me there;

I will

not

fail

a-Maying

To meet
I

thee in that hollow vale.

Whenas

in silks

my Julia

goes,

The Exequy
sweetly

Then, then
flows

(methinks)

how

am content to

live

That
Here

Divided, with but half a heart.


16.

Ib.

liquefaction of her clothes.

Upon
I

Julia's

Clothes

a little child

stand

Heaving up my either hand. Cold as paddocks though they be, Here I lift them up to Thee, For a benison to fall On our meat, and on us all. Noble Numbers [1648]. A Child's Grace

FRANCIS QUARLES
1592-1644 Death aims with fouler spite At fairer marks. 1
Divine Fancies [1632]

We
We
Be

spend our midday sweat, our midtire

JULIUS WILHELM ZINCGREF


1591-1635

night oil; the night in thought, the day


in toil.

Emblems

[1635], bk. II, no. 2

One who
ble,
it.

longs for death


is

is

miserafears

wisely worldly,

be not worldly

wise.
16.

but more miserable

he who

Apophthegmata [1628], bk. II Laws and police regulations can be compared to a spider's web that lets the big mosquitoes through and catches the
small ones. 2
Ib.

This house

is

to

be

let for life or years;

Her

rent
tears.

is

sorrow,

and her income


bills

Cupid,

't

has long stood void; her


let,

make known,
She must be dearly
or let alone.
Ib. 10,

HENRY KING, BISHOP OF CHICHESTER


1592-1669

Epigram

The

slender debt to Nature's quickly


2

Thou
The
library

paid,

art the book,


I

Discharged,
[1657]

perchance,

with

whereon

look.

ease than

made.

greater 16. 13

TheExequy

Then we

shall rise

And

The The

view ourselves with clearer eyes In that calm region where no night Can hide us from each other's sight.
Ib.
It
is

road to resolution lies by doubt: next way home's the farthest way about.8
t

16.

IV,

2,

Epigram
die.

the lot of

man but

once to

Sleep on, my Love, in thy cold bed, Never to be disquieted!

16.

V, 7

My

last good-night!

Thou

wilt not

wake,
Till I thy fate shall overtake; Till age, or grief, or sickness,

must

My soul, sit them a patient looker-on; Judge not the play before the play is done: Her plot hath many changes; every day
1 See Edward Young, p. *'To die is a debt we must

Marry
It so
1
fl

my body to that dust


loves,

much

and

fill

the

room

all

of

us

dis-

charge.

EURIPIDES,
longest

Alcestis,

I.

418

See Catullus, p. i i4b, and note. See Solon, p. 68b, and Swift, p. jSSb.

The

home.

way round is the shortest way BOHN, Foreign Proverbs, Italian

3 21

QUAKLES
Speaks a new scene; the last act crowns the play. 1 Epigram. Respice Finem

HERBERT
Drink not the third glass, 1 which them canst not tame When once it is within thee. The Temple. The Church
Porch,
st.

And

what's
grimage,

life?

weary
fill

pil-

Whose
With
Let
all

glory in one day doth

the
de-

Dare to be
lie:

true:

nothing can need a


it

stage

childhood,

manhood, and

fault,

which needs
2

crepit age.

What

Is Life?

thereby.

most, grows two Ib. st. 13


Ib. st.

thy joys be as the month of thy days be


as a

By

all

means use sometimes to be


25
in debt: take thine

May,

alone.

And
Be

all

Let sorrow,

sickness,

marriage day: and a troubled

By no means run

mind
stranger to thee.
is

own

measure.
live

To a

Bride

Who

cannot

on twenty pound
Ib.
st.

year,

No man

Who

lives

born unto himself alone; 2 unto himself, he lives to


i,

Cannot on

forty.

30

none.
Esther, sec.

Meditation

Wit's an unruly engine, wildly striking Sometimes a friend, sometimes the engineer.
Ib.
st.

41

The way

to bliss lies not

on beds of

Be

useful where thou lives t.


Ib. st 55

down,

And he

that has no cross deserves no


Ib. sec. 9, Meditation 9

crown.8

Man

is
is

God's image; but a poor

man
re-

THOMAS RAVENSCROFT
c.

Christ's

stamp to boot: both images


Ib.
st.

1592-1635
jolly

gard.

64

And who

Nose, nose, nose, nose! gave thee this


ginger,
cloves,

Was
red nose?

ever grief like mine?


Ib.

The Church. The

Sacrifice,

Nutmegs and

cinnamon and
For
thirty
vise,
3

refrain

And

they gave me this jolly red nose. Deuteromelia [1609]. Song no. j*

pence he did

my

death deoint-

Who
Man
I

at three
prize.

hundred did the


4

ment

Ib. st.

GEORGE HERBERT
1593-1633

stole the fruit,

but

must climb
Ib.
st.

the tree.
a sermon
I

51

verse

may
5

find

him who
[1633].

flies.

The Temple
1

The Church
Porch,
st. i

got me flowers to strew Thy way, got me boughs off many a tree:

Who

will not read a sermon.

See Herrick, p. gaoa, and Shakespeare, Troilus and Cressida IV, v, 223 1 p. 2690, and
note.
2

WINTHROP MACKWORTH PRAED [18021839], The Chant of the Bratenhead,


st.

See

Romans

14:8,

p.

510,

and Donne,

p.

William Penn, p. s8ob. Quoted by Beaumont and Fletcher, The Knight of the Burning Pestle [1613], act I, sc. 3. Ravenscroft's Deuteromelia was a supplement to his Pammelia, which was the earliest collection of rounds, catches, and canons printed in
*

joSb. * See

See Victor Hugo, p. 5gga. 2 And he that does one fault at first, And lies to hide it, makes it two. ISAAC WATTS [1674-1748], Song 75 8 See King John and the Abbott of Canterbury, p. io88a. 4 Then saith one of his disciples, Judas Iscariot, Simon's son, which should betray him, Why was not this ointment sold for three hundred John 12:4 pence, and given to the poor?

England.
8

That many people read a song

322

HERBERT
But Thou wast up by break
of day, sweets along with Easter,
st.

And

brought'st

Thy

Thee.

Before my tears did drown it; Is the year only lost to me? Have I no bays to crown it?

The Temple.

The Temple. The


head

Collar

Who

and false says that fictions only hair Become a verse? Is there in truth no
beauty?
1

Call in thy death's

there: tie

thy

fears.

Ib. Jordan, st.

But

as I raved

and grew more

fierce

and

Sweet day, so

The

cool, so calm, so bright, bridal of the earth and sky.


Ib. Virtue, st. i

wild

At every word,
Methought
I

heard one
I

calling, Child!

And

replied,

Sweet spring,
roses,

full

of sweet days

and

My

Lord.
Ib.

A box where sweets


Only
a sweet

compacted
soul,

lie.

He would
st.

adore

my

gifts

instead of

Ib.

me,

and virtuous

And

Like season'd timber, never

gives.

rest in Nature, not the Nature: So both should losers be.

God

of

Ib.

st.

Ib.

The

Pulley,

st.

Who

goes to bed and does not pray, Maketh two nights to every day. Ib. Charms and Knots, st. 4

Let him be rich and weary, that at


least,

If

Nothing wears clothes, but Man; nothing doth need But he to wear them. Ib. Providence, st. 28

goodness lead

him
to

not, yet weariness


16. st.

May toss him

my breast.
4

Most

the things move th' under-jaw, crocodile not.2

As

if

Most
I

things sleep lying, th' elephant 16- st. 35 leans or stands. 3

Grief melts away Like snow in May, there were no such cold thing. Ib. The Flower, st.

Who

would have thought

my

shrivel'd

struck

the
I will

board,

and

cried,

No

heart

more:

Could have recovered greenness?


abroad. ever sigh and pine?
life are free; free as

Ib. st. 2

What?

shall I

My

lines

and

the

After so
I

road,

And now in age I bud many deaths I


relish versing: It cannot be

again,
live

and

write;
rain,

Loose

as the wind, as large as store. Shall I be still in suit?


I

once more smell the dew and

And

O my

only light,

Have

To

let

no harvest but a thorn me blood, and not restore


I

That

am he
fell all

What

have

with cordial fruit? Sure there was wine


lost
it;

On whom
The

thy tempests

night.

16 .st. 6
their harbingers are come. See, see

Before my sighs did dry corn


1

there was

mark;

See Keats, p. 585!). 2 The crocodile does not move the lower jaw, but is the only animal that brings down its

White

is

their

color,

and behold

my
st. i

head.
Ib.

HERODOTUS [484under one. 424 B.C.], Customs of the Egyptians a Leans the huge elephant. JAMES THOMSON, The Seasons, Summer [1727], I- 7*5
upper jaw
to the

The

Forerunners,

Teach me,
In
all

my God and

King,

things tibee to see.

323

HERBERT

And what I do in any To do it as for thee.

thing,
Elixir,
St.

Hell

is

full

of good meanings

and

wishings.

The Temple. The

Jacula Prudentum, 170

A servant with this clause


Who sweeps a room, as for thy laws,
Makes
that and th' action fine.
16. st.

Makes drudgery

divine:

Where the drink goes in, there the Ib. wit goes out. 187

Whose house is of glass, must not 16. 196 throw stones at another.
5

Love bade me welcome: yet drew back, Guilty of dust and sin. But quick-ey'd Love, observing
slack

my

soul

By suppers more have been killed 16. 272 than Galen ever cured.

The

lion

is

not so

fierce as

they paint
16.

me grow

him. 2

289

From my first entrance in, Drew nearer to me, svveetly


ing,
If I lack'd

question-

not for every grief to the physician, nor for every quarrel to the lawyer, nor for every thirst to the pot.
16.

Go

290

anything.
Ib. Love,
st. i

The
Love, and
Ib.

best mirror

is

an old

friend.
16.

296

You must
So
I

sit

down,

says

taste

my meat:
did
sit

When
still;

you are an
are a

anvil,

hold you
strike

and

eat.

st.

when you
fill.

hammer,

Religion stands on tiptoe in our land, Ready to pass to the American strand. The Church Militant [1633], I 235

your

16.
lies

338

He
with

that

fleas.

with the dogs, riseth 16. 343

Love, and a cough, cannot be hid. Jacula Prudentum [1651], 49


111
is

ware

is

half sold.

never cheap. Pleasing ware 16. 61

He that is not handsome at twenty, nor strong at thirty, nor rich at forty, nor wise at fifty, will never be handsome, strong,
rich, or wise.

16.

349
390

When
offers

dog

is

him

drink.

drowning, everyone 16. 77

The buyer
seller

needs a hundred eyes, the


16.

not one. 4
house,

Deceive not thy physician, confessor, nor lawyer. Ib. 105

My

my

art small,

thou art to

house, though thou me the Escurial.


16.

Who
sion.

would do

ill

ne'er wants occaIb.

413 453
lost,

116

Trust not one night's

ice.

16.

A snow year, a
burns.

rich year.
fire,

Well may he smell

125 whose gown


Ib.

Ib.

For want of a
1

nail the

shoe

is

138

Love your neighbor,

yet

down your hedge. 1


daughter

pull not Ib. 141


will;

paved with good intentions. SAMUEL JOHNSON [1775]; from BOSWELL, Life of Dr. Johnson [1791], vol. I, p. $55 [Everyman
Sir,

Hell

is

ed.]
2 The lion is THOMAS FULLER

Marry your son when you when you can.

your

not so fierce as painted. [1608-1661], Expecting Prefer-

ment
3

16. 149

The

mill cannot grind with the water


16. 253

ST.
[A.D.

Stand like an anvil when it is beaten upon. IGNATIUS THEOPHORUS, Bishop of Antioch
104]

that's past.

Good words
cost
1

are worth

little.

much, and Ib. 155


4

When you When you

are the anvil, bear

are the

hammer, strike. EDWIN MARKHAM [1852-1940],


beware].

See Robert Frost, p. ga6a.

Caveat emptor [Buyer,

Preparedness Proverb

324

HERBERT
for want of a shoe the horse want of a horse the rider is
is lost,

WALTON
The
eye
is

for

lost. 1

bigger than the belly. 1018 Jacula Prudentum,

Jacuh Prudentum, 499 Pension never enriched young man.


Ib.

His bark

is

worse than his

bite.

16.

1090

515
523

One enemy

is

too much. 2

Ib.

Thursday come, and the week is Ib. 587 gone.

There is an hour wherein a man might be happy all his life, could he 16. 1143 find it.

Woe
book.

Time

is

the rider that breaks youth.


16.

be to him that reads but one 16. 1146

615

Show me
thief.

liar,

and

111

show thee a
16.

IZAAK WALTO'N
1593-1683 But God, who is able to prevail, wrestled with him, as the Angel did with Jacob, and marked him; marked him for his own. 1
Life of
I

652

One

father

is

schoolmasters.

more than a hundred Ib. 686

Reason
bridle.

lies

between the spur and the 16.711


keeps

Donne

[1640]

One sword
sheath.

another

in
16.

the

have laid aside business, and gone

725

a-fishing.

God's mill grinds slow, but

sure.3

The Compleat Angler [1653747 787


1655]. Epistle to

16.

the

Reader

He

that lends, gives.


are

16.

Angling may be said to be so like the mathematics that it can never be fully
learnt.

Words
Poverty

women, deeds
no
sin.

are

men. 4
842

16.
artist,

16.
is

16.

844
880

man

As no man is born an is born an angler.

so

no
16.

None knows
burthen.

the weight of another's


16.

I shall stay him no longer than to wish him a rainy evening to read this

hour's sleep before midnight is 16. 882 worth three after.

One

following discourse; and that if he be an honest angler, the east wind may

never blow

when he

goes a-fishing.
16.

He

hath no

leisure

who

useth

it

not.

16.

897
the

am,

Sir,

Half the world knows not


other half
Life
is

how
16.

a brother of the Angle. 16. pt. I, ch.

lives. 5

907
be
1

Doubt not but angling


so pleasant that it will
like virtue, a
p. 44ia.

will prove to

half spent before

we know
16.

what

it is.
is

reward to

itself.2

prove

to be,

917

See Genesis 32:24, p. yb,

and Thomas Gray,

Every mile
1
2

two in winter.
16.

949

See Benjamin Franklin, p. 422a. See Ali Ibn-abu-Taleb, p. i48b. See Euripides, p. 8sa, and von See Samuel Johnson, p. 427b. maschii parole femine

Logau, p.

329*.
*

2 sibimet pulcherrima Ipsa quidem virtus merces [Virtue herself is her own fairest reward]. SILIUS ITALICUS [A.D. c. 25-99], Punica, bk. XIII, L 663 Virtue was sufficient of herself for happiness. DIOGENES LAERTIUS [c. A.D. 200], Plato XL1I That virtue is her own reward, is but a cold

Fatti

[Deeds' are
State motto

principle.

SIR

THOMAS BROWNE,
47

Religio Medici

masculine, words are feminine].


of

[164*], pt. I, sec.

Maryland
6

See Rabelais, p. i8ia.

PRIOR [1664-1721], Virtue is its own reward. Imitations of Horace, bk. Ill, ode a

3 5

WALTON
Sir

CAREW
but doubtless God never did"; and so, if I might be judge, God never did make a more calm, quiet, innocent recreation than angling.

Henry Wotton

was a most

dear lover, and a frequent practicer of the art of angling; of which he would
say, "it

was an employment for his idle which was then not idly spent ... a rest to his mind, a cheerer of his
time,

The Compleat
.

Angler, pt.
I,

ch. 5

a diverter of sadness, a calmer of spirits, unquiet thoughts, a moderator of passions, a procurer of contentedness;

and

begat habits of peace and patience in those that professed and practhat
it

Put your Thus use your frog. hook through his mouth, and out at his and then with a fine needle gills; and silk sew the upper part of his leg,
. .
. .

ticed it."

The Compleat

Angler, pt.
I,

ch. i

You

will find angling to

be

like the

with only one stitch, to the arming-wire of your hook; or tie the frog's leg, above the upper joint, to the armed-wire; and in so doing use him as though you 16. 8 loved him. 1

virtue of humility, which has a calmness of spirit and a world of other blessings attending
16. upon it. I remember that a wise friend of mine did usually say, "That which is
1

This dish of meat is too good for any but anglers, or very honest men.
16.

Look
it,

to your health;

everybody's business
ness."

is

nobody's busi16. 2
shall

praise

and if you have God, and value it next to a

good conscience; for health is the second blessing that we mortals are capable of; a blessing that

An

honest ale-house where we

money cannot
16.21

find a cleanly

windows, about the wall.

room, lavender in the and twenty ballads stuck


16.

buy.

Good company and good


are the very sinews of virtue.

discourse
16.
16. 3

Let the blessing of St. Peter's Master be ... upon all that are lovers of virtue, and dare trust in his Providence, 16. and be quiet and go a-angling.
great secretary of Nature 2 learning, Sir Francis Bacon.

The Chavender

or

Chub.

The

and

all

An
God.

excellent angler,

and now with


16.

Life of Herbert [1670]

Old-fashioned
good.
I

poetry,

but choicely
16.

THOMAS CAREW
c.

love such mirth as does not

make
Here
lies

i595~c. 1639
King that
fit

friends

ashamed

to look

upon one an16. 5

rul'd,

as

he

other next morning.

thought

No man

can lose what he never had.


16.

The
Here

universal
lies

monarchy of

wit;

two flamens, and both those


first,

We
ler 2

the best:

may

said

say of angling as Dr. Boteof strawberries: "Doubtless

Apollo's

at

last

the true God's

God
1
. . .

could have
is

made
of

priest.

a better berry,

Elegy on the Death of

Donne
[1633]

There

certainly something in angling that tends to produce a gentleness of spirit, serenity

and a pure
IRVING,
a

mind.

WASHINGTON

The Sketch-Book, The Angler William Butler styled by [1535-1618], THOMAS FULLER in his Worthies of England the "Aesculapius of our age." This praise of the
strawberry
first

Ask
* 8

me no more
June
is

When

where Jove bestows,


the fading rose;
secretaries

past,

See Blunden, p. ioj6a.


Plato, Aristotle,

and Socrates are

appeared in the second edition of

of Nature.
bk.

JAMES HOWELL[ 1594-1 666],

The Angler,

1655.

U,

letter

Letters,

326

CAREW
For in your beauty's orient deep These flowers, as in their causes, sleep.

CROMWELL
It is

not enough to have a good


is

mind.

The main thing


greatest

to use it well.
la

Poems
Ask

[1640].

To

Celia,

st.

Le Discours de

Methode 9

me no more

whither doth haste

The

minds are capable of


16.

nightingale when May is past; For in your sweet dividing throat She winters and keeps warm her note.
Ib. st. 3

The

the greatest vices as well as of the greatest virtues.

The

first

Ask

me no more if east or west

a thing as true until I knew without a single doubt.

precept was never to accept it as such


16.

The Phoenix

builds her spicy nest; For unto you at last she flies, And in your fragrant bosom dies.
Ib.
st.

One cannot

conceive

anything

so

strange and so implausible that it has not already been said by one philoso1 Ib. II pher or another.
I

Give

me more

The

disdain; torrid or the frozen zone:

love or

more

think, therefore I

am.2

16.

IV

Bring equal ease unto my pain; The temperate affords me none. Ib. Mediocrity in Love
Rejected,
st.

JAMES SHIRLEY
1596-1666

How little room


Do we
take

Thou shalt confess the vain pursuit Of human glory yields no fruit
But an untimely
grave.

up

in death that, living,

know

No bounds!
I

16. On the Duke of Buckingham He that loves a rosy cheek,

The Wedding [1626] 3 presume you're mortal, and may err. The Lady of Pleasure [1635]

Or

a coral lip admires,


star-like eyes,

Or, from

doth seek

Only the actions of the just Smell sweet and blossom in their dust. 4
16.

Fuel to maintain his

fires;

As old Time makes these decay, So his flames must waste away.
16.

Disdain Returned,
16.

st.

The

firstling of the infant year.

The Primrose

Then

fly betimes, for only they

Conquer Love that run away.


16.

Death calls ye to the crowd of common men. Cupid and Death [1653] The glories of our blood and state Are shadows, not substantial things; There is no armor against fate; Death lays his icy hand on kings. 5 Contention of Ajax and Ulysses
[1659], so. 3

Conquest by Flight

The magic
16.

of a face.

OLIVER CROMWELL
1599-1658
few honest numbers.

Epitaph on the Lady S

men

are better than

REN
Good
sense

DESCARTES
1596-1650
is

Letter to Sir

W. Spring [September 1643]


Cicero, p.

things in the world the most equally distributed, for everybody thinks he is so well supplied
of
all

1 3

See Varro, p.

noa, and

ma.

Cogito, ergo sum.

that even those most difficult to please in all other matters never desire more of it than they already possess. Le Discours de la Methode

with

it,

Je pense, done je suis. See Pope, p. 4030, and note. * The sweet remembrance of the just
3

Shall flourish

when he

sleeps in dust.
[1696],

NAHUM TATE and NICHOLAS


Psalm 132
5

BRADY, st. 6

See Horace, p. iaob.

27

CROMWELL
The
it,

DIGBY
the greatest good is little enough: for all life is a dream, and dreams themselves are only dreams. 1 Life Is a Dream, act II, Z. 1195

State, in choosing men to serve takes no notice of their opinions. If


it,

they be willing faithfully to serve


that
satisfies.

Before the Battle of Marston

Moor
I

[July 2, 1644]

beseech

you,
it

in

the bowels

of

Christ, think

possible you
tt>e

may be

But whether it be dream or truth, to do well is what matters. If it be truth, for truth's sake. If not, then to gain friends for the time when we awaken.
15. Ill,

mistaken. 1 Letter to

Church

of Scotland

The

treason past, the traitor

is

236 no
109

It

is

not
. .

fit
.

that you
shall

[August 3, 1650] sit here any

longer needed.

Ib. Ill, 1

longer! to better

you men.

now

give place

What surprises you, if a dream taught me this wisdom, and if I still


fear I

To

the

Rump

Parliament

may wake up and

find

myself

[January 22, 1654]


2 Necessity hath no law. Feigned ne-

once more confined in prison? And even if this should not happen, merely to dream it is enough. For this I have

are imaginary necessities the greatest cozenage that men can put upon the Providence of God, and make pretenses to break known rules by. To Parliament [September 12,
cessities,
.

come

to

know, that

all

human

happi-

ness finally ceases, like a dream. Ib. Ill,

1114

1654]
1

MARTIN PARKER
1600-1656

under

would have been glad to have lived my woodside, and to have kept a
have un-

Ye gentlemen
That
Ah!
live at
little

of

England
at ease,

flock of sheep, rather than to dertaken this government.

home

do you think upon

To
Mr.
your
skill

Lely, to paint

desire

Parliament [1658] you would use all

The

dangers of the seas.


the stormy winds do blow. 2

Song
Ib.

When

me, and not

flatter

my picture truly like me at all; but repimples,

mark
warts,
it.

all

these

roughnesses,

JULES, CARDINAL

and everything as you see me, otherwise I will never pay a farthing for
3

MAZARIN
1602-1661
all that!
I

From HORACE WALPOLE, Anecdotes of Painting in England

must leave

Farewell, dear

paintings that

have loved so

much

and which have

cost

me

so

much. 3

[1762-1771] not my design to drink or to sleep, but my design is to make what haste I can to be gone.
It is

Remark

shortly before his death.

SIR

KENELM DIGBY
1603-1665 is to remain upon it no longer than whiles you can
water

Dying

-words

PEDRO CALDER6N DE LA BARCA


1600-1681
life?
x
2

The hot
[the tea]
1

MAN
2

What is life? A madness. What is An illusion, a shadow, a story. And


See Hand, p. giza. See Publilius Syrus, p. i26b, and
St.

Translated by EDWARD and ELIZABETH HUBERin Spanish Drama [1962]. When the battle rages loud and long, And the stormy winds do blow.

THOMAS CAMPBELL
Ye Mariners
3 II

[1777-1884],
of

England

Augus-

tine, p. 1473.
3

faut quitter tout celal Adieu, chers tableaux que j'ai tant aims et qui m'ont tant
coute\

Warts and

all.

Saying

DIGBY
x say the Miserere Psalm very leisurely. The Closet Opened. Tea with Eggs

BROWNE

SIR
I

THOMAS BROWNE
1605-1682

All matter

is

indifferent to form.

Of

the Vegetation of Plants

without usurpation, assume the honorable style of a Christian, Religio Medici [1642], pt. I, sec. i
dare,
I

ROGER WILLIAMS
c.

1603- 1 ^^3

man upon

could never divide myself from any the difference of an opinion,

There goes many a ship to sea, with many hundred souls in one ship, whose weal and woe is common, and is a true picture of a commonwealth or a human combination or society. It hath fallen out sometimes that both papists and Protestants, Jews and Turks may be embarked in one ship; upon which supposal I affirm that all the liberty of conscience that ever I pleaded for turns that none of upon these two hinges the papists, Protestants, Jews or Turks be forced to come to the ship's prayers
or worship, nor compelled from their own particular prayers or worship, if they practice any. I further add that I

or be angry with his judgment for not agreeing with me in that from which

perhaps within a few days


sent myself.
.
. .

should

dis-

Ib.

charged Many the troops of error, and remain as trophies unto the enemies of truth.
16.

have

too" rashly

A man may
of truth as
to surrender. 1

be in as just possession of a city, and yet be forced


Ib.

vinity,

wingy mysteries in diand airy subtleties in religion, which have unhinged the brains of betfor those

As

ter heads, they never stretched the pia Ib. 9 mater of mine.
I love to lose

never denied that, notwithstanding this liberty, the commander of this ship

command the ship's ought yea, and also command that


to

course,
justice,

pursue

my Reason

myself in a mystery, to to an O altitudol


Ib.
2 spoils of Nature.

peace, and sobriety be kept and practiced, both among the seamen and all

Rich with the

Ib. 13
carry with us the wonders seek without us: There is all Africa

the passengers. Letter to the

We

we
and

Town

of Providence

[January 1655]

her prodigies in us.


All things are the art of God.3

Ib. 15

FRIEDRICH VON

artificial, for nature is Ib. 16


is

LOGAU

1604-1655

Obstinacy in a bad cause stancy in a good.


2

but conIb.

25
Ib.

Armed

peace. Poetic Aphorisms

Persecution
[1654]

is

a bad and indirect

way
any

to plant religion.

This month is a kiss Which heaven gives the earth

Not picked from the

leaves of

That she now become

a bride

And

then a future mother.


Ib. Characteristics of

author, but bred amongst the weeds and tares of mine own brain. Ib. 35

May

This reasonable and moderator, Ib. 38 equal piece of justice, Death.


I

Though

grind slowly, 3 yet they grind exceeding small.


Ib. Retribution
51.

the mills of

God

am

not so

much

afraid of death, as

ashamed

thereof. 'Tis the very disgrace

1
3

Psalm

Sinngedichten Translated by LONGFELLOW. See Euripides, p. 8sa, and Herbert, p. 325a.


3

iSee Euripides, p. 84b, and Ovid, p. iaga. a See Thomas Gray, p. 44ob. 8 The course of Nature is the art of God.

EDWARD YOUNG, Night Night IX, I. 1267

Thoughts [1742-1745],

BROWNE
and ignominy of our natures, that in a moment can so disfigure us, that our nearest friends, wife, and children, stand afraid and start at us.
Religio Medici, pt.
I, sec.

There
us,

surely a piece of divinity in something that was before the eleis

ments, and owes no homage unto the


sun.
Religio Medici, pt. II, sec. 11
fiat voluntas tua coelum, heaven the let Thy will falls, [Though be done]. 1 16.

40

Whosoever enjoys not this life, I count him but an apparition, though he wear about him the sensible affections of flesh. In these moral acceptions, the way to be immortal is to die daily.
16.45

Ruat

How
tion of

shall the

dead

arise, is

no ques-

Sleep is a death; O, make me By sleeping what it is to die, And as gently lay my head On my grave, as now my bed. 2

try,

my

faith; to believe only possi-

16. 12

bilities, is

not

faith,

phy.

but mere philoso16. 48


is

When we
words,

desire
rose. 3

to

confine
say

our
are

we commonly

they

The

heart of
1

man

the place the


16. 51

spoken under the

devils dwell in: I feel

sometimes a hell

Vulgar Errors [1645]

within myself.

An
men

old

and gray-headed

error.

16.
living

There
tue.

is

no road

or ready

way

to vir16.

Times before you, when even


were
antiquities;

54

.country;

All places, all airs make unto me one I am in England, everywhere,


16. II,
i

and under any meridian. 2

the living might exceed the dead, and to depart this world could not be properly said to 4 go unto the greater number.
Urn-Burial; or Hydriotaphia
[1658]. Dedication
flames, and hired they solemnized their obsequies.
rich

when

They
destroy

that endeavor to abolish vice,


also
virtue;

for

contraries,

With

tears,

though they destroy one another, are 16. 4 yet the life of one another.

16. ch. 3

But how

shall

wards others, when


to ourselves?
is

we expect charity towe are uncharitable Chanty begins at home*


is

Were the happiness of the next world as closely apprehended as the felicities of this, it were a martyrdom to
16. 4 These dead bones have quietly rested under the drums and tramplings
.

man his
his

the voice of the world; yet greatest enemy, and, as

live.

it

every were,
16.

own

executioner.

even in the beauty, and the silent note which Cupid strikes, far sweeter than the sound of an instrument. For there is a music wherever there is a harmony, order proportion; and thus far we may maintain the music of the 16. 9 spheres.
is

Sure

there

music

of three conquests.
1

16. 5

Fiat iustitia et ruant coeli [Let justice be done though the heavens fall]. WILLIAM

WATSON, Ten Quodlibetical Questions Concerning Religion and State [1601]


3 3

See Ferdinand I, p. i86a. See Thomas Ken, p. 377b.

Sub

rosa.

of

unknown

This phrase, meaning

secretly,

is

For the world, I count it not an inn, but an hospital; and a place not to live, but to die in. 16. 11
1

was

origin. emblematic of

With the
secrecy,

ancients the rose and when a host

a rose above his tables, his guests understood that all words spoken under it were to

hung

remain
orations

secret.

Later, roses
ceilings

on the

of

were carved as deccouncil chambers

See Virgil, p.

igga,

Marlowe,

p.

2133,

and

and
*

note. ote.
fl

See Burton, p. jiia, See Terence, p. io8b,

same significance. had the majority. ROBERT BLAIR, The Grave [1743], pt, II, I.

confessionals, with the 'Tis long since Death

449

330

BROWNE
Time which antiquates antiquities> and hath an art to make dust of all
things.

CORNEILLE
or have slumbering thoughts

at that

time,
as

when sleep itself must end, and, some conjecture, all shall awake
Garden
of Cyrus, ch. 5

Urn-Burial; or Hydriotaphia,

again?

5 What song the Sirens sang, or what name Achilles assumed when he hid
himself
jecture.

ch.

The

created world

is

but a small pa-

renthesis in eternity.

among women, though


beyond
all

zling questions, are not

puzconIb.

Christian Morals, III, 29


[1716]

The

long habit of living indisposeth


Ib.

us for dying.

PIERRE CORNEILLE
1606-1684

The iniquity of oblivion blindly scattereth her poppy, and deals with the memory of men without distinction to
merit of perpetuity. Herostratus lives
Ib.

To umph

conquer without without glory.

risk

is

to

tri-

Le Cid
Brave
first.

2 [1636], act II, sc.

that

Temple of Diana that built it. 1


Oblivion
is

he

is

burnt the almost lost


Ib.

men

are brave

from the very


Ib. II, 3

not to be hired: the must be content to be as greater part though they had not been, to be found in the register of God, not in the record
of

And the combat ceased for want of Ib. IV, 3 combatants.

Do your duty, and leave the rest to Horace [1639], act II, sc. 8 heaven.
All evils are equal treme.

man.

Ib.

when

they are exIb. Ill,

The
day,

night of time far surpasseth the


Ib.

and who knows when was the


is

The
state.

worst of

all states is

the people's
II, sc. i

equinox?

Cinna [1640], act

Man
ashes,

and pompous

a noble animal, splendid in in the grave.


Ib.

Who is all-powerful should fear everything.


Ib.

IV, 2

That
heaven.

unextinguishable

laugh

in

Garden
Life itself
is

of Cyrus [1658], ch. 2

By speaking of 'our misfortunes we often relieve them. Polyeucte [1640], act I, sc. 3

and

but the shadow of death, shadows of under this the name. The sun itself is but the dark simulacrum, and light but the shadow
souls departed but the living. All things fall

The manner
than the
gift,

of giving

is

worth more
I, sc. i

Le Menteur

[1642], act

A liar A

is

always lavish of oaths.


Ib. Ill, 5

of

God.

16.

To

keep our eyes open longer were

but to act our Antipodes. The huntsmen are up in America, and they are
already past their

good memory hashed. 1

is

needed

after

one

Ib.

IV, 5

But who which freed us from


dome

sleep in Persia. can be drowsy at that hour


first

The fire which seems extinguished often slumbers beneath the ashes. Rodogune [1644], act III, sc. 4
Guess
1

everlasting sleep?

aspiring youth that fired the Ephesian

if you can, choose if you dare. H&raclius [1646], act IV, sc. 4

Outlives in fame the pious fool that raised it. COLLEY GIBBER [1671-1757], Richard III,
act III,
sc.

Liars

ought

to

have

ALGERNON SIDNEY,
[1698], ch. a, sec. 15

Discourses

good memories. on Government

331

CORNEILLE

WALLER
Guarded with ships, and all our sea our To My Lord of Falkland own. 1

A service beyond all recompense


Weighs
so heavy that
it

almost gives
III, sc. i

offense.

Surena [1674], act


I

The

yielding
breast.

marble

of

her

snowy

owe

my fame only to myself.


Poesies Diverses, 23

On a
To man,
Those
that

Lady Passing Through a

Crowd
was

of People [1664]

SIR

WILLIAM DAVENANT
1606-1668
leaves his wat'ry nest

in th' evening

made,

Stars gave the first delight; Admiring, in the gloomy shade,


little

drops of light.

The

lark

now

An

Apology for Having Loved


Before [1664]

And, climbing, shakes his dewy wings. Song [1637], st. i


For angling-rod he took a sturdy oak; For line, a cable that in storm ne'er
broke. Britannia Triumphans [1637]

That which her slender waist confin'd Shall now my joyful temples bind;

No

monarch but would give his crown His arms might do what this has done. On a Girdle [1664], st. i

The hook was


tail

baited with a dragon's

My joy, my grief, my
Did all within

hope,

my love,
Ib.st.2

this circle

move!

And then on
whale.
I

rock he stood to bob for


Ib.

narrow compass! and yet there


all

shall ask leave to desist,

when

am

Dwelt
Give

that's

good, and

all

that's

interrupted by so great an experiment


as dying.

fair;

me
all

but what this riband bound,


the rest the sun goes roundl
Ib.
st.

His apology, in

illness, for

not

Take

having finished Gondibert

How much pleasure they lose (and even the pleasures of heroic poesy are not unprofitable) who take away the
fetter his feet in liberty of a poet, and the shackles of a historian.

Go,

lovely rose!

Tell her that wastes her time and

me

That now she knows,

When I resemble her to thee, How sweet and fair she seems
So all we know Of what they do above
Is

to be.
st. i

Prefatory letter to Thomas Hobbes. From S. T. COLE-

Go, Lovely Rose [1664],

RIDGE, Biographia Literaria


[1817],
Cft.

22

that they happy are,


love.

and that they

EDMUND WALLER
1606-1687
Illustrious acts

Upon

My

Death of Rich [1664] Lady


the

And

high raptures do infuse, every conqueror creates a muse Panegyric to My Lord Protector
the
tropic
is

Poets that lasting marble seek Must come in Latin or in Greek.

Of English Verse
1

[1668]
note.

Under

our

language

And

spoke, our part of Flanders hath received

yoke.

Upon

the Death of the Lord Protector [1658"

See Sir Francis Bacon, p. of all I envy the octogenarian poet "Go, lovely Rose" who joined three words so happily together, that he left his name to float down through Time on the wings of a LOGAN PEARSALL SMITH, and a flower.
a

aogb, and

Most

phrase Afterthoughts [1931]

33 2

WALLER

MILTON
age, as if his eager soul, biting for anger at the clog of his body, desired to fret a 1 it.

And

1 keeps the palace of the soul.

Of Tea
Poets lose half the praise they should

have got, Could it be known what they


blot.

passage through Life of the

Duke

of Alva [1642]

discreetly
all

He knows

little

who

will tell his wife

Upon Roscommon's Translation of HORACE, De Arte Poetica


The
soul's

he knows. 2 The Holy State and the Profane


State [1642]
.

The Good Husband

dark cottage, batter'd and

One
by

that will not plead that cause

decay'd, Lets in new light through chinks that Time has made; 2

wherein his tongue must be confuted


his conscience.

Ib.

The Good Advocate


little

Stronger by weakness, wiser,

men

be-

come
As
they

Their heads sometimes so


there
is

that

draw near home.

no room

to

their

eternal

for wit;

sometimes so
for so

long that there

is

no wit
16.

much
Fools

Leaving the old, both worlds at once they view,

room.

Of Natural

That stand upon the threshold of the


new.
Orc the Divine

Light, God's eldest daughter, is a principal beauty in a building. Ib. Of Building

Poems

[1686]

Learning hath gained most by those books by which the printers have lost.
16.

PAUL GERHARDT
1607-1676

Of

Boofe?

O sacred head, now wounded,


With
With

Deceive not thyself by overexpecting happiness in the married estate. Re-

Now scornfully surrounded

grief

and shame bowed down;


8

member

thorns, thy only crown. Passion Chorale, based


$t. i

the nightingales which sing only some months in the spring, but commonly are silent when they have
16.

on twelfth-century Latin hymn,

hatched their eggs.

Of Marriage
people,
will

They

that

marry

ancient

merely in expectation to bury them,

hang themselves in hope that one

THOMAS FULLER
1608-1661

come and

cut the halter.

16.

Fame sometimes hath


thing of nothing.
is

created some16.

Fame

Drawing near her death, she sent most pious thoughts as harbingers to heaven; and her soul saw a glimpse of happiness through the chinks of her sickness-broken body.
Life of Monica [1642] He was one of a lean body and vis1
2

one of the sinews of the Anger soul; he that wants it hath a maimed 16. Of Anger mind.
It is

always darkest just before the

day dawneth.
Pisgah Sight [1650],
6fe. II,

ch 2

To

See Byron, p. 555!). vanish in the chinks that

Time has made.

JOHN MILTON 3
1608-1674
This
1
fl

SAMUEL ROGERS, Italy [1823], Paestum O Haupt vol Blut und Wunden Vol Schmerz und voller Holm! O Haupt zum Spott gebunden Mit einer Dornen KrohnI Translated by JAMES WADDELL ALEXANDER
8

is

the month, and this the happy

morn,
See Dryden, p. 3683. See Odyssey XI, 441, p. 66a. See Wordsworth, London, p. 512!).

[1861].

333

MILTON
Wherein the Son
King,
of Heav'n's eternal
Stol'n

on

his

wing

my

three-and-twend-

eth year.
virgin

Of wedded maid and


born,

mother

On
As
ever in

Our
For

great redemption from above did


bring; so the holy sages once did sing,
forfeit

His Having Arrived at the Age of Twenty-three [1631]


great Taskmaster's eye.
Ib.

my

That He our deadly


lease,

should

re-

Such sweet compulsion doth


lie.

in

music

And

with His Father work us a perpetual peace.

Arcades [1630-1634], L 68

On

the

Morning

of Christ's
>

NaI*

tivity [1629], st - 2

Hence, loathed Melancholy, Of Cerberus and blackest Midnight


born, In Stygian cave forlorn, 'Mongst horrid shapes, and shrieks, and
sights unholy.

was the winter wild While the Heav'n-born


It

child

All

meanly wrapt
lies.

in the rude

16.

Hymn,

st

manger i, Z. 29

UAllegro

[1631],

Z.

No war, or battle's sound Was heard the world around.


The
idle spear

So buxom,

blithe,

and debonair.
Ib.
Z.

24

and

shield were high


Ib.
st.

up
53

Haste thee,
thee
Jest,

Nymph, and

bring with

hung.

4,

Z.

Time

run back and fetch the Age of Gold. 1 Ib. st. 14, I 135
will

The

Oracles are

dumb.
Ib. st. 19,
Z.

and youthful jollity, Quips and cranks and wanton wiles, Nods and becks and wreathed smiles. Ib. I 25
Sport, that wrinkled

173

Care

derides,
sides.

From haunted
The
parting
sent.

spring and dale


is

And

Laughter, holding both his


trip
it,

Edg'd with poplar pale


genius

Come, and

as

with

On
sighing

you go,
Ib.
Z.

the light fantastic toe.

31

Ib. st. 20,

L 184

The mountain nymph,

sweet

liberty.
Z.

Peor and Baalim Forsake their temples dim.


Ib. st. 22,
I.

Ib.

36

197

What

Mirth, admit me of thy crew, To live with her, and live with thee, In unreproved pleasures free.
Ib.
Z.

needs my Shakespeare for his honored bones The labor of an age in piled stones? Or that his hallow'd relics should be hid
a star-y-pointing pyramid?
heir

38

the cock with lively din Scatters the rear of darkness thin, And to the stack, or the barn door,

While

Under

Dear son of memory, great


fame,

of

dames before, the hounds and horn Cheerly rouse the slumb'ring morn.
Stoutly struts his

Oft

listening

how

What

need'st thou such

weak witness

Ib.

Z.

49

of thy

name?

And
Shakespeare [1630]

On

every shepherd

tells

his tale
Ib.

Under the hawthorn

in the dale.
Z.

How
1

soon hath Time, the subtle thief


of youth,

67

Meadows

trim, with daisies pied,

See Horace, p. isab.

Shallow brooks, and rivers wide; Towers and battlements it sees

334

MILTON
Bosom'd high
in tufted trees,

Hence

Where perhaps some beauty lies, The cynosure of neighboring eyes. L Allegro, I. 75 And the jocund rebecks sound To many a youth, and many a maid,
9

The brood
bred!

vain deluding Joys, of Folly without


II

father
i

Penseroso [1631],

Z.

The

gay motes that people the sunIb. 1 8 beams.


Ib.

Dancing in the checkered shade. And young and old come forth to play Ib. L 94 On a sunshine holiday.

Hail divinest Melancholy.


Sober, steadfast, and demure.

L 12

Then

to the spicy nut-brown ale.


Ib.

Ib.

I 32
skies,

L 100

Then

lies

him down

And

stretched

the lubber fiend, out all the chimney's


hairy strength. Ib. I.

And Thy

looks

commercing with the

rapt soul sitting in thine eyes. Ib.


16.

I.

39
42

length,

Basks at the

fire his

Forget thyself to marble.

Z.

no

And

join with thee,

calm Peace and

Tower'd

cities please

us then,

And

the busy

hum

of

men.
16.
Z.

Quiet, Spare Fast, that oft with gods doth


diet.

16.

Z.

45

117

And add

Ladies, whose bright eyes Rain influence, and judge the prize. Ib. I 121

to these retired Leisure, That in trim gardens takes his pleas16. Z. 49 ure.

And pomp, and feast, and revelry, With mask, and antique pageantry,
Such

Sweet

bird, that shunn'st the noise of

folly,

On
If

sights as youthful poets dream summer eves by haunted stream.

Most

musical,

most melancholy!
16.
Z.

61

Then

to the well-trod stage anon, Jonson's learned sock be on, Or sweetest Shakespeare, Fancy's
child, his native wood-notes wild,

walk unseen

Warble

the dry smooth-shaven green, To behold the wandering moon, Riding near her highest noon, Like one that had been led astray

On

And

Lap me

ever, against eating cares, in soft Lydian airs,

Through the heav'n's wide


way,

pathless

Married to immortal Such as the meeting

verse

And
pierce,

oft, as if

her head she bow'd,


16.
Z.

soul

may

Stooping through a fleecy cloud.

In notes with many a winding bout Of linked sweetness long drawn out. Ib. L 127

65

Oft, on a plat of
I

rising ground,

Untwisting all the chains that The hidden soul of harmony.

tie

curfew sound Over some wide-watered shore, Swinging low with sullen roar.
hear the
far-off

16.

L 143
ear

16.

Z.

73
the

Such

strains as

would have won the

Where

glowing

embers

through

Of Pluto,
These

to have quite set free

room
Teach light to counterfeit a gloom, Far from all resort of mirth, Save the cricket on the hearth.
I 148
verse.

His half-regain'd Eurydice. delights, if thou canst give, Mirth, with thee, I mean to live.
Ib.
1

Ib. I

79

Wisdom

married

to

immortal

WORDSWORTH, The Excursion

[1814], bk.

VII

Sometime gorgeous Tragedy In sceptered pall come sweeping by,


let

335

MILTON
Presenting Thebes, or Pelops' line, Or the tale of Troy divine.
IZ

What
From

never yet was heard in tale or

Penseroso, L 97

song, old or

modern bard,

in hall or
I.

Or bid the
Such notes

soul of
as,

Orpheus sing
string,

bower.

warbled to the

Comus,
Bacchus, that
grape
first

44

Drew

iron tears

down

Pluto's cheek.
Ib.

1 105

from out the purple

Or call up him that left half The story of Cambuscan bold.

told
Ib.

Crush'd the sweet poison of misused 16. Z. wine. 46

L 109
L 120

These

my

sky-robes,

spun out

of Iris

Where more
ear.

is

meant than meets the


Ib.

woof.

16.

Z.

83

The

star that bids

the shepherd

fold.
Z.

Hide me from day's garish eye, While the bee with honied thigh, That at her flowery work doth sing,

Ib.

93

And

And the waters murmuring With such consort as they keep,


Entice the dewy-feather'd sleep.
Ib.
I.

the gilded car of day, His glowing axle doth allay In the steep Atlantic stream.

ft.Z-95
141

And

storied

windows

richly dight,

Midnight shout and revelry, Tipsy dance and jollity.

Ib.

I.

103

Casting a dim religious light. There let the pealing organ blow, To the full-voiced choir below, In service high, and anthems clear As may, with sweetness, through mine
ear

What hath

night to do with sleep?


Ib.
Z.

122

Ere the blabbing eastern scout,

The nice morn on th' Indian steep, From her cabin' d loop-hole peep.
Ib.
Z.

Dissolve

me into
all

ecstasies,

138
the

And

bring
eyes.

Heaven before mine


16.
Z.

Come,

knit

hands,

and

beat
Ib.
Z.

159

ground,
In a light fantastic round.
143

Till old experience do attain To something like prophetic strain.


ib.

1 173

Before the starry threshold of Jove's

Court

*
is.

the gray-hooded Even, Like a sad votarist in palmer's weed, Rose from the hindmost wheels of Ib. Z. 188 Phoebus' wain.

When

My mansion
spot

Comus
stir

[1634],
of this
Ib.

'

Above the smoke and

dim
I.

A thousand fantasies Begin to throng into my memory, Of calling shapes, and beck'ning shadows
dire,

Which men

call earth.

And

airy

tongues that syllable men's


wilderZ.

Yet some there be that by due

steps

To

aspire lay their just

On

names sands and shores and desert


nesses.

hands on that golden

Ib.

205

key

That opes the palace

Was
of Eternity.
16.
Z.

I deceiv'd or

did a sable cloud


silver

Turn
12

forth

her

lining

on the
Z.

night?

Ib.

221

An
i

old,

and haughty nation proud in


Ib.
I.

arms.
See William Blake, p. 4 88b.

33

Sweet Echo, sweetest nymph, that unseen

liv'st

Within thy

airy shell

336

MILTON

By slow Meander's margent

And

green, in the violet-embroider'd vale.

That power

Which
Thou

erring

men

call

Chance.

Comus,

I.

230

Comus,
canst not touch the

How
Of
At

sweetly did they float

upon the

I. 587 freedom of

wings
silence,

my
through the empty-vaulted
fall

mind.
lean

Ib.

Z.

663

Praising

night, every

the nence.
is

and

sallow
Ib.

abstiZ.

smoothing
smil'd!

the
Ib.

raven

709

down
Of
darkness
till it

Beauty

I 249 I 263

Nature's coin, hoarded,


current,

must not be

But must be
thereof

Such sober certainty

and the good


bliss.
l.

of waking bliss.
Ib.

Consists in mutual

and partaken
Ib.

With

thy long level'd rule of streaming 16. Z. 340 light.

739

Beauty

is

Nature's brag, and must be

Virtue could see to do what Virtue

shown
In courts, at feasts, and high solemnities,

would

By her own

radiant light, though sun


flat

and moon

Where most may wonder


manship;
It
is

at the workto

Were

in the

sea sunk.

And Wis-

dom's

self

for

homely
their

features

keep
coarse

Oft seeks to sweet retired solitude, Where, with her best nurse Contemplation,

home
They had

name

thence;

complexions
feathers,

She plumes her


her wings.

and

lets

Ib.

I.

grow 373
398

And
The

cheeks of sorry grain will serve to


ply

The unsunn'd
Of
miser's treasure,

heaps
Ib.
I.

sampler, wool.

and

to tease the huswife's

What

need

a vermeil-tinctur'd lip for

Tis Chastity, She that has


steel. 1

brother, Chastity: that, is clad in complete


Ib.

my

that,

Love-darting eyes, or tresses like the

L 420

morn?
Enjoy your dear wit,
oric,

Ib.

Z.

745

charming is divine philosophy! Not harsh and crabbed, as dull fools


suppose, But musical as
Apollo's lute, perpetual feast of
is

How

and gay

rhet-

That hath
2

so well

And

zling fence.

been taught her dazIb. Z. 790

nectar'd

sweets Where no crude surfeit reigns.


Ib.
Fill'd

I 476
dissoZ.

Sabrina fair, Listen where thou art sitting Under the glassy, cool, translucent

the air nance.


I

with

barbarous
Ib.

wave, In twisted braids of

lilies

knitting

550

The

loose train of thy amber-dropping


hair;

was

all ear,

And

took in strains that might create a


soul
ribs of

Listen for dear honor's sake,

Goddess of the
Listen

silver lake,

Under the

Death.

Ib.

Z.

560
But now
I

and
is

save.

Ib.

Z.

859

*See Shakespeare, p. 2153. 2 As sweet and musical

my
or
I

task

can

fly,

smoothly done: can run. Ib. Z. 1012

As bright Apollo's
SHAKESPEARE,

lute.

Love's

Labour's

Lost

Love Virtue, she alone is free, She can teach ye how to climb

337

MILTON
Higher than the sphery chime; Or, if Virtue feeble were, Heav'n itself would stoop to her.

(That

last infirmity

of noble

mind)

To

scorn delights,
days;
fair

and

live

laborious
to

Comus,
Yet once more,

ye

laurels,

1019 and once

I.

But the

guerdon when

we hope

find,

more

And

think to burst out into sudden


blaze,

Ye myrtles brown, with ivy never sere, I come to pluck your berries harsh and
crude,

Comes

And

with forc'd fingers rude Shatter your leaves before the mellowing year. Lycidas [1637], Z. i

And

the blind Fury with th' abhorred shears, slits the thin-spun life. Lycidas, L 64
is

Fame

no plant that grows on mortal


16.
I
Z.

He knew
Himself to
sing,

soil.

78

and build the


16.

lofty
Z.

rhyme.

10

That strain mood.

heard was of a higher Ib. L 87

Without the meed


tear.

of

some melodious
16.
Z.

14

It was that fatal and perfidious bark, Built in th' eclipse, and rigg'd with

Hence with
cuse.

denial vain, and coy ex16. I. 18

That sunk
thine.

curses dark, so low that sacred

head

of

Under

the

opening

eyelids

of

the

16. L

100

We

morn,

drove afield; and both together heard What time the gray-fly winds her sultry horn, Batt'ning our flocks with the fresh dews
of night.
Ib.
I.

Last came, and last did go, Pilot of the Galilean lake; Two massy keys he bore of

The

metals
shuts
Z.

twain,

(The

26

golden amain).

opes,

the

iron
16.

108

the heavy change, now thou art gone, Now thou art gone and never must re-

But

Such as for their bellies' sake, Creep and intrude, and climb into the
fold.

16.

Z.

114

turn!

16.

I.

37

The gadding
As

vine.

16.

Z.

40 45

Blind mouths! That scarce themselves know how to hold

killing as the

canker to the rose.


Ib.
I.

A sheep-hook.
The hungry
fed,

Ib.

Z.

119

sheep look up, and are not

Whom
Alas!

universal Nature did lament.


16.

I 60

But swoln with wind and the rank mist


they draw,

what

boots

it

with

incessant

Rot

inwardly,

and

foul

contagion

To

care tend the


trade,

homely

slighted shepherd's

spread: Besides what the grim wolf with privy

And

paw
meditate
the
thankless

strictly

Muse?

Were it not better done as others use, To sport with Amaryllis in the shade, Or with the tangles of Neaera's hair? Fame is the spur that the clear spirit
doth
1

Daily devours apace, and nothing But that two-handed engine at door
1

said;

the

raise 1

That thirst [for applause], if the last infirmity of noble minds, is also the first infirmity of weak ones; and on the whole, the strongest impulsive influence of average humanity.
RUSKIN,

Sesame and Lilies [1865], Of

Kings'

See Tacitus, p. 1403.

Treasuries, sec. 3

338

MILTON
Stands ready to smite once, and smite no more.
Lycidas,
Z.

Warbl'st at eve,
still.

when

all

the woods are

123

Sonnet,

To

Throw

hither

all

your quaint enamel'd


turf suck the

the Nightingale [c. 1637]

eyes,

Thy

That on the green


showers,

honied

day.

liquid notes that close the eye of Ib.

Where
the ground with vernal

And

the bright seraphim in burning


up-lifted

purple
flowers.

all

row
Their loud blow.
angel

trumpets
[c.

Bring the rathe primrose that forsaken dies. Ib. Z. 139

At a Solemn Music

1637]

Whether beyond

Where thou
ing tide
Visit'st the

the stormy Hebrides, perhaps under the whelmof the monstrous


16.
Z.

soaring in the high reason of his fancies, with his garland and singing robes about him.

A poet

bottom

world.

156

The Reason of Church Government [1641], bk. II, introduction

Look homeward, Angel, now, and melt


with ruth.
Ib.
I.

By

labor

and intent study (which

163

For Lycidas your sorrow is not dead, Sunk though he be beneath the watery
floor;

portion in this life), joined with the strong propensity of nature, I might perhaps leave something so written to after-times, as they should

take to be

my

So sinks the day-star in the ocean bed; And yet anon repairs his drooping
head,

not willingly

let it die.

Ib.

Beholding the bright countenance of


truth in the quiet

and

still

air

of deIb.

And

tricks

his

beams, and with new-

lightful studies.

spangled ore Flames in the forehead of the morning


sky.

He who would
hope
things

not be frustrate of his


to

to write well hereafter in laudable

So

Lycidas
high,

sunk low, but mounted


of

ought himself

be a true

poem.
Apology for Smectymnuus [1642] like so many nimble and airy servitors trip about him at
His words
.
.

Through the dear might


walk'd the waves.

him
Ib.
I.

that

166

He

touch'd the tender stops of various


quills,

command.
Truth world but
.

Ib.
.
.

never

comes

into

the

With
At

eager thought warbling his Doric


Ib.

lay. last

I 188

like a bastard, to the igno-

miny

of

he

rose,

and twitch'd

his

mantle

him that brought her forth. 1 The Doctrine and Discipline of


Divorce [1643], introduction

blue:

Tomorrow
new.

to fresh

woods and pastures


Ib.
Z.

192

Let not England forget her precedence of teaching nations how to live. 2
Ib.
1 Still rule those

The

lazy leaden-stepping Hours,

minds on earth

Whose

speed is but the heavy plumOn Time [c. 1637] met's pace.
that

O
1

nightingale,

on yon bloomy
2

spray
See

sage Milton's wormwood words were hurled: "Truth like a bastard comes into the world Never without ill-fame to him who gives her birth"?

At

whom

THOMAS HARDY, Lausanne


p.

[1897]

Thomson,

4oa.

See VirgU, p. uga.

339

MILTON
Litigious terms, fat contentions,

and

flowing fees.

Tractate of Education [1644]

Inflamed with the study of learning and the admiration of virtue; stirred up with high hopes of living to be brave

men and worthy


and famous

patriots, dear to to all ages.

God,
Ib.

Methinks I see in my mind a noble and puissant nation rousing herself like a strong man after sleep, and shaking her invincible locks. Methinks I see her as an eagle mewing her mighty youth, and kindling her undazzled eyes at the full midday beam.
Areopagitica

Ornate rhetoric taught out of the rule of Plato. ... To which poetry would be made subsequent, or indeed
rather precedent, as being less subtle and fine, but more simple, sensuous,

Give me the liberty to know, to ter, and to argue freely according conscience, above all liberties.

ut-

to
Ib.

and passionate.

Ib.

In those vernal seasons of the year,

when the

air is calm and pleasant, it were an injury and sullenness against Nature not to go out, and see her riches, and partake in her rejoicing with 16. heaven and earth.

1 Though all the winds of doctrine were let loose to play upon the earth, so Truth be in the field, we do injuriously, by licensing and prohibiting, to misdoubt her strength. Let her and Falsehood grapple; who ever knew Truth put

to the worse, in a free and open encounter? 2 16.

Men of most renowned virtue have sometimes by transgressing most truly


kept the law. Tetrachordon [1644-1645]
'

Books are not absolutely dead things, but do contain a potency of life in them to be as active as that soul was whose progeny they are; nay they do
.

preserve as in a vial the purest efficacy

That old man eloquent. To the Lady Margaret Ley


[c.

and extraction of that


that bred them.

living intellect

1644]
stare

Areopagitica [1644]

As good almost kill a man as kill a good book: who kills a man kills a reasonable creature, God's image; but he who destroys a good book kills reason
itself.

That would have made Quintilian and gasp.

On

the Detraction

Which

Fol-

lowed Upon
tain

My

Writing Cer-

Treatises

[1645]

16.

In

mirth, draws.

that

after

no

repenting

A good
life.

book

is

the precious lifeblood

To

of a master spirit,

embalmed and
life

Cyriack Skinner [1646-1647?]

treas-

ured up on purpose to a

beyond
Ib.

For other things mild Heav'n a time


ordains,

And

disapproves that care, though wise


in show,

cannot praise a fugitive and cloistered unexercised and unvirtue, breathed, that never sallies out and sees her adversary, but slinks out of the race, where that immortal garland is to be run for, not without dust and heat.
I

That with superfluous burden


day,

loads the

And, when God sends a cheerful hour,


refrains.
Ib.

Ib.

Where
much

there

is

much

desire to learn,

there of necessity will


writing,

be much arguing,
but knowledge in
16.

For such kind of borrowing as this, if be not bettered by the borrower, among good authors is accounted PlaEikonoklastes [16-49], 23 giar6.
it

many
is

opinions; for opin-

ion in good the making.

men

See Ephesians 4:14, p. 543. Error of opinion may be tolerated where reason is left free to combat it. JEFFERSON, Inaugural Address [March 4, 1801]
2

340

MILTON

None
but

good men; the


license.

can love freedom heartily, but rest love not freedom,

Methought
saint

saw

my kte

espoused

Brought to
grave.

me
his

like Alcestis

from the
[c.

Tenure of Kings and Magistrates


[1649]

On

Deceased Wife

1658]

No man who
were born
free.

knows aught, can be


all

so
16.

But
I

stupid to deny that

men

naturally

embrace me she inclined, wak'd, she fled, and day brought back
oh! as to

my night.
Of Man's
fruit
first

16.

No

Peace hath her victories less renown'd than war. To the Lord General Cromwell
I

disobedience, and the

Of

that forbidden tree


taste

whose mortal

When

consider

how my

light

is

spent,

Ere half

my

days, in this dark world

and wide, And that one


hide Lodg'd with

Brought death into the world, and all our woe, With loss of Eden. Paradise Lost [1667], 6fe. I, L i
Things unattempted yet in prose or 16. L 16 rhyme.

talent

which

is

death to

me useless. On His Blindness

What in me is
[1652]
16.

dark
raise

Doth God
nied?

Illumine,

what

is

low

and sup-

exact day-labor, light de-

port; That to the highth of this great argu-

Who best
Bear his mild yoke, they serve him best:
his state
Is
I

ment

may assert eternal Providence, And justify the ways of God to men. 1
16.

kingly;

thousands

at

his

bidding

L 22

speed,

And
They

post o'er land and ocean without


rest;

The

infernal serpent;

he

it

was, whose

also

serve
.

who

only stand and


16.

guile, Stirr'd up

with envy and revenge, deof

wait.

ceiv'd

The mother

mankind.

16.

Avenge,

L 34

Lord, thy slaughtered saints,

whose bones
Lie scatter'd on the Alpine mountains
cold;

Him the Almighty Power


Hurl'd headlong flaming from th' ethereal sky 2 With hideous ruin and combustion

Ev'n them who kept thy truth so pure


of old

down

When

all

our fathers worshiped stocks

To

and stones
Forget not.

On
Yet
one
I

the Late Massacre in

Who
As

bottomless perdition, there to dwell In adamantine chains and penal fire,


durst defy th' arms.

Omnipotent
16.

to

Piedmont [1655]
argue not
will,

L 44
Z.

far as angels ken.


light,

16.

59

Against Heav'n's hand or


jot
still

nor bate

No

but rather darkness


of

visible.

16.

1 63

Of

heart or hope; but


steer

bear up, and

Regions

sorrow,

doleful

shades,
Pope,
p.

Right onward.

where peace

To

Cyriack Skinner, Blindness

Upon
[c.

his

407!);

iSee Samson Agonistes, p. 34Qa; and A. Housman, p. 853!).


.

1655]

2 See

Luke

10:18, p. 46b.

MILTON

And

rest

can never dwell, hope never


to
all.

When night
Darkens the
streets,

comes That comes

then wander forth

Paradise Lost, bk.

I,

I.

65

Of

All

is

And And

though the field be lost? unconquerable will, study of revenge, immortal hate, co'urage never to submit or yield. Ib. I 105
not
lost; th'

What

the sons Belial, flown with insolence and wine. Paradise Lost, bk. I, /. 500

TV

imperial ensign, which, full high advanced, Shone like a meteor, streaming to the

wind. 1

Ib.

I.

Vaunting aloud, but rack'd with deep Ib. I. 126 despair.

536

To be weak
Doing
or suffering.

is

miserable,
Ib.

Sonorous metal blowing martial sounds: At which the universal host up sent A shout that tore hell's concave, and

And
The

out of good
evil.

still

to find

157 means of
I.

I.

beyond
Frighted the reign of Chaos and old Ib. I Night. 540

Ib.

165

Anon
seat of desolation, void of light. Ib. Z. 181

In

perfect

they move phalanx, to


soft recorders.

the

Dorian

mood
Of
flutes

mind not
time.
is

to

be changed by place or

and

Ib. I

549
ap-

The mind
self

its

own

place,

and in

it-

All

Can make

His form had yet not lost her original brightness, nor
pear'd

a heav'n of hell, a hell of Ib. Z. 253 heav'n. 1


is

Less than archangel ruin'd, and th' excess

To

reign
hell:

worth ambition though in

Of
In

glory obscur'd.

Ib. L
.
.

591

Better to reign in hell than serve in Ib. L 262 heav'n.

The sun
dim

eclipse,

disastrous

twilight

His spear, to equal which the pine

tallest

On

sheds half the nations, and with fear of

Hewn on Norwegian

hills,

to

be the
a

change
Perplexes monarchs.
Ib.
I.

mast Of some great ammiral, were but wand,

594

Care
Sat

on

his

faded

cheek,

but
Ib.

under
L 601

He

walk'd
steps

with,

to

support

uneasy
Z.

brows

Of

dauntless courage.
of scorn,

Over the burning marie.


Thick
as

Ib.

292

Thrice he assayed, and thrice, in spite


Tears,

autumnal leaves that strow the


Ib.
Z.

brooks In Vallombrosa.

such

as

angels

weep,

burst

forth.

Ib. L

302

619
his

Awake,

arise, or

be forever

fallen!

Who overcomes
By
force hath
foe.

Ib.
Spirits,

overcome but half


16. I

Z.

330

648

when they

please,

Can

either sex assume, or both.


Ib.
Z.

Mammon,
fell

the least erected spirit that

423
and
I.

iStreara'd like a meteor to the troubled

air.

^ee
note.

Virgil,

p.

1993,

Marlowe,

p.

2133,

THOMAS GRAY, The Bard


6

[1757], sec

*> st - *>

34 2

MILTON

From

heaven; for ev'n in heaven his

But

all

was

false

and hollow; though

his

and thoughts Were always downward bent, admiring


looks

more

tongue Dropped manna, and could make the worse appear

The

riches of heaven's pavement, trod-

The

better reason. 1

den gold,

Paradise Lost, bk. II,

I.

112

Than aught

divine or holy else enjoy'd


I,
I.

For

who would lose,


of pain, this intellectual

In vision beatific. Paradise Lost, bk.

Though
679

full

being,

Let none admire

Those thoughts that wander through

That

riches

grow

in hell; that soil

may

eternity,

best Deserve the precious bane.


16.

To

and lost perish rather, swallow'd up In the wide womb of uncreated night,
Devoid of sense and motion?
16. 1

I 690

146
174

From morn

To noon he
eve,

fell,

from noon

to

His red right hand.

16.

I.

dewy
Unrespited, unpitied, unrepriev'd.
16.

3
Z.

summer's day; and with the setting sun Dropp'd from the zenith like a falling
star.

185
221
rea-

The never-ending flight


Of future
Thus
days.
16.
Z.

Ib.

I.

742
Belial with

words cloth'd in

High on a throne
far

of royal state, of

which
of

son's garb

Outshone the wealth


Ind,

Ormus and

Counsel'd ignoble ease, and peaceful


sloth,

Or where the est hand

gorgeous East with rich-

Not peace.

16.

Z.

226

With grave
Aspect he rose, seem'd

Showers on her kings barbaric pearl and


gold, Satan exalted sat,

and

in

his

rising

To

by merit rais'd that bad eminence; and from despair

pillar of state;

deep on his front en-

Thus high
pires

uplifted

beyond hope,

as-

graven Deliberation sat and public care; And princely counsel in his face yet shone,
Majestic though in ruin.
16.
Z.

Beyond thus high, insatiate Vain war with heav'n.

to pursue
16. II,
Z.

300

To
The

sit

in darkness here
16. 16.
Z.

Moloch, scepter'd king, Stood up, the strongest and the


spirit

Hatching vain empires.


fiercest

377

palpable obscure.

Z.

406

That fought
despair.

in heav'n;

now

fiercer

Ib.
less

I.

by 44

Long is the way

And

hard, that out of hell leads


4
light.

16.

Z.

up to 432

Rather than be Car'd not to be at all.

16.

I.

47

Their rising all at once was as the sound 16. Z. 476 Of thunder heard remote.
1

My sentence is for open war.


16.
Z.

See Aristophanes, p. 91 a. [65-8


B.C.].

51

Which

if

not victory

is

yet revenge.
16.

I 105

HORACE aRubente dextera. Odes I, iif 2, To Caesar Augustus s See Homer, p. 64b, and note. * See Virgil, p. u8b.

343

MILTON
Others apart sat on a hill retir'd, In thoughts more elevate, and reasoned

b
smallest

Of

magnitude close by the


I.

moon.
Paradise Lost, bk. II,

high

1051

Of

Providence, foreknowledge,
fate,

will,

and

Fix'd fate, fr^e will, foreknowledge absolute,

Hail, holy light! offspring of heav'n firstIb. Ill, I i born. 1

Thus with the

year

And found no
lost.

end, in wand'ring mazes


II,
I.

Seasons return; but not to me returns Day, or the sweet approach of ev'n or

Paradise Lost, bk.

557

morn,

Vain wisdom

all,

and

Or

false philosophy. 16. /. COC

sight of vernal
rose,

bloom, or summer's

Or
But

With
Far

obdur'd breast stubborn patience as with


Ib.

Arm th'

flocks, or herds, or 2

human

face di-

vine;

triple

steel. 1

I 568
silent

off

from these a slow and


rolls.

cloud instead, and ever-during dark Surrounds me, from the cheerful ways
of

stream, Lethe the river of oblivion

men
and
for the

Cut
1 582
bit-

off,

book of knowledge

Ib.

fair

At

certain revolutions all the


feel

damn'd

Are brought: and ter change

by turns the

Presented with a universal blank Of Nature's works to me expung'd and


raz'd,

And wisdom
extremes by change
Ib.

at

Of

fierce extremes,

out.

more
If

fierce.

L 597

one entrance quite shut Ib. L 40


fruitful

See

The
shape
it

other shape,
call'd.

golden
deeds,

days,

of

golden

might be

With
Ib.

I 666

Joy and Love triumphing.


16.
1.

337
380

Whence and what


shape?

art thou, execrable Ib. L 681


sits

Dark with

excessive bright.
16. I

Before mine eyes in opposition Grim Death 2 my son and foe.

Into a limbo large and broad, since


called

Ib. L

803

The
The

Paradise

of

Fools,

to

few unIb. L

Hot, cold, moist, and dry, four champions fierce, Strive here for mast'ry.
3

known.
hell within

him.

16.

L 898

Ib. IV, I

495 20

To compare
Great things with small,
Ib.

L 921

Hide

At whose sight all the stars their diminished heads. 8


Ib.
1.

With

34

ruin

upon

ruin, rout on rout,


16.

Confusion worse confounded.


L 995

A grateful mind
By owing owes
not, but once Indebted and discharg'd.
1

still

pays, at
Ib.
I.

And fast by hanging in a golden chain, This pendent world, in bigness as a


star
iSee Shakespeare,
3
8

55

God's

first

BACON, The
p. 2153.

creature, which New Atlantis [1626]

was

light.

See Massinger, p. gi6a.

Hot and cold, and moist and dry. Du BARTAS, Divine Weeks and Works [1578], Second Day
See Dryden, p. 3695.

MILTON, Light, the prime work of God. Samson Agonistes (1671), I. 70 2 See Blake, pp. 4&7a and 4890. 3 Ye little stars! hide your diminished rays. POPE: Moral Essays [173 1-1735], 'Epistle III,

344

MILTON

Me miserable!
Infinite wrath,

Which way
hell;
*

which way shall I fly and infinite despair?


fly
is

The

tyrant's plea,

excus'd his devilish

deeds.

hell;

myself

am

Paradise Lost, bk. TV, L 393

And
Still

in the lowest deep a lower deep, threatening to devour me, opens

Imparadis'd in one another's arms.


Ib.

L 506

wide,

To which

the hell I suffer seems a heaven. Paradise Lost, bk. IV, I. 73


fare-

Live while ye may,

Yet happy pair.

16.

Z.

533

Now came
Had

still

evening on, and twilight


all

So farewell hope, and with hope


well fear, Farewell remorse:
lost;
all

gray in her sober livery

things clad.
IB. I

good

to
Ib.

me

is

598

Evil,

be thou

my good.

L 108

The wakeful nightingale,


She
all

The

the Tree of Life, middle tree and highest there that


Ib.
I.

And on

night long her amorous descant


pleas'd:

sung; Silence was

now

glow'd the

grew, Sat like a cormorant.

firmament
Ib. L

A heaven

on

earth.

194 208

With
The

living sapphires:

Hesperus, that
till

led
starry host,

Flowers of all hue, and without thorn the rose. Ib. I. 256
of far nobler shape erect and tall, Godlike erect, with native honor clad

rode brightest,

the

moon,
Apparent
Rising in clouded majesty, at length queen unveil'd her peerless

Two

In naked majesty seem'd lords of


Ib.

all.
Z.

And

light, o'er

the dark her silver mantle


Ib.
Ib.

288

threw.

L 602
I.

For

contemplation
form'd,

he

and

valor.

The timely dew of sleep.

614

For softness she and sweet

attractive

With

thee conversing

He

grace; for God only, she for

All seasons,

and

I forget all time, their change; all please

God

in him.

alike.

16. L

297

Sweet

is

the breath of morn, her rising


of earliest birds.
Ib.
Z.

sweet,

Subjection,

Implied but required with


her yielded, by

With charm
gentle

639

sway,

And by

him

best re-

Sweet the coming on

ceiv'd,

Of

grateful ev'ning mild, then

silent

Yielded with coy submission, modest


pride,

night

With
IB.

this

her solemn bird, and this

fair

And

sweet reluctant amorous delay.

moon,

L 307
since

And

these the
starry train.

Adam

the goodliest

man

of

men

gems of heaven, her Ib. Z. 646

born
His sons, the Eve.
fairest of

Millions of spiritual creatures walk the

her daughters
Ib.
I.

earth

323

Unseen, both

when we wake, and when


Ib.
Z.

So spake the Fiend, and with necessity,

we

sleep.

677

^ee
note.

Virgil,

p.

igga, Marlowe, p. aisa,

and
1

In naked beauty
See William Pitt, p. 4Q6b.

more adom'd,

345

MILTON

More lovely, than Pandora. 1


Paradise Lost, bk. IV, L 713

Freely

we

serve,
will

Because we freely love, as in our

Eas'd the putting off

To

These troublesome
wear.

disguises

which we
16.

love or not; in this we stand or fall. Paradise Lost, bk. V, I 538

L 739

What

if

earth

Hail wedded love, mysterious law, true source Ib. L 750 Of human offspring.

Be but the shadow


things therein Each to other like,
is

of

heaven, and
earth
Z.

more than on
16.

thought?

574

Squat like a toad, close at the ear of 16. Z. 800 Eve.

Hear

all

ye Angels, progeny of light,

Not

to

know me

Thrones,
argues yourselves unIb.

Dominations,

Princedoms,
16.
Z.

known.

L 830

Virtues, Powers.

600

And

Abash'd the Devil stood, felt how awful goodness saw

All seem'd well pleas'd, all seem'd but

were not
is,

all.

16.

Z.

and

617

Among
I 846
Z.

the faithless, faithful only he.


16.
Z.

Virtue in her shape

how lovely.
16.

897

Morn,

All hell broke loose.'

16.

918
987

Wak'd by
hand

the circling hours, with rosy


x

Like Teneriff or Atlas unremoved.


16.
/.

Unbarr'd the gates of

light.

16.

VI,

Z.

The
Of heaven.

starry

cope

16.1.992

2 Servant of God, well done, well hast

His sleep

thou fought

Was

airy

light

bred.

from pure digestion 16. V, L 3

The

better fight, tained

who

single hast main-

My
Heaven's

latest

last,

found, best gift,

my

ever
16.

new
Z.

Against revolted multitudes the cause Of truth, in word mightier than they in 16. Z. 29 arms.

delight!

18

He onward
shone.

came;

far

off his

Good, the more

coming
Z.

16.

Communicated, more abundant grows.


16. L 71

768

More

safe I sing with mortal voice, un-

These are thy glorious works, Parent


good.
16.
Z.

of

chang'd

To

hoarse or mute, though fall'n on


evil days,
evil

153

Him

first,

him

last,

him

midst,
16.
Z.

and
165

On
'

days

though

fall'n,

and

evil

without end.

A wilderness
So saying,
haste

of sweets.

16.

In
Z.

294
in

tongues; darkness, and


pass'd round,
solitude.

with dangers com16.

with dispatchful looks

And

VII,

Z.

24

She

turns, tent.

on hospitable thoughts
16.
Z.

in-

Out of one

man

a race 16.
Z.

331

Of men innumerable.
There Leviathan

155

Nor

jealousy

Was
1

understood,
hell.

the

injur'd lover's 16. Z. 449

Hugest of

living creatures,

on the deep

Stretch'd like a promontory sleeps or

See

Cicero,

p.

in a, and James Thomson,


1

swims,
See Homer, p. 62b. 2 See Matthew zy.zi, p. 44a.

p. 4igb.
3

See Robert Greene, p. ao6a.

346

MILTON

And seems
gills

a moving land, and at his

Ofttimes nothing profits more

Than
and
at his trunk spouts out a
I.

self-esteem,

grounded on

just

and

Draws

in,

right

sea.

Well manag'd.
412
Paradise Lost, bk. VIII,
Z.

Paradise Lost, bk. VII,

571
Z.

Endued

My unpremeditated verse.
Ib.
I.

With
The

sanctity of reason.

507
Pleas'd

Ib.

IX,
Ib.

24 26

planets in their stations listening stood,

me

long choosing, and beginZ.

ning

late.

While the
lant.

bright

pomp

ascended

jubi-

Unless an age too late, or cold Climate, or years damp my intended

Open, ye everlasting gates, they sung, x Open, ye heavens, your living doors;
let in

wing.

Ib.
all

Z.

44
the

The

serpent subtlest beast of


field. 1

Ib.
is

Z.

86

The

great Creator from his

work
work,
Ib.
I.

re-

turn'd

For solitude sometimes


a

best society,

Magnificent, world.

his

six

days'

And

563

short retirement urges sweet re16. Z. 249 turn.


of evening flowers.
Ib.
Z.

The

So charming
awhile

angel ended, and in Adam's ear left his voice that he


still

At shut

278
city

As one who long in populous


speaking,
still

Thought him

stood

pent.

16.
left
3

fix'd to hear.

16. VIII,

God

so

commanded, and

445 that comthe


rest,

I.

To know
That which before
Is

mand
us
lies

the prime wisdom.

in daily life Ib. 1. 192

Sole daughter of his voice;

we

live

Law

to ourselves,

our reason

is

our law.
Z.

Liquid lapse of murmuring streams.


Ib.
Z.

Ib.

652

263
I

And
Her

feel

that

am

happier than
Ib.
I.

rash hand in evil hour Forth reaching to the fruit, she pluck'd,

Her

know.
virtue

282

Earth

and the conscience of her

worth,

That would be woo'd, and not unsought be won.


16.
16.
Z.

she eat: felt the wound, and Nature from her seat, Sighing through all her works, gave
signs of

woe
lost.

502 522

That

all

was
I

16.

Z.

780
all

The sum

of earthly

bliss.

Z.

So dear
I

So absolute she seems

love him, that with deaths

him
live
Z.

And

in

herself

complete, so well to
she wills to do or

could endure, without


life.

him

no
832
too

know Her own, that what


say,

Ib.

In her face excuse

Came
discreetest,

prologue,

and

apology
16.
Z.

Seems

wisest, best.

virtuousest,

prompt.

853

Ib.

Z.

547

fairest of creation! last


all

and best

Accuse not Nature, she hath done her


part;

Of

God's works! creature in

whom

excell'd

Do
1

thou but thine.

16.

Z.

561

iSee Genesis 3:1, p. 5b.


2
a

See Psalm 34:7, p. i8a.

See Keats, p. 57ga. See Wordsworth, p. 5145.

347

MILTON
Whatever can
to sight or

thought be

In
Is

me
to

form'd, Holy, divine, good, amiable, or sweet!

is no delay; with thee to go, to stay here; without thee here to

stay,
Is

How

art
lost,

thou

lost,

how on

a sudden

Art

all

go hence unwilling; thou to me things under heaven, all places

Defac'd, deflower'd, and now to Death devote? Paradise Lost, bk. IX, Z. 896

thou,

Who

Heel

for my willful crime art banished hence. Paradise Lost, bk. XII, Z. 615
all

The
Bone

link of nature
flesh,

draw me:
1

flesh of

The world was


to choose

before them, where

of

my

bone thou

art,

and from

Their place

of
in

rest,

and Providence

thy state Mine never shall be parted, bliss or 16. Z. 913 woe.

their guide:

They hand
steps

hand with wandering


their solitary way.
16.
Z.

and slow 646

Our

state

cannot be

severed;

we

are

Through Eden took

one,

One

flesh; to lose
self.
I

thee were to lose myIb.


Z.

Most men admire


Virtue

958
77

who

shall

temper so
Ib.
.

follow not her lore. Paradise Regained [1671], bk.

I,

Justice with mercy.

X,
seat
Z.

Z.

.482
SkilFd to retire, and in retiring draw Hearts after them tangled in amorous Ib. II, Z. 161 nets.

Pandemonium, Of Lucifer.

city

and proud
hiss,

Ib.

424
508
588

dismal universal

the sound
Ib.
Z.

Of public scorn. Death ... on his


Demoniac
frenzy,

Beauty stands
In the admiration only of weak minds

2 pale horse.

Led
Z.

captive. greatest

Ib.

Z.

220
228

Ib.

Rocks whereon
wreck'd.

men have
Ib.

oftest
Z.

moping melancholy,
Ib.

And
Nor

moon-struck madness.
XI,
Z.

Of whom
485

to

be

disprais'd

were no small
Ib. Ill,
Z.

praise.

56

love thy

life,

nor hate; but what

thou

Elephants endorsed with towers.


Ib.
Z.

liv'st

Live well;

how
3

Heaven.

long or short permit to Ib. Z. 553


16.
Z.

329
Z,

Dusk

faces

with white silken turbans


Ib.

A bevy of fair women.


The
The brazen
evening
star,

wreath'd.

IV,

76

582

The childhood shows the man,


As morning shows the day. 1
Ib.
Z.

Love's harbinger.
throat of war.

16.

Z.

588
713

220

16.

Athens, the eye of Greece, mother of


Z.

arts

For now
waste.

see
less

And
than war to
16.
Z.

eloquence.

Ib.
2

Z.

240

Peace to corrupt no

The olive
Plato's

grove of Academe,

783

An

olive leaf

he

brings, pacific sign. 16. Z.


p. 5b.

retirement, bird

where

the

Attic

860

Trills

her thick-warbled notes the sumIb.


Z.

iSee Genesis 2:23,


a

mer long.
1
fl

244

See Revelation 6:8, p. 58a. See Martial, p. i$4b.

See Wordsworth, p. sub. See Horace, p. i4a.

34 8

MILTON

Whom

Socrates . . well inspired


.

And
the oracle pro-

at another to let in the foe?

Samson

Agonistes,
run,

nounc'd Wisest of men.


Paradise Regained,
bk. IV,
I.

L 560

My
And
274
pro-

race
I

of

glory

and race of

shame,
shall shortly

be with them at
Ib.
Z.

rest.

The

first

and wisest of them


this

597

all

fessed

But who

is

this,

what thing of

sea or

To know
knew. 1

only, that

he nothing Ib. I 293


Ib.
I.

land? Female of sex

it

seems,

That

Deep

vers'd in books

and shallow in

himself.
Till

so bedeck'd, ornate, Comes this way sailing

and

gay,

327

Like a stately ship

Came

morning

fair

forth with pilgrim steps, in amice Ib. L 426 gray.


in

Of Tarsus, bound for th' isles Of Javan or Gadire, With all her bravery on, and
trim,
Sails fill'd,

tackle

Eyeless

Gaza,

at

the

mill

with

slaves.

Samson Agonistes

[1671], L 41

Courted by

and streamers waving, all the winds that hold


scent of odorous

them

dark, dark, dark,

amid the bkze of

play;
Ib.

An amber
Dalila: In

noon,
Irrecoverably dark, total eclipse Without all hope of day! 16. I 80

Her harbinger?
argument with

perfume Z. 710

men

woman

When
To

The sun to me is dark And silent as the moon,


she deserts the night, Hid in her vacant interlunar cave.
16.

ever

Goes by the worse, whatever be her


cause.

L 86
I.

Samson: For want of words, no doubt, Ib. Z. 903 or kck of breath!

live a life half dead, a living death.

Ib.

100

Fame, if not double-faced, mouthed,

is

double-

Ran on embattled

And

armies clad in iron,


Ib.
Z.

with contrary blast proclaims most


deeds;

And, weaponless himself, Made arms ridiculous.

129

Apt words have power

The tumors

to suage of a troubled mind.2


Ib.

his wings, one black, the other white, Bears greatest names in his wild airy
flight.

On both

16.

Z.

971

I 184
de-

Wisest men Have err'd, and by bad


ceiv'd.

Yet

beauty,

though

injurious,

hath

women been
Ib.
Z.

210

strange power, After offense returning, to regain

Love once

possessed.

Ib.

Z.

1003

Just are the ways of God, And justifiable to men; B

Unless there be
all.

who

think not

God
Z.

at

Love-quarrels end;

oft in pleasing concord


Ib.
Z.

Not

Ib.

wedlock-treachery.

1008

293
Boast not of what thou would'st have

grain of

manhood.
it

Ib.

Z.

408

What
1
a 8

boots

at

one gate to make de-

What then thou


He's gone; and

done, but do would'st.


Ib.
Z.

fense,
See Socrates, p. 87b. See Aeschylus, p. 78a. See Paradise Lost, bk.

1104

who knows how he may

I,

1.

22, p. $4ib.

report

349

MILTON

SUCKLING
So in our very judgments. 1
Aglaura, epilogue

Thy
For

words' by adding fuel to the flame? Samson Agonistes, L 1350


evil

news

rides

post, while good


Ib,

news

baits. 1
is

L 1538

High characters would see

(cries

one), and he
are,

Suspense in news

torture.

Things that ne'er were, nor


Ib.l 1569
ne'er will be. 2

nor

The Goblins
Her
feet

Nothing
wail

is

here for tears, nothing to


breast,

[1639],

epilogue

Or knock -the

no weakness, no

beneath her petticoat

contempt, Dispraise, or blame, nothing but well

and

fair,

And what may


noble.
All
is

quiet us in a death so Ib.l. 1721


oft doubt,

8 mice, stole in and out, As if they feared the light; But oh, she dances such a way! No sun upon an Easter-day

Like

little

Is

half so fine a sight.

Ballad

Upon

Wedding
st.

best,

though we

[1641],

What
Of

the unsearchable dispose highest Wisdom brings about.


Ib.

Her

lips

were red, and one was thin,

I 1745
Z.

Calm

of mind,

Compared with that was next her chin, Some bee had stung it newly.
Ib,
st.

all

passion spent.
16.

11

1758

Such bickerings to recount, met often in these our writers, what more worth is it than to chronicle the wars of
kites or

crows flocking and fighting in


History of England [1670],

the

air?

me back my heart, cannot have thine; For if from yours you will not part, Why then shouldst thou have mine? Fragmenta Aurea [1646]. Song,
I

prithee send

Since

The

st. i

bk.IV

Tis not the meat, but Makes eating a delight.


Ib.

'tis

the appetite
st.

SIR

JOHN SUCKLING
1609-1642 and wan, fond

Of Thee, Kind Boy,

Out upon
lover?

Why
Will,

so pale

it, I have loved Three whole days together;

Prithee,

why so pale? when looking well


ill

And am
can't

like to love three


fair

more,

move

If it

prove
Ib.

weather.

her,

A Poem

with the Answer,


st. i

Looking

prevail?
st.
i

Aglaura [1638]. Song,


Quit,
quit,

for

shame,

this

will

not

move,
If

This cannot take her. of herself she will not love, Nothing can make her.

Tis expectation makes a blessing dear, Heaven were not heaven, if we knew what it were.
Ib. Against Fruition, st.
See Pope, p. 4020. See Pope, p. 4osa. There's no such thing in Nature,
2
1

The
But

devil take her!

Ib. st. 3
is

as

when an

authentic watch

and

you'll

draw

shown,

A
rectifies his

faultless

Each man winds up and own,


1

JOHN

monster which the world ne'er saw. SHEFFIELD, DUKE OF BUCKINGHAM AND NORMANBY [1648-1721], Es say on Poetry

See Plutarch, p.

See Herrick, p. 3200.

35

NAKAE TOJU

BUTLER

NAKAE TOJUi
1608-1648
Filial piety is the root of man. it is lost from one's heart, then one's life becomes like a rootless plant, and if

ANNE BRADSTREET
c.

1612-1672

When
noth-

the time of getting, middle age of improving, and old age of spendis

Youth

one does not expire ing but sheer luck.

instantly, it

is

ing; a negligent youth is usually attended by an ignorant middle age, and both by an empty old age. He that hath

Toju Sensei Zenshu (Collected Works), vol. i

nothing to feed on but vanity and must needs lie down in the bed of
row.

lies

sor3

Thirty-three Meditations,
is

SIR

MATTHEW HALE*
1609-1676

Be not biased with compassion to the poor, or favor to the rich, in point of
justice.

Authority without wisdom heavy axe without an edge, bruise than polish.

like a

fitter

to

Ib. 12

If we had no winter, the spring would not be so pleasant: if we did not

Things Necessary
ually

Had

in

to Be ContinRemembrance
will Ib.

sometimes taste of adversity, prosperity Ib. 14 would not be so welcome.


Iron till it be thoroughly heated is uncapable to be wrought; so God sees good to cast some men into the furnace of affliction, and then beats them on
his anvil into

Not

to

be

solicitous

what men

say or think.

WILLIAM CARTWRIGHT
1611-1643

what frame he

pleases. Ib. 3 i

Love makes those young whom age doth chill, And whom he finds young, keeps young To Chloe [1651] still.

If ever
If ever

two were one, then surely we. man were lov'd by wife, then

thee;

wife was happy in a man, Compare with me ye women if you


If ever

can.

ARCHBISHOP ROBERT LEIGHTON


16111684
Deliver me, Lord, from the errors of wise men, yea, and of good men.

To

My

Dear and Loving Husband [1678]

SAMUEL BUTLER
1612-1680

Saying

When civil fury first grew high,


And men
fell out they knew not why. Hudibras, pt. I [1663], canto
Z.

ISAAC DE BENSERADE
1612-1691 In bed we laugh, in bed we cry; And, born in bed, in bed we die. The near approach a bed may show

I,
i

And

pulpit,

drum

ecclesiastic,

Was

beat with

fist,

instead of a stick.
Ib.
I.

11

Of human

bliss to

human

woe.

Beside,

'tis

known he
we hear

could

speak

A
1

Son Lit (Translated by SAMUEL JOHNSON)

Greek
lfrhis is the first

of the

"drum

ec-

From Sources of Japanese Tradition, edited by William Theodore de Bary [1958]. Lord Chief Justice of England.
fl

beating up for recruits in worldly warfare in our country. WASHINGTON IRVING, Knickerbocker's History of New York [1809],
clesiastic"

bk. V, ch. 7

BUTLER
As naturally as pigs squeak: * That Latin was no more difficile

The

trenchant blade, Toledo trusty, For want of fighting was grown rusty,

Than

to a blackbird

'tis

to whistle.

Hudibras,

pt

I,

canto

I,

Z.

51

And ate into itself, for lack Of somebody to hew and hack.
Hudibras, canto I,

He

A On

could distinguish and divide hair 'twixt south and southwest side,
either

pt
Z.

I,

357

which he would dispute, Confute, change hands, and still con16. Z. 67 fute.

For rhyme the rudder

is

With which
courses.

like ships

of verses, they steer their


16.
Z.

457

He'd run in debt by disputation, And pay with ratiocination.


Ib.
I.

And force them, though it was in spite Of Nature and their stars, to write.
77
16.
Z.

647

For rhetoric, he could not ope His mouth, but out there flew a trope.
16.
Z.

81

Great actions are not always true sons Of great and mighty resolutions. 16. Z. 885
Til make the fur Fly 'bout the ears of the old cur. 16. canto III,

For

all

a rhetorician's rules
his tools.

Teach nothing but to name

16.

Z.

89

Z.

277
to

A Babylonish dialect
Which
learned pedants

These

reasons

made

his

mouth
16.
Z.

much

affect.

water.

379

Ib. I 93

For he by geometric

scale,

I am not now in fortune's power: He that is down can fall no lower. 1

Could take the

size of pots of ale. 16. Z. 121

16.

Z.

871

And The

wisely tell what hour o' th' day clock doth strike, by algebra.
16.
Z.

Cheer'd up himself with ends of verse, And sayings of philosophers.


16.
Z.

1011

125

Where entity and quiddity, The ghosts of defunct bodies,


'Twas Presbyterian true blue.

A
fly.

Cleric before, and Lay 'behind; lawless linsey-woolsey brother,

Half of one order, half another.


Z.

16.

16.

Z.

1226

Some have been beaten


16.

till

they know

What wood a
Z.

189

Some

cudgel's of by th' blow; until kick'd, they can feel

Such

as

do build

their faith

upon
16.
Z.

whether

The holy

text of pike

and gun.
193

shoe be Spanish or neat's leather. 16. pt II [1664], canto I, Z. 221


fail,

And
By

prove their doctrine orthodox,

apostolic blows

and knocks.
16.
Z.

To
197

Such great achievements cannot cast salt on a woman's tail.


Ib.

I.

2 77

Compound for sins By damning those


to.
1

they are inclined to, they have no mind


16.
Z.

For what

is

worth in anything
as 'twill bring?

But

so

much money

16.

Z.

213

465

He

Greek and Latin speaks with greater


ease

Than

She that with poetry is won Is but a desk to write upon.


16.
1
Z.

hogs eat acorns, and tame pigeons peas. LIONEL CRANFDELD, EARL OF MIDDLESEX [1575-1645], Coriate

591

Panegyric on

Tom

He

that

is

down needs

fear

no

fall.

BUNYAN, Pilgrim's Progress

[1678], pt. II

352

BUTLER
Love
is

MONTROSE
Though he gave
his

Then

spare

a boy by poets styl'd; the rod, and

name

to our

Old

spoil

the

Nick.

child. 1

Hudibras, pt. II, canto I, I. 843

Hudibras, pt. Ill, canto I 9 I. 1313

With

The sun had long since in the lap Of Thetis, taken out his nap, And like a lobster boil'd, the morn From black to red began to turn.
Ib. canto II,
I.

crosses, relics, crucifixes,

Beads, pictures, rosaries, and pixes

The tools of working our salvation By mere mechanic operation.


Ib.

I 1495

29

Oaths are but words, and words but wind. 16. /. 107
For truth
is

The saints engage


About

in fierce contests

their carnal interests.

16. canto II, introduction

precious and divine

Too

rich a pearl for carnal swine.

True as the dial to the sun, 1 Although it be not shm'd upon.


Ib.
Z.

175

He that imposes an oaih makes it, Not he that for convenience takes
Then how can any man be
said

it;

He

that complies against his will

Is of his

own opinion

still.
1.

To

break an oath he never made? Ib. I 377

Ib. canto III,

547

As the ancients
Say wisely, have a care
2
o'

Neither have the hearts to stay, Nor wit enough to run away.
Ib.
Z.

th

main

569

chance, And look before you ere you leap; 3 For as you sow, ye are like to reap. 4
Ib.
Z.

And
As
501
if

poets by their sufferings grow, there were no more to do,

Doubtless the pleasure is as great Of being cheated as to cheat. Ib. canto III,

To make a poet excellent, But only want and discontent. Fragments

I.

If

He made an instrument to know the moon shine at full or no.


Ib.
I.

JAMES GRAHAM FIRST MARQUESSOF


261

MONTROSE
1612-1650

As men of inward

light are

wont

To

turn their optics in upon 't. Ib.pLlII [1678], canto I, I 481


all

He

either fears his fate too


his deserts are small,

much,

What makes
clear?

doctrines

plain
a year.

and

Or That

puts

it

not unto the touch


it all.

To win
111

or lose

About two hundred pounds

My

Dear and Only Love,


glorious

st.

And
Prove

that which was prov'd true before,

make thee

by

false again?

Two hundred more


Ib.
Z.

And famous by my
1

sword.3

my

pen,
Ib.
st.

1277
True as the needle to the pole, Or as the dial to the sun.

Nick Machiavel had


i

ne'er a trick,
4a,

See Proverbs, 13:24, p.


See Lyly, p. soab. See Heywood, p. i8s>a. See Galatians 6:7, p^ 54a.

and Menander
2

p. ioaa.
a
8
*

* I'll

BARTON BOOTH [1681-1733], Song See Shelley, p. 569^ make thee famous by my pen, And glorious by my sword.
SCOTT, Legend of Montrose [1819], ch. 15

353

CRASHAW

LA ROCHEFOUCAULD
All those fair

RICHARD CRASHAW
c.

and

flagrant things.

1613-1649
its

The

conscious water saw blushed. 1

God, and

The Flaming Heart Upon the Book of Saint Teresa [1652],


L 34
Love's passives are his activ'st part. is the wounding heart.
Ib.
I.

Epigrammata Sacra [1634]. Aquae in Vinum Versae

The wounded

Two went
One went

to pray? Oh, rather say to brag, the other to pray. Steps to the Temple [1648]. Two Went Up into the Temple to Pray 2

73

O
By

thou undaunted daughter of


all

desires!
I.

Ib.

93

the eagle in thee,

all

the dove.
Ib.
I.

95

Whoe'er she be, That not impossible she That shall command my heart and me. Ib. Wishes to His Supposed
Mistress,
I.

Poor world

(said

I)

what

wilt thou do

To

Is this

entertain this starry stranger? the best thou canst bestow? cold, and not too cleanly, manger?

Where'er she lie, Locked up from mortal


Life that dares send challenge to his end,

Contend,
eye,
Ib.
I.

ye

powers

of

heav'n

and

earth,

In shady leaves of destiny.

To

fit

a bed for this huge birth. Hymn of the Nativity


said

[1652],
st.

And when
friend!

it

comes,

say,

Welcome,
Ib.
I.

85

Sidnaeian showers Of sweet discourse, whose powers Can crown old Winter's head with
flowers.
I

cease your contest, And let the mighty babe alone. The phoenix builds the phoenix' nest. Love's architecture is his own. The babe whose birth embraves this
I,

Proud world,

morn,

Ib. I'd

I.

88

Made

his

own bed
all

ere

he was born.
Ib.
st.

would be married, but


wife,

have no

Welcome,
a single life. 16. Marriage

wonders in one

sight!

would be married to

Eternity shut in a span.


16. Full

On

Chorus

All

is

So long

Caesar's, and what odds as Caesar's self is God's?


16.

The modest

front of this small floor,

Mark XII
erubuit.

Believe me, reader, can say more Than many a braver marble can

"Here
1

lies a truly

honest man!"

Nympha

pudica

Deum

vidit,

et

Epitaph

Upon Mr. Ashton

Quoted by SAMUEL JOHNSON


[Everyman
ed.].

[1778];

from BOS-

vol. II, p. 218 footnote states that this line has frequently been attributed to Dryden, but appeared in Crashaw's Epigrammata Sacra

WELL, Life of Dr. Johnson [1791],

FRANCOIS, DUG DE LA ROCHEFOUCAULD*


Our
virtues are

[1634].

bashful stream hath seen its God blushed. AARON HILL [1685-1750] The water hears thy faintest word, And blushes into wine.

The

and

1613-1680 most frequently but

vices in disguise. 2

Reflections; or, Sentences


x

JOHN SAMUEL BEWLEY MONSELL [18111875], Mysterious Is Thy Presence,


Lord,
2

and Moral Maxims. Epigraph

st.

Two men went up into the temple to pray, the one a Pharisee, and the other a publican. Luke 18:10

the standard one. epigraph, which is the key to the system of La Rochefoucauld, is found in another form as no. 179 of the Maxims of the first edition, 1665; it is omitted from the second and
fifth edition [1678] is
2

The

This

354

LA ROCHEFOUCAULD
Self-love
ers.
is

the greatest of

all flatter-

It

is

our
Reflections 2

friends

more ignominious to mistrust than to be deceived by


Reflections 84

them.

We

all

have strength enough to en16. 19

dure the misfortunes of others. 1

Everyone complains of his memory, and no one complains of his judgment.


16.

Philosophy triumphs easily over past and future evils; but present evils 2 16. 22 triumph over it.
evils

89

We

need greater

virtues

to sustain

advice, as solace for no longer being able to 16. 93 provide bad examples.

Old people

like to give

good

good fortune than bad.

16.

25

If we had no faults of our own, we would not take so much pleasure in no-

man who is ungrateful is sometimes less to blame for it than his benefactor.

16.
is

96

ticing those of others.

16. 31

The mind
heart. 1

Jealousy feeds upon suspicion, and it turns into fury or it ends as soon as we pass from suspicion to certainty. I6. 3 2
Self-interest

always the dupe of the 16. 102

Nothing
vice.

is.

given so profusely as ad16.

no
to

speaks

all

sorts

of

The

true

tongues, and plays all sorts of roles, even that of disinterestedness.


.

think oneself

way more

to

be deceived

is

clever than others.

39
49

We
selves
all.

We
happy

are never so
as

happy nor so un16.

16. 127 would rather speak ill of ourthan not talk about ourselves at

we

16.

imagine.

138

To

erything

succeed in the world, we do evwe can to appear successful.


16.

Usually

we

praise only to

be

praised. 16. 146

56
for

There

is

no

disguise

which can
16.

long conceal love where it ulate it where it does not.

exists or sim-

Our repentance is not so much regret ill we have done as feai of the ill that may happen to us in consequence.
for the

16.

80

70

There are very few people who are not ashamed of having been in love

Who

lives

without

folly

is

not so
16.

wise as he thinks.

209

when they no

longer love each other.


16. 71

success or their

Most people judge men only by good fortune.


16.

their

True love is like ghosts, which everybody talks about and few have seen. 16. 76 The love of justice in most men is
simply the fear of suffering injustice.
16.

212
2 18
obli-

Hypocrisy
pays to virtue

is
.

the

homage

that vice

16

Too
gation

is

great haste in paying off a kind of ingratitude.

an
16.

78

226

Silence

is

the best tactic for

him who
16.

distrusts himself.

79

There is great skill in to conceal one's skill.

knowing how Ib. 245


in loving.

The
third,

and reappears

for the first time

in the
1

pleasure of love

is

We
Lives
1876]

fourth edition at the head of the Reflections.

AIM
2 See

MARTIN
Goldsmith, p. 448b.

J-See Pope, p. 4133.

The mind lives on the heart Like any parasite. EMILY DICKINSON, The

Mind
[c.

on the Heart

355

LA ROCHEFOUCAUIJD
are happier in the passion in that we arouse. 1

TAYLOR
greatest fault of a penetrating to go beyond the mark.

we

feel

than

The
wit
is

Reflections

259

We
The
age
is

Absence diminishes mediocre pasand increases great ones, as the wind blows out candles and fans fire.
sions
16.

may

give advice,

Reflections 377 but we do not


16.

inspire conduct.

378

276
us;

veracity which increases with old not far from folly. 16. 416

We always like those who


we do not
admire.
always like those

admire
16.

Few

whom we
294
so

people

know how

to

be

old.

16.

423

gratitude of most men is merely a secret desire to receive greater bene2 fits.

The

Nothing prevents our being natural

much
In

as the desire to

appear
16.

so.

431

16.

298
their
lovers,
first

those who bore us, but cannot forgive those whom


frequently
forgive

We

their
love. 1

in

passion women love the others they love


16.

we

bore.

16.

471

304
Quarrels would not last long if the fault were only on one side, 16. 496

Lovers never get tired of each other, because they are always talking about
themselves.

16.312
is

In jealousy there than love.

more

we
self-love

In the misfortune of our best friends often find something that is not dis2

16.

pleasing.

324

16. 583

We

confess to
ourselves

little

faults only to

persuade
great ones.

that

we have no
16.

BISHOP JEREMY

327

TAYLOR
1613-1667

We
love.

pardon to the extent that we


16.

330

rarely find that people have good sense unless they agree with us.8 16.

We

Desperate by too quick a sense of constant infelicity.

Holy Dying [1650-1651]


Every schoolboy knows it. On the Real Presence,

347

Jealousy
love, but

is

it

always born together with does not always die when


16.

love dies.

361

The union

Mediocre minds usually dismiss anything which reaches beyond their own 4 16. 375 understanding.
See Shelley, p. 56ga. Robert Walpole's [1676-1745] definition of the gratitude of place-expectants, "That it is a lively sense of future favors." WILLIAM HAZLTTT, English Comic Writers [1819], Wit and
a

of hands and hearts. Sermons [1653], The Marriage

Ring, pt.

No man ever repented that he arose from the table sober, healthful, and with his wits about him. 16.
1

Sir

Humor
"That was excellently observed," say I when I read a passage in another where his opinion we differ, then I proagrees with mine.
8

See Byron, p. 56ob. In all distresses of our friends first consult our private ends; While Nature, kindly bent to ease us, Points out some circumstance to please us.

We

When

SWIFT [1667-1745], A Paraphrase of Rochefoucauld's Maxim


See Burke, p. 45 ib. 583 is one of the "maximes supprimees" discarded before the 1678 edition.

nounce him

to

be mistaken.

SWIFT [1667-

i745] Thoughts on Various Subjects * See Schopenhauer, p. 5643.

Maxim

356

ADY

COWUEY

THOMAS ADY
1655 Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,
that I He on. Four angels to my bed, Four angels round my head, One to watch, and one to pray, And two to bear my soul away. A Candle in the Dark [1655]
fl.

ABRAHAM COWLEY
1618-1667 do to be forever known, And make the age to come my own?

The bed be blest

What

shall I

The Motto
This only grant me, that

my

means

may
Too low

lie

for envy,

for

contempt too
[1636]

high.

The Vote
I

RICHARD BAXTER
1615-1691
I

Well
This

then;

now do

plainly see
I

busy world
agree;

and
all

shall

ne'er

preached as never sure to preach


again, as a dying

The

very honey of
all

earthly joy
cloy,

And

man to dying men. Love Breathing Thanks and


Praise

Does of

meats the soonest


(methinks)

And

they

deserve

my

Who

for it

can endure the

stings,

SIR

JOHN DENHAM
1615-1669

The crowd, and buzz and murmurings, Of this great hive, the city. The Wish [1647]

My

Oh, could I flow like thee, 1 and make thy stream great example, as it is my theme!
yet
clear,

Ah yet, ere I descend to the grave May I a small house and large garden
have;

Though deep

though gentle

And

yet not dull;

Strong without rage, without o'erflowing


full.

a few friends, and many books, both true, Both wise, and both delightful too!
16.

Cooper's Hill [1642],

I 189

mistress moderately

fair.

16.

SIR

ROGER L'ESTRANGE
1616-1704
this

The

world's a scene of changes,

and

to

be
Constant, in Nature were inconstancy. Inconstancy [1647]

Though

may be
us.2

play to you,

Tis death to

Fables from Several Authors, Fable 398

The thirsty earth soaks up the rain, And drinks, and gapes for drink again. The plants suck in the earth, and are With constant drinking fresh and fair.
Anacreon [1656],
Fill all
II,

BUSSY-RABUTIN
1618-1693 God is usually on the side of the big 3 squadrons and against the small ones. Letter to the Comte de Limoges
[October 18, 1677]
1

ROGER DE

Drinking

the glasses there, for


of morals, tell

why
I,

Should every creature drink but

Why, man

me why?
16.

A mighty pain to love it is,


And
'tis

a pain that pain to miss;

The

river

Thames.
always for the big VOLTAIRE, letter to M. le Riche,
is

8 It

See Bion, p. io4b. is said that God


6,

reserve.

battalions.

Providence is always on the side of the last Attributed to NAPOLEON See Tacitus, p. i4oa; Boileau, p. 377b; Fred-

February

erick the Great, p. 435a;

and Gibbon,

p. 4663.

357

COWLEY
But
of all pains, the greatest pain but love in vain.

LOVELACE
Poet and Saint! to thee alone are given
sacred names of earth and Heaven. On the Death of Mr. Crctshaw 1
[1668]

It is to love,

The two most

Anacreon VII, Gold


His

time
place.

is

forever,

everywhere his Friendship in Absence

His

Nothing
But an
Life

is

there to come, and nothing

faith, perhaps, in

some nice

tenets

might

past,

eternal

now

does always
I,

last. 1

Be wrong;
2

his

life,

I'm sure, was in the


Ib.

Davideis [1656], bk.


is

L 25

right.

an incurable disease. To Dr. Scarborough [1656]

RICHARD LOVELACE
1618-1658 Oh, could you view the melody

Ye

fields of

Cambridge, our dear Camus

bridge, say,

Have ye not seen

Of every
walking
every

And music

grace of her face, 8

Was

day? there a tree about which did not


us two?

know The love betwixt

You'd drop a tear; Seeing more harmony


In her bright eye

On

the Death of Mr. William

Than now you

hear.

Harvey [1657]
Let but thy wicked

Lucasta [1649]. Orpheus to


Beasts

men from

out thee

Tell

me

not, sweet,

am

unkind,

g>
And
Even
all

thou,

the fools that crowd thee so, who dost thy millions
Islington wilt grow,

That from the nunnery Of thy chaste breast and quiet mind,

boast,

A village less than A solitude almost.


God
the
city
first

To war and arms I fly. 16. To Lucasta: Going


I

to

the
st.
i

Wars,

Of Solitude, XII
garden made, and the
first

could not love thee, dear, so much, 16. st. 3 Lov'd I not honor more.

When

I lie

tangled in her hair,

The Garden
Hence ye
profane!
I

[1664], essay 5
all,

hate ye

Both the great vulgar and the small. 4 Horace, bk. Ill, ode i

And fettered to her eye, The gods that wanton in the air Know no such liberty. 16. To Althea: From Prison,

st. i

When

flowing cups
allaying

pass- swiftly

round
st.

Charm 'd

with the foolish whistling of a


Virgil, Georgics, bk. II,
I.

With no

Thames. 4
16.
2
5

name. 5
72

Stone walls do not a prison make,

Words
1

that

weep and

tears that speak. 6

The Prophet
One
of our poets (which
is it?)

Nor iron bars a cage; Minds innocent and quiet take That for an hermitage;
If I
1 2

speaks of an

ROBERT SOUTHEY, everlasting now. tor [1834-1847], ch. 35


3 * 5
fl

The Doc-

have freedom in

my love,

See William Harvey, p. 3130. See Bacon, p. gogb, and note.

See Crashaw, p. 3543. See Pope, p. 4090. The mind, the music breathing

Odi profanum vulgus.


See Pope, p. 4ioa.

face.
st.
*

from hei BYRON, Bride of Abydos [1813], canto i,

Thoughts that breathe, and words that burn. THOMAS GRAY, Progress of Poesy [1754], ///,

6 See Shakespeare, p. aSgb. 6 Stone walls a prisoner make, but not a

slave.

3> 4

WORDSWORTH

[1770-1850],

Humanity

358

LOVELACE

MARVELL
In everything one end. 1

And

in

my soul am free,
Lucasta.

must consider the

Angels alone that soar above 1 Enjoy such liberty.

Fables, bk. Ill, fable 5

To

Althea:
st.

From
If to

Prison,

be absent were to be

Beware, as long as you live, of judging people by appearances. Ib. VI [1668], fable 5

Away from thee; Or that when I am gone, You and I were alone;
Then, my Lucasta, might I crave Pity from blustering wind, or swallowing wave.
Ib.

On
away.

the wings of

Time

grief

flies

Ib. 21

The

sign brings customers. Ib. VII [1678-1679], fable

15

People
Lucasta:

who make no

noise are dan-

To

Going Beyond
the Seas,
st. i

gerous.

VIII [1678-1679], fable 2$ the universe, and himself Ib. 26 he does not know.
Ib.

He knows

NINON DE L'ENCLOS
Old age
is

A hungry stomach cannot hear.2


Ib.

1620-1705 woman's hell.2


Attributed saying

IX [1678-1679],

fable 17

ANDREW MARVELL
1621-1678

JEAN DE LA FONTAINE
1621-1695

The

inglorious arts of peace.

Upon Cromwell's Return from


Ireland [1650]

We
done.

believe

no

evil

till

the

evil's

Fables, bk. I [1668], fable 8

We
The

He nothing common Upon that memorable


3

did or
scene,

mean

heed no

instincts

but our own.


Ib.

But with

his keener eye

The

axe's

edge did
his

try.

Ib.

opinion of the strongest is alIb. 10 the best. ways


Better to suffer than to die: that
is

But bowed

comely head
Ib.

Down as upon a bed. So much one man can

do,
Ib.

mankind's motto.

16.

16

That does both act and know.

By
man.
I

the work one knows the workIb. 21


Ib.

bend but do not break.


is

22

Had we but world enough, and time, This coyness, lady, were no crime. To His Coy Mistress [1650-1652]
I would Love you ten years before the Flood, And you should, if you please, refuse

It

a double pleasure to deceive the


Ib. II

deceiver.
It
is

[1668], fable 15

impossible

to

please

all

the

Till the conversion of the Jews.

world and one's father.


Ib. Ill [1668], fable i
1

My vegetable love should grow Vaster than empires, and more slow,
Ib.
Whatsoever thou takest in hand, remember the end, and thou shalt never do amiss. Apoc1

But though

my wing

is

closely

bound,

My My
The

heart's at liberty; prison walls cannot control


flight, the
er's
st.

freedom of the

soul.

JEANNE GUYON [1648-1717], A PrisonSong, Castle of Vincennes, France,

4
femmes.

La

vieillesse est 1'enfer des

rypha, Ecclesiasticus y.$6 2 Ventre aflame n'a point d'oreilles. See Cato the Elder, p. 1073, and note, and Adlai Stevenson, p. 10480, King Charles I.
1

359

MARVELL
But at my back I always hear Time's winged chariot hurrying near; And yonder all before us lie
Deserts of vast eternity.

MOLEERE

And all the way, to guide their chime, With falling oars they kept the time. 1
Bermudas

To His Coy
Then worms
shall try

Mistress

MOLlfcRE [JEAN BAPTISTE

And And
The

That long preserved virginity, your quaint honor turn to


into ashes all
grave's a fine
I

POQUELIN]
1622-1673

dust,

my lust.
and private place, 1 do there embrace.
Ib.

But none,

think,

pull the chestnuts out of the fire with the cat's paw. 2 L'fitourdi [1655], act III, sc. 6

To

We

die only once,

and

for such a

Though we cannot make our sun Stand still, yet we will make him run.
Ib.

long time!

Le D6pit Amoureux. [1656],


I
I

act

V,
3

sc.

To

Annihilating all that's made a green thought in a green shade. 2 The Garden [1650-1652]

always

make

the

first

have trouble making Les Prfaieuses Ridicules [1659],


act
I, sc.

verse well, but the others. 11

Casting the body's vest aside, My soul into the boughs 'does

The
glide.
affair.

world, dear Agnes,

is

a strange

Ib.

L'ficole des

Femmes

[1662], act II,


sc.

The world
bear

in all doth

but two nations

The

good, the bad; and these mixed everywhere. The Loyal Scot [1650-1652]
is

There is no rampart that will hold out against malice.


Tartuffe [1664], act
I, sc. i

Those whose conduct


talk are always the
first

My love
As
It
'tis

of a birth as rare

gives room for to attack their


Ib.

for object strange

and high;

neighbors.

was begotten by despair

Upon impossibility. The Definition


As

You
son.3

are a fool in

four

letters,

my
16.

of Love [16501652],
st.
i

She

is

laughing up her sleeve at you.


16.

lines, so loves oblique,

may

well

Themselves in every angle But ours, so truly parallel,

A woman
ready.
see. 4

greet;

always

has

her revenge
16. II, 2
I

Though

infinite,

can never meet.


Ib.
st.

Cover that bosom that


7

must not
Ib. Ill, 2
I

Where

the remote Bermudas ride, In th' ocean's bosom unespied.

Although I am a pious man, not the less a man. Ib.

am

Ill, 3

Bermudas [1657]
Orange
1

To create a public scandal is what's wicked; to sin in private is not a sin.


16.

Like golden lamps in a green

light.

IV, 5

Ib.
X

grave

is

such a quiet place.

EDNA

ST.

VINCENT MIIXAY, Renascence [1912] 2 The same phrase is in VIRGIL, Eclogues, IX,
20

54 ib. 3 Tirer les marrons du feu avec la patte du chat. Proverb in many languages See Becker, p. 9130. a Vous tes un sot en trois lettres, mon fils. 4 Couvrez ce sein que je ne saurais voir.
p.

See

Thomas Moore,

360

MOLEERE
I

saw him,
eyes.

say,

saw him with

own

my

ryon

The true Amphitryon who gives dinners. 1

is

the AmphitIII, sc.

Tartuffe, act V, sc. 3 There are fagots and fagots. Le Medecin Malgre Lui [1666], act I, sc. 6

Amphitryon, act

5
to

My

Lord

Jupiter
pill.

knows how
Ib. Ill,

sugarcoat the

10

We have
On some
ing.

changed

all that. 1

Ib. II,

You've asked for it, Georges Dandin, 2 you've asked for it. Georges Dandin [1668], act I, sc. 9

preference esteem
is

to esteem everything

based; to esteem noth[1666], act

is

Good Heavens! For more than


years I have

forty

been speaking prose withit.

out knowing
I,

Le Misanthrope
He's a wonderful
art of telling

Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme
[1670], act II,
All that
is

sc. i

sc.

talker,

who

has the

not prose
is

is

verse;

and

all

that

is

not verse
fair

you

harangue.

nothing in a great Ib. II, 5


his merit,

prose.

Ib.

My
world.

one, let us ,swear


8

He makes his
world
visits his

friendship.

an eternal Ib. IV, i

cook

and the dinners and not him.


Ib.

I will

maintain

it

before the whole

What
You
mots.
see

Ib. IV, 5 the devil was he doing in that

him laboring

to produce 60715 Ib.

galley?

LesFourberies de Scapin [1671],


act II, sc. 11

The more we love our friends, the less we flatter them; it is by excusing
nothing that pure love shows
itself.

Grammar, which knows


trol

how

to con-

even kings. 5

Ib.

Les
1

Femmes

Savantes [1672],
act II, sc. 6
est

Doubts are more


of truths.

cruel than the worst


Ib. Ill,

7
i

Le veritable Amphitryon ou Ton dine.


See Dryden, p. 37 la. Vous 1'avez voulu, 1'avez voulu.
2 8

rAmphitryon

Anyone may be an honorable man,


and yet write
If

Georges

Dandin,
let

vous

verse badly.

Ib.

IV,

sudden thought

strikes

me

us swear

everyone were clothed with in rity, if every heart were just, frank, kindly, the other virtues would be well-

an

eternal

friendship.

FRERE,

The Rovers
for a person
let

[1798]

Madam, I have been looking who disliked gravy all my life;


eternal friendship.

us

swear

nigh
to

useless, since their chief

purpose
Ib.

is

make
It is

us bear with patience the in-

SYDNEY SMITH [1771-1845], Lady Holland's Memoir, vol. I, ch. 9

justice of

our fellows.

V,

*Que diable aliait-il faire dans cette Que diable aller faire aussi dans la

galere?

galere

a wonderful seasoning of all enjoyments to think of those we love.


Ib.
1

d'un Turc? d'un Turc! [What the deuce did he want on board a Turk's galley? A Turkl] CYRANO DE BERGERAC, Le Pedant Jout [1654],
act II, sc. 4

prefer an accommodating vice

to

an

obstinate virtue.

Amphitryon One must eat to


eat. 2

[1666], act I, sc. 4


live,

The saying of Moliere came into his head: "But what the devil was he doing in that TOLSTOI, galley?" and he laughed at himself War and Peace [1865-1872], pt. IV, ch. 6
.

and not

live to

ENS,

Often misquoted "in that gallery," as in DICKA Tale of Two Cities [1859], bk. I, ch. 5:
the
devil

Ib. Ill,
tout cela.

What
there!
5

do you do in that

gallery

iNous avons chang


2

See Socrates, p. 870, and note.

Roman

Sigismund [1361-1437]. Emperor of the Holy Empire, at the Council of Constance

36!

MOLD&RE
It
salt.
is

VAUGHAN

seasoned throughout with Attic

The day
treat

of spirits;

my

soul's

calm

re-

Les

Femmes
more

Savantes, act III, sc. 2


foolish than
16.

Which none

disturb!

learned fool

is

Christ's progress, and His prayer-time; The hours to which high Heaven doth

an ignorant one.

IV, 3

chime.
Silex

Scintillans

Ah, there are no longer any children!

[1655!.
I.

The
There
is

Le Malade Imaginaire
Nearly
all

Night,

25

[1673],
sc. 1 1

act II,

in

God, some

say,

men

deep but dazzling darkness.


Ib.
I.

die of their remedies,


Ib. Ill, 3

and not

of their illnesses.

49

Happy

those early days,

when

RICHARD RUMBOLD
1622-1685
never could believe that Providence had sent a few men into the world,
I

Shin'd in my angel-infancy! 1 Before I understood this place

Appointed

for

my second race.
Ib.

The

Retreat, I
dress

But

felt

through

all this fleshly

ready booted and spurred to ride, and millions ready saddled and bridled to be
ridden.

Bright shoots of everlastingness.


16.

I 19

Some men
But
I I

a forward

the scaffold [1685]. From MACAULAY, History of England,


ch.
i

On

by backward
it,

steps

motion love, would move.


Ib.
I.

29

cannot reach
it,

and

my striving

eye

Dazzles at

ALGERNON SIDNEY
1622-1683
This hand, unfriendly to tyrants, Seeks with the sword placid repose under liberty. 1
Life and Memoirs of Algernon
light.

as at eternity. Ib.

Childhood

I saw Eternity the other night Like a great ring of pure and endless

All calm, as

it

was bright;
it,

And round beneath


days, years,

Time

in hours,

Sidney
It is

not necessary to light a candle to


Discourses on Government
[1698], sec. 23

the sun. 2

Driv'n by the spheres Like a vast shadow mov'd; in which the world And all her train were hurl'd.
16.

The World

HENRY VAUGHAN
1622-1695
Dear Night!
this world's defeat;

They

are all gone into


I

the world of

light!

And

alone

sit

lingering here;
is fair

The

Their very

memory

and

bright,
i

stop to busy fools; care's check and curb;


I

And my
see

sad thoughts doth clear. 16. They Are All Gone, st.

[1414], said, to a prelate who had objected to his Majesty's grammar: Ego sum rex Roman us,

them walking
light

et supra

grammaticam

[I

am

the

Roman

Whose
days,

king,

in an air of glory doth trample on my at best

and
1

above grammar]. Manus haec, inimica tyrannis, Ense petit placidara sub libertate quietem. The second line is the motto of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. 2 See Robert Burton, p.

am

My

days,

which are

but dull and

hoary,
iSee Traherne, p. 3783, and Wordsworth,
p.

VAUGHAN
Mere glimmering and
decays. Silex Scintillans. They

PASCAL

What
Are
st.

is

man

in nature?

Nothing in

All

Gone,

relation to the infinite, everything in relation to nothing, a mean between


1 nothing and everything. Penstes, no. 72
I lay it down as a fact that if all men knew what others say of them, there

Dear, beauteous death, the jewel of the


just!

Shining nowhere but in the dark; What mysteries do lie beyond thy
dust,

would not be four friends in the world.


16. 101

Could man outlook

that mark!
16. st. ;

The
dom,
1

state of
2

man: inconstancy, bore16.

My

soul, there

is

a country

anxiety.

127

Far beyond the stars Where stands a winged sentry


All skillful in the wars:

have discovered that all human evil comes from this, man's being unable to 3 16. 139 sit still in a room.
Cleopatra's nose, had it been shorter, the whole face of the world would have 16. 162 been changed.

There, above noise and danger, Sweet Peace is crown'd with smiles, And One born in a manger Commands the beauteous files.
16. Peace,
st. i

The
spaces

terrifies

eternal silence of these infinite 16. 206 me.


16.

YAMAGA SOKQi
1622-1685

We

shall die alone. 4

211

The heart has its reasons which rea16. 277 son knows nothing of. 5

The

business of the samurai consists

in reflecting on his own station in life, in discharging loyal service to his master if
ity

We know
reason, but
Justice

the truth, not only by the


heart.
is

by the

16.

282

he has one, in deepening his fidelin associations with friends, and,

strength
cal.
.
.

without strength without justice

helpless,

is

tyranni-

with due consideration of his


tion, in
all.

own

posi-

devoting himself to duty above The Way of the Samurai

strong,
just.

Unable to make what is just we have made what is strong 16. 298
.

Man

is

but a reed, the weakest in

BLAISE PASCAL
1623-1662
Things are always
their beginning.

nature, but

he

is

6 a thinking reed. 16.

347

at their best in

neither angel nor beast; and the misfortune is that he who would act 16. 358 the angel acts the beast. 7
is

Man

Lettres Provinciates [16561657], no. 4

Evil

is

easy,

and has

infinite forms.

16.
iQu'est-ce

408

no heed of eloquence, true morality takes no heed of morality. ... To take no heed of phitakes

True eloquence

que rhomme

dans

la

nature?

Un

losophy

is

truly to philosophize.

neant a 1'egard de 1'infini, un tout a regard du neant, un milieu entre rien et tout. 2 Condition de 1'homme: inconstance, ennui,
inquietude. 8 See Walter Bagehot, p. 726b.
4

Pensees [1670], no. 4

you wish people to think well of you? Don't speak well of yourself. 16.44
^From Sources of Japanese Tradition edited by William Theodore de Bary [1958].

Do

On mourra
Le coeur a

seul.
ses raisons

que

la raison

ne confaible

nait point.
e

L'homme

n'est

qu'un roseau,
c'est

le plus

de la nature, mais

un roseau

pensant.
le

? L'homme n'est ni ange ni bfite; et heur veut que qui veut faire 1'ange fait

mal-

la bfite.

363

PASCAL

AUBREY
them tremble
at the

To

ridicule
1

philosophy

is

really to

word of the Lord.


Journal

philosophize.

This was in the year 1650.


Pen$6es, no. 430

What a chimera then is man! What a novelty! What a monster, what a chaos, what a contradiction, what a prodigy!
Judge of
tainty
all

He
there

[Oliver Cromwell]
is

said:

"I see

depository of

things, feeble earthworm, truth, a sink of uncer-

a people risen, that I cannot win either with gifts, honors, offices or all other sects and people I places; but
can."
Ib.

and

error,

the glory and


Ib. Ib.

the

shame of the
Self
is

universe. 2
3

434

455 Men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they do it from religious conviction.
16.

hateful.

ANGELUS SILESIUS [JOHANN SCHEFFLER]


1624-1677

894

God lives not without me. I know that without me God


live at all;

cannot

"The God
Isaac, the

of

Abraham, the God of

God

of Jacob," not of philos-

Were

to go,

he

also to his

death must

ophers and scholars.

fall.

Writing found in Pascal's


effects after his

The Cherubic Wanderer [16571675]


I

death
I

WILLIAM WALKER
1623-1684
Learn to read slow: all other graqes Will follow in their proper places. 4 The Art of Reading

am like God, and God like me. am as large as God, he is as small


cannot above me, nor
I

as

He

beneath
Ib.

him
Everyone

be.

to his
is

own.

The

bird

in the sky, the stone rests


fish,

GEORGE FOX*
1624-1691 The Lord showed me, so that I did see clearly, that he did not dwell in these temples which men had commanded and set up, but in people's hearts ... his people were his temple, and he dwelt in them. 6
Journal [1694]

on the land,
In water lives the God's hand.

my

spirit

in
Ib.

THOMAS SYDENHAM
1624-1689
Fever
itself is

Nature's instrument.

Quoted York Academy


vol.

in Bulletin of the

New

of

Medicine,

the Lord sent me forth into the world, He forbade me to put off my Ib. hat to any, high or low.
Justice Bennet of Derby, was the first that called us Quakers, because I bid
1

When

IV

[1928], p. 922

Gout, unlike any other disease, kills more rich men than poor, more wise men than simple. Great kings, emperors, generals, admirals have all died of gout.

and philosophers
Ib. 993

Se

moquer de

la philosophic, c'est vrairaent

A man

is

as old as his arteries.


Ib.

philosopher. 3 See Pope, p. -^oSb-^oga.


3
*

Le moi

est haissable.

Take time enough; all other graces Will soon fill up their proper places. JOHN BYROM [1692-1763], Advice

JOHN AUBREY
to

6
8

Preach Slow Founder of the Society of Friends (Quakers).


See 7 Corinthians $:iy,
p.

1626-1697
[Hobbes] had read much, but his contemplation was much more than

He

5a.

364

AUBREY
his reading.

BUNYAK
Some
said, "It

He was wont to say that if he had read as much as other men, he should have known no more than other men. Brief Lives [ed. 1898], I, 349

said,

might do good"; others "No."


Pilgrim's Progress [1678]. Apology for His Book

He [John Milton] was so fair that they called him the lady of Christ's
College.
Ib.

As
I

walked through the wilderness


Ib. pt. I
. .

of this world.

Mr. William Shakespeare was horn upon Avon in the county of Warwick. His father was a butcher, and I have been told heretofore by some of the neighbors, that when he was a boy he exercised his father's trade, but when he killed a calf he would do it in a high style and make a
at Stratford

saw a man clothed with rags . a book in his hand, and a great burden

upon

his back.

Ib.

The name of the one was Obstinate and the name of the other was Pliable.
Ib.

The name
spond.

of the slough was DeIb.

speech.

Ben Johnson and he


mors of men

did gather hu-

Every fat bottom. 1

[vat]

must stand upon

his
Ib.

daily wherever they came. Ib. II, 225

The
Set

gentleman's

name was
Sir.

Mr.
Ib.

Worldly-Wise-Man.

down my name,

Ib.

MARIE DE RABUTIN-CHANTAL, MARQUISE DE SfeVIGNll


1626-1696

name

very stately palace before him, the of which was Beautiful. Ib.
valley of Humiliation.

The

Ib.

True friendship
Lettres.

is

never serene.

A Madame
go

Fiend coming over the field to meet him; his name is Apollyon.
ib.
I

A foul

de Grignan
will

[September 10, 1671]

talk

of things heavenly,

or

Racine
coffee.

will

out of style like Attributed saying

things earthly; things moral, or tilings evangelical; things sacred, or things profane; things past, or things to come;
foreign, or things at home; essential, or tilings circumstantial. Ib.

JACQUES BfiNIGNE BOSSUET


1627-1704
greatest weakness of all weaknesses is to fear too much to appear

things
things

more

The

weak.
Politique Tirte del'ficriture Sainte
inexorable the core of life.

It beareth the name of Vanity Fair, because the town where 'tis kept is Ib. lighter than vanity.

Hanging is too good Mr. Cruelty.

for

him, said
Ib.

The

boredom that

is

at

My

great-grandfather

was

but

From M.

A. COUTURIER,

Se Carder Libre

water-man, looking one way, and row2 Ib. ing another.

A castle called Doubting Castle, the owner whereof was Giant Despair.
Ib.
Every tub must stand upon its bottom. CHARLES MACKLIN, The Man of the World [1781],
act I, sc. 2
2

JOHN BUNYAN
1628-1688
1

Some said, "J onn P rmt "Not so."


>

it";

others said,

See Plutarch, p.

137^ and

note.

365

BUNYAN
They came
tains.

POPE

to the Delectable

Moun-

SIR

WILLIAM TEMPLE
1628-1699
proverbs,
receive
their

Pilgrim's Progress, pt. I

A great horror
Christian.

and darkness

fell

upon
Ib.

Books,
of

like

chief value

So I awoke, and behold dream.

it

was a
Ib.

ages

from the stamp and esteem through which they have

passed.

Miscellanea, pt. II [1600!. Ancient

that could look no way but downwards with a muckrake in his

A man

and Modern

ing

hand.

Ib. pt. II
fall,

He that is down needs fear no He that is low no pride.


16.

done, human life is, at the greatest and the best, but like a froward child, that must be played with
all is

When

and humored a
it

little

to keep

it

quiet
care

till
is

falls

asleep,

and then the


Ib.

Shepherd Boy's Song

over.

Of Poetry

Who would true valor see,


One
Let him come hither; here will constant be,

CHARLES
1630-1685
This

II

Come wind, come weather. There's no discouragement


Shall

make him once


a pilgrim.

relent
Ib.

my

His

first

avow'd intent

is very true: for my words are own, and my actions are my minis* ters'. Reply to Lord Rochester

To be

My

sword

I give to

him

that shall

succeed

me

Let not poor Nelly starve. On his deathbed. From BURNET, History of My Own Times,
vol. I, bk. 2, eft.

in

my

courage and

skill

pilgrimage, and my to him that can get it.

17

My marks
warder.

be His battle

scars I carry with a witness for me, that I have

and

me, to
fought

who now

will

be

my

re-

Ib.

said, an uncontime dying; he hoped that they would excuse it. From MACAULAY, History of England [1849], vol. I, ch. 4

He had

been, he

scionable

So he passed over, and all the trumpets sounded for him on the other
side.

Ib.
If

JOHN TILLOTSON
1630-1694
were not a necessary Being of Himself, He might almost seem to be

The captain of all these men of death that came against him to take him
away, was the Consumption, for it was that that brought him down to the
grave.

God

made

for the use

and benefit of men. 2 Sermon


least lib-

The

Life

and Death of

They who
erty,

are in highest places, and

Mr. Badman \i68o]

have the most power, have the

because they are most observed.


Reflections

JOHN RAY
1628-1705
In a calm sea every man is a pilot. English Proverbs [1670]
If

WALTER POPE
c.

1630- 1714

May
1
3

govern sway,

my passions

with absolute

wishes were horses, beggars, might


"

ride.

Ib.

See Rochester, p. 3823. See Ovid, p. isSb, and Voltaire, p. 4183.

366

POPE

DRYDEN

And grow

wiser

and

better, as strength

When

wears away, Without gout or stone, by a gentle decay.

I consider life, 'tis all a cheat; Yet, fool'd with hope, men favor the

deceit;

Trust on, and think tomorrow will

re-

The Old Man's Wish

[1685]

pay.

Tomorrow's

falser

than
it

the

former
shall

BISHOP RICHARD

CUMBERLAND

day; Lies worse, and while


blest

says

we

be

It is better to

1631-1718 wear out than to

With some new


rust
possest.

joys, cuts off

what we
live past
re-

out.

Strange cozenage!

None would

From BISHOP GEORGE HORNE


[1730-1792],

years again,

Sermon on the
the

Yet

all

hope pleasure in what yet

Duty
Truth

of

Contending for

main;

And from
ceive

the dregs of life think to re-

JOHN DRYDEN
1631-1700

What

the first sprightly running could not give. Aureng-Zebe, act IV, sc. i
friends.
III, sc. i

By viewing Nature,
Art,

Nature's

handmaid

The wretched have no


All for

Love [1678], act

Makes mighty

things from small begin1


st.

nings grow.

Your Cleopatra; Dolabella's Cleopatra;


every man's Cleopatra.
Ib.

Annus

Mirabilis [1667],

155

IV,

[Shakespeare] was the man who of all modern, and perhaps ancient poets, had the largest and most com-

He

With how much we wish! x


Whatever
is, is

ease believe
its

we what

prehensive soul.

Essay of Dramatic Poesy [1668]

causes just. 2 Oedipus [1679] (with NATHANIEL LEE), act III, sc. i
in

He was naturally learned; he needed not the spectacles of books to read Nature; he looked inwards, and found her
there.

As

His hair just grizzled, in a green old age.3

Ib.

Ib.

Of no
But

fell like

distemper, of no blast he died, autumn fruit that mellow'd


at,

Than

Pains of love be sweeter far all other pleasures are.

long
sc. i

Tyrannic Love [1669], act IV,

Even wonder'd no sooner.


score years,

because he dropp'd

I am as free as Nature first made man, Ere the base laws of servitude began,

Fate seem'd to wind

him up

for four-

When

wild in woods the noble savage

Yet

freshly

ran

he

on ten winters

ran,

more;
Till like a clock

The Conquest
sc. i

of Granada [1669-1670], pt. I, act I,

worn out with eating

time,

The wheels
still.
1

of weary life at last stood


Ib.

IV,

Death in itself is nothing; but we fear To be we know not what, we know not
where.

Men
18

freely believe that

which they

desire.

CAESAR
sec.
2

[c.

102-44

B.C.],

De

Bella Gallico, bk. Ill,

Aureng-Zebe [1676], act IV,


1

sc. i

See William Bradford, p. giga.

unconscious of decays. POPE, Translation of the Iliad, XXIII, 929

See Pope, p. 4o8b. green old age,

367

DRYDEN
In
pious
begin,
times,
ere
priestcraft

did

In friendship false, implacable in hate, Resolv'd to ruin or to rule the state.

Before polygamy was

made

a sin.
pt. I
Z.

Absalom and Achitophel,


pt. I,
I.

Absalom and Achitophel,

173

[1680],

And Heaven had wanted one immortal


song.
Ib.
1.

Whate'er he did was done with so

197

much
In

ease,

him

alone, 'twas natural to please.


Ib.
Z.

The

27

The

Plots,

true

or

false,

are

necessary

the glad diviner's people's prayer, theme, young men's vision, and the old Ib. I. men's dream! 1 238
foes, his friends his truth

things,

To

raise

up commonwealths and ruin


16.
Z.

His courage

kings.

83

proclaim.
All empire
trust.
is

16.

Z.

357
in

Of these the false Achitophel was ^first, A name to all succeeding ages curs'd.
For close designs and crooked counsels
fit,

no more than power


16.
I.

411

Better one suffer, than a nation grieve.


Ib.
I.

416

turbulent of wit, Sagacious, bold, and Restless, unfix'd in principles and place, In power unpleas'd, impatient of dis-

Who

think too

little,

and who

talk too
Z.

much. 2

16.

534

fiery

grace; soul,

which working out

A man
its

so various that

he seem'd

to be

Not

way,
Fretted the pygmy-body to decay: And o'er-inform'd the tenement
1

one, but all mankind's epitome: Stiff in opinions, always in the wrong;

Was
of

everything by starts,
long: in the

and nothing

clay.

A daring pilot in extremity;


Pleas'd

But,

course of

one revolving

He

with the danger, when the waves went high calm sought the storms; but for a
unfit, steer

moon,

Was

chemist, fiddler, statesman, and 16. Z. 545 buffoon. 3


violent, or over civil,
or

So over
too

Would

nigh the

sands

to
al-

That every man with him was God


Devil.
Ib.
I.

boast his wit.

557

Great wits are sure to madness near


lied,

His tribe were

God

men.
do
their

And

thin partitions vide. 2


life,

bounds
16.
Z.

Almighty's gentle16. /. 645

di-

150
168

Nor

is

the people's judgement always


err

true:

Bankrupt of

yet prodigal of ease.


16.
Z.

The most may


few.

as

the grossly as 16. /. 781


his

And

all

to leave

what with

his toil

he
8

Large was his wealth, but larger was


heart.
16.
Z.

won

826

To
1
2

that unfeather'd two-legg'd thing, JL 16. Z. z~ son.


See
Fuller, p. Remembrance and reflection

Of

ancient race by birth, but nobler


16.
Z.

Thomas
thin

yet In his own worth.

900

how

allied!

What

partitions

sense

from

thought

Beware the fury of a patient man.


Ib.
I.

dividel

POPE, Essay on

Man
epistle I,
I.

1005

See Seneca, p. 1300, and note. * See Diogenes the Cynic, p. g6b.

See Joel 3:28, p. 350. 2 See Jonson, p. 3 See Juvenal, p.

368

DRYDEN

Made

still

a blund'ring kind of mel-

And

torture

one poor word ten thou-

ody;

sand ways.

Spurr'd boldly on, and dashed through thick and thin, Through sense and nonsense, never out

Mac
shine

Flecknoe,

I.

208

Wit will
line.

nor in. Free from all meaning, whether good or bad, And in one word, heroically mad. Absalom and Achitophel, 1 pt II [1682], I 413

Through the harsh cadence of a rugged

To

the

Memory

of

Mr. Oldham
[1684],
I.

15

For every inch that

is

not fool

is

rogue.

Happy the man, and happy he alone, He who can call today his own; He who, secure within, can say, Tomorrow, do thy worst, for I have

Ib. I

463

hVd

today.

There

is

a pleasure sure

Imitation of Horace, bk. Ill,

In being mad which none but know. 2

madmen
Not heaven
power;
itself

ode 29 [1685], L 65

upon the past has

The Spanish
And, dying,
bless the

Friar [1681], act II, sc. i

hand that gave


It16is

But what has been, has been, and I Ib. I. 71 have had my hour.
I

the blow. 3

can enjoy her [Fortune] while she's


kind;

He's a sure card.

They
good

say everything in the world

But when she dances in the wind, And shakes the wings and will not
Ib. I 81 puff the prostitute away. will And virtue, though in rags, keep Ib. I 87 me warm.
I

for something.

Ib. III? 2
his

stay,

Or break
rest.

the eternal Sabbath of


16.

V,

All

human

things are subject to decay,

Men met
The

And, when fate summons, monarchs must obey.

Mac
The
But
rest to

each other with erected look, that they took; steps were higher Friends to congratulate their friends

Flecknoe [1682],
faint

/.

made haste,

some
4

meaning make
deviates

And

foes saluted as they long inveterate


pass'd.

pretense,

Shadwell
sense.

never

into

Threnodia Augustalis [1685],

Z.

124

Some beams
fall,

of wit on other souls

may

Since heaven's eternal year is thine. To the Pious Memory of Mrs.

Anne

Killegrew [1686], I 15
far

Strike

through and make

a lucid inter-

O gracious

God! how

have we
Ib.

val;

But Shadwell's genuine night admits no


ray,

Profan'd thy heavenly gift of poesy!

L 56

His rising fogs prevail upon the day. Ib. I 19


*In collaboration with NAHUM TATE. See p
.

Her wit was more than man, her inno2 Ib. I 70 cence a child. Then cold, and hot, and moist, and
3 dry, iSee Horace, p. i22a.
2

There

is

a pleasure in poetic pains


I.

Which only poets know. COWPER [1731-1800], The Timepiece,


a

Of manners

gentle,

of affections mild,

285

Adore

JOHN POMFRET
*

hand that gives the blow. to His Frien [1667-1703], Verses See Shadwell, p. gSoa.
the

In wit a man; simplicity a child. POPE, Epitaph on Gay [173] bk. II, I 898, a See Milton, Paradise Lost,
p. 344*.

369

DRYDEN
In order to their stations leap, And Music's power obey.

War
har-

seldom enters but where wealth


allures.
1

From harmony, from heavenly


mony,
This universal frame began:

The Hind and the

Panther,

pt. II, I

706

Much
it

From harmony to harmony Through all the compass of the notes


ran,

malice mingled with a

little wit.

Ib. Ill, I i

The

diapason

closing full in

Man.

Jealousy, the jaundice of the soul. 16.

Z.

73

Song

for St. Cecilia's

Day
i

For present
blood

joys are

more

to flesh

and

[1687], st

What
The

passion cannot Music raise and


Ib. st. 2

Than

quell?

a dull prospect of a distant good. Ib. I. 364

trumpet's loud clangor Excites us to arms.


soft

T' abhor the makers, and their laws apIb.


st.

Is

prove, to hate traitors

and the treason


is

love. 2

The

complaining

flute,

Ib. I

706
763

In dying notes, discovers The woes of hopeless lovers.


Ib.
st.

Secret guilt

by

silence

betrayed.
Ib.
Z.

Possess your soul with patience. 8


Ib.
Z.

The trumpet shall be heard on high The dead shall live, the living die, And Music shall untune the sky!
Ib.

Our

vows

are

heard

betimes!

839 and
the

Heaven

takes care

Grand Chorus

To

grant, before

we can conclude

She

fear'd
sin.

no danger,

for she

knew no

prayer:

Preventing angels
the Panther
I,
I.

The Hind and

And

[1687], pt.

met it half the way, sent us back to praise, who came to pray. 4 Britannia Rediviva [1688], Z. z

And doom'd
to die.

to death, though fated not Ib. I. 8

Three poets, in three distant ages born, Greece, Italy, and England did adorn.

For truth has such a face and such a

The

first

in

loftiness of

thought

sur-

mien
As to be
lov'd needs only to

be seen. 1
16.
Z.

33

The The

pass'd; next, in majesty; in

both the

last.

force of Nature could


go-

no

further

Of all the The worst


mind.

is

tyrannies on human kind that which persecutes the


Ib.
rule,
I.

To make
two.

a third, she join'd the

former

239
This
261

Reason to

mercy

to forgive:
Ib. I

The

first is

law, the last prerogative.

Under Mr. Milton's Picture [1688] is the porcelain clay of humankind. 5

Don

Sebastian [1690], act

I, sc. i

And

kind as kings upon their coronation day. Ib. /. 271


leaves the private conscience for the guide. Ib. I. 478

A knockdown argument: word and a blow.


1

'tis

but a
I, sc. i

And

Amphitryon [1690], act


2
8 *

All have not the gift of martyrdom.


1

See See See See

Bion, p. 1046, and note.


Caesar, p. iia.

Luke

21:19, p. 47!).

Goldsmith, p. 44gb.
precious

The

porcelain of

human

clay.

See Pope, p. 4093.

BYRON, Don Juan [1819-1824], canto

4, st.

370

DRYDEN
Whistling to keep myself from being
afraid.
1

Amphitryon, act
I

III, sc. Ill,

Rich the treasure, Sweet the pleasure Sweet is pleasure after pain.
Alexander's Feast, I 58

am

the true Amphitryon.

Ib.

V,

The king grew vain;


Fought
all

Fairest Isle, all isles excelling, Seat of pleasures, and of loves;

And

thrice thrice

his battles o'er again; he routed all his foes,

and
I 68

Venus here

will

choose her dwelling,


groves.
II, sc. 5,

he slew the

slain.

And forsake her Cyprian

Ib.

King Arthur [1691], act

Song of Venus
Theirs was the giant race, before the
flood.3

Fallen from his high estate, And welt'ring in his blood;

By

L 5 Epistle to Congreve [1693],

Deserted, at his utmost need, those his former bounty fed, On the bare earth expos'd he lies, With not a friend to close his eyes.
Ib.

Genius must be born, and never can be Ib. L 60 taught.

I 78

Be kind
fend,

to

my

remains; and oh de-

Softly sweet, in Lydian measures, Soon he sootfi'd his soul to pleasures.

Against your judgment, your departed Ib. I- 7 2 friend!

War, he sung, is toil and trouble; Honor but an empty bubble;


Fighting

Look round the habitable world: how


few

Never ending, still beginning. still, and still destroying. If all the world be worth thy winning,
it

Know

their

own

good, or knowing

it,

Think, oh think

worth enjoying:

pursue.
Juvenal, Satire

[1693]

Lovely Thai's sits beside tiiee, Take the good the gods provide
thee.

Arms, and the man

I sing,

who, forced

w. I 97
again.
I.

by

fate,

And haughty Juno's


None but

unrelenting hate. bk. I, Z. i [1697] Virgil, Aeneid,

Sigh'd and

look'd,

and sigh'd
Ib.
fir'd

120

the brave deserves the fair. Alexander's Feast [1697], L 15

And,

like

another Helen,

Troy.

Ib.

another I 154

With ravish'd ears The monarch hears;


Assumes the god,

Could

soft desire.

swell the soul to rage, or kindle Ib. Z. 160

Meets to nod, And seems to shake


the Sound drums
.

He
the spheres.
Ib.
Z.

rais'd a

mortal to the

skies,

She drew an angel down.


37
the

Ib.

Z.

169

Words, once

my

stock, are

wanting to
friend.

trumpets;
.
.

beat

commend
So great a poet and so good a
Epistle to Peter

Now give the hautboys breath; he 4 Ib. I- 50 comes, he comes.


Bacchus, ever
1

Antony Motteux
[1698],
Z.

54
a

fair

and ever young.


Ib.

Lord of
I
wife.

yourself,

uncumber'd with

Whistling aloud to bear his courage up. BLAIR, The Grave [1743]' L 5 8 *SeeMoliere, p. 36ib.
a 4

Epistle to

John Driden of Chesterton [1700],


Z.

18

See Genesis 6:4, p. 6b. See Morell, p. 42ob.

Better to

hunt in

fields, for

health un-

bought,

37 i

DRYDEN

LOCKE
He. was exhal'd; his great Creator drew His spirit, as the sun the morning dew. 1 On the Death of a Very 'Young

Than
The

fee

the doctor for a nauseous

draught.

God

wise, for cure, on exercise depend; never made his work for man to

mend.
Epistle to John Driden of Chesterton, I. 92

Gentleman
Here
lies

[1700]
liel

Now she's at rest, and so am L


Epitaph intended for his wife

my

wife:

here let her

very merry, dancing, drinking,


quaffing,

Laughing,
time.

and

unthinking
[1700],
/.

The

Secular

Masque

38

WILLIAM STOUGHTON
1631-1701
hath sifted a nation that he choice grain into this wilsend might
derness. 2

The sword within the scabbard And let mankind agree.


All, all

keep,
16. L 61

God

Thy Thy wars brought nothing about; Thy lovers were all untrue.
Tis well an old age

of a piece throughout: chase had a beast in view;

Election

Sermon

at Boston

[April 29, 1669]

And time
111

is out, to begin a new. 1

JOHN LOCKE
16. I

86

1632-1704

by unseen degrees As brooks make rivers, rivers run to


habits gather
seas.

and

opinions are always suspected, usually opposed, without any other reason but because they are not already

New

Ovid, Metamorphoses [1700], XV, The Worship of Aesculapius, L 155


bk.

common.
Essay Concerning Human Understanding [1690], dedicatory epistle

[Of

Here

is

Chaucer's Canterbury Tales] God's plenty. Fables Ancient and Modern


[1700], preface

No
yond

man's knowledge here can go be-

his experience. 16. bk. II, ch. i, sec. 19

For Art may


miss.
16.

err,

but Nature cannot


is

It is

one thing to show a

man

that he

The Cock and


am,
16.

the Fox, I 452

in error, and another to put him in 16. IV, 7, 11 possession of truth.

Old

as I

for ladies' love unfit,


I

The power

All
yet.
i

of beauty

remember

men

are liable to error;

and most
or

Cymon and

Iphigenia, L

men

are, in

many

points,

by passion
it.

interest,

trudg'd along unknowing what he sought, And whistled as he went, for want of
16. /. 84 thought. She hugg'd the offender, and forgave

He

under temptation to

16. 20, 17

Wherever Law ends, Tyranny


gins/

be-

Second Treatise of Government


[1690], sec. 202
1

the offense: Sex to the last. 2

16.

Z.

367

Early,

bright,

transient,

chaste as morning

dew,

Of seeming arms
say,

to

make

a short es-

She

sparkled,

was

exhal'd,

and

went

to

heaven.

Then hasten
1

to

be drunk

the busi16.
Z.

ness of the day.

407

See Tennyson, p. 6513. a And love the offender, yet detest the offense. POPE, Eloisa to Abelard [1717], /. /pa

EDWARD YOUNG, Night Thoughts [17421745], Night V, 1. 600 God had sifted three kingdoms to find the wheat for this planting. LONGFELLOW, Court2

ship of Miles Standish [1858], s See William Pitt, p. 4*6a.

IV

372

LOCKE

SPINOZA

A sound
short but

mind
full

in a sound body, 1 is a description of a happy

Will and same thing.

Intellect are

one and the

state in this world.

Some Thoughts on Education


[1693], sec. i

Ethics, pt. II, proposition 49: corollary

harder to be got than knowledge of the world; and, if lost in a

Virtue

is

young man,

is

seldom recovered.
It.

He that can carp in the most eloquent or acute manner at the weakness of the human mind is held by his fellows as almost divine.
16. Ill: preface

64
Surely
if

He
self

that will have his son have a re-

human

affairs

would be

far

spect for

him and his orders, must himhave a great reverence for his son. 2 16.65
only fence against the world
it.

the power in men to be silent happier were the same as that to speak. But
experience teaches that

more

than

sufficiently

The

men

is

more

thorough knowledge of

16.

88

difficulty

govern nothing with than their tongues. 16. 2: note


pleasure
arising

Pride

is

therefore

BENEDICT [BARUCH]
SPINOZA3
1632-1677
not an absence of war, it is a virtue, a state of mind, a disposition for benevolence, confidence, justice.

from a man's thinking too highly of


himself.
It

16. 26: note

Peace

is

may easily come to pass that a vain man may become proud and imagine himself pleasing to all when he is in
reality a universal nuisance.

Theological-Political Treatise

16. 30; note

Nature abhors a vacuum.


Ethics [1677],* pt.
I, proposition 15: note

Self-complacency is pleasure accompanied by the idea of oneself as cause. 16.51: note


It therefore comes to pass that everyone is fond of relating his own exploits and displaying the strength both of his body and his mind, and that men are on this account a nuisance one to the

God and
eternal.

all

the attributes of

God
16.

are

19

Nothing exists some effect does not

from whose nature


follow.
16.

36

other.

16. 54: note

He who would distinguish the true from the false must have an adequate idea of what is true and false.
16. II, 42: proof
See Juvenal, p. See Juvenal, p. i4oa. Ein Gottbetrunkener Mensch [A God-intoxiNOVALIS (FRIEDRICH VON HARDENcated man].
2
1

I refer those actions which work out the good of the agent to courage, and those which work out the good of oth-

ers to nobility.

sobriety,
ger,
etc.,

and presence of mind


are species
etc.,

Therefore temperance, in danof courage; but are species of


16. 59: note

modesty, clemency,
nobility.

BERG) [1778-1801] The Lord blot out his

name under
for

heaven.

Fear cannot be without hope nor

The Lord

destruction from all the tribes of Israel, with all the curses of the firmament which are written in the Book of the
set

him apart

hope without

fear.

16. definition 13; explanation

There shall no man speak to him, Law. no man write to him, no man show him any kindness, no man stay under the same roof with Amsterdam him, no man come nigh him. Synagogue's curse on Spinoza [1656] * Everyman edition, translated by ANDREW
.

So long as a man imagines that he cannot do this or that, so long is he determined not to do it: and conse-

BOYLE.

him quently, so long it is impossible to that he should do it. 16. 28: explanation

373

SPINOZA

PEPYS

Those who are believed to be most abject and humble are usually most ambitious and envious.
Ethics,

and glory who cry out the loudest of abuse and the vanity of the world.
Ethics, pt.

its

V, proposition
10: note
eter-

pt

III,

proposition 29: explanation

We
nal.

feel

and know that we are


16.

the same thing can at the same time be good, bad, and indifferent, e.g., music is good to the melancholy, bad to those who mourn, and
neither good nor

One and

23: note

All excellent things are as difficult as

they are

rare.

16. 42: note

bad

to the deaf.
16.

The
as

IV: preface

things which ... are esteemed the greatest good of all ... can be

Man

is

a social animal.

reduced to these three headings: to wit,


Riches, Fame, these three the

and

Pleasure.
is

16. proposition 35: note

With

Men will find that they can prepare with mutual aid far more easily what they need, and avoid far more easily the perils which beset them on all sides, by 16. united forces.
ambition, lust, etc., 2 nothing but species of madness.
Avarice,
are

engrossed that it cannot scarcely thirtk of any other good. Tractatus de Intellectus

mind

so

Emendatione [1677],

SIR
16. 44: note

CHRISTOPHER

WREN

1632-1723
Si

day with the greatest anxiety, act and scheme in order to retain his reputation. For the mob is varied and inconstrive

He whose honor depends on opinion of the mob must day by

monumentum

the
[If

requiris circumspice

you would see the man's monument,


Inscription in St. Paul's Cathedral, London. Written by

look around].

Wren's son

stant,

and therefore

if

a reputation
it

is

not carefully preserved

dies

quickly. 16. 50: note

WENTWORTH DILLON, EARL OF ROSCOMMON


1633-1685 Choose an author as you choose a
friend.

In refusing benefits caution must be used lest we seem to despise or to refuse them for fear of having to repay them in kind. 16. 70: note

Essay on Translated Verse


[1684],
/.

To

give aid to every poor


. .

man

is far

96

beyond the reach and power of every man. Care of the poor is incumbent on society as a whole. 3
.

Immodest words admit of no defense, For want of decency is want of sense.


16.
I.

113

16. appendix,

ij

The multitude

is

always in the wrong.


16.
Z.

None

are

more taken

in

than the proud,

who wish

to

by flattery be the first


16.

183

and are not. Those are most desirous


1
fl

21

My
Do

God,

my

Father, and

not forsake

my Friend, me in my end.

of

honor

Translation of Dies Irae

See Blackstone, p. 444b. me, avarice seems not so much a vice, as a deplorable piece of madness. SIR THOMAS

To

SAMUEL PEPYS
1633-1703
pray proud.
I

BROWNE, Religio Medici [1642] 8 See Samuel Johnson, p. 4313, and Andrew
Carnegie, p. 7575.

God

to keep

me

Diary,

March

from being 22, 1660

374

PEPYS
This morning came home my fine camlet cloak, with gold buttons, and a
silk suit,

which cost

me much

money,

and
for

pray

God

to

make me

it.

able to pay Diary, July i, 1660


July 22, 1660, etc.

But Lord! how everybody's looks, and discourse in the street, is of death, and nothing else; and few people going up and down, that the town is like a
place distressed

and forsaken. 1
Diary, August 30, 1665

And
I

so to bed.

unwilling to mix my fortune with him that is going down the wind.

am

Strange to see how a good dinner feasting reconciles everybody.

and

September 6, 1660 A good honest and painful sermon. March 17, 1661

Saw

9, 1665 wedding in the church; and

November

One, by his own confession to me, that can put on two several faces, and look his enemies in the face with as much love as his friends. But, good

strange to see what delight we married people have to see these poor fools de-

coyed into our condition.

December
Musick and

25, 1665

women

cannot but give


is.

God! what an age

is

this,

and what a

way to, whatever

my business
I

world is this! that a man cannot live without playing the knave and dissimulation. September i, 1661

March

9,

1666

The
little

do indulge myself a is, the more in pleasure, knowing


truth
is

Though he be a much company, and


or

fool, will tell all

yet he keeps

that this

the proper age of

my

life

to

he

sees

hears,

so

man may

understand

what the common

talk of the

town
2,

is.

September

1661

My wife, poor wretch.


September 18, 1661,
etc.

do it; and, out of my observation that most men that do thrive in the world do forget to take pleasure during the time that they are getting their estate, but reserve that till they have got one, and then it is too late for them to enjoy March 10, 1666 it.

Thanks be

to

drinking of wine,

God, I do

since

my

leaving

find myself

much

better, and do mind my business better, and do spend less money, and less time lost in idle company.

Home, and, being dined upon cold meat.


Musick
I is

washing-day,
April 4, 1666

the thing of the world that


July 30, 1666
night,

January 26, 1662


for

love most.

As happy a man as any in the world, the whole world seems to smile October 31, 1662 upon me.

Busy

till

mightily to see
it.

what

pleasing myself a deal of business

goes off a man's hands

when he

stays

by

Bought Hudibras again, it being certainly some ill humor to be so against that which all the world cries up to be
solved once

January 14, 1667

Did

satisfy

myself mighty

fair in

the

the example of wit; for which I am remore to read him, and see whether I can find it or no. 1

truth of the saying that the world do not grow old at all, but is in as good

condition in

all

respects as ever

it

was.

February

3,

1667

February

6,

1663

the Trinity House, where a very good dinner among the old soakers. February 15, 1665
Pepys had bought Hudibras December 26, but thought it "so silly an abuse of the Presbyter Knight going to the wars" that he
1662,
1

To

This day I am, by the blessing of God, 34 years old, in very good health and mind's content, and in condition of estate much beyond whatever my
friends

could

expect

of

child

of

theirs, this
i

day 34 years.

The

Lord's

sold

it

the same day.

The

time of the Great Plague.

375

PEPYS

BOILEAU
than the making too a catalogue of things necessary. ~ large Advice to a Daughter [if
understanding

name be
for
it.

praised!

and may

be thankfu"

Diary, February 23, 1667


it is

But
will do.

pretty to see

March

what money 21, 1667


mourning,

ment
no.

Popularity is a crime from the moit is sought; it is only a virtue

To

church; and with

my

where

men have
Political,

it

whether they

will or

very handsome, and new


a great show.

periwig,

make
1667

March

31,

But

with his

to think of the clatter they make coach, and their own fine

Moral, and Miscellaneous Reflections [1750]


is

clothes, and yet how meanly they live within doors, and nastily, and borrow-

Misspending a man's time of self-homicide.

a kind
Ib.

Men
horses, stolen.

are

not hanged

for

stealing

ing everything of neighbors. April i, 1667

but that horses

may

not be
Ib.

Whose
to

red nose makes

be seen with him.


Gives

me ashamed May 3, 1667

ROBERT SOUTH
1634-1716 was Speech given to the ordinary sort of men whereby to communicate their mind; but to wise men, whereby to
conceal
it.

me some
money,

remember how
to keep

kind of content to painful it is sometimes


it.

as well as to get

October 11, 1667

Sermon

[1676]

my wife hath something in her gizzard, that only waits an opportunity of being provoked to bring up; but I will not, for my content-sake, give it.
I

find

ROBERT HOOKE
1635-1703
the science of Nature has been already too long made only a work of the brain and the fancy: It is now high time that it should return to the plainness and soundness of observations on material and obvious things.
truth
is,

June 17, 1668


In appearance, at least, he being on occasions glad to be at friendship with me, though we hate one another,
all

The

and know it on both

sides.

September 22 1668
,

Micrographia [1665]

do hate

to

be unquiet

at

home.

January 22, 1669

And

so

betake

myself

to

that

NICOLAS BOILEAUDESPRf AUX


1636-1711

course, which is almost as much as to see myself go into grave; for which,

my

the discomforts that will accompany my being blind, the good God
all

and

Happy who
steer
i

in

his

verse

can gently
and and

prepare me!

May

31, 1669 (final entry)

Speech was made to open man to man, not to hide him; to promote commerce, not betray it. DAVID LLOYD [1635-1692], Statesmen and Favorites of England Since

The
the

GEORGE SAVILE, MARQUESS OF HALIFAX


1633-1695
Children and fools want because they want wit to (listing there is no stronger evidence of a crazy

Reformation
vol. I, p.

[1665,

edited
to

by

Whitworth],
the

503 only
conceal
of

Men
satire IIf

talk

mind.

EDWARD YOUNG, Love


I.

Fame

[1725-1728],

208

true use of speech is not so much to GOIJDexpress our wants as to conceal them. SMITH, The Bee, no. 3 [October so, 1759] See Voltaire, p. 4i7b.

The

37 6

BOILEAU

TRAHERNE
Oft shakes some rooted
age.
folly

From

grave to light, from pleasant to

of the
Z.

severe. 1

The Art
At
first

of Poetry [1674],

Honor

is

canto
last

I,

/.

75

comes Malherbe

and, the

without a we can never return.

257 an island, rugged and beach; once we have left it,


like

Satire 8,

do so in France, brings to his 16. Z. 131 verse a smooth cadence.


to
is

Now two punctilious


line;

167 and Thine envoys,


a

Satire 10,

Z.

Whatever
said,

well conceived
it

is

clearly

Mine, Embroil the earth about

fancied

And

the words to say

flow with ease. 16. I 153

And, dwelling much on right and much on wrong,


Prove how She right is chiefly with the strong. 1 Satire 11, Z. 141

Every age has


of wit, and
its

its

pleasures, its style


16. Ill,

own

ways.

I 374

The

wisest

man
is

is

he who does not


Satire i,
Z.

Nothing but truth


fair.

is

lovely,

nothing
Epistle 9

fancy that he

so at

all.

46
52

The

terrible

burden of having nothing


Epistle 11

to do.

Cat's a cat, and Rolet

is

a knave.
16.
Z.

[Moli&re] pleases but cannot please himself.

He

all

the world,
16.
Z.

BISHOP THOMAS KEN


1637-1711
Teach

94

In spite of every sage whom Greece can show, Unerring wisdom never dwelt below;
Folly in all of every age we see, The only difference lies in the degree.
Satire 4,
Z.

The

to live, that I may dread bed. 2 grave as little as

me

my

Morning and Evening Hymn,


st.

Praise

God, from

whom

all

blessings

37

flow!

Praise

Greatest fools are oft most

Him,

all

creatures here below!

satisfied.

Praise

16.
is

Z.

128

above, ye heavenly host! Praise Father, Son, and Holy Ghost!


16. st.

Him

from heroic sires, If your descent Show in your life a remnant of their
fires.

10 (DoxoZogy)

Satire 5,

Z.

43

THOMAS TRAHERNE
c.

Of

all

the creatures that creep, swim, or

1637-1674

fly,

and the Peopling the earth, the waters,


sky,

From Rome
I really

to Iceland, Paris to Japan,


is

think the greatest fool

man.
Z.

Satire 8,

You never enjoy the world aright, till the sea itself floweth in your veins, till and you are clothed with the heavens, crowned with the stars: and perceive to be the sole heir of the whole
yourself world.

But

moral, ever new, and instructs him, reader the Delights


satire, ever

Centuries of Meditations [1908],

Century

I, sec.

29

too.

She,
i

if

good sense

refine her sterling

and immortal wheat, which never should be reaped,

The corn was

orient

page,
See Pope, p. 4ioa. Translated by DRYDEN. a Enfin Malherbe vint.

iSee Tacitus, p. i4oa; Bussy-Rabutin, p. and Gibbon, 357a; Frederick the Great, p. 435a; p. 466a.
2

See Browne, p.

377

TRAHERNE
nor was ever sown. I thought it had stood from everlasting to everlasting. 1 Centuries of Meditations,

IHARA SAIKAKU

my

heart: it

is

Venus

herself fastened
I, sc.

to her prey. 1

Ph&dre, act

Century

III, sec. 3
2
st.

How like an angel came I


Wonder
I

down!

Innocence has nothing to dread. Ib. Ill 6

[1910],

within did flow


16.
st.

Crime like virtue has its degrees; and timid innocence was never known to
blossom suddenly into extreme
license. 2

With

seas of life like wine.


3

Ib.

IV, 2

To
time.

repair the irreparable ravages of

LOUIS XIV
1638-1715
I

Athalie [1691], act II,

sc.

am

the state.3 Attributed remark before the


parliament in 1651

SIR
Tis easy

CHARLES SEDLEY
c.

1639-1701
itself

When change
to

for

Has God forgotten him? 4

all I

have done

can give no more, be true. Reasons for Constancy, st. 4

Attributed remark upon hearing the news of the French defeat at

only joy, Phyllis is Faithless as the winds or seas;

my

Malplaquet [1709]
I

almost had to wait. 6 Attributed remark when a coach he had ordered arrived just in
time.

Sometimes coming, sometimes coy, Yet she never fails to please. Song [1702], st

IHARA SAIKAKU
1642-1693
says nothing, and the whole earth grows rich beneath its silent rule.

Heaven

JEAN RACINE
1639-1699
I

Men,

loved
at
all!

him

too

much

not to hate
[1667], ac *
lord,

him

too, are touched by heaven's virtue; yet, in their greater part, they are creatures of deceit. They are born, it

Andromaque

You

are Emperor,

my

and yet
sc.

you weep?

seems, with an emptiness of soul, and must take their qualities wholly from things without. To be born thus empty into this modern age, this mixture of

Eunice

[1670], act IV,

good and ill, and yet to life oh an honest course


dors of success

steer through to the splen-

My

only hope lies in my despair. Bajazet [1672], act I, sc. 4


I.

this is a feat reserved

for paragons of our kind, a task

beyond
Store1

You have named him, not


It
x
a

6
I, sc.

the nature of the normal man.

Ph&dre [1677], act


is

The
3

Japanese
or,

Family

house;

The
I, i

Millionaires

no

longer a passion hidden in

Gospel?

bk.

See Psalm 90:2, p. aoa. See Vaughan, p. 3620, and Wordsworth, p.


L'e"tat c'est

The
living.

first

throughout
*Ce

life,

for consideration all, is the earning of a


Ib.

moi.
j'ai

See Napoleon Bonaparte, p. 5043. *Dieu a done oublie' tout ce que

n'est plus

une ardeur dans mes veines

fait
2 3

cachee:
C'est Ve"nus toute entiere a sa proie attached.

pour
5
6

lui?

J'ai failli attendre.

See Juvenal, p. isga.

C'est toi qui 1'a

nomm.
2-78

Edited and translated by G.

W.

SARGENT.

IHARA SAIKAKU

NEWTON

Though mothers and fathers give us life, it is money alone which preserves
it.

SIR ISAAC
If I

NEWTON

1642-1727
have seen further (than you and the Descartes) it is by standing upon
1 shoulders of Giants.

The
house;

Japanese
or,
I, i

Family

Store-

The

Millionaires'

Gospel, bk.

Letter to Robert Hooke,


rather than birth
Ib. 3
I

In

life it is training

February

5,

1675/6

which counts.

Ancient simplicity is gone ... the nothpeople of today are satisfied with Ib. 4 ing but finery.

is

Take by by

care!

bandits, houses
suitors. 1

Kingdoms are destroyed by rats, and widows


Ib. 5

frame no hypotheses; for whatever not deduced from the phenomena is to be called an hypothesis; and hyor physpotheses, whether metaphysical meoccult of whether qualities or ical, chanical, have no place in experimental
philosophy.
Ib.

There is always something the most careful of human


tions.
2

to upset calculaIb. II, 2

you send a clerk on business to a distant province, a man of rigid Ib. 5 morals is not your best choice.
think twice in every matter and follow the lead of others is no way to

When

of Every body continues in its state in a right motion uniform of or rest, to change line, unless it is compelled that state by forces impressed upon it. Philosophiae Naturalis Principia

Mathematica [i687]. 2 Motion, I

Lam

of

To

The change
to the

of

motion

is

proportional

make money.

Ib.

motive force impressed; and is made in the direction of the right line 3 in which that force is impressed.
Ib. II

For each of the four hundred and four bodily ailments celebrated physicians have produced infallible remedies, but the malady which brings the greatto even the est distress to mankind the is wisest and cleverest of us
plague of poverty.
Ib. Ill, i

To every action there is always opthe mutual posed an equal reaction: or, actions of two bodies upon each other and directed to conare
always equal,
trary parts.

Ib- III

To make
from
If

fate

is

a fortune some assistance essential. Ability alone is


Ib.

in

insufficient.
live

we by subhuman means we never have had the good well as might Ib. fortune to be born human.
to Like ice beneath the sun's rays his forsuch poverty did he fall Ib. 5 tune melted to water.
.
.

beginning formed matter massy, hard, impenetrable, movable particles, of such sizes and figures, and with such other properties,

God

in the

solid,

and in such proportion to space, as most conduced to the end for which he formed them. Optics [1704]
I do not know what I may appear to the world; but to myself I seem to have been only like a boy playing on the seanow and shore, and diverting myself in then finding a smoother pebble or a shell than ordinary, whilst the

If

making money
it is
is

is

a slow process,

losing

quickly done.
for the

Ib

Harshness

good of a boy,
Ib.

prettier iSee
p. 3ioa.

3 softheartedness will ruin him.

Lucan,

p.

134*,

and Robert Burton,

V, 5

See Matthew 6:19, p. 4ob. a See Robert Burns, p. 4gsb. 8 See Proverbs iy.*4, p. 24*.

* Mathematical Principles of Natural PhilosANDREW MOTTE [1739]ophy. Translated by


a

In modern

terms,

acceleration

is

directly

proportional

to applied force.

37Q

NEWTON
great ocean of truth lay
all

PENN
night
let.
I have eaten traveler's fare, and have held out for alms a pilgrim's wal-

undiscovered
of

before me.

From BREWSTER, Memoirs


Newton
[1855], vol. II, ch.

27

Prose

Poem on The

Unreal
1

Diamond! Diamond! thou


knowest the mischief done!

little

My
mer

Dwelling (Genjuan noFu) poetry is like a stove in the sum-

Said to a pet dog ivfto knocked over a candle and set -fire to his papers

or a fan in the winter. It runs

2 practical use.

against the popular tastes

and has no

The Rustic Gate.


collection titled

From

the

THOMAS SHADWELLi
c.

Basho Bunshu

1642- 1692
II, $c. i

And
mind.

wit's the noblest frailty of the

True Widow, act


is

not seek to follow in the footof the men of old; seek what they steps 16. sought.

Do

haste of a fool thing in the world.

The

the slowest
16. Ill, i

The white chrysanthemum Even when lifted to the eye


Remains immaculate.2
Conversations with Basho. From the collection Kyoraisho Hyokai

1 am, out of the ladies' company, like a fish out of the water. 16.

Every

man

loves

what he

is

good
16.

at.
i

V,

Clear cascades! Into the waves scatter

Blue pine needles.

16.

MATSUO BASHO
1644-1694 The months and days
ers

An

old

A frog leaping in
The sound
of water.3

pond

Poem

are the travel-

of eternity. The years that come and go are also voyagers. ... I too for years past have been stirred by the sight of a solitary cloud drifting with the wind to ceaseless thoughts of roaming.

A rough sea!
Stretched out over Sado

The Milky Way. 3

Poem

WILLIAM PENN
1644-1718

The Narrow Road


Such
stillness

of

no Hosomichi)

Oku (Oku 2

No cross, no

crown. 4

Title of

Pamphlet [1669]

The cries of the cicadas Sink into the rocks.

Any government
under
16,
it

where

free to the people the laws rule and the


is

people are a party to the laws.

body, now close to fifty years of age, has become an old .-tree that bears bitter peaches, a snail which has lost its shell, a bagworm separated from its bag; it drifts with the winds and clouds

My

Frame
Truth often
its

of

Government

[1682]

that

know no

destination.

Morning and

suffers more by the heat defenders than from the arguments of its opposers. Some Fruits of Solitude 5 [1693]

of

'Shadwell was at open feud with Dryden from 1682, and the two poets repeatedly attacked one another in satires, the most famous of which is Dryden's Mac Flecknoe. See Dryden,
p. S^ga.
a

'From Anthology of Japanese Literature, edited by Donald Keene [1955]. 2 From Sources of Japanese Tradition, edited
by William Theodore de Bary [1960]. 3 Translated by DANA B. YOUNG.
*

From Anthology

of

Japanese

Literature,

edited by

Donald Keene

[1955].

copy of this little book, Louis STEVENSON, "I carried in

See Quarles,

p, gaaa.

wrote

ROBERT
all

my

pocket

380

PENN

LA BRUYERE
Its

ernment to
excess.

It is a reproach to religion and govsuffer so much poverty and

food too fine for angels; yet come,


take
eat thy
cake.
fill!

And
Some
Fruits of Solitude

It's

Heaven's sugar

love beyond the world cannot be separated by it. Death is but crossing the world, as friends do the seas; they live in one another still.

They

that

Poetical

Works. Preparatory
Meditations, 8

Ib.

This bread of doth cry:


die.
Is

life

dropt in thy mouth

Eat, eat me, soul,

and thou

shalt never
Ib.

are generally more careful of the breed of their horses and dogs than Ib. of their children.
It were endless to dispute erything that is disputable.

Men

Christ thy advocate to plead thy cause?


slide.

upon more

ev-

Art thou his client? Such shall never

Ib.
sail

Have
than

a care where there

is

He never lost his

case.

Ib.

38

ballast.
is

Ib.

Passion

which found

a sort of fever in the mind, ever leaves us weaker than it


Ib.

My My

case
sin

is

bad. Lord, be
red:

my

advocate.
arrest.

is

I'm under God's

Ib.

us.

The

public must and will be served.


Ib.

JEAN DE LA BRUYtRE
We
1645-1696 come too late to
say anything

Much
mind,

reading

is

an oppression of the
natural
so

and extinguishes the candle, which is the reason of


senseless scholars in the world.

many

Advice to His Children [1699]

which has not been said already. Les Caractires [1688], Des Ouvrages de FEsprit
consists less in giving a in gifts well timed. than deal great Coeur Ib.

Liberality

EDWARD TAYLOR
c.

Du

1644-1729
its

Who

spread

canopy?

Or

curtains

Time, which strengthens friendship, Ib. weakens love.

Who

spun?
in this bowling alley

bowled the

We must laugh before we are happy,


for fear

sun?
Poetical

we

die before

Works

Determinations
Elect, preface

[1939]. God's Touching His

we laugh
is

at

all.

Ib.

To

laugh at

men

of sense
Ib.

the
la

privi-

For in

Christ's

coach saints sweetly

lege of fools.

De

Soci6U

sing As they to glory ride therein.


Ib.

life:

There are but three events in a man's birth, life and death. He is not
of being born, forgets to live.
Ib.

The

Joy of Church Fellowship Rightly Attended

conscious

he

dies

in

pain, and he

Make me,

De I'Homme

Lord,

Thy

spinning-wheel

complete.
about the* San Francisco
cars

Ib.
streets,

Housewifery
read in
street-

Most men make use


of their
erable.
i

life

and ferry-boats when I was sick unto and found in all times and places a peaceful and sweet companion."
death,

of the first part to render the last part misIb.

See Beaumarchais, p. 46oa,

and

note.

38!

LA BRUYERE
run to extremes; they are

SHEFFIELD

Women

Whose

lord, oppressed

with pride and

either better or worse than

men.

Les Caract&res. Des Femmes

poverty, (That to the few great

bounty he may

show)

BARON GOTTFRIED WILHELM VON


LEIBNITZ
1646-1716
often say a great doctor kills 1 people than a great general. in Bulletin of The Quoted
I

Is fain to starve

the numerous train be-

low.

Like a Great Family


I

There's not a thing on earth that

can

name,

more

So

foolish,

and so

false,

as

common
World

fame.

New
err,

Did
Reason, which

E'er This Saucy


fifty

York
vol.

Academy

of

Medicine,

times to one does

[1929], p. 152

HENRY ALDRICH
1647-1710 If all be true that I do think, There are five reasons we should drink: a Good wine friend or being
dry

Reason, an ignis fatuus of the mind. A Satire Against Mankind


[1675],
*

11

Books bear him up a while, and make

him

try

To swim

with bladders of philosophy. Ib. L 20


Experience, hand in

Or lest we should be by and by Or any other reason why.


Five Reasons for Drinking

Then Old Age and


hand,

JOHN WILMOT, EARL OF ROCHESTER


1647-1680
Here
lies

to death, and make him understand, After a search so painful and so long, That all his life he has been in the

Lead him

wrong.

Ib.

I.

25

our sovereign lord the King,


on;

Whose promise none relies He never said a foolish thing,


Nor
ever did a wise one. Written on the

Dead, we become the lumber of the world. After Death

bedchamber
*

door of Charles II

JOHN SHEFFIELD, DUKE OF BUCKINGHAM AND

For pointed

satire I

would Buckhurst
with the worst-

NORMANBY
1648-1721

The

choose, best good

man

natured muse.3 An Allusion to Horace.


Satire

Of

all

those arts in which the wise ex-

X, bk. I

A merry

cel Nature's chief masterpiece is writing well. Essay on Poetry [1682]

monarch, scandalous and poor. A Satire on King Charles II


appears like a great family,

Read Homer

once,
else

and you can read no


appear so mean, so

The world
1
8

more; For all books


poor,

See Prior, p. 3875. See Charles II, p. s66b.

Verse

will

seem
will

prose;

but

still

persist

best-humor'd man with the worsthumor'd musel GOLDSMITH, Retaliation [1774],


8

Thou

to read,

And Homer
need.

be

all

the books you


16.

Postscript

382

SHEFFIELD

TATE AND BRADY


be shed except for its own preservation in the utmost extremity. T6l6maque, bk. XIII
Mankind, by the perverse depravity of their nature, esteem that which they have most desired as of no value the

And when

feigned an angry look,

Alas! I loved

you

best.

The Reconcilement

[1701]

SIR

THOMAS POPE BLOUNT


1649-1697
field, every fiber

Every flower of the


carries

of a plant, every particle of an insect, with it the impress of its Maker, if duly considered read and can us lectures of ethics or divinity. 1 Natural History [1693]

moment it is possessed, and torment themselves with fruitless wishes for that which is beyond their reach.
Ib.

XVIII

THOMAS OTWAY
What
1651-1685 mighty ills have not been done
't

WILLIAM III, PRINCE OF ORANGE


to see my country's I ruin: I will die in the last ditch.

Who was

by womanl
betrayed the Capitol?

There is can be sure never

1650-1702 one certain means by which

womanl

Who

lost

A woman!

Mark Antony the

world?

Who was
war,

the cause of a long ten years'

From HUME,
Every bullet has

History of England l>754-*757]> ch 65


-

And

laid at last old

Troy in ashes?
deceitful

Woman!
Destructive,

its billet.

From JOHN WESLEY,

damnable,

woi

Journal \June 6, 1765]

man!

The Orphan

[1680], act III, sc.

FRANCOIS DE SALIGNAC DE LA

MOTHE
man be
long!

FfiNELON

Let us embrace, and from this very eternal misery to16. IV, 2 gether.

moment vow an

1651-1715

woman!
thee

lovely

woman! Nature made


brutes

Do not men die fast enough without being destroyed by each other? Can any
insensible of the brevity of life?
it,

To temper man: we had been


without you; Angels are painted
you.
fair,

to look like

and can he who knows

think

life

too

T&emaque

[1699], bk.
for

VII
said
it.

Venice Preserved [1682], act

I,

war, always ready Mentor, is the surest way to avoid

To be

sc. i

Ib.

Some
that
it is

of the most dreadful mischiefs

NAHUM TATE
1652-1715

afflict

mankind proceed from wine; the cause of disease, quarrels, sediand


Ib.

AND

tion, idleness, aversion to labor, every species of domestic disorder.

NICHOLAS BRADY
1659-1726

When I am laid

in earth.
1

The blood
1
2

of a nation ought never to

Dido and Aeneas

[c.

1690]

See Tennyson, p. 654!). See Vegetius, p. 146!), and note.

1 Tate wrote the libretto for the famous opera by Henry Purcell.

383

TATE AND BRADY As pants the hart


for cooling streams

DENNIS

ANDREW FLETCHER
OF SALTOUN
1655-1716
were permitted to make all the ballads, he need not care who should make the laws of a nation. Conversation Concerning a Right Regulation of Governments for the Common Good
If

When

heated in the chase. Version of Psalm 42 [1696]


all

Through
life.

the

changing

scenes

of

man

Hymn
their
flocks

While shepherds watch'd

by night, All seated on the ground, The Angel of the Lord came down, And glory shone around.
Christmas

of

Mankind

[1704]

Hymn

[1700]

MONZAEMONi
1653-1725 In writing joruri, 2 one attempts
first

CHIKAMATSTJ

NATHANIEL
1655-1692

Then he

will talk

good gods! how he


or,

will talk!

The

Rival Queens;

The

to describe facts as they really are, but in so doing one writes things which are

Death

not true, in the interest of


Preface to
I take

of Alexander the Great [1677], act I, sc. 3

art.

HOZUMI

IKAN,

When

Naniwa Miyage
pathos to be entirely a matter of restraint. . When one says of something which is sad that it is sad,
. .

Greeks joined Greeks, then was the tug of war. 16. IV, 2
calls,

Tis beauty
way.

and glory shows the


16.

one

loses the implications,

and in the

Man,

false

man, smiling, destructive


III, sc. 2

end, even the impression of sadness is slight. It is essential that one not say of a thing that 'it is sad/ but that it be sad of itself. 16.
[Literary
stylization;

man!
Theodosius [1680], act

JOHN DENNIS
1657-1734
could make so vile a pun would not scruple to pick a pocket. The Gentleman's Magazine, vol. LI [1781], p. 324

composition]
this

should have
art,

makes it what delights men's minds.

and

is

A man who

16.

THOMAS D'URFEY
O'er the
hills

1653-1723 and far away.3


Pills to

They
1

will

not

yet they steal

let my play run; and Remark my thunder. 2

Purge Melancholy

Lee collaborated with Dryden on Oedipus

(see p. 3670).

RANSETSU
1653-1708
Against the blue stands A pine tree etched

a For his play Appius and Virginia [1709], Dennis had invented a new species of thunder. "The tragedy however was coldly received, notwithstanding such assistance, and was acted but a short time. Some nights after, Mr. Dennis,

By
1

tonight's

moon. 4

Harvest

Moon

From

Sources of Japanese Tradition, edited


[1960].

by William Theodore de Bary


2
8

Plays for life-size puppets. See Gay, p. 40 ib.

being in the pit at the representation of Macbeth, heard his own thunder made use of; upon which he rose in a violent passion, and exclaimed, with an oath, that it was his thunder. 'See,' said he, 'how the rascals use mel They will not let my play run, and yet they steal my
thunderl'
p. 103

"

Translated by PRESCOTT B. WINTERSTEEN, JR.

Biographia

Britannica,

vol.

Vf

384

FONTENELLE

GARTH

BERNARD LE BOVIER DE FONTENELLE


1657-1757

In their religion they are so uneven,

That each man goes


heaven.

his

own byway

to

The
closely

geometrical

bound

not be drawn
other

so to geometry that it canaside and transferred to


is

mind

not

The True-Born Englishman, pt. II, L 104

And

of

all

plagues with which

mankind

departments
morality,

of

knowledge.

work of

politics,

criticism,

perhaps even eloquence will be more elegant, other things being equal, if it is 1 shaped by the hand of geometry. sur des MatheWtilite Preface

are curs'd, Ecclesiastic tyranny's the worst. 16.

Z.

299
first

When
They

kings the sword of justice

matiques et

la

Physique [1729]

lay down, are no kings,

though they possess


crowns are empty
is

the crown.
Titles are shadows,

JOHN NORRIS
1657-1711
fading are the joys we dote upon! Like apparitions seen and gone. But those which soonest take their
flight

things,

The good
kings.

of

subjects

the end of
16I-

How

313
they

All

men would be
could.

tyrants

if

The Kentish

Petition [1712-1713]

Are the most exquisite and strong Like angels' visits, short and bright; 2 Mortality's too weak to bear them
long.

The

best of
fate:

men cannot

suspend their

The

Parting [1678]

The good
late.

die early,

and the bad die

DANIEL DETOE
c.

Character of the Late Dr. S. Annesley [1715]

1661-1731
erects

Wherever
prayer,

God
8

house
a

of

The

Devil
there;
'twill

always

builds

chapel

He bade me observe it, and I should life always find that the calamities of were shared among the upper and lower the middle part of mankind; but that
station

And
The

be found, upon examina-

had the fewest disasters. Robinson Crusoe [1719]

tion, latter tion.

has

the largest congrega-

The True-Born Englishman


[1701], pt.
I,

day, about noon, going towards my boat, I was exceedingly surprised with the print of a man's naked foot on the shore, which was very plain to be

One

seen on the sand.


I

Ib.

From
That

this

amphibious
ill-natur'd

ill-born

mob
I 132

takes

my man

Friday with me.


Ib.

began
vain,

thing,

an Eng16.

lishman.

Great families of yesterday we show, And lords whose parents were the Lord Ib. I. 374 knows who.
1
a

SIR

SAMUEL GARTH
1661-1719
[1699], canto II,

A barren superfluity of words.


The Dispensary
Hard
was. their food;
their

Translated by F. CAJORI. Like those of angels, short and far between. ROBERT BLAIR, The Grave [1743], I- 588 See Campbell, p. 537b. * See Luther, p. *7gb, and note.

1.95
lodging,

homely was

385

GARTH
For
all their

BROWN
Hearkeners,
of themselves.

1 luxury was doing good.

we

say,

seldom hear good


j

Claremont, L 148

Commentaries, Ecclesiastes

KIKAKU
16611707

It

was a

common

saying

among

the

Puritans,
is

"Brown bread and the Gospel


16. Isaiah 30
so blind as those that will not
Ifc.

A harvest moon!
And on the mats
Shadows of pine boughs.
Harvest

good

fare."

None
see. 1

Jeremiah 20
slip.

Moon

Judas had given them the


Ib.

Matthew

22

RICHARD BENTLEY
1662-1742 No man was ever written out of 3 reputation but by himself. From J. H. MONK, Life
of Bentley [1831]
It is a pretty

After a storm comes a calm.


Ib. Acts 9

of polite learning education.


It is

Men

and a

liberal

Ib. 10

tation!
true.
It is

good news, worthy of all accepand yet not too good to be


Ib.

you must not

call it

poem, Mr. Pope, but Homer. 4


Life of

Timothy

From JOHNSON,

Pope

the public trusts should be lodged in the hands of any, till they
fit

not

MATHEW HENRY
16621714

are first proved and found fit for the business they are to be entrusted with. 2

B.
as

He

rolls

it

under his tongue

All this

and heaven

too.

sweet morsel.

Life of Philip Henry

Commentaries [1708-1710], Psalm 36

THOMAS (TOM) BROWN


I

Our

creature comforts.
Ib.

Psalm 37

1663-1704 do not love thee, Doctor

Fell.

They
inches.

that

die

by famine die by Ifc. Psalm 59


Ifc.

The

To

fish in

troubled waters.

Psalm 60

reason why I cannot tell; But this alone I know full well, I do not love thee, Doctor Fell.8 Written -while a student at Christ Church, Oxford

Here is bread, which strengthens man's heart, and therefore called the staff of life. 5 16. Psalm 104 1 And learn the luxury of doing good.
GOLDSMITH, The Traveller [1764,], I. 22 "Translated by PRESCOTT B. WINTERSTEEN,
3

To treat a poor wretch with a bottle of Burgundy, and fill his snuffbox, is like giving a pair of laced ruffles to a man that has never a shirt on his back. 4
Laconics [1707]
See Jeremiah 5:11, p. j4a. a See Burke, p. 4540; Jefferson, p. 4720; Clay, p. 5380; Calhoun, p. 5450; Sumner, p. 6590; and Cleveland, p. 7713. 8 See Martial, p. 1353.
1

JR.

See Montaigne, p. igob. *The reference is to Pope's translation of the Iliad. See Pope, p. 4053.

"For, behold, the Lord, the Lord of hosts, doth take away from Jerusalem and from Judah the stay and the staff, the whole stay of bread, and the whole stay of water. Isaiah 3:1 Bread is the staff of life. SWIFT, Tale of
a

Tub

[1704]

which is the staff of life. EDWARD WINSLOW, Good News from New England [1624]
Corn,

Je ne vous aime pas, Hylas; Je n'en saurois dire la cause, Je sais seulement une chose; G'est que je ne vous aime pas. COMTE DE BUSSY-RABUTIN [1618-1693]
See Goldsmith, p. 451 b.

386

MATHER

PRIOR
Let
all

COTTON MATHER
1663-1728 I write the wonders of the Christian religion, flying from the depravations of Europe, to the American strand: and, assisted by the Holy Author of that religion,
I

her ways be unconfin'd;

And

clap your padlock

An

on her mind! English Padlock [1707]


the means. 1 Hans Carvel

The end must

justify

And

do,

with

all

conscience

of

thought the nation ne'er would


thrive

truth, required therein by Him, who is the Truth itself, report the wonderful displays of His infinite power, wisdom,

Till all the

whores were burnt alive. Paulo Purganti

goodness, and faithfulness, wherewith his Divine Providence hath irradiated an Indian wilderness.

He

rang'd his tropes,


patience;

and preach'd up

Back'd his opinion with quotations.


16.

Magnolia Christi Americana


[1702], introduction

Cured yesterday of
I

young and have the world before you; stoop as you go through it, and you will miss many hard bumps. Advice to Benjamin Franklin
are

You

died last night of

my disease, 2 my physician.
Disease

The Remedy Worse Than the

And

often took leave, but was loth to


depart.
8

ing

upon approaching a low-hangbeam in his parsonage 1

The Thief and

the Cordelier

WILLIAM WALSH
1663-1708

Nobles and heralds, by your leave, Here lies what once was Matthew
Prior;

Of
I

the plagues a lover bears, Sure rivals are the worst. Song,
all

st.

The son of Adam and of Eve: Can Bourbon or Nassau


higher?
4

claim

can endure

my own

Epitaph

despair,

But not another's hope.

Ib.

st.

Lays the rough paths of peevish Nature


even,

MATTHEW PRIOR
1664-1721
All jargon of the schools. 2
I

And

opens heaven.

in

each

heart

little

Charity

His noble negligences teach

Am

That

Am, An Ode

What
[1688]

others' toils despair to reach.

Our hopes, like towering falcons, aim At objects in an airy height; The little pleasure of the game
Is

Atma, canto
Till their

II,

I.

own dreams

at length deceive

em,

from afar to view the flight. To the Honorable Charles

And
1

oft repeating,

they believe 'em.

Montague

Odds

life!

must one swear

to the truth

of a song?

A Setter Answer

Be
x

Be. to her virtues very kind; to her faults a little blind;

16. Ill, 13 See St. Jerome, p. i45a. 2 See Leibnitz, p. gSaa. 3 As men that be lothe to departe do often take their leff [JOHN CLERK TO WOLSEY]. HENRY ELLIS [1777-1869], Letters, Third Series, vol. lf p. a6z

"A
of

loth

to

From

S.

E.

MORISON,

Vistas

History

for a song, of friends.


4

depart" was the common term or a tune played, on taking leave

[i9 64 l eh.

See Massinger, p. 3150. a Noisy jargon of the schools.

The following epitaph before the time of Prior:


JOHN POMschools.

was

written

long

FRET [1667-1702], The sounding

Reason
jargon of /. 36?
the

Johnnie Carnegie lais heer. Descendit of Adam and Eve. Gif ony con gang hieher,
Ise willing give

COWPER, Truth

[1782],

him

leve.

387

PRIOR

SWIFT

Abra was ready And though I


came.

ere I called her


called

name; another, Abra

JONATHAN SWIFT
1667-1745
Books, like men their authors, have no more than one way of coming into the world, but there are ten thousand to go out of it, and return no more. A Tale of a Tub [1704], dedication

Solomon on the Vanity of the World [1718], bk. II, I 364

To John To

ow'd great obligation;


fit

But John, unhappily, thought

publish it to all the nation: Sure John and I are more than quit.

Books, the children of the brain.


Ib. sec.
i

Epigram [1718]
Venus, take my votive glass; Since I am not what I was, What from this day I shall be,
Venus,
let

salt

As boys do sparrows, with upon their tails.


Satire
is

flir

me

never

a sort of glass, wherein beevery-

see.

Offers Her Looking-Glass to Venus. From

The Lady

Who

holders

The Greek Anthology

do generally discover body's face but their own. The Battle of the Books

[1704], preface

SIR
Once

JOHN VANBRUGH
1664-1726
a

The two noblest of things, which are sweetness and light. 1 Ib.
Laws
are like cobwebs,

has given you her heart you can never get rid of the rest of her.

woman

which may

The Relapse

[1697], act II, sc.

catch small flies, but let wasps and hornets break through. 2 Critical Essay Upon the Fac-

worth having is true to his wife, or can be true to his wife, or ever 16. Ill, 2 was, or ever will be so.
Belinda: Ay, but you know we must return good for evil. Lady Brute: That may be a mistake in the translation.

No man

ulties of

the

Mind

[1707]

There is nothing in this world con3 16. stant, but inconstancy.

Tis very warm weather when


in bed.

one's

The Provoked Wife


act

Journal to Stella [November 8, 1710]

[1698],
I, sc. i
1

With my own

fair

hands.

He

laughs best

who

Ib. [January 4, 1711]

laughs

last.

The Country House

[1706], act II, sc. 5

are so fond of one another, because our ailments are the same.
16. [February i, 1711]
I love good creditable acquaintance; love to be the worst of the company.
I

We

Much

of a muchness.

The Provoked Husband [1728] (completed by COLLEY CIBBER)


act
I,

sc.

It.

[May

17, 1711]

JOHN POMFRET
We
1

were to do more business after dinner; but after dinner is after dinNot
first

We

live

and
2

grow.

1667-1702 learn, but not the wiser Reason, L 112


first

Live and learn, learn and then

live.

BROWNING, Parleyings with


People.
[1887],
1

Certain

With

Christopher

Smart

Better the last smile than the


[1670]
is

laughter.
2
*

IX

JOHN RAY, Proverbs


a lt

good

to live

and

learn.

CERVANTES,

Don

Quixote, pt. II [1615], ch, 53

See Matthew Arnold, p. 7i6a. See Solon, p. 68b, and Zincgref, p. 5213. See Heraclitus, p. 770, and note.

SWIFT
net

an old saying and a


little

true,
1

"much

drinking,

thinking."

journal to Stella [February 26, 1712]

We
make

have

just

enough religion

to

I cannot but conclude the bulk of your natives to be the most pernicious race of little odious vermin that nature ever suffered to crawl upon the surface of the earth.

us hate, but not enough to us love one another.

make

Gulliver's Travels.

Voyage

to

Brobdingnag, ch.

Thoughts on Various Subjects


Censure is the tax a man pays to the Ib. public for being eminent.
Every

man

no man would be

desires to live long, old.

but
Ib.

And he gave it for his opinion, that whoever could make two ears of corn or two blades of grass to grow upon a spot of ground where only one grew before, would deserve better of mankind, and do more essential service to his country, than the whole race of politicians put
1

A nice man

is

man

of nasty ideas. Ib.

together.

16.

Party is the madness of many, for the 2 Ib. gain of a few.

Tis an old maxim in the schools, That flattery's the food of fools; Yet now and then your men of wit
Will condescend to take a bit. Cadenus and Vanessa* [1713]
Proper words in proper places, the true definition of a style.
Letter to a

upon a projsunbeams out of cucumbers, which were to be put in vials hermetically sealed, and let out to warm the air in raw inclement summers. 16. Voyage to Laputa, ch. 5
eight years
ect for extracting
I said

He had been

16.

make

the thing which was not. Voyage to the Houyhnhnmsr ch. 3


.
.

Young Clergyman
[January 9, 1720]

that we ate when I told him we were not hungry, and drank without
.

the provocation of thirst.

Ib.

Heaven had looked upon riches to be a valuable thing, it would not have given them to such a scoundrel. Letter to Miss Vanhomrigh
If

When at a
While
all

A set of phrases learnt by rote; A passion for a scarlet coat;


play to laugh, or cry,

[August 12, 1720]

He [the Emperor] is taller by almost the breadth of my nail, than any of his court, which alone is enough to strike an awe into the beholders.
Gulliver's Travels

Yet cannot tell the reason why: Never to hold her tongue a minute;

The Furniture

she prates has nothing in it. of a Woman's

Mind
For conversation well endu'd; She calls it witty to be rude;

[1727]

Voyage
1

[1726]. to Lilliput, ch. 2

See Addison, p. 3940. * See Pope, p. 4053. a When the poem of "Cadenus and Vanessa" was the general topic of conversation, someone said, "Surely that Vanessa must be an extraordinary woman that could inspire the Dean to write so finely upon her." Mrs. Johnson smiled, and answered that "she thought that point not quite so clear; for it was well known the Dean could write finely upon a broomstick." SAMUEL JOHNSON, Lives of the Poets [17791781], Life of Swift

And, placing raillery in railing, Will tell aloud your greatest failing.
Ib.

A bitter Whig,
Her arguments

In party, furious to her pow'r;


or

Tory

sour;

directly

tend

who mafc^s two blades of grass grow in place of one renders a service to the state.
VOLTAIRE, Letter to

M. Moreau

[1765]

SWIFT
Against the side she would defend. The Furniture of a

The
1

sight of

you

is

good

for sore

eyes.

Woman's Mind
Not
die here
in a rage, like a
poi-

Polite Conversation

[1738?],
i

dialogue

soned rat in a hole.


Letter to Bolingbroke [March 21, 1729]

Tis
I

as

cheap sitting as standing.


ft.
I

hate nobody:

am

in charity with
16.

Yet malice never was

his aim;

the world.
the

He

lash'd

the

vice

but spar'd

You were half seas


I

over.

16.

name.

No individual could resent,


Where
thousands equally were meant.

won't quarrel with

my

bread and
16.

butter.

His satire points at no defect But what all mortals may correct; For he abhorr'd that senseless tribe

She's

no chicken;
if

she's

on the wrong
16.

side of thirty,

she be a day.

Who

call it

humor when they gibe. Verses on the Death of Dr. Swift [1731], I 459
clearly proves that every crea-

She wears her clothes, as if they were thrown on her with a pitchfork.
16.

He
oyster.

was a bold

man

that

first

eat an
16. 2

Hobbes
ture

Lives in a state of war by nature. 1

That's as well said, as


myself.

if I

had

said

it

On

Poetry.

16.

Rhapsody [1733]

So, naturalists observe, a flea Hath smaller fleas that on him prey; And these have smaller still to bite

Fingers were made before hands before knives.

forks,

and
16.

'em;

She has more goodness in her little finger, than he has in his whole body.
16.

And so
Is bit

proceed ad infinitum.
I
first

Thus every poet, in his kind, by him that comes behind.


16.

Lord, invented kissing!

wonder what fool

it

was that
16.

Conversation is but carving! Give no more to every guest

The best doctors in the world are Doctor Diet, Doctor Quiet, and Doctor
Merryman.
I'll

16.

Than

he's able to digest.

Give him always of the prime, And but little at a time. Carve to all but just enough, Let them neither starve nor stuff, And that you may have your due, Let your neighbor carve for you.
Conversation

give
if

thing,

you leave to call me anyyou don't call me spade.


16.
live all

May
life.

you

the days of your


16.

Under
I

this window in stormy weather marry this man and woman together; Let none but Him who rules the thun-

always love to begin a journey on Sundays, because I shall have the prayers of the church to preserve all that 16. travel by land, or by water.
I
1

What

der

Put

this

man and woman

asunder.

WILLIAM HAZLITT [1778-1830], One Would Have Seen


a

a sight for sore eyes that would bel Of Persons

Marriage Service from His

Use three physicians


Dr. Quiet; Next, Dr. Merryman, And Dr. Dyet.
First,

Chamber Window
1

See Hobbes, p.

Regimen

Sanitatis

Salemitanum [1607]

39

SWIFT
I

CONGREVE

know
it

Sir

was sure
I

John will go, though he would rain cats and dogs.

Polite Conversation, dialogue 2

thought you and he were hand-inIb.


as

The pleasure of talking is the inextinguishable passion of a Woman, coeval with the act of breathing. Gil Bias, bk. VII, ch. 7
Facts are stubborn things. 1

glove.

She watches him, watch a mouse. She pays him in


his

cat

would

Ib. dialogue 3

own

WILLIAM CONGREVE
1670-1729
Eternity was in that

coin.
Ib.

There was
wife.

all

the world and

his
Ib.

moment. The Old Bachelor

[1693], act JTv , sc. 7

Hail, fellow, well met, All dirty and wet: Find out if you can,

Marry'd in haste,
leisure.2

we may

repent at Ib. V, 8

Who's

master, who's man.

My
I

Lady's Lamentation [1765],


Z.

171

It is the business of a comic poet to paint the vices and follies of human kind.

The Double Dealer

shall

be

like that tree, I shall die at

[1694],

the top.

epistle dedicatory

From
Ubi
saeva

SIR

WALTER

SCOTT, Life
ulterius

of Swift [1814] indignatio lacerare nequit. 1


cor

Retired to their tea and scandal, ac8 cording to their ancient custom. Ib. act I, sc. i

Epitaph. Inscribed on Swift's

wife one
fools.

Though marriage makes man and flesh, it leaves 'em still two
Ib. II, 3

Grave,

St. Patrick's,

Dublin

SUSANNAH CENTLIVRE
c. 1667- 1723 Simon Pure. The A Bold Stroke for a Wife

No mask like open


As
to go

truth to cover

lies,

naked

is

the best disguise.

I&.V, 4

real

Thou
[i

liar

of the

first

magnitude.

71 8] ,
sc. i

act

V,

Love [1695], act II, sc. 2 I warrant you, if he danced till doomsday, he thought I was to pay the
Love
for
piper.
fie,

ALAIN RENt LE SAGE


1668-1747
It

Ib.

miss,

you must not


tricks

kiss

and
10

the expense of his memory. 2 Gil Bias [1715-1735], bk.

may be

tell.

16.

said that his wit shines at

Women
Ill,

are like

by

sleight of

hand,

ch. 11

Which,

to admire,

we

should not unIb.

flatterer

can

great personages.

risk everything with Ib. IV, 7

derstand.

IV, 3

Music has charms to soothe a savage


breast,
1

4
'z

Pride and conceit were the original Ib. VII, 3 sin of man.
I

Facts are contrary

mules.

JAMES RUSSELL
4
p. g4gb.

LOWELL, Biglow Papers,


a

ser. II [1862], no.

wish you

all sorts

of prosperity with
Ib.
can

little
1

more

taste.
indignation

See Shakespeare, p. 2193, See Fielding, p. 4340.

and Cab ell,

Music hath charms, we

all

may

find,

savage tear the heart. See Yeats, p. 884a. 3 See Sheridan, p. 4823.

Where

no longer

Ingratiate deeply with the

mind.
[1696-1737], The Spleen, I. 141

MATTHEW GREEN

391

CONGREVE

ADDISON

To

soften oak.

rocks,

or

bend

knotted
[1697],
I, $c. i

Our

soldiers
ers

were brave and our were good.

courti-

The Mourning Bride


act

Oh! the

The Roast Beef

roast beef of old England! 1 of Old England,


st. i

By

magic
sound.

numbers

and

persuasive

I0
like love to

Heaven has no rage

hatred

COLLEY GIBBER
as out the fashion. Love's Last Shift [1696], act

Nor

turned, hell a fury like a

woman

scorned. 1 16. Ill, 8

1671-1757 As good be out of the world

oi

II

Love's but a frailty of the mind,

When

'tis

not with ambition joined.

Possession
law.

is

eleven

poiats

in

the
1

The
I

Way

of the

World

[1700], act III, sc. 12

Woman's Wit
are but

[1697], act

Words

empty thanks.
16.

nauseate walking; 'tis a country diversion, I loathe the country.


16.

V
foi

Off with his head

so

much

IV, 5

Buckingham.
Richard III (altered) [1700] act IV, sc. 3
Perish the thought!
16.

Let us be very strange and well-bred: Let us be as strange as if we had been married a great while; and as well-bred as if we were not married at all.
16.

V,

This business will never hold water. She Wou'd and She Wou'd Noi
[1703], act IV

a retailer of phrases, and dost deal in remnants of remnants.


art

Thou

16. 9

Old houses mended,


Cost
little less

than

new

before

they're

O, she

is

the antidote to desire.

ended.

16.14
Careless she is with artful care, Affecting to seem unaffected.

The Double Gallant


Oh, how many torments
lie

[1707]

prologue
in
the

Atnoret

small circle of a wedding ring!


16. act
I, sc. ;

Defer not
rise.2

till

tomorrow

to

be wise,

Tomorrow's sun to thee may never


Letter to

Cobham

Stolen sweets are best. The Rival Fools [1709], act

RICHARD LEVERIDGE
1670-1758

JOSEPH ADDISON
1672-1719 For wheresoever I turn
eyes,

When
It

mighty

roast beef

was the Eng-

my

ravish'c

lishman's food,

ennobled our hearts, and enriched


our blood,
Measure for Measure IV,

Gay

gilded scenes
rise,

and shining prospect

Poetic
1

fields

encompass

me

around,

See
i,

Shakespeare, *6, p. 37* a


-

Oh, the

We

shall

find

no fiend in

hell

can match

And
2

the fury of a disappointed woman. COLLEY GIBBER, Love's Last Shift [1696], act IV See Euripides, p. 843, and Edward Young. P- 399*.
fl

roast beef of England, old England's roast beefl FIELDING [1707-1754], The Grub Stree

Opera, act HI,

sc.

See Shakespeare, p. 2i7b, and Lewis Carroll

39 2

ADDISON

And

still

seem to tread on

classic

'Tis pride, rank pride,

and haughtiness

ground.

of soul;

Letter from Italy [1703]


to

think the

Romans

call it stoicism.

And, pleas'd the Almighty's orders

Cato, act

I,

sc.

perform, Rides in the whirlwind and directs the


storm. 1

Were you
The

my prince, you'd soon forget of the pale, unripened beauties


with these,
north,
16.

The Campaign

[1704],

/.

91

The spacious firmament on high, With all the blue ethereal sky. And spangled heavens, a shining frame,
Their great Original proclaim. 2

Beauty

soon

grows

familiar

to

the

lover,

Fades in his eye, and palls upon the


sense. 16.

Ode
Soon

[in

The

Spectator, no. 465,

August 23, 1712]


as the evening shades prevail,

My
bate

voice

is still

Gods! can a

Roman

for war. senate long de-

The moon takes up the wondrous tale, And nightly to the listening earth
Repeats the story of her birth; While all the stars that round her
burn, And all the planets in their turn, Confirm the tidings as they roll, And spread the truth from pole to
pole.
16.

Which

of the

two to choose,

death?

slavery or 16. II, i

The woman

that deliberates

is lost.

16.

IV,
16.

Curse on his virtues! they've undone his


country.

What pity is it
That we can
country!
die
1

but once to serve our


16.

Forever singing as they shine,

"The Hand

that

made

us

is

divine."
16.

When
The
It

vice prevails,
is

and impious men


2 a private station.

Should the whole frame of Nature round him break,

bear sway, of honor post *


so

16.

He,

In ruin and confusion hurled, unconcerned, would hear

must be
well!

Plato, thou reasonest


this

the

mighty

crack,

Else whence

this pleasing hope,

And

stand secure amidst a falling world. Horace, ode 3, bk. Ill

fond

This

desire, longing after

immortality?

'Tis not in mortals to


cess,

command

suc-

Or whence

this secret dread,

and

in-

But

we'll

do more, Sempronius;
it.

we'll

ward horror, Of falling into naught?


the soul

Why

shrinks

deserve

Cato*
Blesses his stars

[1713], act
it

I,

sc.

Back on

herself,

and

startles at destruc-

tion?
I6. 'Tis the divinity that stirs within us;

and thinks

luxury.

Tis heaven

itself,

that points out an

as frequently ascribed to Pope, it is repeated in his Dunciad, bk. HI [1728] Z. 264. 2 See Psalm 19, p. i7a-b. a The Massachusetts Spy used the following lines from Cato as its motto from November 22

iThis

line

is

hereafter,

And
i
a

intimates eternity to

man.

See Nathan Hale, p. 4840. Give me, kind Heaven, a private station, A mind serene for contemplationl
Title

1771 to April 6, 1775:

and

profit I resign;

Do thou Great Liberty And make our Lives in

inspire our thy Possession

Souls

The

happy

post of honor shall be mine. GAY, Fables, pt. II [1738], The Vulture,

Or, our Deaths glorious in thy just Defense.

The Sparrow, and Other Birds

393

ADDISON
Eternity!

thou

pleasing,

dreadful
sc.
i

A man
painting,

that has a taste of music,


or
architecture,
is

thought!

like

one

Cato, act V,

that has another sense,


arts.

when compared

Sweet are the slumbers of the virtuous

with such as have no relish of those

man.

Ib.

The

From

hence, let fierce contending na-

Spectator, no. 93 \June 16, 1711]

tions

know
effects

What

dire

from

civil

discord
Ib.

flow.

There is no defense against reproach but obscurity. 16. 101 [June 26, 1711]

Round-heads

and

Wooden-shoes
prologue,

are

Much might be

said

on both
it

sides.

standing jokes.

16. 122 [July 20, 1711]

The Drummer,
If I

I.

Authors have established


of rule, that a

as a kind

can any way contribute to the diversion or improvement of the country in


I

man ought

to

be

dull

which

I live, I shall

leave

it,

when

with the secret satisfaction of thinking that I have not lived in vain, 1
out of
it,

am summoned

sometimes; as the most severe reader makes allowances for many rests and nodding-places in a voluminous writer.

The
Thus
species.
I live

Spectator, no.

[March
spectator of

i,

1711]

124 \July 23, 1711] Books are the legacies that a great genius leaves to mankind, which are delivered down from generation to generation, as presents to the posterity those who are yet unborn.
Ib.

16.

of

in the world rather as a


as

mankind than

one of the
16.

166 [September 10, 1711]

I shall endeavor to enliven morality with wit, and to temper wit with mo16. 10 [March 11, 1711] rality.

nature is more agreeable in conversation than wit, and gives a certain air to the countenance which is

Good

more amiable than beauty.


16. 169

True happiness is of a retired nature, and an enemy to pomp and noise; it arises, in the first place, from the enjoy-

[September 13, 1711]

Were
ing,
it

ment

and, in the next, from the friendship and conversation of


of one's
self;

to prescribe a rule for drinkshould be formed upon a saying


I

quoted by
first glass

Sir

William Temple: the

a few select companions.


16.

15 [March 17, 1711]

for myself, the second for friends, the third for good humor, and the fourth for mine enemies. 1 16.

my

thy humors, whether grave or mellow, Thou'rt such a touchy, testy, pleasant
In
all

195 [October 13, 1711]

fellow;

true critic ought to dwell rather upon excellencies than imperfections, to discover the concealed beauties of a
writer,
tion.

Hast so much wit, and mirth, and spleen about thee, There is no living with thee, nor without thee. 2
16.

such things

and communicate to the world as are worth their observa16.

291 [February
sir,

2, 1712]

68 [May 18,1711]

These widows,
16.

are the

most

per-

verse creatures in the world.

There is not a more unhappy being than a superannuated idol.


16.73
tienne de Grellet, p. 5313. *A translation of MARTIAL [A.D. 40-1 02] XII, 47, who imitated Ovm [43 B.C.-A.D. 18], Amores
1

335 [March 25, 1712]

Mirth

is

like a flash of lightning, that

See

breaks through a gloom of clouds, and for a moment; cheerfulness glitters keeps up a kind of daylight in the
1

HI,

ir, ) 9 .

See Swift, p. 3893.

394

ADDISON
mind, and
fills it

STEELE

b
since. I will

with a steady and perSpectator, no. 381

me ever
of wine.

come within

a pint

petual serenity.

The
Sir

Letters to

His Wife [Ekven but at


all

[May
Roger made

17,

at nighty January 5, 1708]

several reflections

on

Kttle in drink,

times yr

the greatness of the British Nation; as, that one Englishman could beat three Frenchmen; that we could never be in danger of Popery so long as we took care of our fleet; that the Thames was the noblest river in Europe with many other honest prejudices which naturally cleave to the heart of a true
.
. .

faithful

husband.
16.

[September 27, 1708]

The finest woman in nature should not detain me an hour from you; but you must sometimes sutler the rivalship
of the wisest

men.
16.

[September 17, 1712]

Englishman.
Ib.

383 [May 20, 1712]

Our disputants put me in mind of the skuttle fish, that when he is unable to extricate himself, blackens all the water about him, till he becomes invisible.

Though her mien carries much more invitation than command, to behold her is an immediate check to loose behavior; to love her is a liberal education. 1 Toiler [1709-1711], no. 49
Reading
cise is to
is to the the body.

mind what
16. no.

exer-

Ib.

476 [September

5,

1712]

147

The

1 fraternity of the henpecked. 16. 482 [September 12, 1712]

When

you

fall

A man
than he

much how much more unhappy he might be


really
is.

should always consider how he has more than he wants, and

he has a greater inclination to hear you, or that you should hear him. The Spectator, no. 49
[April 26, 1711]

sation, the first sider is, whether

into a man's converthing you should con-

Ib.

574

[July 30,

1714]

are always doing something for Posterity, but I would fain see Posterity

We

Of all the affections which attend human life, the love of glory is the most
ardent.
16.

do something

for us.

139 [August

9,

1711]

Ib.

587 [August 20, 1714]

See in what peace a Christian can


die.

Age in a virtuous person, of either sex, carries in it an authority which


makes
it

preferable to
16.

all

the pleasures

Dying words [^719]YOUNG, Conjectures on Original

From

of youth.

153 [August 25, 1711]

Composition [1759]

SIR

RICHARD STEELE
1672-1729

all the diseases of the mind not one more epidemical or more pernicious than the love of flat-

Among
is

there

tery.

16.

238 [December
calls

3,

1711]
over-

I am come to a tavern alone to eat a steak, after which I shall return to the

Will Honeycomb

these

office.

offended ladies the outrageously virtu16. 266 [January 4, 1712] ous.


favor well bestowed is almost as great an honor to him who confers it as to him who receives it.
16.

Letters to His

Wife

[October 28, 1707]


I was going home two hours ago, but was met by Mr. Griffith, who has kept
1

497 [September 30, 1712]

See Byron, p. 56oa.

iLady Elizabeth Hastings [1682-1739].

395

HOYLE

WATTS
But, children, you should never let Such angry passions rise; Your little hands were never made

EDMOND HOYLEi
When
in doubt,

1672-1769 win the

trick.

Twenty-four Rules for Learners, rule 12

To tear

each other's eyes. Divine Song,<?.

Against Quarreling and Fighting

FRANCOIS GOYOT DE PITAVALS


1673-1743
Causes Cflfcbres.
Title of

Birds in their little nests agree; And 'tis a shameful sight, When children of one family
Fall out, and- chide, and fight. 16. 17, Love Between Brothers

book recounting famous trials and judgments

and

Sisters

How doth

the

little

busy bee

NICHOLAS ROWE
1673-1718

1 Improve each shining hour, And gather honey all the day From every opening flower!

As

if

Misfortune

made

Ib. 20, Against Idleness

and

the throne her

Mischief

seat,

And none
2

could be unhappy but the

For Satan finds some mischief For idle hands to do.


Let

still

Ib.

great.

The

Fair Penitent [1703], prologue


cold indifferIb. act
I, sc. i
LV

me be
still.

dress'd fine as

I will,

At length the morn and


ence came.
Is
,

Flies,

worms, and

flowers,

exceed

me

Ib. 22, Against Pride in Clothes

this

that haughty gallant,

Lo-

thario?

V,

Hush!

my

dear, lie

still

and slumber,

ISAAC WATTS
1674-1748

Holy angels guard thy bed! Heavenly blessings without number Gently falling on thy head.
Ifc.

35,

Cradle

Hymn

Were
Or
I

so tall to reach the pole,

grasp the ocean with

Tis the voice

my

of the sluggard; I heard

span,

must be measured by

my

soul;

The mind's

the standard of the man.


II,

him complain, "You have wak'd me


slumber again/' 2

too soon,
Ib.

must

Horae Lyricae [1706], bk.

The

False Greatness

Sluggard

Let dogs delight to bark and bite, For God hath made them so; Let bears and lions growl and fight, For 'tis their nature too. Divine Songs [^7/5]? *6,
Fighting

Lord, in the

morning thou shalt hear

My voice ascending high.

Psalm 5 [1719]

O God, our help in ages past,


Our hope for years to come, Our shelter from the stormy blast, And our eternal home.
Psalm 90 [1719],
st. i

Against Quarreling and

iHoyle published [1742] a Short Treatise on Whist, which in subsequent editions added rules for playing piquet, backgammon, chess, and other games. His Laws [1760] ruled whist
playing until 1864, hence the saying, "according to Hoyle." a None think the great unhappy, but the great,

A thousand ages in Thy sight


Are like an evening gone; Short as the watch that ends the night Ib. st. 4 Before tiie rising sun.
1 2

EDWARD YOUNG, The Love


1728], satire i,
I.

of

Fame

[1725-

238

See Lewis Carroll, p. 7433. See Lewis Carroll, p. 7440.

396

WATTS
Time,
like

FARQUHAR

an ever-rolling stream,

SIR

ROBERT WALPOLE
1676-1745
of power.

sons away; They fly forgotten, as a dream 1 Dies at the day.


all its

Bears

The balance
st.

opening

Psalm 90,

Speech in the House of Com5


All those

mons

[February 13, 1741]

Joy to the world! the Lord is come; Let earth receive her King.

Let ev'ry heart prepare

Him

men have their price. From WILLIAM COXE, Memoirs


of
p.

room,
st. i

And

heav'n and nature sing.

Psalm 98 [1719],

Walpole 369

[1798],

vol.

IV,

When
To

can read my title clear mansions in the skies,


I

Anything but history, for history must be false. Walpoliana, no. 141

Fll bid farewell to every fear,

And wipe my weeping eyes. Hymns and Spiritual Songs, bk. II, hymn 65
There
is

HENRY ST. JOHN, VISCOUNT BOLINGBROKE


1678-1751
Truth
lies

a land of pure delight,


saints

Where
Infinite

immortal reign;
16.

within a
is

And

day excludes the night,


pleasures banish pain.

compass, but error

little and certain immense.

66
fancy.

Reflections

Upon

Exile [1716]
their
in-

Nations,

like

men, have

WILLIAM SOMERVILLE2
1675-1742 Let all the learned say what they can, Tis ready money makes the man.

On the Study and

Use of History [1752], letter 4

They [Thucydides and Xenophon] maintained the dignity of history.


It is

Ready Money [1727] There


is

something in a

face,
trace.

An air, and a peculiar grace, Which boldest painters cannot


The

the modest, not the presumptu-

The Lucky Hit

[1727]

discovery of divine truths. One follows Nature and Nature's God; that is, he follows God in
his

ous, inquirer who progress in the

makes a

real

and

safe

chase, the sport of kings;


I,

Image of war, without its guilt. The Chase [1735],

works and in his word. 1 Letter to Alexander Pope

13

GEORGE FARQUHAR

JOHN PHILIPS
1676-1709

Happy

the

man who,

void of care and

1678-1707 Reason still keeps its throne, but nods a little, that's all.

it

strife,

The Recruiting
I

In silken or in leathern purse retains A Splendid Shilling. The Splendid Shilling [1701], I
1
2

Officer [1706], act III, sc. 2


ale; I

have fed purely upon


ale,

have eat
ale.

my

and

See Marcus Aurelius, p. i4sa.

The Beaux Stratagem

always sleep upon 9


act

[1707],
I, sc. i

Of whom SAMUEL JOHNSON, in his Lives of the Poets, made the famous remark, "He writes very well for a gentleman." See Johnson, p.

My Lady Bountiful.
1 See

Ib.
Jefferson,
p.

Pope, p,

4ioa,

and

47ob.

397

FARQUHAR
I believe they talked of me, for they laughed consumedly. The Beaux' Stratagem,

YOUNG

DESTOUCHES
[PHILIPPE NfcRICAULT]
1680-1754 Those not present are always wrong. 1 Obstacle Imprfvu [1717], act I, sc. 6

act III, sc.

Twas
that
I

Anything I'm a for the good of one's country

for the good of should be abroad. 1 for that.

my

country

Roman

Criticism

is

16. Ill, 2

easy, art

is

difficult.

Le Glorieux [1732], act

II, sc.

How
Spare

a little love

and good company


Ib.

improves a woman!
all I

IV,

EDWARD YOUNG
1683-1765

have, and take

my life.
Ib.

V,

The

love of praise, howe'er conceal'd


art,
less,

by

Reigns more or

and glows in

ev'ry

THOMAS PARNELL
My
1679-1718 days have been so wondrous
free,

heart.

Love of Fame [1725-1728],


satire I,
I.

51

Some

for

The little birds that fly With careless ease from tree Were but as blessed as I.
Song
Still

renown, on scraps of learning

dote,
to tree,
st.

And
i

[1714],

an angel appear to each lover beside,


still

think they grow immortal as they Ib. Z. 89 quote. Be wise with speed; fool at forty is a fool indeed.
Ib. II,
Z.

282

But

be a

woman

When Thy

to you.

Beauty Appears
[1722],
st.

Forever most divinely in the wrong. Ib. VI, I 105

We

call it

only pretty Fanny's way. An Elegy to an Old Beauty


[1722],
st.

For her own breakfast she'll project a scheme, Nor take her tea without a stratagem.
Ib.
Z.

187

Let those love


fore;

now who

never loved be-

One to destroy, is murder by the law; And gibbets keep the lifted hand in
awe;

Let those who always loved, the more.

now

love

To murder
fame. 2

thousands takes a specious


art,

Translation of the Pervigilium Veneris 3


Leaving his country for his country's sake. CHARLES FITZ-GEFFREY, The Life and Death of Sir Francis Drake [1596], st. 213 True patriots all; for, be it understood, We left our country for our country's good. GEORGE HARRINGTON, Prologue written for the opening of the playhouse at New South Wales [January i6t 1796]
(According to The Oxford Companion to English Literaturef Barrington was the adopted name of a notorious pickpocket who was transported to the penal settlement at Botany Bay.) a Set to music by Francis Hopkinson; one of the earliest American songs. 8 See Anonymous Latin, p. 1503.
1

name, War's glorious

and

gives immortal Ib. VII, I. 55

The man
foes.

that

makes

a character

makes
28

To Mr. Pope,

epistle

I, Z.

In records that defy the tooth of time. The Statesman's Creed

Tired

nature's

sweet

restorer,

balmy

sleep!

Night Thoughts [1742-1745].


1
a

Les absents ont toujours


See Porteus, p. 46oa.

tort.

398

YOUNG
Night, sable goddess! from her ebon
throne,

BERKELEY

Our wishes lengthen


clines.

as

our sun de-

In rayless majesty,

now

stretches forth

Night Thoughts. Night V,


I.

Her leaden
world.

scepter o'er a slumbering

661

Death
Night Thoughts. Night
I.

loves a shining

mark, a signal
16.
Z.

I,

blow. 1

18

ion
Z.

Too low
Creation
sleeps!

Tis

they build,
stars.

who

build beneath

as

the general

the

16. VIII,
o'er creation.2

215

Of

pulse life stood

still,

and Nature made a

Final Ruin fiercely drives

An

pause; awful pause! prophetic of her end.


16.
Z.

Her plowshare

16. IX,

Z.

167
771

23

An

undevout astronomer

is

mad.
16.
Z.

The

bell

strikes

one.

We

take
16.
Z.

no
55

note of time

But from

its loss.
'tis

SIR

WILLIAM
1684-1764

Be wise

today;

madness to

defer. 1 16.
Z.

PULTENEY,s EARL OF BATH


Since twelve honest men have decided the cause, And were judges of facts, though not judges of kws.

390

Procrastination

is

the thief of time.


16.
Z.

393
his

At

thirty,
it

man
at

suspects himself a fool;


forty,

Knows
At

and reforms

The Honest

Jury [1731], III

plan; fifty chides his infamous delay,

Pushes his prudent purpose to resolve; In all the magnanimity of thought Resolves, and re-resolves; then dies the 16. Z. same. 417
All

GEORGE BERKELEY, BISHOP OF CLOYNE


1685-1753

And what
velocities

are

these

fluxions?

The

men

think themselves.
lost

all

men

mortal
16.
Z.

but

of
are.

424

And what

evanescent increments. these same evanescent in-

"I've

day!"

the prince

who
his

nobly

cried,

Had been an emperor


crown.2

without
16. II,
Z.

crements? They are neither finite quannor quantities infinitely small, tities, nor yet nothing. May we not call them
ghosts of departed quantities?

99
118

The Analyst
[Tar water]
is

[1734], sec.
to

Man

wants but
long.*

little,

nor that
16.

little
Z.

of a nature so mild

IV,

and benign and proportioned

the

A God

all

mercy

is

God
half

unjust. ib. 1

constitution, as to warm without heating, to cheer but not inebriate.4 Sin's [1744], par. 217

human

By night an

atheist

believes

God>
Like our shadows,
1 a

Truth

is

16.

V,

the cry of

all,

Z.

177

of the few.
iSee Quarles,
a

but the game 16. par. 368

See Congreve, p. 3923. See Anonymous, p. iogoa.

See Vespasian, p. 1350. See Goldsmith, p. 448a. * See W. T. Cummings, p. 10533.

p. 32 ib. See Burns, p. 4933. One of "the three grand allies," the others being Stanhope and Walpole. Walpole said that he feared Pulteney's tongue more than another man's sword. * See Cowper, p. 4583.
8

399

BERKELEY
no such thing as an honest man, you may be sure is him-

CAREY

He who

says there

is

SAMUEL MADDEN
1686-1765
In

self

a knave.

an

orchard

there

should

be

Maxims Concerning
Westward the course
its

Patriotism

of empire takes

enough to eat, enough to lay up, enough to be stolen, and enough to rot

way;
four

The

acts already past, fifth shall close the drama with the
first

upon the ground. Quoted by SAMUEL JOHNSON From BOSWELL, Life [1783].
of Dr. Johnson, vol. II, p. 457 [Everyman edition]

day:

Time's noblest offspring

is the last. the Prospect of Planting Arts and Learning in America

On

[1752],

st.

ALLAN RAMSAY
1686-1758
Farewell to Lochaber, farewell to
Jean.

JANE BRERETON
1685-1740

my

Lochaber

No More

[1724],

st. i

The

picture placed the busts between, to the thought much strength, Wisdom, and Wit are little seen,

Adds
But

THOMAS TICKELL
1686-1740 There taught us how to
too high
live;

Folly's at full length.

On

Beau Nash's Picture

at Full

and

(oh!

Length between the Busts of Sir 2 Isaac Newton and Mr. Pope

The

price

for

knowledge)

taught us

how

to

die. 1

On

the Death of Mr. Addison


[1719],
Z.

AARON HILL
1685-1750
First, then, a

81

woman

will or won't, de-

pend on 't; If she will do 't she will; and there's an end on 't. But if she won't, since safe and sound
your trust
Fear
is
is,

HENRY CAREY
c.

1687-1743
little

Namby Pamby's

rhymes,
2 Namby Pamby

Little jingle, little chimes.

affront,

and

jealousy injustice.

Zara, epilogue

Aldiborontiphoscophornio!

Where left you Chrononhotonthologos?


Chrononhotonthologos, act
His cogitative faculties immersed In cogibundity of cogitation.
I, sc. i

Tender-handed stroke

And
Grasp

it

stings

you

a nettle, for your pains;

it like

And

of mettle, 3 it soft as silk remains. in a Window on Verses Written a

man

Ib.

Of

Scotland
1

Westward the star of empire JOHN QUINCY ADAMS, Oration

takes its way. at Plymouth

all the girls that are so smart, There's none like pretty Sally. She is the darling of my heart, And she lives in our alley.

[1802]

Sally in
1
2

Our

Alley [1729],
and
note.

st. i

In ALEXANDER DYCE [1798-1869], Specimens of British Poetesses. This epigram is generally


2

See Montaigne, p. i8gb,

ascribed to Chesterfield. 8 The world's a nettle; disturb

it, it

stings:

Grasp

it firmly, it stings not.

OWEN MEREDITH

[E.

Lucile [1860], pt.

R. BULWER-LYTTON], I, canto $, st. a

Namby

Phillips . . . who had the or of bringing into fashion a species of composition which has been called, after his name, MACAUIAY, Review of Aikin's Pamby.

Ambrose

hon-

Life of Addison [1843]

4OO

CAREY
the days that's in the week dearly love but one day, And that's the day that comes betwixt
all
I

GAY
While
there
is

Of

life

there's hope,

he

cried. 1

Fables, pt.

L The

Sick

Man

A Saturday and Monday.


save our gracious king!
save the king!

and the Angel


st.

Sdly in Our Alley,

God

Those who in quarrels interpose Must often wipe a bloody nose.


16.
I

Long live our noble king!

The

Mastiffs

God

God

Save the King

hate the

man who
16.

builds his

name
the Rose

[c.

1740]

On ruins

of another's fame.

The Poet and

JOHN GAYi
1688-1732 'Twas when the seas were roaring With hollow blasts of wind, A damsel lay deploring, All on a rock reclin'd.

And when a lady's in the case, You know all other things give place. 16. The Hare and Many Friends
In every age and clime we see Two or a trade can never agree.2 16. The Rat-catcher and Cat

The What D'ye


All in the

Call It
actfl,'sc'~8

From wine what sudden


springs! 16. II [1738].

friendship

Downs the fleet was moor'd. Sweet William's Farewell to Black-eyed Susan [1720]
cries;

The

Squire and

His Cur

Polly,

you might have toy'd and


off,

Adieu! she hand.

and wav'd her

lily

kiss'd,

16.

By keeping men
on.

you keep them

My

And

lodging is on the cold ground, hard, very hard, is my fare,


grieves

The
If

But that which


Is

me more
with

Beggar's Opera [1728], act I, sc. 4, air 9


far away.8 16. 13, air

the coldness of

my

dear.
Is

me you'd fondly stray.


hills

My
Whence

Lodging

on the Cold
[1720],
st.

Over the
Fill

and

Ground

16
us,

is thy learning? Hath thy O'er books consum'd the midnight

toil
oil?

ev'ry glass, for

wine
joy.

inspires

Fables, pt. I [1727]. The Shepherd and the Philosopher

And fires us With courage, love and

Women
Is there

and wine should


ought
else

life

employ.

on

earth desirous?
16. II, i,

Where Who'd

yet was ever found a mother give her booby for another? 16. The Mother, the Nurse, and

dr 19

If

the heart of a
cares,

man

is

depress'd with

the Fairy

The

mist

is

dispell'd

when a woman
16. 3, air 21

When we
It

risk

no contradiction,
fic-

appears.

prompts the tongue to deal in


tion.
16.

Youth's the season made for joys, 16. 4, air 22 Love is then our duty.

The Elephant and

the

Bookseller
Is

Man may
pill:

escape from rope and gun; Nay, some have outiiv'd the doctor's
Terence, p. io8b; Cicero, p. ma; and Goldsmith, p. 447a. a See Hesiod, p. 670, and Meredith, p. 7soa.
See D'Urfey, p. 384^

The

there no hope? the sick man said; silent doctor shook his head. 16. The Sick Man and the Angel
Pope's Epitaph on Gay, p. 4o7b.

1 See

4O1

GAY

POPE
Where'er you walk, cool
the glade, Trees, where you shade:
sit,

Who
That

takes a
basilisk
fly

woman must be
is

undone,
the

gales shall fan

sure to

kill.
is

The
So

that sips treacle


tastes

lost in

shall

crowd into

sweets, he that

woman, woman,
ruin meets.

Where'er you

tread, the blushing flow'rs

woman,

shall rise,

He

that tastes

woman, The

And
26

all

things flourish

where you turn

Beggar's Opera,

your eyes.
Pastorals [written 1704].

act II, sc. 8, air

SumI.

How happy
Were
The The
Life
I

could I be with either, t'other dear charmer away!


Ib. 1$, air

mer,

73

Nor Fame
35
call;

slight,

nor for her favors


for, if

charge met;

is

prepared; the lawyers are


all

She comes unlook'd


all.

she comes at
[1711],
Z.

Judges show!)
is

ranged

(a terrible Ib. Ill, 11, air 57

The Temple

of

Fame

5i3

jest;

and

all

things
I

show

it.
it.

How vast a memory has Love!


Sappho
to

thought so once; but now

know

Phaon
as

[1712], I 52

My Own

Epitaph

PIERRE CARLET DE

Tis with our judgments none

our watches,

CHAMBLAIN DE MARIVAUX

Go

just

alike,

yet

each believes his


Criticism [1711], pt.I,L 9

own. 1

An Essay on
Let such teach others
excel,

1688-1763 In this world, you must be a bit too kind in order to be kind enough. Le Jeu de VAmour et du Hasard
[1730], act
I,

who

themselves
written
Ib.
/.

And
Some

censure freely
well.

who have

sc.

15

ALEXANDER POPE2
1688-1744 Happy the man whose wish and care A few paternal acres bound, Content to breathe his native air
In his

are bewilder'd in

the maze of
nature
Ib.
I.

schools,

And some made


meant but
Those

coxcombs

fools.

26

oft are stratagems


it

which

errors

own ground.3 Ode on Solitude

seem,
[c.

1700],

st. i

Nor

is

Homer

nods, but

we
Z.

that

dream. 2

16.

Thus let me live, unseen, unknown, Thus unlamented let me die, Steal from the world, and not a stone Ib. st. Tell where I lie. 5
1

177
to

Of

all

the causes which blind


.

conspire

Man's

erring judgment,

and misguide
strongest

Life

is

an'

empty
of

dream.
Fate's

BROWNING,
contriving.

Paracelsus II [1835] Life seems a jest


J.
a

the mind, What the weak head with


bias rules,
Is pride,

R. LOWELL, Harvard

Commemoration Ode

[1865],

IV
thousand years may elapse before there appear another man with a power of
equal
to

the never-failing vice of fools.


16. II,
I. i

shall

A
1

little

versification

JOHNSON [1781]; from Johnson [1791]


3

that of Pope. BOSWELL, Life

SAMUEL
of

learning

is

a dangerous thing;

Dr.

2 *

See Horace, p. isob.

See Suckling, p. 3503. See Horace, p. ia4b. See Publilius Syrus, p. 1273.

4O2

POPE
Drink deep,
spring:
or taste not the Pierian

True ease in writing comes from


not chance, As those move easiest to dance. 1 Tis not enough no
offense;

art,

There shallow draughts intoxicate the


brain,

who have

learn'd

And

drinking largely sobers us again. An Essay on Criticism, pt. II, I 15

harshness

gives

The sound must seem an echo


sense.

to the

Hills

peep
arisel

o'er hills,

and Alps on Alps


Ib.
I.

32
of

An
At

Tis not a lip, or eye, we beauty call, But the joint force and full result
all.

Essay on Criticism, pt. II, L 162


Ib. I

ev'ry trifle scorn to take offense.

16.

Z.

45
Yet
For
let

186

Whoever

thinks a faultless piece to see,


is,

not each gay turn thy rapture


admire, but

Thinks what ne'er was, nor


shall be. 1

nor

e'er

move;
fools

Ib. I 53

men

of sense
Ib.
Z.

True

wit
dress'd,

is

nature

to

approve.

190

advantage

Some
Nor

What

oft was thought, but ne'er so Ib. L 97 well express'd.

judge of authors' names, not works, and then praise nor blame the writings, but Ib. Z. 212 the men.

Words

are like leaves;


fruit of sense

and where they


is

most abound,

What

woeful stuff this madrigal would

Much

beneath

rarely

be,

found.

Ib.

L 109

In some starv'd hackney sonneteer, or

me!

Such labor'd nothings, in so strange a


style,

But

let

a lord

once

own

the happy the style


Ib.
Z.

Amaze

th'

unlearn'd,

learned smile.

and make the Ib. Z. 126


the

lines,

How
Some
But

the wit brightens!


refines!

how

218

Be not the
tried,

first

by

whom

new

are

blame
right.

Nor

praise at night,

at

morning what they


the
last

yet the last to lay the old aside. Ib. L 135


to church repair, for the doctrine, but the music there.
syllables alone require,

always
err is

think

opinion
Ib.
Z.

230
325

As some

To
All

human,

to forgive divine. 2
Ib.
Z.

Not

These equal

seems infected that th' infected


spy>
all

Though
tire;

oft the ear the


their

open vowels
aid do

As

looks

yellow to the jaundic'd


Ib.
Z.

While

expletives

feeble

eye.

358
Z.

Be

join,

silent always

when you doubt your


Ib. Ill,
as if

And

ten low words oft creep in one dull Ib. L 142 line.
last

sense.

Men

Then, at the
fraught

and only couplet


thing they
call a

must be taught them not,


I.

you taught

lAlso in Imitations of Horace [1737], Epistle


II, bk. II,
2

With some unmeaning

178.

See Plutarch, p. 1370,

and

Shirley, p. 3270.

thought, A needless Alexandrine ends the song, That, like a wounded snake, drags its Ib. Z. 156 slow length along.
1 See Suckling, p. 350!),

Then

gently scan your brother man, Still gentler sister woman;

Though they may gang a kennin' wrang, To step aside is human.


ROBERT BURNS, Address
to the

and note.

Unco Guid [1787]

403

POPE

And

things

unknown

proposed

as

Fair

tresses

man's imperial race enus with

things forgot.

snare,

An

Essay on Criticism, pt. Ill, I 15


ignorantly

And

beauty draws
hair. 1

single

The

bookful

blockhead

The Rape
Here thou,
Dost
great

of the Lock,
II,
Z.

read, With loads of learned

canto

27

lumber in his
still

Anna!

whom
take

three

head,

realms obey,

With

his

own tongue
list'ning

edifies his

ears,

sometimes counsel sometimes tea.

and
Z.

16. Ill,
dies.

And

always
pears.

to
all

himself

apas-

At

every

word a reputation

16.

Z.

16

All books
sails.

he

reads,

and

he reads
16.

L 53

The hungry
sign,

judges soon the sentence

For

fools rush in

where angels

fear to

tread. 1

And

16.

I 66

wretches hang that jurymen


dine.
16.

may
Z.

21

But where's the man who counsel can


bestow,
Still

pleas'd to teach, to know? 2

and yet not proud


Ib. L 72

Careless of censure, nor too fond of

Let spades be trumps! she said, and 16. Z. 46 trumps they were. makes the Coffee, which politician 16. Z. 117 wise.

fame,
Still

But when to mischief mortals bend


their will,

pleas'd to praise, yet not afraid to


flatter or offend,

How

soon they find


ill!

fit

instruments of
16.
Z.

Averse alike to

125
dis-

Not

free

from mend.

faults,

nor yet too vain to Ib. L 182

The meeting
sever

points the sacred hair

Vital spark of heav'nly flame! Quit, oh quit, this mortal frame:

From
Then

the

fair

head, forever, and

for-

ever!
flash'd the living lightning

from
af-

Trembling, hoping, lingering, flying, Oh the pain, the bliss of dying! B The Dying Christian to His Soul
[1712],
st. i

And

her eyes, screams

of

horror

rend th'
16.
Z.

What

dire offense

from amorous causes


rise

springs,

153 Charms strike the sight, but merit wins the soul. 16. V, Z. 34

frighted skies.

What

mighty contests
4

from

trivial

To wake
art,

the soul by tender strokes of

things!

The Rape

of the

Lock [1712],
canto
I,

To

raise the genius,

and to mend the

heart;

On

her white breast a sparkling cross she wore,

To make mankind,
bold,

in conscious virtue

Which
If to

Jews might

kiss,

and

infidels
Z.

adore.

16. II,

her share some female errors fall, Look on her face, and you'll forget 'em
all.
1

Live o'er each scene, and be what they behold: For this the Tragic Muse first trod the
stage.

16.

Prologue to Mr. Addison's Cato


[1713],
Z.

Z.

17
70,

See

Shakespeare,

Richard

HI,

I,

Hi,

A brave man
fate,
a

p. 2i7a.
a

struggling in the storms of

See Chaucer, p. i66b. See Hadrian, p. i4ia. *See Robert Burton, p. jioa.

iSee Robert Burton, p. 3123.

Queen Anne

[1665-1714].

404

POPE

And

greatly falling with a falling state. Prologue to Mr. Addison's

True

friendship's laws are


expressed,

by

this rule

Cato, I 21

Welcome

the coming, speed the part1

Ignobly vain, .and impotently great.


16.
Z.

29

ingguest. Translation of Odyssey

XV,

83

Here

hills

and

Dear,
vales,

the woodland and


to strive

damn'd, distracting town,


fools

fare-

well!

the plain,

Here earth and water seem

Thy
and

no more

Til tease:

This year in peace, ye

Not

again, chaos-like

Ye harlots,
together
crushed

critics, dwell, sleep at ease! Fare-well to London [1715], st. i

bruis'd, But, as the world, harmoniously confus'd:

Luxurious lobster-nights, farewell, For sober, studious days! 16.

st.

12

Where order in variety we see, And where, though all things differ,
agree.

Oh name
all

forever sad! forever dear!

Still

Windsor Forest
Oft,

[1713],

/.

breath'd in sighs, still usher'd with a tear. Eloisa to Abelard [1717], I- 31


in love,

as in airy rings they skim the heath, The clam'rous lapwings feel the leaden death; Oft, as, the mounting larks their notes

Now warm

now withering in my

bloom,
Lost in a convent's solitary gloom!

Ib.1.37
Speed the soft intercourse from soul to
soul,

prepare,

They

fall,

and

leave their little lives in


16.
I.

And

waft a sigh from Indus to the


Pole.
16.

air.

131
of a
If

I 57
I

Party-spirit,

which

at best

is

but the

No, make me
love;

mistress to the

man

madness of many
few. 1

for

the gain

there
free,

be yet another name more


mistress,

Letter to E. Blount [August 27,

More fond than

make me
16.

that

The wrath
Of

of Peleus' son, the direful

to thee!

I 88

spring all the Grecian woes,


2

And

if I

lose thy love, I lose

my
16.

all.

goddess

L 118
lot!

sing!

Translation of Iliad s [1715]

How happy
I,

is

The world
got.

forgetting,

the blameless vestal's by the world


16.
all

for-

She moves a goddess, and she looks a


queen.
Tell me,
16. Ill, i

L 207

One thought
to flight,
2

of thee puts

the

pomp

Muse, of the man of many

wiles.

Priests, tapers,

temples,

swim before
16.
Z.

my
273

Translation of Odyssey [17251756] I, a

sight.

He

best can paint

them who

shall feel

them most.

16.

So perish

all

who do

the like again.

1 366

What beck'ning
light
2

ghost, along the

moon-

1 See Swift, p. 3893.


fl

shade

Another version

is:

iSee Pope, Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot, p. 41 ib.


Priests,

Achilles' wrath, to Greece the direful spring

Of woes unnumber'd, heavenly


See Bentley, p. g86a.

goddess, sing!

sight.
tus,

victims, swam before my altars, EDMUND SMITH, Phaedra and HippolyJ.

adapted from RACINE [1707], act

sc.

jr.

405

POPE
Invites

my

steps,

and points to yonder

Tis

education

forms
is

the

common
in-

glade?

mind:
Just as the twig clined.

Elegy to the Memory of an Unfortunate Lady [1717], Z. i


Is it,

bent, the tree's


Epistle
I.

Moral Essays.

I,

To

in Heav'n, a crime to love too well? bear too tender, or too firm a
part? reversion in the sky, greatly think, or bravely Ib. L 6

To Lord Cobham,
Give
this

149

cheek a

little

red.
Ib. L

To
Is

heart, act a lover's or a

251

Roman's

And

there
die?

no bright

you, brave breath

Cobham!

to the latest

For those

who
first

Shall feel your ruling passion strong in Ib. I 262 death.

Ambition

sprung from your blest


fault of Angels

Most women have no


16. II,

characters at

all.

abodes;

To Mrs. M.

Blount
*

The

glorious

and of
Ib.
I.

Gods.

13

Choose
in

a firm cloud before


it

it fall,

and

By foreign hands thy dying eyes were


clos'd,

By

foreign

hands

thy

decent limbs

Catch, ere she change, the Cynthia of 16. Z. this minute. 19

composed,

Chaste to her husband, frank to


thy humble grave
side,

all be-

By By

foreign hands adorn'd,

A
and by strangers
Ib. L 51

teeming mistress, but a barren

bride.
I.

strangers honored,

16.

71

mourn'd!

Wise

How

lov'd,

how

wretch! with pleasures too refin'd


spirit

honored once,

avails

thee not,

to please; With too much


ease;

to be

e'er at

To whom

related, or

by

whom begot;
thee;
shall

heap of dust alone remains of Tis all thou art, and all the proud
be!

With

too

much

quickness ever to be

Ib. I 71

taught; With too much thinking to have com-

The

fate

Men may
To

such, be read, as well as books, too

of

all

extremes

is

mon thought.
You
purchase pain with
give,
all

that joy can


live.
l.

much.
observations

which

ourselves

we

And

die of nothing but a rage to Ib.


ev'ry pleasing, ev'ry

We grow more partial for th'


sake.

make,

95

observer's

"With
Say,

prudent
Ib.

part,

what can Chloe want?"


wants a heart.

She

Moral Essays [1720-1735 Epistle I, To Lord Co


l 9
Like following
life

L 159

In

men, we various
find;

ruling

passions

through creatures
detect.

In

women,
kind;

two

almost

divide

the

you

dissect,

You

lose it in the

moment you

Those,

Ib.

I 29

Not always
find

actions

show the man: we


is

The

only fixed, they first or last obey, love of pleasure, and the love of
Ib.
/.

sway.

207

Who

does a kindness

not therefore
Ib.
I.

Men, some

to business,

some

to pleas-

kind.

109

ure take;

406

POPE

But every woman is at heart a rake. Moral Essays. Epistle II, To


Mrs.

Blessed
for

he

shall

M.

Blount, L 215
till

he who expects nothing, never be disappointed. 1 Letter to Gay [October 6, 1727]


is

She who
cools,

ne'er answers

husband

You

beat your pate, and fancy wit will

come:

Or,

if

she rules him, never shows she


accepting,

rules;

Knock as you home.2


Epigram:

please, there's

nobody

at

Charms by
sways,

by submitting,

An Empty House
but

[1727]

Yet has her humor most, when she


obeys.
16. I

Ye Gods!
time,

annihilate

space

and

261

And make two

And

mistress of herself, though china


fall.

lovers happy. Martinus Scriblerus on the Art

Ib.

I 268
still.

Woman's

of Sinking ch. 11

in

Poetry [1728],

at best a contradiction
Ib.
Z.

270

In wit a man, simplicity a child.

Who

shall decide
i

when

doctors disa-

gree?
16. Ill,

Awake,

my

3 Epitaph on Gay [1732] St. John! leave all meaner

To Lord

Bathurst
I.

things

[1732],

To low

ambition,

and the pride of

But thousands
that,

die,

without or

this

or

kings. Let us, since life can little

more sup-

Die, and

endow

ply
a college, or a cat.

Than

just to

look about us, and to


o'er
all

Ib.Z-95

die,

The The

ruling passion, be

it

what

it will,

Expatiate

free

this

scene of

ruling
still.

passion

conquers
Ib.

reason
Z.

153

man; mighty maze! but not without a


plan.

Satan

now

is

wiser than
rich,

of yore,

An

Essay on

Man

And
Good

tempts by making
ing poor.
sense,

not makIb.
Z.

Epistle

[1733-1734]. I, L i
folly

351

Eye Nature's walks, shoot


flies,

as it

which only

is

the gift of

Heaven,

And

catch the manners living as they


rise:

And though no
seven.
Ib.

science, fairly

worth the
BurlingZ.

Laugh where we must, be candid where

IV, To Lord

we

can;

ton [1731],

43

But vindicate the ways man. 4


Say
first,

of

God
16.
I.

to

13

Statesman, yet friend to truth! of soul


sincere,

In action faithful, and in honor

What
clear; pri1

above or man below, can we reason but from what we


of
16.
this
Z.

God

Who
Who

broke no promise, serv'd no


gain'd no
16. VII,
title,

know?
Pope
calls

17

vate end,

and who

lost

no

friend.

the eighth beatitude (Roscoe's edition of Pope, vol. X, p. 184}. Blessed are those that nought expect, For they shall not he disappointed.

To Mr. Addison
who
SIR

[1720],
2

When

doctors differ

decides

milliard-headed throng?
[1851-1890], El-Yazdi VIII, 39

amid the RICHARD FRANCIS


of Haji

JOHN WOLCOT ("Peter Pindar") [17381819], Ode to Pitt His wit invites you hy his looks to come, But when you knock, it never is at home.
COWPER, Conversation
[1782],
/.

305

BURTON

The Kasidah

Abdu

8 *

See Gay, p. 4013. See Milton, p. 3410.

407

POPE
Pleased to the
food,
last,

he crops the flowery

All are but parts of

one stupendous
is,

whole, the hand just raised to shed

And

licks

Whose body Nature


soul.

and God the

his blood.

An

Essay on
Epistle
I,

Man.
I 83
of

An
As
full,

Essay on Man.
I,
Z.

Epistle
as

267
that

Who
Atoms

sees with equal eye, as

God
1

perfect,

in vile

man

all,

A hero perish
And

mourns
As the rapt seraph that adores and
burns.

or a sparrow

fall,

or systems into ruin hurl'd, now a bubble burst, and now a 16. L 87 world.
eternal
in

To Him no
small;
x

high,

no low, no

great,

no

Hope

springs breast:
is,

the

human
blest.

He

fills,

he
all!

bounds,

connects,
16.
Z.

and
277

equals

Man never

but always to be

16.

1 95

All nature is but art unknown to thee, All chance, direction which thou canst

Lo, the poor Indian! whose untutor'd

not

see;

mind
Sees

God

in clouds, or hears

him

in the

All discord, harmony not understood; All partial evil, universal good;

wind;

And,

spite of pride, in erring reason's


spite,

His soul proud Science never taught to


stray

One

truth
2

is

clear,

Whatever
16.

is,
Z.

is

Far

as the solar

walk or milky way;

right.

289
to
8

Yet simple nature to his hope has giv'n, Behind the cloud-topped hill, an humbler heav'n.
16.
Z.

Know then
scan;

thyself,

presume not

God

99

The

But

thinks, admitted to that equal sky, His faithful dog shall bear him com-

proper study of mankind is man. Placed on this isthmus of a middle


state,

pany.

16.

1.

111

In pride, in reasoning pride, our error


lies;

being darkly wise and rudely great: With too much knowledge for the
sceptic side,

All quit their sphere,


skies!

and rush
at

With
into the

too

much weakness

for the stoic's

pride,

Pride

He
is

still

aiming

the

bless'd

hangs between; in doubt to act or


rest;

abodes,

would be Angels, Angels would be Gods. Aspiring to be Gods if Angels fell, Aspiring to be Angels men rebel.
16. I

Men

In doubt to
beast; In doubt his

deem himself
mind

a god,

or

Born but
err;

to die,

or body to prefer; and reas'ning but to

123

Alike in ignorance, his reason such,


1

Seas roll to waft me, suns to light


rise;

me
the

There

To
earth,

is no great and no small the Soul that maketh all.

My

footstool
skies. 2

my

canopy
16.
Z.

EMERSON [1803-1882], Epigraph


a
8

to

139

History
See Dryden, p. 3670. See The Seven Sages, p. 68a.

Die of a rose
1

in aromatic pain?
16.
Z.

200

and
2

See Shakespeare, Hamlet V, ii, 232, p. 266b. note. See Matthew 5:35, p. 4ob; H. G. Wells,

vraie science et la vraie e*tude de 1'homme, 1'homme [The true science and the true PIERRE CHARRON, study of man is man]. Trait^ de la Sagesse [1601], bk. I, preface
c'est

La

Trees

and

fields

tell

me

nothing:
B.C.],

men

are

p. 888b;

and Clarence Day,

p. 9255.

my

teachers.

PLATO [427-347

Phaedrus

408

POPE

Whether he

thinks too

little

or too

Till tired

he

sleeps,

and

life's

poor play

much; Chaos of thought and


fused;
Still

is o'er.

passion, all con-

An
Learn of the
ing gale.
little

Essay on Man.
I.

Epistle II,
nautilus to

274

or disabused; Created half to rise, and half to fall; Great lord of all things, yet a prey to
all;

by himself abused,

sail,

Spread the thin oar, and catch the driv16. Ill,


I.

177

Sole judge of truth, in endless error hurled; The glory, jest, and riddle of the world! 1

For forms of government


test;

let fools con-

An

Essay on

Man.

Epistle II, I i

Whate'er is best administer'd is best: For modes of faith let graceless zealots
fight;

Fix'd like a plant on his peculiar spot, To draw nutrition, propagate, and rot.
16.

His can't be wrong whose


1

life is in

the

I 63

In

right. faith and

hope the world


is

will dis-

And hence one


breast,

agree,

master-passion in the

But

all

mankind's concern

Like Aaron's serpent, swallows up the 2 rest. 16. I 131

charity. 16. Z. 303

Good,

happiness! our being's end and aim! pleasure, ease, content! whatever

Vice

is

a monster of so frightful mien,

As to be hated needs but to be seen; 3 Yet seen too oft, familiar with her

thy name: That something still which prompts the


eternal sigh,

We
The The

face,
first

For which we bear to


endure, then pity, then em16.
is

live,

or dare to
16.

die.

IV, L
of

brace.
learn'd
plore, fool is

2.217
ex-

Worth makes the man, and want


the fellow;

it

happy Nature to

The
happy that he knows no happy in the plenty
giv'n,

rest

is

all

but leather or prunella. 16. 1 203


life

more;

The rich The poor

is

What's Fame? a fancy'd


breath,

in others'

contents

him with

the care of
16.

Heav'n.

I 263

thing beyond death.

us,

ev'n before our


16. 1

237

Behold the

child,

by Nature's kindly
tickled with

A wit's a feather, and


An
God.2

law, Pleased with a


straw:

a chief a rod; honest man's the noblest work of


16.

rattle,

L 247

Some

livelier

plaything gives his youth

One

self-approving

hour whole years


of loud huzzas: Marcellus exil'd

delight, little louder,


garters,

outweighs

but as empty quite:


gold,

Scarfs,

amuse

his

riper

Of stupid starers and And more true joy


feels

stage,

And

beads

and prayer-books are the


still,

Than Caesar with

a senate at his heels.

toys of age!

16.1.25;
as that
If parts allure thee,

Pleased with this bauble


before;
1

think

how Bacon

shin'd,

See Pascal, p. g64a. "For they cast down every man his rod, and they became serpents: but Aaron's rod swallowed

The
a
fl

wisest, brightest,

meanest of man-

kind!
See Cowley, p. See Fletcher, p. 3133,

up
8

their rods.

Exodus

7:12

See Dryden, p. 3703.

and Bums,

p. 4920.

409

POPE

Or

ravish'd

with the whistling of a

name, 1
See Cromwell, damn'd to everlasting fame!

Fired that the house x reject him, " 'Sdeath, I'll print it, And shame the fools." Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot, L 61

An
Slave to

Essay on
takes

Man.

No

creature smarts so little as a fool.


16.
Z.

Epistle IV, L 281

84

no

sect,

who

no private

road,

But looks through Nature up to Nature's God. 2 16. I 331

in vain! Destroy his fib, or sophistry The creature's at his dirty work again. 16. Z. 91

Formed by thy converse, happily


steer

to to

As yet a
I

child, nor yet a fool to fame, lisp'd in numbers, for the numbers

came.
to
gay,

16. L

From

grave

from

127
132

lively

severe. 3

16.

L 379

This long disease,


Pretty! in

my

life.

16.

Z.

Say, shall

my little bark attendant sail, Pursue the triumph and partake the
4

amber
2

to observe the forms

Of

hairs, or straws, or dirt, or grubs, or

gale?

16.

Z.

385

worms!

The

Thou

things,

we know,

are neither rich


devil

wert

my

friend. 5

guide, philosopher, and 16. Z. 390

nor

rare,

But wonder how the


there.

That true
same.

self-love

and

social are the

16.

they got /. 169

16.

Z.

396
fa-

Means

not,

but blunders round about a


fustian's

Shut, shut the door, good John!


tigued,
I said;

meaning;

And he whose
I'm
It is

so

sublimely

Tie up the knocker! say I'm


dead.

sick,

bad,

The

Dog-star rages!
Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot [1735]. Prologue to Imitations of Horace,

not poetry, but prose run mad. 16. L 186

Were
True Genius
spires,

there one
kindles,

whose fires and fair Fame


and each
and

in-

Fire in each eye,

and papers

in each

hand,

Bless'd with each talent, to please,

art

They
Is

rave, recite,

and madden round


16.
Z.

And born

to write, converse,

live

the land.
there a parson, beer,

5
in

with ease; Should such a man, too fond to


alone,

rule

much bemused

Bear, like the Turk,

no brother near the

A A

maudlin poetess, a rhyming peer, clerk foredoom'd his father's soul to


cross,

throne;

View him with

Who pens
gross?

a stanza

when he should
16.
Z.

en-

And

scornful, yet with jealous eyes, hate for arts that caus'd himself to
rise;

15

!The
a 3

theater.

See Cowley, p. 3583. See Bolingbroke, p. 3975. See Boileau, p. 377a. *See Dante, Purgatorio, canto I, 1. i, p. i6ob. 5 Is this my guide, philosopher, and friend? POPE, Imitations of Horace [1733-1738], Epistle I, bk. I, L 177
2

See Martial, p. 1353. Nor is thy fame on lesser ruins built; Nor needs thy juster title the foul guilt Of Eastern kings, who, to secure their reign,

Must have
slain.

their brothers, sons,

and kindred

SIR

JOHN DENHAM, On Mr. John Fletcher's Works [1668]

41O

POPE

Damn

with faint

praise,

assent with

Yet wit

ne'er tastes,

and beauty

ne'ei

civil leer,

enjoys.

And, without
sneer; Willing to
strike,
1

sneering, teach the rest to


afraid to

Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot,

I 309

wound, and yet

Eternal smiles his emptiness betray, As shallow streams run dimpling all the

Just hint a fault, Alike reserved to

and hesitate dislike; blame or to com-

way.

Ib. I
antithesis.

315

And he himself one vile


Wit
that can creep, the dust.

mend,
tim'rous foe, and a suspicious friend; Dreading e'en fools, by flatterers besieged,

325 and pride that licks Ib. I 333

Ib.

I.

And

ne'er obliged; Like Cato, give his little Senate laws, 2 And sit attentive to his own applause.

so obliging that

he

Unlearn'd,

he knew no schoolman's

subtle art,

No
I

of the language, but the language


heart.
Ib.

Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot,

I.

193

I 398

Who
Who
Oh

but must laugh,

if

such a

man

cannot sleep a wink. 1


Imitations of Horace [1733bk. II, L 12 1738], satire I,

there be?

would not weep,

if

Atticus were
Ib. 1.213
Satire's

he!
let

my

weapon, but I'm too


tilt

dis-

own, and die so too all I have to do)! Maintain a poet's dignity and ease, And see what friends, and read what Ib. I 261 books I please.
live

me

my

creet

(To

live

and die

is

To

run amuck, and

at all I meet.
Ib. I 69

But touch me, and no minister


There
St.

so sore.

Ib. I

76

Curs'd be the verse,


flow,

how

well soe'er

it

John

mingles

with

my
of
1-

That tends

to

make one worthy man


Ib. I

The
For

friendly bowl feast of reason


soul.
I,

and the flow


Ib.

my foe.
Let

283

127

Who
Yet

"What? that Sporus tremble thing of silk, of ass's Sporus, that mere white curd milk? Satire or sense, alas! can Sporus feel? breaks a butterfly upon a wheel?" Ib. I 305
let

who hold
2

sage Homer's rule the

best,

Welcome
guest.

the coming, speed the going


Ib. II, II,

I 159

I've often wish'd that I

For

me

had clear, hundred pounds a year; handsome house to lodge a friend,


life, six

flap

this

bug with gilded


dirt,

wings,

A river at my garden's end, A terrace walk, and half a rood


Of land
Give
set

This painted child of

that stinks
fair

out to plant a wood.8


Ib.

and

stings;

VI,

II,

Whose buzz
annoys,

the witty and the

iWhen

needs he must, yet faintly then


the deed,

he

me again my hollow tree, A crust of bread, and liberty.


Ib.

I 220

praises;

Somewhat
raises:

much more

the

means he

A patriot is a fool in ev'ry age.


Ib.

So marreth what he makes, and praising


most, dispraises.

Epilogue to the Dialogue

Satires,
I,

I 41

PHINEAS FIJETCHER,
2

The Purple
[1633],

Island

canto 7
laws.
*

1
2 3

While Cato Cato Prologue to Mr. Addison's

gives his little

senate
[1713],

See Cervantes, p, ig4a. See Pope, Odyssey XV, 83, p. 405!). See Horace, p. isoa.

411

POPE
Laugh then at any but at fools or foes; These you but anger, and you mend not those. Laugh at your friends, and if your
friends are sore,

The

last

and greatest

art

the art to

blot.

Imitations of Horace Epistle I, bk. II, I 280

There

still

So much the better, you may laugh the more.


Imitations of Horace, Epilogue to the Satires, Dialogue I, I 53

The many-headed monster

remains, to mortify a wit, of the pit l


16.
Z.

We poets
Of
all

304
ab-

(upon a poet's word) mankind the creatures most


are

Let humble Allen, with an awkward shame,

surd:

The

season

when

to

Do

come, and when


to
sing,

to

good by
fame.

stealth,

and blush to
16.

find
1.

it

135

To

sing,

or cease

we
16.

never
Z.

Never gallop Pegasus to death.


16. Epistle
I,

know.2
I,

358
a

bk.

I 14

Call,

if

you

will,

bad

rhyming

When the brisk minor pants for twentyone.


16. I

disease,
It gives

men

38

happiness, or leaves
16. II, II,

them
Z.

ease.

Not to go back is somewhat to advance, And men must walk, at least, before
they dance.
He's
16.
that's
I.

182

The

worst of

madmen

is

a saint run

mad.

16.

VI,

I,

Z.

27

53

arm'd
within.

without

innocent
16.
I.

Vain was the They had no

94

Get place and wealth,


grace;
If not,

chief's, the sage's pride! poet, and they died. 16. Odes, bk. IV, ode 9, st. 4

if

possible with

by any means get wealth and


1

Father of all! in every age, In every clime ador'd,

By

saint,

by savage, and by

sage,
st. i

place.

16.

1.

103

Above

all

Greek,

above,

all

Roman
I 26

Jehovah, Jove, or Lord! The Universal Prayer [1738],

fame.

16. II,

And

It

is,

people's voice is odd, and it is not, the voice of God. 2


16. I

The

binding Nature fast in fate, Left free the human will, 16.

st.

And

deal damnation round the land.


16.
st.

89

In quibbles angel and archangel join, And God the Father turns a schooldivine.
16.
1.

Teach me

To

to feel another's woe, hide the fault I see;

101 [on Paradise Lost]

That mercy I to others show, That mercy show to me.8


16.
st.

The mob
ease.

of gentlemen

who wrote
16.

10

with

Z.

108

am

his Highness' 4
tell

that solitary shines In the dry desert of a thousand lines.


16.
Z.

One simile

Pray

me,

sir,

On
night:
in

dog at Kew; whose dog are you?


the collar of a dog
in

111

Nature and Nature's laws lay hid

Who
What

says in verse

what others say


16.
Z.

God

said,
light.

Let Newton be! and

all

was

prose.

202

will a child learn sooner

than a
Z.

Epitaph intended for Sir Isaac

song?
1

16.

205
See Horace, p. isja, and note. 2 See Robert Frost, p. 9263. 8 See Spenser, p. soob. * Frederick, Prince of Wales.
1

Newton

Ev'n copious Dryden wanted, or forgot,


2

See Horace, p. 1233. See Alcuin, p. 152!).

412

POPE

b
in Rabelais' easy

Who

dare to love their country, and be

Or laugh and shake


chair.

poor.

On his

grotto at

Twickenham

The Dunciad [1728-1743],


bk.
I,

l.2i

This

is the Jew That Shakespeare drew.

MackLin's performance in 1741 of Shylock in The Merchant of Venice. (Attributed to

Of

Poetic Justice, with her lifted scale, Where, in nice balance, truth with gold she weighs,

And

solid
praise.

pudding

against

Ib.
vigils

empty L $2
keep,

Pope)
never knew any man in my life who could not bear another's misfortunes
I
1 perfectly like a Christian.

While pensive poets painful

Sleepless themselves to give their readers sleep. 16. Z. 93

Next

o'er his
roll,

Thoughts on Various Subjects

books his eyes begin to


of
all

In pleasing

memory

he

stole.

A man
own

should never be ashamed to he has been in the wrong, which is


is

16. 1 127

Or where the
atone,

pictures
sav'd

for the

page

but saying, in other words, that he wiser today than he was yesterday.

And

Quarles

is

by beauties not his


16.
I.

Ib.

own.

139
Z.

with

with narrow-souled people as narrow-necked bottles; the less they have in them the more noise they make in pouring out. 16.
It
is

And

gentle Dullness ever loves a joke.


16. II,

34 44

A brain
PeeFd,

of feathers,

and a heart of
16.

lead.
Z.

When men grow virtuous

in their old

age, they only make a sacrifice to of the devil's leavings. 2

God
Ib.

patched, and woolsey brothers,


shirtless others.

piebald,

linsey-

Grave mummers!

sleeveless

some, and

True disputants are like men, their whole delight is


suit.

true sportsin the purIb.

That once was

Britain.
16. Ill,
Z.

115

And proud
storm. 1

his mistress* order to per-

There, take (says Justice), take ye each


a shell:

form, Rides in the whirlwind and directs the


16.
Z.

We thrive
you;

at
fat

Westminster on
oyster
live

fools like

263

A
in

'Twas

wit with dunces, and a dunce with


wits.2

peace

adieu. 8

16. IV, I

90
188

Verbatim from Boileau

The Right Divine


wrong.
Stuff the

of Kings to govern
16.
Z.

Whether thou choose


ous
1
2 8

Cervantes'

seri-

air,

head

With
See See

all

such reading as was never

La Rochefoucauld, La Rochefoucauld,
voila,"
caille,

p. 355a.
p. 355!).

read:
chacun

"Tenez
Des

dit-elle,

"a

une

sottises d'autrui nous vivons au Palais; Messieurs, 1'huitre etoit bonne. Adieu. Vivez

For thee explain a thing till all men doubt it, And write about it, Goddess, and about
it.

16.

Z.

en paix." BOILEAU [1636-1711], Epttre 11 (d

249

M.

I'Abbt des Roches)

1 See Addison, p. 2 See Quintilian, p. i$6a,

and note.

4*3

POPE

BYROM

To happy
vines,

convents, bosom'd deep in


abbots, purple as their
bk. IV,
Z.

CHARLES

Where slumber
wines.

BARON DE MONTESQUIEU*
1689-1755

DE

SECONDAT,

The Dunciad,
Led by

301

How can anyone be Persian?


Lettres Persanes [1721], no. 30

my

hand, he saunter'd Europe


birth,

round,

And

A man
Ib.
veils
Z.

gathered every vice on Christian

should be mourned at his Ib. 40 not at his death.

ground.
Religion blushing

311
fires,

her sacred

If triangles

had

a god,

he would have
16.

And unawares
shine;

three sides.2
is

59

Morality expires. Nor public flame, nor private, dares to

Nor human
divine!

spark

is

left,

nor glimpse

the right of doing whatever Liberty the laws permit. De I'Esprit des Lois [1748],
Useless
laws.
If
I

Lo! thy dread empire Chaos! is restored: Light dies before thy uncreating word; Thy hand, great Anarch! lets the curtain
fall,
all.

laws

weaken the necessary


Ib.

XXIX,

16

knew

And

universal darkness buries

serve
Ib. I

my
I

of something that could nation but would ruin anit

other,

649

would not propose


. .

to
I

LADY MARY WORTLEY

prince, for I am first a then a Frenchman .


necessarily a

my
only

man and
because

am

MONTAGU
1689-1762
last.

man, and only

accidentally

am

French. 3

fensees et Jugements

And we

meet, with champagne and a

chicken, at

You have know a little.

to study a great deal to Ib.

The Lover
Be
plain in
diet;

[1748]

dress,

and sober

in

your

CHARLES MACKLIN
1690-1797

In short,
quiet.

my

deary, kiss me,

and be

The law
ence.4

is

a sort of hocus-pocus

sci-

Summary

of Lord Lyttelton's

Advice
should, like a polished razor keen, Wound with a touch that's scarcely felt
or seen.
Satire

Love &

la

Mode

[1759], act II,

sc. i

JOHN BYROM
1692-1763

To

the Imitator of the First Satire of Horace, bk. II

God

bless the King, I

mean

the Faith's
the

Defender;

God
1

bless

no harm

This world consists of men, women,

in blessing

and

Pretender;
*
8

H.erveys.

Letters [1763], voZ. I

But the
ing

fruit that

can

fall

without shak-

See Carlyle, p. 578a, note See Xenophanes, p. 7ob. See Montaigne, p. 191 a.

3.

Indeed

is

too mellow for me.

Letters

and Works

[1837].

The

* Hocus was an old cunning attorney. DR. JOHN ARBUTHNOT, Law Is a Bottomless Pit; or, History of John Bull [1712], ch. j The words of consecration, "Hoc est corpus,"

Answer
1

See Sydney Smith, p. 5233.

were travestied into a nickname for jugglery, as "Hocus-pocus." JOHN RICHARD GREEN, A Short History of the English People [1874], ch. 7.

414

BYROM
But who Pretender
is,

CHESTERFIELD
the pence, for the pounds will take care of themselves." Letters [November 6, 1747]

or

who

is

God

bless us all

that's quite

King, another

thing.

Miscellaneous Poems [1773]- To an officer of the Army, extempore

Advice

is

Some

say, that Signor Bononcini,

who want

it

seldom welcome; and those most always like it least.


16. [January 29, 1748]

Compared to Handel's a mere ninny; Others aver, to him, that Handel


Is scarcely fit

to hold a candle. 2

Speak of the
tempt, and
idolatry.

modems

of

without conthe ancients without

Strange! that such high dispute should

be

16. [February 22, 1748]

Twixt Tweedledum and Tweedledee.


16.

On

the Feuds between

Handel and Bononcini


As
clear as a whistle.

Wear your learning, like your watch, in a private pocket: and do not pull it out and strike it, merely to show that
you have one.
16.

Epistle to

Lloyd

PHILIP DORMER

STANHOPE, EARL OF CHESTERFIELD


1694-1773 Measures not men. 8
Letters [March 6, 1742]

Manners must adorn knowledge, and smooth its way through the world. Like a great rough diamond, it may do very well in a closet by way of curiosity, and
also for its intrinsic value.

16. \July i, 1748]

Women,
all,
is

then, are only children of a


16.

larger growth.

Whatever
worth doing

is

worth doing at
16.

[September

5,

1748]

well.

Women who
[March 10, 1746]
is

are either indisputably

The knowledge
to

of the world

only

beautiful, or indisputably ugly, are best flattered upon the score of their under-

be acquired

a closet.

in the world, and not in 16. [October 4, 1746]

standings; but those who are in a state of mediocrity are best flattered upon
their beauty, or at least their graces; for every woman who is not absolutely ugly 16 thinks herself handsome
. .

An

injury

is

much

sooner forgotten

than an

insult.

16. [October 9, 1746]

Do
surest

as

you would be done by,


of pleasing. 4

is

the

ness can be carried

Without some dissimulation no on at all.


16.

busi-

method

16. [October 9, 1747]

[May

22, 1749]

Idleness

is

Take the tone


you are
I

of the

company

that
16.

minds.
Style
is

only the refuge of weak 16. \July 20, 1749]

in.

knew once a 5 fellow, who used


1

very covetous, sordid to say, "Take care of

the dress of thoughts. 16. [November 24, 1749]


is

in Redgauntlet, vol. II, ch. i [Edinburgh edition, 1832].

Quoted by

SIR

WALTER SCOTT

Dispatch

the soul of business.


16. [February 5, 1750]

See Lamb, p. 535b. 8 See Goldsmith, p. 4493, and Burke, p. 4523.

*See Kingsley,
the

p. 6gib.

"William Lowndes [1652-1724], Secretary of Treasury in the reigns of William III, Queen Anne, and George I.

give weight, but luster, and many give accomplishments more people see than weigh.

Knowledge

may

16.

[May

8,

1750]

4*5

CHESTERFIELD
Let blockheads read what blockheads
write.

VOLTAIRE
Give Dayrolles a chair.
Last words

Letters [November. i, 1750]


1

No. The utmost


tot,

love such a man? can do for him is to consider him as a respectable HottenIs it possible to
I
lib.

FRANCIS HUTCHESON
That
action

[February 28, 1751]


said,

1694-1746 is best which procures

commonly ticularly by Lord


is

It

and more
2

par-

the greatest happiness for the greatest

Shaftesbury,

that

numbers. 1
Inquiry Concerning Moral Good and Evil [1720], sec.
3

ridicule

is

the best test of truth.


Ib. [February 6, 1752]

Every woman is infallibly to be gained by every sort of flattery, and


every

FRANgOIS QUESNAY
1694-1774
Laissez faire, laissez passer. 2

man by one

sort or other.

Ib.

[March 16, 1752]

A chapter of accidents.3
16. [February 16, 1753]
I

Attributed

assisted at the birth of that

significant

word

"flirtation,"

most which

[FRANCOIS MARIE

VOLTAIRE
AROUET]
1694-1778

dropped from the most beautiful mouth


in the world.

The World,
Unlike
It shall

no. 101

Virtue debases
self.

Oedipe [1718], act

itself in justifying itI, sc. 4

my
be

subject

will

frame

my

song,
witty,

O what fine times, this age of iron!


LeMondain
Paradise
is

and it shan't be long. Epigram on ["Long"] Sir Thomas Robinson

[1736]
Ib.

where

am.
a

The
3

superfluous,

very

necessary
Ib.

The dews

of the evening most carefully


for the loss of

thing.

shun Those tears of the sky


the sun.

The

secret of being a

bore

is

to

tell

everything.

Advice to a Lady in

Autumn
Love

Sept Discours en Vers sur

I'Homme
truth,
is

[1738]
Ib.

adorned whatever subject he either spoke or wrote upon, by the most


splendid eloquence.
4

He

but pardon

error.

He who

merely just

is

severe.

Character of Bolingbroke
I 3

Letter to Frederick the Great

Lord Lyttelton.
1

Truth, 'tis supposed, may bear all lights; and one of those principal lights or natural mediums by which things are to be viewed in
order to a thorough recognition
self.
is

Priestley

was the

first

(unless

it

was Beccaria)

who

ridicule

it-

ANTHONY ASHLEY COOPER, LORD

this sacred that the greatest happiness of the greatest number is the foundation of morals and leg-

taught

my

lips

to

pronounce

truth

SHAFTRS-

islation.

BURY, Essay on the Freedom of Wit and


[1709], pt. I, sec. i
8

Humor

JEREMY BENTHAM [1748-1832], Works,


let
it

vol.
fl

X, p. 142 Let it be,

The Chapter

of Accidents

is

the longest chap-

readily translatable,

and

pass. The phrase is not also appears as "Lais-

Attributed to JOHN WILKES by SOUTHEY in The Doctor [1837], ch. 118 * See Johnson, p. 4303. II embellit tout ce qu'il louche [He adorns whatever he touches]. FENELON [1651-1715], Lettre sur les Occupations de l'Acad4mie Francaise, sec. 4

ter in the

book.

sez faire, laissez aller." It

has also been attributed to PIERRE LE PESANT BOISGUILBERT [16761714]

and JEAN CLAUDE GOURNAY [1712-1759]. was widely used by the Physiocrats in urging freedom from government interference, and was adopted by ADAM SMITH [1723-1790]. 8 See Holmes, p. 788b.
It

416

VOLTAIRE

The

first

who was

king was a fortunate

soldier:

Who

serves his

country well has no


[1743], act I, sc. 3

There are truths which are not for all men, nor for all times. Letter to Cardinal de Bernis
[April 23, 1761]

need of

ancestors. 1

Mtrope

One

feels like

It is better to risk saving a guilty per-

son than to condemn an innocent one. 2

after reading your

crawling on work.

all

fours

Letter to Rousseau [August 31,

Zadig [1747], ch. 6

1761]

They squeeze the orange and throw


away the
skin.

Whatever you
those

do,

crush

the

in-

Letter

to

Madame
2,

famous thing [superstition], and love

Denis

who love you. 1


Letter to d'Alembert

[September

1751] referring to his quarrel with Frederick the Great

[November
28, 1762]

Common

This agglomeration which was called

sense is not so common. Dictionnaire Philosophique


[1764].
Self-Love

and which

still

calls
is

Roman Empire

itself the Holy neither holy, nor

Roman, nor an Empire.


Essai sur
les

Moeurs [1756]

In general, the art of government consists in taking as much money as


possible from one class of citizens to Ib. Money give to the other.

for the best in the best of possible worlds. 8 Candide [1759], ch. i
is

All

The

best

is

the

enemy
Ib.

of the good.2

what then
for

If this is the best of possible worlds, are the others? Ib. 6

Dramatic Art

Optimism,

said Candide,
all
is

is

a mania

maintaining that things are going badly.

well

when
Ib.

Very learned women are to be found, in the same manner as female warriors; but they are seldom or never inventors.
Ib.

19

Women

In this country [England] it is good an admiral from time to time, to 4 Ib. 23 encourage the others.
to kill

The proper mean.3


Letter to

Count d'Argental [November 28, 1765]

he

This is the happiest of mortals, for is above everything he possesses.


Ib.

26

Work helps to preserve us from three weariness, vice, and want. great evils
Ib.

Men use thought only to justify their wrongdoings, and speech only to conceal their thoughts. 4 Dialogue 14. Le Chapon et la Poularde [1766]
I

30
Ib.

We must cultivate our garden. 5


1

God,

my

have never made but one prayer to a very short one: "O Lord, 'make enemies ridiculous." And God
it.

granted

Letter to

M.

Damiliville
16, 1767]

What can

line

they see in the longest kingly in Europe, save that it runs back to a
SIR

[May
is little else

successful soldier?

WALTER

SCOTT, Wood-

stock [1826], ch. 37 a See Blackstone, p. 444b.

human
1

History crimes and misfortunes. 5

than a picture of
ch.

des
*

Tout est pour le mieux dans le meilleur mondes possibles (referring to the philosophy of Leibnitz and his followers).
8

L'Ingenu [1767],
Quoi que vous
fassiez,

10

Icrasez 1'infame, et

Pour encourager
reference
is

les autres.

The
5 II

to

Admiral Byng, who was


to relieve

aimez qui vous aime. 2 Le mieux est 1'ennemi du.bien. 3 Le juste milieu. See Horace, p. 12 ib, and
note.
* 5

executed in 1756 for failing

Minorca.

faut cultiver notre jardin. See Rabelais, p. i8ia, and Montaigne, p. 1890.

See Robert South, p. See Gibbon, p. 46513.

41 ?

VOLTAIRE
absolutely on the stomach, but in spite of that, those who have tie best stomachs are not the best

DEFFAND

Thought depends

MATTHEW GREEN
1696-1737

thinkers.

They politics

like ours profess,

Letter to d'Alembert

The

greater prey

upon the less.

The

[August 20, 1770]


did not exist, it would be invent him. 1 to necessary Epitre 6. TAuteur du Livre des Trois Imposteurs [November 10,
If

Grotto, I 69

God

Fling but a stone, the giant dies.

Laugh and be

well.

The Spleen

[1737],

Z.

92

1770]

By happy alchemy of mind They turn to pleasure all they

find.
Ifc.

L 610

Change
loves.
I
all

except Sur I' Usage de

your
la

Vie

am

very fond of truth, but not at

WILLIAM OLDYS
1696-1761
Busy, curious, thirsty fly, Drink with me, and drink -as
I.

of martyrdom. Letter to d'Alembert [February

1776]

The embarrassment
Le Droit du

On
sc.

of riches. Seigneur, act II,

a Fly Drinking

Out

of a of Ale,

Cup
st. i

He who
heavens!
is

thinks himself wise, 16. IV, a great fool.


spirit of his age,

O
i

Who has

not the
all

Of his age has


I

the unhappiness. 2 Letter to Madame du Chdtelet

MARIE DE VICHY-CHAMROND, MARQUISE DU DEFFAND


1697- 1780
[Of Voltaire]
tory.

He

has invented

his-

advise you to go on living solely to enrage those who are paying your annuities. It is

From FOURNIER, UEsprit


I'

dans

the only pleasure I have left. Letter to Madame du Deffand

Histoire [1857]

The
Liberty of thought
soul.
is

first

the

life

of the

1 step is the hardest. Letter to d'Alembert [July

7,

1763]

Essay on Epic Poetry (written in English)

Helvetius in
S.
it

The Friends

of Voltaire [1906] by

Whoe'er thou

art,

He

is,

or was, or has to be. 3

behold thy master,

On
I

a statuette of Cupid in the Cirey Gardens

She claims was a paraphrase of Voltaire's words in the and Essay on Tolerance: "Tfcink for yourselves let others enjoy the privilege to do so too." Norbert Guterman, in A Book of French
G. TALLENTYRE
(E. Beatrice Hall).

disapprove of what you say, but I defend to the death your right to Attributed 4 say it.
will
1
2

Quotations [1963], suggests that the probable the quotation is from a line in a letter to M. le Riche [February 6, 1770]: "Monsieur I'abb6, I detest what you write, but I
source for

would give my

life to

make

it

possible for you

to continue to write."

See Ovid, p.

i28b,

and

Tillotson, p.

3665.

de son age, De son age a tout le malheur. Qui que tu sois, void ton maitre;

Qui n'a pas

1'esprit

II

*This
first

Voltaire's, but was used in quoting a letter from Voltaire to


is

Test le fut sentence

ou

le doit etre.

not

'LThis remark refers to the legend that Saint Denis, carrying his head in his hands, walked from Montmartre to St. Denis, a few miles north of Paris. Voltaire wrote to Madame du Deffand [January 1764] that one of her bon mots was II quoted in the notes of La Pucelle, canto i:
n'y a

que

le

premier pas qui coute.

418

KAMO MABUCHI

THOMSON

KAMO MABUCHIi
1697-1769
Japanese poetry has
as its subject the

JAMES THOMSON
See,

1700-1748 Winter comes to rule the varied


1

human

heart. It

may seem

to

be of no

year,

practical use and just as well left uncomposed, but when one knows poetry well, one understands also without explanation the reasons governing order and disorder in the world. Writings
recite again how troublesome, evil, turbulent a country China To mention just one instance is. there is the matter of their pictureI

Sullen and sad. The Seasons.

Winter

[1726],

Z.

Welcome, kindred glooms! Ib. Congenial horrors, hail!


Cruel as death,
grave.

I.

need not

and hungry
16.
let

as

the

I 393
the

There studious

me

sit,

And

hold

high

converse

with
Ib.
I.

writing.

Ib.

mighty dead.
clouds.
Ib.

431

RICHARD SAVAGE
1698-1743

Ships dim-discover'd dropping from the

Summer

[1727],

Z.

946
1188

No

tenth transmitter of a foolish face. The Bastard [1728], I. 8


see thee now, though late,

Sigh'd and look'd unutterable things.


Ib. I

May
And

redeem
to

Come,

thy name,
glorify

gentle Spring! ethereal mildness,


Ib. Spring [1728], I
i

what

else

is

damn'd

come.
task!

fame.
Character of the Reverend James Foster
Delightful

to

rear

the

tender

To

thought, teach the young idea

how

to shoot.
Z.

WILLIAM WAR BURTON, BISHOP OF GLOUCESTER


1698-1779

16.

1149

An

elegant sufficiency, content, Retirement, rural quiet, friendship, 16. Z. 1158 books.

Orthodoxy

is

my

doxy; heterodoxy

is

another man's doxy. 2

From JOSEPH PRIESTLEY [17331804], Memoirs, vol.


I,

Crown'd with the sickle, wheaten sheaf, While Autumn, nodding


yellow plain, Comes jovial on.
16.

and
o'er

the

the

p. 572

JOHN DYER
c.

Autumn

[1730],

/.

1700-1758

For loveliness

A sway, A sunbeam in a winter's day,


little rule, a little
Is all

the proud and mighty have Between the cradle and the grave.

Needs not the foreign aid of ornament, But is when unadorn'd adorn'd the 16. I. 208 most.2

Or where
Z.

the Northern ocean, in vast

Grongar Hill [1726],


1

89
Boils

whirls,

From

Sources of Japanese Tradition, edited


[1960].

round
isles

the

naked
8

by William Theodore de Bary


2

melancholy
th'

debate on the Test Laws, Lord Sandwich said: "I have heard 'hetfrequent use of the words 'orthodoxy* and erodoxy' but I confess myself at a loss to know
Priestley relates

that

in

Of
1
2

farthest

Thute,

and

Atlantic

surge
See Cowper, p. 458!). Cicero, p. ina, See Virgil, p. ii7a,

precisely

what they mean." Bishop Warburton

whispered his definition to him. See Carlyle, p. 577a.

See

and Milton, and Seneca,

p.
p.

419

THOMSON
Pours in

WESLEY

among the stormy Hebrides. The Seasons. Autumn, Z. 871


expressive
silence,

JONATHAN EDWARDS
1703-1758
Resolved, never to do anything which I should be afraid to do if it were the 1 last hour of my life.

Come

then;

muse
Z.

His

praise.

Hymn

[1730],
2

118

O Sophonisba!

Seventy Resolutions
Intend to live in continual mortification, and never to expect or desire any
worldly ease or pleasure.

Sophonisba, O!

Sophonisba [1730], act

III, sc. 2

Forever, Fortune, wilt thou prove An unrelenting foe to love,

Diary [1723]

And, when we meet

mutual

heart,

little,

wretched,
a
vile

despicable
insect

crealess

Come

in

between and bid us part? To Fortune


first,

ture; a

worm,

mere nothing, and

When

Britain

at Heaven's

com-

mand,
Arose from out of the azure main, This was the charter of the land,
guardian angels sung Rule, Britannia, rule the waves; Britons never will be slaves.
Alfred [1740], act

that has risen up in contempt against the majesty of Heaven and earth. The Justice of God in the Damnation of Sinners
[1734]
I

than nothing; a

And

this strain:

assert that

nothing ever comes

to

pass without a cause.

The Freedom
If, sc.

of the Will [1754]


sense.
Ib.

This dictate of

common

pleasing land of drowsyhead it was. The Castle of Indolence [1748],

canto

I,

st.

THOMAS MORELL
1703-1784
See, the conquering hero

bard here dwelt, more fat than bard beseems, Who, void of envy, guile, and lust of

comes!
2

Sound the trumpet, beat the drums!


Joshua [1748],

pt. Ill

On

gain, virtue

still,

and

nature's

pleasing
strain.
st.

themes, Pour'd forth his unpremeditated


Ib.

JOHN WESLEY
1703-1791
I

68

A little round, fat,

oily

man

of

God.
st.

look upon the world as my parish. Journal [June 11, 1739]


all villainies,

Ib.

69

That execrable sum of

commonly

called the Slave Trade.


Ib. [February 12, 1772]

PHILIP DODDRIDGE
1702-1751

Though

am

always in haste,

am

Awake my

soul! stretch every nerve,

never in a hurry.

And
And

A heavenly race

press with vigor on;

demands thy

zeal,
is

Let

it

Letters [December 10, 1777] be observed, that slovenliness


religion; that neither this

an immortal crown. Hymns [1755]. Zeal and Vigor in the Christian Race, st. i

no part of
1

nor any text of Scripture, condemns


See Gellert, p. 438b.

1 a

See Milton, p. 3393.

Tom Thumb

This line was parodied by Fielding in his


[acted
1730]:

Handel used this in his oratorios Judas Maccabaeus [April i, 1747] and Joshua [March 9, 1748], the libretti of which were written by
Morell. See Dryden, p. 371 a.

Huncamunca,

Huncamunca, O.

420

WESLEY
neatness of apparel. Certainly this is a duty, not a sin. "Cleanliness is, indeed,

FRANKLIN
lettering and gilding), lies here, food for worms; but the work shall not be
lost, for it will

next to godliness."

Sermon
the good you can, By all the means you can, In all the ways you can,
all

93,

On

(as

he believed) appear
elegant

Dress

once more
edition,

in a

new and more

Do

revised

and corrected by the

Author. 1

Epitaph on Himself [composed


in 1728]

In

all

the places you can,


can,

At all the times you

Eat to

the people you can, As long as ever you can. John Wesley's Rule
all

To

live,

and not live to eat. 2 Poor Richard's Almanac

[for

Where

there's marriage

without love,

NATHANIEL COTTON
1705-1788

there will be love without marriage, Ib. [1734]

Yet

still

we hug

the dear deceit. Content. Vision


fast until

IV

Avarice and happiness never saw each other, how then should they be-

come

acquainted.

Ifa.

Hold the

fleet thee. 2

angel

he

bless

Tomorrow

A
well

little

house well

filled,

little field

BENJAMIN FRANKLINS
1706-1790
Benjamin Franklin, Printer (like the cover of an old book, its contents torn out and stripped of its
is

a little wife well willed, Ib. [1735] are great riches.


tilled,

and

Some
otherwise.

are

weatherwise,

some

are
Ifa.

The body

of

Necessity never

made

a good bargain.
Ifa.

According to Rabbi A. S. Bettelheim, this found in the Hebrew fathers. He cites PHINEHAS BEN YAIR as follows: "The doctrines
care-

Three may keep a

secret,

if

two of
Ifa.

them

are dead.
is

of religion are resolved into carefulness; into vigorousness; vigorousness fulness


guiltlessness;

Opportunity

the great bawd.


Ifa.

into

guiltlessness into abstemiousness into cleanliness;

abstemiousness; cleanliness into

Early to bed and early to a

rise,

makes
Ifa.

literally, next to godliness. godliness" 2 See Genesis 32:26, p. 7b, and Whittier,

man
God

healthy, wealthy,

and

wise.

p. 625b.

sEripuit coelo fulmen

mox

sceptra

tyrannis

helps

them

that

help them16.

[He snatched the thunderbolt from heaven, then to Attributed the from tyrants]. scepter TURGOT This line was inscribed on Houdon's bust of Franklin in 1778. FREDERICK VON DER TRENCK
[1726-1794] author of the line. See Manilius, p. i3ib. Antiquity would have raised altars to this mighty genius, who, to the advantage of mankind, compassing in his mind the heavens and the earth, was able to restrain alike thunderbolts and tyrants. MIRABEAU, Address Upon the Death of Franklin I succeed him; no one could replace him.
asserted
in

selves.

Don't throw stones at your neighbors', if

your

own windows

are glass.
Ifa.

1794 that he

was the

an There are three faithful friends old wife, an old dog, and ready money.
ib. [1738]

THOMAS JEFFERSON [to the Comte de Vergennes, who had remarked, "You replace Mr. Franklin"
as

you would not be forgotten, as you are dead and rotten, either write things worth reading, or do tUngs Ifa. worth the writing.
If

soon

as

i a

envoy to France] See Byron, p. 56ja.

See Clare, p. 5730. See Socrates, p. 87!), and note.

* See

Aesop, p. 760, and note.

421

FRANKLIN
Keep your
eyes

b
lost;

wide open before

was
rider

afterwards. marriage, half shut Poor Richard's Almanac [1738]

and for want of a horse the was lost. 1 Poor Richard's Almanac [1758]
are a kind of posterity in respect

None but the how to confess a

well-bred man knows fault, or acknowledge


I&-

We
to

them.
Letter to William Strahan [1745]

himself in an error.

An empty

bag cannot stand upright.


Ib. [1740]

Eighth and
ful!!

lastly.

They

are so grate-

He

that riseth late

must

trot all day. Ib. [1742]

Reasons for Preferring an Elderly


Mistress [1745]

but Experience keeps a dear school,


fools will learn in

no

other. 1

Remember that time is money. 2 Advice to a Young Tradesman


[^748]

Ib. [1743]

The used key

They
is

that

can

always bright.
Ib. [1744]

When

the well's dry,

we know
Ib.

the

to obtain nor safety. safety deserve neither liberty Historical -Review of


liberty

give up essential a little temporary

worth of water. 2

[1746]
Idleness

Pennsylvania [1759]

Dost thou love Life? Then do not Life squander Time; for that's the stuff
is

and pride tax with a heavier hand than kings and parliaments. If we
can get rid of the former, we may easily bear the latter. Letter on the Stamp Act
[July 11, 1765]

made

of.
is

Ib.

Lost time

never found again.


Ib. [1748]

3 Little strokes fell great oaks. Ib. [1750]

The

cat in gloves catches

no mice.
ib. [1754]

The grand leap of the whale up the Fall of Niagara is esteemed, by all who have seen it, as one of the finest spectacles in nature.

To

the editor of a

London

news-

Work

as

dred years, tomorrow.

you were to live a hunpray as if you were to die


if

paper [1765], intended to chaff the English for their ignorance


of America

Ib. [1757]

word

to the wise
fill

is

enough, and

many words won't

a bushel.

Here Skugg lies snug As a bug in a rug.


Letter to Miss Georgiana

a.

[1758]
Ib.

He
ing.

that lives

upon hope
is

will die fast-

Shipley [September 1772] There never was a good war or a bad

Three removes

as

bad

as a fire, Ib.

peace/
Letter to Josiah Quincy [September 11, 1773]
1

A
chief

little

neglect
for

may

breed great mis-

...

was
i

lost; for

want of a nail the shoe want of a shoe the horse

See Herbert, pp. 3240-3253.

and

Sec Burke, p. 4553.

let your chances like sunbeams pass you by, For you never miss the water till the well

Do

not

reckon hours and minutes to be dollars T. C. HALIBURTON [1796-1865], The Clock-maker 3 I cease not to advocate peace; even though unjust it is better than the most just war. CICERO [106-43 B c -]' Epistolae ad Atticum, bk.
2

We

cents.

VII, epistle 14
It hath been said that an unjust peace is to SAMUEL be preferred before a just war. BUTLER, Butler's Remains [1759]. Speeches in the Rump Parliament

runs dry.

ROWLAND HOWARD, You Never Miss


the Water [1876]
3

See Lyly, p. aoab.

FRANKLIN

BUFFON
next thing most like living one's over again seems to be a recollection of that life, and to make that recollife

You and I were long friends: you now my enemy, and I am

are

The

Yours, B. Franklin
Letter to William Strahan
[July 5, 1775]

lection as durable as possible


it

by putting

down

in writing.

Autobiography [1771-1 867],*


ch.
i

We

must

all

assuredly

we

shall

hang together, all hang separately.

or
elevation.
I

At the
Poor man,
for

signing of the Declaration

Eat not to dullness; drink not to Ib. 6


shall never ask,

of Independence \July 4, 1776]


said
I,

never refuse, nor


Ib. 8

your whistle.

you pay too much The Whistle [1779]

ever resign an office.

Human
much by

felicity

is

Here you would know and enjoy what posterity will say of Washington. For a thousand leagues have nearly the same effect with a thousand years. Letter to Washington
[March
5,

great pieces of

produced not so good fortune


as

that seldom

happen,

by

little

ad-

vantages that occur every day.


Ib. 9

When men
best contented;

are employed, they are

1780]

George Washington, Commander of the American armies, who, like Joshua of old, commanded the sun and the moon to stand still, and they obeyed him.

for on the days they worked they were good-natured and


cheerful, and, with the consciousness of having done a good day's work, they spent the evening jollily; but on our idle days they were mutinous and quarrelIfc. 10 some.

A toast at a dinner in Versailles 1


No
I

nation was ever ruined bv trade. Thoughts on Commercial Subjects wish the bald eagle had not been
as

GEORGES LOUIS LECLERC DE BUFFON


1707-1788
[Of the horse] The noblest conquest man has ever made. L'Histoire des Mammiferes.

chosen
country;

the
is

he

representative of our a bird of bad moral char-

acter; like those

among men who

live

by sharping and robbing, he is generally poor, and often very lousy. The turkey is a much more respectable bird, and withal a true original
native of America. Letter to Sarah Eache
[January 26, 1784]

Le Cheval

The

style is the

man himself.2

Discourse [on his admission to the French Academy, 1753]

He
he

[the sun]

gives light as

soon as

Genius is nothing but a greater aptitude for patience. Attributed*


x

rises.

An
Our

Economical Project 2 [1784]


is

The Autobiography, begun

lished in complete
2
3

Constitution

in actual opera-

tion; everything appears to promise that it will last; but in this world nothing is

in 1771, was puband accurate form in 1867. Le style c'est 1'homme raSme. Le gnie n'est qu'une plus grande aptitude a
d.

la patience.
first

certain but death

and

taxes.

Herault de Sechelles, in Voyage attributed this to Buffon.

It

Montbard, is quoted

Letter to
1

M.

Leroy [1789]

The British Minister had proposed a toast George III, in which he likened him to the sun, and the French Minister had toasted Louis XVI, comparing him with the moon.
to
3

A by Matthew Arnold in Essays in Criticism, French Coleridge [1865]. There is also a popular LORD SYDENHAM proverb: Genius is patience.
[1799-1841] defined genius as sense of proportion. See Carlyle, p. 578a; Butler,
a

consummate
756b;

p.

and

Letter to

the Journal

de Paris advocating

Jane

Ellice

daylight saving.

Hopkins, p. 7703. (note continued p. 424)

423

FIELDING

HENRY FIELDING
\11

1707-1754 Nature wears one universal grin. Tom Thumb the Great [1730],
act
it is
I, sc. i

Some folks rail against other folks, because other folks have what some
folks

would be glad

of.

Joseph Andrews, bk. IV, ch. 6

Love and scandal are the best sweeteners of tea. 1

our pleasure to be drunk; Today And this our queen shall be as drunk as we. Ib. 2

Love

in Several

Masques

[1743]
fa-

Every physician almost hath his


vorite disease.

When
I've

I'm not thank'd thank'd enough;

at
I've

all,

I'm

Tom
leaving

Jones

[1749], bk. II, ch. 9


for

done
morel

my

duty, and

done no
Ib. 3

Thwackum was
mercy

doing

justice,

and

to heaven.

16. Ill, 10

am

as sober as a judge.

Don Quixote in England

[1734], act III, sc. 14

This story will never go down.

Can any man have a higher notion of the rule of right and the eternal fitness of things? 16. IV,
4
Distinction without a difference.
16.

Tumife-Down Dick
Hie dusky night
rides

down

the sky,

VI, 13

And ushers

morn; Fhe hounds all join in glorious cry, The huntsman winds his horn, And a-hunting we will go. 1 A-Hunting We Will Go [1734],
St. 1

in the

O! more than Gothic ignorance. 16. VII,

An amiable weakness.
His designs were
as the phrase
is;

16.

X, 8

strictly

honorable,

To whom

nothing

is

given, of
2

him
II,

her fortune by

that is, to rob a lady of way of marriage.


16.

:an nothing be required.

XI, 4

Joseph Andrews [1742], bk.


describe not

ch. 8
I

Hairbreadth missings of happiness look like the insults of Fortune.


16. XIII, 2

men, but manners; not


species.
16. Ill, i

in individual,

but a

The
It

republic of letters.
16.

XIV,
it is

They
ion.

are the affectation of affecta16. 3

hath been often

said,
is

that

not
4

death, but dying which

terrible.
Ill, ch.

Public schools are the nurseries of all net and immorality. 16. 5
Patience is a necessary ingredient of genius. -DISRAELI, The Young Duke [1831] Genius is capacity for taking trouble.
.ESLIE

Amelia [1751], bk.

These are
friendship.

called the pious frauds of 16. VI, 6

STEPHEN [1832-1904] Genius is an intuitive talent

for

labor.

When widows exclaim loudly against second marriages, I would always lay a wager that the man, if not the wedding
day,
is

AN WALAEUS
1 It's

absolutely fixed on.

16. 8

of three jovial huntsmen, and a-hunting they did go; And they hunted, and they hollo'd, and they blew their horns also;

iSee Congreve, p. a See Gibbon, p. 466a.

Look ye

there!

The Three
3

Amiable weaknesses of human nature. GIBBON, Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
3

Jovial

Huntsmen

English ballad),
See

st.

(old /

[1776-1788], ch. 14
It

was

an

Luke

12:48, p. 4ya,

The School

amiable weakness. for Scandal [1777]

SHERIDAN,

424

FIELDING not in the universe a more nor a more contemptible animal, than a proud clergyman. Amelia, bk. VI, ch. 10

PITT
Jesus, lover of Let me to Thy

There

is

my

soul,
fly,

ridiculous,

bosom

One

of

my

illustrious predecessors. 1

While the waters nearer roll, While the tempest still is high; Hide me, O my Savior, hide,
Till the

Covent Garden Journal


[January

storm of

life is past;

n,

1752]

Safe into the haven glide, receive my soul at last.

LINNAEUS [CARL VON LINNfc]


To
bly.
live

Hymns and

Sacred Poems. ^1740]. Jesus, Lover of My

1707-1778 by medicine is

Gentle
to live horri-

Jesus,

meek and

mild,

Diaeta Naturalis, introduction


2

Look upon
Pity
Suffer

a little child;

Nature does not proceed by

my simplicity, me to come to
Ib. [1742].

thee.

leaps. Philosophia Botanica, sec. 77

Gentle Jesus,

Meek

and Mild

Mingle your joys sometimes with 8 your earnest occupation. From biography of Linnaeus by

Soldiers of Christ, arise,

And put your armor

on.

BENJAMIN DAYDON

JONES, ch. 9

Ib. [1749]. Soldiers of Christ, Arise

professor can never better distinenguish himself in his work than by true the for a clever pupil, couraging
discoverers are

Hark! the herald angels sing Glory to the newborn King; Peace on earth, and mercy mild,

among them,

as

comets
Ib.

God and
Joyful
all

sinners reconciled!

amongst the

stars.

Live innocently; God is here. Ib. 15 (inscribed over the door of Linnaeus s bedchamber)
9

ye nations rise, of the skies; the triumph Join With th' angelic host proclaim
Christ
is

If a

tree dies, plant another in

its

born in Bethlehem. 1 Ib. [1753]- Christmas Hymn: Hark! the Herald Angels Sing

place.

Ib.

CHARLES WESLEY
1707-1788
"Christ, the Lord, is risen today," Sons of men and angels say,

WILLIAM PITT, EARL


OF

CHATHAM

1708-1778

Raise your joys and triumphs high, and earth reply. Sing, ye heavens, Hymns and Sacred Poems the Lord, Is [1739]. Christ,

The atrocious crime of being a young man, which the honorable gentleman such spirit and [Walpole] has with I shall neidecency charged upon me, ther attempt to palliate nor deny; but
content myself with wishing that
I

Risen Today
i

may

Illustrious predecessor.

BURKE, The Present

be one of those whose

follies

may

cease

Discontents [1770] men. I tread in the footsteps of illustrious ... In receiving from the people the sacred trust twice confined to my illustrious predecessor

with their youth, and not of that


1
i

numlines

and

MARTIN [Andrew Jackson]. augural Address [March 4, 1837] a Natura non facit saltus. 3 See Horace, p. issjh, and note.

VAN BUREN,

In-

altered George Whitefield [1714-1770] 2, 7 and 8 from Wesley's original: Hark, how all the welkin rings, . "Glory to the King of kings."
. .

Universal nature say, "Christ the Lord is born today."

425

PITT
her

JOHNSON
lay

who

are ignorant in spite of experi-

ence.

never!

down my arms, never never You cannot conquer America.


Speech [November 18, 1777]

Speech in the House of Commons 1 [March 6, 1741]


rejoice that America has resisted. Three millions of people, so dead to all
I

invoke the genius of the Constitu16.

tion.

the feelings of liberty, as voluntarily to

poorest bid defiance to

The

man may
all

in his

cottage

the forces of the


its

submit to be slaves, would have been fit instruments to make slaves of the rest.
16.

Crown.

It

may be

frail

roof

may

January 14, 1766]

in

Confidence is a plant of slow growth an aged bosom; youth is the season

of credulity.

Speech in the House of Com-

the wind may blow through it shake the storm may enter the rain may but the King of England canenter all his force dares not cross not enter the threshold of the ruined tenement! Speech on the Excise Bill

mons
Unlimited power
the minds of those

[January 14, 1766]


is

SAMUEL JOHNSON
1709-1784

apt to corrupt
2

who

and

this I

know,

my

possess it; lords, that where

Of

laws end, tyranny begins. 8 Case of Wilkes. Speech


[January 9, 1770]

the griefs that harass the distrest, Sure the most bitter is a scornful jest. London [1738] (An imitation of lird Satire the Third Satin of Juvenal),
all

I 166
This

something behind the throne greater than the King himself. Speech in the House of Lords [March 2, 1770]
is

There

mournful
confessed
rises

truth

is

everywhere
1

Slow

worth, by poverty depressed. Ib. I. 176

love liberty, and

love the Americans because they I love them for the noble efforts they made in the last war.
I

When

learning's triumph o'er her barb'rous foes First rear'd the stage, immortal Shake-

Ib.

Each change
Reparation for our rights at home,

speare rose; of many-color'd drew,

life

he

and

security violations. 4

against

the

like

future

Letter to the Earl of Shelburne

Exhausted worlds, and then imagin'd new: Existence saw him spurn her bounded
reign,

[September 29, 1770]

an Englishman, while a foreign troop was landed in my country, I never would


If I
as I
1 This is the composition of Johnson, founded on some note or statement of the actual speech. Johnson said, "That speech I wrote in a garret, in Exeter Street." BOSWELL, Life of Johnson

were an American,

am

And

panting
vain.

Time

toil'd after

him

in

Prologue at the Opening of Drury Lane Theatre [1747]

Cold

approbation
bays,

gave

the ling'ring
scarce
16.

For those who durst not censure,


could praise.

fl

3 *

See Lord Acton, p. 7503. See John Locke, p. 37b. Indemnity for the past
future.
of

Declamation
and
security

roar'd,

while Passion

for

slept. 16.

the
vol.

Times
land

Charles

Ill, p.

LORD JOHN RUSSELL, Life and James Fox [1859-1860], 345, letter to the Hon. T. Mait-

1 Three years later Johnson wrote, "Mere unassisted merit advances slowly, if what is

not very

common

it

advances at

all."

426

JOHNSON

The

wild vicissitudes of taste. Prologue at the Opening of Drury Lane Theatre


live to please

With

these celestial

Wisdom

calms the

And

mind, makes the happiness she does not


find.

For we that
to live.

must please
Ib.

Vanity of

Human

Wishes,
i.

Studious to please, yet not ashamed to


fail.

Curiosity

is

367 one of the permanent

and
[

Prologue to the Tragedy of Irene


1 749\

certain characteristics of a vigorous

mind.

The Rambler

[March

12, 1751]

Let observation with extensive view 1 Survey mankind, from China to Peru. Vanity of

Human Wishes
[1749],
Z.

place affords a more striking conviction of the vanity of human hopes

No

than a public
I

library.

Deign on the passing world

to

turn

And

thine eyes, pause a while from learning to be


wise.
ills

16. [March 23, 1751] not so lost in lexicography as to forget that words are the daughters of earth 9 and that things are the sons of

am

heaven.2
the scholar's
life

There mark what


assail

Dictionary [1755], preface

Toil, envy, want, the patron, and the Ib. I. 157 jail.

CLUB

An

lows, meeting

assembly of good felunder certain conditions.


16.

frame of adamant, a soul of fire, No dangers fright him, and no labors


tire.

Ib.

1.

191

loose sally of the mind; an irregular indigested piece; not a reg16. ular and orderly composition.

ESSAY

He
To

left

the

name

at

which the world


tale.

grew

pale,
Ib.
I.

point a moral, or adorn a

221
of

A hateful tax levied upon EXCISE commodities, and adjudged not by the common judges of property, but wretches hired by those to whom excise
is

"Enlarge

my

life

with

multitude

paid.

Ib.

days!" In health, in sickness, thus the suppliant prays:

GRUBSTREET

The

name

of

street near Moorsfield,

London, much

inhabited by writers of small histories,


his state,
is

Hides from himself


to

and shuns

dictionaries,

and temporary poems.


Ib.

know
protracted
protracted woe.

That

life

LEXICOGRAPHER

writer of dicIb.

Ib.l.2 55
Superfluous
stage.
lags

tionaries, a harmless drudge.

the

vefran

on the
I.

Ib.

308

Must

helpless

man,

Roll darkling
fate?

down
he

in ignorance sedate, the torrent of his


16.
gives,
Z.

OATS England is grain which generally given to horses, but in ScotIb. land supports the people.8
in
For the Rambler motto, see Johnson's transof BOETHIUS, De Consolations Philosophiae III, 9, 27, p. 1483.
lation
2

345

Secure, whatever
best.
1

he

gives the
16.
Z.

See Herbert, p. 3253.

356

DE QUINCE Y quotes with approval, but without naming him, the criticism of a writer who contends that this couplet amounts in effect to this: "Let observation with extensive
observation observe Rhetoric [18*8]

was pleasant to me to find, that "oats," the "food of horses," were so much used as the food of the people in Dr. Johnson's own town. BOSWELL, Life of Dr. Johnson [1791]*
3 It

vol. I, p.
I

6a8 [Everyman ed.]


that

own

mankind

extensively."

to vex

by my definition of oats I meant SAMUEL JOHNSON; them [the Scotch].


434

from

Ib. IIj

427

JOHNSON

The

joy of life

is

est love requires to vals of absence.

be renewed by

variety; the tenderinter-

days

and nights to

the volumes of

Addison,
Lives of the Poets [1779-1781],

The

Idler [1758-1760], no. 39

Addison

He

is

no wise man

that will quit a


16.

certainty for

an uncertainty.

57

To be of no church is dangerous. Religion, of which the rewards are disand which is animated only by and hope, will glide by degrees out of the mind unless it be invigorated and
tant, faith

with credulity to the whispers of fancy, and pursue with eagerness the phantoms of hope; who expect that age will perform the promlisten

Ye who

of youth, and that the deficiencies of the present day will be supplied by the morrow; attend to the history of Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia. Rasselas [1759], ch. i
ises

reimpressed by external ordinances, by stated calls to worship, and the salutary influence of example. 16. Milton

The

father of English criticism.


16.

Dryden

He

delighted to tread

upon

the brink
16.

To

a poet nothing can be useless.


16. 10

of meaning.

Human

life is

which much is to be enjoyed.

everywhere a state in to be endured and little


16. 11

The Churchyard abounds with images which find a mirror in every mind, and with sentiments to which every bosom returns an echo. 16. Gray 1
His [Garrick's] death has eclipsed the gaiety of nations, and impoverished the public stock of harmless pleasure.
16.

Marriage has many pains, but celi16. 26 bacy has no pleasures.

Example

is

always more efficacious


16.

Edmund

Smith

than precept.

29

The

endearing

elegance

of female
16.

things are familiar things are

New

made familiar, and made new.


16.

friendship.

45

Pope

Tomorrow

How small,
dure,

of

all

that

human

purpose to regulate

my

hearts en-

room.
Prayers

and Meditations

That part which laws or kings can cause


or cure!
Still

[published 1785]. [1764]

to

ourselves

in

Preserve
every
or find.

me

from unseasonable and


16.

place

immoderate

consigned.

sleep.

[1767]

Our own

felicity

we make

Lines added to GOLDSMITH'S


Traveller [1763-1764]

Every man
self

naturally persuades himthat he can keep his resolutions,

That man is little to be envied whose patriotism would not gain force upon the plain of Marathon, or whose piety would not grow warmer among the
ruins of lona.

nor is he convinced of his imbecility but by length of time and frequency of


experiment.
16. [1770]
is

done and

This world, where much little to be known.

to be

16. Against Inquisitive

and

Journey to the Western Islands


[1775],
I

Perplexing Thoughts
have,
all

my life long,

been lying

till

Whoever wishes
style,

to attain an English
coarse,

familiar

but not

and

ele-

noon; yet I tell all young men, and tell them with great sincerity, that nobody
1

gant bttt not ostentatious, must give his

See Gray, p. 44oa.

428

JOHNSON

who

does not

rise early will ever

do any

good.

there did meet another man With his hat in his hand. 1

From BOSWELL,
Tour

Journal of a to the Hebrides [pub-

Anecdotes of Johnson by GEORGE STEEVENS


Abstinence is as easy to me as temperance would be difficult. Anecdotes of Johnson by

lished 1785], [September 14,

Wickedness

is

always easier than

vir-

tue; for it takes the short cut to everyIb. [September 17, 1773] thing.

HANNAH MORE

Boswell: That, tude of mind.

sir,

was great

forti-

Gratitude
tion;

is

you do not
Ib.

a fruit of great cultivafind it among gross

Johnson: No,

sir;

From

BOSWELL,
2

stark insensibility. of Life

people.

[September 20, 1773]

Johnson

\published 1791],
5,

Here closed in death th' attentive eyes That saw the manners in the face. Epitaph on Hogarth [1786]

[November
Sir,

1728]

we

3 are a nest of singing birds. Ib. [1730]

When

"Come,

the hoary Sage replied, my lad, and drink some beer."

From MRS.
If the

PIOZZI, Anecdotes of

Samuel Johnson [1786]

Birch is as brisk as a bee in conversation; but no sooner does he take a pen in his hand than it becomes to him, and benumbs all his a
torpedo
111
faculties.

Tom

man who

Ib. [1743]

Cry not when Tis a proof that he had

turnips cries, his father dies,


rather
Ib.

David;

come no more behind your scenes, 4 for the silk stockings and white
excite

Have a turnip than

his father. 1

bosoms of your actresses amorous propensities.

my

He was
wisdom

a very good hater.


is

Ib.

A man

may

write at

[i75l any time, if he

Ib.

The law

the last result of

human
Ib.

will set himself

acting

upon human
is

experience

doggedly to it. Ib. '[March 1750]


girls.

for the benefit of the public.

Wretched un-idea'd

to regulate instead of and reality, by imagination thinking how things may be, to see Ib. them as they are.

The

use of traveling

Ib. [1753]
Is not a patron, my lord, looks with unconcern on a man strug-

one who

has

worst

Dictionaries are like watches; the is better than none, and the best
true.

cannot be expected to ga quite

Ib.

and when he him encumbers ground with help? The notice which you have been pleased to take of my labors, had it been early, had been kind; but it has been delayed till I am indifferent, and
the water, gling for life in

reached

Books that you may carry to the fire, and hold readily in your hand, are the most useful after all. Apothegms from HAWKINS, Life of Johnson [1787]

*A parody on the ballad The Hermit of Warkworth. a Edited by G.B. Hill and revised by
is assuredly a great, a not more decidedly very great work. Homer is the first of heroic poets, Shakespeare is not more decidedly the first of dramatists, Demosthenes is not more decidedly the first of orators, than Boswell is the first of biographers. He has

L. F. Powell [1934]The Life of Johnson

As with
I

2 my hat upon my head walk'd along the Strand,


lines,

de Vega's Burlesque of Lope etc. acquien los leones vence," a Elsewhere found, "I put my hat/'
i

"Se

no
a
*

second.

MACAULAY, Samuel Johnson [1831] Of Pembroke College.


David Garrick.

429

JOHNSON
cannot enjoy it; till I am solitary, and cannot impart it; till I am known, and do not want it. 1 From BOSWELL, Life of Johnson
[Letter
to
7,

Papists

or

Protestants,

agree

in

the

Lord
1754]

Chesterfield,

and that their differences are trivial, and rather political than religious. 1 From BOSWELL, Life of Johnson
essential articles,

February

[1763]

This man, [Of Lord Chesterfield] thought, had been a Lord among wits; but, I find, he is only a wit among Ib. [1754] Lords!
I
Sir,

The noblest prospect which a Scotchman ever sees is the high-road that leads him to England!
Ib. [July 6, 1763]

drel,

he [Bolingbroke] was a scounand a coward: a scoundrel, for

A man

ought to read

just as inclina-

charging a blunderbuss against religion and morality; a coward, because he had

tion leads him; for what he reads as a 2 task will do him little good. Ib. \July 14, 1763]
If

not resolution to
left half a

man

fire it off himself, but crown to a beggarly Scotchto draw the trigger at his death. Ib. [March 6, 1754]

he does

really

think that there

is

no

distinction

Ignorance,

madame, pure

why, sir, us count our spoons.


Sir,

between virtue and vice, when he leaves our houses let


Ib.

ignorance.
Ib. [1755]

your

levelers

wish to

-level

down

does not make new acquaintances as he advances through left alone. life, he will soon find himself A man, sir, should keep his friendship 16. [1755] in a constant repair.3
If

man

but they cannot bear leveling up to themselves.


as far as themselves;

Ib. [July 21, 1763]

Sherry

3 is dull, naturally dull;

but

it

Towering in the confidence of twentyone.


16. [January 9, 1758]
jail,

must have taken him a great deal of now see him. pains to become what we Such an excess of stupidity, sir, is not in
Nature.
Sir,

Ib. \July 28, 1763]

Being in a ship is being in a the chance of being drowned.


Ib.

with

woman

preaching

is

like a dog's

[March 1759]
that feels
it

Nothing

is little

to

him

walking on his hind legs. It is not done well; but you are surprised to find it ID. [July 31, 1763] done at all.
I

with great sensibility.


Ib. [July 20, 1762]

look upon

it,

that

he who does

not

mind
thing

man of genius has been seldom ruined but by himself. Ib. [December 21, 1762]
Sir,
I

his belly will hardly mind anyIb. [August 5, 1763] else.

think

all

Christians,

whether

iSee first excerpt for 1772. I do not find that the age or country makes the least difference; no, nor the language the actor spoke, nor the religion which they prowhether Arab in the desert, or Frenchfessed

!What is a Patron? Johnson knew, And well that lifelike portrait drew. He is a Patron who looks down With careless eye on men who drown;
But if they chance to reach the land, Encumbers them with helping hand. AUSTIN DOBSON [1840-1981], The Noble Patron 2 When asked by a lady why he denned
"pastern"
Dictionary.
8

man in the Academy. I see that sensible men and conscientious men all over the world were of one religion of well-doing and daring. EMERSON, Lectures and Biographical Sketches
[1884]. The Preacher See Disraeli, p. 6133.
3

The book which you


or

duty,

because

for

any

read from a sense of reason you must,

as

the

"knee"

of
in

horse

in

his

does not commonly make friends with you. WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS, My Literary Passions
[1895], eh. 7
a

Keep your friendships

repair.

EMER-

Thomas Sheridan
and author.

[1719-1788],

actor,

lec-

SON, Uncollected Lectures: Table Talk

turer,

430

JOHNSON
be
This was a good dinner enough, to sure, but it was not a dinner to ask a
to.

if

Much may be made of a Scotchman he be caught young. 1


From BOSWELL,
Life of
2

man

From BOSWELL,
Johnson [August

Life
5,

of
It
is

Johnson [Spring 1772]


a foolish thing well done. Ib. [April 3, 1773]
sir,

1763]

The gloomy calm


16.

of idle vacancy. 1
8,

[December

1763]

[Of

Sir

John Hawkins]
not

very un-

clubable man.
It matters

Ib. [1764]

how

man

dies,

but

how he

lives.

Ib. [October 26, 1769]

s do you read books through? 16. [April 19, 1773] a college said to one of An old tutor of his pupils: Read over your composia tions, and wherever you meet with is particularly think which you passage

No,

4 fine, strike it out.

That fellow seems


but one
idea,

to
is

me
a

to possess

16. [April 30, 1773]

and that

wrong
ib.

one. 2

You

are the

most

[1770]

countrymen.

unscottified of your 16. [May i, 1773]

gentleman who had been very unhappy in marriage, married immediately after his wife died: Johnson said, it was the triumph of hope over experi-

The woman's
end on
't 5

a whore, and there's an 16. [May 7, 1773]

Was

6 ever poet so trusted before? 16. \July 4, 1774]

ence.

16.
I
is

decent provision for the poor true test of civilization. 3

Attack is the re-action; I never think have hit hard unless it rebounds.
T6. [April 2, 1775]

the
16.

All denominations of Christians have really little difference in point of doctrine,

Most vices may be committed very debauch his genteelly: a man may friend's wife genteelly: he may cheat at
cards genteelly.
16. [April 6, 1775]

though they may

differ

external forms. 4

16.

widely in [1772]

A man will turn


make one book.
Patriotism
scoundrel.
is

over half a library to


16.

Nobody can write the life of a man, but th'ose who have eat and drunk and
lived in social intercourse with him. 5
16.

the last refuge of a 16. [April 7, 1775]


happiest
conversation

[March 31, 1772]

That

is

the

I am a great friend to public amusements; for they keep people from vice.

where there is no competition, no vana calm quiet interchange of ity, but


sentiments.
16. [April 14, 1775]
is

16.

a very good animal in the field; but we turn her out of a garden.
is

cow

a subject ourselves, or we know we can find information upon it.

Knowledge

of

two kinds.

We know
where

16. [April 15, 1772]


1
2

16. [April 18, 1775]

See Cowper, p. 4s8b. See Disraeli, p. 6isa. See Spinoza, p. 374a, and Andrew Carnegie, See
first

In lapidary inscriptions a

man

is

not

upon oath.
1
2

16. [1775]

P-

757.
*

Of Lord Mansfield, educated in England. Of Goldsmith's apology in the London


if

They only who


life

entry for 1763. live with a

Chronicle for beating Evans the bookseller.

man

can write

his

with any genuine exactness and discrimination; and few people who have lived with a man know what to remark about him.
vol. I,

Upon being asked by Elphinstone had read a new book through.


* s

hei

617 (Everyman ed.)

See Sydney Smith, p. 523^ Of Lady Diana Beauclerk, divorced. Of Oliver Goldsmith.

43 1

JOHNSON
There
is

nothing which has yet been

It is a

man's own
if

fault,

it

is

from

ontrived by

man by which
as

so

much

want

of use,

his

mind grows

torpid in

lappiness is produced ivern or inn. 1

by a good
Life of 21, 1776]

old age.

From BOSWELL,
Johnson [April

Life
9,

of

From BOSWELL,
Johnson [March

1778]

No man
Life
tot

but

blockhead ever wrote


Ib. [April 5, 1776]

xcept for money.

Johnson had said that he could reThe Natural peat a complete chapter of from the Danish of Iceland, History of Horrebow, the whole of which was ex-

is a progress from want to want, from enjoyment to enjoyment.

Ib.
Sir,

[May 1776]

LXXII. Concerning no snakes to be met with throughout the whole island/* *


actly thus: "Ch. snakes. There are

16. [April 13, 1778]

you have but two topics, yourself Ib. nd me. I am sick of both.
Olivarii
Jistorici,

Goldsmith, Poetae, Physici,


qui

Every state of society is as luxurious can be. Men always take the best 16. [April 14, 1778] they can get.
as it

nullum

fere

scribendi
tetigit

;enus tetigit, ion ornavit [To


>oet,

non

Nullum quod
Oliver

A
I

country governed by a despot

is

an
Ib.

Goldsmith,

inverted cone.

Naturalist, Historian, who left carcely any style of writing untouched, ind touched nothing that he did not
idorn]
.

am

willing to love all

mankind,

ex-

cept an American.
16. [April 15, 1778]

Ib.

Epitaph on Goldsmith
\June22, 1776]
delays; when to catch it.

Pleasure of

itself is

not a vice.
16.

Life admits not Measure can be had,

of

it is fit

very hour takes away part of the hings that please us, and perhaps part >f our disposition to be pleased.
Ib.

says, "He, the wealth of the Indies, must carry the wealth of the Indies with him," so it is in traveling, a man must carry knowledge with him if

As the Spanish proverb


bring

who would

home

[September
it,

i,

1777]

he would bring home knowledge.


16. [April 17, 1778]
It is better to live rich,

Depend upon

sir,

when

man
rich. 2

:nows he is to be hanged in a fortnight, t concentrates his mind wonderfully. Ib. [September 19, 1777]

than to die
16.

When
s

man

is

tired of
is

London, he

Were it not for imagination, sir, a man would be as happy in the arms of a
chambermaid
as a duchess.

:hat life

tired of life; for there can afford.

in

London

all

16.

[May

9,

1778]

Ib.
1

[September 20, 1777]

Whoe'er has travel'd life's dull round, Whate'er his various tour has been, May sigh to think how oft he found His warmest welcome at an inn. WILLIAM SHENSTONE [1714-1763]; written on a window of an inn at

I would rather be attacked than unnoticed. For the worst thing you can do to an author is to be silent as to his

works.
a place
to

16.
die
in,
it

[March 26, 1779]


should be

an

inn.

Henley. Quoted not quite correctly by Johnson following his remark. ROBERT LEIGHTON [1611-1684], Archbishop of Glasgow, often said that if he were to choose

76 See the Archpoet, p. i54b. i Chapter XLII is still shorter: "There are no owls of any kind in the whole island/' a See Robert Frost, p.

Works,

vol. lf p.

432

JOHNSON
a passage in Goldsmith's of Wakefield, which he was afterwards a fool enough to expunge:
I

remember

Classical quotation is the parole of


literary

Vicar
"I

men all over the world. From BOSWELL,


Johnson [May

Life of

do not love a man who

is

zealous for

8,

1781]

nothing."

From BOSWELL,
Claret
is

Life of Johnson [March 26, 1779]

My
a

friend

man
[as

was of opinion that when of rank appeared in that characan author], he deserved to have 1 handsomely allowed.
16.

ter

the liquor for boys; port for men; but he who aspires to be a hero must drink brandy.
16. [April 7, 1779]

his merit

[May 1781]

A jest breaks no bones.


16. \June 4, 1781]
Officious, innocent, sincere, every friendless name the friend.

Worth
going to
If

seeing?

yes;

but not worth

see.

16. [October 12, 1779]


idle,

Of

you are

be not

solitary; if

you

16. [January 20, 1782;

are solitary, be not idle. 1 16. [October 27, 1779]

on the death of Robert Levett]


away by
negli-

To

let friendship die

Frenchman must be always talkwhether he knows anything of the matter or not; an Englishman is content to say nothing, when he has nothing,

gence and

silence, is certainly

not wise.

to throw away one of the greatest comforts of this weary pil16. [March 20, 1782] grimage.
It is voluntarily

ing to say.

16.
like lace; every

[1780]
gets 16.

Greek,
as

sir, is

man

Whatever you have, spend less. 16. [December j, ^782]


I never have sought the world; the world was not to seek me.2

much

of

it as

he

can.

[Of Oliver Goldsmith]

No man

was

16.

more
his

when he had not a pen in hand, or more wise when he had.


foolish
16.

[March 23, 1783]


16. [1783]

He

is

not only dull himself, but the

cause of dullness in others. 8

The
being
is

applause of a single of great consequence.


to me,

human
16.

Clear your

mind

of cant. 4
16.

[May

15, 1783]

Come
us be as

my
we

dear Bozzy,
can.

and

Who
let

drives fat

oxen should himself


16. \June 1784]

be

fat.

happy

as

16.

[March 14, 1781]

There are people

whom
16.

like very well to drop,

one should but would not

I have found you an argument; I am not obliged to find you an understand-

ing.

16.

wish to be dropped by.

Blown about by every wind


[March 1781]
cism. 6

of

criti-

16.
16.

a parcel of boilers and vats, but the potentiality of growing rich beyond the dreams of
sell

We

are not here to

Don't attitudenize.
1

Usually

writes a book,
a

quoted he ought to be encouraged.

as:

When a

nobleman

avarice. 2

16.

[April 4, 1781]

left

to

men

great direction which Burton has disordered like you, is this: Be

not
2

Ib. solitary, he not idle." See Burton, p. giaa. See Edward Moore, p. 4350.

See Somerville, p. sgya. See Byron, p. 556b, and Emerson, p. 60 ib. 3 See Shakespeare, p. 24ib. * See Carlyle, p. 576b. 5 Parody on: Who rules o'er freemen should free. himself be BROOKE, Gustavus Vasa
[1739] * See Ephesians 4:14, p. 54a.

433

JOHNSON
I look upon every day to be lost, in which I do not make a new acquaintmce.

LOMONOSOV

OLIVER EDWARDS
1711-1791
have tried too in my time to be a philosopher; but I don't know how, cheerfulness was always breaking in.
I

From BOSWELL,

Life

of

Johnson [November 1784]

God

dear! bless you, Ib. [December 13, 1784; his last

my

[April 17, 1778]

From BOSWELL,

Life of Johnson [1791]

words]

DAVID HUME
1711-1776
Avarice, the spur of industry. Essays [1741-1742]. Of Civil

JULIEN OFFRAY DE LA METTRIE


1709-1751

Liberty

The human body


\yatch constructed

is

a watch, a large
.

with

skill

and
*

Beauty which contemplates them. 1

in things exists in the

mind

Ib.

ingenuity.

Of Tragedy

UHomme

Machine [1748]

Custom, then,

is

the great guide of

human

life.

An

GEORGE, LORD

LYTTELTON
1709-1773
like

Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding [1748], pL i


is

No
a

testimony

sufficient to establish

Women,

princes,

find

few

real

miracle, unless the testimony be of such a kind that its falsehood would be

friends.

Advice to a Lady

more miraculous than the fact which it endeavors to establish. Ib. Of Miracles
Opposing one
to another, set
species of superstition

What

is your sex's earliest, latest care, Four heart's supreme ambition? To be

fair.
.

Ib.
lost.

The lover in the husband may be

Ib.

a-quarreling; while ourselves, during their fury and contention, happily make our escape into the calm, though obscure, regions of

them

we

philosophy.

Where none admire,


cel;

'tis

useless to ex-

The Natural
Never
Nature.
press.
literary
It
fell

History of Religion

Where none
belle.

are beaux,

'tis

vain to be a

attempt was more un-

fortunate than rny Treatise of

Human
i

Soliloquy on a Beauty in the

dead-born

from the

Country

My Own

Life [1777], ch.

THEODORE TRONCHIN
1709-1781 In medicine, sins of commission are
nortal, sins of omission venial.

MIKHAIL LOMONOSOV2
1711-1765
Carolus V, 3 Emperor of Rome, was wont to say that the Hispanic tongue was seemly for converse with God, the
1

Quoted in Bulletin of New York Academy of Medicine, V [1929],


151

See Wallace, p.

729!),

and Hungerford,
first

p.

Lomonosov created our


it

university.

To

put
sity.

*Man
CALKINS,

Machine.

Translated

by

M.

W.

he himself was our first univerALEXANDER PUSHKIN, The Trip from


better,

Moscow
8

1912.

to Petersburg [1834] See Charles V, p. i86a.

434

LOMONOSOV
friends, the German with enemies, the Italian with the feminine sex. Had he been versed in the Russian tongue, however, he would of a cer-

ROUSSEAU

French with

EDWARD MOORE
1712-1757
This
is

1 adding insult to injury.

tainty have added to this that it is appropriate to converse with all of the

The Foundling
I

[1748], act V, sc. 2


av-

above,

inasmuch as he would have found in it the magnificence of the


Hispanic tongue, the sprightliness of the French, the sturdiness of the German, the tenderness of the Italian and, over and above all that, the richness

am

rich

beyond the dreams of

arice. 2

The Gamester

[1753], act II, sc. 2

JEAN JACQUES

and conciseness of powerful imagery, of the Greek and Latin tongues.


Russian

ROUSSEAU
1712-1778

Grammar *

[1755]

The

first

man who,

FREDERICK THE GREAT


1712-1786
of bayonets, no firing see the whites of their eyes. 2 you

a piece of land, said, "This

having fenced in is mine,"

and found people naive enough to believe him, that man was the true
founder of
till

civil society.

By push

Discours sur I'Origine et le Fondement de I'In&galiti

Rascals,

When
The
state.

At Prague [May 6, 1757] would you live forever? 3


the Guards hesitated at

parmi
will

les

Hommes
rights,

[1754]

Never exceed your

and they
Ib.

soon become unlimited.


is

Kolin [June 18, 1757]


prince
is

Money
first

the seed of money, and the


is

the

first

servant of his

guinea

sometimes more

difficult

to acquire than the second million.

Memoirs

of the

House

of

Ib.

Brandenburg [1758]

Man
is

is

born

free,

and everywhere he

God

is

always

with

the

strongest

in chains. 3

battalions. 4

Du
The
to

Contrat Social [1762],


I,

Letter to the Duchess Luise Dorothea von

ch. i

Gotha [May
I

strongest

is

never strong enough

8,

1760]

am

tired of ruling over slaves. Last -words [April i, 1786]

master, unless he transforms his strength into right, and Ib. 3 obedience into duty.

be always

the

GEORGE GRENVILLE
1712-1770
wise government knows how to enforce with temper or to conciliate with
dignity.

The right of conquest has no foundation other than the right of the strongIb. 4 est.
In the
will exist.
strict

sense of the term, a true


Ib. Ill,
politic,

democracy has never existed, and never

Speech against expulsion of John


Wilkes, in Parliament [1769]
1
fl

The body

like

the

human

Translated by B. G. GUERNEY. See William Prescott, p. 446b. 3 Ihr Racker, wollt ihr ewig leben?

body, begins to die from its birth, and bears in itself the causes of its destrucIb. 11 tion.
1

That

"Come

sergeant at Belleau Woods on, you ... Do you want to live forever?" SANDBURG, Losers
. . .

*
8

See Phaedrus, p. See Johnson, p.

L'homme

est

libre, et

partout

il

est

dans

les fers.

See Bussy-Rabutin, p. 3573, and note.

See

Bliss, p.

468b,

and

Schiller, p. 497b.

435

ROUSSEAU

COCKBURN
fellows a
this

Good
ter ones;

laws lead to the making of betbad ones bring about worse.

man
shall

as nature

made him, and


I

man

Du

be myself.

Contrat Social,

III,

15

Les Confessions [1781-1788],

Everything is good when it leaves the hands of the Creator; everything degenerates in the hands of man. Smile, ou de V education [1762], I
I

Remorse

sleeps during a prosperous


16. II

period but wakes up in adversity. too difficult to think nobly one only thinks to get a living.
It is

when
16. II

shall always

maintain that whoso

says in his heart, "There is while he takes the name of


his lips,
is

no God/'

God upon
madman.
Ib.

Hatred, as well as love, renders


votaries credulous.
16.

its

either a liar or a

People
great

who know
while
little.

little

are usually
Ib.

talkers,

men who know


is

recollected the thoughtless saying of a great princess, who, on being informed that the country
I

At length

people
eat

much

had no bread,
cake."
i

replied,

"Let them
16.

say

VI

What wisdom

can you find that

greater than kindness?

16. II

The thirst after happiness is never extinguished in the heart of man.


16.

IX

Nature never deceives

us; it is

always
16. Ill

we who

deceive ourselves.
exists

He

governs like a King.

thinks like a philosopher, but 16. XII

There

one book, which, to

my

the happiest treatise of natural education. What then is this marvelous book? Is it Aristotle? Is it it is RobinPliny, is it Buffon? No son Crusoe. 16.
taste, furnishes

JOSIAH TUCKER, DEAN OF GLOUCESTER


1712-1799
true of a shopkeeper of a shopkeeping nation.8
is

What

is

true

Self-love
love.

makes more

libertines

than

16.

IV

Tract Against Going to War for the Sake of Trade [1763]

Provided a man is not mad, he can be cured of every folly but vanity.
16.

ALISON COCKBURN
1713-1794
I've seen the smiling of ing,
la brioche. usually attributed to Marie Antoinette, after her arrival in France in 1770, but the sixth book of the Confessions was
1

Fortune beguil-

A man
says

what

says what he knows, a will please.


is

woman
16.

Qu'ils

mangent de
is

This remark

Where

the

man who owes

nothing

which he lives? Whatever that land may be, he owes to it the most
to the land in

written two or three years before that date. 2 Frederick the Great, King of Prussia [17401786] 8 See

precious thing possessed by man, the morality of his actions and the love of
virtue.
1

Adam Smith,
of

p. 445a.

Let Pitt then boast


nation
shopkeepers. Speech [June 11, 1794]

of

his

victory

to

his

16.

BERTRAND

BAR&RE,

I have entered on an enterprise which is without precedent, and will have no imitator. I propose to show my
1

But it may be said as a rule, that every Englishman in the Duke of Wellington's army paid his way. The remembrance of such a fact surely becomes a nation of shopkeepers. THACKERAY, Vanity Fair [1847-1848], vol. I,
ch. z8

See

John

F.

Kennedy, p. 10733, and note.

436

COCKBURN
I've felt all its favors

STERNE
ing care to moderate his voice at the "Did ever woman, since the creation of the world, interrupt a

and found

its

de-

cay.

same time

The Flowers

of the Forest

The

flowers of the forest are withered

man

away.

with such a silly question?" Tristram Shandy, bk. I, ch.

16.

DENIS DIDEROT
1713-1784

My thoughts are my trollops.2


Le Neveu de Rameau,
I

So long as a man rides his hobby* horse peaceably and quietly along the king's highway, and neither compels you or me to get up behind him pray, sir, what have either you or I to do with it? 16. 7
For every ten jokes, thou hast got an hundred enemies. 16. 12

ch. i

can be expected to look for truth but not to find it. Penstes Philosophiques [1746],
no.

He

was within a few hours of giving


16.

29
3

his enemies the slip forever.

L'esprit de 1'escalier [staircase wit]. Paradoxe sur le Com6dien

Tom

Whistled up

to

London, upon a
16. 16

Fool's errand.

From
one

fanaticism to barbarism
Essai sur
le

is

only

step.

M6rite de

la

Vertu

Tis known by the name of perseverance in a good cause and of obsti16. 17 nacy in a bad one.
Persuasion

LAURENCE STERNE
1713-1768

hung upon

his lips.
16. 19

Only the brave know how

...

to forgive.
it is

coward never forgave;


Sermons,

not
12

in his nature.
vol. I [1760], no.
4

incontestably, are the they are the life, the soul of reading; take them out of this book for instance you might as well take the
Digressions,

sunshine

book along with them.

16.

22

This sad vicissitude of things.


I

16.15
wish
either

The history of a soldier's beguiles the pain of it.

wound
16.

25

my

father

or

my

mother, or indeed both of them, as they were in duty both equally bound to it, had minded what they were about when they begot me. Tristram Shandy, bk. I [1760],
ch.
i

of knowledge, like the thirst of riches, increases ever with the 16. II [1760], ch. 3 acquisition of it.
desire

The

Writing,
a different

when
I

properly

managed
is)
,

(as

you may be sure

think mine

is

but

name

for conversation.
16. 11

'Tray,

my

"have you
clock?"
ther,
i
3 3

dear/' quoth my mother, not forgot to wind up the

"Good

!"

cried

my

fa-

should

making an exclamation, but

tak-

Mes penses

See Jane Elliott, p. 4460. sont mes catins.

devil, get thee gone! hurt thee? This world surely is wide enough to hold both thee and 16. 12 me. 1

Go, poor
I

Why

witty retort thought up after the conversation is finished and one is on one's way downstairs. 4 See Bacon, p. 2090. Revolves the sad vicissitude of things.

The

That's another story, 2 replied


ther.
1

my
16.

fa-

17

REV.

RICHARD

GIFFORD

[1785-1807],

Contem-

Uncle Toby to the fly. But that is another story. KIPIJCNG, Plain An Tales from the Hills [1888], Three and
2

plation

Extra

437

STERNE

VAUVENAJRGUES

Trust that man in nothing who has not a conscience in everything. Tristram Shandy, bk. II, ch. 17

Dan
ren!

to Beersheba

and

cry, 'Tis all bar-

Good
"Our
Flanders/'

bad
armies
cried

indifferent.

Sentimental Journey. In the Street, Calais

16. Ill [1761-1762], ch. 2

swore

terribly

in

my

uncle

Toby
Ib. 11

Tant pis and tant mieux, being two of the great hinges in French conversation, a stranger would do well to set
himself right in the use of

"but nothing to this."

them

before

he

gets to Paris.

Ib. Montreuil

the cants which are canted in canting world, though the cant of hypocrites may be the worst, the cant
all

Of

this

Hail, ye
life!
it.

small,

sweet courtesies of
of

for

smooth do ye make the road


Ib.

3f criticism is

the most tormenting!


Ib. 12
as

The

Pulse, Paris

God

tempers the wind, said Maria,


Ib.

Twould be
worth.

much

as

my

life

was Ib. 20
di-

to the shorn lamb. 1

Maria

CHRISTIAN

One
lemma.

of the
Ib.

two horns of

my

IV

[1761-1762], ch. 26
his cap of havIb. 31

FURCHTEGOTT GELLERT
1715-1769
Live as you will have wished to have
lived

The
ing

feather put into been abroad.

Now or
There

never was the time.

Ib.

when you

are dying. 2

Of Death, st.
is

a Northwest Passage to the


Ib.

intellectual world.

CLAUDE ADRIEN
HELVfiTIUS
1715-1771

[1761-1762], ch. 42

The Accusing
to

Spirit,

which flew up

heaven's chancery with the oath, blushed as he gave it in; and the Re-

Truth

is

a torch that gleams through


7

Angel, as he wrote it down, dropped a tear upon the word and

ading
slotted

the fog without dispelling it. De I Esprit [1758]^ preface

it

out forever. 1
Ib.

VI

[1761-1762], ch. 8
of his

A man
Dwn

What makes men happy is liking what they have to do. This is a principle on which society is not founded.
Ib.

should

know something
too, Ib.

country, abroad.

before

he

goes

VII

[1765], ch. 2
Ib. 17
is

We

don't

call

man mad who

beIb.

lieves that

he

eats

God, but we do the


Jesus Christ.

Ho!

'tis

the time of salads.

one who

says

he

is

L
this

d! said

my

mother, what

all

story about?

A
I,

Cock and

;aid

Yorick.

Ib.

IX
this

a Bull, [1767], ch. 33

LUC DE CLAPIERS, MARQUIS DE

VAUVENARGUES

They
in

order, said

matter better

France.

1715-1747 Great thoughts come from the heart.


Reflexions et Maximes,
[c.

A
I

Sentimental Journey [1768],


I.

1747] no. 127

pity the

man who

can travel from

'But sad

Weep

as angels for the good man's sin, to record, and blush to give it in.

CAMPBELL, Pleasures of Hope

[1799], pt. II, I. 357

iSee Henri Estienne, p. i88b. 2 See Jonathan Edwards, p. 42ob. 3 Voltaire, when he read De I' Esprit, wrote the author: "Your book is dictated by the soundest reason. You had better get out of France as quickly as you can." The book was condemned by the parlement and burned.

43 8

VAUVENARGUES
Lazy people are always looking for something to do. Reflexions et Maximes, no. 458

GRAY
sense have they of ills to come, care beyond today.

No

Nor

On

a Distant Prospect of

The things we know we have not learned.

best are those


Ib.

Eton

College,

st.

479

Grim-visag'd comfortless Despair.


Ib. st.

WILLIAM WHITEHEAD
1715-1785
Yes, I'm in love, I feel it now And Caelia has undone me;

To

each his suff'rings: all are men, Condemn'd alike to groan, The tender for another's pain,

And yet I swear I can't tell how The pleasing plague stole on me.
The
Je ne sgay quoi song

Th' unfeeling for his own. Yet ah! why should they know
fate,

their

Since sorrow never comes too late, And happiness too swiftly flies?

An
knows.

old tale which every schoolboy

The Roman

Father, prologue

Thought would destroy their No more; where ignorance is Tis folly to be wise. 1

paradise.
bliss,

Ib.

st.

10

DAVID GARRICK
1716-1779
Let others hail the
I

Daughter of Jove, relentless power, Thou tamer of the human breast,

rising

sun

Whose iron scourge and tort'ring hour The bad affright, afflict the best!

bow

to that

On

whose course is run. 1 the Death of Mr. Pelham

Hymn to Adversity
What
And
sorrow
was,

[1742],

st. i

thou

bad'st

her

Heart of oak are our ships, Heart of oak are our men:

know, from her

own

We always are ready;


Steady, boys, steady;

at others' woe.

she learn'd to melt Ib. st. 2

We'll

fight,

and

we'll

conquer again
[c.

What What

female heart can gold despise?


cat's averse

to fish?

and
Here
lies

again.

Heart of Oak
ness called Noll,

1770]

Nolly Goldsmith, for shortlike

Death of a Favorite Cat [1747], st. 4 Ib. st. 6 fav'rite has no friend!
the
sickly plants betray a niggard earth, her starves barren bosom

On

Who

As
angel,

wrote

an

but talk'd

Whose

like

poor

Poll.

Impromptu epitaph on Goldsmith

gen'rous birth The Alliance of Education


.

and
I.

THOMAS GRAY
1716-1771

Government

[c.

1748],

The

social smile,

the sympathetic
Ib.

tear.
1.

Ye

37

distant spires, ye antique towers, That crown the wat'ry glade. a Distant Prospect of Eton

When
And

love could teach a


first

monarch to
from I 108

On

be wise,
gospel-light Bullen's eyes. 2
tolls

College [1742], st
Still as

dawn'd
Ib.

They hear

And
The

they run they look behind, a voice in every wind, Ib. snatch a fearful joy.

The curfew
st.

the knell of parting

4
a

day,
Ecclesiastes 1:18, p. 270.

Alas, regardless of their


little

doom,

victims play!
p.

The monarch is Henry VIII; Anne Boleyn's name is here spelled (as it is in Shakespeare's
Henry
VIII) as it
is

iSee Pompey,

naa.

pronounced.

439

GRAY

b
honor's voice provoke the
dust,
silent

The lowing herd wind


lea,

slowly o'er the

Can
Or

The plowman homeward

plods

his

flatt'ry

soothe the dull cold ear

of

And

weary way, leaves the world to darkness and to me. Elegy Written in a Country

death?

Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard, st. u

Churchyard [1750],

st.

the glimmering landscape on the sight, And all the air a solemn stillness holds, Save where the beetle wheels his dron-

Now fades

Hands, that the rod of empire might have sway'd, Or wak'd to ecstasy the living lyre.
16.
st.

12

But knowledge
page Rich with the
unroll;
*

to their eyes her ample


spoils of

ing

flight,

And drowsy
folds.

tinklings lull

the distant 16. st. 2


ivy-mantled
the

time did

ne'er

Save

that tow'r

from

yonder
does to

And
Full

Chill penury repressed their noble rage, froze the genial current of the
soul.

16.

st.

The moping owl


complain.

moon
st.

13

16.

Each

The

in his narrow cell forever laid, rude forefathers of the hamlet


16. $t.
call

sleep.

4
5

of purest ray serene, 2 The dark unfathom'd caves of ocean bear: Full many a flower is born to blush un-

many

gem

seen,

The

breezy

of

incense-breathing
16. st.

And

waste
air.

its

sweetness on the desert


16.
st.

Morn.
shall burn,

14

For them no more the blazing hearth

Some

village

Hampden,

that

with

Or busy housewife
care. 1

ply

her

evening
16. st.

The Some mute


rest,

dauntless breast little tyrant of his fields withstood;


inglorious

Milton here may


counst.

Let not ambition mock their useful toil, Their homely joys, and destiny obscure; Nor grandeur hear with a disdainful
smile,

Some Cromwell
try's

guiltless of his

blood.

16.

15

The The

short and simple annals of the 16. st. 8 poor.

To scatter plenty o'er a smiling land, And read their hist'ry in a nation's eyes.
16.
st.

16

And

boast of heraldry, the pomp of pow'r, all that beauty, all that wealth e'er
gave,

Forbade

to

wade through slaughter

to a

throne,

And

shut the gates of mercy on mankind.


16.
st.

Awaits alike the inevitable hour: The paths of glory lead but to the
grave.
16. st.

17

Far from the madding crowd's ignoble


strife,

Where
The
Can

thro' the long-drawn aisle fretted vault

and

Their

sober

wishes

never learn'd

to

stray;

pealing
praise.

anthem

swells the

16. st.

note of 10

Along the cool sequester'd vale of


1

life

storied urn, or
its

animated bust
call

Back to
1

mansion

the fleeting

breath?
See Homer, p. 632.

See Sir Thomas Browne, p. 3290. Every single phrase is a string of perfect gems, of purest ray serene, strung together on a GEORGE Du MAUREER, loose golden thread.
2

Trilby, pt. VI [1894] See Joseph Hall, p. 3090.

440

GRAY

They kept the


way.
1

noiseless tenor of their

To him

are

opening paradise.
the Pleasure Arising
Z.

Ode on
O'er her

Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard, st. 19


Implores the passing tribute of a sigh.
16. st.

from Vicissitude [1754],

49

warm cheek and


of

rising

bosom

move

20
re-

The bloom

young Desire and purple


Progress of Poesy [1754],
I.

For who

to

dumb

forgetfulness a prey,
e'er

light of

Love.
3,

This pleasing anxious being


sign'd,

The

1 16
*

Left the
day,

warm

precincts of the cheerful


ling'ring look be16. st. 22

Nor

cast

one longing

Far from the sun and summer-gale, In thy green lap was Nature's Darling
laid.

hind?

16. III. i,

Z.

E'en from the tomb the voice of nature


cries,

Or ope

the sacred source of sympathetic


16.
1.

tears.

12

E'en in our ashes


fires.

live

their

wonted
st.

He 2

16.
th'

23

pass'd the flaming bounds of place and time:

Mindful of

unhonor'd dead.

Here

rests

his

24 head upon the lap of

16. st

The living throne, the sapphire-blaze, Where angels tremble, while they gaze,

He

saw;
light,

but blasted with excess of

Earth

youth to fortune and to fame un-

Closed his eyes in endless night. 16.2,

Z.

4
4

known.
Fair Science frown'd not on his
birth,

humble

Thoughts that breathe, burn.

and words that


16. 3,
I.

And Melancholy
own.8

mark'd him for her 16. The Epitaph, st i


sin-

Ruin

seize thee, ruthless King!

Large was his bounty, and his soul


cere,

Heav'n

did send:

recompense

as

largely

Confusion on thy banners wait, Though fann'd by Conquest's crimson wing They mock the air with idle state.

The Bard

He He

[1757],

1. 1,

Z.

gave to mis'ry all he had, a tear, gained from Heav'n ('twas all he 16. st. 2 wish'd) a friend.
farther seek his merits to disclose, his frailties from their dread
re-

No

Weave the warp, and weave the woof, The winding-sheet of Edward's race. Give ample room and verge enough, The characters of hell to trace.
I6.II.1,
Fair
Z.

Or draw

abode, (There they alike in trembling hope


pose,)

laughs

the morn,

and

soft

the

The bosom

of his Father

and

his

God.
st.

16.

The meanest The simplest The common


1

floweret of the vale, note that swells the gale, sun, the air, the skies,
state,
life,

zephyr blows, While proudly riding o'er the azure realm In gallant trim the gilded vessel goes; Youth on the prow, and Pleasure at the

helm;
Regardless of the sweeping whirlwind's sway, That, hush'd in grim repose, expects his 16. 2, I 9 evening prey.
1

In sober

Through

the sequestered vale of rural

The The
2 3

venerable patriarch guileless held tenor of his way.


I.

PORTEUS [1731-1808], Death, See Chaucer, p. 1675. See Walton, p.

108
a

Shakespeare. Milton.

441

GRAY
Visions of glory, spare

FOOTE
like

b
of Balbec

Ye

aching sight, unborn ages, crowd not on my soul! The Bard III. i,l. 11
truth severe, by fairy fiction drest.
Ib. 3> I 3

my

the editions
1

and

Pal-

myra.

Ib.

To Mann [November

24,

And

Now my weary lips I close;

Leave me, leave me to repose! Descent of Odin [1761],

This world is a comedy to those that think, a tragedy to those that feel. Ift. To the Countess of Upper Ossory [August 16, 1776]
Prognostics

I-

71

Iron sleet of arrowy shower Hurtles in the darkened air. The Fatal Sisters [1761]

do

not

always

prove

at least the wisest prophprophecies ets make sure of the event first.
16.

Too poor

for a bribe,

and too proud

to

To Thomas Walpole
[February 19, 1785]

He

importune, had not the method of making a


fortune.

On
I shall

His

Own

Character [1761]

All his [Sir Joshua Reynolds's] own geese are swans, as the swans of others Ib. [December i, 1786] are geese.

be but a shrimp of an author. Letter to Horace Walpole


[February 25, 1768]

JOHANN ELIAS
SCHLEGEL
1719-1749
Busy
leisure.

Sweet

is

the breath of vernal shower,


fall,

The

bee's collected treasures sweet,

Sweet music's melting


yet

but sweeter

Der Geschdftige Mii$siggdnger


I

The

still

small voice

of gratitude. Ode for Music [1769]

743l

SAMUEL FOOTE
1720-1777
Born
2

HORACE WALPOLE
1717-1797

in a cellar

and

Our supreme

governors, the

mob.
7,

garret.

The Author,
fire

living in a act II
to the

Letters.

To Horace Mann
1743]

[September

Thames
Bridge.

Matt Minikin won't set though he lives

near

the

Every drop of ink in


cold.
Ib.

my

pen ran

Trip to Calais [1776]

To George Montagu
[July 3,

1752]

It

is

charming to

totter into vogue.

So she went into the garden to cut a cabbage leaf to make an apple pie; and at the same time a great she-bear, coming up the street, pops its head into the shop. "What! no soap?" So he died, and she very imprudently married the barber; and there were present the Picninnies, and the Joblillies, and the Garyalies, and the grand Panjandrum himself, with the little round button at and they all fell to playing the
top,

Ib.

A. Selwyn [December 2, 1765]

To G.

The next Augustan age will dawn on the other side of the Atlantic. There will, perhaps, be a Thucydides at BosXenophon at New York, and, in time, a Virgil at Mexico, and a Newton at Peru. At last, some curious traveler
ton, a

from Lima
i

will visit

England and give

game
1 2

of catch

as catch

can,

till

the

description of the ruins of St. Paul's,


See Z Kings 19:12, p.

See Macaulay, p, 59513. Born in the garret, in the kitchen bred. BYRON, A Sketch [1816]

442

FOOTE
gunpowder ran out
boots.
at the heels of their
test the

SMOLLETT
In numbers warmly pure and sweetly
strong.

Nonsense written to
boasted

Ode
If

to Simplicity [1747], st- i

memory of Charles Macklin, The Quarterly Review Credited to [1854], Foote by MARIA EDGEWORTH, Harry and Lucy Concluded,
vol. II

aught of oaten stop or pastoral song May hope, pensive Eve, to soothe

thine ear.

Now

air is

Evening [1747], I- * hush'd, save where the weakto shriek


flits

Ode

ey'd bat, With short shrill

by on

DENNIS O'KELLY
It will

1720-1787 be Eclipse first, the

leathern wing, Or where the beetle winds

His small but sullen horn.


rest no-

16.

Z.

where.
Declaration at

Twas
3,

sad by

fits,

by

starts 'twas wild.


Z.

Epsom [May

The

Passions [1747],

28

1769] when the great race horse Eclipse was to run his first race. Annals of Sporting,
vol. II, p.

With

eyes uprais'd, as

one

inspired,

271

Pale Melancholy sate retired, And from her wild sequestered seat, In notes by distance made more
sweet,

JOHN WOOLMAN
1720-1772

Pour'd through the mellow horn her 16. L 57 pensive soul In hollow murmurs died away.
16.
I.

Though
of
. .

I felt

uneasy at the thought


of
slavery

68

writing
.

an instrument
. .
.

through weakness I gave way and said before my maswrote it; but ter and the Friend that I believed slavekeeping to be a practice inconsistent with the Christian religion. This, in some degree, abated my uneasiness; yet ... I should have been clearer if I had desired to be excused from it, as a
thing against

Music, sphere-descended maid, Friend of Pleasure, Wisdom's aid!


16.
Z.

95

JEANNE, MARQUISE DE POMPADOUR


17211764 Aprs nous
1

le

dfluge [After us the

my conscience.
Journal [published 1774]

deluge].

Reputed reply to Louis XV [November 5, 1757] after the defeat of the French and Austrian armies

WILLIAM COLLINS
1721-1759

How sleep
By
all

by Frederick the Great in the battle of Rossbach

the brave,

who

sink to rest,

their country's wishes bless'd! Ode Written in the Year 1746,


St. 1

TOBIAS SMOLLETT
1721-1771

He
sex.

was formed for the ruin of our

By fairy hands their knell is rung, By forms unseen their dirge is sung; There Honor comes, a pilgrim gray,

To bless the turf that wraps their clay, And Freedom shall awhile repair, To dwell a weeping hermit there!
16. st 2

Roderick Random [1748], ch. 22 iThe attribution to Mme. de Pompadour is made by DESPRS, Me~moire$ de Madame de Hausset; also by SAINTE-BEUVE and LA TOUR.
LAROUSSE, Fleurs Historiques, attributes the saying to the King. It was original with neither, for it is an old French proverb.

443

ADAMS

BLACKSTONE

SAMUEL ADAMS
1722-1803
Let us contemplate our forefathers, posterity, and resolve to maintain the rights bequeathed to us from the

And now

the matchless deed's achiev'd, Determined, dar'd, and done. A Song to David, st. 86
I

and

For

bless

God

in the libraries of the


all

former, for the sake of the latter. The necessity of the times, more than ever, calls for our utmost circumspection, deliberation,

learned and for in the world.


Jubilate

the booksellers
frag.

Agno,

Bi, L 79

fortitude

and perseverance.

Let James

Let us remember that

tamely a lawless attack we encourage it, and involve erty, others in our doom." It is a very serious
consideration
.

we suffer upon our lib"if

who

foils his

rejoice with the Skuttle-Fish foe by the effusion of

his ink.

16.

Z.

125

that

millions

For the Mouse (mus) prevails in Latin. For bibi-mus, Edi-mus, vivi-mus,
oremus.
Ib. frag.
2,
Z.

yet

unborn may be the miserable sharers of the event. Speech [1771]

638

What
ica!
x

a glorious morning for Amer-

For I will consider my Cat Jeoffrey, For he is the servant of the Living God, duly and daily serving him.
Ib. I

Upon

hearing the gunfire at

697

Lexington [April 19, 1775]

Driven from every other corner of the earth, freedom of thought and the right of private judgment in matters of conscience direct their course to this

For he counteracts the Devil, who is Death, by brisking about the life.
16.
Z.

722

happy country

as their last asylum. 2

SIR
Man

WILLIAM BLACKSTONE
1723-1780
1

Speech, Philadelphia [August i, 1776]

was formed for

society.

CHRISTOPHER SMART
1722-1771
Tell

Commentaries [1705-1769],
introduction

The
said

royal navy of

them

Am, Jehovah

been
it
is

its its

greatest defense

To Moses; while And smitten to

earth heard in dread, the heart,

England hath ever and ornament; ancient and natural strength;


Ib. bk.
I, eft.

the floating bulwark of our island.


13

At once above, beneath, around,


All nature, without voice or sound,

Replied,

O Lord, Thou art. A Song to David [1763], st.


all

40

Time whereof the memory of man runneth not to the contrary. 2 Ib. 18
That the king can do no wrong is a necessary and fundamental principle of
the English constitution.
16. Ill, 17

For adoration

the ranks

Of angels

And David

yield eternal thanks, in the midst.


Ib.

st 51
find,

Where ask is have, where seek Where knock is open wide.s


1

is

It is better that ten guilty persons 8 escape than one innocent suffer.

16.
1
2

IV, 27

Ib.

st 77
of

See Spinoza, p. g74a.

phrase was adopted by the town Lexington as a legend for the town seal.
a
8

The

See See

Thomas
Matthew

favorite phrase of their law is "a custom whereof the memory of man mnneth not back to the contrary." EMERSON, English

The

Paine, p. 4660. 7.7, p. 413.

Traits [1856] 3 See Voltaire, p. 4173.

444

SMITH

MASON
but how we

ADAM SMITH
1723-1790
a great empire for the sole purpose of raising up a people of customers, may at first sight appear a project fit only for a nation of shopkeepers. It is, however, a project altogether unfit for a nation of shopkeepers; but extremely fit for a nation whose Government is influenced by shopkeepers. 1

may make

ourselves worthy

of happiness.

To found

Critique of Practical

Reason [1788]

There

is

...

cal imperative

and

only a single categoriit is this: Act only

at the

on that maxim through which you can same time will that it should bea universal law.

come

The Metaphysic

Wealth

vol. II, bk.

of Nations [1776], IV, ch. 7, pt. 3

1 of Morals 11 ch. [1797],

FRIEDRICH GOTTLIEB

KLOPSTOCK
1724-1803

JOHN HOME
1724-1808
In the
first

Worth

the sweat of noblemen.

days

Lake Zurich [1750]

Of my
As

women
lords.

distracting grief, I found myself wish to be who love their

ROBERT, LORD CLIVE


1725-1774 Mr. Chairman, at By God, ment I stand astonished at
moderation!
this

Douglas [1756], act


111

I, sc. i

mo-

woo her

as the lion

woos

his brides.
IZ>.

my own

My name
hills

is

Norval; on the Grampian


feeds
his
flocks;

Reply During Parliamentary Inquiry [1773]

My

father

frugal

swain, Whose constant cares were to increase

LOGAN, MINGO CHIEF


1725-1780
appeal to any white man to say if he ever entered Logan's cabin hungry and he gave him not meat; if ever he
I

And

his store, keep his only son, myself, at home. 16. Ill, i

Like Douglas conquer, or like Douglas


die.

Ib.

V,

IMMANUEL KANT
1724-1804

came cold and naked and he clothed him not? 2 Message to Lord Dunmore, Governor of Virginia

[November

11,

Two things fill the mind with everincreasing wonder and awe, the more often and the more intensely the mind
drawn to them: the starry heavens above me and the moral law within me. Critique of Pure Reason [1781],
of thought
is

1774]. From THOMAS JEFFERSON, Notes on Virginia

GEORGE MASON
1725-1792

That
free

all

men

are

by nature equally

conclusion

and independent, and have certain inherent rights, of which, when they
enter into a state of society, they can1

Morality
of

is

how we may make

not properly the doctrine ourselves happy,

Translated by A. D. LINDSAY.

Josiah Tucker, p. 436!).

KANT, Fundamental Categorical imperative. Principles of Ethics [1785], Part a a See Matthew 25:35-36, p. 44a.

445

MASON
not by any compact deprive or divest enjoyment of life and liberty, with the means of

TURGOT
Ubi
is,

libertas ibi patria


is

[Where

liberty

their posterity; namely, the

there

my country]

His motto

acquiring and possessing property, and pursuing and obtaining happiness and
safety.

JAMES HUTTON
1726-1797
result, therefore, of this physical inquiry [into the age of the earth] is, that we find no vestige of a

Virginia Bill of Rights

The

\June 12, 1776],

art. i

Government
tuted for the
tion,

is,

or ought to

be

insti-

common benefit, protecsecurity of the people, nation, or community; of all the various modes
and
and forms of government, that is best which is capable of producing the greatest degree of happiness and safety, and is most effectually secured against
the danger of maladministration.2

no prospect of an end. The Theory of the Earth

beginning
[1795]

WILLIAM PRESCOTT
the whites of their eyes. 1

1726-1795 Don't one of you fire until you

see

At Bunker

Hill [June 17, 1775]

B.
The freedom

JANE ELLIOT
1727-1805
I've

of the press is one of the great bulwarks of liberty, and can never be restrained but by despotic gov-

heard them
ing,
a'

lilting,

at the

ewe

milk-

ernments.

Ib. 12

Lasses

lilting,

before
are

dawn

JOHN NEWTON
1725-1807
Glorious things of thee are spoken, Zion, city of our God. Olney Hymns [1779], Glorious

But now they

of day;
ilka

moaning, on
a'

The

green loaning; flowers of the forest are

wede

away.

The Flowers

of the Forest*

Things

ANNE ROBERT JACQUES TURGOT, BARON


DE L'AULNE
1727-1781

JAMES OTIS
1725-1783
act against the Constitution void; an act against natural equity void,

An

is is

They
model. 3

[the Americans]

are the hope


its

of this world.

They may become

Argument Against the Writs


Taxation without
tyranny.
4
of
all

Letter to Dr. Richard Price


of

Assistance* [1761]
representation is Attributed [1763]
bills

[March 22, 1778]


taxed without their consent. Colonies [1764], p. 64.
1

Rights

of

the

Also

attributed

to

ISRAEL

PUTNAM

iThe parent
of

[1718-

American

of rights.

1790].

SAMUEL ELIOT MORISON, The Oxford History the American People [1965]
See

Patrick Henry, p. 4655.


16

Henry drafted

Article
3 8

on

religious freedom.

See Jefferson, p. 47 8^-47 3a. [Otis arguing] was a flame of fire ... the seeds of patriots and heroes were then and there sown. JOHN ADAMS, Works [1850-1856],
vol.

See Frederick the Great, p. 4353. Silent till you see the whites of their eyes. PRINCE CHARLES OF PRUSSIA, at Jagerndorf, May 33, 1745 2 Sir Walter Scott in Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border says that The Flowers of the Forest was written to an ancient tune and that the last line, the refrain, is indisputably ancient. The
air

H,

p. 523

*This maxim was the guide and watchword


of all the friends of liberty. Otis actually said: No parts of His Majesty's dominions can be

was also used for verses by Alison Cockburn. See p. 437a. 8 This is the origin of "America the hope of the world."

446

WILKES

GOLDSMITH

JOHN WILKES
1727-1797 Earl of Sandwich: Ton my honor, Wilkes, I don't know whether you'll die on the gallows or of the pox. Wilkes: That must depend, my Lord, upon whether I first embrace
your Lordship's principles, or your Lordship's mistresses.

And

still, as darker grows the night, Emits a brighter ray.

The

Captivity,

An

Oratorio, act II

Remote, unfriended, melancholy, slow, Or by the lazy Scheldt, or wandering The Traveller [1764], L i Po.
Where'er
see,
I

roam, whatever realms to


fondly turns
to

From

SIR CHARLES PETRIE,

The
My.

Four Georges [1935]

heart untravel'd

thee; Still to

OLIVER GOLDSMITH
1728-1774

my

brother turns with ceaseless

pain,

And
Such

One

writer, for instance, excels at a

drags at each ing chain.


is

remove a lengthenIb.
I-

plan or a title page, another works away the body of the book, and a third is a

dab

at

an index.

the patriot's boast, where'er we roam, His first, best country ever is, at home.
Ib. L 73

The Bee
As
is

[1759], no.

writers

natural for readers to indolent.


Ib.

become more numerous, it become more

Where

And

175. Upon Unfortunate Merit


all,

wealth and freedom reign contentment fails, honor sinks where commerce long Ib. L 91 prevails.

Good

people
for

with one accord,


Blaize,

Man

Lament

Madame

seems the only dwindles here. 1

growth
Ib.

that

I 126

Who

never wanted a good word From those who spoke her praise. 16. Elegy on Mrs. Mary Blaize
[1759],
st.

But winter

May.

ling'ring chills the lap of Ib. I. 172

They
Till,

to please, are pleas'd, they give

nightcap deck'd his brows instead of


bay,

get esteem,

seeming

blest,

2 they seem.

they grow to what Ib. L 265

cap by night
day!

stocking

all

the

To men
lies.

of other

minds

my

fancy

flies,

Description of an Author's

Embosom'd

in the deep

where Holland

That

strain

Bedchamber [1760] once more; it bids rememrise.

Methinks her patient sons before


stand,

me

brance

The

Captivity,

An

Where
Oratorio

the broad ocean leans against


Ib.

the land.

I 281

[1764], act I

O Memory!
To
the last

thou fond deceiver.

Ib.

Pride in their port, defiance in their


eye,
I

moment

of his breath

see the lords of

human

kind

pass by.

hope the wretch relies; And e'en the pang preceding death
Bids expectation
rise.
1

On

Ib. I

327

Ib. II
light,

The
1
2

land of scholars, and the nurse of


arms. 4
Ib.
I.

356

Hope, like the gleaming taper's Adorns and cheers our way;
iSee Terence, Gay, p. 40 ib.
p.

Italy.

io8b;

Cicero, p.

ma;

and

a *

The The

character of the French,


British.

England.

447

GOLDSMITH
For
in every soil, just experience tells;

That those that think must govern


those that
toil.

faults

Conscience is a coward, and those it has not strength enough to' prevent it seldom has justice enough to

The
1

Traveller,
rich

I.

371
rule

accuse.

Laws grind the poor, and


the law.

men
Ib.

The Vicar

of Wakefield, ch. 13

I 3 86

The naked

Vain, very vain,


find

my

weary search to

When

he put on
Ib. 17.

every day he clad his clothes.

An

That

bliss

mind.

which only centers in the Ib. I 423

Elegy on the Death of a Mad Dog, st. 3


found,

A book may be very amusing with numerous errors, or it may be very dull
without a single absurdity. The Vicar of Wakefield [1766],
preface
I

And in that town a dog was As many dogs there be,


Both
mongrel,

puppy,

whelp,
Ib.

and
st.

hound,

And
The

curs of

low degree.

... chose my

wedding gown, face, but such


well.

wife, as she did her not for a fine glossy surqualities as

dog, to gain some private ends, Went mad, and bit the man.
Ib.
st.

5
8

would wear
Ib. ch. i

The man recovered of the bite, The dog it was that died.

Ib.

st.

sometimes had those little rubs which Providence sends to enhance the
value of
its favors.
is

We

When
And

stoops to folly, lovely finds too late that men betray,

woman

Ib.

What charm
choly?

can soothe her melan-

Handsome
That
guarded
find

that

handsome

does.2
Ib.

What

art

virtue
is

which requires to be ever scarce worth the sentinel.


I6.

can wash her guilt away? * Ib. 29. Song, st.

you want with argument and


I

me

to furnish

you

The only art her guilt to cover, To hide her shame from every eye, To give repentance to her lover, to die. And wring his bosom, is
Ib.
st.

intellects too.

16.

7
in the stable, 2

Man

wants but little here below, Nor wants that little long. 3
Ib. 8

This same philosophy is a good horse but an arrant jade on a

[The Hermit (Edwin and


Angelina),
st.

journey.

The Good-Nattir'd

Man

8]

[1768], act I

She was

all

of a

muck

of sweat.

He
Ib.g
and

calls his

his

trusting

extravagance, generosity; everybody, universal


Ib.

life,

nothing but high company, with other fashionable topics, such as pictures, taste, Shakespeare, and the musi-

They would
and

talk of

benevolence.

high-lived

him

All his faults are such that one loves Ib. still the better for them.

cal glasses. 4
See Isaiah 3:15, p. joa. a See Chaucer, p. i68b. 3 See Edward Young, p.
a

Ib.

Friendship is a disinterested commerce between equals; love, an abject intercourse between tyrants and slaves.
Ib.

3393,

and

Oliver

Wendell Holmes,
*

Shakespeare?" he asked sarcastically. "Or the musical glasses?" ALDOUS HUXLEY, Point Counter Point [19*8], ch. 21
"Shall

we

p. 6343. about talk

Silence gives consent.


1

16. II

See T.

S. Eliot, p. loosb. See La Rochefoucauld, p.

GOLDSMITH
Measures, not men, have always been

A man
And

he was to

all

my mark. 1
The Good-Natur'd Man,
act II

passing rich with forty


year.

the country dear, pounds a


Village,
I.

The Deserted
scan,

141

Sweet Auburn!
plain.

loveliest village of

the
I.

Careless their merits or their faults to

The Deserted

Village [1770],

The The
111

bashful virgin's sidelong looks of


love,

His pity gave ere charity began. Thus to relieve the wretched was his

matron's glance that would those


looks reprove.
Ib.
I.

And
And,

pride, e'en his failings lean'd to Virtue's 16. Z. 161 side.

29
as a bird
tries

fares the land,

to hastening

ills

each fond endearment


to the

prey,

Where

wealth accumulates, and

men
may

To tempt its new-fledg'd offspring


skies,

decay; Princes and lords


fade;

He
may
flourish, or

tried

each

art,

reprov'd each dull

delay,

breath can make them, as a breath has made; But a bold peasantry, their country's
pride,

Allur'd to brighter worlds,

and led the


Ib.
/.

way.

167

Truth from

his lips prevail'd with dou-

When

ble sway,

once destroy'd, can never be


Ib.
I.

And

fools,

who came

to scoff, remained
Ib.
I.

supplied.

51

to pray. 1

179

His best companions, innocence and

Even children follow'd with endearing


wile,

And

health; his best

riches,

ignorance
Ib.
I.

of

And pluck'd his gown,


man's smile.

to share the
Ib.

good
183

wealth.

61

Z.

How

happy he who crowns


like these,

in shades

A man
I

severe

he was, and stem to

A youth

of labor with an age of ease.

view;

Ib. I. 99 Bends to the grave with unperceiv'd

knew him well, and every truant knew: Well had the boding tremblers learn'd
to trace

decay,

The

While
And,

resignation
all

gently

slopes

the

day's disasters in his morning face; Full well they laugh'd with counterfeited glee,

way;
his prospects brightening to
last,

At

all his

jokes, for

many

a joke

had

the

His heaven commences ere the world be


past.

Ib.

I.

109

voice that bay'd the whispering wind, And the loud laugh that spoke the Ib. I. 121 vacant mind.2
1

The watchdog's

the busy whisper, circling round, Convey'd the dismal tidings when he frown'd;

he; Full well

The

Yet he was kind; or if severe in aught, love he bore to learning was in


fault;

See

Chesterfield,

p.

4153,

and

Burke,

p.

The

village all declar'd

how much he
laughter.
9,

45*2-

Frequent and loud laughter is the charof folly and ill manners: it is the" manner in which the mob express their silly
acteristic

knew;
and so
ill-bred

as

audible

LORD

CHES-EERFIELD, Letters
1

[March

1748]

joy at silly things, and they call it being merry. In my mind there is nothing so illiberal

See Ecclesiastes 7:6, p. a8a. See Dryden, p. 47ob.

449

GOLDSMITH

Twas

certain

he

could

write,

and
197

Her modest

cipher too.

The Deserted
skill,

Village, I

In arguing too, the parson own'd his

looks the cottage might adorn, Sweet as the primrose peeps beneath the thorn.

The Deserted
In
all

Village,

L 329
I 384
all

For e'en though vanquished, he could argue still; While words of learned length, and
thundering sound Amaz'd the gazing rustics, rang'd around; And still they gaz'd, and still the wonder grew,

the silent manliness of grief.


Ib.

Thou

source of

all

my

bliss,

and

my
and
413

woe,

That found'st
keep'st

me
so.

poor at

first,

me

Ib.

Z.

That one small head could


knew.

carry all
Ib.

he

In

my

time, the follies of the town

L 211

crept slowly
travel faster

among

us,

but

now

they

Where

village

statesmen talk'd with


older than their ale
Ib.
I.

lookst

profound,
I

And news much


went round.

than a stagecoach. She Stoops to Conquer [1775], actl

223

The whitewashed
floor.

wall, the nicely

sanded

everything that's old: old old times, old manners, old 1 Ib, books, old wines.
friends,

love

The
The

varnish'd clock that clicked behind

The

very pink of perfection.

Ib.

the door;
chest contrived a double debt to
pay.

Let schoolmasters puzzle their brain, With grammar, and nonsense, and
learning;
I stoutly maintain, Gives genius a better discerning.

bed by night, a chest of drawers by 1 Ib. L 227 day.


twelve good rules, the royal game of goose.2 Ib. I 232
dear,

Good liquor,

The

Ib.

Til

be with you

in the squeezing of
Ib.

To me more
heart,

a lemon.

congenial to
all

my

One

native charm, than


art.

the gloss of
Ib.

I 253

modest woman, dressed out in all her finery, is the most tremendous obIb. II ject of the whole creation.
This
is

And, ev'n while

fashion's brightest arts


if

Liberty Hall, gentlemen.


Ib.

The
1

decoy, heart distrusting asks,


joy.

this

be

The

first

blow

is

half the battle.


Ib.

Ib.

L 263

See Description of an Author's Bedchamber,

We are the boys


That
fear

p. 447a.

no noise
Ib.

good rules were ascribed to Charles I: (i) Urge no healths; (sj) profane no divine ordinances; (3) touch no state matreveal no ters; secrets; (4) (5) pick no quarrels; (6) make no comparisons; (7) maintain no ill opinions; (8) keep no bad company; no vice; (9) encourage (10) make no long meals; (u) repeat no grievances; (12) lay no wagers. Goose. A game played with counters on a board divided into compartments, in some of which a goose was depicted. Oxford English
Dictionary

The

twelve

Where

the thundering cannons roar.


better the
Ib.

They liked the book the more it made them cry.


Ask

me no

questions,

and

Til tell

no
1
2

fibs. 2

you

Ib. Ill

Them
6

See Bacon, p. 2070, and note. that asks no questions

isn't

told a

lie. st.

KIPLING [1865-1936],

Smuggler's Song,

45

GOLDSMITH

BUEKE
It's

Our

Garrick's a salad; for in see

him we

like sending them 1 wanting a shirt.

ruffles,

when

Oil, vinegar, sugar,

and

saltness agree!
I.

Retaliation [1774],

The Haunch
There
is

of Venison [1776]

Here

We

our good Edmund, 1 whose genius was such, scarcely can praise it, or blame it
lies

no arguing with Johnson: he knocks you down with the butt end of it. From BOSWELL, Life of Johnson
for if his pistol misses fire,

too much;

[1791] [October 20, 1769]


To

Who, born
his

for the universe, narrow'd

mind,

Dr.

Johnson]

And

to party gave for mankind

up what was meant


.
.

little fishes

talk,

like whales.

you were to they would talk Ib. [April 27, 1773]


If

Who,

too deep for his hearers,


refining,

still

went on

You may all go

to pot.

And thought

of convincing, while they of thought dining; Though equal to all things, for all

Verses in reply to an invitation to dine at Dr. Baker's

Too nice

things unfit; for a statesman, too proud for a


Ib.
still
I.

JOHN STARK
1728-1822

wit.

29

His conduct

My

men, yonder are the Hessians.

right,

with his arguIb.


I.

ment wrong.
Here
lies

46

They were bought for seven pounds and ten pence a man. Are you worth
more? Prove it. Tonight, the American flag floats from yonder hill or Molly Stark sleeps a widow!
Before the Battle of Bennington [August 16, 1777]

David Garrick, describe me,


can,
all

who

An
As

abridgment of
in

that was pleasant


Ib.

man.
if

L 93

a wit,
line.

not

first,

in the very first 16. Z. 96

On

EDMUND BURKED
1729-1797

the stage he was natural, simple,


affecting;
off

'Twas only that when he was


acting.

he was
1.

The

writers

against religion, whilst

Ib.

101

He

cast off his friends as a

huntsman

they oppose every system, are wisely careful never to set up any of their own. Vindication of Natural

his pack,

For he knew when he pleas'd he could Ib. I 107 whistle them back.

Society [1756]
I am convinced that we have a degree of delight, and that no small one, in the real misfortunes and pains of

Who

please.

pepper'd the highest was surest to Ib. I. 112

others.3

When
He

they talk'd of their Raphaels,


1 2

On
See

the Sublime

Correggios, and stuff, shifted his trumpet and only took


snuff. 2
Ib.

and Beautiful [1756], sec. 14

Tom

Brown, p. 3860.

I 145
it

Such
1

dainties to them, their health

might hurt;
Edmund
Burke.
2 Sir

stand five minutes with [Burke] beneath a shed while it rained, but you must be convinced you had been standing with the greatest man you had
that

You could not

man

ever
p. 290
3

seen.

SAMUEL

JOHNSON,

Johnsonian

Miscellanies, edited by G. B. Hill [1897], vol. I,

Joshua Reynolds, who was exceedingly

deaf.

See

La Rochefoucauld,

p.

45

BURKE

Custom

reconciles us to everything. 1

Your

On

representative owes you, not his

the Sublime and Beautiful, sec. 18

There is, however, a limit at which forbearance ceases to be a virtue. Observations on a Late Publication on the Present State of the Nation [1769]

industry only, but his judgment; and he betrays instead of serving you if he sacrifices it to your opinion.

Speech to the Electors of Bristol


I

have

in

[November 3, 1774] general no very exalted

opinion of the virtue of paper govern-

The wisdom

of our

ancestors. 2
Ib.

ment.

Second Speech on Conciliation


America. The Thirteen Resolutions [March 22, 1775]

with

When
must
one,

bad

men

associate; else

combine, the good they will fall one by


sacrifice

an unpitied

in

con-

The concessions of the concessions of fear.


Young
which

weak
is

are the
Ib.

temptible struggle.

Thoughts on the Cause of the


Present Discontents [April 23,

man,
at this

there

America

Of this stamp is the cant of, Not men, but measures; 8 a sort of charm by which many people get loose from Ib. every honorable engagement.
So to be patriots
are gentlemen.
as

day serves for little more than to amuse you with stories of savage men and uncouth manners; yet shall, before you taste of death, show itself equal to the whole of that commerce which now attracts the envy of
the world.
Ib.

not to forget

we
Ib.

with

Public
energy;

life is

a situation of

power and

speak of the commerce our colonies, fiction lags after invention is unfruitful, and truth;
imagination cold and barren.
Ib.

When we

trespasses against his duty who sleeps upon his watch, as well as he Ib. that goes over to the enemy.

he

people

who

are

still,

as

it

were, but
into
Ib.

in the gristle,

are to govern a people who think they ought to be free, and think they are not. Your scheme
Reflect
yields

how you

and not yet hardened the bone of manhood.

no revenue;

it

yields nothing

but

a wise and salutary neglect the [of colonies], a generous nature has been suffered to take her own way to

Through

discontent, disorder, disobedience; and such is the state of America, that after

perfection;
effects,

when I reflect upon these when I see how profitable they

wading up to your eyes in blood, you could only end just where you begun; that is, to tax where no revenue is to be found, to my voice fails me; my inclination indeed carries me no farther
all is

have been to us, I feel all the pride of power sink and all presumption in the

wisdom

of

human

contrivances

melt
rigor
spirit

and die away within me. My relents. I pardon something to the


of liberty.

confusion beyond
First

it.

Ib.

Speech on Conciliation with America. American Taxation [April 19, 1774]


See Pushkin, p. Sapienta Veterum [The Title of work by Ancients],
1

*De

[1609].

The phrase

is

of the FRANCIS BACON also in Burke's Discussion

Wisdom

use of force alone is but tempomay subdue for a moment; but it does not remove the necessity of subduing again: and a nation is not governed, which is perpetually to be conrary. It

The

quered.

Ib.
less

on the Traitorous Correspondence Bill [1793]. 3 See Chesterfield, p. 4153, and Goldsmith,
p. 449*.

Nothing

will

content me, than


Ib.

'whole America.

452

BURKE
Abstract
stractions,
liberty, like
is

other mere ab-

not to be found.

Second Speech on Conciliation


-with

America. Resolutions
religion

The

Thirteen

The

most prevalent
is

in our

northern colonies

a refinement

on the

ment, from the sense of the deep stake they have in such a glorious institution, which gives you both your army and navy, and infuses into both that Sur >eral obedience, without which your army would be a base rabble, and your navy nothing but rotten timber.

principles of resistance: it is the dissidence of dissent, and the protestantism 16. of the Protestant religion.

Second Speech on Conciliation


with America. Resolutions

The

Thirteen

In no country perhaps in the world is law so general a study [as in America]. This study renders men acute, in.
.

dom

Magnanimity in politics is not selthe truest wisdom; and a great empire and little minds go ill together.
16.

prompt in attack, in full of resources. . . defense, ready They augur misgovernment at a disquisitive, dexterous,
.

tance,

and snuff the approach of 16. tyranny in every tainted breeze.


I

By adverting to the dignity of this high calling our ancestors have turned
pire:

a savage wilderness into a glorious emand have made the most extensive,

do not know the method of drawing up an indictment against an whole


people.
It
is

and the only honorable conquests, not

16.

by destroying, but by promoting the wealth, the number, the happiness of


the

what a lawyer tells me I may do; but what humanity, reason, and justice, tell me I ought to do.
not,
16.

human

race.

16.

The march
slow.

of the

human mind

is

Corrupt influence, which is itself the perennial spring of all prodigality, and of all disorder; which loads us, more than millions of debt; which takes away
vigor from our arms, wisdom councils, and every shadow of authority and credit from the most venerable
parts of our constitution.

16.

from our

Freedom and not servitude is the cure of anarchy; as religion, and not atheism, is the true remedy for superstition.

16.

Speech on the Economical

Reform

[1780]

government human benefit and enjoyment, is virtue and every prudent act founded on compromise and barter.
16.

All

indeed,

every every

was not merely a chip of the old block, but the old block itself.

He

On

Pitt's first

speech [February 26, 1781]

Instead of a standing revenue, you will have therefore a perpetual quarrel.


16.

rapacious

and

licentious soldiery,

Speech on Fox's East


India Bitt [1783]

Slavery they can have anywhere. It is 16. a weed that grows in every soil.

The people never


ties

give

up

their liber-

but under some delusion.

Deny them

dom, and which originally made, and must


preserve the unity of the empire.

this participation of freeyou break that sole bond,


still

Speech at County Meeting of Buckinghamshire [1784]

There never was a bad


ability for

man
of

that

had

good

service.

16.
It
it is
is

Impeachment
Religious persecution

Warren
shield

the love of the [British] people; their attachment to their govern-

Hastings [February 15, 1788]

may

it-

453

BURKE
self

under the guise of a mistaken and over-zealous piety. Impeachment of Warren


Hastings [February 17, 1788]

their importunate chink,

whilst thousands of great cattle, reposed beneath the shadow of the British oak, chew the
silent,

cud and are

pray do not imagine

event has happened, upon which to speak, and impossible to Ib. [May 5, 1789] be silent.
it is difficult

An

that those who make the noise are the only inhabitants of the field; that, of course, they are many in number; or that, after all, they are other than the
little

Resolved to die in the


prevarication.
Ib.

last dike of 7,

shriveled,

meager,

hopping,
of

[May

1789]

though loud and troublesome insects


the hour.
Reflections

but one law for all, namely, that law which governs all law, the law of our Creator, the law of humanity, the law of nature, and justice, equity

There

is

on the Revolution
in France

of nations.

Ib.

[May 28, 1794]


a sort of

Superstition

is

the religion of feeble


Ib.

minds.

They made and recorded


institute

and

digest of anarchy, called

the Rights of Man. On the Army Estimates [1790]

He that wrestles with us strengthens our nerves, and sharpens our skill. Our Ib. antagonist is our helper.
To execute laws is a royal office; to execute orders is not to be a king. However, a political executive magistracy,
though merely such,
is

People will not look forward to posterity who never look backward to their
ancestors. 1

Reflections

on the Revolution
in France [1790]
a

a great trust. 1
Ib.

Government

is

contrivance

of

You can
2

never plan the future by the


Letter to a

human wisdom
wants.

Men

to provide for human have a right that these

past.

member

of the

wants should be provided for by this Ib. wisdom.


grace of life, the cheap defense of nations, the nurse of manly sentiment and heroic enterprise
is

National Assembly [1791]

Old

religious

factions are volcanoes

The unbought

burnt out.

Speech on the Petition of the


Unitarians [1792]

gone!

Ib.

chastity of honor, which felt a Ib. stain like a wound.

That

The
judge.

cold neutrality of an impartial

Preface to Brissot's Address


[

Vice
all its

itself lost

half

its evil,

by losing
Ib.

794]

grossness.

The

from policy, when subjects are rebels from principle.


Ib.

Kings will be tyrants

umph

only thing necessary for the triof evil is for good men to do
Letter to

nothing.

William Smith

be cast into the mire, Learning and trodden down under the hoofs of a
will

[January 9, 1795]
All

swinish multitude.

men

Ib.

that are ruined, are ruined


Letters

on the

side of their natural propensities.

Because half-a-dozen grasshoppers under a fern make the field ring with
x The Democratic Party is like a mule without pride of ancestry or hope of posterity. IGNATIUS DONNELLY [1831-1901], Speech in the Minnesota Legislature

on a Regicide Peace
[1796], no.
i

iSee

Matthew

Henry,

p.

386b;

Jefferson,

p. 47ab; Clay, p. 5380; and note.


3

and Calhoun,

p.

See Patrick Henry, p. 4653.

454

BURKE
Example
and they
is

SCOTT

the school of mankind,

JOHANN GEORG

will learn at

no other. 1
no.
i

HAMANN
1730-1788

Letters

on a Regicide Peace,
Poetry
is is

Mere parsimony
.

not

economy.

kind.

the mother tongue of manAesthetica in Nuce [1762]

Expense, and great expense, may be an essential part of true economy. Letter to a Noble Lord [1796]
.
.

THOMAS OSBERT

Economy
consists

is

not

a distributive virtue, and in saving but selection.

MORDAUNT
1730-1809
fill

Parsimony requires no providence, no sagacity, no powers of combination, no


comparison, no judgment.
Ib.

Sound, sound the clarion,


claim,

the

fife,

Throughout the sensual world pro-

looked to Government for bread, on the very first scarcity they will turn and bite the hand that fed

And having

One crowded hour


Is

of glorious

life

them.

Thoughts and Details on


Scarcity [1800]

worth an age without a name. 1 From The Bee (October 12, 1791). Verses Written During the War [1756-1763]

GOTTHOLD EPHRAIM
LESSING
1729-1781

MOTOORI NORINAGA 2
1730-1801 Thus our country is the source and fountainhead of all other countries, and
in all matters
it

He who

doesn't lose his wits over cer-

tain things has

no

wits to lose.

excels all the others.

Emilia Galotti [1772], act IV, sc. j

Precious

Comb-box

No person must have to.


Nathan derWeise
People seem.
are

[1779],

act I, sc. 3

Sages are superior to other people only in their cleverness. The fact is that they were all impostors. Among

them the
fucius.

least

not

always

what

they
16.

blameworthy was ConArrowroot

6
of

The
Not
chains.

true beggar
are

is

the true king.


Ib. II,

end
their

The Tale of Genji* is simply a tale human life which leaves aside and

all

free

who

scorn

One

Ib. IV, 4 can drink too much, but one

does not profess to take up at all the question of good and bad, and which dwells only upon the goodness of those who are aware of the sorrow of human
existence.

Who
But

Lieder never drinks enough. will not praise a Klopstock?


will

Tamg. no Ogashi

anyone read him? No! Sinngedichte an den Leser

JOHN SCOTT
I

JOHN PARKER
1729-1775 Stand your ground. Don't fire unless fired upon, but if they mean to have a war let it begin here!

1730-1783 Hate That Drum's Discordant Sound.


Title of
1

Poem
Old

Quoted

by

Sir

Walter

Scott

in

To
1

his

Minute

Men at Lexington [April 19, 1775]

Mortality [1816], ch. 34. See Scott, p. 5223. a From Sources of Japanese Tradition, edited

See Franklin, p. 422a.

by William Theodore de Bary [1960]. *See Murasaki Shikibu, pp. 1530-1543.

455

WEDGWOOD

COWPER

JOSIAH

WEDGWOOD
-

WILLIAM COWPER
1731-1800

1730-1795

Am I not a man and a brother?


On
a Medallion* [1787]

Oh!

for a closer

walk with God.

Olney

Hymns

[1779], no.

CHARLES CHURCHILL
Genius
is

What

of

1731-1764 no country.

peaceful hours I once enjoy'd! sweet their memory still! But they have left an aching void The world can never fill. Ib.

How

The Rosdad

[1761],
16.

I.

207
a

He mouths
bone.

a sentence as curs

mouth

I 322 So loud each tongue, so empty was each


head,

in a mysterious way His wonders to perform; He plants his footsteps in the sea

God moves

And rides upon

the storm.

Ib.

35
Ib.

Behind a frowning providence


talked, so very little said. Ib. 1. 549

So much they

He hides

a smiling face.

Learn'd without sense, and venerably 16. 1 591 dull.

Happiness depends, as Nature shows, Less on exterior things than most suppose.

Those who would make us


feel themselves. 2

feel

must
L 962

16.

Table Talk [1782], I 246 Freedom has a thousand charms to


show,

Apt

alliteration's artful aid.

The Prophecy

of Famine [1763],
Z.

That

slaves,

86

know.

howe'er contented, never Ib. I. 260


whate'er
is

With

curious art the brain, too finely

wrought,
Preys on herself, and is destroyed by thought. Epistle to William Hogarth
[1763], I
Just to the

Manner is all in all, The substitute for


wit.

writ,

genius, sense, and


Ib. I 542
thirst of praise. 1 Ib. I. 591

Low

ambition and the

645
[Pope]
Z.

windward of the law. The Ghost [1763], pt. Ill,

Made

art.

poetry a mere mechanic Ib. I 656

56
Lights of the world, and stars of
race.

Though by whim,
led,

envy, or resentment

human

They damn

those authors

whom
[1764],
will,

The
they
Z.

Progress of Error [1782], I 97

never read.

How much
57
to

a dunce that has been sent

The Candidate

roam
Ib.
Z.

Be England what she

Excels a dunce that has been kept at

With
1

all
3

her faults she

still.

The

country Farewell, I 27

is

my

home!

415

My
Our

country!

Representing a Negro in chains, with one knee on the ground and both hands lifted up to heaven. This was adopted as a seal by the
Anti-Slavery Society of London.
a Si vis

COWPER, The Task

[1784], bk. II,


I.

The Timepiece,

206

me

flere,

dolendum

est

Primum
[If

ipsi

tibi

you wish
first

me

to weep,
B.C.],

you yourself

country! In her intercourse with foreign nations may she always be in the right; hut STEPHEN DECAour country, right or wrong. TUR, Toast given at Norfolk [April 1816] I hope to find my country in the right:

Must

feel

grief].

however,

I will

stand by her, right or wrong.

HORACE [65-8
See Frost, p. gagb.

Ars Poetica, L zoa


faults
I

JOHN JORDAN CRITTENDEN [1787-1863], the Mexican War


*

On

England,
still,

with

all

thy

love

thee

See Carl Schurz, p. See Pope, p. 4o7b.

456

COWPER

A fool

must now and then be right, by chance. Conversation [1782], L 96


not, with a peremptory tone, upon his face his own.
16.
Z.

am monarch

My

right there

of all I survey, is none to dispute.

He would

Verses Supposed to be Written by Alexander Selkirk [1782],

Assert the nose

st

121

Solitude!

A moral,

sensible, and well-bred man Will not affront me, and no other can. Ib. I 193

That

where are the charms seen in thy face? have sages


16.

There goes the parson,


spark!

illustrious

Pernicious weed!

whose scent the

fair

annoys, Unfriendly to society's chief joys, Thy worst effect is banishing for hours

And

there, scarce less illustrious, goes

the clerk.

On

Observing

Some Names

of

The
I

sex

whose presence

civilizes ours.

Little

Note [1782]

Ib.

Z.

251

Though on
She had

pleasure she was bent,

cannot talk with


fine

civet in the
that's

room,
per/.

a frugal

mind.

puss-gentleman
oil

all

fume.

16.

History of John Gilpin [1785], st. 8

283

Our wasted
urns.

unprofitably burns,
16.
Z.

A hat not much the worse for wear.


16.
st.

Like hidden lamps in old sepulchral

46

357

Now

let

us sing

Long

live the king,

business with an income at its heels Furnishes always oil for its own wheels.

And

Retirement [1782],

Z.

615

And, when he next doth May I be there to see!

Gilpin, long live he; ride abroad,


16.
st.

63

Absence of occupation

is

not
is

rest,

God made
623

the country,

and man made

mind

quite

vacant

a
16.

mind
Z.

the town. 1

distress'd.

The Task

Built

God

a church,

word

to scorn. 2

and laugh'd His 16. Z. 688


chase

[1785], bk. I, Sofa, I 749

The

Oh

for a lodge in
ness,

some

vast wilder-

Philologists,

who

panting syllable through time and


space, it at

Some boundless contiguity of shade, Where rumor of oppression and deceit,


Of
unsuccessful or successful war, Might never reach me more.
16. II,

Start

home, and hunt

it

in the

To
I

dark Gaul, to Greece, and into Noah's 16. Z. 691 ark.

The Timepiece,

Mountains interpos'd

praise the

Frenchman, was shrewd


sweet, tude!
treat

his

remark
is

Make enemies

of nations,

who had

else

How

how

passing sweet,
a friend in

soli-

Like kindred drops, been mingled into 16. 1 17 one.


Slaves

cannot breathe in England;


air,

if

But grant

me

still

my

re-

their lungs

Receive our

that

moment

they are
their

Whom
1
2

may
who

whisper

solitude
Ib.

is

free!

sweet.
Tobacco.
Voltaire,
built

I 739
Ferney
erexit

They touch our country, and


shackles
fall.

16.

1 40
p.

church

at

[1760-1761],' with
Voltaire.
3

the

inscription

Deo

See Bacon, p. aogb,


See

and

note.

Jeremiah 9:2, p. 34a,

and Byron,

La Bruyere.

457

COWPER
Presume to
lay

their

hand upon the

So

let us

Of

ark 1 her magnificent and awful cause.

welcome peaceful evening in. The Task, bk. IV, The Winter Evening, I. 36

The

Task, bk.
2

II,
I.

The
231

Tis

pleasant, through the loopholes of


retreat,

Timepiece,
Variety's the very spice of
life.

To peep
606
stir

at such a world; to see the

Ib. L

His head, Not yet by time completely


o'er,

Of
silver'd

the great Babel, and not feel the Ib. I. 88 crowd.

O
freak-

Winter,

Bespoke him past the bounds of

ruler of the inverted year! * Ib. Z. 120

But

ish youth, strong for

service

still,

and unIb. I

With

spots quadrangular of

diamond
of

form,

impair'd.

702

Ensanguin'd hearts,
strife,

clubs

typical

Guilty splendor.
16. Ill,
I

The Garden, I 70
3

And

spades, the
graves.

emblems

of untimely
Ib. 1.217

was a stricken deer herd


since.

that left the


Ib.

Long
Great

/.

108

In indolent vacuity of thought. 2 Ib.


It

I 297
I 336 L 478
I 510

contest follows, learned dust Involves the combatants.

and

much
161

seems the part of wisdom.


Ib.
all

Ib. L

All learned, and

drunk!

Ib.

From reveries so airy, from the toil Of dropping buckets into empty wells, And growing old in drawing nothing
up.
4
Ib. I

Gloriously drunk, obey th' important


call.

Ib.

188

Silently as a

No

dream the fabric rose sound of hammer or of saw was


there. 8
Ib.

Riches have wings, 5 and grandeur is a Ib. I 265 dream.

Who
Now
Let

V, The Winter Morning Walk, I 144


were
Ib.
Z.

too.
stir

loves a garden loves a greenhouse Ib. I 566

But

war's a game, which,


subjects wise,
at.

their

the

fire,

and

close the shutters

Kings would not play

187
with
is

fast,
fall

the curtains, wheel the sofa

There

is

in

souls

sympathy

round, And, while

the

bubbling and loud-

And

sounds; as the
pleased

mind

is

pitched the ear

hissing urn

Throws up a steamy column, and the


cups,

With melting
grave:

airs or martial, brisk, or

That cheer but not


each,

inebriate,

wait on

Some chord
hear

in

unison with what we

^Uzzah put forth his hand to the ark of God, and took hold of it ... and the anger of the Lord was kindled against Uzzah. // Samuel 6:6
See Publilius Syr us, p. is6a. See Shakespeare, p. 2630. See Sydney Smith, p. ssja. See Proverbs ^315, p. 250. See Berkeley, p. gggb.

p. 4190. See Samuel Johnson, p. 431 a. So that there was neither hammer nor axe, nor any tool of iron heard in the house while / Kings 6:7 it was in building.
2

^ee Thomson,

No hammers
Like some

fell,

tall

no ponderous axes rung, palm the mystic fabric sprung,

B
8

Majestic silence!

REGINALD HEBER [1783-1826], Palestine

45 8

COWPER
Is

DARWIN
I shall

touched within us, and the heart


plies.

re-

If birds

not ask Jean Jacques Rousseau confabulate or no.

The

Task, bk. VI, Winter


at

Walk
Z.

Pairing

Time Anticipated

[c.

1794]

Noon,

Here the heart

Misses! the tale that I relate

May
And

give a useful lesson to the head, Learning wiser grow without his

This lesson seems to carry

books.

Ib.

I 85

Choose not alone a proper mate, But proper time to marry.


Ib.

Moral
Life

Knowledge is proud that he has learn'd so much; Wisdom is humble that he knows no
more.
16.
for
Z.

Oh

that those lips

had language!
I

has pass'd

96

With me but
thee
last.
.

roughly since

heard

Nature

is

but a name

an

effect,

Whose cause is God. Ib. I. 223 An honest man, close-button'd to the


chin,

On

the Receipt of Mother's Picture [1798]

My

Broadcloth without, and a


within.

warm

heart
Z.

Its

Misery still delights to trace semblance in another's case.

The Castaway
62

[1799]

Epistle to Joseph Hill [1785],

With

Shine by the side of every path we tread such a luster, he that runs may
read.
1
Z.

ERASMUS DARWIN
1731-1802
Soon
shall

Tirocinium [1785], Toll for the brave

79

thy arm, unconquer'd steam!


or drive the rapid

afar

The

brave! that are

no more;

Drag the slow barge,


car;

All sunk beneath the wave, Fast by their native shore!

Or on wide-waving wings expanded


bear
st.

On

the Loss of the Royal


2

George

[1791],

The

flying-chariot
air.

through the

fields of

And

still

to love, though prest with

ill,

In wintry age to feel no chill, With me is to be lovely still,

The Botanic Garden,


[1789],

pt.
Z.

I,

289

My Mary!

Would
To Mary
[1791],
st.

it

be too bold to imagine,

11

Beware of desperate steps! The darkest day (Live till tomorrow) will have pass'd away The Needless Alarm '
i

that in the great length of time, since the earth began to exist, perhaps millions of ages before the

commencement

.oral

of the history of mankind, would it be too bold to imagine, that all warm-blooded animals have arisen from one living filament which the Great First Cause

British warrior queen, Bleeding from the Roman rods.

The

endued with animality


improve by
its

and thus

possessing the faculty of continuing to

Boadicea [1782]
1
2

own

inherent activity,

See

Habakkuk

2:2, p. 363.

The Royal George was an

English man-of-

and of delivering down those improvements by generation to its posterity,


world without end!
1

war of 108 guns, which suddenly heeled over, under the strain caused by the shifting of her guns, while being refitted at Spithead, August 29, 1782. The commander, Admiral Kempenfeldt, and eight hundred of the sailors, marines, and visitors on board were drowned.

Zoonomia
the
evolution.

[1794]
Robert

grandfather

of

Charles

Darwin announces

his early theory of organic

459

LEE

WASHINGTON
sincere flattery, and only small afraid of small writings.

CHARLES LEE
1731-1782 Beware that your Northern
laurels
1

men

are

do

not change to Southern willows. To Generd Horatio Gates after the surrender of Burgpyne at
Saratoga [October 17, 1777]

Le Mariage de Figaro, act V, sc. 3

JOHN DICKINSON
Then
join

1732-1808 hand in hand, brave Ameri-

BEILBY PORTEUS
1731-1808 One murder made a
villain,

cans

all!

By

uniting
fall.
1

we stand, by dividing we The Liberty Song [1768]

Millions, a hero. Princes were privileged

To

kill,

and numbers

sanctified

the

RICHARD HENRY LEE


1732-1794 That these united colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent states; that they are absolved from all allegiance to the British crown; and that all political connection between them and the State of Great Britain is, and ought to be, totally dissolved.
.

crime. 2

Death, I 154
slays,

War

its thousands thousands.3

Peace,
Ib.

its
Z.

ten

178

BEAUMARCHAIS
1732-1799
Judging by the virtues expected of a servant, does your Excellency know

PIERRE DE

Resolution

moved
2

at the Con-

many
valets?

masters

who would be worthy


Seville [1775],

tinental Congress [June 7, 1776;

adopted July

2]

Le Barbier de

act
I

I, sc.

JULIE DE LESPINASSE
1732-1776

for fear quickly laugh at everything,

of having to cry. 4
If

Ib.

The

logic of the heart is absurd. Lettres d M. Guibert [August 27,

you assure

me

that your intentions


Ib.

are honorable.
If

IV, 6
grovel,

you are mediocre and you


shall succeed.

GEORGE WASHINGTON
1732-1799
Discipline
is

you

Le Manage de Figaro

[1784],

the soul of an army.

It

act III, sc. 3

makes small numbers formidable; procures success to the weak, and esteem
to
all.

You went
and
If
1

to

some trouble

to

be born,
16.

that's

all. 5

V,

Letter of Instructions to the

censorship reigns there cannot be

ments

Camden, and was


a
a
4

Gates was later defeated by Comwallis at South Carolina [August 16, 1780],
relieved of his

Captains of the Virginia Regi[July 29, 1759]

command.

See Young, p. 3980. See / Samuel 18:7, p. iza.

Let us therefore animate and encourage each other, and show the whole world that a Freeman, contending for
1

Je

me

presse

de

lire

de

tout,

de

peur

See Aesop, p. 760, and George

Pope

Morris,

d'etre oblig

d'en pleurer. See La Bruyere, p. 38 ib; Byron, p. 5613; and Lincoln, p. 638a.
5

p. 6ooa.
2 8

See

John Adams,
Father
of

p. 4633-0.

Vous vous

files

donn

la

peine de

naitre,

et rien

de plus.

HENRY your Country. KNOX, Letter to Washington [March 19, 1787] See Henry (Light- Horse Harry) Lee, p. 486a.

The

460

WASHINGTON
liberty on his own ground, is superior to any slavish mercenary on earth.

The
liberty,

preservation of the sacred fire of and the destiny of the republi-

General Orders, Headquarters, New York \July 2, 1776]


near at hand which determine whether Americans are to be freemen or slaves; whether they are to have any property they can call their own; whether their houses and farms are to be pillaged and
is

The time

now

must

probably

can model of government, are justly considered as deeply, perhaps as finally staked, on the experiment entrusted to the hands of the American people.
First Inaugural

Address [April
30, 1789]

destroyed, and themselves consigned to a state of wretchedness from which no

Happily the Government of the United States, which gives to bigotry

human

will deliver them. The unborn millions will now depend, under God, on the courage and conduct of this army. Our cruel and
efforts

no sanction, to persecution no assistance, requires only that they who live


its protection should demean themselves as good citizens in giving it on all occasions their effectual support. Letter to the Jewish Congregation of Newport, Rhode Island

under

fate of

unrelenting enemy leaves us only the choice of brave resistance, or the most have, therefore, abject submission.

We

[1790]

to resolve to conquer or die. Address to the Continental

To be
most
1

prepared for war

is

one of the
preserving

effectual

means

of

Army
Long
1776]

before the Battle of Island [August 27,

peace.
First

Annual Address [to both Houses of Congress, January 8,


1790]

nothing that gives a man consequence, and renders him fit for command, like a support that renders him independent of everybody but the

There

is

basis of our political system is the right of the people to make and to
alter their constitutions of

The

government.

State he serves. Letter to the President of Congress,

Farewell Address [September 17, 1796]

Heights of Harlem [Sep-

tember 24, 1776]

warn you in the Let me now most solemn manner against the baneful
.
.

To
militia,

place
is,

any

dependence
resting

assuredly,

upon upon a
16.

effects of

the spirit of party.

Tb.

broken

staff.

Without a decisive Naval force we can do nothing definitive. And with it, everything honorable and glorious.

To
If

Lafayette [November 15, 1781]

Observe good faith and justice toall nations. Cultivate peace and The Nation harmony with all. which indulges toward another an habitual hatred or an habitual fondness is in some degree a slave. It is a slave to

ward

are to be precluded from offering their sentiments on a matter which may involve the most serious and

men

its

animosity or to
is

of which

its affection, either sufficient to lead it astray


its interest.

from

its

duty and

Ib.

alarming consequences that can invite the consideration of mankind, reason is of no use to us; the freedom of speech may be taken away, and dumb and silent

Tis our true policy to


permanent
alliances,

steer clear of

with any portion


Ib.

of the foreign world.

we may be

led, like

sheep to the

There can be no greater


expect or calculate upon from nation to nation.
L

error
real

than to
favors
Ib.

slaughter.

Address to Officers of the Army [March 15, 1783]

See Vegetius, p. i46b, and note.

461

WASHINGTON
It is well, I die hard, but I am not afraid to go. Last -words [December 14, 1799]

ADAMS

JOHN ADAMSi
1735-1826
Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passions, they cannot alter the state of facts and
evidence.

Father, I cannot tell a lie, I did it with my little hatchet. 1 Attributed remark from MARK

TWAIN, Mark Twain


ington

as

Wash-

Defense of the British soldiers on trial for the Boston Massacre


[1770]

JOSEPH PRIESTLEY
1733-1804 It was ill policy in Leo the Tenth to patronize polite literature. He was cherishing an enemy in disguise. And the English hierarchy (if there be anything unsound in its constitution) has equal
reason to tremble even at an
or an electrical machine.
air

The
flights

law, in

all vicissitudes

of governor

ment, fluctuations of the passions,

of enthusiasm, will preserve a it will steady undeviating course; not bend to the uncertain wishes,

pump

imaginations and wanton tempers of men. ... It does not enjoin that which pleases a weak, frail man, but

without any regard to persons, com-

Experiments and Observations on Different Kinds of Air [ 1 775-

mands
low

that which
'tis

evil in all,

is good and punishes whether rich or poor, high or

deaf,

On
In completing one discovery we never get an imperfect knowledge of others of which we could have no idea before, so that we cannot solve one
fail to

the one

hand

inexorable, inflexible. it is inexorable to the

cries and lamentations of the prisoners; on the other it is deaf, deaf as an adder, 2

to the clamors of the populace.

Ib.

doubt without
ones.

creating

several

new
Ib.

This

is

ment

of

all!

the most magnificent moveThere is a dignity, a maj-

esty, a sublimity, in this last effort of

CHRISTOPH MARTIN WIELAND


1733-1813

To be
eloquent.

the patriots that I greatly admire. The people should never rise without doing somesomething to be remembered thing notable and striking. This destruction of the tea is so bold, so

not as eloquent would be more

and

The

Journal Merkur [January

daring, so firm, intrepid and inflexible, it must have so important conse-

is

An illusion which makes me happy worth a verity which drags me to the


Idris

quences, and so lasting, that I can't but consider it as an in history! epoch Diary [on the Boston Tea Party,

December
I

ij, 1773]
8

ground.

und Zenide

[1768], canto III

have passed the Rubicon;


is

swim

or

Too much light often blinds gentlemen of this sort. They cannot see the
forest for the trees.

as the being who profound in his view; and where accurate in his judgment, except knowledge of the world is necessary to form
as

He

disinterested
is

made him: he

a judgment.

THOMAS JEFFERSON

[January

30,

Musarion [1768], canto


1

II

1787] See Webster, p. 5473, note a. a See Psalms 58:4-5, p. igb.


8

See

Weems,

p. 49ga.

See p.

nab, note

i.

462

ADAMS
sink, live or die, survive or perish

with

my

that country determination. 1

is

my

unalterable

onies are, and of right ought to be, and independent States." 1

free

Letter to Abigail

Adams

[July 3,

In conversation with Jonathan Sewall, Falmouth, Maine [July


1 774]
I

1776]
of July, 1776,2 will be the most memorable epoch in the history of America. I am apt to believe
that
it

The second day

must study

politics

and war, that

my sons may have liberty to study mathematics and philosophy, geography, natural history and naval architecture,
navigation, commerce, and agriculture, in order to give their children a right to

will

be celebrated by succeeding

fesgenerations as the great anniversary tival. It ought to be commemorated as

study painting, poetry, music, architecture,

statuary, tapestry, and porcelain. Letters of John Adams Addressed to his Wife, edited

the day of deliverance, by solemn acts of devotion to God Almighty. It ought to be solemnized with pomp and parade, with shows, games, sports,
guns, bells, bonfires, and illuminations, from one end of this continent to the
other,

by Charles Francis Adams [1841], vol. II, letter 78


[1780]
If it

from

this

time forward forever16-

more.

The happiness
of government.

of society

is

the end

be the pleasure

of

Heaven

that

my

country shall require the poor offerlife, the victim shall be ready, ing of at the appointed hour of sacrifice, corne

Thoughts on Government [1776] Fear is the foundation of most governments.


Ib.

my

when
live,

that hour may. But while I do let me have a country, and that a
.

When
The

annual elections

end, there
Ib.

slavery begins.

free country.
Sir,

before God,

believe the

hour

is

tinct

come.
All
I

measure, and
that
I

judgment approves this my whole heart is in it. have, and all that I am, and all
hope, in
this life, I
it;

My

judicial power from both the legislative and executive, and independent upon both, that so it may be a check upon both.

ought to be dis-

Tb.

am now

ready
I

not of government of laws, and


Massachusetts Original draft of Constitution [1779]

to stake

upon

and

leave off as

men. 3

began, that live or die, survive or perish, I am for the Declaration.

Speech [1776]
All great changes are irksome to the human mind, especially those which are attended with great dangers and uncertain effects. Letter to James Warren
[April 22, 1776]

blessings hereafter inhabit


est

the best of pray Heaven to bestow on this house and all that shall
it.

May none but

hon-

and wise

men

ever rule under this

roof. 4

Letter to Abigail Adams [November 2 , 1800]


iSee Richard Henry Lee, p. 46ob. for indea On July *, 1776, the resolution
Virginia,

was Yesterday, the greatest question decided which ever was debated in America, and a greater perhaps never

was nor will be decided among men. A resolution was passed without one dis these United Col senting colony, "that
iSee Daniel Webster, p. 546^547*-

by Richard Henry Lee of was adopted by a committee including Declaration of John Adams. On July 4 the Independence was agreed to, engrossed, signed by John Hancock, and sent to the legislatures
pendence, drafted
of the States.

See Burke, p. 45* and note. Written the day after Adams moved into the new White House. President Franklin D.
a

463

ADAMS
Thomas
surv
-

HENRY

Jefferson

still lives

[or:

...

PAUL REVERE
1735-1818

Last words \July 4, 1826]

ISAAC BICKERSTAFFE
1735-0. 1812 There was a jolly miller once Lived on the River Dee; He worked and sang from morn
c.

To

the

memory

of

the

glorious

Ninety-two: members of the Honorable House of Representatives of the Massachusetts Bay who, undaunted by the in-

till

from a

night

No lark more blithe

than he.
I,

Love in a Village [1762], act


sc.

villains in power, regard to conscience and the liberties of their constituents on the 30th of June 1768 voted NOT TO RESCIND. Inscription on Revere's silver

solent

menaces of
strict

And

this the burthen of his song Forever used to be, "I care for nobody, not I,
If

"Liberty" fcowZ [1768]


If the British went out by water, to show two lanterns in the North Church

no one

cares for

me."

16.

CHARLES JOSEPH, PRINCE DE LIGNE


1735-1814

The
waltzes.3

Congress

doesn't
to

run

it

were apprehensive it would be difficult to cross the Charles River or 1 get over Boston Neck. Signal code arranged with Colonel Conant of the Charlestown

steeple; for we

and

if

by land, one

as a signal,

Committee of Safety

[April 16,

Comment

La GardeChambonacs [1814]

1775].

Letter

to

Dr.

Jeremy

Belknap

WILLIAM JULIUS MICKLE


1735-1788

PATRICK HENRY
1736-1799
Caesar had his Brutus; Charles the First his Cromwell; and George the Third ["Treason!" cried the Speaker]
the

The dews of summer nights did The moon (sweet regent


sky)*
Silvered the walls of

fall,

of

Cumnor
oak

Hall

And

many

an

that

grew
i

may profit by their example. If this be treason, make the most of it. Speech on the Stamp Act,
House
of Burgesses, Williams-

thereby.

Cumnor

Hall [1784], st
?

burg, Virginia [May 29, 1765]


I

For there's nae luck about the house, There's nae luck at a ; There's little pleasure in the house

am

not a Virginian, but an Ameri-

can. 2

When

our gudeman's awa. The Mariner's Wife,

Speech in First Continental Congress,

st. i

Philadelphia [October

14,

Roosevelt had it inscribed on the mantelpiece of the State Dining Room. 1 Jefferson at Monticello died the same day the fiftieth anniversary of the adoption of the Declaration of Independence murmuring "This is the Fourth?"
3

Naebody

cares for me,

I care for

naebody.
st.

It is natural for man to indulge in are apt to the illusions of hope. shut our eyes against a painful truth, and listen to the song of that siren till she transforms us into beasts. Is this the part of wise men, engaged in a great

We

ROBERT BURNS [1759-1796], / Hae a


3

and arduous
disposed
1

Wife o' My Ain, Le Congres ne marche pas, il danse


Cynthia, named fair regent GAY, Trivia [1716], bk. Ill
of

to

struggle for liberty? Are we be the number of those


eyes, see not,

[said

of the Congress of Vienna].

who, having

and having

*Now

the

night.

See Longfellow, p. 624a. 2 See Socrates, p. Syb, and note.

462!

HENRY
ears,

GIBBON
but
as for

hear not, 1 the things which so nearly concern their temporal salvation? For my part, whatever anguish of spirit it may cost, I am willing to know the

me, give
1

me

liberty or give

me

death!

Speech in Virginia Convention,

Richmond

[March 23,

1775]

whole

truth; to provide for it.

know

the worst,

and

to

Speech in Virginia Convention, Richmond [March 23, 177^].

From WILLIAM WIRT,


Henry
I

Patrick

[1818]

That religion, or the duty which we owe to our Creator, and the manner of discharging it, can be directed only by reason and conviction, not by force or violence; and therefore all men are
religion,

have but one lamp by which my feet are' guided, and that is the lamp of experience. I know no way of judging of Ib. the future but by the past. 2
are not weak if we make a of those means which the use proper God of Nature has placed in our power. The battle, sir, is not to the strong 3 it is to the alone; vigilant, the active, Ib. the brave.
.

of equally entitled to the free exercise according to the dictates of

conscience; and that it is the mutual duty of all to practice Christian forbearance, love, and charity towards each other.

We
.

Virginia Bill of Rights \June 12, 1776], art. 16

EDWARD GIBBON
The
various

If

we wish

to

be

free; if

we mean

to

preserve

inviolate

those

privileges for

which we

inestimable have been so

long contending; if we mean not basely to abandon the noble struggle in which we have been so long engaged, and which we have pledged ourselves never
to

prevailed in considered by the people as equally true; by the philosopher, as equally false; and by the magistrate, as equally useful. Decline and Fall of the Roman ch. 2 Empire

1737-1794 modes of worship, which the Roman world, were all

[1776-1788],

abandon

our

until the glorious object of we contest shall be obtained


fight!
I

must
fight!

repeat
is all

it,

sir,

we must

An

appeal to arms, and to the


that
is

The principles of a free constitution are irrevocably lost, when the legislative power is nominated by the executive.
tt.j
His [Antoninus'] reign is marked by the rare advantage of furnishing very

God
It
ter.

of hosts,

left us.

Ib.

is

vain,

sir,

to extenuate the matcry, Peace, 4 The war

The gentlemen may

peace! but there is no peace. has actually begun! The next gale that sweeps from the north will bring to our ears the clash of resounding arms! Our

few materials for history; which is indeed little more than the register of the crimes, follies, and misfortunes of mankind. 3
It

IB-

brethren are already in the field! Why stand we here idle? What is it that the gentlemen wish? What would they have? Is life so dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God. I

politicians that

has been calculated by the ablest no State, without being soon exhausted, can maintain above the

hundredth part of and idleness.

its

members

in arms
Ib. 5

All taxes must, at last,


culture.
1

fall

upon

agri-

know not what


1
a

course others
34a.

may

take,

16- 8

See See See 4 See

Jeremiah 5:21, p. Burke, p. 454*.

See Aeschylus, p. 7$b. See George Mason, p. 446a.


i, 3,

Mason

drafted

Ecclesiastes 9:11, p. 28b.

Articles

and

12.

Jeremiah

6:14, p. 34a.

See Voltaire, p. 41 yb.

465

GIBBON
the most infallible Corruption, of constitutional liberty. Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, ch. 21

PAINE
to the historian of the

Roman

Empire.

symptom

Memoirs

THOMAS PAINE
1737-1809

of In every deed mischief he [Comenus] had a heart to resolve, a head to contrive, and a hand to execute. 1
16.
is

From

48

the east to the west blow the trumpet to arms! Through the land let the sound of it
flee;

Our sympathy
of distant misery.

cold to the relation


16.

Let the

far

and the near

all unite,

with

49

The winds and waves are always on the side of the ablest navigators. 2
16.

a cheer, In defense of our Liberty Tree.

The

Liberty Tree [July 1775],


rt.

68

Vicissitudes of fortune, which spares neither man nor the proudest of Bis

Society in every state is a blessing, but Government, even in its best state,
is

works, which buries empires and cities 16. 71 in a common grave.


All that
it
is

but a necessary evil; in an intolerable one.

its

worst

state,

Common Sense
Suspicion souls, and the bane of
is

[1776]

human must

retrograde

if

does not advance.

16.

the companion of mean


all

good

of Charles the Fifth brethren of England; but the romance of Tom Jones* that exquisite picture of human manners, will outlive the palace of the Escurial and the imperial eagle of the house of
Austria.

The successors may disdain their

society. 16.

When we
we ought
to

remember that

are planning for posterity, virtue is not


Ib.

hereditary.

Memoirs

[1796]
16.

Decent easy men, who supinely enjoyed the gifts of the founder,
It
tli at

O! ye that love mankind! Ye that dare oppose not only the tyranny but the tyrant, stand forth! Every spot of
the Old
sion.

World

is

overrun with oppres-

was here
I

[at

the age of seventeen]

suspended

my

religious

in-

quiries.
I
I

16.

Freedom hath been hunted round the globe. Asia and Africa have long expelled her. Europe regards her as a stranger and England hath given her
warning
tive

saw and loved.


sighed as a lover,
I

16.

obeyed as a
16.

and prepare mankind. 1


These

to depart. in

O! receive the fugitime an asylum for


16.

son.

[Of London] Crowds without company, and dissipation without pleasure.


16.

are the times that try men's souls. The summer soldier and the sun-

The captain 4 grenadiers


. .

of the Hampshire has not been useless

shine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink service of his country; but he that stands it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman.

from the

Tyranny,

like

hell,

is

not
this

easily

con-

a head to contrive, a tongue to persuade, and a hand to execute any


mischief.

He [Hampden] had
History

EDWARD HYDE, EARL OF CLARENDON


of
the

[1609-1674],

Rebellion

[1702-

1704], vol. Ill, bk. Vll, sec. 84

See Junius, p. iogib. * See Bussy-Rabutin, p. 3573, and note. 8 See Fielding, p. 424b. * Gibbon was a captain in the Hampshire militia from June 12, 1759* to December 23, 1762.

quered; yet with us, that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph. What we obtain too cheap, we esteem too lightly; 'tis dearness only that gives
everything its value. Heaven knows how to put a proper price upon its goods;
See Samuel Adams, p. 444a.

we have

consolation

466

PAINE

RASPE
[Burke] is not affected by the reality of distress touching his heart, but by the showy resemblance of it striking his

and

it

celestial

would be strange indeed, if so an article as Freedom should

not be highly rated.

The American
Panics, in

Crisis, no. i

[December 23, 1776]

imagination. He pities the plumage, but forgets the dying bird.

some

cases,

they produce as much Their duration is always short; the mind soon grows through them and acquires a firmer habit than before. But
sincerity and hypocrisy, and bring things and men to light, which might otherwise have lain

have their uses; good as hurt.

Rights of

Man,

pt. I [1791]

My country is
gion
is

the world and

my

reli-

to do good. 1
16. II [1792], ch. 5

their peculiar advantage are the touchstone of

is,

that they

man

Every religion to be good.

is

good that teaches


16.

forever undiscovered.

16.

A thing moderately good is not so good as it ought to be. Moderation in temper is always a virtue; but moderation in principle
is

upon earth might be so happy as America. Her situation is remote from all the wrangling world, and
she has nothing to do but to trade with

Not

a place

2 always a vice.

16.

And
a rocket,

the

final

event

to

himself
rose like

[Burke] has been, that, as

he

them.

Ib.

A bad cause will ever be supported by bad means and bad men.
Ib. 2 [January 13, 1777]

a stick. Letter to the Addressers on the


fell like

he

Late Proclamation [1792]


I believe in

one

God and no

more,

Those who expect


ings of

to reap the bless-

and
life.

freedom must, like men, underthe fatigue of supporting it. go 16. 4 [September 12, 1777]
It is not a field of a few acres' of ground, but a cause, that we are defending, and whether we defeat the enemy in one battle, or by degrees, the 16. consequences will be the same.

and
sist

hope for happiness beyond this I believe in the equality of man; I believe that religious duties conI

in doing justice, loving mercy, and make our fellowto endeavoring creatures happy. The Age of Reason [1793], pt. I
It is

with a pious fraud as with a bad

fight not to enslave, but to set a country free, and to make room upon the earth for honest men to live in.

We

action; it begets a calamitous necessity 16. of going on.

When

authors and critics talk of the


it

16.

sublime, they see not how nearly borders on the ridiculous. 3

the object only of war that makes it honorable. And if there was ever a just war since the world began, it
It
is
is

16. II, note

RUDOLF ERICH RASPE


1

this in

which America
16.

is

now

engaged.

5 [March 21, 1778]


easier

What in
of a

the dark I
little

737- 1 794 had taken

to

be a

Character
recovered.

is

much
its

kept than

16. 13 [April 19, 1783]

tree appearing above stump the snow, to which I had tied horse,

my

War

involves in

progress such a
cir-

train of unforeseen

and unsupposed

cumstances that no
calculate the certain, and that
is

human wisdom can


but one thing
to increase taxes.

See Socrates, p. Syb, and note. 2 See W. L. Garrison, p. 6150. Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice. And . . moderation in the pursuit of justice
1
.

is

no

virtue.

end. It has

BABRY GOUDWATER, Acceptance


Presidential

speech,

Republican

nomination

Prospects on the Rubicon [1787]

[July 16, 1064] See Napoleon, p,

467

RASPE
proved to have been the weathercock of the church steeple.
Travels of Baron

BOSWELL

[JOHN WOLCOT]
1738-1819

PETER PINDAR

Munchausen
[1785],
cfc.

What

patriot's, soldier's,

did our duty, which, in the and gentleman's language, is a very comprehensive word, of great honor, meaning, and import.
all

We

rage for fame attends both great and small!

Better be
at
all!

damned than mentioned

not

To
Care
to

the Royal Academicians


coffin

Ib.

our

adds

nail,

no

doubt;

The sprigs took root in my horse's body, grew up, and formed a bower 16. over me.
His tunes were frozen up .in the horn, and came out now by thawing.

And

every grin so merry, draws one out.

Expostulatory Odes, 15

HESTER LYNCH THRALE [PIOZZI]


1739-1821

16.6
If any of the company entertain a doubt of my veracity, I shall only say to

The

tree of deepest root is found Least willing still to quit the ground:

such,

pity their

want

of faith.

16.

A traveler has a right to relate and embellish his adventures as he pleases, and it is very impolite to refuse that deference and applause they deserve. 16. 21

therefore said by ancient sages, That love of life increased with years So much, that in our latter stages, When pain grows sharp and sickness
rages,

Twas

The

greatest love of life appears.

ETHAN ALLEN
1738-1789
[Captain Delaplace
*]

gazed at Allen

Three Warnings Johnson's conversation was by much too strong for a person accustomed to obsequiousness and flattery; it was mustard in a young child's mouth! [May 1781] From BOSWELL, Life of Johnson [1791]

in bewildered astonishment.

"By whose

DANIEL BLISS
1740-1806

authority do you act?" exclaimed he. "In the name of the great Jehovah, and the Continental Congress!" replied
Allen.

God

wills us free, I will as wills,

man

God

God's

wills us slaves, will be done.

From WASHINGTON
Life of 1859], vol.

IRVING,

Washington [1855I, eft. 38

Epitaph on gravestone of John Jack, "A Native of Africa, -who


died

March 1773, aged about


of

60

Tho' born in a land he was born free" 1 slavery


years.

JACQUES DELILLE
1738-1813
Fate chooses our our friends. 2
relatives,

JAMES BOSWELL2
174(^1795

we choose
That

Malheur
1

et Piti
Fort

[1803],
Ticonderoga,

favorite subject, Myself. Letter to Temple [July 26, 1763]


p.

Rousseau,

435b,

and

Schiller,

p.

Commandant

at

New
a

York,
9

May

Le

10, 1775. sort fait les parents, le choix fait les amis.

See also excerpts from

BOSWELL'S JOHNSON,

pp. 429-434-

468

BOSWELL

BLUCHER

He who
body.

praises everybody, praises no-

JOHANN KASPAR LAVATER


1741-1801
Say not you know another entirely, till you have divided an inheritance with him.

Life of Johnson [1791], footnote [March 30, 1778]

We
when

cannot

tell
is

friendship

the precise moment formed. As in filling

a vessel drop

by drop, there is at last a drop which makes it run over; so in a series of kindnesses there is at last one which makes the heart run over.
Ib.
I

Aphorisms on

Man 1
upon
it

[c.

1788], no. 157

He who, when
has done
is

disagreeable truth,

[September 1777]

think no innocent species of wit or pleasantry should be suppressed; and that a good pun may be admitted among the smaller excellencies of lively
conversation.
Ib. \June 1784]

than he

who

to speak a boldly and both bolder and milder nibbles in a low voice and
called
tells

never ceases nibbling. 2

Ib. 302
secrets,

Trust not

him with your

who, when

left

alone in your room,


Ib.

turns over your papers.

449

The

LOUIS StBASTIEN

public seldom forgive twice. Ib.

606

MERCIER
1740-1814

Extremes meet. 1 Tableaux de Paris [1782],


vol.

IV,

eft.

348,

title

Venerate four characters: the sanguine who has checked volatility and the rage for pleasure; the choleric who has subdued passion and pride; the phlegmatic emerged from indolence; and the melancholy who has dismissed
avarice, suspicion

AUGUSTUS MONTAGUE TOPLADY


1740-1778

and

asperity.

Ib.
If

609

you mean

line such

Rock
Let

of Ages, cleft for me,

yourself, interof these aphorisms as affect

to

know

me hide

myself in thee.

you agreeably in reading, and

set

mark
st. i

to such as left a sense of uneasi-

Rock

of Ages [1775],

ness with you;


to

whom

SfiBASTIEN R. N.

you please.

and then shew your copy Ib. 643

CHAMFORT
1741-1794

GEBHARD LEBERECHT VON BLUCHER


1742-1819
Ever forward, but slowly.

The most wasted day of all is that on which we have not laughed. Maxims and Thoughts, i
Chance
dence.
is

While leading the Russians

at

nickname

for

Provi-

Leipzig [October 19, 1813]

Ib.62
or
I will kill

May

the pens of the diplomats not

Be my brother,

you.

From
1

CARLYLE, French RevoluII, pt. i,

ruin again what the people have attained with such exertions. After the Battle of Waterloo

tion [1837], vol.

ch. 12
1

[1813]
These Aphorisms were much admired and privately annotated by William Blake. See the one-volume edition of Blake's Poetry and Prose,
edited by Geoffrey Keynes [jr^a;]. 3 Blake's marginal comment on "Damn suchl"
this

"Extremes meet," as the whiting said with THOMAS HOOD [1799its tail in its mouth. 1845], The Doves and the Crows 2 Sois mon frere ou je te tue. A paraphrase of the revolutionary watchword:
Fraternity or death.

was

469

LICHTENBERG

JEFFERSON
the

GEORG CHRISTOPH LICHTENBERG


1742-1799

mind

of a son or daughter

by

read-

knife without a blade, for which


is

the handle

missing.

ing King Lear, than by all the dry volumes of ethics, and divinity, that ever were written. Letter to Robert Skipwith

Gottingen Pocket Calendar [1798], describing an impossible existence

[August

3, i 77l ]

The God who


liberty at the

gave us

life,

gave

us

same time. 1
of the Rights
of

Summary View

ANNA LETITIA BARBAULD


1743-1825 Life! we've been long together, Through pleasant and through cloudy
weather;

British

America
of

[1774]

When,
events,
it

in

the

course

human
for one

becomes necessary

Tis hard to part when friends are


dear,

people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and of
nature's

Perhaps

'twill cost

a sigh, a tear;
little

God 2

entitle

Then

steal

away, give

warning,

respect to the opinions of

them, a decent mankind re-

Choose thine own


Say not

time;

"Good

night"; but in some


7

brighter clime

quires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separahold these truths to be selftion.

We

Bid

me "Good

morning/

Ode
This dead of midnight
thought.
is

to Life, st 3

evident; that that they are

all

men

are created equal;


their creator
3

endowed by
life,

with certain unalienable

the noon of

rights;

that

among

these are

liberty,

and the

A Summer's Evening Meditation


1743-1816

pursuit of happiness; that to secure these rights, governments are instituted

GAVRIIL DERZHAVIN
I

among men,

deriving their just powers

am

czar

slave,

am

from the consent of the governed; that whenever any form of government becomes destructive to these ends, it is
the right of the people to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new govern-

worm

a god.

God

[1784]

WILLIAM HENRY, DUKE OF GLOUCESTER


1743-1805 Another damned, thick, square book! Always scribble, scribble, scribble! Eh! Mr. Gibbon? Upon receiving from EDWARD GIBBON volume II of the Decline

ment, laying
principles,

its

foundation
its

on such

powers in such form, as to them shall seem most


likely to effect their safety ness.

and organizing

and happi-

Declaration of Independence
[July 4, 1776]

We
[the
friends.
1

must therefore
as

hold them
rest
of

and

Fall of the

Roman
Best's

British]

we hold the

Empire

[1781]. .From Literary Memorials

mankind, enemies in war, in peace


Ib.

THOMAS JEFFERSON
1743-1826 A lively and lasting sense of filial duty is more effectually impressed on

See Patrick Henry, p. 4651*. a See Bolingbroke, p. $97b, and Pope, p, 4102. 8 The phrase is frequently misquoted "inalienable."

All men are born free and equal, and have certain natural, essential and unalienable rights. Constitution of Massachusetts [1778]

470

JEFFERSON

And
tion,

for the support of this declarawith a firm reliance on the protec-

general prey of the rich on the poor. Letter to Colonel Edward

tion of divine providence, we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our

Carrington
I

fortunes,

and our

sacred honor. Declaration of Independence

hold

it,

and then,

is

that a little rebellion, now a good thing, and as neces-

sary in the political

world as storms in

Ignorance is preferable to error; and he is less remote from the truth who believes nothing, than he who believes

the physical.
Letter to James

Madison

\January 30, 1787]

what

is

wrong.

Notes on the State of Virginia [1781-1785]. Query 6


single zealot cutor, and better

may commence persemen be his victims.


16.

17

What country before ever existed a century and a half without a rebellion? The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants. 1 It is its natural manure. Letter to William Stevens Smith
.
.

Indeed,

tremble for
that

when

I reflect

God

my
just.

country
16.

[November

13, 1787]

is

18

Those who labor

in the earth are the

the only form of republican government which is not eternally at open or secret war with the rights of
is

The

chosen people of God, if ever he had a chosen people, whose breasts He has made His peculiar deposit for substantial

mankind.
Letter to William Hunter

[March
from despotism to
bed.

11, 1790]

and genuine
it

virtue.

16. 19
tell

We are not to expect to be translated


liberty in a feather-

He who
once, finds

permits himself to

lie

much

easier to
till

do

it

a
it

second and third time,

at length

Letter to Lafayette [April 2, 1790]

becomes

habitual;
it,

attending to

he tells lies without and truths without the

world's believing him. This falsehood of the tongue leads to that of the heart,

Let what will be said or done, preserve your sang froid immovably, and to every obstacle, oppose patience,
perseverance,

and

in

time depraves
Letter to Peter

all

its

good

dis-

and soothing language, Letter to William Short


[March
18, 1792]

positions.

Can

[August 19, 1785]

The basis of our government being the opinion of the people, the very first object should be to keep that right; and were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter. Letter to Colonel Edward Carrington [January 16, 1787]

Delay preferable to error. Letter to George Washington


is

[May

16, 1792]

confide in our strength, without boasting of it; we respect that of others, without fearing it. Letter to William Carmichael

We

and William Short [1793]


Offices are as acceptable here as elsewhere, and whenever a man has cast a longing eye on them, a rottenness begins in his conduct. Letter to Tench Coxc

Experience declares that man is the only animal which devours his own kind; for I can apply no milder term to the governments of Europe, and to the

[May
1

21, 1799]

See Tertullian, p. i43b

and

Barfcre, p. 4843.

47

JEFFERSON
I

have sworn upon the

altar of

eternal hostility against every tyranny over the mind of man.

God, form of

Letter to Dr. Benjamin

Rush

[September 23, 1800]

We
who

are

all

Federalists. If there

would Union or to change its republican form, let them stand undisturbed as monuments of the safety with which error of opinion may be tolerated where reason is left free to combat it.
First Inaugural Address

we are all Republicans be any among us wish to dissolve this

has gone before us, and guided our steps through an age of revolution and reformation. The wisdom of our sages and the blood of our heroes have been devoted to their attainment. They should be the creed of our political faitih, the text of civil instruction, the touchstone by which we try the services of those we trust; and should we wander from them

moments of error or alarm, let us hasten to retrace our steps and to regain the road which alone leads to peace,
in
liberty,

and

safety. First

Inaugural Address
executive
abilities,

[March 4, 1801] But would the honest patriot, in the


full tide of successful

Of

the

various

no one

experiment, aban-

excited more anxious concern than that of placing the interests of our

don a government which has so far kept us free and firm, on the theoretic and
visionary fear that this government, the world's best hope, may by possibility

fellow-citizens in the hands of honest men, with understanding sufficient for

their stations.

Letter to Elias

want energy to preserve


Sometimes
it is

itself?

16.

cannot be trusted with the government of himself. Can he, then, be trusted with the government of others? Or have we found angels in the forms of kings to govern him? Let history answer this
said that

man

Others of 12, l8oi]


If a

New Haven

Shipman and
[July

due participation of

office

is

matter of right, how are vacancies to be obtained? Those by death are few; by 16. resignation, none.

question.
Still

16.

one thing more, fellow citizens a wise and frugal government, which shall restrain men from injuring one another, which shall leave them
otherwise
free to

Whensoever hostile aggressions . require a resort to war, we must meet our duty and convince the world that we are just friends and brave enemies.
.

Letter to

Andrew

Jackson

regulate

their

own

[December

3, 1806]

pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of

labor the bread it has earned. This is the sum of good government, and this is necessary to close the circle of our felicities.

When a man assumes a public trust, he should consider himself as public


1

property.

Remark

to

Baron von Humboldt

16.
If,

Equal and exact justice to all men, of whatever state or persuasion, religious or political; peace, commerce, and honest friendship with all nations, entangling alliances with none. Freedom of religion; freedom of the press, and freedom of person under the protection of the habeas corpus, and trial by juries impartially selected. These principles form the bright constellation which
. .
.

in

my

retirement to the humble


I

station

of a private citizen,

am

ac-

companied with the esteem and approbation of my fellow citizens, trophies obtained by the blood-stained steel, or the tattered flags of the tented field, will never be envied. The care of human life and happiness, and not
1

See

Mathew Henry,

p. s86b,

and

note.

472

JEFFERSON
their destruction, is the first and only 1 legitimate object of good government. To the Republican Citizens of
terror. I

considered

it

the knell of the

Union.
Letter to John Holmes [April 22, 1820]
I know no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves; and if we think, them

Washington County, Maryland [March 31, 1809]


Politics,

like

religion,

hold up the

torches of
of error.

martyrdom

to the reformers

not
Letter to James Ogilvie
tion,

enlightened

their control with a

[August 4, 1811]

enough to exercise wholesome discrethe remedy is not to take it from

The

earth belongs to the living, not

to the dead.

them, but to inform their discretion. Letter to William Charles Jarvis

Letter to John
I

W.

[September 28, 1820]

Eppes

\June 24, 1813]

agree with you that there is a natural aristocracy among men. The grounds of this are virtue and talents.
Letter to John Adams [October 28, 1813]

even should the cloud of barbarism and despotism again obscure the
libraries of Europe, this to preserve and restore remains country light and liberty to them. In short, the flames kindled on the 4th of July, 1776, have spread over too much of the globe to be extinguished by the feeble engines of despotism; on the contrary, they will

And

science and

Merchants have no country. The mere spot they stand on does not constitute so strong

an attachment

as that

from which they draw

their gains.

consume these engines and work them.

all

who

Letter to Horatio G. Spafford


If

Letter to John

Adams

[March 17, 1814] a nation expects to be ignorant


free,

[September 12, 1821]


Amplification
oratory. It
is is the vice of modern an insult to an assembly of

and

in a state of civilization,

it

expects be.

what never was and never

will

Letter to Colonel Charles

Yancey [January

6,

1816]

reasonable men, disgusting and revoltinstead of persuading. Speeches measured by the hour, die by the hour. Letter to David Harding, presiing

Enlighten the people generally, and tyranny and oppressions of body and

dent of the Jefferson Debating Society of Hingham [April 20,


1824]

mind dawn

will vanish like evil spirits at the of day. Letter to Pont de Nemours

Men
rally

by

their constitutions are natu-

Du

[April 24, 1816]


I have the consolation to reflect that during the period of my administration not a drop of the blood of a single fellow citizen was shed by the sword of war or of the law. Letter to Count Dugnani, Papal

Nuncio [February
But
this

14, 1818]

momentous question

[the

Missouri Compromise], like a firebell in the night awakened and filled me with
1

into two parties: (i) Those who fear and distrust the people, and wish to draw all powers from them into the hands of the higher classes. (2) Those who identify themselves with the people, have confidence in them, cherish and consider them as the most honest and safe, although not the most wise depository of the public interests. In every country these two parties exist; and in every one where they are free to think, speak, and write,

divided

See George Mason, p, 4463.

they will declare themselves. Letter to Henry Lee [August 10, 1824]

473

JEFFERSON
Never buy what you do not want, it is cheap; it will be dear to

LAVOISIER

because
you.

Decalogue of Canons for Observation in Practical Life [February 21, 1825]


angry, count ten before you 1 very angry, an hundred.
Ib.

and all treaties be made, under the authority of the United States, shall be the Supreme Law of the land; and the judges in every State shall be bound
in pursuance thereof; made, or which shall

When
speak;
if

thereby, any thing in the Constitution or laws of any State to the contrary Art. VI, sec. 2 notwithstanding.

Congress shall

make no law

respect-

The good
mother of us

old Dominion, the blessed


all.

Thoughts on Lotteries [1826]


This
is

ing an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people

the Fourth? Last words \July 4, 1826] 2

peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.


First

Amendment

[1791]

WILLIAM PALEY
1743-1805

Who can refute a sneer?


Moral Philosophy
[1785], vol. II, bk. V, eft. 9

ANTOINE LAURENT
LAVOISIER
1

743~ 1 794

It is

impossible to dissociate language


in-

CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES


1787
the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect Union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquillity, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America. Preamble

from science or science from language,


because every natural science always volves three things: the sequence phenomena on which the science
of
is

We

based; the abstract concepts which call these phenomena to mind; and the words in which the concepts are ex-

To call forth a concept a word needed; to portray a phenomenon, a concept is needed. All three mirror one and the same reality. 1 Traiti EUmentaire de Chimie
pressed.
is

[1789]

Treason against the United States, shall consist only in levying war against them, or in adhering to their enemies,
giving

content myself with that term elements, we the if, by saying mean to express the simple and indivisible molecules that compose bodies, it is
I

shall therefore

them

son shall be on the testimony of two witnesses to the same overt act, or on confession in

perconvicted of treason unless

aid

and comfort.

No

open court.

Art. Ill, sec. 3

This Constitution, and the laws of the United States, which shall be made
1

probable that we know nothing about them; but if, on the contrary, we express by the term elements or principles of bodies the idea of the last point reached by analysis, all substances that we have not yet been able to decompose 2 by any means are elements to us.
Ib.
1

See Mark Twain, p. 7623. John Adams died the same day. See

his

last

words, p. 4643.

Translated by J. LIPETZ, D. E. GERSHENSON, and D. A. GREENBERG. 8 Translated by D. McKiE.

474

HERDER

SCOTT

JOHANN GOTTFRIED HERDER


1744-1803

CHARLES DIBDIN
1745-1814

A gain it
soul.

Did you

is

to find a beautiful

human

He

ever hear of Captain Wattle? was all for love, and a little for the
bottle.

Der
Light, love,

gerettete Jungling [1797]


life.

Captain Wattle and Miss Roe


Here, a sheer hulk,
ing,
lies

poor

Tom Bowltempest

Herder's Epitaph [1803]

The

darling of our crew;


he'll

No more

hear

the
to.

ROWLAND HILL
1744-1833
did not see any reason why the devil should have all the good tunes. Sermons. From E. W. BROOME, the Reverend Rowland Hill,
P- 93

howling, For death has broach'd

him

He

Tom
Faithful below

Bowling

he did

his duty, 16.

But now

he's

gone

aloft.

Spanking Jack was so comely, so pleasant, so jolly,

JEAN BAPTISTE

Though winds blew great guns, he'd whistle and sing.

still

LAMARCK
1744-1829

The

Sailor's Consolation

FIRST LAW. In every animal ... a more frequent and continuous use of

HANNAH MORE
1745-1833
Since
trifles

any organ gradually strengthens, develwhile ops and enlarges that organ the permanent disuse of any organ imperceptibly weakens and deteriorates it, and progressively diminishes its func. . .

make the sum

of

human
foibles

And

things, half our misery


springs.

from our

tional capacity, until it finally disappears. SECOND LAW. All the acquisitions or
losses

Sensibility

wrought by nature in individuals ... are preserved by reproduction to the new individuals which arise.
Philosophie Zoologique [1809]
*

May

Small habits well pursued betimes reach the dignity of crimes. FZorio and His Friend

WILLIAM SCOTT, LORD STOWELL


1745-1836

JOSIAH QUINCY
1

744~ 1 775

A dinner lubricates business.


From BOSWELL,
The
Life of

Blandishments will not fascinate us, nor will threats of a Walter" intimidate. For, under God, we are determined that wheresoever, whensoever, or

Johnson [1791]
elegant simplicity of the three 1 per cents. From CAMPBELL, Lives of the

howsoever we
our
exit,

we will

be called to make men. Observations on the Boston


shall

die free

Lord Chancellors [1857], vo *ch.

212
the three per cents.

Port Bill [1774]


irThe sweet simplicity of
1

Translated by

HUGH ELUOT.

DISRAELI,

Endymion

[1880], ch,

96

475

JONES

FOX

SIR
On

WILLIAM JONES
1746-1794

SAMUEL PARRi
1747-1825
that the old lion is dead, every ass thinks he may kick at him.

parent knees, a naked new-born


child,
sat' st

Now

Weeping thou
So
live,

while

all

around

thee smiled;
that sinking in thy last long
sleep,

[1784] While dining with Sir joshua Reynolds, after the death of Dr. Johnson. From BOSWELL,
Life of Johnson [1791]

Calm thou

mayst smile, around thee weep.

while

all

From the

Persian [1786]

GOTTFRIED AUGUST BURGER


1747-1794

FRANCOIS ALEXANDRE FREDERIC, DUC DE LA ROCHEFOUCAULD-

LIANCOURT
1747-1827
Is it

Louis XVI:

a revolt?

The dead

ride swiftly.

La
Lenore [1773]

Rochefoucauld-Liancourt:

No,

Sire, it is a revolution.

Upon
the

JOHN PAUL JONES


1747-^1792
I

fall

learning at Versailles of of the Bastille [1789]

have not yet begun to

JOHN LOGAN
fight.

Aboard the Bonhomme Richard l


[September 23, 1779]

Thou

hast

1748-1788 no sorrow in thy


the

song,

No winter in thy year.


To
Cuckoo
[Attributed]*

JOHN O'KEEFFE
1747-1833

Amo, amas,
love a lass, As a cec(ar tall
I

EMMANUEL JOSEPH
SIEYfcS
1748-1836
I

and slender; Sweet cowslip's grace Is her nominative case,


she's of the

survived.8

Upon
II, sc. 2,

And

feminine gender!

being asked what he had done during the Terror

Agreeable Surprise, act

Song
2 Fat, fair and forty were all the toasts Irish Minnie of the young men.

CHARLES JAMES FOX


17491806
[On the fall of the Bastille] How much the greatest event it is that ever happened in the world! and how much the best! Letter to Richard Fitzpatrick
[July 30, 1789]. From LORD JOHN RUSSELL, Life and Times Fox [1859-1866], of C. J.
voZ. II, p.
*

And why I'm


tell

so

plump
life is

the reason I
sure to live

Who

leads a

good

well.

Merry Sherwood.

Friar of
st.

Orders Gray,

You
1

should always except the present

company.

London Hermit

361

Engaged with the British frigate Scrapis, off Flamborough Head, England. 2 1 am resolved to grow fat, and look young till DRYDEN, Secret Love; or, The fortyl Maiden Queen [1667], act III, sc. i.

Dr. Parr composed the Latin epitaph for the monument to Dr. Johnson, placed in St. Paul's
Cathedral, London, February 1796. *Also attributed to MICHAEL BRUCE
1767].
J'ai vecu.

[1746-

47 6

GOETHE

JOHANN WOLFGANG VON GOETHE


There
is

If I love you,

what business

is

it

of

yours?

1749-1832 strong shadow where there

Wilhelm Meisters
is

Lehrjahre, bk. IV, ch. 9

much light.
Gotz von Berlickingen
[1773], act I
a

One
little

ought, every day at least, to hear song, read .a good poem, see a

One lives but


If

once in the world.


I, sc. i

fine picture, and, if it were possible, to 1 speak a few reasonable words.

Clavigo [1774], act

16.

V,

you inquire what the people


here,

are like

To know

whom we

must answer, "The same

as

every-

where!" Die Leiden des jungen Werthers [1774-1787], May 17 Radiant misery. 16. [December 24]

with us, our earthly ball a peopled garden. 16. VII, 5

of someone here and there accord with, who is living on even in silence this makes

2 short; judgment transient. difficult, opportunity 16. 9

Art

is

long,

life

The
self;

history of science

is

science

it-

the history of the individual, the individual. Mineralogy and Geology

Seeking with the soul the land of the Greeks. Iphigenie auf Tauris [1787],
act
I, sc. i

Getting along with women, Knocking around with men, Having more credit than money,

A useless life is an early death.


One says a lot in vain, refusing; The other mainly hears the "No."

16. 2

Thus one

goes through the world. Claudine von Villa Bella [1776]

Who never ate his bread with tears, Who never sat weeping on his bed
During care-ridden nights

16.3
Pleasure and love are the pinions of 16. II, i great deeds.

Knows you not, you heavenly powers. 1 Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre


[i 786-1 830],

The best

is

Italian Journey

good enough. [March

3,

1787]

bk. II, ch. 13


Ib.

A noble person A
talent

attracts noble people,


I, sc. i

All guilt

is

punished upon earth.

and knows how to hold on to them.


Torquato Tasso [1790], act
is

Who longs in solitude to live,


Ah! soon
his wish will gain:

formed in

stillness,

Men hope
And
leave

and

love,

men

character in the world's torrent.

get

and

give,
i

him

16.2
Three things are to be looked to in a building: that it stand on the right spot; that it be securely founded; that it
be successfully executed.
Elective Affinities 4 [1808], bk. I, ch. 9

to his pain.
16. Ill,

Knowst thou the land where the lemon


trees

bloom,

Where

the gold orange glows in the deep thicket's gloom, Where a wind ever soft from the blue

heaven blows,

The sum which two married people


owe
1
2

And

the groves are of laurel and myrtle

to

one another

defies calculation. It

and

rose? 3

16.

iSee Longfellow, p. 621 a. 2 Kennst du das Land, wo die Zitronen bltihn?


8

8 *

See Charles Eliot Norton, p. 7280. See Hippocrates, p. 88b, and note. In der Kunst ist das Beste gut genug.

Translated

by

JAMES

ANTHONY

FROUDE

See Byron, p. 5563.

[1818-1894].

477

GOETHE
is

an

infinite debt,

which can only be


I,

discharged through all eternity. Elective Affinities, bk.

ch. 9

A pretty
One
is

foot

is

a great gift of nature. Ib. 11

may be well advised to to himself till it is comwork keep no one can readily help because pleted, him or advise him with it ... but the
The
artist

his

scientist

is

wiser not to withhold a

sin-

or a single conjecture from gle finding


publicity.

never satisfied with a portrait


Ib. II, 2

of a person that one knows.

Essay on Experimentation
while his struggle lasts. 1 Faust [1808-1832], pt.
I

Man

errs,

The

fate

of

the

architect

is

the

strangest of all. his whole soul,


passion,

How

to

produce

often he expends his whole heart and buildings into


enter.

Prologue in Heaven

Dear

which he himself may never

And

B.

friend, theory is all gray, the golden tree of life is green. Ib. Apprentice Scene
as

will,

Let us live in as small a circle as we we are either debtors or creditors

As soon

you
live.

trust yourself,

you

will

know how to

Ib.

before

we have had time

to look round.
IB.

He who wishes to uphold the truth and has but one tongue, he will uphold
it

indeed.

Ib. Street Scene

Mediocrity has no greater consolation than in the thought that genius is

Two
I

not immortal.

Ib. 5

breast. souls dwell, alas! in Ib. Before the Gate

my

can arouse a feeling for one sinone for single good action, more than accomplishes gle good poem, he who fills our memory with rows on rows of natural objects, classified with
teacher

who

am

the

spirit that

2 always denies.

Ib. Study

My peace is gone, 3 My heart heavy.


is

Ib.

Gretchen at the Spinning Wheel

name and

form.

Ib.

Who

wants to understand the poem Must go to the land of poetry; Who wishes to understand the poet Must go to the poet's land.
West-ostlicher
[1819],

That

Who can think of something stupid, Who can think of anything smart 4 Who
strives

of? prior ages haven't thought Ib. pt. II. The Gothic Chamber

Diwan
motto

always to the utmost,


Ib.
exist-

him can we
ence

save. 5

have been a man, and that means to have been a fighter.


For
I

He who

and only earns his freedom


daily conquers

them anew. 6

Ib.
If
I

Buck

des Paradies
I

was

fair,

too,

and that was

my

undoIb.
7

work incessantly to the last, nature owes me another form of existence when the present one collapses.
Letter to

ing.

The
1

Eternal Feminine draws us on.

Eckermann
3

Ib., last line

[February 4, 1829]
I call
1 architecture frozen music.

Es irrt der Mensch, so lang er strebt. a Ich bin der Geist der stets verneint.

Ib.
1

[March 23, 1829]


is

Meine Ruh' ist hin, Mein Herz ist schwer.


See Ecclesiastes 1:9, p. sya. Wer immer strebend sich bemuht,

Ich die Baukunst eine erstarrte Musik ncnne.


it

Since
it

[architecture]

music in space, as
der
7

FRBEDRICH VON SCHELLING [1775-1854], Philosophic der Kunst, p. $76 See Madame de Stael, p.

were a frozen music.

Den kdnnen wir Nur der verdient


ta'glich sie

erlosen.
sich Freiheit

wie das Leben

erobern muss.

Das Ewig-Weibliche zieht uns hinan.

47 8

GOETHE

CURRAN
would be uncertain, and the future as the past would be present to its eyes. Oeuvres, vol. VII, Th&orie Analytique des Probability

Do
See!

you wish to roam farther and


ther?

far-

The Good

lies so

near.

Only learn to seize good For good fortune's always


In limitations

fortune, here.

[1812at botre-

1820], introduction

Erinnerung

The

theory of probabilities
calculus.

is

he

first

shows himself the

tom nothing but common sense


duced to
Sire, I
sis.
1

I&-

And

master, the law can only bring us freeWas wir Bringen [1802] dom.

have no need of that hypothe-

Create, artist!

Do

From ERIC TEMPLE BELL,

Men

not

talk!

of Mathematics [1937]

Saying

Everything in the world can be borne

Except

for a series of beautiful days. Proverb collection

HONORS GABRIEL DE RIQUETTI, COMTE DE MIRABEAU


1749-1791

There
O'er
In
all

is

peace

all

the peaks, the treetops


birds are silent in the forest.
rest.

Go and
that

tell

those

who have

sent you

we

are here

by the
shall

will of the na-

You The
You

feel scarce a breath.


little

tion and that

we

not leave save at

Just wait, soon

the point of bayonets. Speech in the

tats-Genraux
[June 23, 1789]

too will

Wanderers Nachtlied
America, you have
it

II

better than our

LADY ANNE BARNARD


1750-1825

continent, the old one.

Wendts Musen-Almanach
Without
haste, but without rest.

[1831]

When
And

Motto

the sheep are in the fauld, and the kye's corne hame, a* the weary warld to rest are

gone.

More

light!

Last

Auld Robin Gray [1771], st

PIERRE SIMON DE LAPLACE


Given for intelligence which could comprehend all the forces by which nature is animated and the respective positions of the beings which compose it, if moreover this intelligence were vast enough to submit these data to analysis, it would embrace in the same formula both the movements of the largest bodies in the universe and
those of the lightest atom; to
^-Amerika, du hast Kontinent, das alte.
cs
it

JOHN PHILPOT

CURRAN
man

1749-1827 one instant an

The
given
lance;
1

condition

1750-1817 upon which God hath

eternal vigiis liberty to 2 which condition if he break,


to

Reply

Napoleon Bonaparte's remark upon

receiving a copy of Laplace's "You have written this huge


of of the universe."

M&anique

Celeste:

book on the system the world without once mentioning the author

Commonly quoted: Eternal vigilance is the also to Jefferson. price of liberty. Attributed There is one safeguard known generally to
3

nothing
als

the wise,
all,

which is an advantage and security to but especially to democracies as against

besser

unser

despots.
[c.

What

is

it?

Distrust.
2, sec.

DEMOSTHENES
34

385-322

B.C.],

Philippic

479

CURRAN
servitude
his crime
guilt.
is

SHERIDAN
faction, and at the same time to preserve the spirit and form of popular government, is then the great object to which our inquiries are directed.

at

once the consequence of


of his

and the punishment

Speech Upon the Right of Election of Lord Mayor of Dublin


[July 10,

The
I

Federalist, no. JQ

1790]

JOHN TRUMBULL
1750-1851

believe there are more instances of the abridgment of the freedom of the

people by gradual and silent encroachments of those in power than by violent

But

and sudden usurpations.


Speech in the Virginia ConvenI.

To

optics sharp it needs, I ween, see what is not to be seen.

McFingd

[1782], canto

I,

67

tion \June 16, 1788]

JAMES MADISON
1751-1836

RICHARD BRINSLEY SHERIDAN


1751-1816
of

By a
ity or

faction, understand a

number

citizens,

whether amounting to a major-

minority of the whole, united and actuated by some

who are common

Mrs. Malaprop: Illiterate him, quite from your memory.

say,

The
Tis
with a
safest
little

Rivals [1775], act


in

I, sc. 2

impulse of passion, or of interest, adverse to the rights of other citizens, or to the permanent and aggregate interests of

matrimony

to

begin
16.

aversion.

A
an

tie community,

The

circulating library in a town is as evergreen tree of diabolical knowlIb.

Federalist [1787], no. 10

edge! It blossoms through the year!

The

sown them everywhere brought


degrees
of
activity,

latent causes of faction are thus in the nature of man; and we see
into different

A progeny of learning.
Never say more than
I
is

Ib.

according to

the

different circumstances of civil society. zeal for different opinions con-

necessary. Ib. II,

know you
is

are

laughing in your
Ib.

cerning

religion,

ment, and many

concerning governother points, as well of

sleeve.

speculation as of practice; an attachment of different leaders ambitiously


for and contending pre-eminence power; or to persons of other descriptions whose fortunes have been interest-

He
ness!
If I

the very pineapple of

polite-

Ib. Ill, 3

ing to the human passions, have, in turn, divided mankind into parties, in-

reprehend anything in this world, the use of my oracular tongue, and a nice derangement of epitaphs! Ib.
it is

flamed them with mutual animosity, and rendered them much more disposed to vex and oppress each other than to cooperate for their common But the most common and good. durable source of factions has been the
. .
.

As headstrong as an allegory on banks of the Nile.


'

the
Ib.

Too
Our

civil

by

half.

Ib. 4

ancestors are very good kind of but they are the last people I should choose to have a visiting acfolks;

various

and

unequal

distribution

of
Ib.

quaintance with.

Ib. IV,

property.

No
tTW\Yii* nn
1

secure the public good, and private rights, against the danger of . .

To

caparisons, miss, if

you
a

please.

Caparisons

don't

become

woman.

young Tit Ib.2

SHERIDAN

You are not like Cerberus, three gentlemen at once, are you? The Rivals, act IV, sc. 2
it

You had no
me.

taste

when you married


for Scandd, act I, sc. 2
fif-

The School
Here's to the
teen; Here's to the

The quarrel is a very pretty quarrel as stands; we should only spoil it by try16. 3 ing to explain it.
it certainly going! sneaking off! I feel it oozing out, as hands! were, at the palm of
is

maiden of bashful

My

widow of fifty;
flaunting,

valor

is it

Here's

to

the
to

extravagant
that's

my

quean,

H.V,
I

And
3

here's
thrifty.

the

housewife

own

the soft impeachment.


all

16.

Let the toast pass

Drink to the

lass;

Through

the drama whether damned or not Love gilds the scene, and women guide 16. Epilogue the plot.

111 warrant shell prove

the gkss.

an excuse for 16. IH, 3

An

unforgiving eye,

and a damned
16.

disinheriting countenance.

An

apothecary should never be out of

IV,

spirits.

St. Patrick's

Day

[1775], act

Be
I, sc. i

just before you're generous.

Death's a debt; his


all alike

mandamus

binds

There

is

no

bail,

no demurrer.
16.11,4

not a passion so strongly

rooted in the

human heart
Sir,

as envy.

The The
most

Critic [1779], act I, sc. i

could any luster see In eyes that would not look on me.
I ne'er

newspapers!
villainous

they are the

licentious

abomiI

The Duenna
I

[1775], act

I, sc,

loved

him

for himself alone. I6. 3

nableinfernal no read them

Not that I make it

ever
rule
16.

never to look into a newspaper.

was struck

all

of a heap.
Ib. II, 2

is the Egad, I think the interpreter hardest to be understood of the two!

A bumper of good liquor


Will end a contest quicker

16.2
in panegyric, or, to practitioner of the more plainly, a professor speak Ib. art of puffing.

Than

justice, judge, or vicar.

Ib. 3

Conscience has no more to do with


gallantry than
it

has with

politics.

Ib.

The number of those who undergo the fatigue of judging for themselves is 1 16. very small indeed.
Certainly nothing is unnatural that 16. II, not physically impossible.
I
is

Tale-bearers are as bad as the tale-

makers.

The School

for

Scandd
act

[1777],
I, sc. i

wish,

sir,

you would practice

this

You shall see them on a beautiful quarto page, where a neat rivulet of text shall meander through a meadow of 16. margin.
1

without me.
night.

can't stay dying here all 16. Ill, i


2 crossed in love.

An

ovster

may be

16.

The government

over a

cup changed by G. P. R. JAMES, Richelieu

of a nation is often decided of coffee, or the fate of empires an extra bottle of Johannisberg.
[1829], ch.

The
i

right honorable

gentleman

is in-

See J. R. Lowell, p. 6g4b, and Bryce, p. 7783. From the interpolated tragedy, The Span-

16

ish

Armada.

SHERIDAN
debted to his

RTVAROL

memory

for his jests,

and

to his imagination for his facts. 1 Sheridaniana. Speech in Reply

Then rushed to meet the insulting but left They took the spear
shield. 1

foe;

the

to

Mr. Dundas

To

the

Memory
st.

of the Brave

You

write with ease to


ing,

show your breedhard reading.


Clio's Protest

Americans 'who Fell at Eutaw S.C. Springs, September 8


1781
[1786],

But easy

writing's curst

JOHANN HEINRICH
VOSS
Who
'

1751-1826 does not love wine, women, and


fool his

FRIEDRICH MAXIMILIAN VON KLINGER


1752-1831
Sturm
stress],

song

und

Drang

[Storm

and

Remains a

whole

life

long.

Attributed

Title of a Play [1776]

THOMAS CHATTERTON3
1752-1770

LEONARD McNALLY
1752^1820

Mie love ys dedde,

Gon

to hys death-bedde,

On Richmond
More
4

Al under the wyllowe-tree.


Mynstrelles Songe

Whose

Hill there lives a lass bright than Mayday morn; charms all other maids' sur-

PHILIP FRENEAU
1752-1832

A rose without a thorn.


The Lass
of

pass,

Richmond

Hill,

st. i

An

age employed in edging

steel
. . .

Can no

No
Can

poetic raptures feel shaded stream, no quiet grove


this fantastic century

JOSEPH DE MAISTRE
1753-1821
st.

move.
Author,

Poems
In spite of
I still

[1795].
all

To an

Every nation has the government it Letter to deserves. [1811]

the learned have said,

The

opinion keep; posture that we give the dead Points out the soul's eternal sleep.

my old

The sword
bard.

of justice has no scab-

The Indian Burying Ground


[1788],
i

Les Soirees de Saint-Petersbourg [1821]. Premier Entretien

st.

See Le Sage, p. 391 a. Wer nicht liebt Wein,

Weib und Gesang,


lang. attributed to Luther,

Der

bleibt ein

Nan

ANTOINE DE RIVAROL
1753-1801

sein

Leben

The couplet has also been apparently on no better authority than an eighteenth-century jingle in which "Luther" is needed to rhyme with "Futter." REDLICH ascribes it to Voss in Die poetischen Beitrage zum Waudsbecker Bothen [1871]. 8 See Wordsworth, p. 51 ib.
*This is from the poems of "Thomas Rowan imaginary fifteenth-century Bristol ley,"
poet invented by Chatterton. Editions of the poems appeared in 1778 and 1782, and were exposed in 1777-8 by Thomas Tyrwhitt.

What

not clear is not French. Discours sur Vuniversalite de


is

la

langue frangaise [1784]


i

When
And

Prussia hurried to the field, snatched the spear, but left the shield. SCOTT, Marmion [1808], canto III,
introduction

Also attributed to J.

UPTON

[1670-1749]

and

W. HUDSON.

BARLOW

TALLEYRAND

JOEL BARLOW
1754-1813
I

The
So
I

ring, so worn as you behold, thin, so pale, is yet of gold.

sing the sweets


feel,

know, the charms

His Mother's Wedding Ring

My
The

morning meal

incense, and

my

evening

WILLIAM DRENNAN
1754-1820

sweets of Hasty Pudding.

The Hasty Pudding

[1792], canto I

Nor one

feeling of to defile
cause, or the
Isle.
1

vengeance presume

To

E'en in thy native regions, how I blush hear the Pennsylvanians call thee

The

men, of the Emerald


Erin [1795],
st.

Mushl

16.

GEORGE CRABBED
1754-1832

JOSEPH JOUBERT
sex-

What

is

a church?
tells,

Our honest

ton

1754-1824 had to grow old to learn what I wanted to know, and I should need to be young to say well what I know.
I

'Tis a tall building, with a


bells.

tower and

Penstes [1842]

The Borough
Habit with him was
truth,

[1810]. Letter 2,

Ask the young: they know


thing!

The Church
all

everyI&Ib.

the test of
it

To

teach

is

to learn twice.

"It

must be
youth/'

right: I've

done
Ib.
3,

from

my

The Vicar
however

JEANNE MANON

ROLAND
1

Books cannot always


good;

please,

754- 1 793
liberty!

O
are

Minds

liberty!

What

crimes

are not ever craving for their Ib. 24, Schools food.

committed in thy name!


Last words, before her death on the guillotine. From LAMARTINE, Histoire des Girondins [1847]

Be

In idle wishes fools supinely stay; there a will, and wisdom finds a The Birth of Flattery way.

Cut and come

again.

Tales [1812!. VII,

The Widow's
Tale
2

CHARLES MAURICE DE TALLEYRANDPfcRIGORD


1754-1838
Black as the devil,

And

took for truth the

test of ridicule.

Tales of the Hall [1819], bk. VIII, The Sisters


1
2 How comes it to we appear pass, then, that such cowards in reasoning, and are so afraid to ANTHONY COOPER, stand the test of ridicule? EARL OF SHAFTESBURY [1671-1713], Characteristics. A Letter Concerning Enthusiam, sec. it Truth, 'tis supposed, may bear all lights; and

Hot

as hell,

See Byron, p. 5553.

Pure as an angel, Sweet as love. 2


Leontinus,

Recipe for coffee


that hu-

apud

Aristotle's Rhetoric,

the only test of gravity, and gravity of humor. For a subject which would not bear and a jest which would raillery was suspicious;

mor was

one of those principal lights or natural mediums to a by which things are to be viewed in order itself. ridicule is recognition thorough SHAFTESBURY, Essay on the Freedom of Wit and

not bear a serious examination was certainly


false wit.

Ib.

5
use of this appellation for

iThe
Ireland.
2

first

known

Humor,

sec. i

Noir comme

le diable,

'Twas the saying of an ancient sage (Gorgias

Chaud comme

renfer,

483

TALLEYRAND
[Of
the

HAMILTON
It is

Bourbons]

They

have

only the dead

who do not
sP eech
i

re-

nothlearned nothing, and forgotten


ing.*

turn.

794]

From CHEVALIER DE PANAT, letter to Mallet du Pan [January

BRILL A T-S AVAR IN


1755-1826
Tell

ANTHELME
eat,

is

1796] It [Of the battle of Borodino, 1812] 2 end. the of die beginning From EDOTTARD FOURNIER, L'E&fmt dans IHistoire
['8573

me what you
are.

and

I will tell

you what you

Physiologic

du Gout [1825], ch. 4

dessert

beautiful

woman

The United
ligions

States has thirty-two re-

without cheese is like a with only one eye.

one dish. but only *


Attributed

16.14
can become a cook, but one is 16. 15 of meat. roaster a born

One

Women

sometimes forgive a

man

who forces the opportunity, but never a Attributed man who misses one.
[To a young diplomat]
eagcrl*
.

A meal without wine without sunshine.

is

like

a day
16.

Don't be

NATHAN HALE
I

From SAIOT-BEUVE, Portraits de Femmes: Madame de Stael

1755-1776 only regret that I have but one

life

to lose for

my country.

WATERHOUSE
1754-1846 Tobacco is a filthy weed, That from fee devil does proceed;
It

BENJAMIN

Last words, before being hanged by the British as a spy [September 22, 1776]

ALEXANDER HAMILTON
your

drains

your purse, dothes,

it

burns

1755-1804

And males a chimney of your nose. From DR. OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES [1809-1 894] wfto was
,

A national
will

debt,

if it is

not excessive*
2

be to us a national

blessing.

Letter to Robert Morris


[April 30, 1781]

vaccinated by Dr. Waterhouse


I

BERTRAND BAR&RE
DE VIEUZAC
1755-1841

the British government forms the best model the world ever
believe

produced.
for
its

This

object public strength

government has and indi-

The

tree of liberty only grows

when

vidual security. Federal Convention Debates

watered by the blood of tyrants.4 Speech in the National Convention [1792]


Par cornme tm ange, Dom cooune I'amour. This appears as an inscription on many old
coffeepots.
1

\June 18, 1787]


All

communities

divide

themselves
first

into the few and the

many. The
.

are

the rich and wellborn, the other the mass of the people. The people are
.
.

Ife

n'oot rien appris, ni rien oublie. Vofla le oocHQcoccjucnt de la fin.


i4jb, and Jefferson,

See Addison, p. 3930.

'Pasdezttei
See Terttdlian, p.
p.

a public blessing."
to

*At the time we were funding our national debt, we heard much ahout "a public debt being

THOMAS

John W. Epps [November

JEFFERSON, Letter
1813]

6,

See Daniel Webster, p. 5473.

484

HAMILTON
turbulent and changing; they seldom or determine right. Give therefore judge to the first class a distinct, permanent

MARSHALL
within the compass of the national authority,

Opinion on the Constitutionality


of the

the government. They will check the unsteadiness of the second, and as they cannot receive any advanshare

in

Sank

a change, they therefore will tage by ever maintain good government.

LOUIS XVIII
1755-1824
Punctuality
1
is

Federal Convention Debates

the

forming a republican Real liberty is neither government. found in despotism or the extremes of democracy, but in moderate governare

We

now

kings.

A favorite

politeness

of

saying

JOHN MARSHALL
1755-1835
It is

ments.

16. \June 26, 1787]


in-

Let Americans disdain to be the

and emphatically the province


department to say
is.

struments of European greatness. Let the thirteen States, bound together in a strict and indissoluble Union, concur in
erecting one great American system, sucontrol of all transatlantic perior to the force or influence, and able to dictate

duty of the judicial

what the law


flict

If two laws conwith each other, the courts must decide on the operation of each. . This is of the very essence of judicial
.

...

duty.

the terms of the connection between the old and the new world!

Marbury

v.

Madison, i Cranch, 1317 [1803]


it
is

The

Federalist [1787-1788], no. 11

We

must never forget that

constitution

we are expounding.
v.

McCulloch

Government making laws. It

implies
is

the

power of

Maryland, 4 Wheaton 3 16, 407 [181 9]

essential to the idea

of a law, that it be attended with a sanction; or, in other words, a penalty or punishment for disobedience.
Ib. 15

tion,

This provision is made in a constituintended to endure for ages to

come, and consequently, to be adapted


to the various crises of

human

affairs.

Ib.

415

government been instituted at all? Because the passions of men will not conform to the dictates of reason Ib. and justice, without constraint.

Why has

be Let the end be legitimate, withini the scope of the constitution, and all means which are appropriate,
let it

Every power vested in a government is in its nature sovereign, and includes by force of the term a right to employ ... to the atall the means
tainment
ity

which are plainly adapted to that end, which are not prohibited, but consist
with the letter and
spirit of

the constiI&.

tution, are constitutional.

421

requisite of the ends of such power.

The power
to destroy. 2

Opinion on the Constitutionalof the

to tax involves the power Ib. 431

Bank [February

23,

The

people

made

the Constitution,

1791]
If the end be clearly comprehended within any of the specified powers, and if the measure have an obvious relation to that end, and is not forbidden by of the Consti-

and the people can unmake it. It is the creature of their own will, and lives only

by

their will.

Cohens

v. Virginia,

6 Wheaton

(19 U.S.) 264, 389 [1821]


1
2

any particular provision to come tution, it may safely be deemed

L'exactitude est la politesse des rois. See Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., p. 788b.

485

ROUTH

BLAKE
For
light doth seize frantic pain.

MARTIN JOSEPH ROUTH


1755-1854
will find it a very good practice always to verify your references, sir.

my brain
Mai
st.

With

You

Poetical Sketches.

Song,

From

J.

W.

BURCON, Memoir

How have

you

left

the ancient love

of Dr. Routh, Quarterly Review


[July 1878]

That bards

of old enjoy'd in you!

[LIGHT-HORSE HARRY]
1756-1818

HENRY LEE
memory
of the

The languid strings do scarcely move! The sound is forc'd, the notes are Ib. To the Muses, st. few! 4
Does the Eagle know what
pit? wilt thou
is

in the

To

the

Man,
first

first

in

war, first in peace, and hearts of his countrymen.

in

the

Resolutions presented to the

Or go ask the Mole? Can Wisdom be put in a silver rod? Or Love in a golden bowl? The Book of Thel [1789].
Thel's Motto

House of Representatives on the death of Washington [December 1799]

Piping down the valleys wild, Piping songs of pleasant glee, On a cloud I saw a child,

WILLIAM BLAKE*
1757-1827

How

sweet

And

roam'd from field to field, tasted all the summer's pride,


I

And he laughing said to me: "Pipe a song about a Lamb'/' Songs of Innocence [1789]. Introduction, st. 1,2
And And And
I

made
wrote

a rural pen,

Till I the prince of love

beheld
did glide.
St. 1

I stain'd I

Who in the sunny beams


to sit

the water clear,

my happy

songs
Ib.
st.

Poetical Sketches [1783]. Song,

Every child

may

joy to hear.
5

He loves
Then,

and hear

me

sing,

laughing,

sports

and

plays

with me;

Then

stretches out

And mocks my loss

my golden

wing,
Ib. st.

Sing louder around To the bells' cheerful sound, While our sports shall be seen On the echoing green.
Ib.

of liberty.

The Echoing Green,


thee?

st. i

My silks and fine array, My smiles and languished air,


By love
Brings

Lamb, who made thee? Dost thou know who made


Little

And mournful

me yew

are driv'n away; lean Despair


to deck

and bid thee feed the stream and o'er the mead; By Gave thee clothing of delight,
life,

Gave thee

my

grave:
st. i

Such end true

lovers have.
Ib. Song,

Softest clothing, wooly, bright. Ib. The Lamb,

st. i

My
And

mother bore
wild,
I

me

in the southern

Like a fiend in a cloud, With howling woe, After night I do crowd, And with night will go; I turn my back to the east, From whence comforts have increased;
1 Poetry and Prose of William Blake, Geoffrey Keynes, ed.

am
as

black,

but O!
is

my

soul

is

white;

White
But
I

an angel

the English child,

am

black, as if bereav'd of light. 16. The Little Black Boy, st. i are

'And

we

put on

earth

little

space,

486

BLAKE

That we may
love;

learn to bear the

beams

of

And
Is

Shall shine like the gold As I guard o'er the fold."

these black bodies and this sunlike a shady grove/' Songs of Innocence. The Little Black Boy, st. 4
till

Songs of Innocence. Night,

St.

burnt face but a cloud, and

When
And

the voices of children are heard

on the green laughing is heard on the


heart
is

hill,

I'll

shade him from the heat, bear

My

at rest within

my

breast
st. i

he can
knee;
silver

And

everything else

is still.

To lean in joy upon our father's And then I'll stand and stroke his
And be
hair, like

Ib. Nurse's Song,

him, and he

will

then love
Ib.
st.

me.

Can I see another's woe, And not be in sorrow too? Can I see another's grief, And not seek for kind relief?
Ib.

On

When my
young,

Another's Sorrow,

st. i

mother died

was very

And my
Could

father sold

me

while yet

my

tongue
scarcely

Rintrah roars and shakes his fires in the burden'd air; Hungry clouds swag on the deep.

cry
I

"Veep!

The Marriage
'weep!
I

of

Heaven and

Hell

[c.

'weep! 'weep!"

1793].

The Argument

So your chimneys
sleep. Ib.

sweep, and in soot

The Chimney Sweeper,

st. i

The reason Milton wrote in fetters when he wrote of Angels and God, and at liberty when of Devils and Hell, is
because he was a true poet and of the
Devil's party without knowing it. Ib. The Voice of the Devil, note

To Mercy,

And

Pity, Peace, and Love All pray in their distress; to these virtues of delight

Return

their thankfulness.
Ib.
st. i

The busy bee has no time


row.

for sor-

The Divine Image, For Mercy has a human heart,


Pity a

Ib. Proverbs of Hell

No
The
of
3

bird soars too high,

if

he

soars
Ib.

human

face,

with his

own

wings.
is

And And

Love, the Peace, the

human form divine, 1 human dress.2


Ifa. st.

pride of the peacock


lust of the goat
is

the glory

God.

The
God.

the bounty of
is

The moon

like a flower

In heaven's high bower,

The wrath
of

of the lion

the wisdom
is

With
Sits

silent delight

God.

and smiles on the

night. Ib. Night,

The nakedness
st.
i

of

woman

the work
Ib.

of

God.

And

there the lion's ruddy eyes Shall flow with tears of gold, And pitying the tender cries,

The

cistern

contains:

the fountain
Ib.

overflows.

And

walking round the fold, Saying "Wrath, by his meekness,

the morning. Act in the noon. Eat in the evening. Sleep in the
in

Think

And by his
Is

health, sickness,

night.

Ib.

driven away
day."
Ib. st. 5
life's river,

You
less

never

From our immortal


"For, wash'd in
1 2

you

know what is enough unknow what is more than


Ib.

enough.

My bright mane forever


See Milton, p. 344b. See A Divine Image, p. 48gb.

Improvement makes

straight

roads;

but the crooked roads without improvement are roads of genius. Ib.

487

BLAKE
Truth can never be told so as to be understood, and not be believ'd.

The Marriage

The sword he sung a song of death, But could not make the sickle yield.
Miscellaneous

of Heaven and Hell. Proverbs of Hell


16.

Fragments.

Poems and Poem

Enough! or Too Much.


Never seek to tell thy love Love that never told can be; For trie gentle wind does move
Silently, invisibly.
I

Abstinence sows sand all over The ruddy limbs and flaming hair,
Plants fruits of

But Desire Gratified life and beauty


you trap the
1

there.
16.

Poem
it's

If

moment

before

told

told her all

my love, I told my love, my heart,


ghastly
fears

The
But

ripe, tears of

repentance you'll certainly


let

Trembling, cold, in Ah, she doth depart.

wipe;
if

once you

the ripe
off

moment

Soon

as

A traveler came by
Silently, invisibly

she was gone from

me

You

g can never wipe woe.

the tears of
16.

Poem

He who binds

to himself a joy
flies

O, was no deny.
Miscellaneous Poems and Frag-

Does the winged life destroy; But he who kisses the joy as it
Lives in eternity's sunrise.

ments [1793-1818]. Poem


I

He
I

asked a thief to steal me a peach: turned up his eyes. ask'd a lithe lady to lie her down:
cries.

16. Eternity

What
The
The

is

it

men

in

women do
in

require? require?

lineaments of Gratified Desire.


is

Holy and meek she


As soon
as I

What

it

women do
16.

men

lineaments of Gratified Desire.

He wink'd at the thief And srmTd at the dame, And without one word spoke Had a peach from the tree, And 'twixt earnest and joke
Enjoy'd the Lady.
Sleep, Sleep, beauty bright Dreaming o'er the joys of
Sleep, Sleep: in thy sleep Little sorrows sit and

went an angel came:

The Question Answer'd

look of love alarms 'tis fill'd with fire; But the look of soft deceit Shall win the lover's hire.

The

Because

16.

Poem
sees;

16.

Poem

Hear the voice of the Bard! Who Present, Past, and Future,

night.

Whose ears have heard The Holy Word


That walk'd among the ancient
st. i

trees.

weep. 16. A Cradle Song,

Songs of Experience [1794].


Introduction, st
i

Why

art

thou

silent

and
Ib.

invisible,

"Turn away no more;

Father of Jealousy?

To Nobodaddy

Love

The starry floor, The wat'ry shore,


Is

Why wilt thou turn away?


giv'n thee
till

to faults
is

Always

is always blind, to joy inclin'd,

the break of day." 2


16.
st.

And

Lawless, wing'd, and unconfin'd, breaks all chains from

"Love seeketh not


every

itself

mind.

16.

Poem
heath,

Nor for
1

to please,

itself

hath any

care,
IV, IV,
v,

The sword sung on the barren The sickle in the fruitful field:

See Shakespeare, II Henry p. 242b. See Milton, p. 3363.


fl

95,

BLAKE
But
for another gives its ease, builds a Heaven in Hell's
spair."

Did he who made the Lamb make


de-

And

thee?

Songs of Experience. The

Songs of Experience. The Clod and the Pebble,


St.

Tiger,

st.

4,

"Love seeketh only self to please, To bind another to its delight,


Joys in another's loss of ease, And builds a Hell in Heaven's
spite."
Ib.

In every cry of every man, In every infant's cry of fear, In every voice, in every ban,

The
dest.

mind-forg'd manacles I hear.


Ib.

London,
streets I

st.

But most
3
Blasts the

thro'

O Rose, thou art sick!


The
That
invisible

How the youthful harlot's curse


newborn
infant's tear,

midnight

hear

worm

flies in the night, In the howling storm,

And

blights with plagues Che marriage Ib. st. 4 hearse.

Has found out thy bed

My mother

Of crimson joy, And his dark secret love


Does thy
life

groan'd! my father wept. Into the dangerous world I leapt: Helpless, naked, piping loud: Like a fiend hid in a cloud.
Ib. Infant Sorrow,
st. i

destroy.
16.

The

Sick Rose.
I

was angry with


told

Little Fly,

my

friend:

I
I I

Thy summer's

my wrath, my
it

wrath did end.


did grow. Tree,

My

play thoughtless hand

was angry with


told
not,

Has brush'd away.

my foe: my wrath
Ib.

A Poison

st. i

Am not I
A fly like thee?
Or
art

not thou
like

A man
For
I

me?
and
sing,

Cruelty has a human heart, Jealousy a human face; Terror the human form divine, 1 And Secrecy the human dress.2

And

dance,
drink,

16.

A Divine
me

And
Till

Image,

st. i

some blind hand

My
Ib.

specter around

night and day

Shall brush

my

wing.

The Fly

Like a wild beast guards my way. My emanation far within

Weeps

incessantly for

my sin.

Tiger! Tiger! burning bright In the forests of the night,

Poems from

MSS

What immortal hand

1803].

1800[c. Poem, st. i

or eye

And
I

Could frame thy fearful symmetry? In what distant deeps or skies


Burnt the
fire

throughout

all

eternity
16.
st.

forgive you,

you forgive me.


on,
3

of thine eyes?
fire?
st. i,

On what wings dare he aspire? What the hand dare seize the
16.

Mock
2

on, seau:

mock

Voltaire,

14 Rous-

The

Tiger,

What the hammer? what the


Dare

chain? In what furnace was thy brain? What the anvil? what dread grasp
its

Mock on, mock on: 'tis all in vain! You throw the sand against the wind, And the wind blows it back again.
16.

Poem,

st.

When
And
Did

deadly terrors clasp? the stars threw down

their

Terror in the house does roar, But Pity stands before the door. 16. Fragment
1 2 3

spears,

water'd heaven with their tears, he smile his work to see?

See Milton, p. 344**. See The Divine Image, p. See Job 21:3, p. 15!).

BLAKE
There
is

a smile of love,

And there is a smile of deceit, And there is a smile of smiles


In which these two smiles meet.

Some Some

are born to sweet delight. are born to endless night.

Poems from MSS. Auguries


of Innocence,
st.
I.

Poems from MSS. The


Smile,
i

113

And did those Walk upon

feet in ancient

England's

time mountains

The And And And

cabinet
pearl

is

formed of gold
crystal shining bright,

and

And

green? was the holy

Lamb

of

God

within it opens into a world a little lovely moony night. 16. The Crystal Cabinet,
is

On
2

England's pleasant pastures seen?

st.

For a tear

an
is

intellectual thing,

And
And
Is

a sigh

the sword of an Angel

And did the countenance divine Shine forth upon our clouded hills? And was Jerusalem builded here Among those dark Satanic mills?

King, the bitter groan of the martyr's

woe
an arrow from the Almighty's bow. 1 16 The Grey Monk, st. 8

me my bow of burning gold: me my arrows of desire: 'Bring me my spear: O clouds unfold! Bring me my chariot of fire.
Bring Bring

To see a world in a grain, of sand And a heaven in a wild flower,


Hold
infinity in the

palm

of your

hand
I.

And

eternity in an hour. 16. Auguries of Innocence,

not cease from mental fight, my sword sleep in my hand Till we have built Jerusalem In England's green and pleasant land. Milton [1804-1808]. Preface, poem
I will

Nor

shall

A robin
Puts
all

redbreast in a cage Heaven in a rage.

16.

Z.

dog

starv'd at his master's gate

Great things are done when men and mountains meet; This is not done by jostling in the street. Epigrams [1808-1811]
If

Predicts the ruin of the state.


16.

1 9

Go

He who

shall

Shall never

hurt the little wren be belov'd by men.


16.

you have form'd a circle to go into, into it yourself and see how you would do. 16. To God
first

Degrade
1 29

the arts

if

you'd mankind

degrade.

truth that's told with


all

bad intent

Beats

the

lies

you can invent.

a.
Every tear from every eye

z.

53

Hire idiots to paint with cold light and hot shade. Annotations to Sir Joshua Reynolds' s Discourses [c. 1808]

Becomes a babe

in eternity.

16.

Z.

67

He who shall teach the child to doubt The rotting grave shall ne'er get out.
Ib.
I.

To generalize is to be an idiot. To particularize is the alone distinction of merit. General knowledges are those
knowledges that
idiots possess.
Ib.

77

The Angel

He who

doubts from what he sees

that presided o'er my birth Said, "Little creature, form'd of joy and

Will ne'er believe, do what you please. If the sun and moon should doubt,
They'd immediately go out.
16.
Z.

mirth,

97

The
Shall

harlot's cry

from

street to street

weave
sheet.

old

Go, love without the help of any thing on earth." Poems from MSS [c. 1810] Grown old in love from seven till seven
I oft

England's

16.

winding Z. 105

times seven, have wish'd for Hell for ease from

in Jerusalem III, preface [1804-1820]

Heaven.

Ib.

490

BLAKE

MONROE
But

The
Is

vision of Christ that thou dost see


greatest

why
stairs?

did

you kick

me down
act
I, sc. i

my vision's
The

enemy:

The Panel*

Thine has a great hook nose like thine, Mine has a snub nose like to mine.
Everlasting Gospel
[c.

1818]

ROYALL TYLER
1757-1826

Both read the Bible day and night, But thou read'st black where I read
white.
Ib.

Why should our thoughts to distant countries roam, When each refinement may be found
at

This

life's

dim windows

of the soul

Distorts the heavens from pole to pole And leads you to believe a lie

home? The Contrast

[1787], prologue

When
I

Since
off

you see with, not

thro', the

eye

16.

General Shays 2 has sneaked and given us the bag to hold.


Ib. act II, sc. 2

am

sure this Jesus will not

do
Ib.

am

at the

end of

Either for Englishman or Jew.

my tether.
16. Ill, i

Poetry
race.

fettered

fetters

the

human

Nations are destroyed or flourish in proportion as their poetry, painting, and music are destroyed or flourish. Jerusalem [ 1 804-1 82 o] ch i
,
.

FISHER AMES
1758-1808

monarchy

is

merchantman which
strike

preface

sails well,

but will sometimes

on a

He who would do good


do
it

to another

must

in

minute
is

rock, and go to the bottom; a republic is a raft which will never sink, but then

General good
drel,

particulars: the plea of the scoun-

For

art

hypocrite and flatterer, and science cannot exist but


particulars. Ib. 3, sec.

your feet are always in the water. Speech in the House of Representatives [1795]

in

minutely organized

55

JAMES MONROE
1758-1831
National honor
is

England! awake! awake! awake! Jerusalem thy sister calls! Why wilt thou sleep the sleep of death And close her from thy ancient
walls?
16. 4, sec. 77,
st. i

national property

of the highest value. First Inaugural Address

[March

4, 1817]

JAMES GILLRAY
1757-1815

continents ... are henceforth not to be considered as subjects for future colonization by any Eu-

The American

ropean powers.

The
Street. 2

Old

Lady

of

Threadneedle

Title of cartoon [1797]

Annual Message to Congress [December 2, 1823]; the Monroe Doctrine

JOHN PHILIP KEMBLE


Perhaps
1

it

1757-1823 was right to dissemble your

In the wars of the European powers matters relating to themselves we have never taken any part, nor does it comport with our policy so to do.
in
Ib.

love,

We

When we
8

are led to believe a lie see not thro' the eye. Auguries of Innocence,

*An
I.

Well 'Tw
ixat
2

adaptation of Isaac Bickerstaffe's No Worse. Tyler was involved in suppressing Shays's

Tw

The Bank of England.

Rebellion,

491

MONROE
owe it, therefore, to candor, and to the amicable relations existing between the United States and those
powers to declare that we should consider any attempt on their part to extend their system to any portion of this hemisphere as dangerous to our peace and safety. With the existing colonies
or dependencies of

BURNS

We

Thank God, I have done my duty. At the Battle of Trafalgar. From


SOUTHEY,
ch. 9

Life

of

Nelson,

Kiss

me, Hardy.

Ib.

ROBERT BURNS
1759-1796

any European power we ... shall not interfere. But with the governments whose independence we have acknowledged,
.

Wee,

sleekit, cow'rin,

tim'rous beastie,

we could not view any

interposition for

O, what a panic's in thy breastie! Thou need na start awa sae hasty,

the purpose of oppressing them, or controlling, in any other manner, their destiny,

Wi'

bickering brattle!

To a Mouse
Has broken Nature's

[1785],

st.

by any European

power, in

any

other light than as a manifestation of an unfriendly disposition towards the

I'm truly sorry man's dominion


social union.

Ib.st.2

United

States.

Annual Message
the

to Congress;

The

best laid

schemes

o'

mice and
Ib.
st.

Monroe Doctrine

men 1 Gang aft a-gley.


Nature's law,

HORATIO NELSON
1758-1805 Westminster Abbey, or
victory!

That man was made

to

mourn.
to

Man Was Made


Cape
St.

Mourn
st.

At the

Battle

[1786],

of

Vincent [February 14, 1797]* SOUTHEY, Life of Nelson [1813], ch. 4

From
I

Man's inhumanity to man.2 Makes countless thousands mourn!


Ib.
st.

have only one eye, I have a right to be blind sometimes ... I really do not see the signal.

He

wales a portion with judicious care; And "Let us worship God" he says, with solemn air.

At the

Battle of

Copenhagen
[1801]. Ib. 9

The

Cotter's Saturday Night [1786], St. 12


like

Something must be
nothing
others.
is

left to

chance;
all

From

scenes

these,

old

Scotia's

sure in a sea fight

beyond

Memorandum

to the fleet, off


9, 1805]

grandeur springs, That makes her loved at home, revered abroad:


Princes and lords are but the breath of
3

Cadiz [October

But, in case signals can neither be seen or perfectly understood, no captain can do very wrong if he places his ship 16. alongside that of the enemy.

kings,

"An honest man's


God."
man
for
will

the noblest work of


Ib.
st.

19

do his duty." Captain Pasco, Nelson's

England expects every man


his duty. 1

will

do

flag lieutenant, suggested substituting "expects"

"confides,"

which was

Blackwood,

who commanded

A* the

adopted. Captain the Euryalus, says

Battle of Trafalgar [October 21, 1805]. From SOUTHEY, Life of Nelson [1813], ch. 9
fleet,

This famous sentence

"Say to the

reported: England confides that every

is

thus

first

that the correction suggested was from "Nelson expects" to "England expects." 1 See Ihara Saikaku, p. 37ga. See Pliny, p. 1320, and Wordsworth, p. 5o8b. 8 See Goldsmith, p. 44ga.
fl

See Pope, p. 4ogb.

492

BURNS
Gie

me
a'

That's

ae spark o' Nature's the learning I desire.


First Epistle to

fire,

life!

thou

art a galling load,

Along

a rough, a

weary road,
I!

Lapraik [1786], st. 13


J.

To wretches

such as

Despondency [1786],$^

The

social, friendly, honest man, Whatever he be, Tis he fulfills great Nature's plan, And none but he! Second Epistle to J. Lapraik

Perhaps it may turn out a sang, Perhaps turn out a sermon. Epistle to a Young Friend
[1786],
1

st. i

[1786],

st.

15

waive the quantum o' the


it

sin,

The hazard
But, och!

On

ev'ry

hand

it will

allow'd be,

of concealing; hardens a' within,

He's just
be.

nae better than he should

And

petrifies

the feeling!

Ib. st.

A Dedication to Gavin Hamilton


[1786]
It's

An

atheist-laugh's a

poor exchange
16. st. 9

For Deity offended.

To

hardly in a body's pow'r, keep, at times, frae being sour.


Epistle to Davie [1786],
st.

There's nought but care on ev'ry han', In every hour that passes, O:

What signifies
2

An'

*t

Misled by fancy's meteor

the life o' man, were nae for the lasses, O. Green Grow the Rashes,
[1787],

ray,

st. i

By

But yet the

Was light from heaven'.


The Vision

passion driven; light that led astray


[1786], II,
st.

18

His locked, lettered, braw brass collar Showed him the gentleman an'
scholar.

Auld Nature swears, the lovely dears Her noblest work she classes, O: Her prentice han' she try'd on man, An' then she made the lasses, O.
16.
st.

The Twa Dogs


About the

[1786],

st.

Green grow the Green grow the

rashes,
rashes,

O; O; O.
16. chorus

The

sweetest hours that e'er I spend


lasses,

An' there began a lang digression


lords o' the creation.
16.
st.

Are spent among the


6
I

wasna fou, but

Oh wad some
To

power the giftie gie us

just had plenty. Death and Dr. Hornbook

see oursels as others see usl It wad frae monie a blunder free us, An' foolish notion.

[1787],

st.

John Barleycorn got up again,

And
8

To

a Louse [1786],

sore surpris'd

them

all.

st.

John Barleycorn [1787],

st.

Wee, modest, crimson-tipped flow'r, Thou's met me in an evil hour; For I maun crush amang the stoure Thy slender stem: To spare thee now is past my pow'r, Thou bonie gem. To a Mountain Daisy [1786], st. i
Stern Ruin's plowshare Full on thy bloom. 1
1

The heart benevolent and kind The most resembles God. A Winter Night

[1787]

Ye're aiblins nae temptation. Address to the Unco


[1787],

Guid
st.

drives

Then
elate,
Still

gently scan your brother

man,

16. st. 9

gentler sister
is

woman;
16.
st.

Tho' they may gang a kennin wrang,

See

Edward Young,

p. 399!).

To

step aside

human.

493

BURNS
O,

my

Luve

is

like a red, red rose,

That's newly sprung in June. O, my Luve is like the melodie, That's sweetly play'd in tune.

When we were first acquent,


Your locks were like the raven, Your bonie brow was brent; But now your brow is beld, John, Your locks are like the snaw, But blessings on your frosty pow,
John Anderson

John Anderson

my jo, John,

Johnson's Musical Museum [1787-1796]. A Red, Red Rose, st i

Contented wi'
mair.
16.

little

and cantie
wi' Little,

wi'

my jo!

Contented
braes o'

st. i

John Anderson my jo, John, clamb the hill thegither,

We

Ye banks and

can ye chant, ye little birds, sae weary fu' o' care! Thou'll break my heart, thou warbling

How How
And

bonny Doon, can ye bloom sae fresh and fair?

And mony a

cantie day, John,

We've had wi' ane anither; Now we maun totter down, John, And hand in hand we'll go,

And sleep

thegither at the foot,

bird,

That

wantons
thorn!

thro'
o'

the

flowering
joys,

John Anderson, my jo! Johnson's Musical

Museum.
Jo,
st.

John
departed
i,

Anderson

My

Thou minds me

Departed never to return. 9 Ib. The Banks o Doon,

st.

Chords that vibrate sweetest pleasure


Thrill the deepest notes of woe. Ib. Sensibility Charming,

Farewell to the Highlands, farewell to the North, The birthplace of valor, the country of worth!

How

st.

Wherever

Ae fond kiss, and then we sever; Ae farewell and then forever! Ib. Ae Fond Kiss,
But to see her was to love her, Love but her, and love forever. 1

The
st. i

hills

I wander, wherever I rove, of the Highlands for ever

love.
Ib.

My Heart's in the Highlands,


st. i

My heart's in the Highlands, my heart is


Highlands a-chasing the deer; A-chasing the wild deer, and following the roe, heart's in the Highlands wherever I go. 16. chorus

Had we never lov'd sae kindly, Had we never lov'd sae blindly, Never met or never parted

My

not here, heart's in the

We had ne'er been broken-hearted.


Ib.
It
st.

My

was

a' for

We left fair Scotland's strand.


Ib. It

our rightfu' King

Was

A' for Our Rightfu


King,
st.

whistle, lad:

and

I'll

come

to you,

my

Now
And

a' is a' is

done that men can do, done in vain. 16. st. 2

Tho' father and mither and a' should gae mad, O whistle, and I'll come to you, my
lad.

right and round about the Irish shore; Upon And gae his bridle reins a shake,

He

turn'd

him

Whistle, and

I'll

Come

to You,

My Lad
Should auld acquaintance be forgot, never brought to mind? Should auld acquaintance be forgot,

With

And

adieu forevermore, dear adieu forevermore!

My

And

16. st. 3
p. 6473.

And

auld lang syne!

1 See Halleck, p. 565!),

and Tennyson,

Auld Lang Syne [1788

st. i

494

BURNS
For auld lang syne, my dear, For auld lang syne, Well tak a cup o' kindness yet For auld lang syne! Auld Lang Syne, chorus

chield's

amang you
he'll

takin' notes,
it.

And faith

the Late Captain Grose's Peregrinations Thro' Scotland


[1793],
st. i

On

prent

Flow gently, sweet Afton, among thy green braes, Flow gently, I'll sing thee a song in thy
praise.

My

Mary's asleep by thy murmuring


stream,
gently, sweet Afton, disturb not

Some hae meat and canna eat, And some wad eat that want it; But we hae meat, and we can eat, And sae the Lord be thankit. The Selkirk Grace [1793]
(attributed]

Flow

her dream.

O Mary, at thy window be!


It is

Afron "Water [1789,]


This day
chain,

st.

Time winds
the

th'

exhausted
length
sti

the wish'd, the trysted hour. Mary Morison [1793],

st. i

The lovely Mary Morison!


twelvemonth's
Year's

Ib.

To

run
again.

Whare

sits

New

Day

Gathering
storm,

our sulky, sullen dame, her brows like gathering

[1791],

The voice of Nature loudly cries, And many a message from the skies,
That something
in us never dies.
Ib,
st.

Nursing her wrath to keep it warm. Tam o' Shanter [1793], L 10

Ah, gentle dames!


3

it

To

think

how monie

gars me greet counsels sweet,

When
And

Nature her great masterpiece


last,

de-

How

monie lengthened, sage advices,


frae the wife despises.

sign'd,

The husband
best work, the

fram'd her

Ib. I 33

human mind,
Her eye intent on
plan,
all

the wondrous

His ancient, trusty, drouthy crony;

Tam

She form'd of various

stuff the various

lo'ed him like a vera brither They had been fou for weeks thegither.

Man.

Ib. I 43
blest,

To Robert Graham
She She She
is

[1791],

st. i

Kings
O'er

may be
the

but

Tam

was

glori-

winsome wee thing, is a handsome wee thing, is a lo'esome wee thing, This sweet wee wife o' mine.
a

ous,
a'
ills o' life

victorious.

Ib.

I 57

My
The golden

Wife's a

Winsome Wee

But

pleasures are like poppies spread

Thing [1792], chorus


hours on angel wings

You seize the flow'r, its bloom is shed; Or like the snow falls in the river A moment white then melts forever.
Ib. I

Flew o'er me and For dear to me as

my

dearie;

59

light

and

life

Was my sweet Highland Mary.


Highland Mary [1792],
But, oh!
st.

That hour, o' night's black arch the Ib. Z. 69 keystane.

That

death's untimely frost, nipt my flower sae early.


fell

What
st.

Inspiring bold John Barleycorn! make dangers thou canst


scorn!

us

Ib.
If there's a
I

hole in
it;

a'

your coats,

Wi' tippenny, we fear nae evil; Wi' usquebae, we'll face the devil!
Ib.

rede you tent

I 105

495

BURNS
As

PITT

Tammie
rious,

and cuglow'red, amazed,


fast

God

knows, I'm no the thing


be,
I

should

The mirth and fun grew


ous.

and
I.

furi-

Nor am

even the thing


erend John

Tarn

o'

Shanter,

143
If

Posthumous
there's
bliss;

Pieces.

To

could be. the Revst.

Her cutty sark, o' Paisley harn, That while a lassie she had worn,
In longitude tho' sorely scanty, It was her best, and she was vauntie. 16. I 171

M'Math,

8
in

another world, he

lives

If

there
this.

is

none, he

made

the best of

"Weel done, Cutty

Sark!"

16.
16. 1

Epitaph on William Muir


vile

189

In durance

here must

wake and
sorrow

Ah, Tarn! Ah! Tarn! ThouTl get thy


fairin!

weep,

And

all

my

frowsy couch in

In hell they'll roast you like a herrin!


16.

I 201
It's

steep. 16. Epistle

from Esopus to Maria

Scots Scots

wha hae

wham

Welcome Or to victorie.

wi' Wallace bled, Bruce has aften led, to your gory bed

It's
It's

guid to be merry and wise, guid to be honest and true, guid to support Caledonia's cause bide by the buff and the blue. 16. Here's a Health to Them That's Awa', st. i

And

Now's the day, and now's the hour;


See the front o' battle lour! See approach proud Edward's
er

pow-

GEORGES JACQUES

Chains and
Scots

DANTON
1

slaverie!

Wha Hae

[1794], st

1,2

759~ 1 794

Lay the proud usurpers low!


Tyrants
fall in every foe! Liberty's in every blow! Let us do or die! 2

when
16. st,

Everything belongs to the fatherland the fatherland is in danger. Speech to the Legislative As-

sembly [August 28, 1792]

The rank is but the The man's the gowd

We

must

dare,

and dare again, and


[September
2,

guinea's stamp, for a' that.


st. i

1 go on daring.

16.

For A' That and A! That [1795],

1792]
it
is

Show my head
worth seeing.

to the people,

A prince can mak a belted knight, A marquis, duke, and a' that;
But an honest man's aboon his might, Guid faith, he mauna fa' that.
16.
st.

Last words, addressed to the executioner

WILLIAM PITT
1759-1806
Necessity
is

For a' that, and a' that, An* twice as muckle 's a' that, I've lost but ane, I've twa behin',
I've wife

fringement of

human

the plea for every infreedom. It is the

eneugh

for a* that.

argument of
slaves. 2

tyrants; it is the creed of

Posthumous Pieces [1799]-

The
*Tb& famous
by
story of

chorus Jolly Beggars,

Speechj House of

Commons
18, 1783]

tea clipper Cutty Sarkt designed Hercules Linton and built in 1869, had the
X I1

[November
toujours de 1'audace. See Spenser, p. aoob,
2

Tarn o' Shanter carved upon her bow and counter. Nannie, with flying locks and scanty shift, was the figurehead.
3

nous faut de 1'audace, encore de 1'audace,

and

note. i26b.

See Fletcher, p. 3130.

See Publilius &yrus, p.

496

SCHILLER

JOHANN CHRISTOPH
FRIEDRICH VON SCHILLER
feel

Strength when life's surges rudest roll, Light when thou else wert blind! Hope, Faith, and Love, st. 5

1759-1805 an army in my fist. Die Rduber (The Robbers) [1781], act II, end

World

history

is

the world's court. 1

Resignation [1786]

The lemonade is weak, like your soul. Kabda und Liebe [1784], act V,
sc.

What one refuses in a minute No eternity will return.

16.

who knows what slumbers


background of the times?

in the
I, sc. i

thou spark from Heav'n immortal, Daughter of Elysium! Drunk with fire, toward Heaven adJoy,

Don

Carlos [1787], act

the idea was childish, but divinely beautiful. IB. 2


suffer in silence.

vancing Goddess, to thy shrine we come. Thy sweet magic brings together

Great souls

Ib.

What
All

stern Custom s'preads afar; mankind knows all men brothers Where thy happy wing-beats are. 1 An die Freude (Ode to Joy)

A moment lived in paradise


Is

not atoned for too dearly by death. Ib. 5


richest

The
The

monarch in the Christian

embrace now all you millions, With one kiss for all the world.
Brothers, high beyond all stars Surely dwells a loving Father.
16.
st.

world; sun in
sets.

my own

dominions never 16. 6


wreathe

Honor
5

womenl

They

and

weave
Heavenly roses into earthly life. Wiirde der Frauen (The
der of

WonZ.

There are three lessons I would write, Three words as with a burning pen,
In tracings of eternal light Upon the hearts of men.

Women)

[1795"],

186

What the inner voice says


[c.

Hope, Faith, and Love

1786],

Will not disappoint the hoping soul. Hope, last stanza [1797]
If

st

Thus
Hope,

grave
faith,

these

lessons

on

thy
shalt

Just look
If

soul

you want to know yourself, how others do it; to understand others, want you
into your

and

love;

and thou

Look

own heart.
Tabulae Votivae [1797]

find

Menschen warden Bruder, dein sanfter Flugel weilt. 2 Translated by THEODORE SPENCER for the Boston Symphony Orchestra, for the performance of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. It was during his student days in Bonn that

Wo

Man

is

created free,

and

is free,

3 Though he be born in chains. Die Worte des Glaubens (The

Word
st.

of the Faithful)

[1797],

Beethoven fastened upon Schiller's poem. The heady sense of liberation in the verses must have appealed to him as they appealed to every German. They were in the spirit of the times, the spirit that had swept Europe and America, and Beethoven belonged to his time. JOHN N. BURK, progiwu notes /or the Boston Symphony
.

Virtue

is

no empty echo.

16.

st.

Weltgeschichte ist das Weltgericht. See Scott, p. sasa, and Daniel Webster, p.
See Rousseau, p. 4$5b, and Bliss, p. 468b.

Orchestra [October

8 i,

1965]

497

SCHILLER
Posterity weaves
tators.

no garlands

for imi-

Appearance should never attain reality, And if nature conquers, then must art
retire.

Wdlensteins Lager (Wallenstein's

Camp)

[1798],

pro-

logue

taire's

To Goethe, when he put VoZMahomet on the stage


[1800]

He who has
Life
is

done his best


all

for his

own
Ib.

time has lived for

times.
is

Life

is

earnest, art
is

gay.
is

Ib.

And
I

only error, death is knowledge.

Cassandra [1802]

Whatever
mitted.

not forbidden

perIb. sc. 6
Ib.

am better than my
this

reputation.
III, sc.

Maria Stuart [1801], act


For

Live and let

live. 1
is

The

peasant
is

also

human

in a

manner of speaking.

Ib. sc. 10

should the singer accompany the king: Both dwell on the heights of mankind.

Man
habit
is

of ordinary things, his nurse.

made

and

Die Jungfrau von Orleans (Joan


of Arc)

[1801], act

I,

sc.

Wattensteins
stein's
sc.
I

Tod (WallenI,

Death) [1798], act


office here,

^ linst stupidity the very gods Themselves contend in vain. 1


16. Ill, 6

have only an
is life

and no
16.

Pain

is

short,

and joy

is

eternal.

opinion.

16. last lines

What
love?

without the radiance of


16.

IV, 12

What

are hopes,

Time

is

man's angel.

what are plans? Die Br'ut von Messina (The


Bride of Messina)
III, sc.

16.

V, 11
Don't

[1803], act

What

is

the short meaning of the


I, sc.

long speech? Piccolomini [1799], act


In thy breast are the
fate.
stars

let

That ornament

your heart depend on things life in a fleeting way!


possesses,
is

of thy
16. II,

He who
lose,

let

him
let

learn

to

He who
pain.

You

fortunate,

him
16.

learn

say

it as

you understand
wine goes
in,

it.

IV, 4

16.

When
things

the

On
strange 16. 12

the mountains there


is

is

freedom!

come

The world

out.

perfect everywhere, Save where man comes with his tor-

The

dictates

of the heart are the


16. Ill,

ment.

16.

IV, 7

voice of fate.

tender yearning, sweet hoping! The golden time of first love! The eye sees the open heaven, The heart is intoxicated with bliss; that the beautiful time of young love

Who

reflects

too

much

will

accomplish
sc. i

little.

Wilhelm
told

Tell [1804], act III,

This feat of Tell, the archer, will be

While yonder mountains stand upon


their base.

Could remain green forever. The Song of the BeU [1799]


*Al$o attributed to Wieland in the GoetheZelter correspondence. Quoted in GOETHE, Faust, prologue [1808], and in SWINBURNE, FeUise [1866], st. 59.

By Heaven! The
1

apple's

cleft

through the core.


struggle in vain. Antichrist, 48

right 16. 3

Against boredom even the gods themselves NIETZSCHE [1844-1900], The

498

SCHILLER

COLMAN

The most
peace
If it

pious

man

can't

stay

in

ANTOINE BOULAY
DE LA

MEURTHE
it is

doesn't please his evil neighbor.

Wilhelm

1761-1840
It is

Tell, act

TV,

$c. 3

worse than a crime,

a blun-

der. 1

MASON LOCKE WEEMS


1759-1825
"George/' said his
father,

On

the execution of the


[1804]

Due d'Enghien

know who
cherry
. . .

"do you
little

killed

that beautiful
in

WILLIAM LISLE BOWLES*


The
cause of

garden?" the sweet face of youth brightened with the

tree

yonder

the

Looking

at his

father with

inexpressible charm of all-conquering truth, he bravely cried out. "I can't tell a lie. I did cut it with my hatchet/' *

God!

1762-1850 Freedom is the cause of Edmund Burke, I 78

ANDREW CHERRY
1762-1812

The

Life of George

Washing-

ton:

Curious Anecdotes, Equally Honorable to Himself

With

Loud

and Exemplary to His Young Countrymen [1800]

The

roar'd the dreadful thunder, rain a deluge show'rd.

The Bay
Till next day,

of Biscay

JOSEPH ROUGET DE LISLE


1760-1836
Allons, enfants de la patrie, Le jour de gloire est arriv6!
.
. .

There she lay, In the Bay of Biscay, O!

16.

GEORGE COLMAN THE YOUNGER


1762-1836
Tell 'em

Aux

armes, citoyens! Formez vos bataillons!

Queen Anne's dead. The Heir-at-Law


at.

[1797],
I, sc. i

Marchons!

March ons!
sillons!

Qu'un

sang

act

impur Abreuve nos

Not

to

be sneezed

Ib. II, i

The

Marseillaise 2

[1792]

Like two single gentlemen rolled into


one.

AUGUST FRIEDRICH FERDINAND VON KOTZEBUE


1761-1819

Lodgings for Single Gentlemen

When taken,
To be well shaken. The Newcastle Apothecary
Miss Bailey! Unfortunate Miss Bailey!

There

is

another and a better world.


Stranger [1798], act
I, sc. i

The
1

Love Laughs at Locksmiths,


act II, song Says he, "I

See George Washington, p. 463 a. 2 Forward, sons of France, the day of glory has come! To arms, citizens! Line up in battalions! Let us march on! And let the impure
. .
.

am

handsome man, but


16.

I'm a gay deceiver."


1

blood [of our enemies] drench our fields. Composed in the garrison at Strasbourg and originally called Chant de guerre de I'arme'e du Rhin, the Marseillaise took its name from the
patriots of Marseilles, in Paris.

C'est pire qu'un crime, c'est une faute. Attributed also to TALLEYRAND and FOUCH! SAINTE-BEXJVE attributes it to DE LA MEURTHE.
2 8

See Simonides,

Fragment

2, p.

7ob.
for
telling

who

first

made

it

known

phrase became what everybody knows.

The

proverbial

499

COLMAN
His heart runs away with his head. Who Wants a Guinea?, act I, sc. i
I

HALL

SAMUEL ROGERS
1763-1855 Think nothing done while aught
mains to do.
re-

had

a soul above buttons.

Sylvester Daggerwood; or, Hay at the Old Market, sc.

New
i

Human
Never
less

Life,

I.

49

Mynheer Vandunck, though he never


was drunk, Sipped brandy and water
John
side.
gaily.

alone than

when

alone.

Ib. I

756

Mynheer Vandunck
Bull,
1

By many

a temple half as old as Time. 2


Italy.

Farewell

or

An

Englishman's

Fire-

Title of play [1803]

Mine be a

cot beside the

hill;

A beehive's hum shall soothe my eai;; A willowy brook that turns a mill,
With many a
Go! you may
fall shall

DOROTHEA JORDAN
1762-1816 "Oh where, and Oh! where is your Highland laddie gone?" "He's gone to fight the French, for King George upon the throne,

8 linger near.

Wish, st
folly;

call it

madness,

You

not chase iny gloom away! There's such a charm in melancholy I would not if I could be gay.
shall

And

it's

Oh!

in

my

heart,

how

wish
It

To
doesn't
for

[1814],
signify

st.

him

safe at

home!"
Bells of Scotland

much

whom

one

The Blue

JOSEPH FOUCHfi
1763-1820

one is sure to find next morning that it was someone else. Table Talk
marries,

Ward

has no heart, they say, but


it;

Death

is

an eternal

2
sleep.

deny

He has
it.

a heart,

and

Inscription placed by his orders

gets his speeches

on cemetery

by Epigram

gates [1794]

JOHANN PAUL FRIEDRICH RICHTER


[JEAN PAUL]
1763-1825 Weltschmerz.3
Selena, oder Vber die Unsterblichkeit [or Above Immortality],

JOHANN GOTTFRIED
SEUME
1763-1810

You can
is

relax peacefully
fear of

wherever there

singing

Without

what

is

thought in the
is

land;

No man
ing,

is

robbed where there

sing-

Providence has given to the French the empire of the land; to the English that of the sea; to the Germans that of the air!

For scoundrels have no songs. Songs [1804], first strophe

ROBERT HALL
1764-1831
things by their right names. Glass of brandy and water! That is the current but not the appropriate 1 See Cicero, p. uib. See John William Burgon, p. 6751*.
.

From CARLYLE,
Miscellaneous
[2827]

Critical

and
Call
. .

Essays.

Richter

!The
British
a
8

origin

of the

supposed type of

the

character.

See Catullus, p. 1140. Literally, world pain.

fl

See Yeats, p.

500

HALL
name: ask
distilled

DISRAELI

for a glass of liquid fire

and

damnation.

ROBERT GOODLOE HARPER


1765-1825
Millions for defense, cent for tribute. 1

From OLINTHUS GREGORY, Brief Memoir of the Life of Hdl

but not one

GASTON PIERRE MARC, DUG DE LfVIS


1764-1830
Noblesse oblige. 1

Toast at banquet for John Marshall [June 18, 1798]

Maxims and

MARY LAMB
Reflections [1808]

1765-1847

THOMAS MORTON
1764-1838

Thou straggler into loving arms, Young climber-up of knees.

A Child, st. 3

Push on

keep moving.

Cure for the Heartache


[1797], act II, sc.
i

SIR

JAMES MACKINTOSH
1765-1832
immortalizes knowledge Vindiciae Gallicae [1791]
faithful to their sysIb.

Approbation from
is

Sir

Hubert Stanley
Ib.
'

praise indeed.'

V,

Diffused
itself.

What
will

will Mrs. Grundy say? Mrs. Grundy think? 2

What
I, sc. i

The Commons,
inactivity.

Speed the Plow [1798], act

tem, remained in a wise and masterly

ANN RADCLIFFE
1764-1823
Fate
sits

The
ness.

frivolous

work of polished

idle-

on these dark battlements and

Dissertation

And

frowns, as the portal opens to receive me, voice in hollow murmurs through the courts Tells of a nameless deed. 3

on Ethical Philosophy [1830]. Remarks on

Thomas

jBroivn

Disciplined inaction. History of the Revolution in England in 1688 [1834], ch. 7

The

Mysteries of Udolpho
[1794], motto

ISAAC D'ISRAELI
1766-1848

CATHERINE MARIA FANSHAWE


1765-1834

Whatever
risks

is

felicitously

expressed

Twas

whisper'd in heaven, 'twas mut-

ter'd in hell,

being worse expressed: it is a wretched taste to be gratified with mediocrity when the excellent lies before
us.

And echo
fell;

caught faintly the sound as

it

Curiosities of Literature [1834].

On
And

the confines of earth 'twas permitted to rest, the depths of the ocean its presence confessed.

On

Quotation

Enigma: The Letter


a
3

See Sophocles, p. 8ia, and Euripides, p. 850. See Spencer, p. 7o6a, and Locker- Ham pson, See Shakespeare, Macbeth IV,
i,

p. 7103.
8

49, p. 2850.

In 1797 a secret agent from Talleyrand told Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, Minister to the French Republic, that the American Commissioners in Paris to protest French attacks on U.S. shipping would be received only if they paid a $50,000 bribe and made a large loan to the French government. Pinckney 's was: reply "Not a sixpence, sir." Later, Harper's remark was attributed to him.
'

501

MALTHUS

ADAMS
There's nae sorrow there, John, There's neither cauld nor care, John, The day is aye fair, In the land o' the leal.
Life

THOMAS ROBERT MALTHUS


1766-1834
Population,

when

unchecked,

in

creases in a geometrical ratio. Subsistence increases only in an arithmetical


slight acquaintance with num bers will show the immensity of the first power in comparison of the second. An Essay on the Principle of Population [1798]
ratio.

and Songs. The Lani


o'

the Lea

MADAME DE STAfiL [GERMAINE, BARONNE DE STAfiL-HOLSTEIN]


Love woman's
man's. 1
is

the

ERNST
Absolutism
tion.

F.

MUNSTERi
by
assassina-

life,

1766-1817 whole history of it is but an episode in

1766-1839
tempered

De
ion; a

I'lnfluence des Passions [1796]

A man

Description of the Russian Constitution

must know how to defy opinwoman how to submit to it.


Delphine
[1802]
is

The

sight of such a

monument

like

CAROLINA, BARONESS

NAIRNE

a continuous and stationary music. 2 Corinne [1807], bk. IV, ch.

1766-1845 Will ye no come back again? Better lo'ed ye canna be, Will ye no come back again?
Life Charlie's uted to

To

tolerant. 8
I

understand everything makes one 16. XVIII, 5

would gladly give half of the wit


I

and Songs

Now Awa*.

[1869].

Bonnie
[1770-

with which

am

credited for half of the

Also attrib-

beauty you possess.


Letter to

JAMES HOGG

Madame

Recamier

Charlie

is

my darling,

the young Cheva-

JOHN QUINCY ADAMS


1767-1848

lier.

Ib. Charlie Is

My

Darling (also

Think

attributed to

Hogg)

of your forefathers!
4

Think

of

your posterity!

WI'

a hundred pipers an' a', an* a', We'll up an' gie them a blaw, a blaw, a hundred pipers an' a', an' a'.

Wf

Speech at Plymouth [December 22, 1802]


In charity to all mankind, bearing no malice or ill-will to any human being, and even compassionating those who
1

Ib.

The Hundred
be wi' you
Ib.

Pipers

Gude

nicht,

and

joy

a'.

Gude Nicht
o'

A penniless lass wi'


Ib.

c'est

a lang pedigree.

L'amour est 1'histoire de la vie des femmes, un episode dans celle des homraes.
ties indulgent.

2 3

The Laird

See Goethe, p. 4783.

Cockpen

Tout comprendre rend


Comprendre
forgive].
c'est

Attributed to

Madame de

Stael

are similar

I'm wearin' awa' To the land o' the


16.
1

phrases:
leal.

stand
o'

is to

pardonner [To underTout comprendre c'est tout


is

The Land
St.

the Leal

pardonner [To know everything


everything].
4

to

forgive

Hanoverian envoy at

Petersburg.

Et maiores vestros et posteros cogitate. TACITUS [c. A.D. 55-117], Agricola 32, a6

502

ADAMS
hold in bondage their fellow men, not 1 knowing what they do. Letter to A. Bronson

ARNDT
selves,

injustice of their

have a right to complain of the government. Veto of the Bank Bill


\July 10, 1832]

[71^30,1838]

My wants are many, and, if told, Would muster many a score; And were each wish a mint of gold, I still should long for more.
The Wants of Man
is

There are no necessary


ernment.
abuses.
If
Its
it

evils in gov-

evils

exist

only

in

its

[1841],
I

st. i

This
tent.

the last of earth!

am

con-

Last words [February 21, 1848]

would confine itself to equal protection, and, as Heaven does its rains, shower its favors alike on the high and the low, the rich and the poor, it would be an unqualified blessing.

Ib.

ANDREW JACKSON2
1767-1845

One man with


jority.

courage makes a maSaying

The

individual

who

refuses to defend

his rights

when

called

by

his

Govern-

FRANCOIS REN
1768-1848

ment, deserves to be a slave, and must be punished as an enemy of his country and friend to her foe. Proclamation to the people of Louisiana from Mobile [September 21, 1814]

CHATEAUBRIAND

DE

[On his conversion to Christianity] I 1 wept and I believed. Le Genie du Christianisme [1802]
Achilles exists only through Homer. art of writing from this
will probably take

The brave man


duty,
is

inattentive

to

his

worth little more to his country, than the coward who deserts her in the hour of danger. To troops "who had abandoned

Take away the world, and you


its glory.

away

Les Natchez [1826], preface

New
served!

their lines during the battle of

Orleans [January
it

8,

1815]
pre-

Our Federal Union!

must be

ERNST MORITZ ARNDT


1769-1860

Toast at Jefferson Birthday


Celebration
[i

83 o]
to

The God who made Wanted no slaves.

iron

grow

Every

man

is

equally
.
. .

entitled

Vaterlandslied [1812]

protection by law; but when the laws undertake to add artificial distinctions, to grant titles, gratuities, and
exclusive privileges, to richer and the potent

What

is

Wherever

the German Fatherland? the German tongue


1st

is

make the rich more powerful,


of society the and laborers

heard.

Was

Des Deutschen Voterland [1813]

the

humble members

farmers,

who

mechanics, have neither the time nor the


like favors to

The Rhine: Germany's

river,

but not

means of securing
3

them-

Abraham Lincoln, p. 64ob. He was the most American of Americans

Germany's border. Title of a


1

work [181 3]

an embodied Declaration of Independence the Fourth of July incarnate, JAMES PARTON, Life of Andrew Jackson [1859]

J'ai pleure* et j'ai

cm.
795,

See

Pindar,

p.

and

Alexander

the

Great, p. iosa.

53

NAPOLEON

NAPOLEON I [NAPOLEON BONAPARTE]


1769-1821
Soldiers,

God's help and their valor,


to drive the
tier.

hope soon

enemy beyond the fronAt Paris [January 23, 1814]

The
cast.

bullet that will kill

me

is

not yet

from the summit of yonder


forty

pyramids

centuries

look

down

At Montereau [February

17, 1814]

upon you.
In Egypt
[July 21, 1798]

the world was made in six days. You can ask me for anything you like, except time.

Go,

sir,

gallop,

and don't forget that

Allied Powers having proclaimed that the Emperor Napoleon is the sole obstacle to the re-establishment of

The

To an

aide [1803].

From R. M. Corsican The JOHNSTON,


is

faithful to his peace in Europe, he, oath, declares that he is ready to descend from the throne, to quit France, and even to relinquish life, for the good

A form

of government that

not the

of his country. Act of Abdication [April 4, 1814]

result of a long sequence of shared ex-

periences, efforts, never take root.

and endeavors can

Unite for the public safety, if you would remain an independent nation. Proclamation to the French

From J. CHRISTOPHER HEROLD, The Mind of Napo[1803]

People [June 22, 1815]

Wherever wood can swim,

there

leon [1955]

am
is

sure to find this flag of England.

From
but a

the sublime to the ridiculous


1

AtRochefort

[July 1815]

step.

Whatever
spot? Well,

shall

we do

in that remote

To the Abbe du Pradt, on the return from Russia [1812], referring to the retreat from
Moscow
You
write to
is

Work is

we will write our memoirs. the scythe of time. On board H. M. S. Bellerophon

me

that

it's

impossible;

[August 1815] [Of his relations with the Empress


Josephine] I generally

the word

not French. Letter to General Lemarois


[July 9, 1813]

On

St.

had to give in. Helena [May 19, 1816]

the throne? with gilded and covered I alone am the state 2 resentative of the people. done wrong you should
is

What

a bit of
velvet.

wood
I

My

maxim

was, la carriere est ou-

am
had
re-

verte aux talents, without distinction of birth or fortune. 1


Ib.

here the rep-

[March

3,

1817]

Even

if I

not have

in public people wash proached 3 their dirty linen at home. France has more need of me than I of France.

me

marked, and no one can claim a moment of life beyond what

Our hour

is

fate has predestined.

To Dr.

Arrcott [April 1821}

To
France
is

the Senate [1814]


I

Two

o'clock in the

morning
2

courage:

invaded; I am leaving to take command of my troops, and, with

mean unprepared

courage.

*Du
The

sublime au ridicule il n'y a qu'un pas, saying has been attributed also to Talley1 2

[December 4, 5, 1815] From LAS CASES, Memorial de SteHttene [1823]


See Carlyle, p. 5750. Le courage de 1'improviste. The three o'clock in the morning courage, which Bonaparte thought was the rarest.

rand. See Paine, p. 467b. 2 See Louis XIV, p. 378a. * II faut laver son linge sale en famille [One

should wash one's dirty linen Saying current since about if 20

at

home].

THOREAU, Walden

[1854], ch. 4,

Sounds

See F. Scott Fitzgerald, p. iO36b.

504

NAPOLEON

KRYLOV

Madame Montholon having inquired what troops he considered the best, "Those which are victorious, Madame," replied the Emperor. From BOURRIENNE, Memoirs
[1829]

We've
us

notes,

we've instruments; do

tell

how to sit!

The

enough.

nightingale replies: To sit is not Fables, The Quartet


seats,

Then change your


too:

and

fiddles

silk

stocking filled with mud. Description of Talleyrand; attributed by SAINTE-BEUVE


its

For chamber music's not for you!


Ib.

When

An army marches on

stomach. Attributed

partners can't agree Their business fares disastrously. Ib. Svtan, Pike and Crab

Every French soldier carries a mar1 shal's baton in his knapsack.


Attributed
2 Perfidious Albion.

day, the pike, the crab, the swan Set out to drag a truck along the road, All three together harnessed to the
load.

One

16.
difficult

Attributed
It

was not that their load was


to

Chief of the

Army

3
.

Last 'words

move; But upward strained the swan, toward

IVAN KRYLOV
1769-1844

The

The tricksome little monkey, The goat with tangled hair, The donkey, And the clumsy-fingered bear

And
I

the skies above, crab kept stepping back, the pike was for the pond. which was right or wrong, I neither

onlv

know nor care: know the truck's still

there.
Ib.

great
start;

quartet

had

planned

to

You
Your

They got the

think I've got the time to count your crimes, you pup?

notes, viola, fiddles, bass,


tree,

And

sat

beneath a lime

on the

you up!

to eat guilt consists in this: I want l Ib. Wolf and

Lamb

grass,

To charm

creation with their art. Fables [1809],* The Quartet

The weak
Is

against the strong, always in the wrong.

Ib.

It

can't go right like that; know how to sit!

you don't
Ib.

What
Why,
Than

good from you yourselves has come?


yes,

We'll play to quite another tune And make the hills and forest dance
for glee.
Ib.

our ancestors in Rome. Ib. Geese


old
cat
there's

that

no one

I'm sure we'll

make

stronger.
it

Ib.

Mouse and Rat

go
Ib.

By
1

sitting in a row.

And why not


tried that

raise the lid?

He

never
itself.

soldat francais porte dans sa giberne le biton de marshal de France. 2 L'Angleterre, ahl la perfide Angleterre.

Tout

way! This was a box that opened of


Ib.

A Little Box

Sermon JACQUES BENIGNE BOSSUET [1627-1704],


sur la Circoncision and it beNapoleon used the phrase in 1803, came widespread during the French Revolution.

Heaven save you from a

foolish friend;

The

too officious fool


foe.

worse than any Ib. Hermit and Bear


is
I,

Tete d'armee. * Translated by SIR BERNARD PARES.

See

La

Fontaine, Bk,

Fable 10, p.

55

WELLINGTON

CANNING

DUKE OF WELLINGTON
1769-1852

ARTHUR WELLESLEY,

LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN


1770-1827
Art!

Nothing except a battle lost can be half so melancholy as a battle won. Dispatch [1815]
used to say of him [Napoleon] that his presence on the field made the difference of forty thousand men. [November 2, 1831] From STANHOPE, Notes of Conversations with the Duke of Wellington
I

Who

comprehends her? With


concerning
this

whom

can one consult

great goddess?

Letter to Bettina von

Arnim

The world

is

[August ii, 1810] a king, and, like a king,

desires flattery in return for favor; but true art is selfish and perverse it will

[I""'

not submit to the mold of flattery. Conversations [March

1820]

The
fear. 1

only thing
16.

am

afraid
,

of
1

is

[November 3
is

83 1 ]

GEORGE CANNING
1770-1827

Ours [our aimy]

scum of the earth the earth.

composed of the the mere scum of


Ib.

When
No

our perils are past, shall our

My

rule always

was to do the

gratitude sleep? here's to the pilot that weathered the storm.

busi-

ness of the day in the day. 16. [November 2, 1835]


I

Song

for the Inauguration of the Pitt Club

[May

25, 1802]

give thee sixpence!

will

see thee

They wanted

this iron fist to

com-

mand them.
[November 8, 1840]; of troops sent by Wellington to the Canadian frontier in the
war with America
Ib.

damned first. The Anti-Jacobin, no. 11 [1797]. The Friend of Humanity and
the Knife-Grinder,
I
st.

There is no mistake; there has been no mistake; and there shall be no mistake.

think of those companions true studied with me at the U-niversity of Gottingen.

Who

Ib. no.

30 [1798]. The Rovers,


song,
st.

Wellingtoniana [1832]

A steady patriot
The
own.
1

of the world alone,

don't care a twopenny damn what becomes of the ashes of Napoleon


I

friend of every
16.

country but his

Buonaparte.

Attributed

no 36 [1798].
Morality,
I.

New
113

The

battle of
fields

Waterloo was won on


of Eton.

And

the playing

finds,

with keen, discriminating

From

PHASER,

Words on Wellington [2889]

sight,

Black's

not so black

nor white so
16.1.199

very white.

Publish and be damned.


Attributed;

Give
his mistress

me
foe,
I

the avowed, erect, and manly

when
to

threatened
diary
1

publish

her

Firm
1

can meet, perhaps return the

and

his letters

blow;
This refers to the Jacobin. See Overbury, p. 3150, and note.

See Montaigne, p. i8gb, and note-

506

CANNING
all plagues, good Heaven, thy wrath can send, Save, save, oh save me from the candid

HOGG
experience and history teach is people and governments never have learned anything from history, or acted on principles deduced
this

But of

What

that

friend! *

The

Anti-Jacobin, no. 36. New Morality, I. 207

from it
Philosophy of History [1832]^
introduction

In matters of

commerce the

fault of the

Amid

Dutch
Is

the pressure of great events, a

offering too little

and asking too

general principle gives

no

help.

Ib.

much.
Dispatch to Sir Charles Bagot, British Minister at The Hague
[January 31, 1826]
I called the New World into existence to redress the balance of the Old.

To him who
rationally,
tual.

looks

upon the world


its

the world in

turn presents
is

a rational aspect.

The

relation

muIb.

The

history of the world is nqne other than the progress of the consciousness of freedom. 16.
affirm absolutely that nothin the world has been accoming great Ib. plished without passion.

The

King's Message [December 12, 1826]

We

may

DAVID EVERETT
1770-1813 You'd scarce expect one of my age To speak in public on the stage; And if I chance to fall below Demosthenes or Cicero, Don't view me with a critic's eye, But pass my imperfections by. Large streams from little fountains
flow,

It

is

easier to discover a deficiency in

individuals, value.

in states, and in Providence, than to see their real import and


Ib.
it

Life has a value only when something valuable as its object.

has
16.

Serious occupation is labor that has reference to some want.


Ib. pt.
I,

sec. 2, ch. i

Tall oaks from


,

acorns grow. Written for a school declamation for Ephraim H. Farrar,


little

matter of perfect indifference where a thing originated; the only quesIt is a

tion

is:

"Is it true in

and

for itself?"

aged seven,

New

Ipswich,

New

16.111,3,2

Hampshire [1791]

FRIEDRICH HEGEL
1770-1831

GEORG WILHELM
is

The Few assume to be the deputies, but they are often only the despoilers of the Many. 16. IV, 3, 3

JAMES HOGG*
that

What
which
is

reasonable
is

is

1770-1835
We'll We'll
o'er the water, we'll o'er the sea, o'er the water to Charlie;

real;

real

reasonable.

Philosophy of Right [1821]


Defend me from my myself from my enemies.
1

Come
And
1

weal,

come woe,

we'll gather

and

friends;

can defend Attributed to MartI

chal Villars,
2

taking leave of Louis XIV lofty oak from a small acorn grows. LEWIS DUNCOMBE [1711-1730], De Minimis

when

live

and die wf Charlie.


O'er the Water to Charlie

The

Maxima
See

(translation)
p. 1513.

Translated by J. SIBREE. Quoted by G. B, Shaw in The Revolutionists Handbook.


fl

Anonymous,

The

Ettrick Shepherd.

507

HOGG

WORDSWORTH
Save
in

For Kilmeny had been she knew no


where,

the

way of

kindness,

is

a a

wretch
seen

And Kilmeny had


not declare.

what she

coulc

Whom

'twere gross flattery to

name

Kilmeny , L 38

coward.

Love is like a dizziness, It winna let a poor body

The Honeymoon

[1805], aci

II,

sc. i

Gang about his


Love

bizziness.
i

Is Like a Dizziness, st

WORDSWORTH*
PIERRE JACQUES
1770-1850

WILLIAM

COUNT CAMBRONNE
1770-1842 The Guards die, but never surrender. 1

fiTIENNE,

And
And

homeless near a thousand homes


stood,

Attributed

near a thousand tables pined and wanted food. Guilt and Sorrow [written 1791-

*794]>

&

II,

st 41

JOSEPH HOPKINSON
1770-1842 Hail, Columbia! happy land!
Hail, ye heroes! heaven-born band! fought and bled in Freedom's 2 cause. Hail, Columbia, st i

A simple child,
That
lightly

And

feels its life in

What

breath, every limb, should it know of death?

draws

its

Who

We Are
Such
stores
as

Seven [1798], st

Reader! had you in your


silent

mind
can

Let independence be our boast, Ever mindful what it cost; Ever grateful for the prize, Let its altar reach the skies.

thought
find

16.

O gentle Reader! you A tale in everything.


In
that

bring,

would

Simon Lee
sweet

[1798],

st.

WILLIAM ROBERT SPENCER


1770-1834 Oh! where does faithful GSlert roam,

mood when

pleasant

thoughts Bring sad thoughts to the mind. Lines Written in Early

Spring
rt- 1

The
So

[1798],

flow'r of all his race?

And
home,
st.

A lion in the chase!

true, so brave; a

lamb

at

my faith, that every flower Ib. st 3 Enjoys the air it breathes.


'tis

Beth-G&ert,

Have
4

not reason to lament


of

What man has made


Nor
less I

man?

2
Ib.

JOHN TOBIN
1770-1804

st 6

The man that woman,


1

Which
hand upon
a

lays his

that there are Powers of themselves our minds imthis

deem

press;

That we can feed


phrase, the

mind

of ours

which was invented by Rougemont


battle

La Garde meurt, mais ne se rend pas. Cambronne denied having said this
of

In a wise passiveness. Expostulation

and Reply

[1798],

after

Waterloo, in the Indtpendant. FOURNEER, L'Esprit dans I'Histoire [1857]

st 6
Coleridge said to Wordsworth, "Since Milton, of no poet with so many felicities and unforgettable lines and stanzas as you."
I
1

*The

music,

generally attributed

to

was Washington's inaugural march. Hopkinson supplied verses at a singer's request, and the song won instant acclaim.
Phile,

Philip

know

HENRY NELSON
2

COLERIDGE, See Burns, p. 4920.

Memoir

[1847]

508

WORDSWORTH
Up!
up! my books;
up!
looks;
friend,

and quit your

Or surely you'll grow


Up!

double:

To Of
clear

I have learned look on nature, not as in the hour

my

friend,

and

your

thoughtless oftentimes

youth;

but

hearing

Why all this toil and trouble?


The Tables Turned
[1798],
st. i

The still, sad music of humanity, Nor harsh nor grating, though of ample
power

Come forth

into the light of things, Let Nature be your teacher.


Ib.
st.

To

chasten and subdue.

And

A
4

presence that disturbs


joy

me

have felt with the

impulse from a vernal teach you more of man, Of moral evil and of good, Than all the sages can. 1

One

wood

Of elevated thoughts; a sense sublime Of something far more deeply interfused,

May

Whose
Ib.
st.

dwelling

is

the light of setting

suns,

These hedgerows, hardly hedgerows,


tle lines

lit-

And

the round ocean and the living


air,

Of

sportive

wood run wild. Lines Composed a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey [1798],

And

the blue sky,

and

in the

mind of

man;

motion and a
thought,

spirit,

that impels

All thinking things, all objects of all

Sensations sweet, Felt in the blood, and felt along the heart. Ib. Z. 27

And

rolls

through all things. Lines Composed a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey, L 88

That best portion of a good man's life, His little, nameless, unremembered acts Ib. Z. 33 Of kindness and of love.
Blessed mood, In which the burthen of the mystery, In which the heavy and the weary weight Of all this unintelligible world,
Is

Of

All the mighty world eye and ear, both what they half
create,

And what
The

perceive.

Ib.

Z.

105

Knowing that Nature never did betray Ib. I 122 heart that loved her.
Full twenty times was Peter feared, For once that Peter was respected.

lightened.

Ib.

Z.

41

While with an eye made


power

quiet by the

Of harmony, and

We

the deep power of joy see into the life of things.


Ib.l.

Peter Bell [written 1798], pt.


st.

I,

47
tall

The sounding cataract


Haunted me
rock,
like

A primrose by a river's brim A yellow primrose was to him,


And
it

passion;

the

was nothing more.

Ib.

st.

12

The

The

mountain, and the deep and gloomy wood, Their colors and their forms, were then

soft blue sky did never melt Into his heart; he never felt The witchery of the soft blue sky!

Ib.

st.

15

tome
An
appetite; a feeling and a love, That had no need of a remoter charm,

Fair seedtime

had

my

soul,

and

grew

up
Fostered alike by beauty and by fear. The Prelude \written 17991805], bk.
1

By thoughts
iSee
St.

supplied, nor
eye.

any

interest
Z.

Unborrowed from the

Ib.

76

Bernard, p. 1543, and Shakespeare, pp. 2475 and S4gb.

I,

Z.

301

See Shelley, p. 5683.

509

WOKDSWORTH
With what
strange utterance did the
ear!

One

of those heavenly days that cannot

loud dry wind Blow through my not a sky

die.

the sky seemed

What

Nutting [1799], Z. 3 fond and wayward thoughts will

Of

earth

and

with

what
bk.
I,

slide

motion
Z.

moved the clouds! The Prelude,


Dust
as

Into a lover's head! "O mercy!" to myself


"If

I cried,

337

Lucy should be dead!"


Strange Fits of Passion Have I

we

are,

the immortal spirit


is

grows Like harmony in music; there


Inscrutable
ciles

Known
a dark recon-

[1799],^.

workmanship

that

Discordant elements, makes them cling


together In one society.
Ib.
I.

She dwelt among the untrodden ways Beside the springs of Dove, A maid whom there were none to
praise

And very few to

love. 1

The grim shape


Towered up between me and the and still,
For so
it

A violet by a
stars,
its

mossy stone Half hidden from the eye!


Fair as a star,

seemed, with purpose of


like

when only one

Is

own

shining in the sky.


lived

And measured motion


thing, Strode after

a
Ib.

living

She

unknown, and few could

know
me.

L 381

When
But she
is

Lucy ceased to be;

Where
Of Newton
face,

the statue stood with his prism and silent

The

in her grave, and, oh, difference to me!

The marble
Voyaging

index of a mind forever

Lucy: She Dwelt Among the Untrodden Ways


[1799]

through strange seas of Ib. Ill, I 61 thought, alone. When from our better selves we have
too long Been parted by the hurrying world, and droop, Sick of its business, of its pleasures
tired,

Three

years

she

grew

in

sun

and

shower,
said, "A lovelier flower earth was never sown; This Child I to myself will take;

Then Nature

On

She

shall

A Lady of my own."

be mine, and

I will

make

How

gracious,

how
all

Lucy: Three Years She


benign,
Ib.
is

Grew

in

Solitude.
I.

Sun and Shower


I

[1799],

st. i

IV,

354

Brothers

traveled

among unknown men,

In honor, as in one community, Scholars and gentlemen.


Ib. IX,
Bliss
Z.

227

was it in that dawn to be alive, But to be young was very heaven! *


16. XT,
Z.

In lands beyond the sea; Nor England! did I know till then What love I bore to thee. I Traveled Among Unknown

Men

[1799],
ways

st. i

108

There

is

He lived amidst th untrodden To Rydal Lake that lead; A bard whom there were none
f

One The

great society alone on earth:

And

to praise,

very few to read.

noble Living and the noble Dead. Ib. XI, I. 393

Unread his works his "Milk White Doe" With dust is dark and dim; It's still in Longmans' shop, and oh!

The

1 Also in French Revolution as It Appears to Enthusiasts [ 1804].

difference to himl

Parody by HARTLEY COLERIDGE


[1796-1849]

510

WORDSWORTH

A slumber did my spirit seal;


had no human fears: She seemed a thing that could not
I

I have said that poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings: it

feel

The

touch of earthly years.

its origin from lected in tranquillity.

takes

emotion

recol-

Lyrical Ballads, preface

No

motion has she now, no force; She neither hears nor sees; Rolled round in earth's diurnal course, With rocks, and stones, and trees. A Slumber Did My Spirit Seal

Something between a hindrance and a Michael [1800], I. 189 help.


Drink, pretty creature, drink!

The Pet Lamb

[1800],

st. i

May no

rude hand deface


forlorn hie jacet!

it,

A fingering slave,
One that would peep and Upon his mother's grave.
botanize

And

its

Ellen Irwin [1800],

st.

Poet's Epitaph [1799],

She gave
st.

me eyes,
cares

she gave

me

ears;

And humble

and

delicate fears;

A reasoning, self-sufficing thing,


An
intellectual All-in-all!
16.
st.

A heart, the fountain of sweet tears;


And
8
love,

and thought, and


I

joy.
st.

The Sparrows' Nest

[1801],

And you must

love him, ere to

you
st.

He

will

seem worthy of your

love.

My heart leaps up when A rainbow in the sky:


11

behold

16.

The
The

harvest of a quiet eye.

16.

st.

13

So was it when my life began; So is it now I am a man; So be it when I shall grow old.

Beside a

sweetest thing that ever grew human door.

Lucy Gray [1799],

st.

And
That

sings a solitary song whistles in the wind. 16.


st.

Or let me die! The Child is father of the Man; * And I could wish my days to be Bound each to each by natural piety. My Heart Leaps Up When,
Sweet childish days, that were
as

16

Behold [1802]
long

so much So much And such impetuous blood.

youth to of earth

whom
Ruth

was given
of heaven,
st.

As twenty days are now.

To

a Butterfly [1802]. pt. II,

Fve Watched You


21

Now

a Full

[1799],

Half-Hour,

st.

the breath and finer spirit Poetry of all knowledge; it is the impassioned expression which is in the countenance
is

Pleasures newly found are sweet

When they lie about our feet.


To the Small Celandine
I

[1802],
st. i

of all Science.

Lyrical Ballads [2nd ed., 1800], preface

thought of Chatterton, the marvelous


boy,
his sleepless soul that perished in
pride;

In spite of difference of soil and climate, of language and manners, of laws and customs in spite of things silently gone out of mind, and things violently destroyed, the Poet binds together by passion and knowledge the
vast

The

Of him who walked in glory and in joy Following his plow, along the mountainside:

empire of

human

We
1

By our own
ness;

society, as it

is

spirits are we deified: Poets in our youth begin in glad-

spread over the whole earth, and over all time. 16.

See Milton, p. 348b.

5 11

WORDSWORTH
But thereof come in the end despond1 ency and madness. Resolution and Independence
[1802],
st.

Once

did she hold the gorgeous east in the safeguard of the west. the Extinction of the Venetian Republic [1802],
Z.

fee:

And was

On

That heareth not the loud winds when


they
all.

call;
all

And, when she took unto herself a


together,
if it

And moveth

move

at

mate,

Ib.st.ii
phrase,

She must espouse the everlasting

sea.

Choice word and measured above the reach

Ib.

I 7

Men
Of

are we, and must grieve when


is

Of

ordinary

men.

Ib.

st 14

And mighty

poets in their misery dead. Ib'. st- 17

even the shade that which once was great,


away.

passed
I.

Ib.

11

Earth has not anything to show more


fair:

Dull would he be of soul

who

could

Thy And

Thou hast great allies; friends are exultations, agonies,


love,

and man's

unconquerable

pass

by
its

mind.
majesty.

sight so touching in

To

Toussaint UOuverture
[1802],
Z.

Composed Upon Westminster Bridge [September 3, 1802], Z. i Ne'er saw I, never felt, a calm so deep!

11

The
Dear

river glideth at his

own

God!
asleep;
all

the

very

sweet will; houses seem


is

Milton! thou should'st be living at this hour: England hath need of thee; she is a fen

Of stagnant
lying Ib. I 11
still!

waters.

And

that mighty heart

London

[1802],

Z.

Thy
Thou

soul was like a


apart;

star,

and dwelt

Plain living

and high thinking are no


of the

more:

hadst a voice whose sound was

The homely beauty


Is

good old

like the sea:

cause gone; our peace, our fearful innocence,

Pure as the naked heavens, majestic,


free,

So didst thou

travel

on

life's

common
Ib.
Z.

And

pure religion breathing household


laws,

way, In cheerful godliness.

Written in London
It
is

[September 1802] a beauteous evening, calm and


free,

We must be free or

The

holy time is quiet as a nun Breathless with adoration. It Is ft Beauteous Evening


[1802],
Z.

die, who speak the tongue That Shakespeare spake; the faith and morals hold Which Milton held.

It Is

Not To Be Thought Of
[1802],
Z.

11

Thou

liest in

Abraham's bosom

all

the

year;

And

worship'st at the Temple's inner


shrine,

Thou unassuming commonplace Of Nature. To the Same Flower [1802],


Oft on the dappled turf at ease I sit, and play with similes, Loose types of things through
grees.

st. i

God being
not.
1

with thee

when we know
Ib.
Z.

it

12

all

de-

See Robert Lowell, p. 10750.

16.

st.

512

WORDSWORTH

And

stepping westward seemed to be

Whither

is

fled
it

A kind of heavenly destiny.


Stepping Westward [1803],
st.

the visionary gleam?

Where
2

is

now, the glory and the


(Intimations of Immortality, st.

dream?

Ode

And

Old, unhappy, battles long ago.

far-off things,
st.

The

Solitary

Reaper [1803],

Our

birth

is

but a sleep and a forget-

The music in my heart I bore Long after it was heard no more.


Ib.
st.

The
4

ting: soul that rises with us, our life's


star,

The good

old rule

Sufficeth them, the simple plan, That they should take, who have the

Hath had elsewhere its setting, And cometh from afar: Not in entire forgetfulness,

And not in
But
trailing

utter nakedness,

And

power, they should keep who can. Rob Roy's Grave [1803],
trees.

clouds
is

of

glory

do we

st.

come From God, who


Heaven
lies

our home:

brotherhood of venerable

Sonnet Composed at

Castle [1803], I 6

about us in our infancy! * Shades of the prison-house begin to


close

O for Who

Upon
The
east

the growing boy.

Ib. st. 5

a single hour of that Dundee on that day the word of onset

youth,

who

daily farther

from the
priest,

gave!

In the Pass of Killicranky [1803], I 11

Must travel, still is Nature's And by the vision splendid

There was a time when meadow, grove, and stream, The earth, and every common sight, To me did seem
Appareled in
celestial light,

Is on his way attended; At length the man perceives

it

die

And
As

away, fade into the light of


day.

common
Ib.

The
It

glory

and

the
as
it

freshness

of

if

his

whole vocation
Ib.
st.

dream. is not now


yore

Were
hath been
of

endless imitation.

Turn wheresoe'er I may, By night or day, The things which I have seen see no more.

O joy!
Is
I

that in our embers something that doth live,


so'

now

can

That nature yet remembers

What was
High

fugitive!

Ib. st. 9

Ode

(Intimations of Immortality

from Recollections of Early Childhood*) [1803-1806], st. i

instincts before which our mortal nature Did tremble like a guilty thing surprised.

The Rainbow comes and And lovely is the Rose. The


sunshine
is

16.

goes,
Ib.
st.

Truths that wake,

a glorious birth;

To perish

never.

Ib.

But yet I know, where'er I go, That there hath passed away a glory from the earth. 16.
Immortality is the high water mark which the intellect has reached in this
age.
1

Though inland far we be, Our souls have sight of that immortal
sea

The Ode on

Which brought us hither.


1

16.

EMERSON, English Traits [1856]

See Lowell, p.

6ga.

5*3

WORDSWORTH
Though nothing can
hour
bring back the

b
all

When

at

once

A host, of golden daffodils.


I

saw a crowd,
as a

Of

splendor in the grass, of glory in the


flower.

Wandered Lonely

Cloud
st. i

Ode
In
that

Im(Intimations of st. 10 mortality),


the philosophic
16.

[1804],

Continuous

as the stars that shine

And

twinkle on the milky way.


16.
st.

years

bring

mind.

The

clouds that gather round the setting sun take a sober coloring from an eye
o'er

at a glance, Tossing their heads in sprightly dance.


16.

Ten thousand saw I

Do

A poet could not but be gay,


In such a jocund company.
16.
st.

That hath kept watch


tality;

man's mor-

Another race hath been, and other palms are won. Thanks to the human heart by which

That inward eye

Which

is

the

bliss

of solitude.
16. st

4
i i

we live,
Thanks
to
its

tenderness,

its

joys,

and

Stern Daughter of the Voice of God! Ode to Duty [1805], st.

fears,

To me

the meanest flower that blows


lie

To

A light to guide, a rod check the erring, and reprove.


16.

can give

Thoughts that do often


tears.

too deep for 16. st. 11

Me

this

I feel

unchartered freedom tires; the weight of chance-desires;


their

blithe
1

newcomer!

have heard,

My
I

hopes no more must change

hear thee and rejoice.

name,
long for a repose that ever is the same. 16. st.
5
16.
st.

Cuckoo!

shall I call thee bird,

Or but

wandering voice?

To

the

Cuckoo

[1804],

st. i

Stern Lawgiver!

A voice, a mystery.

No bird, but an invisible thing,


16. st.

Thou
4

dost

preserve

the

stars

from

wrong;

She was a phantom of delight When first she gleamed upon

And

the

most

ancient

heavens,

my
The

through Thee, are fresh and strong.


that never was,

A lovely apparition, sent


To be a moment's
She
ornament.
of Delight
st. i

sight;

light

on sea
the

or

land;

Was a Phantom

The

consecration,

and

Poet's

[1804],

dream.
Suggested by a Picture of Peek Castle in a Storm [1805], st. 4

A spirit, yet a woman too!


And now
The
I see with eye serene very pulse of the machine.

16. st. 2

Dear Child of Nature,

let

them

rail!

To
16. st. 3

a Young Lady [1805],

st. i

A perfect woman,
To

Thou, while thy babes


cling,

around thee

nobly planned,
16.

warn, to comfort, and command.

Shalt

show

us

how

A woman may be made.


1

divine a thing
Ib.
st.

1 wandered lonely as a cloud That floats on high o'er vales and

hills,

See Milton, p. 3475.

WORDSWORTH
But an old age serene and

And

bright, lovely as a Lapland night, Shall lead thee to thy grave.

Getting and spending, powers:


Little
st.

we

lay waste our

To

Young Lady,

3
is

We

Who

is

the happy Warrior?

Who

we see in Nature that is ours; have given our hearts away, a did boon!

sor-

The World

Is

he

That every man

Too Much With Us [1806], /. i

in arms would wish to be? Character of the Happy Warrior

[1806],

Great God! I'd rather be Pagan suckled in a creed outworn; So might I, standing on this pleasant
lea,

Who, doomed
pain,

to go in

company with
miserable

Have glimpses that would make me


forlorn;

less

And

fear, train!

and

bloodshed,

Have

sight of Proteus rising


his

from the
wreathed
Ib.
I.

Turns

his necessity to glorious gain. Ib. 1 12


skillful

sea;

Or hear old Triton blow


horn.

More

in self-knowledge,

even

more pure,
As tempted more; more
dure,

Where

lies

the land to which yon Ship


I

able to en-

must go?

Fresh as a lark mounting at break of


day, Festively she puts forth in trim array.

As more exposed to
tress.

suffering

and

dis-

Ib. L 23
if

Where

Lies the

Land
/.

But who,

he be

called

Some

awful moment to has joined


issues,

upon which Heaven


for

to face

[1806],

Great
Is

good or bad

humanIb.
/.

kind,

Blessed barrier between day and day. To Sleep [1806], II, A Flock of Sheep, L 13

happy

as a lover.

48

Maidens withering on the

stalk.2
i

And, through the heat


the law

of conflict, keeps

Personal Talk [1806], Sonnet

In calmness made, and sees what he Ib. L 53 foresaw.

Dreams, books, are each a world; and books, we know, Are a substantial world, both pure and
good.

Whom

neither shape of danger can dis-

may, Nor thought of tender happiness beIb. I. 77 tray.


Like

Round

these, with

tendrils strong as
will

and blood, Our pastime and our happiness


flesh

grow.

Ib. 3

but oh
Yes, It

how different!
the

Was

Mountain Echo
[1806],
st.

A power

Nuns

fret not at their convent's narrow room.

is passing from the earth. Lines on the Expected Dissolution of Mr. Fox [1806], st. 5 1 Where lies the land to which the ship would

go?
Far, far ahead, is all

Nuns
The world
is

Fret

Not

[1806],

/.

her seamen know.


Songs of Absence
[1819-1861],

ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH


a

too

much

with

us; late

See
I,

and soon,

Dream

Shakespeare, if 77, p. 2280.

Midsummer-Night's

5*5

WORDSWORTH

Two
One

voices are there:


voice.

of the sea, 1 of the mountains; each a mighty

one

is

There

is

a luxury in self-dispraise;

Thought of a Briton on the Subjugation of Switzerland [1807],


L
i
is

And inward self-disparagement affords To meditative spleen a grateful feast. The Excursion, bk. IV
I

have seen
child,

A
in the starry sky,

curious
tract

who

dwelt upon a

The The

silence that

sleep
hills.

that

is

among the

lonely

Of inland ground, applying to his ear The convolutions of a smooth-lipped


shell,

Song

at the Feast of Brougham Castle [1807] Z. 163

To

which, in silence hushed, his very


soul

Every great and original writer, in


proportion as he is great or original, must himself create the taste by which

Listened intensely; and his countenance

soon
Brightened with were heard
pressed
joy,

for

from within
ex-

he is to be

relished.

Letter to

Lady Beaumont [May


21, 1807]

Murmurings, whereby the monitor


Mysterious union with
its

few strong
rules.

instincts,

and a few plain

native sea. 1
16.

Alas!

Boots the Long Laborious Quest? [1809]


impatient as the
Z.

What

One in whom persuasion and belief Had ripened into faith, and faith become

Surprised

by joy

wind.
Surprised by Joy [1812],
i

A passionate intuition.
Spires

16.

Strongest minds Are often those of whom the noisy

whose

"silent

heaven." 2

finger

points to
16.

VI

world Hears least.

A man
And
[1814], bk. I
offices

The Excursion 2

he seems of cheerful yesterdays confident tomorrows. 16. VII

The

imperfect
praise.

of prayer
3

and
16.

The

The gods approve depth, and not the tumult, of the


soul.

The good

Laodamia [1814],
ether, a diviner air.
16.

st.

13

die

first,

And
Burn

they whose mer dust

hearts are dry as sum16.

An

ampler

st.

18

to the socket.

And

beauty, for confiding youth,

Wrongs

unredressed,

or

insults

un-

avenged.
Society became
1

16. Ill

Those shocks of passion can prepare That kill the bloom before its time;
1

my

glittering bride.

16.

Upon

See Landor, p. s^Ga. a mountain height, far from the sea, I found a shell,

Two

And indicates that two and one are three. And, Wordsworth, both art thine. JAMES KENNETH STEPHEN, Sonnet, Wordsworth [1891] "This will never do. FRANCIS JEFFREY, Opening sentence, review of WORDSWORTH'S Excursion, Edinburgh Review [1814] 8 See Menander, p. losa, and note.

voices are there: one is of the deep; is of an old half-witted sheep Which bleats articulate monotony,

And

And one

to my listening ear the lonely thing Ever a song of ocean seemed to sing, Ever a tale of ocean seemed to tell. EUGENE FIELD [1850-1895],
2

An

instinctive

taste
flat

teaches

The Wanderer, st. i men to build


with
spire

their

churches

in

countries

which, as they cannot be referred to any other object, point as with silent finger to the COLERIDGE, The Friend [1809], sky and stars. no. 14
steeples,

516

WORDSWORTH
And
blanch, crime.

MONTGOMERY
Small service
lasts:
is

without

the

owner's

true service while

it

The most resplendent hair. Lament of Mary Queen


if

Of humblest
of Scots

friends,

bright creature!

scorn not one:

[1817], st 6

The

Enough, something from our hands have power To live, and act, and serve the future
hour.

Protects

by the shadow that it casts, the lingering dewdrop from the sun. To a Child, written in her album
daisy,

[1834]

The

River

Duddon, Sonnet:

Afterthought [1820], I 10

We

feel that

we

are greater than


Ib.,
I.

we
14

know.
Habit

does the meadow flower its bloom unfold? Because the lovely little flower is free Down to its root, and, in that freedom,
bold.

How

rules the unreflecting herd. Ecclesiastical Sonnets

[1822],

pt. II,

28

The

feather,

Was

whence the pen

shaped that traced the lives of these good men, 1 Dropped from an angel's wing. Ib. Ill, 5. Walton's Book of Lives
all

Poetl He Hath Put His Heart to School [1842], Z. 9 Minds that have nothing to confer Find little to perceive. Yes, Thou Art Fair [1845], st 2
-

MARIE FRANCOIS XAVIER BICHAT


1771-1802
the totality of those functions which resist death.
is

Give

thou canst; high Heaven

rejects

the lore

Of

nicely calculated less or more. Ib. 43. Inside of King's College

Life

Chapel, Cambridge

But

hushed
springs

be

Physiological Researches Upon Life and Death [1800]

every

thought

that

From out

THOMAS DIBDIN
1771-1841

the bitterness of things. Elegiac Stanzas, Addressed to

SirG.H.B.

[1824],$*. 7

Oh,

it's

Ethereal minstrel! pilgrim of the sky! To a Skylark [1825], I i

A right little,

snug

little island!

tight little island. The Snug Little Island

Type
True

of the wise

who

soar,

but never

WILLIAM PITT
d.

roam,
to the kindred points of heaven and home! Ib.

1840

Scorn not the sonnet. Critic, you have frowned, Mindless of its just honors; with this

strong norVester's blowing, Bill, Hark! Don't ye hear it roar, now? Lord help 'em, how I pities all Unhappy folks on shore now!

The

Sailor's Consolation, st. i

key 2 Shakespeare unlocked his heart. Scorn Not the Sonnet [1827],
x

Z.

JAMES MONTGOMERY
1771-1854

The pen wherewith thou


Made

dost so heavenly

sing of a quill from an angel's wing.

HENRY CONSTABLE
1615],
*

[1563-

Sonnet

Tomorrow oh, 'twill never be, If we should live a thousand years! Our time is all today, today. 1 Today
1

See Browning, p. 668a.

See Sydney Smith, p. 5*30.

MONTGOMERY
Give

SCOTT
cannot
tell how the truth may be; say the tale as 'twas said to me. The Lay of the Last Minstrel,

me

the hand that

is

honest and

hearty, Free as the breeze


party.

Give

Me

and unshackled by Thy Hand, st. 2

canto
In peace, Love tunes
reed;

II, st.

22

Who,

that hath ever been,

the shepherd's

Could bear to be no more? Yet who would tread again the scene

He trod through

life

before?
st.

The

Falling Leaf,

In war, he mounts the warrior's steed; In halls, in gay attire is seen; In hamlets, dances on the green. Love rules the court, the camp, the
grove,

Here in the body pent, Absent from Him I roam, Yet nightly pitch my moving tent A day's march nearer home. At Home in Heaven
the soul's sincere desire, Prayer Uttered or unexpressed; The motion of a hidden fire That trembles in the breast.
is

And men
For

below, and saints above;

love, is heaven,

and heaven

is love. Ib. Ill, st. 2

For ne'er

A simple race!
st. i

Was flattery lost on poet's

ear:

they waste their toil For the vain tribute of a smile. 16. IV, conclusion
it

What Is Prayer?
the burden of a sigh, The falling of a tear; The upward glancing of an eye,

Call

Prayer

is

Who say,

Mute And celebrates


Ib. st. 2

not vain; they do not err that when the Poet dies, Nature mourns her worshipper,
his obsequies. Ib.

When none but God

is

near.

V,

st. i

True

love's

the gift which

God

has

SIR

WALTER SCOTT
1771-1832

given To man alone beneath the heaven: It is not fantasy's hot fire,

Whose
It liveth

wishes, soon as granted,


fierce desire,

fly;

The way was long, the wind was cnld, The Minstrel was infirm and old;
His withered cheek, and tresses gray, Seem'd to have known a better day. The Lay of the Last Minstrel
[1805], introduction

not in

With dead
It is the secret

desire it

doth not
tie,

die;

The silver Which heart


mind

sympathy, link, the silken


to

heart

and mind

to

The unpremeditated
Such
is

In body and in soul can bind.


Ib.
st.

lay.

Ib.

13

the custom of Branksome Hall. Ib. canto I, st. j

What

shall
shall

Who

be the maiden's fate? be the maiden's mate?


Ib.
st.

16

Steady of heart, and stout of hand. Ib.St.2l


If

Breathes there the man, with soul so dead, never to himself hath said, This is my own, my native land! Whose heart hath ne'er within him burn'd i As home his footsteps he hath turn'd

Who

From wandering on
If such

thou

would'st

view

fair

Melrose

a foreign strand! there breathe, go, mark him


swell;

well;

aright,

Go

visit it

by the pale moonlight.


Ib. II,
st. i

For him no Minstrel raptures


a

Sce Luke 24:32, p. 475.

5 l8

SCOTT

High

though name,
his

his

titles,

proud
wish

his

There never was knight


Lochinvar.

like the

young
st.

Boundless
claim;

wealth

as

can

Marmion, canto V,
[Lochinvar,

12
i]

st.

Despite those titles, power, and pelf, The wretch, concentered all in self,
Living, shall forfeit fair renown,

For a laggard in love, and a dastard in


war,

And, doubly dying,

shall

To

the

vile

dust,

go down from whence he

Was

to wed the fair Ellen of brave Lochinvar.

sprung, 1 Unwept, unhonor'd, and unsung. The Lay of the Last Minstrel,

Ib. [Lochinvar,

st.

2]

With

a smile

on her

lips,

and a

tear in
st.

her eye.

Ib. [Lochinvar,

5]
is

canto VI,

st.

Heap on more wood!


chill;

the wind

O Caledonia!
wood;

stern

and wild,
But
shaggy

Meet nurse for a poetic child! Land of brown heath and


Land

let it

whistle as

it will,

We'll keep our Christmas merry still. Ib. VI, introduction, st.

of the mountain and the flood!


Ib. st. 2

England was merry England, when Old Christmas brought his sports
again.

That day

When

heaven
2

of wrath, that dreadful day, and earth shall pass


Ib. St. 31
is is

'Twas Christmas broach'd the mightiest


ale;

away.

November's sky November's leaf

and drear, red and sear.


chill

Twas Christmas
tale;

told

the

merriest

Marmion

[1808], canto I, introduction, st. i

The poor man's


year.

Christmas gambol oft could cheer heart through half the


Ib.
dar'st thou, then,
st.

Stood for his country's glory fast, And nail'd her colors to the mast!
Ib.
st.

And
10

But search the land

To beard the lion in his den, The Douglas in his hall?

Ib. st.

14

Where

of living men, wilt thou find their like again?


Ib.
st.

Oh, what a tangled web we weave,

11

When

first

we

practice to deceive!
Ib.
st.

When

Just at the age 'twixt

thought

is

boy and youth, speech, and speech


st.

17

is

truth.

in our hours of ease, Uncertain, coy, and hard to please, And variable as the shade *

Woman!

Ib. II, introduction,

And come he
It is

slow, or

come he

fast,

When
30

By the

light quivering aspen

made;

but Death who comes at

last.

pain brow,

and anguish wring the

Ib. st.

A ministering angel thou! 2


Ib. st.

Oh, young Lochinvar is come out of the West, Through all the wide Border his steed was the best. Ib. V, st. 12 [Lochinvar, st. i]
So faithful
war,
1

30

"Charge, Chester, charge! On, Stanley, on!" Were the last words of Marmion.
Ib.
st.

32

in love,

and

so dauntless in

To all, to each, a fair goodnight, And pleasing dreams, and slumbers


light!

Ib.

L'Envoy

See Homer, p. 64b, and note. 2 See Tommaso di Celano, p.

157!).

*See Virgil, p. n8b. 2 See Shakespeare, p. *66a.

5*9

SCOTT

The stag at eve had drunk his fill, Where danced the moon on Monan's
rill,

Still

are the thoughts to

memory dear.
I, st.

Rokeby [1813], canto

33

And deep

his midnight lair had In lone Glenartney's hazel shade.

made

A mother's pride, a father's joy.


16. Ill,
st.

15

The Lady

of the Lake [1810] canto I, st. i

Oh,

Brignall banks are wild

and

fair,

The

In listening mood she seemed to stand guardian Naiad of the strand.


16. st.

And Greta woods are green, And you may gather garlands there Would grace a summer's queen.
16.
st.

17

16

Forward and

frolic glee

was there,

The

will to do,

the soul to dare. I6.St.21

Soldier, rest! thy warfare o'er, Sleep the sleep that knows not breaking,

of battled fields no more, Days of danger, nights of waking.


16.
st.

Dream

O! many a shaft at random sent Finds mark the archer little meantl And many a word, at random spoken, May soothe or wound a heart that's broken! The Lord of the Isles [1815], canto V, st. 18
Randolph, thy wreath has lost a rose * 16. VI, st. 18

31

Hail to the Chief


vances!
x

who

in triumph ad16. II, st.

19

There

-was

and O! how many

sor-

Some With

feelings are to mortals given, less of earth in them than

rows crowd
Into these two brief words!
16. conclusion

heaven.

16.

st.

22

Like the dew on the mountain, Like the foam on the river, Like the bubble on the fountain,

A
is

lawyer without history or literature

Thou art gone, and


16. Ill,
st.

forever!
st.

16 [Coronach,
16.

3]

mere working mason; if he possesses some knowledge of these, he may venture to call himself an architect. Guy Mannering [1815], ch. 37
a mechanic, a

And, Saxon,

am

Roderick Dhu!

Bluid
st.

is

thicker than water. 2


I6. 3 8

V,

9
It's

Come
From

one, come all! this rock shall its firm base as soon as I.
16.
st.

fly

no

fish ye're

lives.8

buying,

it's

men's

The Antiquary
as

10

[1816], ch. 11

Respect was mingled with surprise, And the stem joy which warriors feel
In foemen worthy of their
steel.

Come

the winds come,

when

Forests are rended,

16

Come as

Where, where was Roderick then! One blast upon his bugle horn Were worth a thousand men!
16.

the waves come, when Navies are stranded. Pibroch of Donald Dhu

[1816],
st.

VI,

st.

18

But answer came there none. The Bridd of Triermain [1813],


canto III,
1

Time Time

will rust the sharpest sword, will consume the strongest cord;

st.

10

The

set to

The march

has become traditionally attached to the President of the United States.

verses beginning with this line were music by JAMES SANDERSON [1769-0. 1841].

1 Robert Bruce's censure of Randolph for permitting a body of English cavalry to pass his flank on the day before the battle of Bannock-

burn [June 34, 1314]. 2 This proverb is


seventeenth century. 8 See Thomas Hood,

found

as

early

as

the

520

SCOTT

That which molders hemp and steel, Mortal arm and nerve must feel.
Harold the Dauntless [1817], canto I, st 4
Sea of upturned
faces.

When we are
it,

we

day;

are that

man and

handfasted, as we term wife for a year and space gone by, each may
or, at their pleas-

choose another mate,

Rob Roy
Lochow and
the

[1817], ch. 20

ure, may call the priest to marry them for life; and this we call handfasting. 1

The Monastery. Answer

of the

adjacent districts formed the original seat of the Campbells. The expression of "a far cry to

Lochow" was

Author of 'Waverley to the Letter of Captain Clutterbuck 25 Spur not an unbroken horse; put not
your
land.

proverbial.

Ib. 29, note

plowshare

too

deep

into

new
Ib.

There's a gude time coming.


Ib. 32

My

foot

is

on

my name is MacGregor.

my

native heath,

and
34

Ib.

Oh, poverty parts good company. The Abbot [1820], ch. j Ah! County Guy, the hour is nigh,

Jock, when ye hae naething else to do, ye may be ay sticking in a tree; it will be growing, Jock, when ye're sleep1

The sun has left the lea. The orange flower perfumes the bower, The breeze is on the sea. Quentin Durward [1823], ch. 4
ors

ing.

TheHeart

of Midlothian [1818], ch. 8


eye,

Tell that to the marines won't believe it. 2

the

sail-

Redgauntlet [1824],

vol. II, ch.

Vacant heart, and hand, and Easy live and quiet die.
.

Too much rest

is

rust.3

The Bride of Lammermoor 81 9] , ch. 3 Lucy Ashton's [i


Song
There is a Southern proverb fine words butter no parsnips. The Legend of Montrose
[1819], ch. 3

The Betrothed

[1825], ch. 13

The playbill, which is said to have announced the tragedy of Hamlet, the
character of the Prince of ing left out.

Denmark

be-

The Talisman

[1825], introduction
his
lair.

Rouse the lion from

The happy combination


circumstances
.

of fortuitous

15. heading, ch.

[1820]. Answer of the Author of Waverley to the Letter of Captain Clutter-

The Monastery

buck

Recollect that the Almighty, who gave the dog to be companion of our pleasures and our toils, hath invested him with a nature noble and incapable
of deceit.
Ib.

24

Within

The

that awful volume 3 mystery of mysteries!


better

lies

Ib. ch. 12

And

Who read to
^The
his son.
a

had they

ne'er

been bom,
Ib.

doubt, or read to scorn.

This custom of handfasting actually prevailed in the upland days. It arose partly from the want of priests. While the convents subsisted, monks were detached on regular circuits through
the wilder districts,
lived in this
to

marry those who had

dying words of a Highland laird to

ANDREW species of connection. LANG, Note in his edition of The Monastery 2 "Right," quoth Ben, "that will do for the
BYXON, The Island
[1823], canto II,
sailors

marines."
last line

See Daniel Webster, p. 54?b. Fortuitous combination of circumstances.


17,

"That
8

will

DICKENS, Our Mutual Friend [1864-1865], vol. ch. 7


s

won't believe it"

do for the marines, hut the is an old saying.

German

proverb: Rast ich, so rost ich

[When

The

Bible.

I rest, I rust].

521

SCOTT
If you keep a thing seven years, yoi are sure to find a use for it. Woodstock [1826], ch. 28

SMITH
hundred pounds for the of putting him to death. privilege Review of SEYBERT, Annals of the United States [1820]
license of a
If you choose to represent the various parts in life by holes upon a table, of different shapes some circular, some

The sun never sets on the immense 1 empire of Charles V.


Life of

Napoleon

[1827'

fill up my cup, come fill up can, Come saddle your horses, and call

Come

m)
up

triangular,

some

square,

some

ob-

long
parts

and the persons acting these by bits of wood of similar shapes,

your men; Come open the

we

West

Port,

and

let

me

shall generally find that the triangu-

gang free,

And

it's room Dundee!

for the bonnets of

Bonny

The Doom ofDevorgoil [1830] Bonny Dundee, chorus


life, crowded to the full with glorious action, and filled with noble risks, is worth whole years of

One hour
mean

of

dom fit so exactly that we can say they were almost made for each other.1 Sketches of Moral Philosophy
[1850]

person has got into the square hole, the oblong into the triangular, and a square person has squeezed himself into the round hole. TTie officer and the office, the doer and the thing done, sellar

those

observances of paltry decoof Paris [1832], ch. 25

rum. 2

Count Robert
Heaven knows
its billet.
its

That knuckle-end of England that land of Calvin, oatcakes, and sulphur. Lady Holland's Memoir [1855],
vol. I, ch. 2

time; the bullet has


Ib.

No
...

it is

one minds what Jeffrey says: not more than a week ago

that I heard

him speak

disrespectfully
Ib.

SYDNEY SMITH
1771-1845

of the equator.

The schoolboy whips his taxed top; the beardless youth manages his taxed horse with a taxed bridle on a taxed road; and the dying Englishman, pouring his medicine, which has paid seven per cent, into a spoon that has paid fifteen per cent, flings himself back upon his chintz bed which has paid

Preaching has become a byword for long and dull conversation of any kind; and whoever wishes to imply, in any piece of writing, the absence of everything agreeable and inviting, sermon.
calls it a

Ib. 3
glory,

Avoid shame, but do not seek

nothing so expensive as glory.

16.4

twenty-two per cent, and expires in the arms of an apothecary who has paid a
should the brave Spanish soldier brag the sun never sets in the Spanish dominions, but ever shine th on one part or other we have CAPTAIN JOHN SMITH, conquered for our king? Advertisements for the Unexperienced. &c

Take short views, hope and trust in God.


Looked
as if she

for the best,


16.

*Why

had walked

out of the ark.

straight Ib. j

No

furniture so

charming

as books.

[1631]
[the Hollanders] as of the Spaniards, that the sun never sets on their
It

16.9
said of

may be

them

dominions. GAGE, New Survey of the West Indies [1648], Epistle Dedicatory See Schiller, p. 497^ and Daniel Webster,
p,

to cover his mind decently with; his intellect is improperly 16. exposed.
Generally accepted as the origin of the phrase 'A square peg in a round hole."
1

Not body enough

548a.
8

See Mordaunt, p.

522

SMITH

COLERIDGE
Serenely
full,

b
the epicure would say, harm me, I have dined

He

down empty
and he
is

has spent all his life in letting buckets into empty wells;
frittering

Fate cannot
1

away

his age in tryvol.

ing to draw

them up again. 1 Lady Holland's Memoir,


I,

today.

Lady Hollands Memoir,


Recipe for Salad

ch. 9

What you
great book.

don't

know would make

Ah, you

flavor everything;

you are the


16.

Ib.

vanilla of society.

As the French say, there are three sexes men, women, and clergymen. 2
Ib.

In composing, as a general rule, run your pen through every other word you have written; you have no idea what
vigor
it

will give

your

style.

Ib.

Thank God

for tea!

My living

What would
how
did
it

the
ex-

in Yorkshire

was so

far out

world do without tea?


ist?
I

of the way, that it was actually twelve Ib. miles from a lemon.

am

glad

was not born before


Ib.

tea.

Praise
all.

is

the best diet for us, after


Ib.

That

sign of old age, extolling the


Ib.

past at the expense of the present.

Daniel Webster struck


a steam engine in trousers.

me much

like

Ib.

We
3

know nothing
is

of tomorrow; our
to-

"Heat, ma'am!"
dreadful here, that

nothing
flesh

left for it
sit

"it was so found there was but to take off my


I

business
day.

to

said;

be good and happy

Ib. 12

and

in

my bones/'
in

Ib.

SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE


1772-1834
Poor
I

Live

always
read.

the

best

company
Ib. 10
little

when you
it

Never give way


steadily, for

to melancholy; resist the habit will encroach.


Ib.

Foal of an oppressed race! love the languid patience of thy -face. To a Young Ass [1794], t. i

Blest hour!

He was
library.

one-book man.

Some men
Ib. 11

^ to be! was a luxury on Reflections Having Left a


it

have only one book in them; others, a

Place

of Retirement- [1795],

1 43

Marriage resembles a pair of shears, so joined that they can not be separated; often moving in opposite directions, yet

This Lime Tree Bower

My Prison.

always punishing anyone

who
Ib.

comes between them. 3

poem [1797] Khan A stately pleasure dome decree: Where Alph, the sacred river, ran
In Xanadu did Kubla

Title of

Macaulay

is

like a book in breeches

... He has occasional flashes of silence, that make his conversation perfectly delightful.

Through caverns measureless

to

man

Down
With

to a sunless sea.
five

So twice

Ib.

walls

miles of fertile ground and towers were girdled

Let onion atoms lurk within the bowl And, half suspected, animate the Ib. Recipe for Salad whole.
1

round.

Kubla Khan [1798]


enchanted

savage place! as holy and As e'er beneath a waning

moon was
demonIb.

haunted
See Cowper, p. 4583. a See Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, p. 4i4a. 3 We are the two halves of a pair of scissors,

By woman
lover!
1

wailing

for

her

we are apart, Pecksniff, but together DICKENS, Martin Chuxzlewit [1843something.


when
1844],

See Horace, p. i22a, and note. 2 See Samuel Johnson, p. 4310.


See James

ch. ii

Montgomery,

p. 5170.

523

COLERIDGE
Five miles meandering with a
tion.

mazy mo-

It is

an ancient Mariner,
of three.
glittering

Kubla Khan
Ib.

And he stoppeth one


eye,

Ancestral voices prophesying war!

"By thy long gray beard and

Now wherefore

It

was a miracle of rare device,


of sunny pleasure dome with caves
ice!

stopp'st thou me?" The Ancient Mariner [1798],


pt. I,
st.

Ib.

The

A damsel with

a dulcimer

guests are met, the feast May'st hear the merry din.

is

set:

Ib.

st 2

In a vision once I saw: It was an Abyssinian maid, And on her dulcimer she played, Singing of Mount Abora.

He
Ib.

him with his glittering The Wedding Guest stood still,


holds

eye

And listens like a three years' The Mariner hath his will.
The
ship

child:
Ib.
st.

That sunny dome! those

caves of ice!

And

all

who heard

should see

them

was

cheered,

the

harbor

cleared,
there,
all should cry, Beware! Beware! His flashing eyes, his floating hair! Weave a circle round him thrice, And close your eyes with holy dread, For he on honeydew hath fed, 1 And drunk the milk of Paradise.

And

Merrily did we drop Below the kirk, below the hill, Below the lighthouse top.

Ib.

st.

The Wedding Guest


breast,

here

beat

his

For he heard the loud bassoon.


Ib.
Ib.
st.

Sir Leoline,

the Baron

rich,

Hath a

toothless mastiff bitch.

The bride hath paced Red as a rose is she.


I 6

into the hall,


Ib.
st.

Christabel [1797-1800],
pt. I,

And now
snow,

there

came both mist and

And

the spring comes slowly up this Ib. Z. 22 way.


red leaf, the last of its clan, dances as often as dance it can.
Ib.
I.

And And

it

grew wondrous cold:


mast-high, came floating by, Ib. st. 13 as emerald.
there,

ice,

The one
That

As green

49
149

The ice was here, the ice was The ice was all around:
It

And what
Her

can

ail

the mastiff bitch?


Ib.
Z.

cracked and growled, and roared and


Ib.
st.

And

gentle limbs did she undress, lay down in her loveliness.

howled, Like noises in a swound!

15

"God From
252

save thee, ancient Mariner!

the

fiends,

that

A sight

plague

thee

to

dream

of,

not to

tell!

thus!
I.

Ib.

Why
I

Saints will aid if

men

will call:
all!

For the blue sky bends over

look'st thou so?" crossbow shot the Albatross."


fair

"With my
Ib.
st.

20

Ib.

Z.

330

The

breeze blew, the white foam

And constancy lives in realms above; And life is thorny; and youth is vain; And to be wroth with one we love
Doth work
1

flew,

The furrows

We
As

were the

followed free; first that ever burst


Ib. II,
st.

like

madness

in the brain.

Into that silent sea.


idle as a painted ship

Ib. II,
SeeHesiod, p. Gya.

Z.

410

Upon 524

a painted ocean.

Ib.

st.

COLERIDGE

Water, water, everywhere,

Alone, alone,
pt. II,
st.

all, all

alone;
st.

Nor any drop to drink. The Ancient Mariner,

Alone on a wide, wide sea. The Ancient Mariner, pt. IV,

The

Christ! very deep did rot: That ever this should be! Yea, slimy things did crawl with legs Ib. st. 10 Upon the slimy sea.

The moving moon went up And nowhere did abide;


Softly she

the sky,

was going up,

And a

star or

two beside.

Ib.

st.

10

About, about, in reel and rout The death-fires danced at night.


Ib. st. 11
I

bit

my

arm,

sucked the blood,


Ib. Ill,
st.

And

cried,

A sail! a sail!
4
free,

sultry main, Like April hoarfrost spread; But where the ship's huge shadow lay, The charmed water burnt alway Ib. st. 1 1 A still and awful red.

Her beams bemocked the

spring
heart,

of

love

gushed
unaware.

from

my
14

Her lips were red, her looks were Her locks were yellow as gold: Her skin was white as leprosy,

And I blessed them

Ib. st.

The

Who

nightmare Life-in-Death was she,


thicks man's blood with cold.
Ib. st. 11

a gentle thing, Beloved from pole to pole.


sleep! it is

Oh

Ib.

V,

st. i

"The game is done! I've won, won!" Quoth she, and whistles thrice.
Ib.

I've

We were a ghastly crew.


A noise like of a hidden brook
That
In the leafy month of June, to the sleeping woods Singeth a quiet tune.
all

Ib.

st.

11

st.

12

night
Ib.
st.

sun's rim dips, the stars rush out: At one stride comes the dark; With far-heard whisper o'er the sea

The

17

Off shot the specter-bark.


at a cup,

Ib. st. 13

The man hath penance And penance more will do.

done,
Ib. st.

25

We listened and looked sideways up!


Fear at

Like one that on a lonesome road

my heart, as

Doth walk

in fear

and dread,

My lifeblood seemed to sip.


Ib. st.

And
14
bright
Ib.

having once turned round walks


on, turns

The horned Moon, with one


star

no more his head; Because he knows a frightful fiend

And

Within the nether


Each turned
his

Doth
Is this

close

behind him
this

tread. Ib.

tip.

VI,

st.

10

face with

a ghastly
Is this

the hill?

is

the kirk?

And
I I

pang, cursed

me with his

eye. Ib.
st.

mine own countree?

15

No

fear thee, ancient Mariner! fear thy skinny hand!


art

Ib. st. 14 but oh! the silence sank Ib. st. 22 Like music on my heart.
voice;

And thou
brown,

long,

and

lank,

and

And
That

the owlet
low,

whoops to the wolf ^beyoung. Ib. VII,

As

is

the ribbed sea-sand. 1


Ib.

eats the she-wolf's

IV,

st. i

st,

*A note by Coleridge in Sibylline Leaves [1817] says: 'Tor [these] lines I am indebted to
Mr. Wordsworth."

"Ha! ha!" quoth he, "full plain

I see,

The Devil knows how

to row."
Ib.
st.

12

COLERIDGE

"O

shrieve me, shrieve

The Ancient

me, holy man! Mariner, pt VII,


st.

And

hooting at the glorious sun Heaven,


Z.

in

14

Wedding

Guest!

This

soul

hath

Cries out, "Where is it?" Fears in Solitude [1798],

81

been Alone on a wide wide sea: So lonely 'twas, that God himself Scarce seemed there to be. Ib. st 19

And
Is

the Devil did grin, for his darling


sin

1 pride that apes humility. The Devil's Thoughts 2 [1799],

st6
Strongly
it

He prayeth well who loveth well Both man and bird and beast.
Ib. st. 22

bears us along in swelling

and

limitless billows,

He prayeth best who


All things both great

loveth best

and small;
loveth us,
Ib.
st.
1 all.

Nothing before and nothing behind but the sky and the ocean. The Homeric Hexameter (translated

For the dear

God who
loveth

from

Schiller)

[1799?]

He made and

23

In the hexameter rises the fountain's


silvery

A sadder and a wiser man


He rose the morrow mom.
Ib. st

column;

25

In the pentameter aye falling in melody back.

The Ovidian

With what deep


adored

Elegiac Metre

worship

have

still

(from Schiller) [1799]


All thoughts, all passions,
all

The spirit
The frost

of divinest Liberty.

delights,

France:

An Ode

[1798],

st. i

Whatever

performs its secret ministry, Unhelped by any wind. Frost at Midnight [1798], L
all

mortal frame, All are but ministers of Love,


stirs this

And
i

feed his sacred flame.

Love [1799],
Tranquillity! thou better

st. i

Therefore
thee,

seasons shall be sweet to


clothe the gensit

name
st. i

Than

all

Whether the summer


eral earth

the family of Fame! Ode to Tranquillity [1801],

With

greenness,

or the redbreast

The

and sing
Betwixt the tufts of snow on the bare branch. Ib. I. 65

Aloof with hermit-eye I scan present works of present

man

wild and dream-like trade of blood

Too

Or

if

the secret ministry of frost

and guile, foolish for a tear, too smile!

wicked
16.

for a
st.

Shall

hang them up

in silent icicles,
16.

Quietly shining to the quiet moon.


Z.

Hast thou a charm to stay the morning


star

72

Forth from his dark and lonely hiding


place (Portentous -sight!) the owlet Atheism, Sailing on obscene wings athwart the

In his steep course? Hymn in the Vale of

Chamouni
[1802],
Z.

Earth, with her thousand voices, praises

noon,

God.
a
8

Ib.

Drops his blue-fringed

lids,

and holds

them
1

close,

See Robert Burton, p. gna. This poem was written in collaboration with

Southey,

who
i

also

imitated

it

in

The

Devil's

See Alexander, p. 684b.

Walk, p.

COLERIDGE

What
Its

is

an

Epigram?

dwarfish

Nought cared
weather,

this

body

for

wind or

whole,

body

brevity,

and wit

1 its soul.

When

An Epigram
feel,

[1802]

youth and I lived in *t together. Youth and Age [1823-1832], sL i

I see,

not

how

Dejection:

An Ode

beautiful they are! [1802], st. 2

O
A

And

Lady! we receive but what we give in our life alone does Nature live.
16.
st.

Flowers are lovely; love is flower-like; Friendship is a sheltering tree; Oh the joys that came down showerlike,

Of friendship,
Ere
All
I

was

love, old!

and

liberty,

Ib. st. 2

light, a glory, a fair

luminous cloud
Ib.

Nature seems at work. Slugs leave


their lair

Enveloping the Earth.


Joy
is

The
the sweet voice, Joy the luminous cloud

bees are stirring

birds are
in

on the

We in ourselves rejoice!
And
thence flows
or sight,
All melodies the echoes of that voice, All colors a suffusion from that light.
16.
st.

wing And Winter slumbering


air,

the open

all

that charms or ear

Wears on

his smiling face a

dream of
unbusy

Spring!

And

the

while,

the

sole

thing,

Nor honey make, nor


nor sing.

pair,

nor build,
[Febru-

How

seldom, friend! a inherits


pains!

good great man


and

Work Without Hope


Work
'

Honor
It

or wealth, with all his worth


like stories

ary 21, 1825]

without

Hope draws

nectar in a

sounds

from the land of

sieve,

spirits
If

And Hope without an


live.

any man

Or

obtain that which he merits, any merit that which he obtains.

object cannot 16.


full

The Good Great Man


Trochee
trips

In

[1802]

many ways doth


veal

the

heart re-

From long

to long in
stalks.

from long to short; solemn sort


Metrical Feet [1806]

The

presence of the love


ceal.

it

would con-

Slow Spondee

Poems Written
I

in Later Life

[1826],

motto

The Knight's bones are dust, And his good sword rust;
His soul
is

counted two-and-seventy stenches,

All well defined,

and

several stinks.

with the

saints, I trust.

Cologne [1828]

The

Knight's

Tomb

[c.

1817]

The
But

With Donne, whose muse on dromedary


trots,

Rhine, it is well known, Doth wash your city of Cologne;


river
tell

me, nymphs! what power

di-

vine

Wreathe
knots.

iron

pokers

into

true-love

Shall henceforth

wash the

river

Rhine?
16.

On

Donne's Poetry

[c.

1818]

The Eighth Commandment was not made for bards. The Reproof and Reply [1823]
l

not the proper antithesis to Poetry prose, but to science. Poetry is opposed
is

See Shakespeare,

Hamlet U,

tt,

$o, p. a6ob.

science, and prose to metre. The proper and immediate object of science is the acquirement, or communication, of truth; the proper and immediate ob-

to

2 5 7

COLERIDGE
ject

of poetry

is

the communication of

monious

in

themselves,

immediate pleasure.
Definitions of Poetry [1811]

stantial with the truths of

and consubwhich they


[1816]

are the conductors.

Reviewers are usually people

who
Not

The Statesman's Manual


the

would have been

poets, historians, bioghave raphers, etc., if they could; they tried their talents at one or at the other,

but that to which


power,

poem which we have read, we return, with the

and have
critics.
1

failed;

therefore

they turn

the genuine greatest pleasure, possesses and claims the name of essential
1

poetry.

Lectures on Shakespeare and

Biographia Literaria [1817], ch.

Milton [1811-1812]

The
the

speech [lago's soliloquy], motive-hunting of a motiveless

last

Experience informs us that the first defense of weak minds is to recriminate.


Ib. 2

malignity

how awfull
[c.

Notes on Shakespeare
Taste
is

1812]
to

intermediate faculty active with the passive powers of our nature, the intellect with the senses; and its appointed function is to elevate the images of the latter, while it realizes the ideas of the

the

Indignation at literary wrongs I leave men born under happier stars. I canit.

not afford

Ib.

which connects the

Milton had a highly imaginative, Ib. 4 Cowley a very fanciful mind.

former.

On
The
beauty
.

the Principles of Genial


Criticism [1814]
definition

An idea, in the highest sense of that word, cannot be conveyed but by a Ib. 9 symbol.
Veracity does not consist in saying, but in the intention of communicating
truth.
Ib.

most
.

general

of
Ib.

Multeity in Unity.

consists in the congruity of a thing with the laws of the reason and the nature of the will, and in its
fitness to

The Good

Never pursue

literature as a trade.

Ib. u. 11
itil you understand a writer's ignoUntil p^uu^ yourself ignorant of his presume Ib. 12 understanding, rstanding.

determine the

latter to actual-

ranee, i,

and it is always discurBeautiful arises from the perceived harmony of an object, whether sight or sound, with the inborn and
ize the former:
sive.

The

constitutive rules of the

judgment and
Ib.

imagination: and

it is

always intuitive.
that reconcilincor-

During the act of knowledge itself, the objective and subjective are so instantly united, that we cannot determine to which of the two the priority
belongs.
Ib.

The

imagination

The
be the

ing and mediatory power, which

living

primary imagination I hold to power and prime agent of

porating the reason in images of the sense and organizing (as it were) the flux of the senses by the permanence and self-circling energies of the reason, gives birth to a system of symbols, harReviewers, with some rare exceptions, are a most stupid and malignant race. As a bankrupt thief turns thief-taker in despair, so an unsuccessful author turns critic. SHELLEY, Fragments of Adonais [1821] See Disraeli, p. 6isb, and Lowell, p. 6ggb.
1

all human perception, and as a repetition in the finite mind of the eternal

act of creation in the infinite

Am.
Ib. 13
. . .

The

secondary

imagination

dissolves, diffuses, dissipates, in order to re-create; or where this process is rendered impossible, yet still at all events it

struggles to idealize
1

and to

unify. It

is

See Robert Frost, pp. g2gb and ggoa.

528

COLERIDGE
essentially vital, even as all objects (as objects) are essentially fixed and dead.

human
Proteus

character
of

and
fire

passion, the

one

the

and

the

flood,

Biographia Literaria, ch. 13

The fancy is indeed no other than a mode of memory emancipated from the
order of time and space.
'

Ib.

[Milton] attracts all forms and things to himself, into the unity of his own Ideal. All things and modes of action shape themselves anew in the being of

The two cardinal points of poetry, the power of exciting the sympathy of the reader by a faithful adherence to the truth of nature, and the power of the giving the interest of novelty by
modifying colors of imagination.

Milton; while Shakespeare becomes things, yet ever remaining himself.


1

all

Biographia Literaria, ch. 15

Our myriad-minded

Shakespeare.

16.

16.14

best part of human language, properly so called, is derived from re2 flection on the acts of the mind itself.

The

That
for

willing suspension of disbelief the moment, which constitutes


Ib.

I6.i 7

poetic faith.

The
hand,
is

The

tion, brings the


activity, faculties

poet, described in ideal perfecwhole soul of man into

itself
its

shapes, as it develops, from within, and the fullness of


it
is

organic innate;

form,

on

the

other

with the subordination of its to each other, according to their relative worth and dignity. He diffuses a tone and spirit of unity, that blends, and (as it were) fuses, each
into each,
cal

development

with the form.

perfection

one and the same of its outward

Shakespeare's Judgment Equal to His Genius [1818]


Art, used collectively for painting, sculpture, architecture and music,
is

by that synthetic and magi.

Now

power

imagination.
reveals
itself

Ib.

in

the

balance or reconciliation of opposite or discordant qualities: of sameaess, with difference; of the general, with the concrete; the idea, with the image; the individual, with the representative; the sense of novelty and freshness, with old and familiar objects; a more than usual state of emotion, with more than usual
self-possession,

the mediatress between, and reconnature and man. It is, therefore, the power of humanizing nature, of infusing the thoughts and passions of man into everything which is the object
ciler of,

of his contemplation.

On

Poesy or Art [1818]

awake and steady enthusiasm and or vehement; and feeling profound while it blends and harmonizes the natural and the artificial, still subordiorder;

judgpent

ever

with

The artist must imitate that which is within the thing, that which is active through form and figure, and discourses 16. to us by symbols.
heart should have fed upon the on a leaf, till it be tinged with the color, and show its food minutest fiber. . . 16. in every
truth, as insects
.

The

nates art to nature; the manner to the matter; and our admiration of the poet
to our

sympathy with the poetry.


Ib.

Schiller

has the material sublime. Table Talk [December 29, 1822]


I

No man was ever yet a great poet, without being at the same time a proIb. 15 found philosopher.
forth

*A

phrase which

have borrowed from a

While and

[Shakespeare] darts himself passes into all the forms of

it to a patriarch of Constantinople. [Coleridge's footnote.] 3 The WALLACE poem of the act of the mind. STEVENS [1879-1965], Collected Poems. Of Mod-

Greek monk,

who

applies

ern Poetry

529

COLERIDGE
I

SCHLEGEL
will be the the right all, duty of some, to prepare definitely for a separation amicably if they can; violently if 1 they must. Speech in the U. S. House of

wish our clever young poets would

of

so

it

remember prose and

my

homely
that

definitions
is,

oi

words in their best order; poetry = the best words in their best order. Table Tdk \July 12, 1827]

poetry;

prose

Representatives

[January 14

The man's desire is for the woman; but the woman's desire is rarely other than for the desire of the man.
Ib. [July 23, 1827]

1811]

WILLIAM BARNES RHODES


1772-1826
Bombastes: So have
I

Poetry
sense at

is

certainly

than good sense, but


all

it

something more must be good


is

heard on

Afric's

events; just as a palace

more than a house, but it must be a 16. house, at least. [May 9, 1830] That passage is what I call the sublime dashed to pieces by cutting too close with the fiery four-in-hand round the corner of nonsense. 16.

burning shore hungry lion give a grievous


grievous shore.
Afric's

roar;

The

roar

echoed along the


I

Artaxaminous:

So have burning shore

heard

on

Another lion give a grievous roar; And the first lion thought the last
bore.

The
minute
gotten

happiness of
fractions
charities

life is

made up
soon

of

the

little

for-

Bombastes Furioso [1810], act

I,

of a kiss or smile, a

sc-4

kind look, a heartfelt compliment, and


the countless infinitesimals of pleasurable

and genial

feeling.

DAVID RICARDO
1772-1823
Labor, like all other things which are purchased and sold, and which may be increased or diminished in quantity, has its natural and its market The
price.

The

Friend.

The

Improvisatore
[1828]

Beneath

this sod

A poet lies,

or that which once seemed

he Oh, lift a thought in prayer for S.T.C.! That he, who many a year, with toil of
breath,

natural price of labor is that price which is necessary to enable the laborers, one

Found death
in death.

in

life,

may

here find

life

with another, to subsist and perpetuate their race, without either increase or diminution.

Epitaph written for himself [1833]

On

the Principles of Political


[1817]

Economy and Taxation

JOSIAH QUINCY,
1772-1864
If this bill [for the

FRIEDRICH SCHLEGEL
1772-1829

admission of Or-

The
verse.

historian

is

leans Territory as a State] passes, I am compelled to declare it as my deliberate

prophet in

re-

Athenaeum [1798-1800]
for-

opinion that the bonds of this Union are virtually dissolved; that the States which compose it are free from their

moral obligations; and

that, as it will

be

gotten his own sentiment, uttered even on the floor of this House, "Peaceably if we can, forcibly if we must." -HENRY CLAY, Speech [January 8,

The gentleman [Quincy] cannot have

53

SEBASTIANI

SOUTHEY

FRANCOIS HORACE BASTIEN StBASTIANI


1772-1851 Order reigns in Warsaw. 1

He

is

man

of splendid

abilities,

but

shines and stinks utterly corrupt. 1 like rotten mackerel by moonlight.

He

Of Edward
fall

Livingston; from

Announcement

of the

of

W. CABELL BRUCE, John Randolph


of

Warsaw

Roanoke
197

[1831]

[1923],

vol. II, p.

ETIENNE DE GRELLET
1773-1855
I expect to pass through this world but once; any good thing therefore that I can do, or any kindness that I can show to any fellow creature, let me do it now; let me not defer or neglect it, 2 for I shall not pass this way again.

He
oars.

rowed

to his object with muffled

Of Martin Van Buren

ROBERT SOUTHEY
1774-1843

"You

are

old,

Father William/' the


cried,

young

man

Attributed

"The few

locks

which are
Father

left

you are
a

WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON


We
vine

You

gray; are

hale,

William

hearty old

man:
I pray."

Now
di-

tell

me the reason,

1773-1841 admit of no government by

The Old Man's Comforts and How He Gained Them,2 st. i


"In the days of my youth, I remembered my God, And he hath not forgotten my age."
Ib. st.

right ... the only legitimate right to govern is an express grant of

power from the governed. Inaugural Address [March

4,

1841]
offi-

Never with

my

consent shall an

And

cer of the people, compensated for his services out of their pockets, become

in at the windows,
door,

and in

at the

the pliant instrument of the Executive


will.

And through
they pour;

the walls by thousands

Ib.

And down from

decent and manly examination of the acts of government should be not only tolerated, but encouraged. Inaugural Address

the ceiling and up through the floor, From the right and the left, from behind and before, From within and without, from above

and below

JOHN RANDOLPH
1773-1833

'Tis vain for present

fame

to wish.

The
to fear

surest
it.

way

to prevent

war

is

not
2

persons first must be forgotten; For poets are like stinking fish, They never shine until they're rotten.

Our

MCDONALD CLARKE
Of

[1798-

Speech, U.S.
sentatives
1

House

of Repre5,

[March

1806]

by

1843], Epigram several parodies of this poem, the one Lewis Carroll is probably better known than

Des lettres que je re?ois dc Pologne m'annoncent que la tranquillitS regne a Varsovie. DUMAS [1808-1870], Mtmoires [and series],
vol.
*

the original. See p. 543b. "You are old, Father William,

and though one

would think
All the veins in your body were dry, Yet the end of your nose is red as a pink;
I

IV, ch. 3 This is not found in any of Grellet's writings, and has been attributed to many others. See Addison, p. 3944.

beg your indulgence, but why?" LEE O. HARRIS and JAMES WHITCOMB RILZY, Father William, st. i

53 1

SOUTHEY

And

all at

once to the Bishop they go. God's Judgment on a ^Wicked

Bishop*

st.

17

But which no one can speak, and no one can spell. The March to Moscow, $t. 8
Curses are like young chickens, they always come home to roost. The Curse of Kehama [1810],

was a summer evening; Old Kaspar's work was done, And he before his cottage door
It

Was
His

sitting in the sun;

motto

And by him
little

sported on the green grandchild Wilhelmine. The Battle of Blenheim [1798],


st.

They sin who With life all other passions


tell

us love can die;


fly,

All others are but vanity. Ib. canto X,

st.

10
the

He came

to ask

That was
round.

so large,

what he had found, and smooth, and


Ib. si. 2
fellow's skull,"

Thou
But

hast been called,

O
Ib.

sleep!

friend of woe;
'tis

the happy that have called thee

so.

"Tis some poor


he,

XV,

st.

12

said

No
The

stir

"Who fell in

the great victory."


Ib.
st.

in the sea, air, ship was still as she could be.


stir

in the

no

But what they fought each other


I

And
for,

The Inchcape Rock* st. i then they knew the perilous


Rock,
blessed the

could not well

make

out.

Ib. st.6

And

Abbot of Aberbrothok.
16. st. 4 with a shivering

"And

Who

everybody praised the Duke, this great fight did win."


it

"But what good came of Quoth little Peterkin.

Till the vessel strikes

at last?"

shock

"Why,
"But

that I cannot tell," said he; 'twas a famous victory/'


Ib.st. 11
2

"O

Christ! It

is

the Inchcape Rock."


Ib.
st.

15

Blue, darkly, deeply, beautifully blue. Madoc in Wales [1805], pt. I, 5

My days among the dead are past; Around me I behold, Where'er these casual eyes are cast,
The mighty minds
of old.

What

will

not woman, gentle


stirs

woman
spirit

My

Days Among the Dead Are


Past [1818],
st. i

dare,

When
And

strong affection

her

up?
last of all

Ib. II, 2

Yet leaving here a name, I trust, That will not perish in the dust.
16.
st.

A terrible man with A name which you


very well,
a

an Admiral came,
a terrible
all

name
sight

know by

Agreed to differ. Life of

Wesley

[1820]

The

Satanic school.

Hatto, in the time of the great famine of when he saw the poor exceedingly oppressed by famine, assembled a great company of them together into a barn at Kaub and burnt them . . because he thought the famine 'would sooner cease if those poor folks were dispatched out of the world. . But God . sent against him a plague of mice . . . and the prelate rea treated to tower in the Rhine . . but the mice chased him continually . . and at last he was most miserably devoured. THOMAS
914,
. .
.

Vision of Judgment [1821],


original preface

So I told them in rhyme, For of rhymes I had store.


1

The Cataract of Lodore A rock in 'the North Sea, off the Firth of Tay,

CORYAT, Crudities [1611]


See Byron, p. s6ia.

Scotland, dangerous to navigators because it is covered with every tide. There is a tradition that a warning bell was fixed on the rock by the Abbot of Aberbrothok, which was stolen by a
sea pirate,

who

perished on the rock a year

later.

SOUTHEY

AUSTEN

From

his brimstone bed, at break of

You have
Mrs.

day,

delighted us long enough. Pride and Prejudice, ch. 18


to

A-walking the Devil is gone, To look at his little snug farm of the

Bennet was restored

her 42

World,

usual querulous serenity.

16.

And

see

how

his stock

went on.
st. i

The DeviFs Walk,

as

How

then was the Devil dressed? O, he was in his Sunday's best; His coat was red, and his breeches were
blue, there was a hole

certainly to forgive them, a Christian, but never to admit them in your sight, or allow their names to be
16.

You ought

mentioned in your hearing.


For what do

57

we

live,

And

where his
16.

tail
st.

sport for our neighbors, them in our turn?


I

but to make and laugh at


16.
all

came through.

He

have been a

selfish

A
Is

passed a cottage with a coach-house cottage of gentility; And he owned with a grin,
his favorite sin
1

double

being

my life,
16.58

in practice,

though not in

principle.

That

pride that apes humility.

half of the world cannot understand the pleasures of the other. [1815], ch. 9

One

Emma

16.

st.

It

was a delightful

visit

The

arts babblative

and

scribblative.

being

much

too short.

perfect, in 16. 13

Colloquies on the Progress and Prospects of Society [1829], no. i, pt. 2

interior of

The march
As frozen

of Intellect.
2

16.

14

in the a family can say what the difficulties of any individual of that 16. 18 family may be.

Nobody who has not been

as charity. The Soldier's

Wife,

st.

Business, you know, may bring money, but friendship hardly ever does. 16.34
t

JANE AUSTEN
1775-1817
It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession

"Only a novel" ... in short, only some work in which the greatest powers of the mind are displayed, in which the most thorough knowledge of human
nature, the happiest delineation of its varieties, the liveliest effusions of wit

of a

good fortune, must be in want of a


Pride andPrejudice [1813],
eft. i

wife.

She [Mrs. Bennet] was a

woman

and humor are conveyed to the world in the best chosen language.
Northanger Abbey [1818],
eft.

of

mean

understanding, little information, 16. and uncertain temper.

What
It

dreadful hot weather

lady's imagination

is

very rapid;

it

keeps

me

in

have! a continual state of

we

love to

jumps from admiration to love, from matrimony in a moment. 16.6

inelegance. Letters.

To

her

sister

Cassandra

Mr. Collins had only to change from and it was soon Jane to Elizabeth done done while Mrs. Bennet was 16. 15 stirring the fire.
1
fl

of agreeable, as it saves me the trouble liking them a great deal.


16.

[September 18, 1796] do not want people to be very

[December 24, 1798]


(two inches wide) of work with so fine a

See Coleridge, p. 5*60, and note. See Hood, p. 59$a, and O'Reilly, p.

The
ivory

little bit
I

on which

533

AUSTTEN
brush
as

LAMB
melancholy,
Street.

produces

little

effect

after

who can be

dull in Fleet

much

labor. 1

Letters.

To

J.

Edward Austen
16,

Letter to

Thomas Manning
[February 15, 1802]

[December

1816]

CHARLES LAMB
1775-1834
I

have something more to do than


Letter to

Nursed amid her [London's] noise, what her crowds, her beloved smoke have I been doing all my life, if I have not lent out my heart with usury to 16. such scenes?

feel.

Coleridge after the death of Lamb's mother [1796]

To

that

Gone before unknown and

silent shore.
st.

Hester [1803],

The not unpeaceful evening of a day Made black by morning storms.


Poem-letter to Cokridge [1797]
I

good-natured woman, which is as much as you can expect from a friend's


wife,

whom

you got acquainted with


Letter to Hazlitt
[i

bachelor.

have had playmates,

have had com-

805]

panions, days of childhood, in my joyful school-days familiar All, all are gone, the old

In

my

Neat, not gaudy. Letter to Wordsworth [1806]

This very night


off

am

going to leave

faces.

Old Familiar Faces


For God's sake
serious)
(I

[1798]

tobacco! Surely there must be some other world in which this unconquerable purpose shall be realized. Letter to Thomas Manning [1815]

never was

more
any

don't
.

make me

ridiculous

gentle-hearted in 2 . drunken dog, . substitute print ragged head, seld-shaven, odd-eyed, which stuttering, or any other epithet to the gentruly and properly belongs

more by terming

me

Anything awful makes me laugh. misbehaved once at a funeral.

Letter to Southey [1815]

[Of Coleridge]

An

archangel a

little

damaged.
Letter to

tleman in question.
Letter to Coleridge [August 1800]
of your Separate from the pleasure company, I don't much care if I never see a mountain in my life. Letter to Wordsworth [1801]

Wordsworth

[1816]

Fanny Kelly's divine plain face. Letter to Mrs. Wordsworth [1818]

The
all

red-letter days,

now become,

to

intents

and purposes,

dead-letter

days.

The man must have

a rare recipe for

Essays of Elia [1823]. Oxford in the Vacation l

x the [Miss Austen] had a talent for describing involvements and feelings and characters of

The human

the species, according to

ordinary life which is to me the most wonderful I ever met with. The Big Bow-Wow strain I can do myself like any now going; but the comexquisite touch, which renders ordinary

best theory I can form of it, is composed of two distinct races, the men

who

borrow, and the


16.

monplace things and characters interesting, from the truth of the description and the sentiment, is denied to me. SCOTT, Journal [March 14,
1826]
a

men who lend. The Two Races of Men

No

For thee, my gentle-hearted Charles, to whom sound is dissonant which tells of life. CoiiWDGE, This Lime Tree Bower My
Prison [1797]

those Your borrowers of books mutilators of collections, spoilers of the


1 Which, it has been pointed out, was actually written at Cambridge. See E. V. LUCAS, Lamb and the Universities,

534

LAMB
symmetry of odd volumes.
shelves,

and

creators

of

Who
And

first

invented work, and bound

the free

Essays of Elia.

The Two

Races of

Men

holiday-rejoicing spirit

down?

Work
Riddle of destiny, What thy short

Of

all

sound of

all bells

(bells, the

who

can show

music nighest bordering upon heaven) most solemn and touching is the peal which rings out the Old Year.
16.

visit

meant,

or

know

New

Year's

Eve

What thy errand here below? On an Infant Dying as Soon


Martin, if dirt was hands you would hold!

as

clear

fire,

a clean hearth,

and the

Born [1827]
trumps,

rigor of the game. Ib. Mrs. Battle's

Opinions on

what

Whist
I

have no

ear.

16.

A Chapter on Ears
disposed to har-

Lamb's Suppers. From LEIGH HUNT, Lord Byron and His


Contemporaries [1828]

Sentimentally

am

mony; but
of a tune.

organically I

am

incapable
Ib.

Some cry up Haydn, some Mozart, Just as the whim bites. For part,

my

Credulity is the man's weakness, but the child's strength.


16. Witches,

do not care a farthing candle For either of them, nor for Handel. 1 Letter to Mrs. William Hazlitt
I

and Other Night


Fears

[1830]

Not many sounds in life, and I include all urban and all rural sounds, exceed in interest a knock at the 16. Valentine's Day door. 1

For thy sake, Tobacco, I Would do anything but die. A Farewell to Tobacco

The custom of saying grace at meals had, probably, its origin in the early times of the world, and the hunter-state
man, when dinners were precarious things, and a full meal was something more than a common blessing!
of
16.

A poor relation is the most irrelevant thing in nature. Last Essays of Elia [1833]. Poor Relations
I

love to lose myself in other men's


16.

minds.

Grace Before Meat

Detached Thoughts on Books and Reading


16.
16.

Presents, I often say, endear absents. 16. Dissertation Upon Roast Pig

Books think for me.

Nothing
faction

is

to

me more

Books which are no books.

distasteful
satis-

than that entire complacency and

which beam in the counte-

No

Newspapers always excite curiosity. one ever lays one down without a
16.

nances of a new-married couple. 16. The Behavior of Married People


I

feeling of disappointment.

came home
on

forever!

How

sickness

Letter to Bernard Barton

sions of a

man's

enlarges the dimenself to himself.


16.

[i 825] , leaving his "33 years' desk" at the East India House

The Convalescent

Doorbells are like a magic game, Or the grab bag at a fair You never know when you hear one ring Who may be waiting there. RACHEL FIELD [1894-1942], Doorbells

Your absence of mind we have borne, till your presence of body came to be called in question by it. 16. Amicus Redivivus
i

See

John Byrom,

p.

535

LAMB

LANDOR
There
this

A pun is a pistol let off at the ear not a feather to tickle the intellect. Last Essays of Elia. Popular Fal
lades: IX, That the are the Best

are

no

fields

side of the grave:

voices,

Rhodop&

of amaranth on there are no that are not soon

Worst Puns

mute, however tuneful: there is name, with whatever emphasis

no
of

A
of a

presentation copy

...

is

a copy

passionate love repeated, of which the

echo

is

sent you by the author, with his foolish autograph at the beginning of it; for which
sell,
if

book which does not

not faint at last. Imaginary Conversations [18241829]. Aesop

andRhodope,!
is

a stranger,
if

he only demands your

Of all

failures, to fail in a witticism

a brother author, he expects from you a book of yours, which does not sell, in return.
friendship;

XI, That We Must Not Look a Gift Horse in the Mouth


16.

the worst, and the mishap is the more calamitous in a drawn out and detailed one. Ib. Chesterfield and Chatham
'Tis verse that gives

Immortal youth to mortal maids.


Verse

The good
had
ture.
singly,

things of life are not to be but come to us with a mix-

Around the

child

bend

all

the three
faces;

Ib. XIII,

That You Must Love Me and Love My Dog

Around the man bend other

Sweet Graces; Faith, Hope, Charity.

Pride, Envy, Malice, are his Graces.

The greatest pleasure I know is to do good action by stealth, and to have it found out by accident. Table Talk. In the Athenaeum

Around

the Child

When we
The

play the fool,

how wide

How long the audience sits before us! How many prompters! what a chorus!
Plays [1846],
st.

theatre expands! beside,

WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR


1775-1864

There is delight in singing, though none hear


Beside the singer.

But

have sinuous
,
.

shells

of

pearly

To Robert Browning
Shakespeare
is

[1846]

hue Shake one,


Its

and
lips

it

awakens;

then

not our poet, but the


speech! and brief
alive

world's,

Therefore on
polished
ear,

him no

to

your

attentive

for thee,

And it remembers And murmurs as


there.*

Browning! Since Chaucer was


its

and

august abodes, the ocean murmurs


Gebir, bk. I [1798]

hale,

No man

hath walked along our roads with step

Ah what Ah what
Rose

avails the sceptered race,

the form divine!

So active, so inquiring eye, or tongue So varied in discourse. 16.


I

Rose Aylmer [1806]


Aylmer,
eyes

strove with none, for

none was worth

whom

these

wakeful

my strife;
Nature
I

loved;

and next to Nature,


fire

May

weep, but never see, night of memories and of sighs consecrate to thee.
See Wordsworth, p. 5160.

Art.

warm'd both hands before the


life;

of

16.

It sinks,
1

and

I am ready to depart. I Strove with None [1853]

536

HIRATA ATSUTANE

CAMPBELL
shriek'd
as Kosciusko

HIRATA ATSUTANEi
1776-1843
It

And Freedom
fell!

was the gods who formed

all

the

Pleasures of

Hope,

pt. I,

/.

381

lands of the world at the Creation, and these gods were without exception born in Japan. Japan is thus the homeland of the gods, and that is why we call it the Land of the Gods.

Who
The

hath not own'd, with rapture-

smitten frame, power of grace, the magic of a

name?

Ib. II,

Z.

Summary

of the Ancient

Way

And muse on Nature with


Cease,
to

a poet's eye.
16.

With

L 98

their scientific instruments the

Dutch attempt
erties of things.
is

to determine the prop-

every joy,

glimmer on

my

Unlike China, Holland a splendid country where they do not

mind,

But

leave, oh! leave the light of

Hope

rely

on

superficial conjectures.

Ib.

behind!

The
and

ancient Japanese

all

correctly

practiced

constantly what the

Chinese called humanity, righteousness,


the five cardinal virtues and the rest, without having any need to name them or to teach them. In China there were evil customs from the very outset,
.
.

though my winged hours of have been Like angel visits, few and far beIb. I. 375 tween? *
bliss

What

On No No

the green banks of Shannon, Sheelah was nigh,


blithe Irish lad

when
I;

was so happy as

and

human

behavior

was

ex-

harp

like

my own
I

could so cheerily

why

tremely licentious. That is the reason so many sages appeared in ancient times to guide and instruct the Chinese.

play,

And
Ye

wherever
2

went was

my

poor dog
st.
i

Tray.

The Harper

[1799],

Indignant Discussion of Chinese

mariners of England,. That guard our native seas;

Books

[c.

1810]

Whose

flag

has

braved,

thousand

The art of medicine, though introduced to Japan from abroad, appears originally to have been taught to foreign countries

years,

The battle and the breeze! Ye Manners of England


While the

[1800],

by our own great gods. Shizu No Iwaya [1811]

st

battle rages loud and long, and the stormy winds do blow. 16.

THOMAS CAMPBELL
1777-1844 Tis distance lends enchantment
to the

No

Britannia needs no bulwarks, towers along the steep;

And

view, robes the mountain in hue.2


Pleasures of

Her march is o'er the mountain waves, Her home is on the deep. 16. st. 3

its

azure

The meteor

flag of

England

Shall yet terrific burn,


I,

Hope

[1799], pt.

L j

And

Hope, for a season, bade the world


farewell,

Till danger's troubled night depart, the star of peace return. 16. st.

Was
1

Oh! once the harp of


ness;

Innisfail

^From

Sources of Japanese Tradition, edited

strung full high to notes of glad-

by William Theodore de Bary [1960]. 2 The mountains too, at a distance, appear airy masses and smooth, but seen near at hand DIOGENES LAERTIUS [c. A.D. 200], they are rough.
Pyrrho, sec. 9

See John Morris, p. 3853. of

My Old Dog Tray. Title STEPHEN C. FOSTER [18*6-1864]

song

by

537

CAMPBELL
But yet it often told a tale Of more prevailing sadness.
(/Connor's Child,
st. i

CLAY

A
me

stoic of the

woods

man

without
[1809],

tear.

Gertrude of

Wyoming

Tis the sunset


lore,

of life gives

mystical

pt. I, st. 23

And coming
before. 1

events cast their shadows

HENRY CLAY
1777-1852

LochieFs Warning [1802]

The combat

Who rush to glory or the grave!


Wave, MunichI
all all

deepens. On, ye brave,

we forced to charge fortune with partiality towards the unLetter [December 4, 1801] just!
often are

How

And

charge with

thy banners wave, thy chivalry!

you wish to avoid foreign collision, better abandon the ocean. had you
If

Few, few shall part where many meet! The snow shall be their winding sheet And every turf beneath their feet
Shall be a soldier's sepulcher.

Speech, U.S. House of Representatives [January 22, 1812]


a trust, and the offigovernment are trustees; and both the trust and the trustees are created for the benefit of the people. 1

Government

is

cers of the
st.

Hohenlinden [1802],

7, 8

There was silence deep as death, And the boldest held his breath,
For a time. Battk of the Baltic [1805],
st.

Speech at Ashland, Kentucky [March 1829]


2

The
It

arts of

power and
countries

its

minions are
in
all
it;

Ye are brothers! ye are men! And we conquer but to save.


16. st. 5

the same in

all

and

ages.

marks

its

victim; denounces

and

Star that bringest

And

sett'st

home the bee, the weary laborer free! Song to the Evening Star
[1822],
st. i

excites the public odium and the public hatred, to conceal its own abuses and

encroachments.
Speech,

US. Senate [March

14,

1834]

Oh, how hard it is to The one just suited

find

to our

mind!
Song,
st. i

To
Is

live in hearts not to die. 2

we

leave behind
st.

Precedents deliberately established by wise men are entitled to great weight. They are evidence of truth, but only But a solitary preceevidence. dent which has never been re.
. . .

Hallo-wed Ground,

Oh

leave this barren spot to me!

examined, cannot be conclusive. Speech, U.S. Senate [February 18,1835]


I

Spare,

woodman,

spare

the beechen
st. i

tree! 3

The Beech
1

allegiance

have heard something said about to the South. I know no


I

Tree's Petition,
Shakespeare,

South, no North, no East, no West, to

See

Cicero, p.

ma;

Shelley, p. 5733;

and H. G. Wells, Often do the spirits Of great events stride on before

p. s68a; p. 888b.

which
sir, is

owe any

allegiance.

The

Union,

my country.

Speech [1848]

And
a

the events, in today already walks tomorrow.

The
States
i
1

COLERIDGE, Wallenstein [1799-1800], pt.


II, act V, sc.

Constitution of the United was made not merely for the

See

are not dead who live In hearts they leave behind. HUGH ROBERT OWR. [b.

They

Jefferson, p.
1887],

Mathew Henry, p. s86b; Burke, p. 454b; 47b; Calhoun, p. 545b; and Cleveis the potent, the omniLouis D. BRANDEIS, Olmstead

land, p. 77 ia.

They
st.

Our government
present teacher.
v. U.S. [1928]

See George Pope

Softly Morris, p. 6ooa.

Walk,

538

CLAY
generation that then existed, but for, unlimited, undefined, endperpetual posterity.

HAZLITT

The
one

soul of a journey

is liberty,

per-

posterity
less,

fect liberty, to
pleases.

think, feel,

do

just as

Speech in the Senate


[January 29, 1850]
Sir, I

Table Tdk.

On

Going

a Journey

would

rather be right than

be

President. 1

Speech [1850]

LORENZO DOW
1777-1834

Give me a clear blue sky over my head, and the green turf beneath my feet, a winding road before me, and a three hours' march to dinner and then to thinking! It is hard if I cannot
start

You will be damned if you do. And you will be damned if you don't
[definition of Calvinism].

some game on these lone heaths.


Ib.
it is

Oh!

Reflections on the

Love of God
[1836]

great

to

shake

off

the

trammels of the world and of public to lose our importunate, toropinion


menting, everlasting personal identity and become the creature of the mo-

CARL PRIEDRICH
GAUSS
1777-1855
It

ment,

clear

of

all

ties

...

to

be
Ib.

known by no other

title

than the gen-

may be

merely

true that people mathematicians have

who

are

tleman in the parlorl

certain
is
it.

What

specific shortcomings; however, that is not the fault of mathematics, but is

true of every exclusive occupation. 'Letter to H. C. Schumacher [1845]

I mean by living to one's self living in the world, as in it, not of ... It is to be a silent spectator of

Mathematics
sciences.

is

the

queen of the

From SARTORIUS VON WALTERSHAUSEN, Gauss zum Geddchtniss


[1856]

the mighty scene of things; ..." to take a thoughtful, anxious interest or curiosity in what is passing in the world, but not to feel the slightest inclination to make or meddle with it. 16. Living to One's Self

On

Even
little

in the

common

affairs of life,

VALENTINE BLACKER
1778-1823 Put your trust in God, keep your powder dry! From HAYES,

in love, friendship, security

and marriage, how


trust

have we when we

our happiness in the hands of others!


Ib.

my

boys, and

Ballads of Ireland, Col. Oliver's Advice

There is not a more mean, stupid, dastardly, pitiful, selfish, spiteful, envious, ungrateful animal than the Public. It is the greatest of cowards, for it is
afraid of itself.

WILLIAM HAZLITT
1778-1830
of the pleasantest things in the world is going a journey; but I like to

16.
is

When
money
to his

man

dead,

they

put

One

in his coffin, erect

monuments

memory, and celebrate the anni-

go by myself. Table Talk [1821-1822]. On Going a Journey When I am in the country I wish to 16. vegetate like the country. 1 Said when told that his defense of the Compromise would endanger his chances for
Presidency.

versary of his birthday in set speeches.

Would

they take any notice of him if he were living? No! x 16.

Horus non numero nisi Serenas 2 is the motto of a sundial near Venice. There is a softness and a harmony in
1
2

the

See Martial, p. 1353, and Thayer, p. 9493. I count only the sunny hours.

539

HAZLITT
the words and in the thought unparalTable Talk. On a Sundial

KEY

The
against
array.

schoolmaster
the

leled.

trust to

is abroad, and I him, armed with his primer,

No
die.

young man
Ib.

believes

he

shall ever

soldier

in

full

military

The

Feeling of Immortality
in

Speech, Opening of Parliament


[January 29, 1828]

Youth
In

The young
cious

superabundance of
have
little left,

are prodigal of life from a it; the old are tena-

on the same score, because they and cannot enjoy even


it.

what remains of

16.

As we advance in life, we acquire a keener sense of the value of time. Nothing else, indeed, seems of any consequence; and
respect.

mind, he was guilty of no was chargeable with no he ,was betrayed exaggeration by his fancy into no metaphor, who once said that all we see about us, Kings, Lords, and Commons, the whole machinery of

my
he

error

we become

misers in this
16.

the apparatus of the sysvaried workings, end in simply bringing twelve good men into a box.
all
its

the State, tem, and

Present State of the


Pursuit of
culties.

Law

love of liberty is the love of others; the love of power is the love of
ourselves.
Political Essays.

The

[February j, 1828]

The Times
Newspaper
lead,

Knowledge Under DiffiTitle of book [1830]

We
doing

cease to
it.

never do anything well till we think about the manner of


Sketches and Essay. On Prejudice

Education makes a people easy to but difficult to drive; easy to govern but impossible to enslave.
Attributed

The

great

Unwashed.

Attributed

It is better to

be able neither to read

THOMAS, LORD DENMAN


1779-1854
Trial

nor write than to be able to do nothing *


else.

On the Ignorance of the Learned


of genius do not excel in any profession because they labor in it, but they labor in it because they excel. Characteristics

by

jury, instead of

being a

se-

Men

are accused, will be a delusion, a mockery, and a snare.

curity to persons

who

O'Connell

v.

The Queen
1

[September 4,

844]

We

are not hypocrites in our sleep.

FRANCIS SCOTT KEY


1779-1843

On Dreams
Oh,
say,

can you see by the dawn's

HENRY PETER, LORD BROUGHAM


1778-1868

What
1 At

early light, so proudly

we

hailed at the twi-

light's last
the
first

gleaming?
7

What
what
is

is

valuable

is

not new, and

new is not valuable.1 From The Edinburgh Review [c. 1802], The Work of Thomas Young

Institution, 1825,

meeting of the London Mechanics Jota Reynolds, head of a school

at this meeting, said in the course of his remarks, "Look out,

Lord Brougham, who spoke

in ClerkenweU, acted as secretary of the meeting.

See Daniel Webster, p. 548!).

gentlemen, the schoolmaster is abroad." attracted little phrase attention at time, but when used in a speech three years it at once became popular.

The
that
later,

540

KEY

MOOKE
Our
voices keep tune time. 1

Whose

broad

stripes

and bright

stars,

and our

oars keep

through the perilous fight 7 O'er the ramparts we watched were so

Poems Relating
Row,
brothers,

to America.

And

gallantly streaming? the rockets' red glare, the

Canadian Boat Song,

st. z

bombs
fast,

bursting in air, Gave proof through the night that our


flag

row, the stream runs

was

still

there.

The

rapids are near,


past.

and the

Oh,

say,

does that star-spangled banner

daylight's 16.

yet

wave

Go

where glory waits theel

O'er the land of the free and the of the brave?

home

But while fame elates thee, Oh, still remember me!


Irish

The

Star-Spangled Banner [September 14, 1814], st. i


for our cause
it

Melodies [1807-1834].

Go

Where Glory Waits Thee,


Oh, breathe not

st. i

Then conquer we must,


is

And

just this be

our motto, "In

God

is

our

trust!"

16.

st.

his name! let it sleep in the shade, Where cold and unhonor'd his relics are laid.
16.

Oh

Breathe

Not His Name,


st.i
shed, though in

WILLIAM LAMB, VISCOUNT MELBOURNE


1779-1848
I

And

the tear that

we

secret it rolls, Shall long keep his

memory

wish

was

as cocksure of
is

anything

our souls. 2

green in 16. st. 2

as

Tom

Macaulay

of everything.

From COWPER, Melbourne's


Papers [1889], preface

The

harp
halls

that

once through Tara's

The soul

Now

CLEMENT CLARKE MOORE


1779-1863
'Twas
night before Christmas, through the house not even a creature was stirring

of music shed, hangs as mute on Tara's walls


16.

As

if

that soul were fled.

The Harp That Once Through Tara's Halls, st. i

the

And
Is

when

all

Not

the heart that is soonest awake to the flowers always the first to be touch 'd by the
thorns.
16.

a mouse;

The stockings were hung by the chimney with care, In hopes that St. Nicholas soon would
be
there.

A Visit from St Nicholas


[December 1823]

Oh, Think Not My Spirits Are Always as Light, st. i Rich and rare were the gems she wore, And a bright gold ring on her wand she
bore.
16.

"Happy Christmas
goodnight!"

to

all,

and to

all

Rich and Rare Were the Gems She Wore, st. i

16.

Ah!

little

they think

who

delight in her
is

strains,

THOMAS MOORE
1779-1852
Faintly as tolls the evening chime,
iSee Shakespeare, Hamlet
I,
i,

How the heart


ing. 16. She Is
1
3

of the Minstrel

breakst.

Far from the Land,


I,

10,

p. 25613.

See Marvell, p. g6ob. See Shakespeare, Hamlet

2,

p.

2573.

54

MOORE
Believe me,
if all

those endearing young

But the scent of the


round
it still.

roses will

charms

hang

Which I gaze on so fondly today, Were to change by tomorrow and


in

Irish
fleet

Melodies. Farewell!
st.

But Whenever,

my arms,

Like fairy gifts fading away, Thou would'st still be adored as this

No

eye to

watch, and no tongue


us,

to

wound
us.

moment thou art,


And around
Let thy loveliness fade as it will, the dear ruin each wish of

All earth forgot,


Ib.

and

all

heaven around

Come
that

O'er the Sea, st 2

my heart
Would
entwine itself verdantly still. Irish Melodies. Believe Me,
If All

The

light

lies

In woman's eyes,

Has been

my heart's
Ib.

undoing.

Those Endearing Young Charms, si. i


truly lov'd never

The Time I've Lost in Wooing, st. i

No, the heart that has


forgets,

My only books
Were woman's looks, And folly's all they've taught me.
Ib.

But as truly loves on to the close; As the sunflower turns on her god, when he sets, The sarte look which she turn'd when he rose. Ib. st. 2

Persian's heaven is easily made: Tis but black eyes and lemonade.

Intercepted Letters; or,

The

But As

there's
life

nothing half so sweet in

Two-Penny Post Bag [1813],


Oft in the stilly night, Ere Slumber's chain has bound me,

love's

young dream.

Ib. Love's

Young Dream,

st. i

Eyes of unholy blue.


Ib.

By That Lake Whose Gloomy Shore, st. 2

last rose of summer, Left blooming alone; All her lovely companions Are faded and gone.

Tis the

Ib.

The Last Rose

of

Summer,

st. i

Fond Memory brings the light Of other days around me; The smiles, the tears, Of boyhood's years, The words of love then spoken; The eyes that shone Now dimmed and gone, The cheerful hearts now broken.
National Airs [1815]. Oft in the Stilly Night, st. i
I feel like

Minstrel Boy to the war is gone, In the ranks of death you'll find him. His father's sword he has girded on, And his wild harp slung behind him.
Ib.

The

Who treads alone


Some banquet
jar
will

one,

The Minstrel Boy,

st. i

hall deserted,

Then awake! the heavens look

Whose lights are fled,


long keep
the
fragrance of

bright,
dear;

my dear;
'Tis never too late for delight,

And the best of all ways To lengthen our days


Is to steal

my

what it was once steeped in when new. HORACE [65-8 B.C.], Epistles if 2, 69 That flavor, absorbed when new, remains.
QUINTILIAN
But,
[A.D.

42-118]
of' other,
first

my

a few hours from the night, dear.

somehow

though you
ST.

fill

it
it

with water, the jar retains the odor which


acquired 342-420]
cal

Ib.

The Young May Moon,


break, you
if

when

used.

st. i

JEROME

[A.D.

You may
vase,

may

shatter the

you

will,

frequently used in the classiperiod; unglazed ware is more absorbent than glazed.

The image was

542

MOORE

CHAJNNING
Like

Whose garlands dead, And all but he departed.


National Airs. Oft in the
Stilly

Dead Sea
eye,

fruits,

that tempt the


1

But turn

to ashes

on the

lips.

Night,
love

st.

Lalla

Rookh

[1817],

pt.V

What
Age

though

youth

gave

and

Paradise itself were

dim
16.

And

roses,
still

joyless,

if

not shared with him!

leaves us friends
Ib. Spring

and wine.
st. i

VI

and Autumn,
o'er

Sound the loud timbrel


dark
sea!

Egypt's

HORACE [HORATIO] SMITH


Thinking
is

Jehovah

has

triumphed

his

people

are free.

1779-1849 but an idle waste

of

Sacred Songs. Sound the Loud Timbrel, st. i

thought,

And nought

There was a
little

little

Man, and he had

And he

Soul; said, "Little Soul, let us try, try,

is everything, and everything is nought. Rejected Addresses [1812], Cui Bono?, st. 8

In the

name

try!" Satirical
Little

and Humorous Poems.


Soul,
st. i

of the Prophet figs. Johnson's Ghost

Man and Little

And

Oh, call it by some better name, For friendship sounds too cold. Ballads and Songs. Oh, Call
by Some Better Name,

walk'd about (how a strange story! ) In Thebes's streets three thousand years
hast

thou

ago,

It

When

the

Memnonium was

in all its

st. i

glory?

Address to the
There's a bower of roses by Bendemeer's stream, And the nightingale sings round it all the day long. 1
Lalla

Mummy at Belst.

zoni's Exhibition,

13

JOSEPH STORY
1779-1849
I will

Rookh

[18 17], />*.!!

One morn a Peri at the gate Of Eden stood disconsolate.


Some
flow'rets of
trail

not say with Lord Hale, that


will

Ib.
still

IV

"The Law
but
I will
tress,

admit of no
it is

rival'

say that

a jealous mis-

Eden ye

inherit,

But the
all.

of the serpent

is

over

them
16.

and requires a long and constant courtship. It is not to be won by trifling 2 favors, but by lavish homage.

The Value and Importance


Oh! ever
I've seen
I

of

thus,

my

from childhood's hour, fondest hope decay;

Legal Studies

[August

5,

1829]

never loved a tree or flower, But 'twas the first to fade away. I never nurs'd a dear gazelle To glad me with its soft black eye,

WILLIAM ELLERY

CHANNING
1780-1842
all

But when

it

came
it

to

know me

And
x

love me,

was

well, sure to die.

We V
1

do, then, with

earnestness,

16.

though without reproaching our brethren, protest against the irrational and
3
3

As I recall them the roses bloom, again, and the nightingales sing by the calm Bendemeer. THACKERAY, The Newcomes [1853-1855], ch.
at

See Byron, p. 5563. See Emerson, p. 6oga. Inaugural address as

Dane

Professor of

Law

Harvard University.

543

CHANNING
unscriptural doctrine of the Trinity. "To us," as to the Apostle and the primitive Christians, "there is one God,

CLAUSEWTTZ
enjoy intercourse with superior minds. ... In the best books, great men talk to us, give us their most precious
thoughts,
ours.

With Jesus, we worship the Father, as the only living and are astonished, that any true God. man can read the New Testament, and avoid the conviction, that the Father alone is God. Unitarian Christianity
even the Father/'

and pour their souls into


for books.

God be thanked
make

We

They

are the voices of the distant

and the

dead, and
life

us heirs of the spiritual

of past ages. Books are true levelers. They give to all, who will faithfully use
society,

them, the
race.

[Baltimore,
I see

1819]

ence, of the best

and greatest

the spiritual presof our

the marks of God in the heavens and the earth, but how much more in a liberal intellect, in magnanimity, in unconquerable rectitude, in a philan-

Self-Culture [Boston, September

z8 3 8]

The mind,
off

in proportion as it

is

cut

thropy which forgives every wrong, and which never despairs of the cause of
Christ and human virtue! I do and must reverence human nature. 1
.

I
.

bless

it

for its kind affections, for


love. I

its

strong
its

and tender

honor

it
.

for
.

struggles
its

against

oppression

communication with nature, with revelation, with God, with itself, loses its life, just as the body droops when debarred from the air and the cheering light from heaven. Remarks on the Character and Writings of Fgnelon [1843]
from
free
I call

for
art,

achievements in science and


that
its

and still more for its examples of heroic and saintly virtue. These are marks of a divine origin and the pledges of a celestial inheritance; and
I

mind

free

which

jealously

guards powers,

intellectual

rights

and

which calls no which does not content

man

master, itself with a

thank

God

up with

that my own lot is that of the human race. 2

bound

Likeness to

God

[Providence,

passive or hereditary faith, which opens itself to light whencesoever it may come, which receives new truth as an

Rhode

Island,

1828]

angel from Heaven.


Spiritual

Freedom

There are seasons, in human affairs, of inward and outward revolution, when new depths seem to be broken up
in the soul, when new wants are unfolded in multitudes, and a new and

The office of government is not to confer happiness, but to give men opportunity to work out happiness for themselves.
The
Life

undefined good is thirsted for. There are periods when the principles of experience need to be modified, when hope

and Character

of

Napoleon Bonaparte

and
with

trust

and

instinct claim a

share

prudence in the guidance of affairs, when, in truth, to dare, is the 3 highest wisdom.

KARL VON CLAUSEWITZ


War
also

Complete Works [1879]. The Union [1829]


It is chiefly
1

1780-1831 not merely a political act, but a pplitical instrument, a continuais

through books that

we

See Albert Schweitzer, p. ggga.


Inscription

tion of political relations, a carrying out of the same by other means. 1

on Channing Memorial, Public


p. soob,

Vom

Kriege [1833]

Garden, Boston. a See Spenser,

and Danton,

p. 4g6b.

See

Mao Tse-Tung,

p.

io7b.

544

COLTON

CALHOUN

CHARLES CALEB COLTON


When
nothing.

CAPTAIN JAMES

LAWRENCE
1781-1813

1780-1832 you have nothing to

say, say

Tell the
give
sinks. 1

men

to

fire faster

and not to
till

up the

ship;

fight

her

she

Lacon [1820-1822],
Imitation
is

vol. I, no.

183

On

board the

US.
i,

frigate

the sincerest of

flattery.

16.

Chesapeake \June

1813]

217
66

The debt which

cancels

all

others.
16. II,

THOMAS HART BENTON


1782-1858
This new page opened in the book of our public expenditures, and this new departure taken, which leads into the bottomless gulf of civil pensions and
family gratuities. Speech in the U.S. Senate against a grant to President Harrison's
[April 1841]

CHARLES MINER
When
little

I see

1780-1865 a merchant

his customers,

begging them

over-polite to to taste a

brandy and throwing half his thinks I, that goods on the counter man has an ax to grind. Essays from the Desk of Poor Robert the Scribe [1815]. Who'll Turn Grindstones *

JOHN
Protection
rocal.

C.

CALHOUN
recip-

ADELBERT VON
CHAMISSO
1781-1838
Peter Schlemihl. From the title: Peter Schlemihls wundersame Geschichte [1804]

1782-1850 and patriotism are

Speech, U.S. House of Representatives

[December

12,

1811]

The very essence of a free government consists in considering offices as


2 of public trusts, bestowed for the good the country, and not for the benefit of an individual or a party.

EBENEZER ELLIOTT
Not Not
1781-1849 and lords, but nations! kings thrones and crowns, but men!

Speech [February 13, 1835]

Corn Law Rhymes [1828]. When Wilt Thou Save the


People? st
i

God

save the people!


is

16.

A power has risen up in the government greater than the people themselves, consisting of many and various and powerful interests, combined into one mass, and held together by the cohesive

What

a communist?

One who hath

banks. 3

power of the vast surplus in the Speech [May 27, 1836]

yearnings

For equal division of unequal earnings.


Poetical
1 First

Works

[1846].

Epigram

1 Usually quoted as "Don't give up the ship"; Lawrence's final order as he was carried below fatally wounded, before capture of his ship by

published in Luzerne Federalist [September 7, Because of the similarity of the


title to Poor Richard, the phrase "an ax to grind" has often been attributed to Franklin.

1810].

the British frigate Shannon. 2 See Henry, p. s86b; Burke, p. 454b; Jefferson, and Cleveland, p. 77*a. p. 47b; Clay, p. ssSb; 8 From this speech comes the phrase "Cohesive

power

of public plunder."

545

CALHOUN

WEBSTER

The
sinking

surrender of life is nothing to down into acknowledgment of

DANIEL WEBSTER
It
is,
sir,

inferiority.

as

1782-1852 I have

Speech,
It is

US.

said,

small

Senate [February 19, 1847]

college,

and yet there are those who

love

it.

harder to preserve than to obtain


1

Dartmouth College Case [1818]

liberty.

Speech,

US.

Senate [January

tians,

ANN TAYLOR
1782-1866

Whatever makes men good Chrismakes them good citizens. Speech at Plymouth, Massachusetts l [December 22, 1820]

JANE TAYLOR
1783-1824

Labor in this country is independent and proud. It has not to ask the patronage of capital, but capital solicits
the aid of labor. 2

Who

ran to help

me when

I fell,

And would some Or kiss the place

pretty story tell, to make it well?

Speech [April

2, 1824]

My

mother.
Original Poems for Infant
[1804].

Minds

My
st.

TAYLOR],
Twinkle, twinkle,

Mother 6

[by

ANN

wish that this column, rising towards heaven among the pointed spires of so many temples dedicated to God,
contribute also to produce in all minds a pious feeling of dependence and gratitude. wish, finally, that

We

may

little star,

We

How I wonder what you are, Up above the world so high, 2

the last object to the sight of him who leaves his native shore, and the first to

Like a diamond in the sky! Rhymes for the Nursery [1806].

gladden his who revisits it, may be something which shall remind him of
the liberty and the glory of his country. Address on Laying the CornerStone of the Bunker Hill Monu-

The
I like little

Star, st. i

And

if I

Pussy, her coat is so warm; don't hurt her she'll do me no


16. 1 Like Little Pussy [by

harm.

ment
is

[June 17, 1825]

JANE TAYLOR], st. thank the goodness and the grace Which on my birth have smiled,

Mind the great lever of all things; human thought is the process by which human ends are ultimately answered.
16.

And made me,

A happy English child.

in these Christian days,

A
Then

Hymns for
Chil&s

Infant Minds

Knowledge, in truth, in the firmament. Life


scattered with
all its

is

the great sun


are
16.

[1810].
i

and power

Oh, .that it To do the things

Hymn of Praise, st. were my chief delight


I

beams.

ought!

let me try with all my might To mind what I am taught.

Let our object be our country, our whole country, and nothing but our
country.
16.

16.

For a Very

Little

Child

Sink or swim, live or die, survive or


1 This oration will be read five hundred years hence with as much rapture as it was heard. It ought to be read at the end of every century, and indeed at the end of every year, forever and ever. JOHN ADAMS, Letter to Webster [December 33, 1821]
2

And

willful waste, depend upon 't, Brings, almost always, woeful want! 16. The Pin [by ANN TAYLOR],
st.
1

See S. E. Morison, p. * See Lewis Carroll, p. 7444.

See Lincoln, p.

546

WEBSTER
perish, I give this vote. 1

my hand

and

my heart

to

land rent with


it

civil feuds, or

drenched,

may be,

in fraternal blood.

Adams and
It is

Discourse in Commemoration of Jefferson, Faneuil

Second Speech on Foote's


Resolution
Liberty and Union, one and inseparable.

Hall, Boston [August 2, 1826]

now and

my living
God

sentiment, and
it

by the
dying
Ib.

forever, Ib.

blessing of

shall

be

my

Independence 2 Independence forever.

sentiment

now and

There is no refuge from confession but suicide; and suicide is confession.

Washington
sky.

is

in

the clear upper


16.

Argument on the murder of Captain White [April 6, 1830]


There
truth
is

nothing

so

powerful

as
1

has not seen how to reply to this, otherwise than by supposing me to have advanced the doctrine that a national debt is a national
3

The gentleman

and often nothing so


concatenation
of

strange. Ib.

Fearful
stances.2

circumIb.

blessing.

Second Speech on Foote's Resolution \January 26, 1830]


I shall enter on no encomium upon Massachusetts; she needs none. There 4 she is. Behold her, and judge for yourselves. There is her history; the world

sense of duty pursues us ever. It is omnipresent, like the Deity. If we take to ourselves the wings of the morning, and dwell in the uttermost parts of the

secure.

by heart. The past, at least, is There is Boston and Concord and Lexington and Bunker Hill; and
it

knows

duty performed or duty violated is with us, for our happiness or our misery. If we say the darkness shall cover us, in the darkness as in the light Ib. our obligations are yet with us. 3
sea,
still

there they will remain forever.

16.

He smote
resources,

the rock of the national


rev-

people's government, made for the people, made by the people, and answerable to the people. 5 16.

The

and abundant streams of

enue gushed forth. He touched the dead corpse of Public Credit, and it
sprung upon
4 its feet.

When my
hold
for

eyes shall
last

the

be turned to betime the sun in

Speech on Hamilton \March 10,

heaven, may I not see him shining on the broken and dishonored fragments of a once glorious Union; on States dissevered,
1

On

this question of principle,

while

actual suffering

was yet afar

off,

they

discordant,

belligerent;

on a

[the Colonies] raised their flag against a power to which, for purposes of for-

See John Adams, p. 4633. Live or die, sink or swim.


a

Edward I

GEORGE PEELE,

eign conquest and subjugation, Rome in the height of her glory is not to be

being "Independent Day," he replied, "Independence forever." DANIEL WEBSTER, Works [1903],
vol. I, p.
8

[c. 1584] the day of his [John Adams's] death, hearing the noise of bells and cannon, he asked the occasion. On reminded that it was

On

a power which has dotted compared over the surface of the whole globe with
1

*
8

See Byron, p. 562^ See Scott, p. 5*1 a. See Psalm 130:9, p. aga.

150

See Hamilton, p. 4840. Generally misquoted as "Massachusetts, there

she stands."
5

*And Moses lifted up his hand, and with his rod he smote the rock twice; and the water came out abundantly. Numbers *o;n

Our

sovereign, the people.

CHARLES JAMES

Fox, toast [1798], for which his from the Privy Council.

name was

erased

He it was that first gave to the law the air of a science. He found it a skeleton, and clothed it with life, color, and complexion; he embraced
the cold statue,

See Wycliffe, p. i63b; Garrison, p. 6i6a; Lincoln, p. 6393; and Theodore Parker, p. 657^

youth, health,

and by his touch it grew into and beauty. BARRY YELVJERTON,

LORD AVONMORE [1735-1805],

On

Slackstone

547

WEBSTER
her

BOLtvAK
from
changes
of
1

and military posts, possessions whose morning drumbeat, following the 1 sun, and keeping company with the hours, circles the earth with one continuous and unbroken strain of the
martial airs of England.

circumstances,

are

often justifiable.

Speech

[July

25 and 27, 1846]

Liberty exists in proportion to whole-

some

restraint.

Speech [May

7,

1834]

Speech at the Charleston Bar Dinner [May 10, 1847]

God
love
it,

grants liberty only to those who and are always ready to guard
it.

The
honor
I

law: It has
it.

honored

us;

may we
16.

and defend

Speech [June

3, 1834]

One
destiny.

country,

one

constitution,

one

have read their platform, and I think there are some unsound in it, I can stand upon it pretty places

though

well.

But

see nothing in it

both new
7

Speech [March 15, 1837]

and

valuable.

"What

is

There are persons who constantly


clamor.

They complain

of oppression,

of speculation, and pernicious influence

new, and what is new is Speech at Marshfield, Massachusetts [September i, 1848]


I was born an American; I will live an American; I shall die an American. Speech \July 17, 1850]

valuable is not not valuable/ 2

wealth. They cry out loudly against all banks and corporations, and a means by which small capitalists become united
in

order

to

produce

important

carry hostility against all established institutions.

beneficial results.

They

and on mad

Faneuil Hall, the cradle of American Letter [April 1851] liberty.

They would choke

of industry

and dry all Speech, UJS. Senate [March

the fountain streams.

Men hang out their signs indicative of their respective trades: shoemakers hang out a gigantic shoe; jewelers, a
monster watch; and the dentist hangs out a gold tooth; but up in the mountains

When
low.

tillage begins,

The

farmers

therefore

other arts folare the

of

New

Hampshire,

God

Al-

founders of

human

civilization.

On

Agriculture [January 13, 1840]


to the world

mighty has hung out a sign to show that there He makes men. On the Old Man of the

Mountain;
America has furnished
the character of Washington. And if our American institutions had done nothing else, that alone would have entitled them to the respect of mankind. On the Completion of Bunker Hill Monument [June 17, 1843]
I still live.

attributed

Last words [October 24, 1852]

SIMON BOLl'vAR
1783-1830

A
falls

state too extensive in itself, or


its

Thank God!
American!
Justice, sir, is earth.

also

am

an
16.

virtue of

by dependencies, ultimately
its

into decay;

free

government

is

the great interest of


Justice Story [September 12, 1845]

man on

transformed into a tyranny; it disre1 L'homme absurde est celui qui ne change jamais [The absurd man is he who never
changes].

On

Mr.

AUCUSTE

MARSEILLE

BARTH LEMY,

Ma
2 8

Justification [1839]

Inconsistencies
*See

of

opinion,
and
Scott,

arising

Schiller, p.

49713,

p.

See Lord Brougham, p. 54oa. Natural rock formation in the shape of a human profile, in the Presidential Range of the White Mountains. It gave Hawthorne the theme of his story The Great Stone Face.

548

BOliVAR
gards

IRVING

preserve,

the principles which it should and finally degenerates into despotism. The distinguishing characteristic of small republics is stability: the character of large republics is
mutability.

His blood-red banner streams Who follows in His train?

afar;

Hymns. The Son

of

God
st.

Goes Forth to War,

Letter from Jamaica

the popular and representasystems of government I do not approve of the federal system: it is too

Among

tive

From Greenland's icy mountains, From India's coral strand, Where Afric's sunny fountains Roll down their golden sand. Ib. Missionary Hymn,
Though
every prospect pleases,

st. i

perfect;
political

and

it

requires

virtues

and
Ib.

talents

much

superior to our

own.

And

only

man is vile.
in his blindness

Ib.

st.

Let us give to our republic a fourth power with authority over the youth,
the hearts of men, public
spirit, habits,

The heathen
Bows down

to

wood and

stone.

Ib.

and republican morality. Let us establish this Areopagus to watch over the
education of the children, to supervise national education, to purify whatever may be corrupt in the republic, to denounce ingratitude, coldness in the
country's service, egotism, sloth, idleness, and to pass judgment upon the
first

Holy, Holy, Holy! Lord God Almighty! Early in the morning our song shall rise
to

Thee:
Holy!
Merciful

Holy,

Holy, Mighty!
in

and

God

Three Persons, Blessed Trinity.


Ib. Holy, Holy, Holy!

signs of corruption

and pernicious

WASHINGTON IRVING
How convenient
of our great

example.

Address to the Congress of Angostura

1783-1859 it would be to many men and great families of

Those who have served the cause of the revolution have plowed the sea.
Attributed
three greatest dolts in the world: Jesus Christ, Don Quixote, and I. Attributed

doubtful origin, could they have the privilege of the heroes of yore, who, whenever their origin was involved in
obscurity, modestly announced selves descended from a god..

them-

The

Knickerbocker's History of New Yorfe [1809], bk. II, eft. 3

REGINALD HEBER
1783-1826
Brightest and best of the sons of the

His wife "ruled the roast," and in governing the governor, governed the province, which might thus be said to

be under petticoat government. 1


16. IV,

morning, Dawn on our darkness, and lend us


thine aid.

Hymns. Epiphany,

st.

to be the first inventors of those recondite beverages, cocktail, 2 stonefence, and sherry cobbler.

They claim

Ib.

How

By cool

Siloam's shady rill sweet the lily grows!


Ib. First

241

There
a

is

in every true

Sunday

after

Epiphany,
no. 2

spark

of

woman's heart heavenly fire, which lies

dormant in the broad daylight of prosperity; but which kindles up, and
1
2

The Son

of

God

A kingly crown to gain;

goes forth to war,

See Themistodes, p. 77b. See Browning, p. 66Gb.

549

IRVING

STENDHAL
I

beams and
adversity.

blazes in the dark

hour of

am

always at a loss to

know how
To

much

The Sketch-Book [1819-1820]. The Wife


Those men are most apt to be obsequious and conciliating abroad, who
are under the discipline of shrews at 16. Rip Van Winkle * home.
ject

to believe of my own stories. Tales of a Traveler [1824].


1

the Reader

The almighty

dollar,

that great ob-

throughout our land, seems to have no genuine devotees in these peculiar villages.

of universal devotion

sharp tongue is the only edge tool that grows keener with constant use.
16.

Wolfert's Roost [1855]. The Creole Village

That happy age when a man can be


idle

STENDHAL
[HENRI BEYLE]
1783-1842
that action of that discovers fresh perfections in its beloved at every turn of
I call "crystallization"

with impunity.

16.
life is

woman's whole
16.

a history of

the affections.

the

mind

The Broken Heart

it

Language gradually varies, and with fade away the writings of authors
have
16.

events.

who
time.

wise

flourished

their

allotted

De I'Amour [1822], eft. i woman never yields by apIt

pointment.

The

Mutabilities of Literature

foreseen happiness.

should always be an un16. 60


in

There rise authors now and then, who seem proof against the mutability
of language, because they have rooted

One
solitude

can

acquire everything except character.


16.

Fragments
IZ>.

themselves in the unchanging principles


of

human

nature.

16.

Prudery worst of all.

is

kind of avarice, the

His [the author's] renown has been purchased, not by deeds of violence and blood, but by the diligent dispensation
of pleasure.
16.

In matters of sentiment, the public has very crude ideas; and the most shocking fault of women is that they make the public the supreme judge of
their lives.
16.

Westminster Abbey [The


Poets' Corner]
is

There

is

no such thing

as

"natural

The

sorrow for the dead

the only
to

sorrow from which


divorced.

we
16.

refuse

be

Rural Funerals

law": this expression is nothing but old nonsense. Prior to laws, what is natural is only the strength of the lion, or the need of the creature suffering from

Whenever
he may

compliment him about


growing old.

man's friends begin to looking young, be sure that they think he is


a

hunger or
I

cold, in short, need.

The Red and the Black


see but one rule: to

[1831]

be

clear. If I

am
of Irving' s story
derives

not

Bracebridge Hall [1822]. Bachelors


a

clear, all

my

world crumbles

to

nothing.

The theme

from

DIOGENES LAERTTUS, Epimenides [c. A.D. 200]. Epimenides was sent by his father into the field to look for a sheep, turned out of the road at

Reply to Balzac [October 30, 1840]^

Wit
turies.
1

lasts

no more than two

cen16.

midday and asleep, and

in a certain cave and fell slept there fifty-seven years; and after that, when awake, he went on looking for the sheep, thinking that he had been taking a short nap.
lay

down

See Jonson, p. 3033. In reference to La

Chartreuse

de Parme

55

STENDHAL
It is

HUNT
Green
little

will

make our

the nobility of their style which writers of 1840 unreada-

To

vaulter in the sunny grass. the Grasshopper and the

ble forty years

from now.
Manuscript note [1840]

Cricket [1817]

Abou Ben Adhem (may


crease!)

his tribe in-

Love has always been the most important business in my life, I should say the only one. La Vie d'Henri Brulard [1890]

Awoke one night from


peace.

a deep

dream

of

A&ou Ben Adhem

[1838]
Ib.

An

ALLAN CUNNINGHAM
1784-1842

angel writing in a
as

book of

gold.
his fellow
16.

A wet sheet and a flowing sea,

Write me men.

one that loves

A wind

that follows

fast,
sail,

And And
[1825].

show'd the names

whom
led

love of
all

And fills the white and rustling And bends the gallant mast. The Songs of Scotland
st.i

GodhadblessM, lo! Ben Adhem's name


rest.

the
Ib.

A Wet Sheet and a Flo-wing Sea,

Jenny kissed

me when we met,

hollow oak our palace is, Ib. st. 3 Our heritage the sea.
it's hame, hame fain wad be O, hame, hame, hame to my ain coun-

The

It's

hame and
I

tree!

16

Ifs

Hame and

It's

Hame,
refrain

Jumping from the chair she sat in; Time, you thief, who love to get Sweets into your list, put that in: Say I'm weary, say I'm sad, Say that health and wealth have missed me, Say I'm growing old, but add, 1 Rondeau [1838] Jenny kissed me.
Stolen sweets are always sweeter, Stolen kisses much completer, Stolen looks are nice in chapels,
Stolen, stolen,

LEIGH HUNT
This

1784-1859 Adonis in loveliness

was

corpulent

man

be your apples. Song of Fairies Robbing an Orchard

of

fifty.

The Examiner [March 22,

1812]

A Venus grown fatl


Blue-Stocking

Revek

Where

the light woods go from the town.

seaward

"No

The

Story of Rimini [1816], canto I, Z. 18

love," quoth he, "but vanity, sets love a task like that."

But most he loved a happy human


face.
I&. canto III,
all forgot,
Z.

no

Of

4 Learn the right coining words in the quick mint of


joy.

The Glove and the

Lions,

2 st.

The world was


o'er,

the struggle

A Rustic Walk and Dinner,

Z.

33

Desperate
read

the

joy.

That day they


Ib.
I.

no more. 2

607

A fireside is a great opiate. A Few Thoughts


It

on Sleep

has been said of ladies

*For this reference to the Prince Regent, Hunt was imprisoned. But he was allowed to
of roses,

when they

redecorate the walls of his prison with a trellis had his family with him, and visitors were freely admitted Byron, indeed, gave a dinner party in his honor at the jail. 2 See Dante, p. i6oa.

write letters, that they put their minds 1 Jenny was Jane Welsh Carlyle, who kissed

Hunt when he brought Carlyle good news. 2 Schiller wrote a poem on the same theme, and Browning's The Glove [1845] is a later
version of the familiar legend.
]

55

HUNT
let out the real in their postscripts as if it were a objects of their writing, or a thing comparasecond

PEACOCK

breaking,

thought,

tively indifferent.

Anacreon

comes next to drinking and Sabbathand from that to incivility and procrastination. Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts [1827]

ZACHARY TAYLOR
1784-1850 Hurrah for Old Kentuck! That's^ the damn 'em. way to do it. Give 'em hell, Shouted to the 2nd Kentucky Regiment on seeing them rally
in battle [Buena Vista, Mexico, February 23, 1847]

LADY CAROLINE LAMB


1785-1828

and danger[Of Byron] Mad, bad, ous to know. Journal

THOMAS LOVE PEACOCK


1785-1866

A little
Tell

more

Br grape, Captain
Attributed

I never could bear heeltap! a heeltap!


it!

him

1 to go to hell. demand Anna's Santa to Reply for surrender [Ib.]

So

fill

me

bumper, a bumper

of

claret!

Headlong Hall [1816],

ch. 5,

song

THOMAS DE QUINCEY
1785-1859

The burden

of the incommunicable.

Confessions of an English Opium-Eater [1822-1856],


fit.

Not drunk is he who from the floor Can rise alone and still drink more; But drunk is he who prostrate lies, Without the power to drink or rise. The Misfortunes of Elphin
ch. heading, 3, [1829], translated from the Welsh

I
all
is

spectacles, what going to his rest. Call for the grandest

Call for the grandest of is that? It

earthly

the sun
that?

The mountain
But the

sheep are sweeter,


it

human sentiments, what is It is that man should forget his 2 before he lies down to sleep.
of
all

We therefore deemed
To

valley sheep are fatter;

meeter
Ib. 11

anger
Ib.

carry off the latter.

So,

then,

Oxford

Street,

stony-

hearted stepmother, thou that listenest to the sighs of orphans, and drinkest the tears of children, at length I was I dismissed from thee.
Everlasting farewells! and again, and reverberated everlasting again yet
farewells!

Ancient sculpture is the true school of modesty. But where the Greeks had had modesty, we have cant; where they

we have cant; where they had where they patriotism, we have cant;
poetry,

had anything that


adorns
cant, cant, cant.

exalts,

delights,

or

humanity, we have nothing but


Crotchet Castle [1831], ch. 7

Ib. Ill

A
is,

Dyspepsy
empires,
else.

the ruin of most things: expeditions, and everything Letter to Hessey [1823]
is

me

book that furnishes no quotations it is a playjudice, no book


Ib. 9

thing.

He remembered
green bed,

too late, on his thorny

indulges himself in murder, very soon he comes to think little of robbing; and from robbing he
If

once a

man

Much

See McAuliffe, p. iO4*b. See Ephesians 4:26, p. 5

that well may be thought cannot wisely be said. Ib. The Priest and the Mulberry

Tree,

st.

55 2

PEACOCK
Gotham's three wise men we Whither in your bowl so free?
be.

SCOTT

LUDWIG BORNE
1786-1837
Like buttered bread, state ministers 1 usually fall on the good side. Collected Works, pL III

To

rake the
shine.

The bowl

moon from out the sea. goes trim. The moon doth
is

And

our ballast

old wine.
of

Three

Men

Gotham

[1837],
St. 1

DAVID CROCKETT
1786-1836
I

OLIVER HAZARD PERRY


1785-1819

leave this rule for others

when I'm

dead,

Be

We

then go always sure you're right ahead. 2 Autobiography [1834]

have met the enemy, and they


Dispatch to General William

are ours.

Henry Harrison, announcing


his

Don't shoot, Colonel, Til come down: I know I'm a gone coon. 3 Story told by Crockett of a treed
raccoon

victory

at the

battle

of

Lake Erie [United States Brig Niagara, September 10, 1813,

WILLIAM LEARNED

P.M.]

MARCY

1786-1857

SAMUEL WOODWORTH
1785-1842

see nothing wrong in the rule that to the victor belong the spoils of

They

How

dear to this heart are the scenes of


presents

the enemy. Speech,

U.S. Senate

my childhood, When fond recollection


to view!

[January 1832]

them

The Old Oaken Bucket

WINFIELD SCOTT
1786-1866
say that Americans are good at a long shot, but cannot stand the cold iron. I call upon you instantly to give a lie to the slander. Charge! Address to the nth Infantry

The
The

old oaken bucket, the iron-bound bucket, moss-covered bucket which hung in the well. Ib.
shovel,

The enemy

Pickaxe,

spade,

crowbar, hoe,

and barrow,
Better not invade, Yankees have the

Regiment [Chippewa, Canada, June $ 9 1814]


Say to the seceded States, "Wayward
sisters,

marrow.

The

Patriotic Diggers [1814],

st. i

depart in peace." Letter to

W.

H. Seward
3,

We'll show him that Kentucky boys Are Alligator-horses. The Hunters of Kentucky*- st. 2
1 This ballad has the subtitle Half Horse and Half Alligator and celebrates the participation of Kentuckians, under the command of General John Coffee, in the Battle of New Orleans [January 8, 1815]. It was published as a broadside in Boston and in 1826 collected in Melodies, Duets, Trios, Songs, and Ballads, by JAMES M. CAMPBELL.

[March
1 1

1861]

never had a piece of toast Particularly long and wide But fell upon the sanded floor, And always on the buttered side.

3
8

Crockett's

motto in the

War of

JAMES PAYN [1884]


1812.

expression "gone coon" was current during the Revolutionary War, originating in the plea of a spy, dressed in raccoon skins, to his discoverer, an English rifleman. Century

The

Cyclopedia of

Names

553

CORNWAIX

BYRON
I

BARRY CORNWALL [BRYAN WALLER


PROCTER]
1787-1874

only know only feel

we

loved in vain; farewell! farewell!

Farewell! If Ever Fondest Prayer [1808], st. 2

The The

the sea! the open sea! blue, the fresh, the ever free Without a mark, without a bound, It runneth the earth's wide regions The Sea, St. i round.
sea!

When we two parted


In silence and tears,

Half broken-hearted,

To sever

When We Two

for years.

Parted [1808],
st. i

FRANCOIS GUIZOT
1787-1874
Enrich yourselves!
*
i,

Near this spot are deposited the remains of one who possessed Beauty
without Vanity, Strength without Insolence, Courage without Ferocity, and all lie Virtues of Man, without his Vices. This Praise, which would be un-

Speech [March

1843]

JOHANN LUDWIG UHLAND


1787-1862 Let him sing to whom song is given. Des Sangers Fluch [1814]

meaning

Flattery

if

inscribed

over

human ashes, is but a just tribute to the Memory of Boatswain, a Dog. Inscription on the monument of
a

Newfoundland dog

[1808]

The poor dog, in life the The first to welcome,


defend.
I'll

firmest friend, foremost to


Ib.

EMMA WILLARD
1787-1870

publish right or wrong:

Fools are
song,

my

theme,

let satire

be

my

Rocked

in the cradle of the deep. The Cradle of the Deep [1831]

English Bards and Scotch Reviewers [1809], Z. 5


'Tis pleasant, sure, to see one's

RICHARD HARRIS
BARJIAM
1788-1845 The Lady Jane was tall and slim, The Lady Jane was fair. Ingoldsby Legends [1840]. The Knight and the Lady

name

in

print; book's a book,

although there's noth16.


Z.

ing in

't.

51

A man
Save

must

serve his
critics

time to every
all

trade

censure

are

ready
to mis-

made.

The

Ib. L 63

Devil

must
16.

be

in

that

little

With

Jackdaw!

just

enough of learning

The Jackdaw

of

Rheims

quote.

Ib.

I.

66

GEORGE NOEL GORDON, LORD BYRON


Friendship
is

As soon Seek roses in December, ice in June; Hope constancy in wind, or corn in
chaff;

1788-1824 Love without

his wings,

UAmiti6 Est I'Amour


1

sans Ailes [1806]

Believe a woman or an epitaph, Or any other thing that's false, before Ib. Z. 75 You trust in critics.

Enrichissez-vous!

Better to err with Pope, than shine with Ib. 1 102 Pye.

554

BYRON

Twas
And

thine own genius gave the final blow, help'd to plant the wound that laid thee low:
eagle, stretch'd

Gone

through glimmering dream of things that were.

the

Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, canto II [1812], st. 2

So the struck
plain,

upon the

A schoolboy's
hour!

tale,

the wonder of an an
Ib.

No more

through rolling clouds to soar


fatal

again,

The dome
soul. 1

View'd his own feather on the


dart,

of thought, the palace of the


Ib.
st.

And wing'd

the shaft that quiver'd in


1

Fair

Greece! worth!

sad

relic

of

departed

his heart.

English Bards and Scotch Reviewers, I. 826

Immortal,

though

no

more;

though
st.

fallen, great!

Ib.
'tis

73

Though Nature's
the best. 2

sternest painter, yet Ib. I 839

Where'er we tread
ground.

haunted, holy Ib. st. 88

What
What

is

the worst of woes that wait on

Maid

of Athens, ere

we

part,
st. i

Give, oh give

me back my heart!
of Athens [1810],

age?

Maid
night.

Vex'd with mirth the drowsy ear of


Childe Harolffs Pilgrimage, canto I [1812], st. 2

stamps the wrinkle deeper on the brow? To view each loved one blotted from
life's

page,
earth, as I

And be alone on

am now.
I&.
st.

98

Had

sigh'd to

many, though he loved


'

Once more upon the

waters, yet once

but one.
Maidens,
like

16. st. 5

And

more! the waves bound beneath


steed
his rider!

me

as a

moths, are ever caught by


wins his way where
Ib.
serst.

And Mammon

glare,

That knows
9

Ib. canto III [1816],

st.

aphs might despair.

Years steal
Fire from the

Might shake the


chorite.

saintship

of an an-

mind

as vigor

from the

Ib.st.ii

limb;

Adieu! adieu! my native shore Fades o'er the waters blue.


Ib.
st.

And
13 [song]
Ib.

life's

enchanted cup but sparkles


Ib. st.

near the brim.

And Harold
skulls.

stands

upon

this place of

Ib.

st.

18

My native land, good night!


Still

from the fount of


springs

joy's

delicious

There was a sound of revelry by night,

And

Some

bitter o'er the flowers

its

bub-

Belgium's then
bright

capital

had gather'd
chivalry,

bling

venom
is still

flings.

Ib. st. 82

Her beauty

and

her

and

War, war
1

the

cry,

"War

even to

The lamps shone


brave men.

o'er fair

women and

the knife!" 4
See Aesop, p. 766.
* 8

Ib. st.

86

A
Crabbe.

thousand hearts beat happily; and

when
Music arose with
Soft
eyes
its

See Lucretius, p. n4a. * "War even to the knife" was the reply of Palafox, governor of Saragossa, when summoned to surrender by the French, who besieged that city in 1808.

voluptuous swell,
to
eyes

look'd love

which

spake again,
1

See Waller, p. 3333.

555

BYRON

And
But

all

went merry

as a marriage bell.

hush! hark! a deep sound strikes like a rising knell! Chude Harold's Pilgrimage, canto III, st. 21
it?

He who surpasses or subdues mankind Must look down on the hate of those
below.

Did ye not hear

No!
o'er

'twas

but

Or

the wind, the car rattling


street.

Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, canto III, st. 45 to the crannying save All tenantless, 16. st. wind. 47
History's purchased page to call Ib. great.

the

stony

them
st.

On

with the dance!


fined;

let joy

be uncon-

48

The

castled crag of Drachenfels


o'er

No
To

sleep

till

mom, when Youth and


Ib.
st.

Frowns

the

wide

and winding
Ib.
st.

Pleasure meet chase the glowing hours with flying


feet.

Rhine.

55

22

To
By

fly

from, need not be to hate, manIb.


st.

kind.

69

Arm! Arm!

it is

it is

the cannon's
Ib.

opening

roar!

the

blue rushing

of

the

arrowy

Rhone.

And
Or

there was

mounting

in hot haste.

Ib. st. 71

16.

st.

25

whispering, with white lips, "The foe. They come! they come!"
Ib.

I live not in myself, but I become Portion of that around me: * and to

me
High mountains are a
feeling,

but the
st.

hum

Battle's magnificently stern array! Ib. st.

Of human
28

cities torture.

Ib.

72

Like to the apples on the


shore, All ashes to the taste. 1

Dead
Ib.

Sea's

Sapping a solemn creed with solemn Ib. st. 107 sneer.

st.

34

Fame
I

is

the thirst of youth.


Ib.
st.

Thou fatal Waterloo.


Millions of tongues record thee, and

112

anew
Their children's
lips shall

echo them,

have not loved the world, nor the world me; 2 have not flatter'd its rank breath, nor

and say "Here, where the sword united nations


drew,

bow'd

To its

idolatries a patient knee.

Ib.

st.

Our countrymen were warring on


day!"

113

that
will

stood

And

this

is

much, and
2

all

which
Ib.
st.

Among
Of
I

not pass away.

35

them, but not of them; in a shroud thoughts which were not their
thoughts.
Ib.

He who
find

ascends to mountaintops, shall

The
1

loftiest

peaks most wrapt in clouds snow;


p. 543!). the passage Sir Winston Churchill

stood in Venice
Sighs,

on the Bridge
on each hand.

of

A palace

and

a prison

See

Thomas Moore,

Ib. canto

IV

This was

[1818],

st. i

quoted to President Franklin D. Roosevelt when both agreed to substitute the term United Nations for Associated Powers in the pact that the two leaders wished all the free nations to
sign.

Where Venice
1 1

sate in state, throned


isles.

on
Ib.

her hundred

am

a part of

all

that I have met.

TENNYp. 60 ib.

[In

a conference
1941.]

at

the

White House,

December

SON, Ulysses [1842] 2 See Johnson, p. 4335,

and Emerson,

556

BYRON
She looks
ocean,
a

sea

Cybele, fresh

from

"While stands the Coliseum, Rome


shall stand;

Rising with her tiara of proud towers At airy distance, with majestic motion, A ruler of the waters and their powers. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, canto IV, st. 2

When

falls

the Coliseum,
falls

Rome

shall

fall;

And when Rome

the world." 1 Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, canto IV, st. 145

Tis
It

solitude should teach us


die;

how

to

Oh!

that the desert were


2

my

dwelling-

hath no flatterers; vanity can give No hollow aid; alone man with his

God must strive.


The
Ariosto of the North. 1
Italia!

16. st.
16. st.

33

40
42

O Italia! thou who hast


Ib. st.

The

fatal gift of beauty. 2

177 There is a pleasure in the pathless woods, There is a rapture on the lonely -shore, There is society, where none intrudes, By the deep sea, and music in its roar: I love not man the less, but Nature more. 16. st. 178
place.

16. st.

Let these describe the undescribable.


Ib.
st.

53

The

starry Galileo, with his woes. 16. st.

on, thou deep and dark blue roll! ocean Ten thousand fleets sweep over thee in

Roll

54
58

vain;

The

poetry of speech.
farewell, Horace;

16. st .

Man

marks the earth with ruin


control
16. st.

his

Then
Not

whom

hated

Stops with the shore.

179

so,

for thy faults, but mine.

He
Ib. st.

sinks into thy depths with

bubbling

77
78

groan, Without a grave, unknell'd, uncoffin'd,

Rome! my

country! city of the soul!


16.
st.

and unknown. 3

16.

Time
Such

writes

no wrinkle on thine azure

The Niobe
Childless

and crownless,

of nations there she stands, in her voiceless


I

brow
as creation's

dawn

beheld, thou
16.
st.

79 Yet, Freedom! yet thy banner, torn, but


flying, Streams like

woe.

16. st.

rollestnow. 4

182

Thou

glorious

mirror,

where the Al-

the thunderstorm against the wind. 16. st. 98

mighty's form Glasses itself in tempests.


16. st.

183

Alas! our

young

affections
desert.
is

Or water but the

run to waste, 16. st. 120


diseased,

Dark-heaving sublime

boundless, endless, and


16.

Of

its

own beauty

the

mind

The image

of Eternity.

16.

st 122

And
1

have loved thee, Ocean! and

my

Time, the avenger! unto thee I lift My hands, and eyes, and heart, and
crave of thee a
gift.

joy

16. st.

130

Butcher'd to make a

Roman

The saying of the ancient pilgrims, quoted from BEDE by GIBBON, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire [1781], ch. ji. 2 See Jeremiah 9:2, p. 343, and Cowper, p.
8

holiday!
16. st. 141
See Homer, p.
p.

64b;

Horace, p.

issb;

and

Scott,
i Sir Walter 9 Based on

5193.

Scott

*And thou
famous sonnet of VINCENZO
Italia, Italia!

the

DA FIIICAJA [1642-1707]:
feo la sorte.

vast ocean, on whose awful face Time's iron feet can print no ruin-trace.

tu cui

ROBERT MONTGOMERY, The Omnipresence of the Deity [1830]

557

BYRON
Of
youthful sports was on thy breast to

He

makes

a
x

solitude,

and

calls

it

be
Borne, like thy bubbles, onward: from a

peace!

The Bride

of Abydos, canto
II,
st.

boy
I

20

wanton'd with thy breakers.


Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, canto TV, st. 184

The
verse.

fatal facility of

the octosyllabic

The
Such hath

Corsair [1814]. Dedication


it

And
And
I

trusted
near,
laid

to thy billows

far

and
1

been

shall

be

be-

neath the sun


16.

my hand
do here.

upon thy mane,

The many

still

must labor

for the one.


I, st.

as I

Ib. canto

awoke one morning and found myfamous.

He

self

Entry in Memoranda after publication of -first two cantos of Childe Harold's Pilgrimage.

a corsair's name to other times, Link'd with one virtue, and a thousand Ib. canto III, st. crimes. 24
left

The Cincinnatus

of the

From THOMAS MOORE,


Byron [1830], ch. 14

Life of

Whom envy (Jared not hate,


one!
2

West,

Bequeathed the name of Washington To make man blush there was but

Clime of the unforgotten brave! The Giaour [1813], I 103 And lovelier things have mercy shown To every failing but their own;

Ode
Lord
of

to

Napoleon Bonaparte
that
heritage
I, st.

And

himself

every

woe

of 2

a tear can claim,


sister's

woe.

Except an erring
I

shame.
16.
1.

Lara [1814], canto

418

She walks

die

And

have possess'd, come what may, I have been bless'd. 16. Z.i 114
first I

but

in beauty, like the night

Of

cloudless climes
all that's

and

starry skies;

And

ye the land where the cypress and myrtle Are emblems of deeds that are done in
their clime? 2

Know

best of dark and bright Meet in her aspect and her eyes: Thus mellow'd to that tender light Which heaven to denies.

Hebrew Melodies [1815], She Walks in Beauty, st. i

gaudy day

the rage of the vulture, the love of the turtle, Now melt into sorrow, now madden to crime. The Bride of Abydos [1813], canto I, st. i

Where

The

And

Assyrian came down like the wolf on the fold, his cohorts were gleaming in purple and gold; the sheen of their spears was like stars on the sea, the blue wave rolls nightly on
Ib.

And

Where

And

the virgins are soft as the roses they twine, all, save the spirit of man, is divine? Ib.
his carnage

When

deep Galilee.

The

Destruction of
st.
i

Sennacherib?
1 See Tacitus, p. i4ob. 3 See Don

Mark! where
1

and

his con-

quests cease!

He

laid his

And
9

hand upon "the Ocean's mane,'* played familiar with his hoary locks. ROBERT POLLOK
[1798-1857],
I.

The
68$

Juan, p. 56 ib, and The Age o] Bronze, p. 563^ 3 And it came to pass that night, that the angel of the Lord went out, and smote in the camp of the Assyrians an hundred fourscore and five thousand: and when they arose early in the

Course of Time, bk. IV,


See Goethe, p. 477a.

morning, behold, they were all dead corpses. II Kings 19:35

BYRON
For the Angel of Death spread his wings on the blast.

My boat is

on the shore,

Hebrew Melodies. The

Destrucst.

tion of Sennacherib,

But, before I go, Tom Moore, Here's a double health to thee!


Here's a sigh to those who love me, And a smile to those who hate;

And my bark is on the sea;

And

the might of the Gentile, unsmote by the sword, Hath melted like snow in the glance of
the Lord!
16.
st.

And, whatever

sky's

above me,
[1817],
st. i,

The Glory and


name.
For years
fleet

the Nothing of a Churchill's Grave, L 43


of

Here's a heart for every fate. 1

To Thomas Moore
So
we'll

away with the wings

go no more a-roving
still

So

the dove.

late into the night,

The

First Kiss of Love, st. j


if forever,

Though the heart be

And

the

moon be

still

as loving, as bright.

Fare thee well! and


Still forever, fare

thee well.
st. i

Fare Thee Well [1816],

For the sword outwears its sheath, And the soul wears out the breast,

Sighing that Nature form'd but one such man, And broke the die, in molding Sheridan. 1 Monody on the Death of Sheridan [1816], Z. 117

And the heart must pause And love itself have rest.
Though the night was made

to breathe,

for loving,

the day returns too soon, Yet we'll go no more a-roving By the light of the moon.
So, We'll

And

My

hair

is

gray,
it

Nor grew

but not with years, white

Go No More A-Rovmg
[1817]

In a single night,

Mont Blanc
tains;

is

As men's have grown from sudden


fears.

the monarch of moun-

The
God!
it is

Prisoner of Chitton [1816],


st. i

They crowned him long ago

On

a throne of rocks,

in a robe of

To

a fearful thing soul take wing In any shape, in any mood. 16.
see the

clouds, With a diadem of snow.

human
in

Manfred
st.

[1817], act

I, sc. i

His heart was one of those which most

A light broke
It
It

upon

my

brain

enamor

us,

was the carol of a bird; ceased, and then it came again,


sweetest song ear ever heard.
16.
st.

Wax
10

to receive,

and marble to

retain.
st.

Beppo

[1818],

34

The

There be none of Beauty's daughters With a magic like thee; And like music on the waters Is thy sweet voice to me.
Stanzas for music [1816],
1
st.
i

Besides, they always smell of bread and 16. st. 39 butter.

love the language, that soft bastard Latin, Which melts like kisses from a female
I

mouth.
a
I

16. st.

44

had a dream which was not


dream.
the day of

all

wish he
tion.

would explain

his explana-

Darkness [1816]
destiny's over, fate hath declined.
1

Don

Though

my

And
1

the star of my Stanzas to Augusta [1816],

Juan. Dedication [written 1818], st. 2

st. i

3
s

See Longfellow, p. 6aob. See Cervantes, p. 1970.


Coleridge.

See Ariosto, p. i78a.

559

BYRON
In virtues nothing earthly could surpass
her,

Of some

strong

swimmer

in his agony.
st.

Don
If this

Juan, canto II,


true, indeed,

53

Save

thine
cassar!

"incomparable

oil,"

MaSome
17

be

Christians

Don
But

Juan, canto

I,

st.

creed.

have a comfortable 16. st. 86

Ohi ye
tual,

lords of ladies intellec-

Inform us

truly,

peck'd you

all? x

have they not hen16. st. 22


I

Let us have wine and women, mirth and laughter, Sermons and soda water the day after. 1 16. st. 178
In her
first

Her

stature

tall

hate

dumpy

passion

woman

loves her

woman*

16- st . 61
call

lover,

What men
adultery,
Is

gallantry,

and gods
the

In

all

the others, all she loves is love. 2 16. canto III [1821], st. 3
if

much more common where


climate's sultry.

Think you,

Laura had been

Pe-

16. st. 63

trarch's wife,

Christians have burnt each other, quite

He would
life?

have written sonnets

all his
st.

16.

persuaded That all the Apostles would have done


as they did.

He

16. st. 83

mildest-manner'd man That ever scuttled ship or cut a throat.

was

the

little

still

she strove, and

much

re-

16.

st.

41

And

pented, whispering "I will ne'er consent" 16. st. 1 1 7 consented.

Even good men


stare.

like to

make the
16.

public st. 81
*

Tis sweet to hear the watchdog's honest


bark

The isles of Greece, the isles Where burning Sappho


sung.
16. st.

of Greece!

loved
[song,

and
st.

Bay deep-mouth'd welcome as we draw near home; Tis sweet to know there is an eye will mark Our coming, and look brighter when we
come. Sweet
is

86

i]

Eternal

But all,

gilds them yet, except their sun, is set.

summer

16.

The mountains

look on Marathon,

16.

st.

123
to

And Marathon looks on the sea; And musing there an hour alone,
I

women.2
pleasure.

revenge

especially 16. st.

dreamed that Greece might


free.

still

be

124
a

16.

[st. 3]

Pleasure's a sin,

and sometimes
16.

sin's
st.

And where
thou,

are they?

and where

art

133

Man's love
apart,
'Tis

is

of man's

life

a thing

woman's whole

existence.
16. st.

194

There's nought, no doubt, so much the spirit calms As rum and true religion. 16. canto II [1819], st. 34

country? On thy voiceless shore heroic lay is tuneless now heroic bosom beats no morel And must thy lyre, so long divine, Degenerate into hands like mine?

My

The The

ft.
1 See p. 886b.
8

[rf.

5]

Dickens, p.

67oa,

and

George

Ade,

See

solitary shriek, the

bubbling cry
Hi,

La Rochefoucauld, p. gs6b. From isles of Greece

The
Have
p.

1 See

Addison, p. 395a. *See Shakespeare, Coriolanus F,

44,

princes orgulous, their high blood chaf d, to the port of Athens sent their ships. SHAKESPEARE, Troilus and Cressida

sgoa.

[1601-1603], Prologue

560

BTfRON
Earth! render back from out thy breast remnant of our Spartan dead! Of the three hundred grant but three, To make a new Thermopylae. Don Juan, canto III [st. 7]

And

put himself upon his good behavior.

Don Juan, canto V,


That
all-softening,

st.

47

The

tocsin of
bell.

overpowering knell, the dinner the soul


Ib.
all
st.

You have the Pyrrhic dance as yet, Where is the Pyrrhic phalanx gone? Of two such lessons, why forget The nobler and the manlier one? You have the letters Cadmus gave
Think ye he meant them
Fill

49

The women pardon'd


face,

except her
Ib.
st.

113

for a slave?

Ib.

[st.

10]

Polygamy may well be held in dread, Not only as a sin, but as a bore.
Ib. canto

VI

high the bowl with Samian wine!


16.
[st.

[1823],
age,"

st.

12

11]

lady

of

certain

which

means
Place ine on Sunium's marble steep, Where nothing save the waves and I May hear our mutual murmurs sweep;
Certainly aged.
Ib. st.

69

There, swan-like, let me sing and die. A land of slaves shall ne'er be mine

The drying up a single tear has more Of honest fame than shedding seas of
gore.
Ib. canto

Dash down yon cup

of Samian wine! Ib. [st. 16]


so

VIII [1823],

st.

Milton's the prince of poets


say;

we

Not

so Leonidas

and Washington,

Whose Which

little

heavy, but no

less divine.

Ib.

every battlefield is holy ground, breathes of nations saved, not Ib. st. 5 worlds undone. 1
life

st.

91
Half-pay for
destroying.

And

laugh at any mortal thing, Tis that I may not weep. 2 Ib. canto IV [1821], st. 4
if I

makes mankind worth Ib. st. 14

These two hated with a hate

Found only on

the stage.
est,

Ib.

st.

93

George Washington had thanks and nought beside, Except the all-cloudless glory (which few men's is)

"Arcades ambo"- -id both.


I've stood

blackguards
Ib.

To

free his country. 1 Ib. canto

IX
a

[1823],

st.

And heard Troy

Achilles' tomb, doubted; time will doubt of Rome. Ib. st. 101

upon

"Gentlemen

farmers'*

race

worn
32

out quite.

Ib. st.

Oh! "darkly, deeply, beautifully blue," 3 As someone somewhere sings about the
sky.

When
And

Bishop Berkeley said "there was


it

no matter/'
proved
'twas

Ib. st.

no

no matter what

he said.
Ib. canto

There's not a sea the passenger e'er

XT

[1823],

st. i

pukes Turns up more dangerous breakers than


in,

And,

after all,

what

is

a lie?

Tis but
Ib. st.

the Euxine.
Ib. canto
1

The truth

in masquerade.

37

[1821],
and

st.

'Tis strange
particle,

the mind, that very fiery

See Plato, p. 93!), and note. *See Beaumarchais, p. 46oa,


Southey, p.

Lincoln,
1 See

p. 6383. 8 See

Ode

to

Napoleon, p.

558!?,

and The Age

of Bronze, p.

561

BYRON
Should
let itself

be snuff'd out by an
Juan, canto XI,
[of
st.
*]

The

antique Persians taught three useful things

article.

Don
Ready money
is

To draw

60
16. canto

John Keats
st.

Aladdin's lamp.

the bow, to ride, and speak the truth. Don Juan, canto XVI
[1824],
st.
i

XII [1823],

12

Cervantes smil'd Spain's chivalry away. Ib. canto XIII [1823]', st.

In truth he was a noble steed.

Mazeppa
Oh,
talk

[1819],

st.

The English winter ending To recommence in August.


Society
is

in July,
Ifc. st.

not to

me

of a

name

great in

story;

42

The

now one

polish'd horde,
tribes,

Formed of two mighty


and Bored.
All

the Bores
16. st.

And

days of our youth are the days of our glory; the myrtle and ivy of sweet two-

95

Are worth

and-twenty all your


so plenty.

laurels,

though ever

human history attests the hungry That happiness for man


sinner!

Stanzas

written

Between

Florence

on the Road and Pisa


[1821],
st. i

Since Eve ate apples, dinner. 2

much depends on
Ib. st.

99

All farewells should

Of all

the horrid, hideous notes of woe, Sadder than owl songs or the midnight
blast,
Is

be sudden. Sardanapalus [1821], act

The

that portentous phrase, "I told you


so/'
16. canto

the past.

best of prophets of the future is Journal [January 28, 1821]


is

XIV

[1823],

st.

50

The world

a bundle of hay,

Tis strange

but

true; for truth

is al-

ways strange;
3 Stranger than fiction.

are the asses that pull, Each tugs in a different way And the greatest of all is John Bull!

Mankind

16. st. 101

Letter to

Thomas Moore
[June 22, 1821]

The

An

Devil hath not, in all his quiver's choice, arrow for the heart like a sweet
voice.

Because

He
I

is

all-powerful,

must

all-good, too,

follow?
16. canto

XV

[1824],

st.

13
or

judge but by the fruits


are bitter
I

and they

lovely

being,
all its

scarcely

form'd

Which

molded,

mine.
sweetest leaves yet
Ib.
st.

rose with folded.

must feed on for a fault not Cain [1821], act I, sc. i

43

Who killed John Keats?


"I," says the Quarterly,

Byron, John
p. 5713.
2

Keats, p. 562!), and Shelley,

For a

man seldom

thinks with more earnest-

"

ness of anything than he does of his dinner. JOHNSON, from MRS. PIOZZI, Anecdotes of Samuel

So savage anoTartarly; 'Twas one of my feats." x John Keats

[c.

1821]
has

Johnson [1786]
See
*

He seems
To have
seen better days, as

Fanny Fern, p. 6s8a. Le vrai peut quelquefois n'tre pas

who

vrai-

semblable [Truth

may sometimes be

not

improbable].
I.

^BOILEAU

[1636-1711], L'Art Pofrique, III,

48

Who
1

has seen yesterday?

See Daniel Webster, p. 547^ Truth is stranger than fiction, but Anonymous popular.

Werner
not so
See

[1822], act

I, sc, i

Don

Juan, p. s6a, and Shelley, p. 571 a.

562

BYRON

SCHOPENHAUER

The

"good

when
Are gone.

old times" old are good


of

all

times

Then

look

around,
rest.

and choose thy

And
Bronze [1823],
si. i

The Age

Whose

game was empires and whose

Ou My Thirty-sixth Year, st. Now Barabbas was a publisher.

ground, take thy

10

stakes were thrones, Whose table earth whose dice were

Alleged alteration in the Bible, x John 18:40

human bones.
While
Franklin's quiet

Ib.

$t.

SARAH JOSEPHA HALE


1788-1879

memory

climbs

to heaven, Calming the lightning which he thence

Mary had
Its

little

lamb,
as

fleece

was white

had

snow,

riven,

And
the

Or drawing from
earth

no
to

less

kindled

everywhere that

Mary went,

The lamb was

sure to go.

Freedom and peace


boasts his birth;
2

that

which

He
It

followed her to school one day;


rule;

That was against the

While

Washington's such as ne'er

made the

watchword,
left to
st.

To

children laugh see a lamb at school.

and

play,

Shall sink while there's


air.3

an echo

Mary's

16.

[in The Juvenile Miscellany, September 1830], st.

Lamb 2

Sublime tobaccol which from east to west Cheers the tar's labor or the Turkman's
rest. 4

"What makes the kmb love Mary, so?" The eager children cry.
"Oh, Mary loves the lamb, you know,"

The
[1823], canto
II, st.

teacher did reply.


Ib.
st.

The Island

19

A mere pause from thinking!


The Deformed Transformed
[1824], act III, sc.
i

What's drinking?

SCHOPENHAUER
1788-1860
Hatred comes from the heart; contempt from the head; and neither feeling is quite within our control. Studies in Pessimism* Psychological Observations

ARTHUR

My days are in the yellow leaf; 5


The flowers and fruits of love are gone; The worm, the canker, and the grief
Are mine alone!

On My
Seek
out

Thirty-sixth Year [1824], St. 2

Every

man

takes

own

field of vision for

the limits of his the limits of the


Ib.

world.
less

often

sought

than

found

Every parting gives


grave, for thee the best;

A soldier's
1 2

death;
1

every coming

of together again a
Ib.

a foretaste

foretaste of the resurrection.

Napoleon.

See Franklin, p, 42ia, note i. See Ode to Napoleon, p. 558!), and Don Juan, p. 56 ib. * Let Aristotle and all your philosophers say what they like, there is nothing to be compared MouiRE [1622-1673], Don with tobacco. Juan; or, Le Festin de Pierre [1665], act I, sc. i. Translated by CURTIS HIDDEN PAGE. See Anonymous, p. io85b. 5 See Shakespeare, pp. 286a and 2 gab.
8

publisher John Murray sent Byron a lavish copy of the Bible in acknowledgment of a favor, and the poet returned it with the word "robber" changed to "publisher." 2 The first three stanzas are also attributed to John Roulstone [1805-18*3], of Sterling,
Mass. 8 Translated
*

The

Partir c'est
little].

by T. BAILEY SAUNDERS. mourir un peu [To part


French proverb

is

to

die a

See Haraucourt, p.

563

SCHOPENHAUER

LATHAM
superstitious, chaste.

The fundamental
character
tice.
is

that

it

fault of the female has no sense of jus-

modest, and commonly


of the

The Last
Studies in Pessimism.

Mohicans

On Women
woman,

[1826]

"Pis grand! 'tis solemn! 'tis tion of itself to look upon!

an educaeft.

Dissimulation

is

innate in

The Deerslayer
Those
upper
sand. 1

[1841],

a quality of the Ib. the clever. as of stupid

and almost

as

much

families, you know, are our crust not upper ten thou-

Noise is the most impertinent of all forms of interruption. It is not only an interruption, but also a disruption of 16. On Noise thought.
general survey shows us that the two foes of human happiness
are pain

The Ways

of the Hour [1850], ch. 6

The most

WILLIAM KNOX
1789-1825

and boredom.

Oh why

should the

spirit of

mortal be
[1824],
st.
i

Essays. Personality; or,

What

proud?

Man Is

Songs of

Israel

A man who has


cause his intellect

no mental needs, beis of the narrow and

Mortality,

normal amount, is, in the strict sense of the word, what is called a philistine. 1
Ib.
Intellect
is

PETER MERE LATHAM


1789-1875
practice of physic is jostled by quacks on the one side, and by science on the other.

The

invisible to the

man who

has none.2
Ib.

OUT Relation
is

to Others, sec. 23

There
happiness high life.

no more mistaken path to


than
worldliness,
revelry,

25 nothing so captivating as new knowledge. Ib. 51

Cdkcted Works,
is

bk. I,

eft.

There

Ib.

Our

Relation to Ourselves,
sec.

24
the

Truth in all its kinds is most difficult and truth in medicine is the most difficult of all. Ib. 60
to win;

Do
ting

not shorten the morning by get-

Beware of language,
great cheat.

for it

is

often a
Ib. 138

up

late;

look

upon

it

as

quintessence of tent sacred.

life, as

to a certain ex-

The
often

diagnosis of disease

is

often easy,
Ib. 173

Counsels and Maxims, ch. 2

difficult,

and often impossible.


dis-

JAMES FENIMORE

We
ease to

should always presume the

COOPER
1789-1851

be curable, until
otherwise.
is

its

own

nature

prove

it

Ib. 174

Few men esdiibit greater diversity, or, if we may so express it, greater
than the native warrior of North America. In war, he
antithesis of character
is

Fortunate, indeed,

the

man who

takes exactly the right measure of himself, and holds a just balance between

daring,

boastful,

self-denying,
just,
1

and

cunning, ruthless, self-devoted; in peace,


revengeful,

what he can acquire and what he can use, be it great or be it small!


I&. II, ii

generous,

hospitable,

See Matthew Arnold, p. See La Rochefoucauld,

Maxim

575, p. 3563.

bad book is generally a very easy book, having been composed by its auSee Sam Slick, p. 587!).

564

LATHAM
thor with no labor of mind whatever; whereas a good book, though it be not necessarily a hard one, yet, since it con-

LAMARTTNE

None knew thee but to love thee,1 Nor named thee but to praise.

On

important facts, duly arranged, and reasoned upon with care, must re-

tains

the Death of Joseph Rodman Drake [1820], st. i

from the reader some portion of same attention and study to comprehend and profit by it, as it required
quire

Strike
Strike

till

the

last

armed foe

ex-

me

pires,

from the writer to compose it, Collected Works, bk. II, ch. 43 The way of death is often smoother than the path of life; and great bodily
anguish (there is reason to believe) does not often enter largely into the Ib. 91 process of dissolution.

Strike

for your altars and your fires; for the green graves of your

sires;

God

and your native Marco Bozzaris 2

land!

[1855],

st.

But to the hero, when his sword Has won the battle for the free,

Thy

voice

sounds

like

prophet's

Common
It takes as

sense

is

in

medicine the
Ib.

word,

master workman.

389

And in its hollow tones are heard The thanks of millions yet to be.
Ib. st.

much

time and trouble to

pull down a falsehood as to build up a truth. Ib. 398

Remedies are our


disease.

One of the few, the immortal names That were not born to die. Ib. st 7
.

great analyzers of Ib. 406

Faith and knowledge lean largely upon each other in the practice of Ib. 408 medicine.
It is

ALPHONSE DE LAMARTINE
1790-1869
time, arrest your flight! and you, propitious hours, arrest your course! Let us savor the fleeting delights of our most beautiful days! 3

no easy

task to pick one's

way

from truth to truth through besetting Ib. 415 errors.


Perfect health, like perfect beauty, is a rare thing; and so, it seems, is perfect
disease.
It

The Lake
1

[1820],

st.

Ib.

443

say

to

this

night:

"Pass
will

would be a

slowly";

and the dawn

more come to
Ib.
st.

great thing to under-

4 dispel the night.

stand pain in
It is

all its

meanings.
Ib.

474

Limited in his nature, infinite in his


desires,

man

is

which

the great mystery of life itself is at the bottom of all the

a fallen god

who

re-

members the heavens.


Meditations Po&tiques [1820].

mysterious language we are obliged to Ib. 494 employ concerning it.

Sermon 2
1
3

People in general have no notion of


the sort and

See Burns, p. 4943,

Greek patriot,

and Tennyson, p. 647a. born about 1788, killed in

amount

of evidence often

a night attack against the Turks, near Missolonghi, Greece [August 20, 1823]. 3 temps, suspends ton vol! et vous, heures

needed to prove the simplest matter of fact. Ib. 525

propices,

FITZ-GREENE HALLECK
1790-1867

Green be the
Friend of

Suspendez votre coursl Laissez-nous savourer les xapides delices Des plus beaux de nos joursl *Je dis a cette nuit: "Sois plus lente'*; et raurore

my

turf above thee, better days!

Va
6

dissiper la nuit.

See Emerson, p. 6o5a.

565

LAMARTINE

WOLFE

What
first

is

our

life

but a succession of
1

LYDIA HUNTLEY

preludes to that

unknown song whose


is

SIGOURNEY
all

solemn note

sounded by Death?

Meditations Pofriques. 2nd series. Sermon 15

Ye

1791-1865 have passed away, say they That noble race and brave.
Indian Names,
st. i

Experience is the only prophecy of wise men. Speech at Mdcon [1847]


love for the sake of being loved is human, but to love for the sake of lov-

But

To
is

their name is on your Ye may not wash it out.


evil habit's earliest

waters

Ib.

ing

angelic.

To
see of the representatives

wile

Graziella [1849], pt. IV, ch. 5

The more
dogs.

of the people, the

more

admire

my

glance, nor smile Choke the dark fountain ere it flows, Nor e'en admit the camel's nose.
ear,

Lend

neither

nor

From COUNT

D'ORSAY, Letter to

The Camel's Nose,

st.

John Forster [1850]

FERDINAND RAIMUND
1790-1836

CHARLES SPRAGUE
1791-1875 and loved another race of beings. Beneath the same sun that rolls
Here
lived

No

matter

how

fair

the sun shines,

Still it

must set.

Das Mddchen aus der Feenwelt (The Maiden from Fairyland)


[1826]

SAMUEL OILMAN
1791-1858
Fair Harvard!

over your heads the Indian hunter pursued the panting deer. The Indian of falcon glance and lion bearing, the theme of the touching ballad, the hero of the pathetic tale, is gone. The American Indian
.
.

Thy

sons to thy Jubilee

CHARLES WOLFE
1791-1823

throng.

Ode, Bicentennial, Harvard University

[September

8,

1836],

$t. i

Not
As

drum was

heard, not a funeral

First flower of their wilderness, star of their night,

Calm

rising through through storm.

change

and
Ib.

note, his corse to the rampart we hurried. The Burial of Sir John Moore at

Corunna
But he lay

[1817],

st. i

like a warrior taking his rest,

HENRY HART MILMAN


1791-1868 And the cold marble leaped to
god.
life

With

his martial cloak

around him.
Ib.
st.

We carved not a line, and we raised not


a stone

The

Belvedere Apollo

But we

left

him alone with

Ride on! ride on in majesty! In lowly pomp ride on to die.

his glory. Ib. st. 8


fearless race

Hymns. Ride On!


1

*We
To

will give the

names of our

for his tone

This passage was used by Liszt poem Les Preludes.

as

a heading

each bright river whose course we trace. FELICIA D. HEMANS [1793-1835], Song of
Emigration

566

BOWRING

SHELLEY

JOHN BOWRING
1792-1872

The

voice that breath'd o'er


earliest

Eden

That

wedding day.
[1869].

Watchman,

tell

us of the night, 1

Poems

What

its

are. signs of promise

Holy Matrimony, st. i

Hymn

[1825]

FREDERICK MARRYAT
All zeal,

VICTOR COUSIN
1792-1867
religion for religion's sake, for sake, art for art's morality's morality Cours de Philosophic [1818] sake.

1792-1848 Mr. Easy. Midshipman Easy [1836],

eh.

We

need

haven't sons
sea.
It's

the gift of the gab, my because I'm bred to the

The Old Navy,


one and

st. i

just six of

half-a-dozen
Pirate, ch.

JOHN FREDERICK WILLIAM HERSCHEL


1792-1871
the knowledge of many, and orderly and methodically digested
Science
is

of the other.

The
paddle his

Every

man

own

Settlers in

Canada

canoe. 8 [1844], ch.

JOHN HOWARD PAYNE


1792-1852 'Mid pleasures and palaces though we

attainable by arranged, so as to become one. The knowledge of reasons and their conclusions constitutes abstract, that of causes and their effects, and of

may roam,
Be
it

ever so

the laws of nature, natural science. Preliminary Discourse on the

like

Study
[1830]

of

Natural

Philosophy

humble, there's no place home. 1 Home, Sweet Home. From the Milan opera Clari, the Maid of
[1823]

JOHN KEBLE
1792-1866

LORD JOHN RUSSELL


If

The trivial round, the common task, Would furnish all we ought to ask. The Christian Year [1827].
Morning,
Abide with me! Fast
tide;
falls
st.

1792-1878 be maintained with cannot peace 2


it is

honor,

no longer peace. Speech, Greenock [September

10

the even-

Among the defects of the bill, which were numerous, one provision was conand another by spicuous by its presence
its

The

darkness deepens: Lord, with


abide!

me

absence. 3

Speech to the
City of

electors of the

When

London

other helpers
helpless,

fail,

and comabide with

[April 1859]

forts flee,

Help of the me!

PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY


1792-1822
Once, early in the morning, Beelzebub arose,

Ife.

Evening, st

Abide with me from morn till eve, For without Thee I cannot live; Abide with me when night is nigh, For without Thee I dare not die.
Ib. st.
1

iHome
4

is

home, be

it

never so homely.

English proverb [c. 1300] a See Disraeli, p. 6131, and Neville Chamberlain, p. 8g7a.

See Isaiah 21:11, p. $ib.

See Tacitus, p. i4oa.

567

SHELLEY

With

He

care his sweet person adorning. 1 put on his Sunday clothes,

Half sunk, a shattered visage

lies,

whose

The DeviTs Walk

[1812],

st. i

And

frown, wrinkled

lip,

and sneer of cold

How wonderful is Death,


Death and
his brother Sleep! 2

command,
[1813], I

Queen Mob
Power,
Pollutes whatever
it

Tell that its sculptor well those passions read." Ozymandias [1817]

like a desolating pestilence,

"My name
kings:
spair!"

is

Ozymandias, king of
de-

touches; and obedivirtue,

ence,

Look on my works, ye Mighty, and


Nothing beside remains. Round the

Bane of

all

genius,

freedom,

truth, Makes slaves

de-

of

men, and, of the


16. Ill

human

frame,

Of

cay that colossal wreck, boundless and


bare,

A mechanized automation.
The awful shadow
Power
Floats

The
of

some unseen
3

lone and level sands stretch far

away.

16.

though unseen among us

With hue

like that

when some

great

visiting

This various world with as inconstant

painter dips His pencil in the

gloom of earthquake
of Islam [1817],

wing As summer winds that creep from


flower to flower. to Intellectual Beauty

and

eclipse.

The Revolt

canto V,
Lift not the painted veil

st.

23

Hymn

which those

[1816],

st. i

who live
Call Life.

Spirit of Beauty, that dost consecrate With thine own hues all thou dost shine upon Of human thought or form. 16. st. 2

Sonnet [1818]

I could lie down like a tired child, And weep away the life of care Which I have borne and yet must

bear,

Some

say

that gleams

of a remoter

Till

world
Visit the soul in sleep

that death

is

death like sleep might steal on me. Stanzas Written in Dejection near Naples [1818], st. 4

And

slumber, that its shapes the busy thoughts


live.
st.

The good want


ren
tears.

power, but to weep bar-

outnumber Of those who wake and

The powerful goodness want: worse


need for them.
3

Mont
morrow;

Blanc [1816],
ne'er

The

Man's yesterday may

wise want love; and those

who

love

be

like his

want wisdom;

And
Mutability.
4
I, st.

all

Nought may endure but


I

best things are thus confused


ill.

with

Mutability [1816],

4
Peace
is

Who

a traveler from an antique land "Two vast and trunkless legs of stone Stand in the desert. Near them, on the
said:

met

Prometheus Unbound [18181819], act I, L 625


in the grave.
all

The
I

grave hides

things beautiful and


it

sand,
1 See Southey, p. a See

am

good:
a

God and

cannot find

there.

Homer,

p.

53^, and 643, and

note,

16.

note.

L 638 L 697

See Wordsworth, p. 5090. *See Heraditus, p. 770.

From

the dust of creeds outworn.


Ib.

568

SHEULEY

Forms more

real than living man, Nurslings of immortality!

Thou Paradise
It is

of exiles, Italyl

Julian

and Maddalo, L 57

Prometheus Unbound, act I, I. 748

our will

That thus enchains us to permitted


ill

To know
be

nor

faith,

nor love nor law; to

We might be otherwise
all

we might be

Omnipotent but

friendless is to reign. 16. act II, sc. iv, I. 47

We dream of happy,
Where
is

high majestical.

All love is sweet, Given or returned. Common as light


love,

the love, beauty and truth

we

is

But

seek, in our

mind?
as a nerve o'er

16.

And
As

its

familiar
.
.

voice
it

wearies

not

Me
The

who am
creep
else

170 which do
Z.

ever.

They who
I

inspire

most are fortunate,


feel it

unfelt

oppressions

of
16.

this

am

now; but those who


still.
1

earth.

L 449

most
Are happier
16. II, v,

39

Death

is

the veil which those


it is lifted.

who

live

call life:

Most wretched men Are cradled into poetry by wrong; They learn in suffering what they teach 16. L 543 in song. 1
Chameleons feed on light and Poets' food is love and fame.
air:

They sleep, and

16. Ill,

xfx,

113

Nor

yet exempt, though ruling


like slaves,

them
wild

An

Exhortation [1819],

St.

From

chance, and death, and mutabil-

West Wind, thou

breath of

ity,

The The

clogs of that which else might overscar loftiest star of unascended heaven,
16. Ill, xv,

Autumn's being, Thou, from whose unseen presence the leaves dead Are driven, like ghosts from an enchanter fleeing,

Pinnacled dim in the intense inane.

200

Yellow, and black, and pale, and hectic


red,

Familiar
love.

acts

are

beautiful through 16. act IV, I. 403 a despot and a

Pestilence-stricken multitudes.

Ode
Wild

to the

West Wind
art

[1819],

Man, who wert once


slave;

Spirit,

which

moving

every-

where;
Destroyer and preserver; hear, oh, hear! 16. 1 13

dupe and a deceiver; a decay; from the cradle to the grave Through the dim light of this immortal
traveler

A A

Thou
Of

dirge

L 549 Good, great and joyous, beautiful and


day.
16.
free;

the dying year, to which this closing night Will be the dome of a vast sepulcher.
16. 1

This

alone Life, Joy, Empire, and 16. closing lines Victory.


is

23

Oh,

lift

me

as a wave, a leaf, a cloud!


life! I

love

all

waste

1 fall

upon the thorns of


lyre,

bleed!

And The
Is

where we taste pleasure of believing what we see


solitary places;

I6.Z.44

boundless, as be.
Julian
See

we wish our

Make me thy
is:

even as the forest

souls to

What
[1819], L 14
1

if

andMadddo
p.

my

leaves are falling like its

own!
See Butler, p. 353!).

La Rochefoucauld,

569

SHELLEY

The tumult
tone,

of thy mighty harmonies Will take from both a deep, autumnal

bring fresh showers for the thirsting


flowers, seas

From the
in

Sweet though

sadness.

Be

thou,

and the streams. The Cloud [i8ao],st.

Spirit fierce,

My

spirit!

Be thou me, impetuous one! Ode to the West Wind, I 57

I am the daughter of Earth and Water, And the nursling of the Sky;

The trumpet
hind?

of a prophecy! Wind, If winter comes, can spring be far beIb.


Z.

69

change,

of the ocean pass through the pores and shores, Ib. st. 6 but I cannot die.

Men

of England, wherefore plow For the lords who lay ye low? Song to the Men of England
[1819],
st. i

Hail to thee, blithe spirit! Bird thou never wert, That from Heaven, or near Pourest thy full heart

it,

Nothing

in the world

is

single,

All things by a law divine In one spirit meet and mingle.

In profuse strains of unpremeditated To a Skylark [1821], st. i art.

And
st. i

Love's Philosophy [1819],

singing still dost soar, ever singest.


art

and soaring
Ib.
I
st.

I arise from dreams of thee In the first sweet sleep of night, When the winds are breathing low, And the stars are shining bright. The Indian Serenade [1819], st.

Thou

unseen

but yet

hear thy
Ib.
st.

shrill delight.

We look before and after,


And
Our
pine for what
is

not;

Hell

is

A populous and smoky city.


Peter Bell the Third [1819],

a city

much

like

London

sincerest laughter
is fraught; sweetest songs are those that Ib. saddest thought.

With some pain


Our

tell
st.

of

pt

III, st. i

18

Where

Teas, small talk dies in agonies.


Ib. st. 12

An

old,

mad, blind, despised and dying


1

Teach me half the gladness That thy brain must know, Such harmonious madness From my lips would flow,

king.

The world should


England in 1819 [written
1819], I
i

listen then, as I

am
21

listening

now.

Ib.

st.

met Murder on the way He had a mask like Castlereagh. The Mask of Anarchy [written
I

1819],

st.

they rise and set, Kings are like stars have they The worship of the world, but no re1 Hellas [1821], I 195 pose.

One by

He

toss'd

them human

one, and two by two, hearts to chew.


Ib.
st.

The world's great age begins anew, The golden years return, 2 The earth doth like a snake renew
Her winter weeds outworn.
16.
Z.

A lovely

lady,

garmented in

light

From her own beauty. The Witch of Atlas

1060

[1820],

st.

The world
Oh, might

is

weary of the past,


die or rest at last! Ib. final chorus

A Sensitive
i

Plant in a garden grew. The Sensitive Plant [1820],


pt. I, st.
i

it

George

III.

1 See Bacon, p. ao8b. *See Virgil, p. ii6b.

57

SHELLEY

What!

alive, and so bold, O earth? Written on Hearing the News of

the
St. 1

Death

of

Napoleon [1821],

She knew not 't was her own; as with no stain She faded, like a cloud which had out-

wept the
I.

rain.

The
I

fields of immortality.

Adonais,

st.

10

Epipsychidion [1821],
never was attached
sect,

133

to

that

great

Winged

Desires and Adorations, Persuasions and veiled Desti-

nies,
is,

Whose

doctrine

that

each

one
or

should select Out of the crowd a


friend,

Splendors, and Glooms, ing Incarnations

and glimmertwilight Fan-

mistress
fair

Of hopes and
tasies;

fears,

and

And
To

all

the

rest,

though

and

wise,

commend
cold oblivion, though
'tis

And And
Of

Sorrow, with her family of Sighs, Pleasure, blind with tears, led by

in the

code

Of modern
road

morals,

and the beaten

the gleam her own dying smile instead of eyes, 16. st. 13 Came in slow pomp.

Which

Ah woe
home among
But
the

is

me! Winter
returns

is

come and

those poor slaves with weary

Who

footsteps tread travel to their

gone,
grief

dead

year.

with the revolving 16. st. 18


glows
in a
16. st.

By the broad highway of the world, and so With one chained friend, perhaps a

The intense atom

moment, then
cold repose.

is

quenched

most 20

The

jealous foe, dreariest and the longest journey

Alas! that all

we

loved of

him should

g16.
I
I.

be,

But
149
our

for

our

grief, as if it

had not been,


16.
st.

And grief itself be mortal!


As long
as skies are blue,

21

weep Oh, weep


tears

for

Adonais
for

he

is

deadl
green,

Adonais!

and

fields are

though

Thaw

not the ahead!

frost

which binds so dear Adonais [1821], st. i

Evening must usher night, night urge the morrow, Month follow month with woe, and
year

Till the Future dares the Past, his fate and fame shall Forget

wake year to sorrow.


thou leave
the

16.

be

Why
Too

didst

trodden

An

echo and a light unto


musical
of

eternity!

16.

Most

mourners,

again!

16. st.

weep 4

To

that

high

Capital,

where kingly

weak hands though mighty heart Dare the unpastured dragon in his den? Defenseless as thou wert, oh, where was then

paths of men soon, and with

Death
Keeps his pale court in beauty and decay,

Wisdom
The

the mirrored shield, or scorn 16. st. 27 the spear?


1 Pilgrim of Eternity, whose

He came.
x

16.

st.

Over

his

living

head

like

fame Heaven is

Lost Angel of a ruined Paradise!


john Keats.
See Byron, p. 56sa-b.

bent,

An
1

early

but enduring monument,

Byron.

57 1

SHELLEY

Came>

veiling all the lightnings of his

The

soul of Adonais, like a star,

song
In sorrow.
Adonais,
st.

Beacons

30

from the abode where the Eternal are. Adonais, st. 55

paid-like spirit, beautiful

and

swift.
.

Music,

when

soft voices die,

16. st 32

In mockery of monumental stone.


Ib. st.

35

Vibrates in the memory; Odors, when sweet violets sicken, Live within the sense they quicken.

He

wakes or sleeps with the enduring


is

dead; Thou canst not soar where he

sitting

now
Dust to the
dust!

Rose leaves, when the rose is dead, Are heaped for the beloved's bed; And so thy thoughts, when thou
gone,

art

but the pure

spirit

Love

itself shall

slumber on.
:

shall flow

To

Back to the burning fountain whence it came, A portion of the Eternal. 16. st 38 He hath awakened from the dream of
life.

Music, When Soft Voices Die [1821]

One word
For

is

too often profaned

me to profane it,
feeling too falsely disdained to disdain it.

One

16.

si.

39

For thee

He

has outsoared the shadow of our


night;

To

:One Word

Is

Too
st.

Often Profaned [1821],

Envy and calumny and hate and pain, And that unrest which men miscall delight

Can touch him not and


again;

torture not

The desire of the moth for the star, Of the night for the morrow, The devotion to something afar From the sphere of our sorrow.
16.
st.

From the contagion


stain

of the world's slow

Swiftly walk

o'er

the

western wave,
[1821],
st. i

He is

and now can never mourn heart grown cold, a head grown gray
secure,

Spirit of Night!

To Night
I

in vain.

16.
'tis

st.

40
41
is

He lives, he wakes
not he.

Death

is

dead,

16. st.

ask of thee, beloved Night Swift be thine approaching flight, Come soon, soon! 16.
Rarely, rarely, comest thou, Spirit of Delight!

st.

He

is

made one with Nature:


all

there

heard

His voice in

her music, from the


I

Song: Rarely, Rarely, Comest

moan
Of thunder
bird.

Thou
love tranquil solitude

[1821],

st. i

to the song of night's sweet 16. st. 42

And
As
is

such society
quiet, wise,
is

He

is

a portion of the loveliness


lovely. 16. st.

and good.

16.

st.

Which once he made more


The One
and
remains, the

There
43
Is

no sport in hate when


side.

all

the

rage

many change

on one

pass;

Lines to a Reviewer [1821]

Heaven's light forever shines, Earth's shadows fly;


Life, like a

When the lamp is


The
The

shattered

of many-colored glass, Stains the white radiance of Eternity, Until Death tramples it to fragments.
16. st.

dome

When the cloud is scattered


rainbow's glory is shed. When the Lamp Is Shattered
[1822],
st.
i

light in the dust lies

dead

52

572

SHELLEY
Best and brightest,

HEMANS
Till kicked

To

Jane:

An Invitation

come away!

and torn and beaten out he

[1822]

lies

Away, away, from men and towns, To the wild wood and the downs.
I

And

leaves his hold

and

cackles, groans,

Tb.

and
If life

dies.

Badger

am gone into
by the

To
Sit

the fields take what this sweet hour yields

Reflection,

you may come tomorrow,


fireside

had a second edition, would correct the proofs. 1 Letter to a friend. From

how
J.

W.

with Sorrow.
bill,

You

with the unpaid

Despair
16.

AND ANNE TIBBLE, John


Life [1932]

Clare:

You, tiresome verse-reciter, Care I will pay you in the grave.

FELICIA
The
stately

Poets are the hierophants of an unappreh ended inspiration; the mirrors of the gigantic shadows which futurity casts upon the present. 1

DOROTHEA HEMANS
1793-1835

homes of England!
tall

How beautiful they stand,


Amidst their
ancestral trees,
st. i

Defense of Poetry [1821]

the record of the best and Poetry happiest moments of the happiest and best minds. Ib.
is

O'er all the pleasant land! 2 The Homes of England,

The breaking waves dashed high

Poets are the unacknowledged lators of the world.

On
legis-

a stern

and rock-bound

coast,

Ib.

And

PETER VYAZEMSKY
He
lives

the woods, against a stormy sky, Their giant branches tossed. The Landing of the Pilgrim
Fathers,
st. i

1792-1878 in haste and hurries to


First

feel.

Snow

A band of exiles moored their bark On a wild New England shore.


Ib.
st.

JOHN CLARE
I

Ay,

call it

holy ground,
there

1793-1864 am! yet what I am who knows?


friends forsake
lost.

The soil where first they trod! They have left unstained what
cares,

or

they found Freedom to worship God.


16. st.

My

me

like a

10

memory
I

Am
I

The boy

stood on the burning deck,

Untroubling and untroubled where


lie

The

grass
sky.

below

above the vaulted


16.

*See Benjamin Franklin, p. 4*ia-b. 2 Those comfortably padded lunatic asylums, which are known, euphemistically, as the stately VIRGINIA WOOLF [i88shomes of England. 1941 ], The Common Reader: Lady Dorothy Nev~
ill

The wind and


there,

clouds,

now

here,

now

The

Hold no such strange dominion As woman's cold, perverted will,

beautiful they stood Before their recent owners Relinquished them for good.
E. V.
8

How

stately

homes of England,

KNOX

And soon
a

[1881-

],

The

estranged opinion.

When Lovers Part


Shakespeare, p. s68a;
to

See Cicero, p.

ma;

Giacomo Casablanca, whose the battle of the Nile, 1798, commanded the flagship Orient. It took fire and blew up, the

Stately Homes father, Louis, at

and Campbell, p. 5383, and note. * Quoted by Pushkin as epigraph


Onegin.

Eugene

commander was mortally wounded, and when most of the crew fled, Giacomo remained aboard, in an effort to help his gallant father.

573

HEMANS

BRYANT

Whence all but he had


The

fled.
$t. i

Casabianca,

The innumerable caravan which moves To that mysterious realm, where each
shall take

flames rolled on; he would not go


his father's word.

Without

His

chamber in the
death,

silent

halls

of

16.

st.

Thou

go not, like the quarry-slave at

There came a burst of thunder sound; oh! where was he? The boy
16. st. 9

night,

Scourged to his dungeon, but, sustained and soothed

Come

to the sunset tree!


is

By an
st. i

unfaltering trust, approach thy

The day

past and gone. Tyrolese Evening Song,

grave,

Like one that wraps the drapery of his couch

And

Leaves have their time to fall, flowers to wither at the northwind's breath,

About him, and


dreams. 1

lies

down

to pleasant
I.

Thanatopsis,

73

And stars to set but all, Thou hast all seasons for thine own,
Death!

He who,

from zone to zone,

Guides through the boundless sky thy


certain flight,

The Hour

of Death,

st. i

In the long way that


alone,

must

tread

In the busy haunts of men, Tale of the Secret Tribunal, pt. I

Will lead

my steps

aright.
st.

To
The

a Waterfowl [1818],
first

Oh,
I

call

my

brother back to me!


with flower and

cannot play alone:

groves were God's

The summer comes


bee

temples.

Forest

Hymn

The melancholy days


saddest of the year,
st. i

are

come, the

Where is my brother gone? The Child's First Grief,

Of

wailing winds,

He never smiled again.


Title

and naked woods, and meadows brown and sere.

and

refrain of

poem

The Death

of the Flowers
[1832],
st. i

WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT


1794-1878

Loveliest of lovely things are they, On earth, that soonest pass away.

The
Is

To him who
holds

in the love of Nature


visible forms,

rose that lives its little hour prized beyond the sculptured flower. Scene on the Banks of the

Hudson,
with her
she
these

st.

Communion
speaks

These are the gardens of the Desert,

A various language.
Thanatopsis [1817-1821], 1. i Go forth, under the open sky, and list To Nature's teachings. 16. 1. 14

The

unshorn
beautiful,

fields,

boundless

and

For which the speech of England has no name

The

The

Prairies.

The
to
earth,

Prairies
rise

hills,

Rock-ribbed, and ancient as the sun. 16. L 37

Truth,

crushed

shall

Old ocean's gray and melancholy waste.


16.
Z.

43

So

again; eternal years of God are hers; But Error, wounded, writhes in pain, And dies among his worshippers.

The

live,

that

when

thy summons comes


1

The

Battlefield,

st.

to join

See Lucretius, p. ii$b, and Horace, p. iaob.

574

EVERETT

GARLYLE
civilization,

EDWARD EVERETTi
1794-1865

gunpowder, printing, and

the Protestant religion.


Critical
says.

The days of palmy prosperity are not those most favorable to the display of public virtue or the influence of wise and good men. In hard, doubtful, unprosperous, and dangerous times, the
disinterested

and Miscellaneous EsState of

The

German

Lit-

erature [1827]
Literary

men

are

...

a perpetual
Ib.

priesthood.

way, by opposed, joyfully welcomed, to the control of affairs.

patriotic find their a species of public instinct, un-

and

ter of

In every man's writings, the characthe writer must lie recorded.


Ib.

Goethe [1828]

Mount Vemon

Papers, no. 14

poet without love were a physical


impossibility. Ib. Burns [1828]

and metaphysical

WILLIAM WHEWELL
1794-1866

And
stretch

so

a
2

no force however great can cord however fine into an


line

horizontal
straight.

which

There is no heroic poem in the world but is at bottom a biography, the life of a man; also, it may be said, there is no life of a man, faithfully recorded, but is
a heroic

is

accurately

poem

of

its

sort,

rhymed

or

Elementary Treatise on Mechanics [1819]. The Equilibrium of Forces on a Point

unrhymed.
16. Sir

Walter Scott [1838]

COMTE DE SALVANDY
We
1795-1856 are dancing on a volcano.

NARCISSE ACHILLE,

To the very last, he [Napoleon] had a kind of idea; that, namely, of La carri&re ouverte aux talents, The tools 16. to him that can handle them.

At a

f&te given by the Due d'OrUans to the King of Naples [1830]

No man lives without jostling and being jostled; in all ways he has to elbow himself through the world, giving
and receiving
little

offense.
is

16.
it is

All greatness

unconscious, or

and naught.

16.

THOMAS CARLYLE
1795-1881

well-written Life

is

almost as rare

The uttered part of a man's life, let us always repeat, bears to the unuttered, unconscious part a small unknown
knows
proportion.
it,

as a well-spent one. Critical

He
do

himself never
16.

and Miscellaneous

much

less

others.

Essays. Richter [1827]

great law of culture is: Let each become all that he was created capable

The

of being.

16.

It can be said of him, when he departed he took a Man's life along with him. No sounder piece of British manhood was put together in that eight-

The
1

three great elements of

modern
de-

eenth century of Time.

16.

His

best-known wartime oration was

livered at the dedication of the national cemetery at Gettysburg [November 19, 1863], the same occasion on which Lincoln made his famous
address.

Nothing that was worthy in the past no truth or goodness realized 16. by man ever dies, or can die.
departs;

The

barrenest of all mortals

is

the
16.

In a slightly altered form ("line that shall be absolutey straight"), this was reputed to be an example of unconscious but perfect rhyme.

sentimentalist.

Aesop's Fly, sitting on the axle of the

575

CABLYLE
chariot, has

been much laughed at for a dust I do raise! exclaiming: On BoswelTs Life of Johnson

What

the language of the Devil; for which reason I have, long since, as good as

renounced

it.

[1832]

Sartor Resartus, bk. II, ch. 4

belongs only to his own age, its gilt Popinjays or must soot-smeared Mumbojumbos, Ib. needs die with it. 1

Whoso

and reverences only

your own choler, as chimneys consume their own 1 to keep a whole Satanic smoke; School spouting, if it must spout, in-

To consume

some

The

stupendous

Fourth

Estate,

audibly,
tue,

is

a negative yet

no

slight vir-

whose wide world-embracing influences Ib. what eye can take in? 2
All
spreads,

nor one of the commonest in these


16. 6
is

times.
Alas! the fearful Unbelief

work is as seed sown; it grows and and sows itself anew. Ib.
has once heartily and

unbelief
16. 7

in yourself.

No man who
wholly

laughed can be altogether 3 irreclaimably bad, Sartor Resartus [1833-1834],


bk.
I, eft.

As

the

Swiss

inscription

says:

Sprechen ist silbern, Schweigen ist "Speech is silvern, Silence is golden


golden"; or, as I might rather express it, 2 speech is of time, silence is of eternity.
Ib. Ill, 3

He who
copyists

first

shortened the labor of

by device of movable types was disbanding hired armies, and cashiering most kings and senates, and creating a whole new democratic world: he had
invented the art of printing.
Ib. 5
.

Trust not the heart of that

man

for

whom
The

old clothes are not venerable.


16. 6

Public

is

an old woman. Let her


Journal [1835]

Man
Without
he
is all.

is

tool-using

animal.

maunder and mumble.

tools

he

is

nothing, with tools


Ib.
It
is

The

everlasting

No.
Ib.

now

almost

my

sole rule of

life

7 (chapter

title)

Be not

to clear myself of cants 3 and formulas, as of poisonous Nessus shirts.

the slave of Words.

Ib. 8

Letter to His

Wife

[1835]

The everlasting Yea.


16. 9 (chapter title)

Man's unhappiness, as I construe, comes of his greatness; it is because there is an Infinite in him, which with all his cunning he cannot quite bury
under the Finite.
Ib.

you can speak or act but it will come, after longer or shorter circulation, like a bill drawn on Nature's Reality, and be presented there for with No the answer, payment
lie

No

effects.

The French Revolution

Close thy Byron; open thy Goethe.


16.

[1837], pt. I, bk. Ill, eft. i

To
1

Wonder

a shower of gold

most

things are
16. 7

is

the basis of worship.


16. 10

penetrable.
See Heroes

is

you see, yet can not see over, as good as infinite. 16. II, i Sarcasm I now see to be, in general,
See Voltaire, p. 4i8a.
p. 5770,

What

and Hero-Worship,
your

p. 5775.

Consume

own

smoke.

BROWNING,
smoke.

Pacchiarotto [1876], aj Would that he consumed his

own
96

MELVILLE,

Moby Dick

[1851], ch.

Heroes and Hero-Worship, Thackeray, p. 66oa.


8

2 See

and

See \V. C. Fields, p. 9510.

See Osier, p. 8170. * Silence is deep as Eternity; speech is shallow as Time. CARLYLE, Sir Walter Scott [1838] 8 See Johnson, p. 4330.

576

CARLYLE
eat grass": hasty abroad irrevocable words, fly and will send back tidings.

"The people may


which

terial

substance of

it

has altogether van-

ished like a dream.

Heroes and Hero-Worship. The

The French

Revolution, pt.
Ib.

I,

Hero

as

Man

of Letters

bk. Ill, ch. 9

A whiff of grapeshot. O poor mortals, how


earth bitter for each other.

V,
Ib.

ye

make

this

All that mankind has done, thought, gained or been: it is lying as in magic preservation in the pages of books.
Ib.

Battles, in these ages, are transacted

by mechanism; with the slightest possible development of human individuality or spontaneity; men now even die, and
kill

The true university of these days collection of books.


in Parliament; but,

is

Ib.

Burke said there were Three Estates


in

one another,

in

an

artificial

man4

the Reporters'
sat
far

ner.

Ib. VII,
difference between

Gallery Estate
all.

yonder,

there

more important
it

a Fourth than they

Orthodoxy or 2 My-doxy and Heterodoxy or Thy-doxy.


Ib. pt. II, bk.

The

It

is

saying;

not a figure of speech, or witty is a literal fact very moIb.

IV, ch. 2
Ib. VII,

mentous to us in these times. 1

Aristocracy of the Moneybag.

The
7

consume

suffering man ought really to his own smoke; there is no


till

Democracy
self-canceling

by the nature of it, a business; and gives in the


is,

good in emitting smoke

you have
Ib.

made

it

into

fire.

long run a net result of zero.

Chartism [1839]. Ch.

6, Laissez-

Faire

Adversity is sometimes hard upon a man; but for one man who can stand prosperity, there are a hundred that will

No
man

sadder proof can be given by a

stand adversity. 3

Ib.

of his

own

littleness

than disbelief

in great

men. Heroes and Hero-Worship [1841]. The Hero as Divinity


is

"A fair day's wages for a fair day's work": it is as just a demand as governed men ever made of governing. It is
the everlasting right of man. Past and Present [1843],
Fire
bfe. I,

history of the world 3 biography of great men.

The

but the
Ib. Ib.
is

ch. 3

the best of servants; but what


Ib. II,

We must get rid of fear.


A
of
all

a master! 4

vein of poetry exists in the hearts

men.

Ib.

The Hero
is

as

Poet

even cotton-spinning, is noble; work is alone noble. ... A life of ease is not for any man, nor for any
All

work,

The Age

of Miracles
Ib.

forever here!
as Priest

god.

The Hero

Every noble crown


will forever be, a

is,

Ib. Ill, 4 and on earth

crown of thorns.
I6.

In books lies the soul of the whole Past Time; the articulate audible voice of the Past, when the body and maof Foullon, when his finance scheme raised the question: What will the people do? 2 See William Warburton, p. 4iga, note. 8 History is the essence of innumerable biog1

The

come

gallery in which the reporters sit has bea fourth estate of the realm. MACA.ULAY,

The remark

On

See

Hallam's Constitutional History [18*8] On Boswell's Life of Johnson, p. 5f6a.

2 See Sartor Resartus, p. 576b. 8 See Samuel Butler, p. 755b.


*

Mammon

is

like

fire:

the usefulest of

all

raphies.

On

History [1830]

servants, if the frightfulest of all masters!

Ib.

See Emerson, p. 6osb.

577

CARLYLE
Blessed
is

GRIBOYEDOV

he who has found

his

JOSEPH RODMAN

work;

let

him ask no other blessedness. Past and Present, bk. Ill, ch. 4
Ib.

DRAKE

When

1795-1820 Freedom from her mountain

Captains of Industry.

height,
title)

IV, 4 (chapter

There is endless merit in a man's knowing when to have done.


Francia [1845]
that works and does some Poem, not he that merely says one, is worthy of the name of Poet. Introduction to Cromwell's
Letters

Unfurled her standard to the air, She tore the azure robe of night,

And

set the stars of glory there;


its

She mingled with

gorgeous dyes

The milky

baldric of the skies,

He

And striped its pure, celestial white With streakings of the morning light. Then from his mansion in the sun
She called her eagle bearer down,

and Speeches [1845]

And gave into his mighty hand The symbol of her chosen land.
The American Flag
[1819],
st. i

Respectable Professors of the Dismal


Science. 1

Latter

Day Pamphlets,

no. i [1850]

Parliament speaking through reporters to Buncombe and the twentyseven millions, mostly fools. Ib. 6

JOHN WOODCOCK GRAVES


1795-1886 D' ye ken John Peel with his coat
so

healthy hatred of scoundrels.

16.12
"Genius" (which means transcendent capacity of taking trouble,
2
first

of

gay? D' ye ken John Peel at the break of day? D' ye ken John Peel when he's far far

all).

Life of Frederick the Great [1858-1865], bk. IV, ch. 3

away

With

his

hounds and

his

horn in the

morning?

Happy the people whose annals are blank in history books! 3 Ib. XVI, i
So here hath been dawning Another blue day:
Think, wilt thou let Slip useless away?
it

Twas
And

me from my bed,

the sound of his horn brought

the cry of his hounds, has me ofttimes led; For Peel's view-hollo would waken the

Today
castle
is;

My whinstone house my I have my own four walls.

Or the
Walls

dead, fox from his


ing.

lair

in the morn[1832]

John Peel

My Own Four

Lord Bacon could as easily have created the planets as he could have written Hamlet. Remark in discussion
1 Referring to political economy and social science, Carlyle also in his Occasional Discourse on the Negro Question [1849] speaks of "What
call,

ALEXANDER GRIBOYEDOV
1795-1829

The
are old.

houses are new, but prejudices

we might
Science/*
s

by way of Eminence, the Dismal

Wit Worfa?

Woe

See Buffon, p. 4230, and note.


Carlyle
identifies

[1822-1824], act II, sc. 5

this

as

"Montesquieu's
I'll

aphorism." See George Eliot, p. 68gb.

seek

me

out a nook for the heart


Ib.

that's tried too sore.

IV, 15

578

GREBOYEDOV

KEATS

And

what
l

will

Princess

Marya

Much have
gold,

travel'd in the realms of

Aleksevna say?

Wit Works Woe,

act II, sc. 15

And many
seen;

goodly states and kingdoms


islands have
I

JOHN KEATS
1795-1821
I

Round many western


been

Which

stood tiptoe upon a

little hill.

Poems

I i [1817]. I Stood Tiptoe,


then there crept
noise

bards in fealty to Apollo hold. Sonnets. On First Looking into Chapman's Homer
I

And

Then
the

felt

like

some watcher

of the

little

noiseless

among
that

skies

leaves,

When
Or
I.

new

planet swims into his ken;

Born of the very


heaves.

sigh

silence
Ib.

like stout

Cortez

when with
and

eagle
his
sur-

10

eyes

Open afresh your round Ye ardent marigolds!

of starry folds,
Ib.
I.

He

star'd at

the Pacific

all

men
Look'd at each other with a wild mise
Silent,

47

Where swarms

of

minnows show

their

little heads, the Staying their wavy bodies 'gainst Ib. I. 72 streams.

upon a peak

in Darien.

16.

Hear yfe not the

hum

Sometimes goldfinches one by one will drop From low hung branches; little space
they stop;

Of mighty workings?
Listen awhile ye nations, and be dumb. 16. Addressed to Haydon

The
and
their feathers

But

sip,

and

twitter,

sleek;

dead. poetry of earth is never 16. On the Grasshopper and the Cricket
mortality
like unwilling

Then off at once, as in a wanton freak: Or perhaps, to show their black, and
golden wings, Pausing upon their yellow
flutterings. 16. I 87

spirit is too weak Weighs heavily on me

My

sleep,

And
Of

Woman! when
vain,

behold ihee

flippant,

each imagined pinnacle and steep me I must godlike hardship, tells


die

Inconstant, childish, proud, and full of


fancies.

Like a sick Eagle looking at the sky. 16. On Seeing the Elgin Marbles
It

16.

Woman! When
has

Behold

Thee Flippant, Vain

keeps eternal whisperings around Desolate shores, and with its mighty
swell

To one who
2

been long in
fair

city

pent,

Tis very sweet to look into the And open face of heaven.
Sonnets [1816-1817].

Gluts twice ten thousand caverns. 16. On the Sea


Life
is

To One
in City

but a day;

Who
Pent

Has Been Long

A fragile

E'en

like the passage of


falls

an angel's

tear
si-

dewdrop on its perilous way From a tree's summit. Sleep and Poetry [1817], I. 85

That
1
a

through the clear ether

for ten years, that I

may overwhelm

lently.

16.

Name

used as a symbol for idle gossip. See Milton, p. 347b.

Myself in poesy; so I may do the deed That my own soul has to itself decreed. 16. 1 96

579

KEATS

A drainless shower
Of
light
is

The

poesy;

'tis

the supreme of

We

have
dead.

power;

grandeur of the dooms imagined for the mighty Endymion, bk. I, Z. 20


comfortable bird,
o'er the troubled sea of

Tis might
"

half slumb'ring

on

its

own
235

lit

arm.
Sleep and Poetry,
Z.

O magic sleep! That broodest


the
Till
it is

mind
hush'd and smooth!
Ib.
1.

But strength alone though of the Muses born


Is like

a fallen angel: trees

453

uptom,

Darkness, and worms, and shrouds, and


sepulchers

Time, that aged nurse, Rock'd me to patience. Ib.

Z.

705

Delight it; And. thorns of

for it feeds
life;

upon the burrs forgetting the great

Wherein

lies

happiness? In that which

end

Of

To

poesy, that it should be a friend soothe the cares, and lift the

Our

becks ready minds to fellowship divine, fellowship with essence; till we


shine,

thoughts of man.
In a drear-nighted December

Ib.

Z.

241

Full alchemiz'd, and free of space. Be-

~
The

hold
clear religion of heaven!

Too happy, happy tree, Thy branches ne'er remember


Their green
felicity.

Ib.

1.

777

Stanzas [written 1817]

Is

But were there ever any Writh'd not at passing


Shed no
tear

The crown of these made of love and friendship, and


high
the forehead of humanity.

sits

joy?

Ib.

Upon

O shed no tear! bloom another year. Weep no more weep no more! Young buds sleep in the root's white
The
flower will
core.

Ib.Z.8oo

A hope beyond
Pleasure
is

the shadow of a dream.


Ib.
Z.

857

oft a visitant;

but pain
Ib.
Z.

Faery Songs, I [written 1818]

Clings cruelly to us.

906

There

is

not a

fiercer hell

than the

Tis the pest

failure in a great object.

Of
[1818], preface
is

love, that fairest joys give


rest.

most unZ.

Endymion

Ib. II,

365

boy healthy, and the mature imagination of a man is healthy; but there is a space of life between, in which the soul is in a ferment, the character undecided, the way of life uncertain, the ambition thicksighted: thence proceeds mawkishness, and the thousand bitters which those
speak of must necessarily taste in over the following pages. Ib. going
I

The

imagination of a

To
I

sorrow,
far

bade good-morrow, And thought to leave her


hind;

away be-

But

cheerly, cheerly,

She loves me dearly; She is so constant to me, and so kind.


Ib.

men

IV, I 173

"For cruel

'tis,"

said she,

A
A

"To
thing of beauty
is

steal

Its loveliness increases; it will

a joy forever: never


still

my

Basil-pot

Isabella; or,

away from me." The Pot of Basil


[1818],
st.

62

Pass into nothingness; but

will

keep

bower quiet for us, and a sleep Full of sweet dreams, and health,
quiet breathing.
Ib. bk. I,

and
Z.

Blue! Gentle cousin of the forest-green, Married to green in all the sweetest
flowers

580

KEATS
Forget-me-not
that

the

blue

bell

and

This living hand,


ble

now warm and


if it

capa-

Queen

Of

secrecy, the violet.

Of

Sonnets [1818-1819]. Blue

earnest grasping, would, cold


in the icy silence of the
chill

were

When
be
Before

have

And
fears that I

may

cease to

tomb,
thy dream-

So haunt thy days and


ing nights

my
I

pen has glean'd


Ib.

brain.

When
upon

my
I

teeming

Have Fears
the
night's
ro-

That thou would wish thine own heart


dry of blood

When

behold,

So

in

my

veins red life

might stream

starr'd face,

again,

Huge cloudy symbols


mance.

of a

high

And thou be
I

Ib.

the shore Of the wide world I stand alone, and think Till love and fame to nothingness do
sink.
'Ib.
I

Then on

see conscience-calm'd here it is hold it towards you. Lines Supposed to Have Been Addressed to Fanny Browne
in a hut, with water and a crust, cinders, ashes, Love, forgive us!
dust.

Love
Is

Bright

star, would thou art

were steadfast

as

Poems
hung
aloft the

Not

[1820]. Lamia, pt. II,

in lone splendor

And

night watching, with eternal

There was an awful rainbow once in

lids apart,

Like nature's patient, sleepless Eremite,

We
In

The moving
task

waters at their priest-like

heaven: fciow her woof, her texture; she is given the dull catalogue of common
things.

Of pure

ablution round earth's

human

shores.

Ib. Bright Star

Philosophy will clip an angel's wings.


Ife. Z.

The day
Sweet

is

gone, and

231
it

all its

sweets are
St.

gone!
voice, sweet lips, soft hand, softer breast. Ib.

Agnes' Eve
was!

Ah,

bitter

chill

and

The Day Is Gone

The The

owl, for all his feathers,

was

a-cold.

what can ail thee, knight at arms, Alone and palely loitering?

And
The The

hare limp'd trembling through the frozen grass, silent was the flock in wooly fold
Ib.
silver,

The Eve

The sedge has withered from And no birds sing!


La
1

of St. Agnes,

st. i

the lake,
*
[first

Belle

Dame

Sans Merci

chide.
st. i

snarling trumpets 'gan to 16. st. 4

version, 1819],

music, yearning like a


for

God

in pain.
Ib. st.

a lady in the meads Full beautiful, a faery's child; Her hair was long, her foot was light, Ib. st. And her eyes were wild.

met

She sigh'd

Agnes'

dreams,

the
Ib.

sweetest of the year.

Asleep in lap of legends old.

She looked

And made

at me as she did love, sweet moan. Ib. st. 5

"La belle dame Thee hath in thrall!"


1

sans merci
Ib.
st.

10

15 Sudden a thought came like a fullblown rose, Flushing his brow, and in his pained
heart

Ib. st.

The

title
[c.

of

French

poem by AIADJ

CHARTIER

1385-0. 1433]

Made purple riot.

Ib. st.

16

583

KEATS
^L

churchpoor, weak, palsy-stricken, yard thing. Poems. The Eve of St. Agnes,
st.

a beaker full of the warm South, ? for Full of the true, the blushful Hippocrene,

18

With beaded bubbles winking


brim,

at the

\s

though

tongueless

nightingale

should swell
Her throat in vain, and in her dell.
Full
die, heart-stifled 16. st. 23

And

purple-stained

mouth. Poems. Ode to a Nightingale,


st.

on

this

casement shone the wintry


gules on Madeline's
16.
st.

Fade

far

away, dissolve,

and quite

for-

moon,

get

And threw warm


fair breast.

What

25

Unclasps her warmed jewels one by one; Loosens her fragrant bodice; by degrees

thou among the leaves hast never known, The weariness, the fever, and the fret Here, where men sit and hear each

Where

other groan; palty shakes a few, sad, last gray

Her

rich attire creeps rustling to her 16. st. 26 knees.


still

hairs,

Where youth
thin,

grows pale, and specteris

And

she slept an azure-lidded sleep.


16. st.

and dies; Where but to think


sorrow

to

be

full

of

30

And
And

the long carpets rose along the 16. st. 40 gusty floor.

And leaden-eyed

despairs.

16. st. 3

These

they are gone: aye, ages long ago lovers fled away into the storm.
16.
st.

Already with thee! tender


I

is

the night.
16. st.

42

cannot see what flowers are at


feet,

my

My My

heart aches, ness pains


sense, as

and a drowsy numbI

Nor what

soft incense

hangs upon the

though of hemlock
dull

had

boughs,
But, in embalmed darkness, guess each
sweet.
16. st. 5

drunk,

Or emptied some
drains

opiate to the

The murmurous haunt


past,

of

flies

on sum16.

One minute
sunk. 1
16.

and Lethe-wards had


to a Nightingale,
st. i

mer eves.
I

Ode

That thou, light-winged Dryad of the


trees,

Darkling I listen; and, for many a time have been half in love with easeful

Death,
Call'd

In

some melodious
green,
berless,

him

soft

names

in

many

mused

plot

Of beechen
Singest of

and shadows numin full-throated ease.

rhyme,

To

summer

take into the air my quiet breath; Now more than ever seems it rich to
die,

16.

To

cease
pain,

upon the midnight with no

O, for a draught of vintage! that hath been


Cool'd a long age in the deep-delved
earth,

While thou

Tasting of Flora and the country green, Dance, and Provengal song, and sunburnt mirth!
1

art pouring forth thy soul abroad In such an ecstasy! Still wouldst thou sing, and I have ears

To

in vain thy high requiem become a sod.


16.
st.

See Horace, p. izob.

KEATS

Thou

wast not born for mortal Bird!


generations

death, imtread
tibee

Lead'st thou that heifer lowing at the


skies,

No
The

hungry down;
voice
I

And

all

her silken flanks with garlands

drest?

hear this passing night was

Poems. Ode on a Grecian


Urn,
st.

heard

4
5

In ancient days by emperor and clown: Perhaps the self-same song that found a path

O Attic shape!
"Beauty
that
is

Fair attitude!
Ib. st.

Through the sad heart of Ruth, when, sick for home, She stood in tears amid the alien corn; The same that oft-times hath Charm'd magic casements, opening on the foam

truth,

truth

beauty/'
all

is all

Ye know on
know.

earth,

and

ye need to
16.

To make
Upon

delicious

moan
st.

Of

the midnight hours.


Ib.

perilous seas, in faery lands forlorn. Poems. Ode to a Nightingale,


st.

Ode

to Psyche,

3 at

Forlorn! the very

word

is like

a bell

To

toll

me

bright torch, night, To let the warm Love in!

and a casement ope


Ib.
st.

back from thee to

my

sole

self!

Ib. st. 8

Ever

let

the fancy roam,


is

Was

a vision, or a waking dream? Fled is that music: Do I wake or


it

Pleasure never

at

home.
16.

Fancy, L

sleep?

16.

Thou Thou

still

foster-child of silence

unravish'd bride of quietness, and slow

time,

Bards of Passion and of Mirth, Ye have left your souls on earth! Have ye souls in heaven too? Ib. Ode written on the blank

Sylvan historian,

who

canst thus ex-

press

BEAUMONT AND Fair Maid of The FLETCHER,


page before
the Inn
Souls of Poets dead and gone,

flowery tale

more sweetly than our


legend haunts about
st. i

rhyme:

What

leaf-fring'd

What Elysium have ye known,


Happy
field or

thy shape?
Ib.

mossy cavern,

Ode on a Grecian Urn,

Choicer than the Mermaid Tavern?

What men What mad

or gods are these? maidens loth?

What

pursuit?

What

struggle to

Have ye tippled drink more fine Than mine host's Canary wine? Ib. Lines on the Mermaid Tavern
Season of mists and mellow
fruitful-

escape? What pipes and timbrels?


ecstasy?

What

wild
16.
1

ness,
See Herbert, p. asked who said "Beauty is truth, truth beauty!" a great many readers would answer "Keats." But Keats said nothing of the sort. It is what he said the Grecian Urn said, his description and criticism of a certain kind of work of art, the kind from which the evils and problems of this life, the "heart high sorrowful and cloyed," are deliberately excluded. The Urn, for example, depicts, among other beautiful sights, the citadel of, a hill town; it does not depict warfare, the evil which makes the citadel
If

Heard melodies unheard Are sweeter.


'

are sweet, but those


16. st. 2
fair!

Forever wilt thou love, and she be

Ib.

Forever piping songs forever new.


Ib. st. 3

Who

are these

coming to the
altar,

sacrifice?

To what
priest,

green

mysterious

necessary.
[zptfaj

W. H.

AUDEN, The Dyer's Hand

Robert Frost

583

KEATS
Close bosom-friend of the maturing
sun.

As when, upon a
night,

tranced

summer-

Poems. To Autumn,

st.

Those green-rob'd senators of mighty


woods,
Tall
oaks,

Who

hath not seen thee oft amid thy

branch-charmed
so

store?

by

the

Sometimes whoever seeks abroad may


find

earnest stars,

Dream, and
a
stir.

dream

all

night without
I,
Z.

Thee

Thy

sitting careless hair soft-lifted

on a granary floor, by the winnowing


furrow

Poems. Hyperion, bk
For to bear
all

72

Or on

wind; a

half-reap'd

sound

And

asleep,

truths, to envisage circumstance, all calm, That is the top of sovereignty.

naked

Drows'd with

the fume of poppies while thy hook Spares the next swath and all its twined
flowers.

16. II,

Z.

203
of

Knowledge enormous makes a God


me.
I

Ib.

st.

16. Ill,

Z.

113

Then in a wailful mourn

choir the small gnats


Ib. st . 3

certain of nothing but the holiness of the heart's affections and the

am

truth

Among the river sallows.

of imagination
as
it

No, no, go not to Lethe, neither twist Wolf's-bane, tight-rooted, for its poisonous wine.
Ib.

agination seizes truth whether


not.

beauty
existed

what the immust be


before or

Ode on

Melancholy,

st. i

Letter to Benjamin Bailey [November 22, 1817]

Nor

let the beetle,

nor the death-moth


to

The

imagination

may be compared
he
awoke
and
16.

be Your mournful Psyche,

Ib.

Adam's dream found it truth.


of Thoughts!
1

Then

glut thy sorrow on a

morning
16.
st.

for a life of Sensations rather than


16.

rose.

She dwells with Beauty must die.


Veil'd

Beauty that
Ib. st. 3

scarcely

remember counting upon


I

happiness not in the


startles

look not for

it if it

be

Ay, in the very temple of Delight Melancholy has her sovran


shrine,

me

present hour nothing beyond the moment. The

Though

Can

seen of none save him whose strenuous tongue burst Joy's grape against his palate
shall taste the sadness of

setting sun will always set me to rights or if a sparrow come before win-

dow

my

take part in

its

existence and pick


16.

about the gravel.

fine;

His soul

her

might,

At once it struck me what quality went to form a man of achievement, in and which especially literature,
Shakespeare

And be among
hung.

her

cloudy

trophies Ib.

mously
that
in
:

mean

Deep

in the shady sadness of a vale

is,

when

so enorpossessed negative capability, a man is capable of being


mysteries,

uncertainties,

doubts,

Far sunken from the healthy breath of morn, Far from the fiery noon, and eve's one
star,

without any

irritable

reaching after fact

and reason.
Letter to George

and Thomas

Sat gray-hair'd Saturn, quiet as a stone. Ib. Hyperion, bk. I, I i

Keats [December 22, 1817]


hate poetry that has a palpable and if we do not design upon us
agree,
!

We

That

large utterance of the early Gods! 16. 1. 51

seems to put

its

hand

in

its

breeches pocket. Poetry should be great

584

KEATS

and unobtrusive, a thing which enters into one's soul, and does not startle or amaze with itself, but with its subject. Letter to John Hamilton Reynolds [February 3, 1818]

acquainted with the soundings, the quicksands, and the rocks, than if I had stayed upon the green shore, and piped a silly pipe, and took tea and comfortater

ble advice.

Poetry should surprise by a fine excess, and not by singularity. It should strike the reader as a wording of his

Letter to James Hessey


I

would sooner

fail

than not be
Ib.

among the greatest.

own
most

highest thoughts, and appear


as a

al-

remembrance.
Letter to John Taylor [February 27, 1818]

I think I shall be among the English Poets after my death. Letter to George and Georgiana

If poetry comes not as naturally as leaves to a tree it had better not come

at

all.

Ib.
is

Keats [October 14, 1818] The poetical character ... is not itself it is everything it has no self and nothing. ... It has as much delight

Scenery
is

fine

but

human

nature

in

conceiving

an

lago

as

an

finer.

Imogen.
Letter to Benjamin Bailey

Letter to Richard

Woodhouse

[March

13, 1818]

[October 27, 1818]


poet is the most unpoetical of anything in existence; because he has no he is continually informing] identity Ib. and filling some other body.

Axioms

in philosophy are not axioms

until they are proved upon our pulses: we read fine things but never feel them
to the full until

we have gone

the same

steps as the author. Letter to John

Hamilton Reyn-

A man's
the
tive.

life

of any worth

is

a contin-

olds
I

[May

3, 1818]

and very few eyes can ual allegory a life like see the mystery of his fife
Scriptures,
figurative.
.
. .

compare human

sion of
I

many

to a large manapartments, two of which


life

Lord

Byron cuts a
his

figure,

but he

is

not

figura-

rest

can only describe, the doors of the Ib. being as yet shut upon me.

Shakespeare led a life of allegory: works are the comments on it.


Letter to George and Georgiana Keats [February iq-May 3, 1819]

an awful warmth about my heart like a load of immortality. Letter to John Hamilton Reynolds [September 22, 1818]

There

is

Nothing ever becomes


experienced proverb to you
trated
I
it.

real

till it

is

acquainted with my own strength and weakness. Praise or blame has but a momentary effect on the man whose love of beauty in the abstract makes him a severe critic on his own works. Letter to James Hessey [October 9, 1818]
I

begin to get a

little

Even
till

a proverb is no your Life has illusIb.

myself am pursuing the same incourse as the veriest human I am, howanimal you can think of
stinctive

ever

young,

writing

at

random

straining

The genius of poetry must work out its own salvation in a man; it cannot
be matured by law and precept, but by sensation and watchfulness in itself. That which is creative must create itself

midst

at particles of light in the of a great darkness without

tion, of any one opinion. in this be free from sin?

knowing the bearing of any one asserYet may I not


Ib.

[March

19, 1819]

In Endymion, I leaped headlong into the sea, and thereby have become bet-

Call the world if you please vale of soul-making/'

"The

Ib. [April 21, 1819]

585

KEATS
I

MANN

have two luxuries to brood over in

FRIEDRICH WILHELM
1795-1861
I

IV

my walks, your loveliness and the hour of my death. O that I could have possession of
ute.

them both

in the

same min1819]

love an opposition that has convic-

tions.

Speech [April

n,

1847]
as

To Fanny Erawne
"If
I

\July 25,
I

Henceforth Prussia goes forward


part of Germany.

should die/' said

to myself, "I

have
of

left

no immortal work behind me

friends proud have lov'd the of beauty in all things, and if frinciple had had time I would have made myself remember'd."

nothing to

make my
but
I

my memory

Proclamation: To People, to the German Nation [March 21, 1848]

My

ALFRED BUNN
1796-1860
dreamt that I dwelt in marble halls, With vassals and serfs at my side.
I

16.

[c.

February 1820]

You might curb your magnanimity, and be more of an artist, and load every
rift

The Bohemian

of your subject with ore. Letter to Shelley [August 1820]

Girl [1843], act II, song

I can scarcely bid in a letter. I always

you good-bye, even made an awkward

HARTLEY COLERIDGE
1796-1849

bow.

God bless you!


Letter to Charles Armitage Brown; Keats's last letter

The

soul of

man

is

larger than the sky,

Deeper than ocean, or the abysmal dark Of the unfathomed center.

Here
water. 1

lies

[November 30, 1820] one whose name was writ in


Epitaph for himself [1821]

To

Shakespeare

She is not fair to outward view As many maidens be;


I never knew Until she smiled on me: Oh! then I saw her eye was bright, A well of love, a spring of light. Song, She Is Not Fair

Her loveliness

LEOPOLD VON RANKE


1795-1886

You

have

reckoned

that

history

ought to judge the past and to instruct the contemporary world as to the future. The present attempt does not yield to that high office. It will merely 2 tell how it actually happened. Geschichten der Romanischen und Germanischen Volker (History of the Romanic and Germanic Peoples) von 1492 bis

Her very frowns

are fairer far

Than

smiles of other

maidens

are.

Ib.

HORACE MANN
1796-1859
Lost, yesterday, somewhere between sunrise and sunset, two golden hours,

1535 [1824], preface


1

Among

the

many
is

me

tonight, this gravestone shall

things he has requested of the principal that on his Letter be this inscription.

No

each set with sixty diamond minutes. reward is offered, for they are gone
forever.

from Severn,
Life,
Letters,

in

RICHARD MONCKTON MILNES, and Literary Remains of John

Aphorism

Keats [1848]
See Sophocles, p. 83a, and note, >Wie es eigentlich gewesen. See Thucydides, p. 8ga.

Be ashamed to die until you have won some victory for humanity.

Commencement
586

Address,

Antioch College [1859]

PLANCHE

BAYLY

JAMES ROBINSON PLANCHt


It

1796-1880 would have made a cat laugh.

SAM SLICK [THOMAS CHANDLER HALIBURTON]


4
1796-1865 want you to see Peel, Stanley, Graham, Shiel, Russell, Macaulay, Old Joe, and so on. These men are all
I

The Queen

of the Frogs [1879],


act
I, sc.

WILLIAM HICKLING PRESCOTT


1796-1859
then, must have been the emotions of the Spaniards, when, after working their toilsome way into the up-

1 upper crust here.

Sam

Slick in England [1843- 1844],* eft. 24

What,

Circumstances alter cases.

The Old Judge

[1849], ch. 15

per
fair

air,

fore their eyes,


ico]

the cloudy tabernacle parted beand they beheld these

scenes [the valley and city of

Mex-

JOSEPH AUGUSTINE

in all their pristine magnificence

WADE

and beauty! It was like the spectacle which greeted the eyes of Moses from
of Pisgah,,and, in the warm glow of their feelings, they cried out, "It is the promised land!"

1796-1845

Meet

Me

the

summit

by Moonlight Alone.
Title of

poem

The Conquest of Mexico ico


bk
:.

[1843],

Ill, eft.

THOMAS HAYNES
BAYLY
1797-1839
I'd be a butterfly; living a rover, Dying when fair things are fading

surest test of the civilization of a at least, as sure as people any afforded by mechanical art is to be found in their architecture, which

The

presents so noble a field for the display of the grand and the beautiful, and which, at the same time, is so inti-

away!
I'd

Be

a 'Butterfly,

st.

mately connected with comforts of life.

the

essential

Oh

no!

we never mention her


is

Her name
That once

never heard;
to speak

The Conquest
Drawing
his

of Peru [1847], bk. I, eft. 5

My lips are now forbid


Oh No!

familiar word.

sword

he

We Never Mention Her

[Pizarro]

traced a line with it on the sand from East to West. Then, turning towards

the South, "Friends and comrades!" he said, "on that side are toil, hunger, nakedness, the drenching storm, deser-

Why don't the men propose, Mamma? Why don't the men propose? Why Don't the Men Propose?
She wore a wreath of
roses

and death; on this side ease and 1 pleasure* There lies Peru with its riches and its poverty. Choose, Panama here, each man, what best becomes a brave
tion,

The night

that

first

we met. She Wore

Wreath
them

Castilian.

For my part, I go to the South." So saying, he stepped across


16. II,
p.

Friends depart, and memory takes To her caverns, pure and deep.

Teach
1

Me

to Forget

the line.
1

4
p.

See

Garibaldi,

6soa,

and Churchill,

See James Fenimore Cooper, p. 5640. The "Sam Slick" papers first appeared In a weekly paper in Nova Scotia in 1836.
a

587

BAYLY
Tell

HEINE

me

the

tales that to

me

were so
I

At
did

first I

was almost about to


never could bear
it
it.

despair,

dear,

thought
bear

but

Long, long ago, long, long ago. Long, Long Ago

The

how?
child, don't greet after we get back

question remains: An Karl von U.

Oh pilot, 'tis a fearful night! There's danger on the deep*.


The Pilot
Absence makes the heart grow
Isle

Don't make a fool of me, my pretty me under the lindens;

home, everything

will

fonder: 2

be

learned.

Poem
Harzreise

of Beauty, fare thee well! Isle of Beauty


I Sing.

A knight of the holy spirit.


Good Luck is
a giddy maid,
hair;

I'm Saddest When

Title of

poem

Fickle and restless as a fawn;

She smooths your

and then

the

HEINRICH HEINE*
1797-1856

jade Kisses you quickly, and is gone. 1 Das Gliick 1st eine Leichte

Toward France
grenadiers.

there

journeyed two

Dime,
st.i

Nach Frankreich Zogen Zwei


Grenadier* y
st.

From

grief too great to banish

Come songs, my lyric minions. 5


Aus Meinen Grossen
Schmerzen,
I
st.

But Madame Bad Luck scorns all this, She shows no eagerness for flitting; But with a long and fervent kiss Sits by your bed and brings her
knitting.
lib. st.

For Sleep
still

is

good, but Death

is

better

am

know not why

it

should be that

The best is

so sad; there is a fairy tale of olden 6 days that I cannot get out of my head.

never to be born at all. 2 Gross 1st die Ahnlichkeit der beiden schonen

Die

Lorelei, st. i
If

You

are like a flower,


7 fair.
st.

one has no heart, one cannot write


Letter to Julius

So sweet and pure and

for the masses.


i

Du

Bist

Wie

eine Blume,

Campe

[March

18, 1840]

*A popular temperance song, Where Are the Friends That to Me Were So Dearf was set to the tune of Long, Long Ago. * Distance sometimes endears friendship, and absence sweeteneth it. JAMES HOWELL, Familiar Letters [1650], bk. I, sec. i, no.
*

No talent,
Ordinarily
lucid

but a character. Atta Troll [1843], ch 2 4


-

he

is

insane, but

he has

See Artemus Ward, p. 7500. Therefore a secret unrest

moments when he is only stupid, Of Savoye, appointed ambassador to Frankfurt by Lamartint

Tortured thee,

brilliant

and bold.
Heine's Grave
[1867]
1

MATTHEW ARNOLD,
B

Out of my own great woe I make my little songs.


Translated by ELIZABETH BARRETT

See Dryden, p.

BROWNING
8

Good Luck is the gayest of all gay girls, Long in one place she will not stay, Back from your brow she strokes the curls,
Kisses you quick and flies away. But Madame Bad Luck soberly comes And sits by your bed, and brings her knitting JOHN HAY [1838-1905], Good and Btu Luck (after Heine a See Theognis, p. 77a, and note.
.

Ich weiss nicht, was soil es bedeuten, Dass ich so traurig bin; Ein Marchen aus alten Zeiten, Das kommt mix nicht aus dem Sinn.

Du

bist wie eine Blume, So hold und schon und rein.

LOVER

LINLEY
Love that which
twice. will never

SAMUEL LOVER
1797-1868 a smile her on lip, but Reproof
eye.
in her
st. i

be seen
16.

Silence alone
ness.
IxJ

is

great; all

eke

is

weak-

Rory O'More [1836],


For dhrames always go by

Mort du Loup
I

[1864]

my dear.
"For

contrairies, Ib. st. 2

WILHELM
1797-1888
In

there's luck in odd numbers/' says 1 16. st. 3 Rory O'More. When first I saw sweet Peggy Twas on a market day; A low-backed car she rode, and sat

Germany,

Prussia

must

make

moral conquests through

legislation.

Speech to the Cabinet [November 8, 1858]

Upon

a tuft of hay.

The Low-Backed

The
Car,
st. i

Prussian

arms.
I

army is the people in As Prince Regent [1860]

MOTHERWELL
I've

WILLIAM

now have no time

On

his

to be tired. deathbed [March 8, 1888]

1797-1835 east, Fve wandered west, Through many a weary way; But never, never can forget

wandered

AUGUSTE COMTE
1798-1857
Love our
our foundaprinciple, order
tion, progress

The love

o' life's

young

day!
st. i

our goal.

Jeannie Morrison,

Systime de Politique Positive [1851-1854]

MARY WOLLST ONE CRAFT


SHELLEY
1797-1851
the miserable beheld the wretch monster whom I had created. Frankenstein [1818], ch. 5
I

Nothing
manity.
1

at

bottom

is

real except huIb.

The dead govern the living.


Catfchisme
Positiviste [1852]

HOFFMANN VON
FALLERSLEBEN
1798-1874
Deutschland, Deutschland iiber
les.

ALFRED DE VIGNY
1797-1863 I love the sound of the horn, 2 night, in the depth of the woods.
at

al-

Titk of poem [September

i,

1841]

Le Cor
God! how sad
I
is

[1826]

GEORGE LINLEY
1798-1865

the sound of the Ib. horn deep in the woods! 3


[Nature]
a grave.

am

called a mother,

but

am

La Maison du Berger

[1864]

iSee Pliny, p. i$3a, and Shakespeare, p. 2675. a J'aime le sou du cor, le soir, au fond des bois. *Dieu! que le son du cor est triste au fond
des boisl

Among our ancient mountains, And from our lovely vales, Oh, let the prayer re-echo: "God bless the Prince of Wales!" God Bless the Prince of Wdes,
st. i
i II

n'y a,

au fond, de

reel

que

I'humanite*.

589

LINLEY
Fhough lost to sight, to memory dear Fhou ever wilt remain. 1

BALZAC

AMOS BRONSON ALCOTT


1799-1888

Song

(attributed)

One must be

a wise reader to quote

JULES MICHELET
England
is

wisely

and

well.

Table Talk. Quotation


a

1798-1874 an empire, Germany

is

Qation, a race, France

is a person. Histoire de France [1833-1867]

To be ignorant of one's ignorance is the malady of the ignorant. 16. Discourse

Why are we not within?


What
is

the

first

part of politics?

Education. The second? And the third? Education.

Education.
[1846]

Outside the Courthouse,, Boston, during the abortive attempt to


free

Anthony Burns [May 26,

Le Peuple

1854].

From THOMAS WENTHIGGINSON,


Cheerful

WORTH
The

Yesterdays [1899]

DAVID MACBETH MOIR


1798-1851
the lone sheiling of the misty island Mountains divide us, and the waste of
seas

against his

true teacher defends his pupils own personal influence. He

From

guides their eyes inspires self-trust. from himself to the spirit that quickens him. will have no disciple.

He

He

Orphic Sayings [1840], The Teacher

Yet

still

the blood

is

strong, the heart

is

Who

loves

garden

still

his

Eden

Highland,

And we in dreams behold

the Hebrides.

keeps,

Canadian Boat Song

Perennial pleasures plants, and whole-

some

harvests reaps.

Tablets [1868]

ROBERT POLLOK
1798-1827
Sorrows remembered sweeten present

press thee to ful child.

my heart

as

Duty's

faith-

Sonnet to Louisa

May

Alcott
[1822]

Course of Time, bk.

I,

L 464

1 Absent or dead, still let a friend be dear. ALEXANDER POPE, Epistle to Robert, Earl of Oxford end Mortimer [17*1] 2 This poem, now generally called The Lone

HONORS DE BALZAC
It is easier to

1799-1850 be a lover than a hus-

Sheiling, appeared

anonymously in Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine in September 1829, in a section called Nodes Ambrosianae, edited by John Wilson ("Christopher North"). The poem has been attributed to him, to John Gait, John Lockart, Scott, David Macbeth Moir, a Scottish physician and friend of Gait's, and others. Edward MacCurdy in A Literary Enigma [1935] and G. H. Needier in The Lone Sheiling [1941] produce convincing evidence that establish Moir
as the author.

band more

for the simple reason that it is difficult to be witty every day than to say pretty things from time to

time.

Physiologie
I

du Manage [1829]
pen and
ink.

am

a galley slave to

Lettres [1832]

*See Virgil, Aeneid

I, 203,

p.

Fame is the sun of the dead. La Recherche de VAbsolu

[1834]

590

BALZAC
I

HOOD
which make up the Declaration of Independence.
Letter to the

believe in the incomprehensibility

of

God.
Letter to

Madame

de Hanska

Maine Whig Committee [1856]

Those sweetly smiling angels with


pensive looks, innocent faces, and cashboxes for hearts. Cousin Bette [1846], eft. 15

EUGtNE DELACROIX
1799-1863

O
ject

young
is

artist,

you search
is

for a sub-

everything

subject.

Your

RUFUS CHOATE
1799-1859

subject

yourself,

your impressions,

your emotions in the presence of nature.

Oeuvres

Littfraires
is

The courage

of

New

England was

the "courage of conscience." It did not rise to that insane and awful passion, the love of war for itself.

The

first

virtue of a painting

to be

a feast for the eyes.

Journal [1893-1895] only a bridge linking the painter's mind with that of the viewer.
Painting
is

Address at Ipswich Centennial


[1*34]

ft.

The
to

end of government is not exert restraint but to do good.


final

Speech,

US.

Senate \July 2, 1841]

THOMAS HOOD
1799-1845

There was a state without king or nobles; there was a church without a 1 there was a people governed bishop; by grave magistrates which it had selected, and by equal laws which it had
framed.

Ben

Battle was a soldier bold, And used to war's alarms;

But a cannonball took off his legs, So he laid down his arms. Faithless NeUie Gray [1826],
His
death,
berth,

st. i

Speech before the New England Society [December 22, 1843]

which

happened

in

his

We

join ourselves to

does not carry the flag the music of the Union. Letter to the Whig Convention,

no party that and keep step to

At forty-odd

befell:

Worcester [October
Its

i,

1855]

They went and told the sexton, and The sexton tolled the bell. faithless Sotty Brown [1826], st. 17 There is a silence where hath been no
sound.

constitution

the
2

glittering

and

There

is

a silence where

sounding generalities
1

of natural right

no sound may

be,

a religion without a prelate, a government without a king. GEORGE BANCROFT, History of the United States
[1834-1876], vol. Ill, ch.

See Junius, p. iogib. It [Calvinism] established

In the cold grave

under the deep,


life
is

deep sea, Or in wide desert where no


found.
I remember, I remember The house where I was born,

Silence [1827]

Oh, we are weary pilgrims; to this wilderness we bring A church without a bishop, a state without a
king.

glittering generalities of the speaker

Puritan's Mistake [1844]; anonymous 2 Six years earlier, Choate gave a lecture in Providence, a review of which, by FRANKUN J. DIGKMAN, appeared in the Journal of December 14, 1849. Dickman wrote: "We fear that the

The

have left an impression more delightful than permanent." It would seem that Dickman must have the

credit of inventing the phrase "glittering gen-

report was merely echoing words used by Choate in the lecture.


eralities," unless his

59 1

HOOD
The
little

window where the sun


I

Seem'd washing

his

hands with

invisible

Came peeping in at morn.


Remember, I Remember
[1827],
I
st. i

soap In imperceptible water.

Miss Kilmansegg and Her Precious

remember,

The fir-trees
I

remember dark and high;


I

Leg [1841-1843], Her


st.

Christening,

10

Were close against


It

used to think their slender tops the sky:

bed!

O bed! delicious bed!

was a childish ignorance,


'tis little

But now

That heaven upon earth to the .weary 16. Her Dream, st. head. 7

joy

To know I'm farther off from heaven 16. st. 4 Than when I was a boy.
She stood breast-high amid the corn.
1

Homemade
home.

dishes that drive one from


Ib.

Her Misery,

st. i

Another tumble!
nose!

that's his precious

Ruth

[1827],

st. i

And there is

even a happiness
afraid.

Parental

Ode

to

My Infant Son
rt.

That makes the heart

Ode

to Melancholy [1827]

There's not a string attuned to mirth Ib. But has its chord in melancholy.

With fingers weary and worn, With eyelids heavy and red, A woman sat in unwomanly rags
Plying her needle and thread
Stitch! stitch! stitch!

But evil is wrought by want of thought, As well as want of heart.

The Lady's Dream


I

[1827],

st.

16

In poverty, hunger, and dirt. The Song of the Shirt [1843],

saw old Autumn

in the misty

morn
She sang the Song of the
Shirt.
16.
st.

Stand shadowless

like silence, listening

To silence.
Straight

Autumn

[1827],

st. i

Work! work! work!

16.

down the Crooked Lane,


round the Square.

And

all

O men, with sisters dear! O men, with mothers


st.
i

and
x

wives!

Plain Direction,

It is

not linen you're wearing out,


creatures' lives!
16.
st.

men set out from Lynn Through the cold and heavy mist, And Eugene Aram walked between,
stern-faced

Two

But human

With

gyves

upon

his wrist.

O
A

The Dream

of

Eugene Aram [1829], st. 36

God! that bread should be And flesh and blood so cheap!


wife

so dear,
16.
st.

Never go to France Unless you know the lingo, If you do, like me, You will repent, by jingo. French and English [1839],

who

preaches in her gown,

And

lectures in

The
st. i

her nightdress. Surplice Question, st 2

One more unfortunate, Weary of breath,


Rashly importunate, Gone to her death!

No No No

warmth, no cheerfulness, no healthful ease,

comfortable feel in any


shade,
bees,
fruits,

member
no
no

no
no

shine,

no

butterflies,

Take her up

No

flowers,

no

leaves,

tenderly, Lift her with care; Fashioned so slenderly,

birds,

Young, and so

fair!
st. i,

November!
1

No
1

The Bridge

of Sighs [1844],

See Keats, p. 5833.

See Scott, p. 52ob.

592

HOOD
Alas for the rarity Of Christian charity Under the sun! *

PUSHKIN
Rousseau
sion

please pardon this digres-

The Bridge
Sunny

of Sighs,

st.

Could not conceive how solemn Grimm Dared clean his nails in front of him.

O'er the earth there comes a bloom;

Warm
I

light for sullen gloom; perfume for vapor cold

Custom

is

Eugene Onegin9 ch. lord of all mankind.

i, st.

24
25

Ib.

st.

smell the rose above the mold!


Farewell, Life [1845],
st.

We have, alas, as yet no clues,


Known
as the

A malady to whose causation


tion,

MARY HOWITT
1799-1888 "Will you walk into my parlor?"
said

Spleen to Albion's na-

In our parlance just:

The

Blues.
Ib.
st.

38

"Tis

the spider to the fly; the prettiest little parlor that ever you did spy/' The Spider and the Fly
thing,
'tis full

Habit
It

is

Heaven's

own

redress:

takes the place of happiness. 1 16. 2,


[writing

st.

31

Pimen

Oh! poverty is a weary grief and pain;


It

of

by lamplight]: One more, the final record, and my


annals

It

keepeth down the soul of man, as with an iron chain; maketh even the little child with

Are ended, and fulfilled the duty laid By God on me, a sinner. Not in vain

heavy sighs complain.

Hath God appointed


witness, teaching
ters;

me me

for

many

years
let-

the art of

The Pet Lamb

day

will

come when some

laborious

THOMAS NOEL
1799-1861 Rattle his bones over the
He's only owns!
a
pauper,
stones!

monk
Will bring to light
less toil,

my

zealous,

name-

whom

Kindle, as

I,

his lamp,

and from the

nobody
st. i

parchment
Shaking the dust of ages, will transcribe

The

Pauper's Drive,

My chronicles.
Boris

ALEXANDER PUSHKIN
1799-1837
Like to

Godunov 2

The mind's dispassionate notations, The heart's asides, inscribed in tears.


Eugene Onegin
For he possessed the happy
2

some magistrate grown gray oEce


unjust, with indifference

[written 1825] in
alike the just

Calmly he contemplates

[1823], dedication

And
Evil

he notes
Ib.

and good, and knows not wrath


nor pity.
of

gift

Of unaffected conversation: To skim one topic here, one


Keep
silent with

Ah! heavy art thou, crown nomakhl

MoIb.

there,

an expert's

air

In too exacting disputation.


Ib. ch. i,
st.

Contented ever with

his

Mosalsky: Good folk! Maria Godunov and her son Feodor have poisoned have seen their dead themselves. bodies. [The people are silent with hor-

We

life,

Himself, his dinner, and his wife.


Ib.
1
*

ror.]

st.

12

Why are you silent? Cry, Long live Czar Dimitry Ivanovich! [The people
Ib.
i

are speechless.]
See Burke, p. 4523. * Translated "by AIJPRED HAYES.

See Southey, p. 53$a, and O'Reilly, p. 8o7a. Translated by WALTER AINDT.

593

PUSHKIN

MACAULAY
This
is

And
Shall

thus he mused:

"From

here, in-

deed

Remark
Swede;
city,

we

strike terror in the

And

here a
bor;

Founded,

shall gall our

by our labor haughty neighNature gives

to the gallows, seated on his coffin [December 2, 1859]

a beautiful country. as he rode

"Here cut"

so

coml

JULIA

CRAWFORD
is

mand
"Your window through on Europe:
stand Firm-footed by the sea, unchanging!"

1800-1885 Kathleen Mavourneen! the gray dawn

The Bronze Horseman

The

breaking, horn of the hunter


hill.

is

heard on the
i

[written

Kathleen Mavourneen [1835], st

JOHN BROWN
1800-1859
so interfered in behalf of the the rich, powerful, the intelligent, the so-called great, or in behalf of any of
I

Oh! hast thou forgotten this day we must part? It may be for years, and it may be

Had

Then why

forever; art

thou

silent,

thou voice

of
ft.

my heart?

friends . . every man in this court would have deemed it an act worthy of reward rather than punishtheir
.

ment.
Last Speech to the Court [November 2, 1859]
I

THOMAS BABINGTON, LORD MACAULAY


1800-1859
the best government which desires to make the people happy, and
is

That

I persons. believe that to have interfered as I have

that

am yet too young to God is any respecter of

understand
2

knows how

On

to make them happy. Mitford's History of Greece

done ... in behalf of His despised poor, was not wrong, but right. Now, if it is deemed necessary that I should forfeit my life for the furtherance of the ends of justice, and mingle my blood
further with the blood of

Free trade, one of the greatest blessings which a government can confer on a people, is in almost every country unpopular.
Press
Ib.

and

my children, with the blood of millions in this

where ye see

my

white plume
hel-

slave country whose rights are disregarded by wicked, cruel, and unjust enactments, I submit: so let it be done!
16.
^Algarotti has
est la fenetre,

shine, amidst the ranks of war,

And be

met

your oriflamme today the of Navarre.


Ivry [1824],

/.

29

Europe.

somewhere said: P&ersbourg par laquelle la Russie regarde en AUTHOR'S NOTE, The Bronze Horse-

Nobles by the right of an earlier creation, and priests by the imposition of a On Milton [1825] mightier hand.

at length going to give you some account new city, of the great window lately opened in the North, through which Russia looks into FRANCESCO ALGAROTTI, Europe. Letters About Russia [June 30, 1739] z See Acts 10:34, p. 503.
of this

man I am

The
shelf.

dust and silence of the upper


16.
al-

As civilization advances, poetry most necessarily declines.

Ib.

The

Father,

who without
to

judgeth according / Peter inj

respect of persons every man's work.

Perhaps no person can be a poet, or even can enjoy poetry, without a certain Ib. unsoundness of mind.

594

MACAU1AY
Nothing maxim.
is

so useless

as

a general

him

seemed

great, and whatever to him little.

was great

On

Niccold de Machiavelli [1827]

On

Horace Wdpole [1833]

The English Bible a book which if everything else in our language should perish, would alone suffice to show the whole extent of its beauty and power.

Such night in England ne'er had been, nor ne'er again shall be.

The Armada

[1833],

I.

34

OnJohnDryden
of an ostrich. It enabled though not to soar.

[1828]

An acre

in

Middlesex

is

better than a

His imagination resembled the wings

1 principality in Utopia.

him

On

to run,
16.

Lord Bacon [1837]

Ye

diners-out from

whom we

spoons.

guard our Political Georgics

Every schoolboy knows who imprisoned Montezuma, and who strangled On Lord Clive [1840] Atahualpa.

Men are never so likely to settle a question rightly as when they discuss it freely. Southefs Colloquies [1830]

She [the

Roman

Catholic Church]

may still exist in undiminished vigor when some traveler from New Zealand
shall, in

A
tide

single breaker
is

may

recede; but the


in. 2

evidently

coming

16.

We
as

know no
fits

spectacle so ridiculous
its peri-

the midst of a vast solitude, on a broken arch of London Bridge to sketch the ruins of St.
take his stand
Paul's.2

the British public in one of

On
She
[the

odical

On
From

of morality. Moore's Life of

Ranke's History of the

Lord Byron
oughly

Popes [1840]
Catholic Church] thorunderstands what no other Church has ever understood, how to Ib. deal with enthusiasts.
See Tennyson, p. Macaulay used a similar image in his review [1824] of MnroRD, Greece, and in his review
2 1

the poetry of Lord Byron they drew a system of ethics compounded of a misanthropy and voluptuousness system in which the two great commandments were to hate your neighbor and to love your neighbor's wife. Z6.

Boswell

the first of biographers.3 On Boswett's Life of Johnson


is

[1829] of MILL, Essay on Government. Who knows but that hereafter some traveler
like myself will sit down upon the banks of the Seine, the Thames, or the Zuyder Zee, where

That wonderful book, while tains admiration from the most ous critics, is loved by those who

it

ob-

fastidi-

are too

simple to admire it. On Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress

now, in the tumult of enjoyment, the heart and the eyes are too slow to take hi the multitude of sensations? Who knows but he will sit down solitary amid silent ruins, and weep a people inurned and their greatness changed into an CONSTANTIN DE VOLNEY [1757empty name?
Ruins, ch. See Horace Wai pole, p. 44a-b. In the firm expectation that when London shall be a habitation of bitterns, when St. Paul and Westminster Abbey shall stand shapeless and nameless ruins in the midst of an unpeopled marsh, when the piers of Waterloo Bridge shall become the nuclei of islets of reeds and osiers, and cast the jagged shadows of their broken arches on the solitary stream, some transatlantic commentator will be weighing in the scales of some new and now unimagined system of criticism the respective merits of the Bells and the SHEUJEY, Peter Fudges and their historians. Bell the Third [1819], dedication
1820],

Reform, that you may preserve. Debate on the First Reform

Bill

[March

2,

1831]

The conformation of his mind was such that whatever was little seemed to
1 The louder he talked we counted our spoons.

of his honor, the faster

EMERSON, Conduct of
p. 688b.

Life [1860], Worship * See Arthur Hugh 8 See p. 4290 note

dough,
2.

595

MACAULAY
The Chief and infamous.
Justice

was

rich,

quiet,

And

even

the

ranks

of

Tuscany
st.

Could scarce forbear to cheer.


Hasting? [1841]
Horatius,

On Warren

60

I shall not be satisfied unless I produce something which shall for a few

days supersede the last fashionable novel on the tables of young ladies. Letter to Macvey Napier

has never looked on a faint idea of a catabut has Niagara ract; and he who has not read Harare's

A man who

[November
In order that

5, 1841]

Memoirs may be said not to know what it is to lie. Review of M&noires de


Bertrand Barfae [1843]

he might rob a neighbor whom he had promised to defend, black men fought on the coast of Coromandel and red men scalped each other by the great lakes of North America.

The
sess

of virtue is to poshighest proof boundless power without abusing it. Review of AIKIN, Life of

On Frederick

the Great [1842]


instance of the

We

hardly

know an

Addison [1843] [Richard Steele] was a rake among scholars, and a scholar among

He

strength and weakness of human nature so striking and so grotesque as the character of this haughty, vigilant, resolute, sagacious blue-stocking, half Mithridates and half Trissotin, bearing up against a world in arms, with an ounce of poison in one pocket and a quire of Ib. bad verses in the other.

rakes.

Ib.
1
sit,

There you

doing penance for

the disingenuousness of years. Speech, House of Commons [April 14, 1845]

Forget

all feuds,

and shed one English

tear

O'er English dust.


here.

broken heart

lies

Lars Porsena of Clusium By the Nine Gods he swore That the great house of Tarquin

Should

suffer

wrong no more.

By the Nine Gods he swore it, And named a trysting day, And bade his messengers ride forth
East and west and south and north,

To summon his

array.

Lays of Ancient

Rome [1842]. HoTOtius, st. i

Epitaph on a Jacobite [1845] Those who compare the age in which 2 their lot has fallen with a golden age which exists only in imagination, may talk of degeneracy and decay; but no man who is correctly informed as to the past will be disposed to take a morose or desponding view of the present.
History of England [1849-1861],
voZ. I, ch.
i

To

Death cometn soon or kte;

man upon this every

earth

And how can man die better Than facing fearful odds
For the ashes of his fathers, And the temples of his gods?
Ib. st.

I shall cheerfully bear the reproach of having descended below the dignity of history if I can succeed in placing before the English of the nineteenth century a true picture of the life of their

ancestors.

Ib.

27

Those behind

cried "Forward!"
16.
st.

And

those before cried "Back!"

because because

50

Puritan hated bear-baiting, not it gave pain to the bear, but it gave pleasure to the specIb. 2 tators. 8
Robert
*

The

Oh, Tiber! father Tiber!

Peel.

To whom

the

Romans

pray,

Roman's life, a Roman's arms, Take thou in charge this day.


Ib.
st.

See Horace, p. ib. Even bear-baiting was esteemed heathenish and unchristian: the sport of it, not the inhu*

59

HUME, History of Engmanity, gave offense. land [1754-1757], vol. It ch. 62

co6

MAC AULAY
There were gentlemen and there were seamen in the navy of Charles II. But the seamen were not gentlemen, and the gentlemen were not seamen.
History of England
vol. I, ch.

NEWMAN

DAVID GLASGOW

FARRAGUT
1801-1870
the

Damn
ahead!
*

torpedoes

full

speed

At the Battle of Mobile Bay


[August 5, 1864]

The ambassador [of Russia] and the grandees who accompanied him were so
stare at
all London crowded to them, and so filthy that nobody dared to touch them. They came to the court balls dropping pearls and vermin. 16. V, 23

gorgeous that

JOHN HENRY, CARDINAL NEWMAN


18011890
Time hath
a

taming hand.
Persecution [1832],
st.

Your Constitution

is all

sail

and no

anchor. Letter to H. S. Randall, author of a Life of Thomas Jefferson

Lead, kindly Light, amid the encircling gloom; Lead thou me onl

[May 23, 1857]


Soon fades the
night;
spell,

The
soon comes the

night

is

dark,

and

am

far

from

home; Lead thou me on!

Say will

it

not be then the same,

Keep thou
see

my

feet:

do not ask

to
for

Whether we played the black or white, Whether we lost or won the game? Sermon in a Churchyard, st. 8

The

distant scene;

one step enough

me.

The

Pillar of

HELMUTH VON MOLTKE


1800-1891
First ponder,

Cloud [1833]. Lead Kindly Liglit, st. i

And

with the morn, those angel faces


smile
I

then

dare. 1

Attributed aphorism

Which

have loved^ong

since,

and
Ib.

lost

awhile.

st.

The fate own power.

of every nation rests in

its

Growth

To

the

German

Reichstag [March i, 1880]


It is

is the only evidence of life. Apologia pro Vita Sua [1864]

war, even the most victorious, is a Letter [1880] national misfortune.

Which

thy very energy of thought keeps thee from thy God. Dream of Gerontius [1866],
pt. Ill

RICHARD BETHELL, LORD WESTBURY


1800-1873

Take a note of says he will turn it

Who lets his feelings run In soft luxurious flow, Shrinks when hard service must be
done,

that; his Lordship over in what he is


2

pleased to call his mind. NASH, Life of Lord

And faints

at every woe. Flowers Without Fruit

Westbury
Living Nature, not dull Art
Shall plan

[i888],vol.I,p. 158
^Erst wagen, dann wagen. a Reported to have been spoken in an audible whisper, from the barristers* table, in reference to a presiding judge. According to Nash, Lord Westbury always disclaimed invention of the

my ways and rule my heart. Nature and Art [1868], st. 12

most famous version. The is the "torpedoes" were mines anchored by the Confederates in Mobile Bay.

597

NEWMAN
Lord, support us all the day long, the shadows lengthen and the evening comes, and the busy world is hushed, and the fever of life is over, and our work is done. Then in thy mercy grant us a safe lodging, and a holy rest, and peace at the last. Sermon [1834]; included in the
until

HUGO

DAVID CHRISTY
1802-0. 1868
Cotton is King; or, The Economical Relations of Slavery. 1 Title of book [1855]

Book
It is

of

Common Prayer,

p. 571

ALEXANDRE DUMAS THE ELDER


1802-1870
All for one, one for device. 2
all,

man
pain.

almost a definition of a gentleto say he is one who never inflicts


Idea of a University [1873]. The Man of the World

that

is

our

The Three Musketeers


Nothing succeeds

[1844], ch. 9

like success.3
I,

A great memory does not make a philosopher, any more than a dictionary can be called a grammar. 1 Ib. Knowledge in Relation

Ange Pitou [1854], vol.


Let us look for the woman. 4

p. 72

The Mohicans of

to Learning

Paris [18541855], vol. Ill, ch. 10, 11

Ex umbris
truth]!

et imaginibus in veritatem

[From shadows and symbols into the


His

VICTOR HUGO
1802-1885 These two halves of God, the Pope and the emperor. Hernani [1830], act IV, sc. 2

Own

Epitaph

at

Edgbaston

BRIGHAM YOUNG
1801-1877
This
the place! On first seeing the valley of the Great SdtLake 2 [July 24, 1847]
is

God became
devil

man, granted. The


II, sc.

became

woman. 5
Bias [1838], act
It
is

Ruy
Popularity?

change.

glory's Ib. Ill, 5

small

Greater than the tread of mighty armies is an idea whose time has

LYDIA MARIA CHILD


1802-1880
Over the
river

come. 6
Histoire d'un

Crime

[written

and through the wood,


a

1852], conclusion
Take away time
is

To grandfather's house we'll go; The horse knows the way To carry the sleigh,
Through the white and
1

money, and what

is left

drifted snow. Thanksgiving Day, st

of England? take away cotton is king,, and what VICTOR HUGO, Les Miserais left of America? ble* [1863]. Marius, bk. IV, ch. 4
2

See Shakespeare, p. a*oa.

Rien ne

reussit

comme

le

succes.

French
is

proverb
Confucius, p. yia; Lao Tzu, p. 75b; Heraclitus, p. 77b. 2 Brigham Young and 142 men, three women and two children were the vanguard of Mormon

See

and

*The phrase "Cherchez la femme" uted to JOSEPH FOUCH [1763-1820].


fait
6

attrib-

Dieu s'est femme.

fait

homme;

soit.

Le diable

s'est

who explored westward from Nebraska. Mahonri M. Young, noted sculptor and grandson of Brigham Young, designed the "This Is the Place Monument," dedicated July 24, 1947.
pioneers

On

resiste

a 1'invasion des armees; on ne

resiste pas a 1'invasion des idees. (Literally, one can resist the invasion of armies, but not the

invasion of ideas.)

59 8

HUGO
Waterloo! Waterloo! Waterloo! Dis*

mal

plain!

Les Chdtiments [1853],


L'Expiation

The

eye was in the

at Cain.

tomb and stared La Conscience [1859]


a

A man is not idle because he is absorbed in thought. There is a visible labor and there is an invisible labor. Le Miserables. Cosette, bk. VII, ch. 8
No
a child.

one ever keeps a secret so well as Ib.VIII, 8


peculiarity of prudery
is

You have created

new

thrill. 2

The

to mulas

Letter to Baudelaire [October 6, 1859]

tiply sentinels, in proportion fortress is less threatened. 1

the

The supreme
conviction that

happiness of

life is

the
.

16. Marius, bk. II, ch. 8

we are loved.
Les Miserables 8 [i 862] Fantine f bk. V, ch. 4

He had the appearance of a caryatid on vacation; he was supporting nothing Ib. IV, 2 but his reverie.
Social prosperity means man happy, the citizen free, the nation great. Ib. Saint Denis, bk. I, ch. 4

Great

grief

is

a divine and terrible


transfigures

radiance wretched.

which

the
Ib. 13

Napoleon
list

mighty

somnambu-

of a vanished dream.
Ib. Cosette, bk. I, ch. 13

Nothing is more dangerous than dishabit continued labor; it is habit lost. easy to abandon, difficult to resume.

Ib. II, i

Waterloo

won by

is a battle of the first rank a captain of the second.

Thought
reverie
is its

is

the labor of the intellect,


Ib.

pleasure.

Ib. 16

Would you
is,

call

realize

what Revolution and would you what Progress is, call it Tomorrealize
it

Progress;

Where the telescope ends, the microscope begins. Which of the two has the Ib. Ill, 3 grander view? is something like a compliment

kiss

row.

Ib.

through a

veil.

Ib. VIII, i
this beauty, that

17

Great

perils

have

What is

that to the Infinite?


Ib. 18

they bring to light the fraternity of Ib. XII, 4 strangers.

Great blunders are often made, like large ropes, of a multitude of fibers. Ib. 7 10

Philosophy
thought.

is

the

microscope

of

Ib. Jean Valjean, bk. II, ch. 2

goblet he read this inscription, monkey wine; upon the second, lion wine; upon the third, sheep wine; upon the fourth, swine wine. These four inscriptions expressed the four descending degrees of drunken-

Upon

the

first

sublimest song to be heard on earth is the lisping of the human soul on the lips of children.

The

Ninety-Three [1879], pi.

Ill,

bk. Ill, ch. i

To To

rise at six,

first, that which enlivens; the second, that which irritates; the third, that which stupefies; finally the last, that which brutalizes. 4 Ib. VI, 9

ness: the

sup at
a

six,

Makes

man

to dine at ten, to sleep at ten, live for ten times ten.

Inscription over the door of

Hugo's study
the refuge of all old coquettes; it is hard for them to be deserted by the gallants, and from such a desertion, in their spite, they
is

That

a
8

Waterlool Watcrlool Waterlool Morne plainel Vpus crez un frisson nouveau. Translated by CHARLES E. WILBOUR. * See George Herbert, p

take refuge in the trade of a prude. Tartuffe [1667], act 1, sc. J

599

HUGO
represent a party which does not the party of revolution, civilization.
I

BEDDOES

yet exist:

WINTHROP MACKWORTH PRAED


1802-1839
His talk was like a stream, which runs With rapid change from rocks to roses; It slipped from politics to puns; It passed from Mahomet to Moses.

This party
century.

will

make the twentieth

There will issue from it first the United States of Europe, then the United States of the World. On the wall of the room in which

The Vicar, st.

Hugo
Paris

died, Place

des Vosges,

Dame Fortune is a fickle gipsy, And always blind, and often tipsy;
Sometimes
for years

and years
the

LETITIA ELIZABETH

She'll

bless

you

with

together, sunniest

LANDON

weather,

1802-1838 Few, save the poor, feel for the poor. The Poor

Bestowing honor, pudding, pence, You can't imagine why or whence;

Then
Your

moment Presto, pass! are withered like the grass. joys


in a

Were it not better to forget Than hut remember and regret?


Despondency

The Haunted

Tree

GEORGE POPE MORRIS


18021864

FRIEDRICH JULIUS STAHL


1802-1861
Authority, not majority. Speech before the Erfurt Parlia-

Woodman,
Touch
In youth
it

spare that tree! not a single bough!


sheltered me,
it

ment

[April 11, 1850]

And

Fll protect

now.
Spare That Tree
[1830],
st. i

Woodman,
The

WILLIAM ALLEN
1803-1879
* Fifty-four forty, or fight!

iron-armed soldier, the true-hearted


soldier,
2 gallant old soldier of Tippecanoe. Campaign song for William

Speech, U.S. Senate [1844]

The

song for
recall

Henry Harrison [1840] our banner! The watchword

THOMAS LOVELL
BEDDOES
1803-1849
heaves,

Which

gave the Republic her station:

The anchor
free,

the

ship

swings

"United we stand, divided we fall!" 3 It made and preserves us a nation! 4

The

sails

swell full.

To

The Flag
1
s

of

Our Union
If there

sea, to sea! Sailor's Song,


sell,

st.

See Campbell, p.
Morris's words,

were dreams to

sung to the tune of The Old Oaken Bucket, were immensely popular. BEN PERLEY POORE, Reminiscences [1886] *See John Dickinson, p. 4600. *Bless'd with victory and peace, may our Heaven-rescued land Praise the Power that hath made and preserved us a nation.

What would you buy?


1 Phrase adopted as the slogan of the war party in the presidential election of 1844. At the time, war with England over the Oregon question seemed imminent. The Democratic convention of 1844 demanded the reoccupation of the whole of Oregon up to 544o', but the new President, James R. Polk, compomised with Great Britain on the forty-ninth parallel.

FRANCIS SCOTT KEY,

The Star-Spangled
Banner
[1814],
st.

6OO

BEDDOES

EMERSON
Beneath the rule of

Some cost a passing-bell; Some a light sigh.


Dream
thou wilt ease thine heart Of love and all its smart,
If

men

entirely great,

The pen
Pedlary

1 mightier than the sword. Richelieu [1839], act II, sc. 2


is

In the lexicon of youth, which fate


reserves

Then

sleep, dear, sleep.

For a bright manhood, there

is

no such
Ib.

word

But wilt thou cure thy heart Of love and all its smart,

As

fail.

Then

die, dear, die.

Out-babying

Wordsworth

and

out-

Death's Jest Book [1850]

2 glittering Keats.

The New Timon

[1846], pt. I

GEORGE BORROW
1803-1881
There's night and day, brother, both sweet things; sun, moon, and stars, brother, all sweet things; there's likewise a wind on the heath. Life is very sweet, brother; who would wish to die?

In science, read, by preference, the newest works; in literature, the oldest. The ckssic literature is always modern. Caxtonia. Hints on Mental Culture In science, address the few, in literature the many. In science, the few must dictate opinion to the many; in literature, the many, sooner or later, force their judgment on the few.

Lavengro [1851],
I

eft.

25
to

learned

...

to fear

God, and
Ib.

Ib. Readers

and Writers

take

my own part.

86

Youth is the only season for enjoyment, and the first twenty-five years of
one's life are worth all the rest of the longest life of man, even though those
I

WILLIAM DRIVER
1803-1886

name thee Old Glory. As the flag was hoisted

to the

five-and-twenty be spent in penury and contempt, and the rest in the possession
of wealth, honors, respectability.

masthead of his brig 3

The Romany Rye

[1857], ch. 30

RALPH WALDO EMERSON


1803-1882
Good-bye,

EDWARD BULWER-LYTTON
1803-1873

proud
not

worldl

I'm

going

home;

Thou
the

art

my

friend and I'm not


st.

thine. 4
all

good heart

is

better than

Poems
ceit,

[1847]. Good-bye,
all

heads in the world.

For what are they


[1828], ch. 33
is

in their high con-

The Disowned

The easiest own self.


Rank
is

person to deceive

one's

16.

42

*See Cervantes, p. 19513, and Burton, p. 31 la. Eloquence a hundred times has turned the
of war and peace at Progress of Culture [1867]
scale
a

will.

EMERSON,

a great beautifier. The Lady of Lyons [1838], act II, sc. i

Tennyson. 3 On August 10, 1831, a large American flag was presented to Driver, captain of the Charles Doggett, by a band of women in recognition of
his bringing the British mutineers of the ship Bounty from Tahiti back to their former home,

Love, like Death,


Levels
all ranks,

and

lays the shepherd's

crook Beside the scepter.

Ib* III, 2

Pitcairn Island. The flag is now in the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. *See Johnson, p. 433b, and Byron, p. 556b.

601

EMERSON

When man
meet?

in the

bush with God may Poems. Good-bye, st. 4

The

frolic architecture

of the snow.

Poems. The Snowstorm


Life
is

Nor knowest thou what argument Thy life 'to thy neighbor's creed has
lent
All are needed

In

critic

too short to waste peep or cynic bark,

Nothing
I

is

by each one; fair or good alone, 16. Each and

Quarrel or reprimand: Twill soon be dark;


All, st. i

Up! mind thine own aim, and

God

speed the mark!

16.

To J.W.

wiped away the weeds and foam,


fetched the

my

sea-born treasures
unsightly,

home;

There's no rood has not a star above


it.

But

poor,

noisome

16.

Musketaquid

Had left their beauty on the shore, With the sun and the sand and
wild uproar.
I like

All sorts of things

and weather

the
st.

16.

Must be taken in together, To make up a year

And

a church; I like a cowl; love a prophet of the soul;


heart monastic aisles

a Sphere. 16. Fable,

The Mountain and the


Squirrel

And on my

Fall like sweet strains or pensive smiles; Yet not for all his faith can see

In May,
I

when

sea

winds pierced our

Would

solitudes,

that cowled
16.

churchman

be.
st. i

The Problem,

found the fresh woods.

Rhodora
16.

in

the

The Rhodora

Not from a vain or shallow thought His awful Jove young Phidias brought. 16. st. 2

Rhodora! if the sages ask thee why This charm is wasted on the earth and
sky,

The hand

And

that rounded Peter's dome, groined the aisles of Christian


a sad sincerity;

Tell them, dear, that


for seeing,

if

eyes were

made

Rome, Wrought in

Then Beauty
being.

is

its

own

excuse for
Ib.

could not free; He builded better than he knew; The conscious stone to beauty grew.
16.

Himself from

God he

And

For Nature beats in perfect tune, rounds with rhyme her every rune,

Earth proudly wears the Parthenon

As the best gem upon her zone.


16. st. 3

The passive Master lent his hand To the vast soul that o'er him
Announced by
sky,
all

planned.

Whether she work in land or sea, Or hide underground her alchemy. Thou canst not wave thy staff in air, Or dip thy paddle in the lake, But it carves the bow of beauty there, And the ripples in rhymes the oar forsake. 16. Woodnotes II

16.

the trumpets of the


16.

And

Things are in the saddle, ride mankind.


Ib.

Arrives the snow.

The Snowstorm
There are two laws
16.

Ode

Inscribed to

W. H.
discrete,

Chaining

Enclosed In a tumultuous privacy of storm.


*This <uplet is inscibed on the boulder marking Emerson's grave in Sleepy Hollow
Cemetery, Concord, Massachusetts.

Not

reconciled
for

Law

man, and law

for thing.

16.

OI lympian bards who sung


Divine ideas below,

602

EMERSON

Which always find us young, And always keep us so. Poems. Ode
Give
all

to Beauty

Today unbind the captive, So only are ye unbound; Lift up a people from the dust,

to love;

Trump

of their rescue, sound!

May-Day and Other


Boston

Pieces.

Obey thy heart;


Friends, kindred, days, Estate, good fame, Plans, credit and the Muse,

Hym^ &
16.

*7

Oh, tenderly the haughty day Fills his blue urn with fire.
Ode,
st. i
st. i

Nothing

refuse.
Ib.

Give All to Love,

Go

put your creed into your deed,


16. st.

Nor speak with double tongue.


Heartily know,

When half-gods go,


The gods
arrive.

16. st.

think no virtue goes with


16.

size.

The Titmouse

Love not the flower they pluck, and

know

it

not,

And

all their

botany

is

Latin names.
Ib. Blight

So nigh is grandeur to our dust, So near is God to man, When Duty whispers low, Tftou must, The youth replies, I can.
Ib. Voluntaries, III

By the rude
flood,

bridge that arched the

Their

flag to April's breeze unfurled,

Nor sequent centuries could hit Orbit and sum of Shakespeare's


Born
for success

wit.

Here once the embattled farmers stood, And fired the shot heard round the
world.
Ib.

Ib. Solution

he seemed,

Hymn
of

Sung
the

at the

pletion
st . i

Battle

ComMonu-

With With

grace to win, with heart to hold, shining gifts that took all eyes.
16.

In Memoriam EJ3.E.
unalterable Days
stays.

ment, Concord

[July 4, 1837],

Nor mourn the

That Genius goes and Folly


Hast thou named
all

the birds without


it

16.

a gun? 1 Loved the wood-rose, and left


stalk?
2

on

its

Ib. Forbearance

Fear not, then, thou child infirm, There's no god dare wrong a worm.
16.

Compensation

"Pass in, pass in," the angels say, "In to the upper doors, Nor count compartments of the floors,

He To

thought

it

happier to be dead,

die for Beauty,

than

live for bread.

Ib.

Beauty
of
ill?

But mount to paradise

By the

stairway of surprise."
Ib.

Wilt thou
Merlin I

seal

up the avenues

Pay

every debt, as if

God wrote the bill. 16. "Suum Cuique"


16.

God

said, I

am

tired of kings,

Too

busied with the crowded hour to


fear to live or die.

I suffer

them no more;

Nature

Up
The

to

my

ear the

morning brings
Daughters of Days, Muffled and
dervishes,

outrage of the poor.

Time,

the
like

hypocritic

May-Day and Other Pieces 3 2 [1867]. Boston Hymn, $t.


*

dumb
single in

barefoot

See

S.

W.

Foss, p.

SeeLytton, p. 74ib. 8 Read at a celebration in Boston of Emancii,

And marching

an endless
in
16.

file,

pation Day, January

1863.

Bring diadems hands.

and

fagots

their

Days

603

EMERSON
I,

too late,

Under her solemn fillet saw the scorn May-Day and Other Pieces Days
It is

The music that can deepest reach, And cure all ill, is cordial speech. May-Day and Other Pieces.
Merlin's Song

time to be old,
sail.

To take in
Obey the

16.

Terminus

Some of your hurts you have cured, And the sharpest you still have survived,

voice at eve obeyed at prime.


16.

But what torments of


dured

grief

you
1

en-

Though love repine, and reason chafe, There came a voice without reply " Tis man's perdition to be safe, When for the truth he ought to
die."
16. Sacrifice

From

evils

16.

which never arrived * Borrowing [from the French]

A ruddy drop of manly blood


The surging sea outweighs, The world uncertain comes and The lover rooted stays.
16.
goes,

For what

avail the
life, if

Or land

or

plow or sail, freedom fail?


16. Boston, st. 5

Friendship
is

To different
a
hell,

the red skyer think he slays, Or if the slain think he is slain, They know not well the subtle ways
If
I 1 keep, and pass, and turn again.

minds, the same world and a heaven,

Journal [December 20, 1822]

Four snakes gliding up and down a


hollow for no purpose that I could see not to eat, not for love, but only
gliding.

16.

Brahma
out;

They reckon

ill

who

leave

me

16. [April 11, 1834]

they fly, I am the wings; am the doubter and the doubt, And I the hymn the Brahmin sin.
is

When me

I wish to write such rhymes as shall not suggest a restraint, but contrariwise the wildest freedom.

That book

16. [June 27, 1839]

Which

puts

me in

good

a working

mood.

Unless to Thought is added Will, Apollo is an imbecile. 16. Fragments on the Poetic Gift

shall have joy, or you shall have power, said God; you shall not have both. 16. [October 1842]

You

The
eyes.

sky

is

In the vaunted works of Art The master stroke is Nature's part. 2


16.
I

the daily bread of the 16. [May 25, 1843]

Poetry must be as
as old as the rock.

new
16.

as

foam, and

Art

am

the owner of the sphere,

Of the seven stars and the solar year> Of Caesar's hand, and Plato's brain, Of Lord Christ's heart, and Shakespeare's strain.
16. History

[March 1845] I hate quotations. Tell me what you 16. [May 1849] know.
Blessed are those

who have no

talent!

16. [February 1850]

Ever from one

who comes tomorrow

Men
1

wait their good and truth to borrow. 16. Merlin's Song


The Upanishads,
p. 623,

The word liberty in the mouth of Mr. Webster sounds like the word love
in the

mouth

of a courtesan.

See

16. [February 12 (?), 1851]


1 Let us be of good cheer, however, remembering that the misfortunes hardest to bear are those which never come. JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL, Democracy and Addresses [1884]

Nature paints the best part of a picture, carves the best part of the statue, builds the
best part of the house, and speaks the best part of the oration, Society and Solitude [1870], Art

604

EMERSON
I trust a

good deal to
If a

common

as

we

all

must.

man

fame, has good corn,

He who

or

wood, or boards, or

pigs, to sell, or

private thoughts, tent of all men

has mastered any law in his is master to that ex-

whose language he

can make better chairs or knives, crucibles or church organs, than anybody else, you will find a broad hard-beaten road to his house, though it be in the woods. 1
Journal [February 1855]

speaks, and of all into whose language his own can be translated.

The American Scholar


Wherever Macdonald
the head of the table. 1

[1837],
sec. 3

sits,

there

is

16.
really

The
is

blazing evidence of immortality our dissatisfaction with any other


Ib. \July 1855]

What would we
of?

know the

solution.

Undoubtedly we have no questions ask which are unanswerable. We must trust the perfection of the creato

in the firkin; the meaning milk in the pan; the ballad in the street; 16. the news of the boat.
If the single man plant himself indomitably on his instincts, and there abide, the huge world will come round 16. to him. 2

The meal

tion so far as to believe that whatever curiosity the order of things has awak-

ened in our minds, the order of things can satisfy. Nature [1836], introduction

Men
truism,

grind and grind in the mill of a

Nature never wears

mean

appear-

and nothing comes out but what was put in. But the moment they
desert the tradition for a spontaneous thought, then poetry, wit, hope, virtue, learning, anecdote, all flock to their aid. Literary Ethics [1838]

ance. Neither does the wisest man extort her secret and lose his curiosity by findIb. sec. i ing out all her perfection.

Give

me

make

the

pomp

health and a day and I will of emperors ridiculous.


Ib. sec. 3

Time dissipates to shining ether solid angularity of facts.

the

Essays: First Series [1841].

Every natural

fact

is

a symbol of
Ib. sec.

some

History

spiritual fact.

We
A man
1

There
ography.

is

properly no

history; only bi-

are

like

Nebuchadnezzar,

de-

16.

throned, bereft of reason, and eating Ib. sec. o grass like an ox.
is

a god

in ruins. 2

Ib.

Nature is a mutable cloud, which is 16. always and never the same.
It is the fault of our rhetoric that we cannot strongly state one fact without 16. seeming to belie some other.

The editors, E. W. EMERSON and W. E. FORBES, appended a footnote: "There has been much inquiry in the newspapers recently as to whether Mr. Emerson wrote a sentence very like the above which has been attributed to him hi print. The Editors do not find the latter in his works, but there can be little doubt that it was a
memory quotation by some
hearer, or, quite probably, correctly reported from one of his lectures, the same image in differing words." If a man can write a better book, preach a better sermon, or make a better mousetrap than his neighbor, though he builds his house in the woods the world will make a beaten path to his door. SARAH S. B. YULE AND MARY S. KEENE,

To

believe your

own

thought, to be-

lieve that

what
is

private heart
is

true for you in your that true for all men


is

genius.
1

16. Self-Reliance

Emerson's sentence is usually quoted with the substitution of "Macgregor" for "Macdonald."
2

See Disraeli, p. 6isa.

Borrowings [1889], reported by Mrs. Yule as having been used by Emerson in an address 3 See Lamartine, p. 565^

come round to him wlio will but wait. LONGFELLOW, Tales of a Wayside Inn, The Students Tale [1863]
All things

See Carlyle, p. 5773,

605

EMERSON

We
are

but half express ourselves, and ashamed of that divine idea which
Essays: First Series. Self Reliance

For every Stoic was a Stoic; but in Christendom where is the Christian? 1
Essays: First Series. Self Reliance

each of us represents.

Nothing can bring you peace but


yourself.
Ib,
its

Accept the place the divine providence has found for you, the society of
your contemporaries, the connection of
events.
Ib.

Every sweet has


good.

sour; every evil its Ib. Compensation

Society everywhere is in conspiracy against the manhood of every one of its

For every thing you have missed, you have gained something else; and for
every thing you gain, you lose someIb. thing else.

members.
is

The

virtue in

most

re-

conformity. Self-reliance is its quest aversion. It loves not realities and creators,

but names and customs.


a

Ib.

Whoso would be
nonconformist.

man must be

a
.

Everything in Nature contains all the powers of Nature. Everything is made of one hidden stuff. Ib.
It is as impossible for a man to be cheated by anyone but himself, as for a thing to be, and not to be, at the same

Ib

The doctrine of hatred must be preached, as the counteraction of the doctrine of love, when that pules and whines. I shun father and mother and wife and brother when my genius calls
me.
It is easy in

time.
All

Ib.

mankind love a
art to

lover.

Ib.

Love

Ib.

Thou

me

the world to

live after

a delicious torment. Ib. Friendship

the world's opinion; it is easy in solitude to live after our own; but the great man is he who in the midst of the crowd keeps with perfect sweetness the

Almost

all

2 people descend to meet.

Ib.

Happy
friend.

is

the house that shelters a


Ib.
is

independence of solitude.

Ib.
is

foolish

consistency

the hob-

A
A

friend

a person with

whom
I

goblin of little minds adored by little statesmen and philosophers and divines. 1
Ib.

may be

sincere.

Before him,
well

may
Ib.

think aloud.
friend

may

be reckoned the
Ib.

To be

great

is

to

be misunderstood.
Ib.

masterpiece of Nature.

An
I

institution

is

the

lengthened
Ib.

shadow of one man.


like

Two may talk and one may hear, but three cannot take part in a conversation of the most sincere and sort.
searching
Ib.

the silent church before the

service begins, better than


ing.

any preachIb.

only reward of virtue is virtue; the only way to have a friend is to be


one.
I

The

Ib.

Discontent
reliance: it
is

is

the

want

of

self-

do then with

infirmity of will.
.

Ib.
.

my

friends as I do

with

my
I

My
1

Traveling is a fool's paradise. giant goes with me wherever

where them.
1

books. I would have them can find them, but I seldom use
Ib.

go. Ib.

See William Allen White, p. 8g6b.

See Melville, p. 69515. Men descend to meet. First Series. The Over-Soul
2

EMERSON,

Essays.

606

EMERSON
In skating over thin ice our safety
in our speed.
is

Essays: First Series. Prudence

Heroism
therefore
is

feels

and never reasons and


Ib.

thought so passionate and a plant or an animal it has an architecture of its own, and adorns nature with a new thing.

poem

alive that like the spirit of

always right.

Essays:

Second

Series [1844].

Heroism
that see them.

The Poet
Nature and books belong to the eyes 16. Experience

a thinker

Beware when the great God lets loose 16. Circles on this planet.

another's injustice; one man's beauty another's ugliness; one man's wisdom another's folly. 16.
justice
is

One man's

Of what use is genius, if the organ is too convex or too concave and cannot find a focal distance within the actual 16. horizon of human life? The
only gift
is

Nature abhors the old, and old age seems the only disease; x all others run
into this one.
16.

a portion of thvself. 1 lb: Gifts

The
better

less

Nothing

great

was

ever

achieved
16.
as

government we have, the the fewer laws, and the less


16. Politics
its

without enthusiasm.

confided power.

common

Nothing astonishes men so much sense and plain dealing.

We

think our civilization near

16. Art

meridian, but

we

are yet only at the

Beauty will not come at the call of a legislature, nor will it repeat in England
or

cock-crowing and the morning star. In our barbarous society the influence of
character
is

in

its

infancy.

16.

America
as

its

history in Greece. It will

come,

always,

unannounced,

spring up between the feet earnest men.

and of brave and


16.

Money, which represents the prose of


life,

and which

is

hardly spoken of in

I fancy I need more than another to speak (rather than write), with such a formidable tendency to the lapidary style. I build my house of boulders. Letter to Carlyle [October 30, 1841]

parlors without an apology, is, in its effects and laws, as beautiful as roses. 16. Nominalist and Realist

Every man is wanted, and no wanted much.

man

is

16.
is

The reward
to have

of a thing well done,

done

it.

16.

A man may

love a paradox without


[Dial,

either losing his wit or his honesty.

He
others.

is

great

Walter Savage Landor


Literature
is

Nature, and

who is what he is from who never reminds us of

1841],

XII

the effort of man to indemnify himself for the wrongs of his


condition.
16.

Representative

Men

[1850],

Uses of Great

Men

There
in the

always a certain meanness argument of conservatism, joined


is

with a certain superiority in its fact. The Conservative [1842]

nature removes a great man, people explore the horizon for a successor; but none comes, and none will. His class is extinguished with him. In some other and quite different field, the 16. next man will appear.

When

For

it

is

not meters, but a meterthat

making
1

argument

makes

Every hero becomes a bore at


and Whitman,

last.

Ib.
SENECA,
Lowell, p. Sgzb,
p. 7<x>b.

Old age is an incurable disease. Epistulae ad Lucilium, no. 108

607

EMERSON
Great
geniuses

have

the

shortest

biographies.

Representative
OT,

Men. Plato; The Philosopher

There is always a best way of doing everything, if it be to boil an egg. Manners are the happy ways of
doing
things.

Things added to
civil

history,

are

things, as statistics, inventories. Things


at-

Conduct of

Life. Behavior

used as language are inexhaustibly


tractive.

fine

Fine manners need the support of manners in others. 16.

16.
cool:
Ib.
it

Keep

will
1

be

all

one a hun-

dred years hence.

with

Montaigne;

or,

The Skeptic

highest compact we can make "Let there be our fellow is truth between us two forevermore."
16.

The

not marriage an open question, when it is alleged, from the beginning of the world, that such as are in the institution wish to get out, and such as Ib. are out wish to get in? 2
Is

Shallow

men

believe in luck. 1
16.

Worship

Our chief want in life is somebody who shall make us do what we can.
16. Considerations

Plymouth in 1620. The plays of Shakespeare were


Pilgrims

The

came

to

by the
to

Way
some16.

Make
body.

yourself

necessary

not published until three years later. Had they been published earlier, our forefathers, or the most poetical among them, might have stayed at home to read them. 16. Shakespeare
Self-reliance, the height and perfec-

Beauty without grace without the bait.

is

the hook
16.

Beauty

year old.

Never read any book that is not a 16. In Praise of Books


key to the period appeared to be mind had become aware of The young men were born
.

tion of

man,

is

reliance

on God.

The

Fugitive Slave

Law

The
[1854]
itself.
.

that the

Classics which at home are drowsily read have a strange charm in a country inn, or in the transom of a merchant
brig.

with knives in their brain, a tendency to introversion, self-dissection, anatomizing of motives. Life and Letters in

English Traits [1856]


are

Men
them.

what

their

mothers made
[1860], Fate

New England
[1867]

Conduct of Life
Coal
is

God may

forgive sins,

he

said,

but
in

a portable climate. 16.


is

Wealth
to
16,
16.

awkwardness has heaven or earth.


Society

no

forgiveness

The
go over

world
it.

his,

who

has

money

and Solitude [i Society and Soli


al-

Art

is

a jealous mistress. 3

The most advanced nations are ways those who navigate the most.
Hitch your wagon to
a star, 2

All educated Americans, first or last, 16. Culture go to Europe.


Solitude, the safeguard of mediocrity, to genius the stern friend. 16.
1

16. Civilization
16.

is

What
all

be
is

matters what anybody thinks? "It will the same a hundred years hence." That

GEORGE
8 8

the most sensible proverb ever invented. Du MAURIER, Peter Jbbetson [1891]
See Montaigne, p. 1900, and note. See Story, p. 543^

The true test of civilization is, not the census, nor the size of cities, nor the crops no, but the kind of man 16. the country turns out.
iLuck is infatuated Persian proverb a See Carl Schurz, p.
with
the
efficient

608

EMERSON
art has as reason for being as the earth and the sun.

Every genuine work of

much

Life is not so short but that there is always time enough for courtesy. Letters and Social Aims [1876].

Society and Solitude. Art

Social
I

Aims

masterpiece of art has in the mind a fixed place in the chain of being, as 16. much as a plant or a crystal.

have heard with admiring submis-

sion the experience of the lady who declared that the sense of being perfectly
well-dressed gives a feeling of inward
tranquillity to bestow.

We boil at different degrees.


16.

which

Eloquence

religion

is

powerless
16.

The

best

recommended

university that can be to a man of ideas is the


Ib.
is

gauntlet of the mobs.

friends

The ornament of a house who frequent it.


Ib.

the

Do not say things. What you are stands over you the while, and thunders so that I cannot hear what you say to the contrary. Ib.
Great

men
is

Domestic Life

are they

who

see

that

Can anybody remember when the money not Ib. Works and Days scarce?
times were not hard and

spiritual stronger than any material force, that thoughts rule the world. 16. Progress and Culture, Phi Beta Kappa Address [July 18,

1876]

good reader that makes the good book; in every book he finds passages which seem confidences or asides hidden from all else and unmis'Tis the

Next
tence
is

to the originator of a

good sen-

the

first

quoter of

it.

16.

Quotation and Originality


is

takably meant

books

is

for his ear; the profit of according to the sensibility of

When

Shakespeare
authors,

charged with
replies,

debts to his

Landor

the reader; the profoundest thought or passion sleeps as in a mine, until it is discovered by an equal mind and heart. Ib. Success

"Yet he was more


originals.

original

He

breathed

than his upon dead


life."

bodies

and brought them into

16.

We do not count a man's years he has nothing else to count.


Ib.

until

light,

By necessity, by proclivity, and by we all quote.

de16.

Old Age

mollusk is a cheap edition [of man] with a suppression of the costlier illustrations, designed for dingy circulation, for shelving in an oyster-bank or among the seaweed.

A
and

good symbol
is

is

the best argument,

sands.

a missionary to persuade thou16. Poetry and Imagination


its

Wit makes

own welcome, and


16.

levels all distinctions.

Power and Laws of Thought


[c.

The Comic
is

1870]

Poetry teaches the enormous force of a few words, and, in proportion to the inspiration, checks loquacity. Parnassus [1874]. Preface

The perception of the comic of sympathy with other men.


1

a tie
16.

There

is

not

less

wit nor less invention hi

applying rightly a thought one finds in a book, than in being the first author of that thought. BAYLE, Dictionnaire Historique et Critique
[1697-1705]

There are two


poets

classes of poets

the

by education and practice, these we respect; and poets by nature, these


Ib.

Though

pld the thought

and

oft exprest,

'Tis his at last

who

says it best.

we love.

JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL, For an Autograph [1868]

609

EMERSON
a weed? A plant whose vir1 tues have not yet been discovered. Fortune of the Republic [1878]

JEKROLD

What

is

RICHARD HENRY HENGIST HORNE


1803-1884 Tis always morning somewhere
world. 1
in the

To

live

without duties is obscene. Lectures and Biographical Sketches [1883]. Aristocracy

Orion [1843], bk.

Ill,

canto 2

Speak

the

affirmative;

emphasize
that

DOUGLAS JERROLD
1803-1857 one of those wise philanthroin a time of famine would pists who vote for nothing but a supply of tooth-

of all your choice by utter ignoring Ib. The Preacher

you

reject.

He

is

Genius has
sand.

no

taste

for

weaving

Ib.

The Scholar

picks.
in verse or prose must have a intellectual coeye, but an Ib. Plutarch
full

poet sensuous

Wit and Opinions


Dogmatism
growth.
fellow
is

of Douglas

Jerrold [1859]

perception.

puppyism come

to

its

All thoughts of a turtle are turtles,

Ib.

and of a

rabbit, rabbits.

The Natural

That

History of Intellect

would vulgarize the day


Ib.

of judgment.

Comic Author

When
kill

you

strike at a king,

you must

him.
Recollected by OLIVER

WEN-

The best thing I know between the sea. France and England is 16. The Anglo-French Alliance
Some people
Ib.

DELL HOLMES, JR. From MAX LERNER, The Mind and Faith of Justice Holmes [1943]

are so fond of ill-luck

that they run halfway to

meet it. Meeting Troubles Halfway


[Australia]

Earth

is

here

ROBERT STEPHEN HAWKER


1803-1875

that just tickle her with a laughs with a harvest.


Ib.

hoe and

so kind, she

A Land of Plenty

And shall Trelawny


The Song
1

die?

Here's twenty thousand Cornish Will know the reason why.

men

The ugliest of trades have their moments of pleasure. Now, if I were a a hangman, there gravedigger, or even
are

of the Western
[1825],'

Men
st.

some people

could work for with a


Ib.

great deal of enjoyment.

Ugly Trades
rose-

A weed
weed

is

no more than a

JAMES RUSSEIX LOWELL,


[1848]

flower in disguise. A Fable for Critics

He

was so good he would pour


Ib.

water on a toad.
ELLA

is

but an unloved flower!

Charitable

Man

WHEELER WILCOX [1850-1919], The Weed, st. i "And shall Trelawny die?" has been a
the popular phrase throughout Cornwall since imprisonment in the Tower of London, in 1688, of Sir Jonathan Trelawny [1650-1721] with six
other prelates for refusing to recognize the Declaration of Indulgence issued by James II.

Talk to him of Jacob's ladder, and he would ask the number of the steps.
Ib.
1

Matter-of-fact

Man

See Longfellow, p. 625a.

6lO

SURTEES

DISRAELI
I

ROBERT SMITH
SURTEES
Full o'

trust;

repeat that

that

all

power

is

a
its

we
all

are accountable for

1803-1864 beans and benevolence.


Handley Cross [1843], ch. 27

exercise; that,

the people,
exist.
1

from the people, and for all must springs, and Vivian Grey bk. VI, ch. 7

Three things I never lends 'oss, my wife, and my name.

my

Man
stances.

is

not the creature of circumCircumstances are the crea16.

Hillingdon Hall [1845], ch. 33

tures of

men.

More people
The

are flattered into virtue

than bullied out of vice.


Analysis of the Hunting Field [1846], ch. i

James rushed list,

dark horse, which had never been thought of, and which the careless St. had never even observed in the
past

the

grandstand

in

Better be killed than frightened to


death.

sweeping triumph.

The Young Duke


Yes,
I

Mr. Facey Romford's Hounds


[1864],,

[1831], bk. I, ch. 5

ch. 32

FEDOR TIUTCHEV
A
1803-1873 once uttered, thought,
first
is

and when the anceshonorable gentleman were brutal savages in an unknown island, mine were priests in the temple of
a Jew,
tors of the right

am

Solomon. 2

lie.

Silentium [1830]
Like
will

Reply to a taunt by Daniel O'Connell

love, the heart of Russia

What we
what we
pens.

anticipate seldom occurs;

not forget you.


Tribute to Pushkin
[January 29, 1837]

least

expected generally hap-

Henrietta Temple [1837],


bk. II, ch.

Homeland

of patience, land of the

Russian people.

These Poor Villages [1855]

will

Though come when you will hear me.3 Maiden speech in the House

sit

down now,

the time
of

Commons

[1837]
it is

BENJAMIN DISRAELI, EARL OF BEACONSFIELD


1804-1881

Free trade
4

is

not a principle,

an

expedient.

Speech on import duties [April


25, 1843]

The microcosm
I

of a public school.
I, c/i.

The noble
2

lord 5

is

the Rupert of

Vivian Grey [1826], bk.


hate definitions.
is

Parliamentary discussion.

16. II, 6
1

Speech [ApriZi844]
See Wycliffe, p. i6sb,

Experience

and Thought We cannot learn men from books.


16.

the child of Thought, is the child of Action.

The gentleman will when his half-civilized

note. that please remember ancestors were hunting

and

V,
16.

the wild boar in the forests of Silesia, the princes of the earth. JUDAH P.
to [1811-1884], reply

mine were BENJAMIN a Senator; from BEN PERIXY


Years in
the

Variety

is

the mother of Enjoyment.

POORE, Reminiscences of Sixty National Metropolis [1886]


8

See Garrison, p. 6i5b.


p. 7713.

There

is

*See Grover Cleveland, moderation even in excess. sLord Stanley. 16. VI, i 61:

DISRAELI

Youth

is

blunder;

manhood a
is

struggle; old age a regret.

Coningsby [1844], bk.


Property has
1
its

Ill, eft. i
its

The characteristic of the present age craving credulity. Speech at Oxford Diocesan Conference

[November 25, 1864]

duties as well as
[i 845] ,

Is

rights.

Sybil

bk. II,

eft. 1 1

lord,

man an ape or an angel? * I, my I am on the side of tie angels. I

Little things affect little minds, 16. Ill, 2

repudiate with indignation and abhorrence those newfangled theories. 16.

We
cle.
2

all

of us live too

much

in a cir16.

Mr. Kremlin was distinguished for ignorance; for he had only one idea 16. IV, 5 and that was wrong.5
was told that the privileged and the Ib. 8 people formed two nations.
I

In the character of the victim [Lincoln], and even in the accessories of his last moments, there is something so homely and innocent that it takes the question, as it were, out of all the pomp of history and the ceremonial of
it touches the heart of diplomacy nations and appeals to the domestic sentiment of mankind.

gentleman caught the Whigs bathing and walked away with their clothes.
right

The

honorable

Speech, House of

Commons

[May 1,1865]
Ignorance never settles a question.
16.
Individualities
ties,

Speech, House of Commons [February 28, 1845]

[May

14, 1866]

may form communi-

conservative government

is

an

or-

but

it is

institutions alone that can

ganized hypocrisy.

create a nation.

Speech on Agricultural Interests [March 17, 1845]

Speech at Manchester [1866]

However gradual may be the growth


still

was fresh and full of faith that 5 "something would turn up." Tancred [1847], bk. Ill, eft. 6
Everything comes
wait. 6
if

He

of confidence, that of credit requires more time to arrive at maturity.

When
age,
it

man

will only

9, 1867] into his anecdotwas a sign for him to retire.

Speech [November

man

fell

Ib.

IV, 8
Every
of

precedent embalms a principle. Speech on the expenditures

woman

Lothair [1870], should marry

eft.

28

and
16.

no man.

30

the country [February 22, 1848]


Justice
is

truth in action.
11, 1851]
it is

You know who the critics are? The men who have failed in literature and
art.
2

16.

Speech [February

35
7

This shows how much easier be critical than to be correct.


1

"My
said

idea of an agreeable person/


"is

to

Hugo Bohun,
me."

a person

who
16.
lei-

agrees with

Speech [January 24, 1860]


Property has
its

Increased
sure are the

duties as well as

its

rights.

CAPTAIN THOMAS

Drummond
8

light),

DRUMMOND (inventor of the Letter to the Landlords of


is

means and increased two civilizers of man.

Tipperary [May

32, 1838]

Speech to the Conservatives of Manchester \April 3, 1872]

The

life

of

man

a self-evolving
1841],

circle.

The
1

secret of success

is

EMERSON, Essays
8

[ist series,

Circles

constancy to

See Johnson, p. 4$ia.

purpose.
see rascal, p.
p. 6s8a.
a

Speech \June 24, 1872]


363!),

4 Sir
5
6

Robert Peel.

and Charles Darwin,

See Dickens, p. 671 a. See Emerson, p. 6055.

See Coleridge, p. 528a, and Lowell, p. 6gsb.

61 2

DISRAELI

HAWTHORNE

be a place of of learning. and of liberty, light, Speech, House of Commons [March 11, 1873]
university should

HAWTHORNE
1804-1864
the seeming confusion of our mysterious world, individuals are so and sysnicely adjusted to a system, tems to one another and to a whole, that, by stepping aside for a moment, a man exposes himself to a fearful risk
of losing his place forever.

NATHANIEL

Amid

The author who speaks about his own books is almost as bad as a mother who talks about her own children,
Speech [November 19, 1873]

The health of the people is really the foundation upon which all their happiness and all their powers as a state deSpeech \July 24, 1877] pend.
Lord
Salisbury

Wakefield [1835]
His hour
adversity,
is

and

one of darkness, and doperil. But should


still

and

myself

have

mestic tyranny oppress us, or the invader's step pollute our soil,

brought you back peace 1 I hope with honor.

but a peace

may

Speech, House of
[Jiffy

Commons
16, 1878]

A series of congratulatory regrets.2


Speech, Knightsbridge [July 27, 1878]

the Gray Champion come, for he is the type of New England's hereditary and his shadowy march, on the spirit; eve of danger, must ever be the pledge, that New England's sons will vindicate
their ancestry.

The Gray Champion

[1835]

sophistical

rhetorician

[Glad-

stone], inebriated with the exuberance of his own verbosity, and gifted with an that can at all egotistical imagination

times

command

an interminable and

inconsistent
self.

of arguments to malign an opponent and to glorify himseries

By the sympathy of your human hearts for sin ye shall scent out all the whether in church, bedchamplaces where or forest field, ber, street, crime has been committed, and shall exult to behold the whole earth one
stain of guilt,

one mighty blood

spot.

Ib.

Young Goodman Brown


overpowers
all

[1835]

The
-

harebrained chatter of irrespon-

As the moral gloom of the world


so was their

sible frivolity,

Speech, Guildhall,

London
9,

systematic gaiety, even of wild mirth made desolate amid the sad forest.

home

[November

1878]

The Maypole

of

Menymount
. .

[1836]

His Christianity was muscular. Endymion [1880], ch. 14

The Athanasian Creed is the most splendid ecclesiastical lyric ever poured 16. 52 forth by the genius of man.
that," said Waldershare, are all of the same reliingion." "And pray, what is that?" quired the prince. "Sensible men never
for

"What is the Unpardonable Sin?" . asked the lime-burner. "It is a sin that grew within my own
breast,"

replied

Ethan

Brand.

The

"As

"sensible

men

triumphed over the sense of brotherhood with man and reverence for God." Ethan Brand [1850]

sin of

an

intellect that

On
cloth,

the breast of her gown, in red

tdl."
^See
3

Ib. 81
Russell,
p.
567!),

and

Chamberlain,

surrounded with an elaborate embroidery and fantastic flourishes of letter A. gold thread, appeared the

Lord Hartington's Resolution on the Berlin

The

Treaty.

Scarlet Letter [1850], ch. 2

6j

HAWTHORNE
There is a fatality, a feeling so irreand inevitable that it has the force of doom, which almost invariably
sistible

Not

to be deficient in this particular,

the author has provided himself with the truth, namely, that the a moral

compels

human

beings to linger around

wrongdoing of one generation


the successive ones.

lives into

and haunt, ghostlike, the spot where some great and marked event has given the color to their lifetime; and still the more irresistibly, the darker the
tinge that saddens
it.

The House

of the Seven Gables [1851], preface

God
Life

will give

him blood
of marble

to drink!
Ib. ch.
i

The

Scarlet Letter, ch. 5


is
is

Wherever there
intellect,

heart

and an

made up

and mud.
16.3

the diseases of the physical frame are tinged with the peculiarities lb. 9 of these.

What

other dungeon

one's own heart! What orable as one's self!

so dark as jailer so inexis

16. 11

tremble to win the hand of woman, unless they win along with it the utmost passion of her heart.

Let

men

Ib. 15

"Never,

"What we
its

she. never!" whispered did had a consecration of


Ib.

the events which constitute a biography, there is scarcely one ... to which the world so easily reconciles itself as to his death. 16. ai
all

Of

person's

own/'

The
is

17

greatest obstacle to being heroic

The

scarlet letter

was her passport

into regions where other women dared not tread. Shame, Despair, Solitude! stern These had been her teachers

may not be going to prove one's self a fool; the truest heroism is, to resist the doubt; and the profoundest wisdom, to know
when
it

the doubt whether one

ought to be

resisted,

and when

and wild ones and they had made her strong, but taught her much amiss.
Ib. 18

to be obeyed.

The
I

Blithedale

Romance
fault, it

[1852], Ch. 2

No

man,

for

any considerable period,

am

woman, with every


that
a

can wear one face to himself, and another to the multitude, without finally getting bewildered as to which may be the true. Ib. 20
press upon us from the poor minister's miserable experience, we put only this into a

may

be,

woman

ever

had

weak, vain, unprincipled (like most of my sex; for our virtues, when we have any, are merely impulsive and
intuitive).

16.25
spirit is inestimable
is

Among many
"Be
trait

morals

which

It is

because the

that the lifeless

body

so little valued.

sentence:
yet

true!
if

Be

true!

Show
In youth

16.28

freely to the world,

some

not your worst, whereby the worst may


16.

men

are apt to write

more

be inferred."

24

wisely than they really know or feel; and the remainder of life may be not
idly spent in realizing and convincing themselves of the wisdom they uttered

you would see anything in it, requires to be read in the clear, brown, twilight atmosphere in which it was written; if opened in the sunbook,
if

The

long ago.

The Snow Image

[1852], preface

shine, a volume of blank pages.

it is

apt to look exceedingly like

Twice-Told Tdes [1851],


preface

author, without a trial, can conceive of the difficulty of writing a romance about a country where there
is

No

no shadow, no antiquity, no mystery,

614

HAWTHORNE
no picturesque and gloomy wrong, nor anything but a commonplace prosperity,

GARRISON

SARAH FLOWER ADAMS


1805-1848

in

broad and simple daylight, as

is

happily the case with


land.
.
. .

my

dear native
poetry,
ivy,

Romance and

my dreams I'd be Nearer, my God, to Thee,


Nearer to Thee.
Nearer,

Yet in

lichens

and wallflowers need ruin

to

make them grow. The Marble Faun

My

God,

to Thee,

st.

[1860], preface

He

sendeth sun,

He

sendeth shower.
-first

Hymn,
This greatest mortal consolation, which we derive from the transitoriness from the right of sayof all things
ing, in every conjuncture, will pass away." l

line

and

title

"This, too, Ib. ch. 16

WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISON


1805-1879

think, ought to read poetry, or look at pictures or statues, who cannot find a great deal more in

Nobody,

Our

country

is

the

world

our

countrymen are

all

mankind. 1

them than the poet


2

or artist has actu16. 41


let

Motto

of the Liberator [1831]

ally expressed.

Mountains monuments.

are

earth's

undecaying
[1868].

Let Southern oppressors tremble let their secret abettors tremble their Northern apologists tremble let all the enemies of the persecuted
blacks tremble.

Sketches from

Memory
of

The

Notch Mountains

the

White
I

The
will

Liberator, no. i

[January

i,

1831]
as
this

be

as harsh as truth

and

CHARLES AUGUSTIN
SAINTE-BEUVE
1804-1869
Vigny, more secret, As if in his tower of ivory, retired before noon.3 Pensees d'Aout, & M. Villemain
[1837], Silence
is

justice. uncompromising subject I do not wish to think, or speak,

as

On

or write, with moderation. a

man whose house

is

No! No! Tell on fire to give

a moderate alarm; tell him to moderately rescue his wife from the hands of the ravisher; tell the mother to gradually extricate her babe into which it has fallen; moderation. 2

rf.

from the but urge

fire

me
16.

3
4

not to use
J

the sovereign contempt. Mes Poisons

am

in earnest
I

I will

cate
retreat

will

not excuse

not equivoI will not


I

*See Lincoln, p. 6s6b. 3 Every book is written with a constant secret reference to the few intelligent persons whom . . the writer believes to exist in the million.
.

a single inch;

and

will

be
16.

heard! 3

The compact which


hell4

exists

between

The

has always the masters in his eye. EMERSON, Progress of Culture [1867] 3 Vigny, plus secret, Comme en sa tour d'ivoire, avant midi, rentrait.
artist

the North and the South is a covenant with death and an agreement with

The

poet, retired in his

Tower

of Ivory, iso-

lated, according to his desire,

from the world of

Resolution adopted by the AntiSlavery Society [January 27,


1843]
i See Socrates, p. 87b, 8 See Paine, 8
*

man, resembles, whether he

so wishes or not, another solitary figure, the watcher enclosed for months at a time in a lighthouse at the head of a cliff. JULES DE GAULTIER [b. 1858], La Guerre et les Destinies de I'Art * Le silence seul est le souverain mepris.

and

note.

p. 46yb. See Disraeli, p. 61 ib.

See Isaiah 28:15, p. gaa.

615

GARRISON

DE TOCOUEVUXE
pressed for the theory of the permanent equality of property. 1 Democracy in America, pt I

with

With reasonable men, humane men I will


I

I will

reason; plead; but to

tyrants
lost.

will give

no

arguments where they

quarter, nor waste will certainly be

[1835],

eft.

W.

P. AND F. J. T. GARRISON, William Lloyd Garrison [18851889], vol. I, p. 188

Within these
in

limits the

power

vested

the American courts of justice of pronouncing a statute to be unconstitutional forms one of the most powerful
that have ever been devised the tyranny of political assemagainst
barriers
blies.
I

Since the creation of the world there has been no tyrant like Intemperance,

and no

slaves so cruelly treated as his. Ib. p. 268

Ib.

We

may be

personally defeated, but


Ib. p.

our principles never.

402

a human being, I see God-given rights inherent in that being, whatever may be the sex or com-

Wherever there

is

have never been more struck by the good sense and the practical judgment of the Americans than in the manner in which they elude the numberless difficulties

resulting

from

their

Federal
Ib. 8
is

Constitution.

plexion.

Ib. Ill, p.

390
no

In this question, therefore, there

You cannot
basis

for

possibly have a broader any government than that


all

medium

between

servitude

and

license; in order to

which includes

the people, with

all

their rights in their hands,

and with an

1 equal power to maintain their rights.

enjoy the inestimable benefits that the liberty of the press ensures, it is necessary to submit to the inevitable evils that it creates. Ib. 9

16. IV, p.

224

They

[the

Americans]

have

all

SIDNEY SHERMAN
1805-1873

COLONEL
2

the perfectibility of man, they judge that the diffusion of biowledge must necessarily be advantageous, and the consequences of ignorance fatal; they all consider society as a tofcdy
lively faith in

Remember the Alamo!


Battle cry,

in a state of

improvement, humanity

as

San

Jacinto [April 21, 1836]; attributed

a changing scene, in which nothing is, or ought to be, permanent; and they

ALEXIS DE TOCQUEVILLE
I

admit that what appears to them today to be good, may be superseded by Ib. 18 something better tomorrow.

1805-1859 know of no country, indeed, where

the love of money has taken stronger hold on the affections of men and where a profbunder contempt is exiSee Wydiffe,
Lincoln, p. Sjga;
p.

America is a land of wonders, in which everything is in constant motion and every change seems an improvement. The idea of novelty is there indissolubly connected with the idea of
amelioration.

No
what

natural
is

i6 3b;

Webster,
p.

p.

547^

seems to be set to the

and Parker,

657^

and

in his eyes

days after Texas declared her independence from Mexico, President Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna attacked the Alamo, the fortified mission at San Antonio;
6, 1836, five

On March

boundary man; not yet done is


efforts of

only what he has not yet attempted to do. Ib.

captured it after every Texan had been killed or wounded; and put the wounded to death. He was defeated and captured at San Jacinto [April i, 1836] by the Texas army under Commander in Chief Samuel Houston.

Democratic nations care but little for what has been, but they are haunted by
1 The Henry Reeve text, as revised by Francis Bowen, corrected and edited by Phillips Bradley

[1945]-

6 6

DE TOCQUEVILLE
visions of
their

BROWNING

what will be; in this direction unbounded imagination grows and dilates beyond all measure. De. . .

Or from Browning some "Pomegranate," which, if cut deep down the


middle,

mocracy, which shuts the past against the poet, opens the future before him. Democracy in America, pt. II [1840], bk. I, eft. 17

Shows a heart within blood-tinctured


a veined humanity.

of

Lady Gercddine's Courtship


[1844],
Life treads
st.

41

Thus not only

does democracy

make

on

every man forget his ancestors, but it hides his descendants and separates his

We
To

life,

from him; it throws him back forever upon himself alone and threatens in the end to confine him
contemporaries
entirely within the solitude of his own 16. bk. II, eft. 2 heart.

press too close keep a dream or grave apart.

and heart on heart; in church and mart

Vision of Poets [1844],


conclusion,

Knowledge by

suffering entereth,
16. last lines

And life And

is

perfected by death.

were asked ... to what the and growing singular prosperity strength of that people [the Americans] ought, mainly to be attributed, I should reply: To the superiority of their
If
I

I smiled to think God's greatness flowed around our incomplete-

ness

Round our

restlessness,

His

rest.

women.

16. bk. Ill,


is

c/i.

12

Rime

The

love of wealth

therefore to
all

be

of the Duchess May [1844], conclusion, st. 11

traced, as either a principal or accessory

Do

motive, at the bottom of

that the

ye hear the children weeping,


brothers,

O my

this gives to all their a sort of family likeness. . . passions It may be said that it is the vehemence
.

Americans do;

Ere the sorrow comes with years? The Cry of the Children [1844],
st.

of their desires that makes the Americans so methodical; it perturbs their

The

child's

sob in the silence curses

minds, but

it

disciplines their lives.

I6.i 7

deeper Than the strong

man

in his wrath. Ib.st. 13


is

SAMUEL WILBERFORCE*
1805-1873
If I

tell

you hopeless

grief

passionless.
i

Grief [i8 4 4\,l

were a cassowary of Timbuctoo, would eat a missionary, 2 and hymnbook, Cassock, band,

On the pkins
too.

Therefore to this dog will Tenderly not scornfully,

I,

Render praise and


Is

favor:

With my hand upon his head,

Impromptu

my benediction

said
st.

ELIZABETH BARRETT

Therefore and forever.

BROWNING
1806-1861

To Flush, My Dog

[1844],

14

Thou

large-brained

woman and
Sand,

Who
large-

And lips

say "God be pitiful," ne'er said "God be praised."

hearted man.

The Cry

of the

Human

[1844],
st.

To George
1

A Desire
[1844]

And

kings crept out again to feel the


sun.

Bishop of Oxford, and nicknamed "Soapy Sam." Variant: Skin and bones.

later of

Winchester

Crowned and Buried

[1844], st. 11

617

BROWNING
"Yes,"
I

b
only,

"No,"

answered you this morning,

last night;
sir,

God

who made

us rich, can

make

say:

us poor.

Colors seen by candlelight Will not look the same by day. 1 The Lady's "Yes" [1844], st.

Sonnets from the Portuguese, no. 24


i

By

thunders thrown.

of

white

silence

over-

Because God's gifts put man's best Ib. 26 dreams to shame.

How
Slave
I

do

love thee? Let

me

count the

Hiram Power's Greek


Unless you can

[1850], last line

muse

in a crowd

all

day

My

ways. love thee to the depth and breadth and height soul can reach, when feeling out of
sight

On the
With

absent face that fixed you; Unless you can love, as the angels

For the ends of Being and ideal Grace.


43
I

may,
the breadth of heaven betwixt
is

love thee with a love


lose
lost saints
I

seemed

to

you; Unless you can dream that his faith


fast,

With my

love thee with

the breath,
is

Through behoving and unbehoving; Unless you can die when the dream
past

and, if Smiles, tears, of all my life! God choose, I shall but love thee better after death.
Ib.

Oh, never

call it loving!

A Woman's

Shortcomings [1850], st. 5

Life, struck sharp

on death,
I,
Z.

Makes awful
As

"Guess now who holds thee?" "Death," I said. But there The silver answer rang "Not Death, but Love." Sonnets from the Portuguese
[1850], no.
i

lightning.
*

Aurora Leigh
sings the lark

[1857], bk.

210

when sucked up
and blue
air.

out of

sight In vortices of glory

Ib.
I

1.

1055

Go from me. Yet


stand

feel

that I shall
16.
it

should not dare to call

my

soul

my

Henceforward in thy shadow.


thou must love me, let naught Except for love's sake only.
If

I 786 on and some sudden God answers sharp


own.
16. II,

be for
16.

And
14 and

When

our two souls stand up erect

prayers, thrusts the thing we for in our face, gauntlet with a gift in 't.

have prayed

strong, Face to face, silent, drawing nigh and Ib. 22 nigher.


x

How
Have

L 952 many desolate creatures on the


16.

To

say why gals acts so or so, Or don't, 'ould be presuming Mebby to mean yes an* say no

earth learnt the simple dues of fellow-

ship

And
The Biglow
18

social comfort, in

a hospital.
16. Ill, I 1122
life.

Comes nateral to women. JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL,


loved you Wednesday, Well, what is that to you? I do not love you Thursday So much is true.
if I

Papers, series II [1867], st.

little

And

sunburnt by the glare of

Ib.IV, I 1140
Since

when was
Edward

genius found respecta.

ble?
1

EDNA

ST.

VINCENT MILLAY [1892-1950], Thursday

16. VI,

Z.

275

See

Fitzgerald, p. 631 a.

618

BROWNING
Earth's

ADAMS

crammed with heaven,


afire

We
ion

And

every

common bush
sees

with
his

we

can never be sure that the opinare endeavoring to stifle is a false

God; But only he who


shoes;

takes

off

opinion; and if we were sure, stifling it would be an evil still. Liberty, ch. 2

The

rest sit

round

it

and pluck blackZ.

berries.

Aurora Leigh, bk. VII,

820

The liberty of the individual must be thus far limited; he must not make himself a nuisance to other people.
I6. 3

What was he doing, the great god Pan, Down in the reeds by the river? Spreading ruin and scattering ban, Splashing and paddling with hoofs of a
goat,

All

good things which

exist are the

fruits of originality.

16.

Liberty consists in doing


desires.

what one
16.

And breaking the golden lilies afloat With the dragonfly on the river. Musical Instrument [1860]

is

of a state, in the long run, the worth of the individuals composit.

The worth

ing

16.

Grief

may be

Only the Good

joy misunderstood; discerns the good.

Unearned increment.
Dissertations

and Discussions
[1859]
dissatisfied

De Profundis

[1802],

st.

21
It is

better to

be Socrates

FRIEDRICH HALM [ELIGIUS FRANZ JOSEF VON MUNCHBELLINGHAUSEN]


Two Two
1806-1871 souls with but a single thought,
hearts that beat as one. 1 Der Sohn der Wildness [1842], act II

than a pig

satisfied.

Utilitarianism [1863]

Ask yourself whether you are happy, and you cease to be so. Autobiography [1873], cn 5
-

GRAF VON RECHBERG


1806-1899
Guarantees which are not worth the
paper they are written on. In a dispatch concerning the
recognition of Italy [1861]

JOHANN BERNHARD

JOHN STUART MILL


The
sole

1806-1873 end for which mankind

are

warranted, individually or collectively, in interfering with the liberty of action of any of their number is selfprotection.

NATHANIEL PARKER
WILLIS
1806-1867

Liberty [1859], introduction


If all mankind minus one, were of one opinion, and only one person were

The sin forgiven by Christ in Heaven By man is cursed alway.


Unseen
Spirits, St.

of the contrary opinion, mankind would be no more justified in silencing that one person, than he, if he had the power, would be justified in silencing mankind. 16. ch. 2
1

CHARLES FRANCIS ADAMS


me to point out to your Lordship that this is war. Dispatch to Earl Russell
It

1807-1886 would be superfluous in

Zwei Sellen und en Gedanke, Zwei Herzen und ein Schlag!

Translated by MARIA LOVELL.

[September

5, 1863]

619

AGASSIZ

LONGFELLOW
I

JEAN RODOLPHE AGASSIZ


1807-1873
has arisen in some way or it originated is the great like all question, and Darwin's theory, other attempts to explain the origin of

LOUIS

heard the trailing garments of the

The world

another.

How

life, is

thus far merely conjectural. I be-

Night Sweep through her marble halls. Hymn to Night [1839], st. i Tell me not, in mournful numbers, Life is but an empty dream! For the soul is dead that slumbers, And things are not what they seem. 1
Life is earnest! the grave is not its goal; Dust thou art, to dust returnest, Was not spoken of the soul.
Life
is real!

lieve

he has not even made the best

state conjecture possible in the present of our knowledge.

And

Evolution and Permanence of

Type [1874]

A Psalm

of Life [1839], st
is

i, 2

GIUSEPPE GARIBALDI
1807-1882
offer neither pay, nor quarters, noi forced provisions; I offer hunger, thirst,
I

Art

is

long,

and Time

fleeting,

And
Still,

our hearts, though stout and

brave,
like muffled drums, are beating Funeral marches to the grave.8
IZ>. st.

who

marches, battles and death. Let him loves his country in his heart, and not with his lips only, follow me. 1

From G. M. TREVELYAN,
Garibaldi's Defense of the

Trust no Future, howe'er pleasant! Let the dead Past bury its dead! *

Roman
1911].

Republic

907-

Act act in the living present! Heart within, and God o'erhead!
Lives of great

men

all

remind us

ROBERT EDWARD LEE


It is

We can make our lives sublime,


16.
st.
<5,

1807-1870 well that war is so

And, departing, leave behind us Footprints on the sands of time.


7

terrible,

or

we
Let
us, then,

should get too fond of it. 2 On seeing a Federal charge repulsed at Fredericksburg [December 1862]

be up and doing, With a heart for any fate; 5


achieving,
still

Still

pursuing,
Ib.
st.

Learn to labor and to wait.

9
is

Duty

is

the sublimest word in our

language.

Do
less.

There

is

You cannot do more. You


wish to do

your duty in all things. should never

Reaper whose name


his sickle keen,

Death,

And, with

Inscribed beneath his bust in the

Hall of

Fame

He reaps the bearded grain at And the flowers that grow


The Reaper and

a breath,

between. the Flowers


st. i

Let the tent be struck. Last -words [October 12, 1870]

[1839],
clouds, like friars, Tell their beads in drops of rain.

The hooded

HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW


1807-1882

Midnight Mass for the Dying Year [1839], st. 4


*See Phaedrus, p. isgb, and
p. 766a.
2

W.

S.

Gilbert,

Music mankind time and


^See

is

the universal language of poetry their universal pas-

See

Hippocrates,

p.

88b,

and Goethe,

p.

delight.

477D-

Outre-Mer [1833-1834]
5873, and Churchill, gaob. 2 See William T. Sherman, p. yc^a.
Prescott,

p.

p.

Our lives are but our marches to the grave. BEAUMONT AND FLETCHER, The Humorous Lieutenant [1619], act III, sc. 5 *See Matthew 8:22, p. 4ib. B See Byron, p. 559^
a

LONGFELLOW

Who ne'er his bread in sorrow ate, Who ne'er the mournful midnight
hours

And

looks the whole world in the For he owes not any man. The Village Blacksmith f

face,
st.

Weeping upon
ers. 1

bed has sate, He knows you not, ye Heavenly Powhis

Something attempted, something done,

Has earned

a night's repose.

16.

st.

Hyperion [1839], bk. I, motto Look not mournfully into the Past. It comes not back again. Wisely improve
the Present. It
is

No one is so accursed by fate, No one so utterly desolate,


But some
heart, though unknown, Responds unto his own.

tfiine.

Go

forth to

meet the shadowy Future, without fear, and with a manly heart. 2 16. IV, ch. 8
Skoal!

Endymion
Into each
life

[1842],
fall,

st.

some

rain

must

to the Northland! skoal!


tale

Some
Armor
St.

days must be dark and dreary.

Thus the

ended.

The Rainy Day


in

[1842],

st.

The Skeleton
It

[1841],

20

I like

that ancient Saxon phrase, which

calls

was the schooner Hesperus,

The

burial

That

sailed the wintry sea;

And

the skipper had taken his little daughter, To bear him company. The Wreck of the Hesperus
[1842],
st.

ground God's Acre! God's Acre [1842],

st. i

Standing with reluctant feet, the brook and river meet, Womanhood and childhood fleet!

Where

Maidenhood

[1842],

st.

But the father answered never a word, 16. st. 12 A frozen corpse was he.
Christ save us

banner with the strange device,


Excelsior!

Excelsior [1842],

st. i

On

from a. death like the reef of Norman's Woe!


all

this,

Stars of the

summer

night!

16.

st.

22

Far in yon azure deeps, Hide, hide your golden light!

Under the spreading chestnut

tree

She

sleeps!

The village smithy stands; The smith a mighty man is he With large and sinewy hands. And the muscles of his brawny arms
Are strong

My

lady sleeps!

Sleeps!

The Spanish Student


act
I, sc.

[it

3 [sere
of
his

The
His brow
1

as iron bands. Village Blacksmith [1842],


st. i

She

floats

upon

the

river

thoughts.
I

16. II, 3

is

wet with honest sweat,


can,

He earns whatever he
Wer Wer
Auf Der kennt euch

stood on the bridge at midnight, As the clocks were striking the hour.

nie sein Brod mit Traneu ass, nie die kummervollen Nachte seinem Bette weinend sass,
nicht, ihr

The
The day
Falls

Bridge [1845;!

himmlischen

MSchte. GOETHE, Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship [1786-1830], bk. II, ch. i) See Goethe, p. 477a. *Blicke nicht trauernd in die Vergangenheit, Sie kommt nicht wieder, nutze weise die

is done, and he darkness from the wings of Night, As a feather is wafted downward

From an eagle The Day

in his flight. Is Done [1845], rf

feeling of sadness

and

longing,

Gegenwart,

Zukunft geh ohne Furcht mit mannliche Sinne entgegen. Inscription, Chapel of St. Gilgen, near Salzburg
Sie ist dein, der diisteren

not akin to pain, And resembles sorrow only As the mist resembles the
is

That

rain.

16.

st.

621

LONGFEIXOW
Some simple and heartfelt lay. The Day Is Done,
That which the fountain sends
$t.

forth turns again to the fountain.

re-

The

bards sublime,
footsteps echo
16.
st.

Evangeline, pt.

II, sec.

Whose distant

Through the corridors of Time.


5

may be
Build

Give what you have. To someone, better than you dare to think.

it

Kavanagh

[1849]

And

the night shall be filled with music, And the cares, that infest the day, Shall fold their tents, like the Arabs,

me straight,
shall

O worthy

Master!
vessel,

Staunch and strong, a goodly

That

laugh at

all disaster,

And

And

as silently steal away.

16.

st. 1 1

with wave and whirlwind wrestle! The Building of the Ship


[1849], Z.i
see! she stirs!
starts

The horologe
Never

of Eternity

Sayeth this incessantly "Forever never!


forever!"

And
She
the Stairs
*

she moves
of
life

she seems to

feel

The Old Clock on


I

The

thrill

along her keel.


16.

[1845],

9
Sail on,

1 349

shot an arrow into the

air,

It fell to earth, I

knew not where.


[1845],
st. i

The Arrow and the Song

And
I

the song, from beginning to end, found in the heart of a friend.


Ib. st. 3

O Ship of State! Union, strong and great! Humanity with all its fears, With all the hopes of future years, Is hanging breathless on thy fate! 16. 1 378
Sail on,

This

is

the forest primeval.


pines
. .

The murthe

Our hearts, our hopes, are all with thee, Our hearts, our hopes, our prayers, our
tears,

muring
locks
.

and
old.

hem-

Our
Are

faith
all

triumphant o'er our fears, are all with thee! with thee
16.

Stand

like

Druids of

Evangeline [1847],

I.

L 396
de-

There
Alike were they free from Fear, that reigns with the tyrant, and envy, the vice of republics.
16. pt. I, sec. i

is

no

fireside,

howsoe'er

fended, But has one vacant chair!

Resignation [1849],

st.

When

There

is

no Death!

What

seems so

is

she had passed, it seemed like the ceasing of exquisite music.


16.
Is

transition;

one by one, in the of heaven Blossomed the lovely stars, the me-nots of the angels.
Silently

infinite

This life of mortal breath but a suburb of the life elysian, Whose portal we call Death.
16.
sf.

meadows

forget16. 3

Talk not of wasted affection! affection never was wasted; If it enrich not the heart of another, its

Nothing useless is, or low; Each thing in its place is best; And what seems but idle show Strengthens and supports the rest.

The

Builders [1849],

st. 2

Back to

waters, returning their springs, like the rain, shall fill them full of refreshment:

God sent his Singers upon earth With songs of sadness and of nurth. The Singers [1849],^. 622

LONGFELLOW
But the great Master
said, "I see

Were
But

not attained by sudden

flight,

No
I

best in kind, but in degree;


gift

gave a various

To

charm,
teach."

to

to each, to strengthen, and The Singers, st. 6

companions slept, Were toiling upward in the night. The Ladder of St. Augustine, st. 10
death.
at

they, while their

All your strength is in your union. All your danger is in discord; Therefore be at peace henceforward,

The long mysterious Exodus of The Jewish Cemetery

Newi

port [1858],$!.

And

as brothers live together.

The Song of Hiawatha

[1855],
fit.

And

By the shores of Gitche Gurnee, By the shining Big-Sea-Water, Stood the wigwam of Nokomis, Nokomis. Daughter of the Moon,
Ib. Ill

boy's will is the wind's will, the thoughts of youth are long, long thoughts. Lost Youth [1858], refrain

My

Lady with a Lamp

shall stand

From the

he named Minnehaha, Laughing Water,


waterfall

her,
16.

In the great history of the land, noble type of good, Heroic womanhood. Santa Filomena [1858],

st.

10

IV

Ye

are better

than

all

the ballads
said;

As unto the bow the cord is, So unto the man is woman, Though she bends him, she obeys him,

That ever were sung or For ye are living poems,

And all the rest are

dead.
st.

Children [1858],

Though she draws him,

yet she fol-

lows, Useless each without the other!

Between the dark and the daylight,

When
Ib.X
Comes
That

the

night

is

beginning

to

lower,

If we could read the secret history of our enemies, we should find in each man's life sorrow and suffering enough

a pause in the day's occupais

tions,

known

as

the

Children's

Hour.

to disarm all hostility.

The
Driftwood [1857]
I

Children's

Hour

[1860],
St. i

If I

am not worth the wooing, I surely am not worth the winning. The Courtship of Miles Standish
[1858],
Jft.

hear in the chamber above


little feet. patter of

me
Ib.
st.

The

HI
I&

"Why

don't you speak


i

for

yourself

Grave Alice, and laughing Allegra, And Edith with golden hair.
Ib.
st.

John?"

Saint Augustine! well hast thou said, That of our vices we can frame A ladder, if we will but tread

Listen,

my

children,

and you

shall

hear,

Of

Beneath our feet each deed o shame. 2 The Ladder of St. Augustine
[1858],
st. i

On

the midnight ride of Paul Revere, the eighteenth of April, in Seventyfive;

Who

Hardly a

man

is

now

alive

remembers that famous day and


Tales of a Wayside Inn [1863The Landlord?* 1874!, pt. I, Tale: Paul Revere's Ride, st. i

year.

The
i

heights by great

men

reached anc

kept
See Shakespeare, p. 246a. See St. Augustine, p. i47*

and Tennyson
i

p. 64Qb.

Florence Nightingale [1820-1910].

6,3

LONGFEIXOW

One And

1 by land, and two if by sea; on the opposite shore will be, Ready to ride and spread the alarm

if
I

Is a

proverb old, and of excellent wit. The Golden Legend, pt. VI, The School of Salerno

Through every Middlesex

village

and
I,

Let him not boast

who

farm. Tales of a Wayside Inn, pt. Paul Revere's Ride, st.

puts his armor

on As he who puts

The

fate of a nation

was riding that


Ib. st. 8
I told

if off, the battle done. Morituri Salutamus [1875], st. 9

night.

He seemed
Ib.

the incarnate "Well,

Ye, against whose familiar names not yet

you so!"

The
Poet's Tale:

fatal asterisk of

death

is set.

The

The

Birds
st.

Ib.

st.

11

of Killingworth,

The

Ships that pass in the night, and speak each other in passing, Only a signal shown and a distant voice in the darkness; So on the ocean of life we pass and
2 speak one another, a a look then darkness and voice; Only again and a silence.

And

love of learning, the sequestered nooks, all the sweet serenity of books. Ib. st. 21

Ah, nothing
tate.

is

too late,
Ib.
st.

Till the tired heart shall cease to palpi-

22

Ib. pt. Ill,

The

Theologian's

For age

is

opportunity no
itself.

less

Tak: Elizabeth, IV

Than youth
Not
in

Ib.

st.

24

Time has laid his hand Upon my heart, gently, not smiting
But

the

clamor

of

the

crowded

it,

street,

as a harper lays his open palm Upon his harp to deaden its vibrations.

Not
But

in the shouts

and

plaudits of the
de-

throng,
in ourselves, are
feat.

triumph and

The Golden Legend [1872], pt. IV, The Cloisters

The
is

Poets

Nothing that

The

but a covered bridge grave Leading from light to light, through a


itself is

The moon
wane,

will

wax,

can pause or stay; the moon will

brief darkness.3
Ib.

V,

A Covered Bridge
till

at

Lucerne

Don't

cross the bridge

you come to

The mist and cloud will turn to rain, The rain to mist and cloud again, Tomorrow be today. Keramos [1878]
Three
silences

it,

there are:
desire,

the

first

of

1 See Paul Revere, p. 464!). * And soon,, too we

speech,

soon,

To

part with pain,

The second

of

the

third

of

sail o'er silent seas again.

Two
divide.

[1779-1852], Meeting of the Ships lives that once part are as ships that

THOMAS MOORE

EDWARD BULWER-LYTTON

thought; This is the lore a Spanish monk, traught With dreams and visions, was the
to teach.

dis-

first

A Lament

[1803-1873],

As vessels starting from ports thousands of miles apart pass dose to each other in the naked breadths of the ocean, nay, sometimes even touch in the dark. OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES, Professor at the Breakfast Table [1860] 3 Death seems hut a covered way Which opens into light.
WHTTTIER [1807-1898],

The Three

Silences of Molinos

In the long, sleepless watches of the


night.

The Cross
1

of

Snow

[1879]
mystic,

Miguel Molinos [1640-1696], Spanish

My

Psalm,

st.

14

one of the early Quietists.

624

LONGFELLOW
The The
Your
holiest of all holidays are those silence and apart;
secret anniversaries of the heart.

WHITTIER

JOHN GREENLEAF

Kept by ourselves in

WHITTIER
1807-1892

Holidays

No

fetters in

We

silent tents of green 1

the Bay State upon our land!

no

slave

deck with fragrant

flowers;

Massachusetts to Virginia
[1843],
st.

Yours has the suffering been. The memory shall be ours. Decoration Day,
Great
is

st.

24

What

calls

back the past,

like the rich

the art of beginning, but greater the art is of ending; Many a poem is marred by a superfluous verse.
Elegiac Verse,
st.

pumpkin pie? The Pumpkin [1844],

st.

The

Present,

the Present

is

all

thou

hast

14

For thy sure possessing; Like the patriarch's angel hold

it fast

There was a little girl Who had a little curl Right in the middle of her forehead; And when she was good She was very, very good, But when she was bad she was horrid. There Was a Little Girl *

Till it gives its blessing. 1 Soul and I [1847], st.

My

34

The Night is mother of the Day, The Winter of the Spring, And ever upon old Decay The greenest mosses cling. A Dream of Summer [1847],
So
fallen! so lost!

st.

Out of the shadows of night The world rolls into light;


It is

the light withdrawn


hairs

daybreak everywhere.

3 $t.

The

Bells of

San Bias*

11

Which once he wore! The glory from his gray


Forevermorel

gone
st.

Ichabod 2 [1850],

ROBERT MONTGOMERY
1807-1855

The

From those great eyes soul has fled:


faith
is lost, is

When
its

when honor

dies,
st.

The

soul aspiring pants

source to

The man

dead!

Ib.

mount, As streams meander


fount. 5

level

with their

The Omnipresence
1

of the Deity [1828], pt. I

can be less like each other than that of meandering level and that of mounting upwards. MACAULAY, Review of Montgomery's Poems
[1830]

These

lines

were omitted in the subsequent


p.

The low
Whose

green tent

edition of the poem. iSee Genesis 32:26,

yb,

and Cotton,

p.

curtain never outward swings.

421 a.

WHITHER, Snowbound [1866] BLANCHE ROOSEVELT TUCKER, in The Home Life of Henry W. Longfellow [1882], states that
a

these lines were written by the poet for his children on a day when Edith did not want to have her hair curled. 8 See Home, p. 6iob. * The last poem written by Longfellow, dated March 15, 1882. He died March 24. 5 take this to he, on the whole, the worst similitude in the world. In the first place, no stream meanders or can possibly meander level with the fount. In the next place, if streams did

This poem was the outcome of the surprise and grief and forecast of evil consequences which I felt on reading the seventh of March speech of Daniel Webster in support of the "compromise," and the Fugitive Slave Law. No
partisan or personal enmity dictated it On the contrary my admiration of the splendid* personality and intellectual power of the great senator was never stronger than when I laid down his speech, and, in one of the saddest moments of

We

my
4:21

life,

penned

my

protest.

WHrrnER's Note

And she named the child Ichabod, saying, The glory is departed from Israel. / Samuel

meander

level

with their founts, no two motions

625

WHTTTIER
Search tihine

own

heart.

What

paineth

thee
[n others in thyself

"Shoot, if head,
said.

you must,

this

old

gray

may be. The Chapel of the Hermits


[1853],
st.

But spare your country's

flag/'
st.

she

85

Barbara Frietchie,

18

Blessings

on

thee, little

man,
st. i

Barefoot boy r with cheek of tan!

The

"Who touches a hair of yon gray head Dies like a dog! March on!" he said. 16. st. 21
The sun
that brief December day Rose cheerless over hills of gray, And, darkly circled, gave at noon A sadder light than waning moon.

Barefoot Boy [1856],

Health that mocks the doctor's rules, Knowledge never learned of schools.
Ib.
st.

TTie age

is

dull

and mean.

Men

creep,

Snowbound
all

[1866],

Z.

Not

walk.

Lines Inscribed to Friends under


Arrest for Treason Against the Slave Power [1856], st. i

We

the world without, Shut in from sat the clean-winged hearth about.
ib.
1.

55

Nature speaks in symbols and in

Angel of the backward look.


16.
I

signs.

To
For of
all

Charles Sumner

1 714

know not where His


only

islands lift

The

sad words of tongue or pen, saddest are these: "It might have been!"

Maud

Their fronded palms in air; know I cannot drift Beyond His love and care.

Muller [1856],

st.

53

The

Eternal Goodness [1867],


st.

Old Floyd Ireson, for his hard heart, Tarred and feathered and carried in
cart

20

Dear Lord and Father of mankind,


Forgive our foolish ways! Reclothe us in our rightful mind,

By

the

women

of Marblehead.
st.

Skipper Ireson's Ride [1860],


i

Round the silver domes of Lucknow, Moslem mosque and Pagan shrine,
Breathed the
air to Britons dearest,
1

In purer lives Thy service find, In deeper reverence, praise. The Brewing of Soma [1872]

God is and

all is well. 1

My
9

Birthday,

st.

The

air

of Auld

Lang Syne. The Pipes at Lucknow,


I

st.

He brings cool dew And lets it fall on


You can
still

in his little bill, the souls of sin:


his red breast

The windows

Wide

of my soul open to the sun.

throw
st.

see the

mark on

My
Up
The
from the meadows

Of
Psalm,
2
i

fires

that scorch as

he drops
st.

it

in. 2

The Robin,

rich with corn,


i

Clear in the cool September morn. Barbara Frietchie [1864], st.

Green-walled by the
1

clustered spires of Frederick stand hills of Maryland.


Ib.
st.

See Browning, p. 66 ib. a Far, far away, is a land of woe and darkness, bird spirits of evil and fire. Day after day a little flies there, bearing in his bill a drop of water to quench the flame. So near the burning stream does he fly that his feathers are scorched by it,

and

hence

he

is

named

"Bron-rhuddyn"

breast-burned.
See Burns, p. 494b. It was the pipes of the Highlanders, And now they played "Auld Lang Syne."

Carmarthenshire legend of the

robin Sweet Robin, I have heard them say That thou wert there upon the day

ROBERT TRAOX SPENCE LOWELL [18161891], The Relief of Lucknow [September 25, 1857]

And

That Christ was crowned in cruel scorn, bore away one bleeding thorn; That so the blush upon thy breast

626

CHASE

DARWIN

SALMON PORTLAND
CHASE
1808-1873

CAROLINE SHERIDAN NORTON


1808-1877
Love
not! love not! ye hapless sons of
clay;

The
sume.

only way to resumption

is

to re-

Letter to Horace Greeley [March 17, 1866]

Hope's

gayest

wreaths

are

made

of

earthly flowers.

Constitution, in all its provisions, looks to an indestructible Union composed of indestructible States.

The

Love Not,

st. i

soldier of the
Algiers;

Legion lay dying in

Decision in Texas v. White, j Wallace 725 [1868]

There was lack of woman's nursing, there was dearth of woman's tears. Bingen on the Rhine, st. i

ANDREW JOHNSON
We
1808-1875 are swinging round the
circle.

GEORGE WASHINGTON PATTEN


1808-1882
If

On

the Presidential Reconstruction

we must perish in
Oh!
let us die like

the fight,
st.

Tour [August 1866]

men. Oh! Let Us Die Like Men,

ALPHONSE KARR
1808-1890

SAMUEL FRANCIS SMITH


1808-1895

The more things change, the more 1 they remain the same.
Les Gu&pes
[Janvier, 1849]

My country,
Of thee

'tis

of thee,

Sweet land of

liberty,

I sing:

MAURICE DE MACMAHON
Here
I

1808-1893 and here I stay. 2 am,

Land where my fathers died, Land of the pilgrims' pride, From every mountainside
Let freedom ring.

At

Sevastopol [September 1855]

America [1831],

st. i

Long may our land be bright

With

THOMAS MILLER
1808-1874 Christmas comes but once a
.

freedom's holy light; Protect us by thy might,

Great God, our King!

16.

st.

year. Title of poem

CHARLES ROBERT

DARWIN
1809-1882

In shameful sorrow was imprest, And thende thy genial sympathy With our redeemed humanity.

WILLIAM CROSWELL DOANE [1832-1913], Robin Redbreast


1 Plus ga change, plus c'est la
3

mfime chose.

have called this principle, by which each slight variation, if useful, is preserved, by the term Natural Selection.
I

J'y suis, j'y reste. Reply to the commander in chief,

The

Origin of Species [18 op],


en. 7

from the

trenches before Malakoff, in the siege of Sevastopol, when warned to beware of an explosion which might follow the retreat of the Russians.

The expression often used by Mr. Herbert Spencer, of the Survival of the

627

DARWIN
Fittest, is

more

accurate,

and

is

some-

Man
cattle,

times equally convenient 1 The Origin of Species, ch. 3

character

scans with scrupulous care the and pedigree of his horses,

We

will

now

discuss in a little

more
16.

2 detail the Struggle for Existence.

and dogs before he matches them; but when he comes to his own marriage he rarely, or never, takes any such care. The Descent of Man, ch. 21

It is interesting to contemplate an entangled bank, clothed with many plants of many kinds, with birds singing

on the bushes, with various insects flitting about, and with worms crawling through the damp earth, and to reflect
constructed that these elaborately forms, so different from each other, and dependent on each other in so complex a manner, have all been produced by
laws acting around us.
16.

For my own part I would as soon be descended from that heroic little monkey, who braved his dreaded enemy in order to save the life of his keeper; or from that old baboon, who, descending from the mountains, carried away in
triumph his young comrade from a as from a crowd of astonished dogs
savage who delights to torture his enemies, offers up bloody sacrifices, practices infanticide

highest possible stage in moral culture is when we recognize that we ought to control our thoughts. The Descent of Man [1871], ch. 4

The

without remorse,

treats

his wives like slaves,

knows no decency,
supersti16.

and

is

haunted by the grossest

tions.

The
structed

presence of a body of well-in-

men, who have not


is

to labor for

their daily bread,

important to a de-

gree which cannot be overestimated; as


all high intellectual work is carried on by them, and on such work material

progress of all kinds mainly depends, not to mention other and higher advantages.

The plow is one of the most ancient and most valuable of man's inventions; but long before he existed the land was in fact regularly plowed, and still continues to be thus plowed by earthworms. It may be doubted whether there are many other animals which have played so important a part in the history of the world, as have these lowly
organized creatures.

16.

Progress has been than retrogression.

much more general


16.

The Formation Mold Through

of Vegetable the Action of

Worms

[1881], ch.

The Simiadae then branched off into two great stems, the New World and Old World monkeys; and from the latter at a remote period, Man, the wonder and the glory of the universe, proceeded.3
1

Physiological experiment
is

on animals

but not for mere damnable and detestable


justifiable for real investigation,

curiosity.

Letter to E.

Ray Lankester

16. 6
fittest

This survival of the

which

have here
is

As for a future life, every man must judge for himself between conflicting
vague probabilities.

sought to express in mechanical terms,

that

which Mr. Darwin has called "natural


or
the

selection,

From

preservation of favored races in the HERBERT SPENCER, Principles struggle for life." of Biology [1864-1867], Indirect Equilibration

Life and Letters of Charles Darwin, edited by

FRANCIS
I

DARWIN

[1887]

*The

perpetual struggle for room and food.

MALTHUS, On Population [1798], ch. 3 *I confess freely to you, I could never look long upon a monkey, without very mortifying reflections. CONGREVE, Letter to Dennis [1695]
See Disraeli, p. 6isb.

love fools' experiments. I

am always
16.

making them.
distant future will

Believing as I do that be a far

man
more

in the
perfect

628

DARWIN
creature than he now is, it is an intolerable thought that he and all other sentient beings are doomed to complete

FITZGERALD

Each Morn a thousand Roses

brings,

you say: Yes, but where leaves the Rose of Yesterday?

annihilation after such long-continued slow progress. To those who fully admit the immortality of the human soul, the destruction of our world will not appear
so dreadful.

The Rubdiydt of Omar Khayyam, st. 9

A A

Book of Verses underneath


Bough,
Jug of Wine, a Loaf of Bread

the

From

Life and Letters of Charles Darwin

and

Thou
Beside me singing in the Wilderness Oh, Wilderness were Paradise enow! Ib. st. 12

EDWARD FITZGERALD
1809-1883

Wake! For the Sun who


flight

scattered into

Ah, take the Cash, and

let the Credit

The

Stars before

him from the

Field of

ft^y

night,

Drives Night along with

them from
a Shaft of

Nor heed the rumble Drum!


Hearts upon or Turns Ashes
anon,

of

distant

Ib. st. 13
set

Heav'n and

strikes

The

Sultan's Turret with

The Worldly Hope men


it

their

Light.

The Rubdiydt of Omar Khayydmi #. l


Awake!
for

prospers;

and
dusty
is

Like

Snow upon the


Face,
little

Desert's

Morning

in

the Bowl of

Night

Has

And
The

flung the Stone that puts the Stars to flight: Lo! the Hunter of the East has

Lighting a gone.

hour

or

two
Ib. st.

16

Think, in

this batter'd Caravanserai

caught
Sultan's

Whose

Portals are alternate


after

Night and
with
his

Turret in

Noose of

Day,

Light.

Ib. [fast ed.]

How
Abode

Sultan

Sultan

Now
The

the
sires,

New

Pomp
his destined

Year reviving old DeSolitude reIb. st.

way.

Hour, and went his Ib. st. 17

thoughtful Soul to
tires.

4
5
of

Irani indeed

is

gone with

all his

Rose.
st.

They say the Lion and tie Lizard keep The Courts where Jamshyd gloried and
drank deep:

16.

And Bahram,
Wild Ass
Stamps
I

that great Hunter

the

Come,

the Cup, and in the Spring


fill

fire

o'er his

Head, but cannot break


Ib.st.i8

The Winter garment


fling:

of

Repentance
little
is

his sleep.

The Bird of Time To fly and Lo!


Wing.

has but a the Bird


Ib. st.

sometimes think that never blows so


red
as

way

on the

The Rose
bled;

where some buried Caesar

[fast ed.]

The Leaves
one.
1

of Life keep falling one b; Ib. st.

Translated in four editions. 1859, 1868, 1872, 1879. The fourth edition is used here, unless otherwise stated.

That every Hyacinth the Garden wears Dropt in her Lap from some once 1 16. st. 19 lovely Head.
^See
p. 65oa.

and

Shakespeare,

p.

266a,

and Tennyson,

629

FITZGERALD
Ah,

my BelovM,
past
Fears:

fill

the

Cup

that clears
future
I

Millions of Bubbles like us, and will


1

Today of
Tomorrow! be
Years. 1

Regrets

and

pour.

The Rubdiydt

of

Omar
st.

Why, Tomorrow

may
Tis
all

Khayydm,
Days

46

Myself with Yesterday's Sev'n thousand

a Checkerboard of Nights and

The Rubdiydt
For some we loved, the
the best

of

Omar
st.

Where

Destiny with

Men

for Pieces

Khayydm,

21

plays:

Hither and thither moves, and mates,

loveliest

and

and
lays.

slays,

And one by one back


rolling 16.

in

the Closet

That from
hath

his

Vintage

Time
st.

prest.

22

Ah, make the most of what we yet may


spend, Before we too into the Dust descend; Dust into Dust, and under Dust, to
lie,

49 [-first ed.] from the Calendar Unborn Tomorrow and dead YesterStriking

16. st.

day.

16.

st.

57

The Moving Finger


writ,

writes; and, having

Moves on: nor


sans

Sans Wine, sans Song,

and

sans End!

Singer, 16. st. 24


fre-

Shall lure

Nor

all
it.

all your Piety nor Wit back to cancel half a Line, your Tears wash out a Word of
it

Myself when young eagerly quent Doctor and Saint, and heard great
did

16.

st.

71

argument About it and about: but evermore Came out by the same door wherein
went.
16.
st.

That inverted Bowl we call The Sky, Whereunder crawling coop'd we live 16. st. 72 [first ed.] and die.
Ah,

Moon
Flash

of

my
it

Delight
16.
st.

who
74

know'st

no wane.

[first ed.]

27

And
"I

this

was
like

all

the Harvest that I


like

One

of

within the

Tavern
out-

reap'd

caught

came
go."

Water, and

Wind
st.

Better than in the


right.

Temple

lost

16.

28

16. st.

77

There was the Door to which I found no Key; There was the Veil through which I might not see. Some little talk awhile of Me and

And He that made


stroy.

with his hand the Vessel


after

Will surely not in

Wrath
16.
st.

de-

85

Thee
There was and then no more of Thee and Me. 16. st. 32

After a momentary silence spake Some Vessel of a more ungainly Make; "They sneer at me for leaning all

awry:

"While you
Drink!
for,

What! did
live,

once

dead,

shall return."

you never 16. st. 35


closing

the shake?"

Hand then

of the Potter
16.
st.

86
the

Who

And

fear

not

lest

Existence

is the Potter, pray, Pot?

and who
16. st.

87

your Account, and mine, should know the like no more; The Eternal Saki from that Bowl has
pour'd
*See Euripides, p. 84a.

Indeed the Idols

have loved so long


this

Have done my

credit in

World

much wrong:
Have drown'd
Cup,
1

my

Glory in a shallow

See Tennyson, p. 644b.

630

FITZGERALD

GLADSTONE

And

sold

my

Reputation for a Song. The Rubdiydt of Omar Khayydm, st. 93

WILLIAM EWART GLADSTONE


1809-1898
Decision by majorities is as much an expedient as lighting by gas. Speech, House of Commons

I wonder often what the Vintners buy One half so precious as the stuff they

sell.

Ib. st.

95

Yet Ah, that Spring should vanish with


the Rose! That Youth's sweet-scented manuscript Ib. st. 96 should close!

You cannot fight against the Time is on our side. Speech on the Reform Bill

future.

[1866]

Ah To

Love! could you and conspire


grasp this Sorry
entire,

with

Him

[The Turks] one and all, bag and baggage, shall, I hope, clear out from the province they have desolated and
profaned.

Scheme
it

of Things

Speech, House of

Commons
,

Would not we
then

shatter

to bits

and

[May 7 1877]
conscience is beyond the practice of all the physicians of all the countries in the world.
disease of
evil

The

an

Remold

it

nearer to the Heart's Desire!


16. st.

99

And when
pass

like her,

Saki,

you

shall

Speech, Plumstead [1878]


National injustice
to national downfall.
is

the surest road


Ib.

Among
And
in

the Guests Star-scatter'd on the

Grass,

Out
tics.

of the range of practical poli-

your joyous errand reach the


I

spot

Where

made One
Glass!

turn

down an
Ib. st. 101

empty

The

Speech, Dalkeith [November 26, 1879] resources of civilization are not

The King in a carriage may ride, And the Beggar may crawl at his side;
But

yet exhausted.

Speech, Leeds [October 7, 1881]


All the world over, I will back the masses against the classes. Speech, Liverpool [June 28, 1886]

They

in the general race, are traveling all the

same pace. Chronomoros

Mrs. Browning's death was rather a


relief to

rora

must say; no more Aume, thank God! Leighs,


I

Letter [July 15, 1861]

have always regarded that Constias the most remarkable work known to me in modern times to have been produced by the human intellect,
I

tution

Taste is the feminine of genius. Letter to James Russell Lowell


[October 1877]
1

at a single stroke (so to speak), in its 1 application to political affairs.

Aye, dead! and were yourself alive, good Fitz, How to return your thanks would pass my
wits.

Letter to the committee in charge of the celebration of the centennial anniversary of the American Constitution [July 20, 1887]
1 As the British Constitution is the most subtle organism which has proceeded from progressive history, so the American Constitution is the most wonderful work ever struck off at a given GLADtime by the brain and purpose of man. STONE, Kin Beyond the Sea [North American

Kicking you seems the


grace.

common

lot of curs,

While more appropriate greeting lends you


Surely to spit there glorifies your face, Spitting with lips once sanctified by Hers.

ROBERT BROWNING

in

The Athenaeum
[July 13,
ii

Review f September, 1878]

63'

GLADSTONE
Selfishness
is

GOGOL
do I constantly hear towards you? the echo of your mournful song as it is carried from sea to sea through your entire expanse? And since you are without end yourself, is it not within you that a boundless thought will be born? 1

the greatest curse of the

Why
. .

human race.
Speech, Hawarden [May 28, 1890'

NIKOLAI GOGOL
1809-1852
It is dreary to live in this world,

gen

Dead

Souls, vol. I, ch. 12

tlemen!

aw Ivan Ivanovich with Ivan NikiforoQuarreled


The Tale
of

vich [1835]
It is

Oh troika, winged troika, tell me who invented you? Surely, nowhere but among a nimble nation could you have
been born: in a country which has
taken itself in earnest and has evenly spread far and wide over half of the globe, so that once you start counting the milestones you may count on till a
speckled
eyes.
.

no use
your face

to
is

blame the looking


awry.

glass if

The

Inspector-General [1836], epigraph

course, Alexander the Great hero, but why smash the chairs?

Of

haze
.

dances

before

was a
16.
every-

your

The more
town

destruction there
it

is

where, the more


authorities.

shows the

activity of

16. act I, sc. i


I

I tell

everyone very plainly that

take

bribes,

but what kind of bribes?


That's
a

Why,
totally 16.

you not similar in your motion to one of those nimheadlong ble troikas that none can overtake? The flying road turns into smoke under you, bridges thunder and pass, all falls back and is left behind! And what does this awesome motion mean? What is
Rus,
are
.

puppies. different matter.

greyhound

the passing strange force contained in these passing strange steeds? Steeds,
steeds,

The sergeant's widow told you a lie when she said I flogged her. I never
flogged her. She flogged herself.
I/,,

what
in

steeds!

Has the whirlwind


. .

your manes? Rus, whither are you speeding so? Answer


a
.

home

me.
IV, 15
are

No

answer.
is

The middle
its

bell

trills

out in a dream
roaring air

What

are

you kughing

at?

You
16.

liquid soliloquy; the torn to pieces and be-

laughing at yourselves!

V, 8

And for a long time yet, led by some wondrous power, I am fated to journey hand in hand with my strange heroes and to survey the surging immensity of
life,

comes wind; all things on earth fly by and other nations and states gaze askance as they step aside and give her
the right of way. 1
16. vol. I, concluding paragraphs

that

to survey it through the laughter all can see and through the tears

In

the

course

of

the

reading he

unseen and unknown

Dead Souls

by anyone.
I,

became more and more melancholy and finally became completely


[Pushkin]

[1842], vol.

ch. 11

gloomy.
uttered

RusI Rus! I see you, from my lovely enchanted remoteness I see you: a
country of dinginess, and bleakness and dispersal; no arrogant wonders of nature crowned by the arrogant wonders of art appear within you to delight or terrify the eyes. ... So what is the in-

the reading was over he full of sorrow: "Goodness, how sad is our Russia!" Four Letters Concerning Dead Souls [1843]
in

When
a

voice

I shall

laugh

my bitter laugh.
NABOKOV
in Nikolai

Epitaph on Gogol's tombstone


1

comprehensible secret force driving

me 6

Translated by VLADIMIR
[1944]-

Gogol

HOLMES

OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES*


1809-1894
Ay, tear her tattered ensign down! Long has it waved on high, And many an eye has danced to see That banner in the sky; Beneath it rung the battle shout, And burst the cannon's roar The meteor of the ocean air Shall sweep the clouds no more.

Where we

love

is

home,
leave,

Home

that our feet

may

but not
st.

our hearts.

Homesick in Heaven,
There

no time when you and


is

No

the old time, were young. 1 Time Like the Old Time.
like
I
st. i

Lean, hungry, savage, anti-everythings. A Modest Request. The Speech


i

Old

Ironsides 2 [1830],

st.

One

On my

sad, ungathered rose ancestral tree.

My Aunt, st. 6
And silence, like a poultice, comes To heal the blows of sound.
The Music
Grinders,
st.

A thought is often original, though you have uttered it a hundred times. The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table [1858], ch. i
Everybody
likes

and

respects

self-

10

And

As funny

since, I never dare to write as I can.

made men. It is a great deal better to be made in that way than not to be made at all. 16.
rate

The Height

of the Ridiculous,
st.

Insanity is often the logic of an accumind overtaxed. Ib. 2

When
Age,

the last reader reads no more. The Last Reader


like

Man
her way!

has his will

but

woman

has
Ib.

distance,

lends

double

Put not your


your

trust in

money, but put


Ib.

charm. 3

money

in trust.

A Rhymed
And when you
burrs,
stick

Lesson. Urania

on conversation's

not so

find the great thing in this world is much where we stand, as in what direction we are moving: To reach the
I

Don't strew your pathway with those


dreadful urs.
Ib.

port of heaven, with the wind


it

we must

sail

sometimes

and sometimes against but we must sail, and not drift,


at anchor.

Learn the sweet magic of a cheerful


face;

nor

lie

Ib.

Not always

smiling, but at least serene. The Morning Visit

Build thee more stately mansions,

my soul,
As the
swift seasons roll!

One
One

flag,

one land, one

heart,

one

hand, Nation, evermore!

Leave thy low-vaulted past! Let each new temple, nobler than the
last,

Voyage of the Good Ship Union,


st.
1

Shut thee from heaven with a dome

12
Till
1

more

vast,
free,

The most

successful combination the world

thou at length art

has ever seen, of physician and man of. letters. SIR WILLIAM OSLER. From HARVEY GUSHING, Life of Sir William Osier [1925], vol. It ch. 15 2 This poem roused such popular feeling that it is generally credited with saving the frigate Constitution from being destroyed as unfit for
service.
3

The good

great old timesl


First Quarter

old times, the grand old times, the DICKENS, The Chimes [1844],
like the

There are no days

good old

days,

The

days

See Campbell, p. 537a, and note.

youthfull EUGENE FIELD [1850-1895], Old Times, Old Friends, Old Love

when we were

HOLMES
Leaving thine outgrown shell by
life's

LINCOLN

He comes

unresting sea! The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table, [The Chambered Nautilus,
st.

New

of the Brahmin caste of England. This is the harmless, in-

offensive, untitled aristocracy.

The Brahmin Caste


Science
is

of

New

5]

England [1860]
but a
all.

Sin has

many
fits

tools,

lie is

the

a first-rate piece of furniif

handle which

them

Ib.

ture for a man's upper chamber,

he

There is that glorious Epicurean paradox uttered by my friend the Histo1 rian, in one of his flashing moments: "Give us the luxuries of life, and we 2 will dispense with its necessaries."
Ife.

has

common
The

sense on the ground floor. Poet at the Breakfast Table


[1872],
eft.

And

if I

The last

should live to be leaf upon the tree

Boston State-House
solar system.

is

the

hub

of the

of a Boston
all

couldn't pry that out you had the tire of creation straightened out for a crow-

You

I do now, At the old forsaken bough

In the spring, Let them smile, as

man,

if

Where

I cling.

The Last

Leaf,

st.

bar.

Ib.
axis of the earth sticks

The

bly through every town or city.

out visithe center of each and


Ib.

RICHARD MONCKTON MILNES, BARON

H3UGHTON
The

The world's commonly been

great

men

great scholars,

have not nor its


Ib.

great scholars great

men.

1809-1885 But the beating of my own heart Was all the sound I heard.
Brookside,
tree,
st.

Knowledge and timber shouldn't be

much used

till

they are seasoned.


Ib.

A fair little girl


right,

sat

under a

the ultimum moriens of 16. 8 respectability.


is

The hat

Sewing as long as her eyes could see; Then smoothed her work, and folded

it

And

said,

Have you heard


hoss shay,

of the wonderful one-

"Dear work, good

night,

That was built in such a logical way It ran a hundred years to a day?
16.

good night." Good Night and

Good Morning,
st.

n. [The

Deacon's Masterpiece,
st.

Lady Moon, Lady Moon, where


roving?

are you

i]

End

Over the

sea.

of the wonderful one-hoss shay. Logic is logic. That's all I say.


16.
[st.

Lady Moon, Lady Moon, whom


you loving? All that love me!

are

12]

Child's Song

Little I ask;

my wants

are few,
will

I only wish a hut of stone, (A very plain brown stone That I may call my own.3

ABRAHAM LINCOLN
do,)
st.

1809-1865
the good people, in their wisdom, shall see fit to keep me in the background, I have been too familiar with
If

16. [Contentment,

i]

ijohu Lothrop Motley [1814-1877].


2

Said Scopas of Thessaly,


felicity

"We

rich

men count

our

and happiness

to lie in these super-

and not in those necessary things." PtUTARCH [AJ>. 46-130], On the Love of Wealth 8 See Edward Young, p. 33ga, and Goldsmith,
fluities,

disappointments to be very
grined.

much

cha-

Address,

New

Salem,

Illinois

p. 448a.

[March

9, 1832]

634

LINCOLN
I go for all sharing the privileges of the government who assist in bearing its burdens. Letter to Editor, Sangamon

Journal, New Salem, [June 13, 1836]

Illinois

"A house divided against itself cannot stand." * I believe this government cannot endure permanently half slave and half free. I do not expect the Union to be dissolved I do not exbut I do expect the house to fall
pect
it

will cease to
all

be

divided. It will

If

destruction be our lot

we must
live

become

ourselves

be
all

its

author and finisher. As

nation

of

freemen

we must

one thing, or all the other. Either the opponents of slavery will arspread of
it,

rest the further


it

through

time, or die by suicide,

and place
rest in

Address,

Young Men's Lyceum,

where the public mind shall

Springfield, Illinois [January 27,

the belief that it is in the course of ultimate extinction; or its advocates will

push

There

is

object of redress

no grievance that by mob law.


disdains

is

lawful in
fit

Ib.

forward till it shall become alike all the states, old as well as new, North as well as South. Speech, Republican State Conit

Towering genius
path.
It

a beaten

seeks regions hitherto

unexIb.

vention, Springfield, \June 16, 1858]

Illinois

plored.

Nobody has
President. In

No man
another
sent.

is

man

good enough to govern without that other's conIllinois [Octo-

nobody

ever expected me to be poor, lean, lank face has ever seen that any cabbages

my

were sprouting out.

Second campaign speech against


Speech, Peoria,
Douglas,
2

Springfield,

Illinois

ber 16, 1854]


.*

\July 17,

1858]
I

not a Know-Nothing; that is certain. How could I be? How can anyone who abhors the oppression of Negroes be in favor of degrading classes of white people? Our progress in degeneracy appears to me to be pretty rapid. As
I

am

As I would not be a slave, so not be a master. This expresses

would

idea of democracy. Whatever differs from this, to the extent of the difference, is

my

no democracy.3 Fragment

[August

i,

a nation
"all

we began by

declaring that

men

practically read it "all

are created equal." now men are created

We

From ROY P. BASLER, The Collected Works of Abraham


Lincoln [1953], vol.
II, p.

1858?].

532

equal,

except

Negroes/'

When

the

Know-Nothings
read "all

men

get control, it will are created equal, except


to this,
I

Negroes and foreigners and Catholics."

When

it

comes

shall prefer

emigrating to some country where they make no pretense of loving liberty to Russia, for instance, where despotism can be taken pure, and without the base alloy of hypocrisy. Letter to Joshua F. Speed

you have succeeded in dehumanizing the Negro; when you* have put him down and made it impossible for him to be but as the beasts of the field; when you have extinguished his soul in this world and placed him where the ray of hope is blown out as in
.

When

the darkness of the damned, are you


quite sure that the

demon you have

[August 24, 1855]

The
let.

ballot

is

stronger than the bulIllinois

Speech, Bloomington,

[May

19, 1856]

[Douglas's] round, post offices, land offices, marshalships and cabinet appointments, chargships and foreign missions, bursting and sprouting out in wonderful exuberance, ready to be laid hold of by their greedy hands. Ib. See Address to Indiana Regiment, p. 64ob.
jolly,

Mark 3:25, p. a They have seen


1

See

45a. in his

fruitful

face,

635

LINCOLN
roused will not turn and rend you? constitutes the bulwark of our

What

own liberty and independence? It is not our frowning battlements, our bristling sea coasts, our army and our navy. These are not our reliance against tyranny. All of those may be turned
against us without
for the struggle.

he who would be no slave must consent to have no skve. Those who deny freedom to others deserve it not for themselves, and, under a just God, cannot
long retain it. Letter to H. L. Pierce and others
[April 6, 1859]
It is said

making

us weaker
is

Our

an Eastern monarch once

reliance

in the

which God has planted in us. Our defense is in the spirit which prized liberty as the heritage of all men,
love of liberty
in all lands
spirit

everywhere. Destroy this

and you have pknted the seeds of

charged his wise men to invent him a sentence to be ever in view, and which should be true and appropriate in all times and situations. They presented him the words: "And this, too, shall
pass away."
x

despotism at your own doors. Familiarize yourselves with the chains of bondage and you prepare your own limbs to wear them. Accustomed to trample on the rights of others, you have lost the
genius of your own independence and become the fit subjects of the first cun1 ning tyrant who rises among you. Speech, Edwardsville, Illinois

How much

it

expresses!

How How
tion!

chastening in the hour of pride! consoling in the depths of afflicAddress,


ricultural

Wisconsin State AgMilwaukee Society,

[September 30, 1859]

What is conservatism? Is it not adherence to the old and tried, against the
new and
untried?

[September 11, 1858]


the issue that will continue in this country when these poor tongues of
is

That

Address, Cooper Union,

New

York [February 27, 1860]


Let us have faith that right makes "it, and in that faith let us to the end dare to do our duty as we understand it Ib.

Douglas and myself shall be siJudge ent. It is the eternal struggle between
these

two

principles

right

and wrong

throughout the world. They are the two principles that have stood face to face from the beginning of time; and will ever continue to struggle. The one is the common right of humanity, and the other the divine right of kings. It is the same principle in whatever shape it develops itself. It is the same spirit that says, "You toil and work and earn bread, and 111 eat it." No matter in what shape it comes, whether from the
of a king who seeks to bestride the people of his own nation and live by the fruit of their labor, or from one race of men as an apology for enslaving another race, it is the same tyrannical
principle.

No

one, not in

preciate
parting.
I

my
To

situation, can apfeeling of sadness at this

my

this place,
I

and the kindness

mouth

everything. Here have lived a quarter of a century, and have passed from a young to an old man. Here my children have been born, and one is buried. I now leave, not knowing when or whether ever I may return, with a task before me greater than that which rested upon Washington. Without the assistance of that Divine Being who ever attended him, I cannot succeed. With that assistance I cannot fail. Trusting in Him who can

of these people,

owe

Reply, seventh and last joint debate, Alton, Illinois \October i c, 1858]

go with me, and remain with you, and be everywhere for good, let us confidently hope that all will yet be well.
Farewell
Illinois

Address,

Springfield,

This
1

is

a world of compensation;

and

[February 11, 1861]

See Einstein, p. 951 a.

Hawthorne,

p. 6153.

6 6

LINCOLN
If

we do not make common

cause to

people?

Is

there

any better or equal

good old ship of the Union on this voyage, nobody will have a chance to pilot her on another voyage. Address, Cleveland, Ohio
save the

hope

in the world?

First Inaugural Address

and

While the people retain their virtue vigilance, no administration, by

[February 15, 1861]

have never had a feeling, politically, that did not spring from the sentiments embodied in the Declaration of Independence. ... I have often inquired
I

any extreme of wickedness or folly, can very seriously injure the government in
the short space of four years.
16.

of myself

what

great principle or idea

it

was that kept this Confederacy so long the mere matter of together. It was not separation of the colonies from the motherland, but that sentiment in the Declaration of Independence which gave liberty not alone to the people of this country, but hope to all the world, for all future time. It was that which gave promise that in due time the weights would be lifted from the shoulshould have an equal chance. This is the sentiment embodied in the Declaration of
ders

We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained, it must not break,
our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land, will yet swell the
chorus of the Union when again touched, as surely they will be, by the 16. better angels of our nature.
I

think the necessity of being ready

of all

men, and that

all

increases.

Look to

it.

Independence.
assassinated
it.

...

on

this spot

would rather be than surrender


Hall,

Letter (this is the -whole message) to Governor Andrew G. Curtin of Pennsylvania [April
8,

1861]
is

Labor
Independence Speech, Philadelphia [February 1861]
It
is

prior to,

and independent

22,

Capital is only the fruit of labor, and could never have existed if labor had not first existed. Labor is the
of, capital.

safe to assert that

no govern-

ment proper

ever

had

organic law for

its

a provision in its own termination.

superior of capital, and deserves much the higher consideration. Capital has its
rights, tion as

which are
First

as

worthy of protecto
3,

First Inaugural Address

1 any other rights.

[March
If

4,

1861]

by the mere force of numbers a majority should deprive a minority of any clearly written constitutional right,
it

Annual Message gress [December

Con1861]

It is difficult to

make a man

misera-

might, in a moral point of view,


revolution
certainly
vital one.

jusif

tify

would

ble while he feels he is worthy of himself and claims kindred to the great

God who made him.


Address

such a right were a

16.

This country, with its institutions, belongs to the people who inhabit it. Whenever they shall grow weary of the existing government, they can exercise their constitutional right of amending
it,

on colonization to a Negro deputation at Washington [August 14, 1862]


object in this struggle
is

My paramount
is

to save the

Union, and

not either

member

or their revolutionary right to disor overthrow it. 16.

to save or to destroy slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing any
slave, I
it
i

would do
all

Why should there not be a patient confidence in the ultimate justice of the

by freeing

it; and if I could save the slaves, I would do

See Webster, p, 546b.

637

LINCOLN
it; and if I could do it by freeing some and leaving others alone, I would also do that. Letter to Horace Greeley

present,

men

should utter nothing for

which they would not willingly be responsible through time and in eternity. Second Annual Message
to Congress

[August 22, 1862]


I

shall

try to

correct

errors
I

when
adopt

shown

to

be

errors;

and

shall

new views so fast as they shall appear to be true views. ... I intend no modification
free.

of

my
all

oft-expressed

personal
16.

wish that

men, everywhere, could be

The dogmas of the quiet past are inadequate to the stormy present. The occasion is piled high with difficulty, and we must rise with the occasion. As our case is new, so we must think anew and act anew. must disenthrall ourselves, and then we shall save our coun-

We

the first day of January in the our Lord, one thousand eight of year

On

try.

Fellow
history.

hundred and

sixty-three,

all

persons

We

citizens, of this

we cannot

escape
this

Congress and

held as slaves within any state, or designated part of a state, the people whereof shall then be in rebellion against the United States shall be then,
thenceforward, and forever
free.

Preliminary

Emancipation Proclamation [September 22,


1862]

administration will be remembered in spite of ourselves. No personal significance or insignificance can spare one or another of us. The fiery trial through which we pass will light us down in honor or dishonor to the last generation. say we are for the Union. The world will not forget that we say this. know how to save the Union. The world knows we do know how to save it. We, even we here, hold the power and bear the responsibility. In giving freedom to the slave, we assure freedom to the free honorable alike in what

We

The

President takes the result of the


elections 2
philosophically, by the lesson.

We

New
and

York

will, doubtless, profit

how he

Colonel Forney inquired of him felt about New York, he replied: "Somewhat like the boy in Kentucky, who stubbed his toe while run-

When

we

give

and what we

preserve.

We
last,

ning to see his sweetheart. he was too big to cry, and hurt to laugh/'

The boy
far

said

shall

nobly save or meanly lose the

too badly

best hope of earth. Other succeed; this could not fail.


plain, peaceful,

Frank Leslie's Illustrated Weekly

means may The way is a way generous, just

[November 22, 1862]

A nation may be said to


territory, its people,

which if followed the world will forever applaud and God must forever bless.
Ib.

consist of
its

its

and

laws.

The
is

territory

is

the only part which

of

certain durability.

Beware of rashness, but with energy and sleepless vigilance go forward and
give us victories. Letter to

Second Annual Message to Congress [December i, 1862] If there ever could be a proper time for mere catch arguments, that time surely is not now. In times like the
1 The Emancipation Proclamation was issued one hundred days later, on January i, 1863. 2 The election was a victory for Horatio Seymour, Democratic candidate for governor of New York. Moreover, throughout the North the Democrats picked up a number of congressional seats and won a number of state elections.

Major General Joseph Hooker \January 26, 1863]


of

The Father
un vexed

Waters again

goes

to the sea.

Letter to James C. Conkling [August 26, 1863]


I

cule without

have endured a great deal of ridimuch malice; and have rea great deal of kindness, not

ceived

6 8

LINCOLN
from ridicule. quite free
it.

am

used to

ance.

One

of

them

said,

"He

is

Letter to James

H. Hackett
2, 1863]
fa-

common-looking man."
replied,

The

President
are

"Common-looking people

[November
thers

Fourscore and seven years ago our

the best in the world: that is the reason the Lord makes so many of them.*'

brought forth on

this continent, a

From

new

nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.

John Hay and from His Diary, edited by C. L. Kay [December 23,
Letters of
Extracts

1863]
I claim not to have controlled events, but confess plainly that events have controlled me. Letter to A. G. Hodges

are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation or any nation so conceived and so dedicated

Now we

can long endure.

battlefield of that war.

We are met on a great We have come

to dedicate a portion of that field, as a final resting place for those who here

[April 4, 1864]

gave their lives that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this.
But, in dedicate
a larger sense, we cannot we cannot consecrate we

The world
nition

of the

has never had a good defiword liberty. And the

this cannot hallow ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us, the living, rather to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion; that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain; that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom; and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth, 1

American people just now are much in want of one. all declare for liberty; but in using the same word we do not mean the same thing. With some, the word liberty may mean for each man to do as he pleases with himself and the

We

product of his labor; while with others the same word may mean for some men to do as they please with other men and the product of other men's labor. Here are two, not only different, but incompatible things, called by the same name, liberty. And it follows that each of the things is by the respective parties
called

by two

different

ble names, liberty

and incompatiand tyranny.

The shepherd drives the wolf from the sheep's throat, for which the sheep thanks the shepherd as his liberator, while the wolf denounces him for the
same
act.
. .
.

Plainly the sheep

and

the wolf are not agreed


tion of liberty.

upon

a defini-

Address, Sanitary Fair, Balti-

more
I

[April 18, 1864]

Address at Gettysburg [November 19, 1863]

The
dream.

President

last

night

had

either the

do not allow myself to suppose that convention or the League


I

was in a party of plain people and as it became known who he was they began to comment on his appear1

He

have concluded to decide that

am

ei-

ther the greatest or best man in America, but rather they have concluded that
it is

See

Wydiffe,
p.

Garrison,

p. 61 6a;

163!);

Webster,

p.

5473;
p.

and Theodore Parker,

ing the river, cluded that I

not best to swap horses while crossand have further conam not so poor a horse

639

LINCOLN
that they might not make a botch of it in trying to swap. Reply to the National Union
laid so costly a sacrifice yours to have upon the altar of freedom. Letter to Mrs. Eixby [November 21, 1864]
It may seem strange that any men should dare to ask a just God's assistance in wringing their bread from the 1 sweat of other men's faces, but let us 2 be not we that judged. judge not, Second Inaugural Address

League \June
Truth
is

9,

1864]

generally the best vindication against slander. Letter to Secretary Stanton, refusing to dismiss PostmasterBlair General Montgomery
\July 18, 1864]

has long been a grave question whether any government, not too strong for the liberties of its people, can be strong enough to maintain its existence in great emergencies. Response to a serenade [November 10, 1864]
It

[March

4, 1865]

The Almighty
poses.

has

His

own

pur16.

Fondly do we hope, fervently do we pray, that this mighty scourge of war may speedily pass away. Yet, if God wills that it continue until all the
wealth piled by the bondsman's two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another drawn with the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said, "The judgments of the Lord are true and righteous alto3

Human

nature will not change. In


trial,

any future great national

com-

pared with the men of this, we shall have as weak and as strong, as silly and
as wise, as

bad and

as good.
affairs

16.

I desire so to

conduct the

of

this administration that if at the end, when I come to lay down the reins of lost every other friend on earth, I shall at least have one friend left, and that friend shall be down in-

power,

have

gether/'

side

me.
Reply to Missouri Committee
of Seventy [1864]

malice toward none, with charwith firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, 4 let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation's wounds, to care for him who shall have borne the battle
ity for all,

With

Dear Madam,
the
files

have been shown in

of the

War

Department

statement of the Adjutant-General of Massachusetts that you are the mother


1 sons who have died gloriously on the field of battle. I feel how weak and fruitless must be any words of mine which should attempt to beguile you from the grief of a loss so overwhelming. But I cannot refrain from tendering to you the consolation that may be found in the thanks of the Republic

for his widow and his orphan, to do which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations. 16.

and
all

of five

I have always thought that all men should be free; but if any should be slaves, it should be first those who deit for themselves, and secondly those who desire it for others. Whenever I hear anyone arguing for slavery, I feel a strong impulse to see it tried on

sire

they died to save. I pray that our heavenly Father may assuage the anguish of your bereavement, and leave you only the cherished memory of the loved and lost, and the solemn pride that must be
1

him

personally.

Address to an Indiana Regiment

[March 17, 1865]


^See Genesis 3:19, p. 6a.
2

* *
8

Later, the records were revised; the correct

number was two.

See See See See

Matthew
Psalms

7:1, p. 41 a.

19:9, p. 17!).

John Quincy Adams, p. 5033. Fragment, p. 6350.

640

LINCOLN
Important principles may and must
be
inflexible.

POE

From
As As

childhood's hour
I

others were
others saw.

I have not been have not seen

Last public address, Washington [April 11, 1865]


If you once forfeit the confidence of your fellow citizens, you can never regain their respect and esteem. It is true that you may fool all the people some of the time; you can even fool some of the people all the time; but you can't fool all of the people all the time. To a caller at the White House. From ALEXANDER K. MCCLURE, Lincoln's Yarns and Stories

Alone [1827]

And

the cloud that took the form When the rest of Heaven was blue Of a demon in my view.
Ib.

Hast thou not torn the Naiad from her


flood,

The
,

Elfin

from the green

grass,

and

from

me
Sonnet:

The summer dream beneath the tamarind tree?

[1904], p.
If I

124

To

Science [1827]
in

were to try to read, much less answer, all the attacks made on me, this shop might as well be closed for any other business. I do the very best I the very best I can; and I know how

Sound
It is

loves

to

revel

summer
pt. II

night.

Al Aaraaf [1829],
is

with literature as with law or

empire

an established name

an

es-

mean

to keep doing so until the end. If

tate in tenure, or a throne in possession.

the end brings


said against

thing. If

me out all right, what is me won't amount to anythe end brings me out wrong,
at

Poems

[1831]. Preface, Letter to

Mr. B

ten angels swearing I was right would

make no

difference.

Conversation

the

White
B. CARat the

Helen, thy beauty is to me Like those Nicean barks of yore, That gently, o'er a perfumed sea,

House.

From FRANCIS
Six

The

weary,

wayworn wanderer bore


native shore.

To

his

own

PENTER,

Months
-with

White House
Lincoln [1866]

Abraham

On

desperate seas long

wont

to roam,

EDGAR ALLAN POE*


O,

human

On

1809-1849 thou spirit given, Earth, of all we hope in Heaven! Tamerlane [1827]
love!

thy Thy Thy Naiad airs have brought me home To the glory that was Greece, And the grandeur that was Rome. To Helen [1831], st. 1,2
hyacinth hair,
If I

classic face,

could dwell
Israfel

Where
Hath

All that
Is

we

see or

seem

but a dream within a dream.

A Dream
My
The
I

Within a Dream [1827]

dwelt, and he where I, might not sing so wildly well A mortal melody, While a bolder note than this might

He

swell

The happiest day


known,

the happiest hour sear'd and blighted heart hath

From my lyre within

the sky. Israjel* [1831],

st.

highest hope of pride and power, feel hath flown.

The Happiest Day Happiest Hour


1 See

The
[1827]

Lo! Death has reared himself a throne In a strange city. The City in the Sea [1831], st. i
1 And the angel Israfel, -whose heartstrings are a lute, and who has the sweetest voice of all God's creatures. The Koran

James Russell Lowell,

p. 6920.

641

POE

The

viol,

the

violet,

and the

The City
While from
Death

vine. in the Sea,

And much
st.

of Madness,

and more

of

Sin,

And
a proud tower in the looks gigantically down. 1

Horror the soul of the plot.

town

The Conqueror
While the
angels,
all

Worm

[1843],
st.

Ifc.rf-3

pallid

and wan,

And,

Guy De
tear?

Vere,

weep now

hast thou no or never more!


st. i

Lenore [1831],

Uprising, unveiling, affirm That the play is the tragedy, "Man," And its hero, the Conqueror Worm.
16.
st.

that dirge for her the doubly dead in Ib. she died so young.

Vastness! and Age! and Memories of Eld! and Desolation! and dim Silence!

Night!

The Coliseum
Thou wast
that
all

[1833],

st. i

There is something in the unselfish and self-sacrificing love of a brute, which goes directly to the heart of him who has had frequent occasion to test the paltry friendship and gossamer fidelity of mere Man. The Black Cat [1843]
Perverseness
is

to me, love,

one of the primitive


heart.
Ib.

For which

A green isle in the sea, love, A fountain and a shrine,


ers,

my

soul did pine

impulses of the

human

All wreathed with fairy fruits and flow-

And

all

To One in

the flowers were mine. Paradise [1834],

st. i

The boundaries which divide Life from Death are at best shadowy and vague. Who shall say where the one ends, and where the other begins? The Premature Bunal [1844]
poetry has been not a pura but pose, passion; and the passions should be held in reverence: they must not they cannot at will be excited, with an eye to the paltry compensations,

And all my days are trances, And all my nightly dreams


Are where thy gray eye glances, And where thy footstep gleams
In what ethereal dances,

With me

or the

more

By what

eternal streams.

Ib.

paltry

commenda-

st.

tions, of

mankind.

During the whole of a dull, dart, and soundless day in the autumn of the year, when the clouds hung oppressively
low in the heavens, I had been passing alone, on horseback, through a singularly dreary tract of country, and at length found myself, as the shades of evening drew on, within view of the
melancholy House of Usher.

The Raven and Other Poems


[1845], preface

midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary, Over many a quaint and curious vola

Once upon

ume of forgotten lore


I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping, As of some one gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door.

While

The

Fall of the

House of Usher
[1838]

The Raven
All, distinctly I

[1845],**.
it

zant of

Those who dream by day are cognimany things which escape those who dream only by night.
Eleonora [1841]
1

remember

was

in the

ember dying the floor. wrought ghost upon Eagerly I wished the morrow; vainly I
its

And

bleak December; each separate

See Hart Crane, p. io4gb.

had sought

to

borrow

642

POE
surcease of sorrow sorrow for the lost Lenore For the rare and radiant maiden whom the angels name Lenore Nameless here for evermore. The Raven, st. 2

From my books

The object Truth, or the satisfaction of the intellect, and the object Passion, or the excitement of the heart, are, although attainable, to a certain extent, in poetry, far more readily attainable in
prose.

The
Deep

silken

sad uncertain

each purple curtain.

rustling of Ib. st. 3

The Philosophy
I

of Composition [1846]

into that darkness peering, long

I stood there, wondering, fearing, Doubting, dreaming dreams no mortal ever dared to dream before.

"Of all melancholy asked myself according to the universal understanding of mankind, is the most was the obvious melancholy?" Death
topics, what,
reply.

"And when/'

I said, "is this

Ib.

st.

melancholy of topics
.

most most poetical?"


is

"Ghastly grim and ancient Raven wandering from the Nightly shore
thy lordly name is on the Night's Plutonian shore!" Quoth the Raven, "Nevermore." Ib. st. 8
Tell

The
it

"When

answer ... most closely

obvious
itself

allies

to

me what

Beauty: the death, then, of a beautiful woman is, unquestionably, the most and the world poetical topic in equally is it beyond doubt that the lips best suited for such topic are those of
a bereaved lover/'
Ib.

Whom
Followed
fast

unmerciful Disaster and followed faster.


Ib. st. 11

The skies they were ashen and sober; The leaves they were crispfed and
sere

"Prophet!" said I, "thing of evill prophet still, if bird or devil!"


15. st.

The
16
It

leaves they

were withering and

sere;

was night in the lonesome October

"Take thy beak from out take thy form from

my heart, and off my door!"


It
st.

Of my most immemorial

year.

Quoth the Raven, "Nevermore."


Ib.

Ulalume [1847], st. i was down by the dank tarn of


Auber, the ghoul-haunted

17
is

And

the Raven, never


sitting, still is

flitting,

still

In

woodland

of
Ib.

sitting

Weir.

On

the pallid bust of Pallas just above

my chamber door;
And
And
his eyes have all the seeming of demon's that is dreaming,
a

Here once, through an alley Titanic, Of cypress, I roamed with my


soul

Of
Thus

cypress,

with Psyche,

my soul.
Ib.
st.

the lamplight o'er him streaming throws his shadow on the floor; And my soul from out that shadow that lies floating on the floor Shall be lifted nevermore! Ib. st. 18

pacified

Psyche and

kissed her,

And tempted her


Can
it

out of her gloom. Ib. st. 8

be fancied that Deity ever vin-

From
Out

a wild weird clime that lieth, sub-

dictively Made in his

image

mannikin merely

lime, of Space

to

out of Time. Dreamland [1845],

st. i

The Imp

of the Perverse.
Title of story

of Verse [1848] iWhatl out of senseless Nothing to provoke A conscious Something to resent the yoke.
FrrzcERAiJ),

madden it? * The Rationale

[1845]

The Rubdiydt of Omar Khayydm [1859-1879], st. 78

643

POE

TENNYSON
I would define, in brief, the Poetry of words as the RhythmicaL,Creation of

of the honorable Quixotic sense chivalrous. the of

Letter to Mrs.

Whitman

[October 18, 1848]

is'Taste. Beauty. Its sole arbiter The Poetic Principle [1850]

"Over the Mountains

Of the Moon,

PIERRE JOSEPH

Down

the Valley of the Shadow, Ride, boldly ride,"

PROUDHON
1809-1865
is

The shade
"If

you seek

replied for Eldorado!"

Property
st.

theft.

la Propri&e? Qu'est-ce que

Eldorado [1849],

And
Is

the fever called "Living"


last.

conquered at

LORD TENNYSON
with no

ALFRED,

For Annie [1849]


lived

And
Than

this

maiden she

1809-1892 Dower'd with the hate of hate, the


scorn of scorn,

other thought to love and be loved by me.


child,

The love
For
it

of love.

The Poet
Of good Haroun Alraschid.

[1830],

st. i

She was a child and I was a

In this kingdom by the sea, But we loved with a love that was than love
I

was in the golden prime


Recollections of the Arabian

more

and
of

my Annabel

Lee
winged seraphs

Nights [1830],

st.

With

a love that the

Heaven
st. i,

Coveted her and me. Annabel Lee [1849],

She said, "I am aweary, aweary, I would that I were dead!" Mariana * [1830],

refrain

still

small voice
it

spake unto me,

And

neither

the

angels

in

Heaven
the

"Thou

art so full of misery,

above

Were

Nor the demons down under


sea,

not better not to be?" The Two Voices [1832],

st. i

Can

ever dissever
soul

my

soul

from the

This truth within thy mind rehearse, That in a boundless universe Is boundless better, boundless worse.
IB.
st.

Of the

beautiful Annabel Lee.


IB. st. 5

Though
Yet
is

thou

wert

scattered

to

the

In her sepulcher there by the sea In her tomb by the side of the sea.
IB. st.

wind,
3 there plenty of the kind.

6
I

IB.

st.

11

Keeping time, time, time, In sort of Runic rhyme,

know

that age to age succeeds,

Blowing a noise of tongues and deeds,

To

the tintinnabulation that so musically wells

dust of systems and of creeds.


IB.
st.

69

From

the bells, bells, bells, bells, Bells, bells, bells.

of forgotten dreams. Like glimpses 6


IB.
st. i

st.

127

The
Brazen
bells!

Bells [1849],
bells

No

life

that

breathes

with

human

Hear the loud alarum

breath
iSee Shakespeare, p. 27 ib. 2 See / Kings 19:12, p. igb.
See Fitzgerald, p.

What

a tale of terror, now, their turtells!

bulency

IB. st. 3

644

TENNYSON
Has ever
truly longed for death.

Music that
st.

gentlier

The Two

Voices,

132

Than

tir'd eyelids

on the spirit lies, upon tir'd eyes.


[1832]. Choric

The Lotos-Eaters
In after-dinner talk, Across the walnuts and the wine.

Song, st.

The

Miller's

Daughter [1832],
st.

There

is

no

joy

but calm!

Ib.

st.

4
Should

Ah, why
life all

mother Tda, many-fountained Ida, Dear mother Ida, hearken ere I die.

labor be?

Ifa.

st.

Oenone

[1832],

I.

22

Let us alone,
fast,

Time

driveth

onward

Self-reverence, self-knowledge, self-control,

And

Let us alone.
life

in a little while our lips are dumb. is it that will last?

What

These three alone lead


power.
1

to sovereign Ib. I 142

All things are taken from us,

and be-

come
Portions and parcels of the dreadful Ib. Past.

built

my

Wherein

soul a lordly pleasure-house, at ease for aye to dwell.

The

Palace of Art [1832],

st. i

Give us long rest or death, dark death Ib. or dreamful ease.


Live and
lie

The daughter of a hundred Earls, You are not one to be desired.


Lady Clara Vere deVere
[1832],
st.

reclined
together, careless
Ib. st. 8

On

the

hills like

Gods

of mankind.

A simple maiden in her flower


Is

worth a hundred coats-of-arms.


Ib.
st.

Chaucer, the first warbler, whose sweet breath Preluded those melodious bursts that
fill

Dan

The
Is

on your old stone gates not more cold to you than I.


lion
Ib.
st.

The spacious times of great Elizabeth With sounds that echo still. A Dream of Fair Women [1832]

The

wife gardener Smile at the claims of long descent.


Ib.
st.

Adam and his

A
7

And most divinely fair.

daughter of the gods, divinely tall, Ib. st 22

Tis only noble to be good. Kind hearts are more than

Willows whiten, aspens quiver, Little breezes dusk and shiver.

And

coronets, simple faith than Norman blood. Ib.


to read,

The Lady of

Shalott [1832], pt. I, st. 2

Oh! teach the orphan boy

But who hath seen her wave her hand? Or at the casement seen her stand?

Or teach the orphan

girl to

sew.
16.
st.

Or is she known in all the The Lady of Shalott?


All in the blue

land, 16.

st. 3

You must wake and

call

me

unclouded weather.
16. Ill,
st.

early, call

mother dear; Tomorrow 'ill be the happiest time of


the glad New Year; Of all the glad New Year, mother, the maddest, merriest day; For I'm to be Queen o' the May, mother, I'm to be Queen o' the
all

me early,

"Tirra

lirra,"

by the river
16.
st.

Sang

Sir Lancelot.

May.

The May Queen

[1832],

st. i

She left the web, she left the loom, She made three paces thro' the room, She saw the water lily bloom, She saw the helmet and the plume, She look'd down to Camelot.

645

TENNYSON
Out flew the web and floated wide; The mirror cracked from side to side. "The curse has come upon me/' cried The Lady of Shalott. The Lady of Shalott,
pt. Ill, $t. 5

Myself not
all;

least,

but honor'd of them

And drunk
peers,

delight of battle with

my

Far on

the ringing plains

of windy

But Lancelot mused a little space; He said, "She has a lovely face;

God in his mercy lend her The Lady of Shalott/'

grace,

Ib.

IV,

st.

Troy. I am a part of all that I have met; Yet all experience is an arch wherethrough Gleams that untravel'd world. 1 Ulysses, L 13

God gives us love. Something to love He lends us; but when love is grown To ripeness, that on which it throve
Falls off,

How
To

dull it is to pause, to make an end, rust unburnished, not to shine in


use,

and love

is left

alone.
st.

To
More

/.S.

[1842],

As though

to breathe were

life!

Ib.Z.22

black than ashbuds in the front of March. The Gardener's Daughter


[1842], I

28

And this gray spirit yearning in desire To follow knowledge like a sinking
star,

light, half shade, She stood, a sight to make an old man Ib. L 139 young.

Half

Beyond the utmost bound of human


thought.
Ib.
I.

30

This

is

my

son,

mine own Telemachus.


Ib.
I.

The long mechanic pacings to and fro, The set gray life, and apathetic end.
Love and Duty [1842],
Ah! when Be each man's
peace
Lie like a shaft 'of light across the land, And like a lane of beams athwart the
sea,
Z.

33

17

Death

closes all:

but something ere the

end,

shall all
rule,

men's good
universal

Some work
done,

of noble note,

and

may

yet be

Not unbecoming men


gods.

that strove with


Ib.
Z.

51

Through
year?

all

the circle of the golden


[1842], I

The deep Moans round with many

voices.

Come,

my friends,
47
'Tis

The Golden Year


It little profits

not too late to seek a newer world.


off,

By

this

still

that an idle king, hearth, among these barren


wife,
I

Push

and

sitting

well

in

order

smite

The sounding
holds

furrows, for

my

purpose

crags,

Match'd with an aged


dole

mete and
race.
Z.

To

Unequal laws unto a savage


I will

Ulysses [1842],

beyond the sunset, and the baths Of all the western stars, until I die. It may be that the gulfs will wash us
sail

drink
Ib.
Z.

down;
6
It

Life to the lees.

may be we
Isles,

shall

touch the Happy

Much have I seen and known; cities of men And manners, climates, councils, governments,

And
1 See

see the great Achilles,

whom we
Ib.
Z.

knew.
Henry Adams,
p. 7761*.

55

646

TENNYSON

To

strive, to seek, to find,


1

and not to
70
while

Till the

yield.

Ulysses, L

war drum throbbed no longer and the battle flags were furled

Comrades, leave
as yet
'tis

me

here a

little,

early

morn:

In the Parliament of Man, the Federation of the world.

Leave me here, and when you want me, sound upon the bugle horn.

Locksley Hall, L 127

And

LocksleyHall [1842],
In

Z.

the kindly earth shall slumber, lapp'd in universal law.


Ib.
Z.

the

spring a young man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.


16.

130

Yet

I 19

He

hold thee, when his passion shall have spent its novel force, Something better than his dog, a little Ib. I. 49 dearer than his horse.
will

And

doubt not through the ages one increasing purpose runs, the thoughts of men are widened
Ib.

with the process of the suns.

L 137

Knowledge comes, but wisdom

lingers.

Ib.

The many-winter'd crow

that leads the


Ib.

L 141
all

clanging rookery home.

Woman
Are

is

the lesser man, and

thy

I 68
to

Such a one do I remember, look at was to love.2


This
is

whom
Ib.

L 72

passions, match'd with mine, as moonlight unto sunlight, and as Ib. L 1 51 water unto wine.

will take

some savage woman, she

the truth the poet sings, That a sorrow's crown of sorrow is re-

shall rear

my
all

dusky race.
Ib.

I 168
L 178

membering happier

things. Ib. I

the heir of

the ages, in the foreIb.

75

most

files

of time.

Like a dog, he hunts in dreams.


Ib.
Z.

79

With

little

hoard of maxims preacha daughter's heart.


Ib.
Z.

Let the great world spin forever down the ringing grooves of change. Ib. 1.182
Better
fifty years of of Cathay.

ing

down

94

Europe than a
Ib.
I.

cycle

184

But the

jingling of the guinea helps the


feels.

hurt that Honor

Ib.

I 105

This proverb flashes through his head, "The many fail, the one suceeds."

The Day Dream

[1842].

The
st.

For

dipp'd into the future, far as hu-

Arrival,

eye could see, Saw the Vision of the world, and all the wonder that would be; Saw the heavens fill with commerce, argosies of magic sails, Pilots of the purple twilight, dropping down with costly bales; Heard the heavens fill with shouting, and there rain'd a ghastly dew From the nations' airy navies grappling Ib. Z. 119 in the central blue.
1

man

And on her lover's arm she leant, And round her waist she felt it fold, And far across the hills they went
In that new world which
Ib.
is

the old.
st.
i

The Departure,

And

there any moral shut Within the bosom of the rose?


is

Ib. Moral,

st. i

My
Or

strength

is

as the strength of ten,


st. i

Because

my heart is pure.

Inscribed

on the memorial
of

cross erected to

the

memory

Captain Robert Falcon Scott

[1868-191*] and his


Antarctic.
fl

men

at

Hut

Point in the

Sir Galahad [1842], that eternal lack of pence, Which vexes public men.

See Burns, p. 494a, and Halleck, p. 565!). See Pindar, p. 790, and note.

Will Waterproofs Ly
ol

647

TENNYSON
Cophetua sware a royal beggar maid
queen!"
*

oath;
shall

Come
be

from

the

dying

moon,

and

"This

my
st.

blow,

The Beggar Maid

[1842],

Blow him again to me; While my little one, while


one, sleeps.

my

pretty

Break, break, break, On thy cold gray stones, Sea! And I would that my tongue could

The

Sweet ana Low,

Princess, pt. Ill [song,


st.

i]

utter

The

The

thoughts that arise in me.


his
sister

on castle walls And snowy summits old in story:


splendor
falls

O well for the fisherman's boy,


That he shouts with
at

The long light shakes across the And the wild cataract leaps in
flying,

lakes,

glory.

O well for the sailor lad,


That he
sings in his boat on the bay!

pky!

Blow, bugle, blow, set the wild echoes

Blow, bugle; answer, echoes, dying, dying, dying. Ib. IV [song,

And the stately ships go on To their haven under the


But

The Splendor Falls,


st.

hill;

for

the touch of a vanished

i]

And

hand, the sound of a voice that is still! Break, Break, Break [1842], st. 1-3
is

The

horns of Elfland faintly blowing.


Ib.
[st.

2]

But the tender grace of a day that dead Will never come back to me.
Ib.
st.

Love, they die in yon rich sky, They faint on hill or field or river: Our echoes roll from soul to soul,

And grow
4

forever

and

forever.

Ib.

[st.

3]

With

And

prudes for proctors, dowagers for deans, sweet girl-graduates in their golden

Tears, idle tears,

know not what

they

hair.

mean, Tears from the depth of some


despair Rise in the heart,
eyes,

divine
to the

The

Princess [1847]. Prologue,


I.

and gather

141

And

rosebud set with little willful thorns, sweet as English air could make Ib. 1.153 her, she.
kiss

And

In looking on the happy autumn fields, thinking of the days that are no more.
Ib. [song, Tears, Idle Tears,
st. i]

When we
And

out with those again with tears!


fall

we

love

Dear

as

remember'd

16. pt. II [song,

As Through the
Land, I
8]

kisses after death,

And

sweet as those by hopeless fancy


feign'd

And quoted
long

odes,

and

jewels five-wordsforefinger of all


Ib.
I.

On

lips that are for others;

deep

as love,
all re-

Deep

as first love,

and wild with

That on the stretched

Time
Sparkle forever*

gret;

Death

355

more.

in Life, the days that are no Ib. [st. 4]

Sweet and low, sweet and low,


of the western sea, Low, low, breathe and blow, Wind of the western sea! Over the rolling waters go,
See Shakespeare, 10875.
l

Wind

Swallow, South,
eaves,

Swallow,
fall

flying,

flying

Fly to her, and

upon her
what
I

gilded
tell to

And
p.

tell her,

tell

her,

p.

2*33,

and Ballads,

thee.

Ib. [song,

O Swallow, st. i]

TENNYSON

Man

is

the hunter;

woman

is

his game.

The moan
elms,

of

doves in

immemorial

The

Princess, pt.

V, L 147

Man

for the field

and woman for the

And murmuring
The

of innumerable bees.
Z.

hearth: Man for the sword and for the needle she: Man with the head and woman with

Princess, pt. VII,

203

Happy he

With

the heart:

such a mother! faith in womankind Beats with his blood, and trust in all
things high

Man

to

command and woman

to obey;

All else confusion.

Ib.

L 427

Comes

easy to him;
fall,

and though he

trip

and

Home they brought her


She nor swoon'd nor

warrior dead.
utter'd cry:

He

shall

not blind his soul with clay.


Ib.
Z.

All her maidens, watching, said, "She must weep or she will die."
Ib.

308

Some
Some

sense of duty, something of a

VI
i]

[song,

Home They
Warrior,

faith,

Brought
St.

Her
so hard

reverence for the laws ourselves


force

have made,

Some
Ib.
fate
I.

The woman is

patient

to

change them

Upon
Ask
I

the

woman.

205

when we will, Some civic manhood


crowd.
Believing where

me

no more: thy

and mine are

firm against the Ib. Conclusion, Z. 54

seal'd:

strove against the stream and all in vain: Let the great river take me to the main:

In

we cannot prove. Memoriam [1850]. Prologue,


st. i

Our
Let

little

No
Ask

more, dear love,


yield;

for at a

touch

systems have

their day. Ib. st.

me no more.
Ib.

VII

[song,

Ask Me No More,
St.

knowledge
more,

grow from more to

3]
the

Now

sleeps the crimson petal,

now

But more of reverence in us dwell; That mind and soul, according well, May make one music as before.
Ib. st.

white;

Nor waves
walk;

the cypress in the palace


the gold
fin in

held

Nor winks
font:

the porphyry

To
Of
I

truth, with him who sings one clear harp in divers tones,
it

That men may


stones
their

rise

on stepping-

The

firefly

wakens: waken thou with

me.
Ib. [song,

dead

Now Sleeps
all

the Crimson Petal, st. i]

selves to higher things. 1 Ib. i, st. i

Now
And

lies

the Earth

Danae

to the

stars,
all

thy heart

lies

open unto me.


Ib.
[st.

sometimes hold it half a sin To put in words the grief I feel; For words, like Nature, half reveal And half conceal the Soul within.
Ib. 5,
st.

3]

Sweet is every sound, Sweeter thy voice, but every sound


sweet;

is

But, for the unquiet heart and brain use in measured language lies; The sad mechanic exercise,

Myriads of

rivulets

hurrying through
p. 6s 3 a.

St.

Augustine, p. i4ya, and Longfellow.

the lawn,

649

TENNYSON
n
n
is

the hunter;

woman

is

his

game.

The moan
elms,

of

doves

in

immemorial

The

Princess, pt.

V, L 147
for the

for the field

and woman

And murmuring
The

of innumerable bees.

hearth: .n for the sword and for the needle she: in with the head and woman with the heart:
in to

Princess, pt. VII,

I 203

Happy he

With

such a mother! faith in

womanall

kind
Beats with his blood, and trust in
things high

command and woman

else confusion,

to obey; Ib. I. 427

Comes

easy to him;
fall,

and though he

trip

and

ime they brought her warrior dead. She nor swoon'd nor utter'd cry: her maidens, watching, said, "She must weep or she will die."
[

He

shall

not blind his soul with


Ib.

clay.

I 308

Some

sense of duty, something of a

Ib.

VI
i]

[song,

Home They
Warrior,

faith,

Brought
st.

Her
so hard

Some

reverence for the laws ourselves


to

have made,

The woman
pon the woman.
;k

is

Ib.

I.

205

Some patient force when we will, Some civic manhood


crowd.
Believing where

change them

firm against the


I.

me no
seal'd:

more: thy fate and mine are

16. Conclusion,

54

strove against the stream vain:


it

and

all

in

we cannot prove. In Memoriam [1850]. Prologue,


st. i

the great river take me to the main: o more, dear love, for at a touch I
yield;

Our
Let

little

systems have

their day. 16.

st.

sk me no more.
16.

knowledge grow from more to


more,

VII

[song,

Ask Me

No More,
st.

3]

bw
for

sleeps the crimson petal,

now

the

But more of reverence in us dwell; That mind and soul, according well, May make one music as before.
Ib.
I
st.

white;

waves the cypress in the palace


walk;

held

for

winks the gold


font:

fin in

the porphyry

To

truth, with him who sings one clear harp in divers tones,
it

That men may


stones

rise

on stepping-

Tie firefly

wakens: waken thou with

me.
Ib. [song,

Of
I

their

dead selves to higher things. 1


Ib. i,
st.
i

Now

Sleeps the Crim-

son Petal,

st.

i]

fow
tod

lies

the Earth

all

Danae

to the

stars,
all

thy heart

lies

open unto me.


ib.[*.. 3 ]

sometimes hold it half a sin To put in words the grief I feel; For words, like Nature, half reveal And half conceal the Soul within.
16. 5,
st.

Sweet is every sound, Sweeter thy voice, but every sound is sweet; Myriads of rivulets hurrying through
the lawn,

But, for the unquiet heart and brain use in measured language lies; The sad mechanic exercise,

See

St.

Augustine, p, i47a, and Longfellow,

p. 6* 3 a.

649

TENNYSON
Like dull narcotics numbing pain.

Hold thou the good; define


st.

it well;

In Memorianit

5,

To

evening, but

Never morning wore some heart did break.


16. 6, st. 2

For fear divine Philosophy Should push beyond her mark, and

be
Procuress to the Lords of Hell.

And from his ashes may be made The violet of his native land. 1
Ib. 18,
st. i

In Memoriam, 53, st 4

Oh

yet

we

trust that

somehow good
ill,

Will be the

final goal of

do but sing because I must, And pipe but as the linnets sing. 2
I

16. 54,

st. i

Ib. 21,

st.

But what am

I?

Who

keeps the keys of

all

Ib. 23,

the creeds. st. 2

An infant An infant And with no

crying in the night: crying for the light: 1 language but a cry.
16.
st.

And Thought

leap'd out to

wed with
with

Thought Ere Thought could wed


Speech.

itself

16. st.
lost loved at all.3

So careful of the type she seems, So careless of the single life.


16. 55,
st.

Tis better

to have loved

and

Than
Her

never to have

The
st.

great world's altar-stairs,

16. 27,

eyes are

homes of

silent prayer. 16. 32, st. i

That slope through darkness up to God. 16. st. 4


Nature, red in tooth and claw.
16. 56,
st.

Short swallow-flights of song, that dip Their wings in tears, and skim away.
16. 48,
st.

The
That

sweetest soul

ever look'd with

Be near me when my

human

eyes.
st.

light

is

low.

16. 50, st. i

16. 57,

And Time, a maniac scattering dust, And Life, a Fury slinging flame.
16.
st.

Who breaks his birth's


And And

invidious bar, the of skirts grasps happy chance, breasts the blows of circumstance.
16. 64,
st.

indeed desire the dead Shouid still be near us at our side?


16. 51,
l

Do we

st. i

So many worlds, so much to do, So little done, such things to be. 2


16. 73,
st. i

See

Shakespeare,

p.

266a,

and

Fitzgerald,

p. 62gb.
2

Der

Ich singe, wie der Vogel singt in den Zweigen wohnet.

O last regret, regret can die!


16. 78,
st.

GOETHE, Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship [1786-1830], bk. 11, ch. ii 8 Say what you will, 'tis better to be left than never to have been loved. CONGREVE, The Way of the World [1700], act II, sc. 6 Better to love amiss than nothing to have loved. CRABBE, Tales [1812], XIV, The Struggles of Conscience What voice did on my spirit fall,
I crost? Peschiera, 'Tis better to have fought and lost Than never to have fought at all.

God's finger touch 'd him, and he


16. 85,

slept.
st.

And
1
2

Fresh from brawling courts dusty purlieus of the law.


16. 89,
st.

when thy bridge

How How

See Pliny, p.
little I

have gained, vast the unattained.

ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH

[1819-1861], Peschiera

WHTTTIER [1807-1892],

My

Triumph,
st.

650

TENNYSON
There lives more faith in honest doubt, 1 Believe me, than in half the creeds.
In Memoriam, 96,
st.

The

wrinkled sea beneath

him

crawls;

He

seems so near, and yet so

far.

He watches from his mountain walls, And like a thunderbolt he falls. The Eagle [1851]
This laurel greener from the brows Of him that utter'd nothing base. 1 To the Queen [1851], st. 2

16. 97,

st 6

Ring

out, wild bells, to the wild sky! 16. 106, st.

Ring out the old, ring in the new, Ring, happy bells, across the snow:

And

Broad-based upon her people's will, compassed by the inviolate sea.


16.
st.

The
Ring

going, let him go; out the false, ring in the true.

year

is

16.

st 2

Ring in the nobler modes of

life,

Bury the Great Duke With an empire's lamentation, Ode on the Death of the Duke of

With

sweeter manners, purer laws.


16. st.

Wellington [1852],

st. i

The
Rich

last great

Englishman

is

low.
16.
st.

Ring out old shapes of foul disease, Ring out the narrowing lust of gold; Ring out the thousand wars of old, Ring in the thousand years of peace.
Ring in the valiant

in saving

common

sense,

And,
In

man and

O
free,

as the greatest only are, his simplicity sublime.


all

good gray head which

men

knew!

hand; Ring out the darkness of the land, Ring in the Christ that is to be.
16.
st.

The

16. st.

larger heart, the kindlier

4
of

O O

iron nerve to true occasion true, fall'n at length, that tower

7, 8

The blind hysterics

strength Which stood

of the Celt.
16. 109, st.

four-square

to

all

the
16.

winds that blew.

Not once
story

or twice in our

And thus he bore without abuse The grand old name of gentleman,
Defamed by
every charlatan,
all

rough island
to

The

path
glory.

of

duty was the way


16.
st.

And soiled

with

ignoble use. 16. 111,


that weight

st.

Wearing

all

Speak no more of his renown. Lay your earthly fancies down,

Of

learning lightly like a flower. 16. Conclusion,

And God
st.

in the vast cathedral leave

him.
st.

10

accept him, Christ receive him.


16.

9
a

One God, one law, one element, And one far-off divine event, To which the whole creation moves.
16. st.

And

yet,

my

Lords, not well: there

is

higher law.

The Third
36

of February, 1852, St. 2


all.

He clasps the crag with crooked hands; Close to the sun in lonely lands, Ring'd with the azure world he stands.
1-

We are not cotton-spinners


Half a league, half a league, Half a league onward,
1

16.

st.

never doubted never half believed. Where doubt there truth is 'tis her shadow.
P. J. BAILEY [1816-1902], Festus:

Who

Country

A Town

Wordsworth, Tennyson's predecessor as poet

laureate.

65,

TENNYSON
All in the valley of death

Rode the six hundred. The Charge of the


"Forward, the Light Brigade!" Was there a man dismay'd?
16. st. 2

For a breeze of morning moves, And the planet of Love is on high, Beginning to faint in the light that she
loves

On a bed

of daffodil sky.
I,

Maud, pt

sec. xxii,

si.

Theirs not to

Someone had blundered: make reply,


16.

All night have the roses heard The flute, violin, bassoon; All night has the casement jessamine
stirr'd

Theirs not to reason why, Theirs but to do and die.

Till a silence fell

Cannon to right of them, Cannon to left of them, Cannon in front of them


Volley'd and thunder'd.
Into the jaws of death, Into the mouth of hell
16. st. 3

the dancers dancing in tune; with the waking bird, And a hush with the setting moon.
16.
st.

To

Queen

rose of the rosebud garden of 16. st. girls. 9


fallen a splendid tear the passion-flower at the gate. coming, my dove, my dear;

There has

Rode the
I

six

hundred.

From
16.

come from haunts of coot and hern, I make a sudden sally


fern,
st. i

She is She

is

coming,

my

life,

my
is

fate;
is

The

red rose

cries,

"She

near, she

And sparkle out among the To bicker down a valley.


The Brook
For

near"; And the white rose weeps, "She


late"-

is

[1855], song,

men may come and men may


I

go,

But

go on forever.
icily

16.
regular,

st.

The larkspur listens, "I hear, I hear"; And the lily whispers, "I wait."
She
is

Faultily faultless,

splen-

coming,
it

didly null,

Were

my own, my sweet; ever so airy a tread,

Dead

perfection,

no more.
[1855], &
1>

My heart would hear her and beat,


sec i*

Maud

Were

That jeweled mass of millinery, That oiled and curled Assyrian Bull.
16. vi, st.

My
6

it earth in an earthy bed; dust would hear her and beat,

Had Would

I lain

for a century dead;

start

and tremble under her


in purple

feet,

One

still

strong

man

in a blatant land.

And blossom

and
16.

red.
st.

16. x,

st.

10, 11

And ah

for a

That the man

man to arise in me, I am may cease to


from head to
16.
foot,

Ah
be!

Christ, that it were possible For one short hour to see


souls

16. st.

The

we

loved, that they

might

tell

us

Gorgonized

me

With

a stony British stare.


Kiii, st.

What and where they be.


16. II, fv,
st.

Come

And

after

into the garden,

Maud,

many

summer

dies

the

swan.

For the black bat, night, has flown,

Tithonus [1860], I 4

Come into the I am here at


1

garden, Maud, the gate alone.


16. xxii,
st. i

Here at the quiet limit of the world.


16.
Z.

Wearing

the white flower of a blame-

See Bosquet, p. 6555.

less life,

TENNYSON
Before a thousand peering littlenesses, In that fierce light which beats upon a
But, friend, to

me
fault at

He

is

all

fault

who hath no

And

throne, blackens every blot. Idylls of the King [1859-1885], dedication, L 24


is

all.

For who

loves

me must have

a touch of

earth.
Idylls of the

King, Lancelot

Man's word
16.

God

in

man.
of Arthur, L 132

and Elaine, L 131


In

The Coming

me

Large divine

and comfortable words.1


Ib.

No
Of
The

greatness,

there dwells save it be

some
I

far-off

I 267
I.

touch
greatness to
great.

know

well

am
/.

not

Clothed in white samite, mystic, wonderful. 2


Ib.

284
fol-

shackles of

447 an old love straitened

16.

Live pure, speak true, right wrong, low the King Else, wherefore born?
Ib.

him, His honor rooted in dishonor stood,

And

faith unfaithful true.

117 her slender was nose Lightly


Tip-tilted like the petal of a flower. Ib. I

Gareth and Lynette,

kept

him

falsely

Z.

16. I

870

Sweet

is

true love

though given in

vain,

in vain;

574

And

sweet
pain.

is

death

who

puts an end to
16.
Z.

Our hoard

is

little,

but our hearts are


of Geraint,

1000
a

great. Ib.

He makes no
The Marriage
foe.

friend

who

never
16.

made
Z.

1082

1.352

For

man
fate.3

is

man and

1 Figs out of thistles.

master of his 16. I 355

16.

The Last Tournament, L 356

The

greater

man

the greater courtesy.


16.
Z.

The useful
It is

trouble of the rain.

628

16. Geraint

and Enid, L 770

The vow
itself.

that binds too strictly snaps


16.
Z.

the

little rift

That by and by

will

within the lute, make the music

652
702

And

mute, ever widening slowly silence all. 16. Merlin and Vivien, L 386

For courtesy wins As valor may.

woman
idle,

all

as well
Z.

16.

For manners are not

Blind and naked Ignorance unDelivers brawling judgments,

Of loyal

but the fruit nature and of noble mind.


16. Guinevere,
Z.

333

ashamed,

On
For

all

things
at

all

day long.
differ as

16.

Z.

662

To love one maiden only, cleave to her, And worship her by years of golden
deeds.
16.
Z.

men

most

Heaven and

472
a

Earth,

No more subtle master under Heaven


best, as Heaven 16. Z. 812

But women, worst and and Hell.

Than
Not

is

the

maiden

passion

for

maid,
only to keep

Elaine the fair, Elaine the lovable, Elaine, the lily maid of Astolat. 16. Lancelot and Elaine, L
1

down

the base in

man,
i

Hear what comfortable words our Saviour

Christ saith unto all

who

truly turn to

him.

But teach high thought, and amiable words And courtliness, and the desire of fame,
a

Book
2

of

Common

Also The See Sail us t, p. n6a, and note.

Prayer, Holy Communion Passing of Arthur, L 199.

Ye

shall

know them by

their

fruits.

Do

men

gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles? Matthew j:x6

653

TENNYSON

And

love of truth, and

all

that makes

He
That a
lie

said likewise

man.
Idylls of the King,

which

is

half a truth
lies,

is

ever

the blackest of

Guinevere,

I.

475

Let no

man dream but

that

love thee
16.

still.

L 557

That a lie which is all a lie may be met and fought with outright, But a lie which is part a truth is a
harder matter to fight.

The

days will grow to weeks, the weeks


to months,

The Grandmother
Dosn't thou
Proputty,
'ear

[1864], st 8
-

The months will add themselves and make the years, The years will roll into the centuries, And mine will ever be a name of scorn.
16.
Z.

my

'erse's legs, as

they

canters awaay?

proputty,
I 'ears

proputty

that's

what

619
is

'em saay. Northern Farmer:


for
is!

New

Style
i

To where beyond
I

these voices there

[1869], **

16. L 692 peace. found Him in the shining of the stars, mark'd Him in the flowering of His
fields,

Doant thou marry


goa wheer

munny, but
16,
st.

munny

But

in His ways with not.


16.

men

find

Him

The

Passing of Arthur, L 9

For why

is all

As

if

some

lesser

around us here god had made the


it

thou for He hears, and Spirit with Spirit can meet Closer is He than breathing, and nearer than hands and feet. The Higher Pantheism [1869], st. 6

Speak to

Him

world,

But had not


would?

force to shape

as

he

Flower in the crannied wall, pluck you out of the crannies, I hold you here, root and all, in
hand,
flower

my

And
The

L 13 slowly answer'd Arthur from the


16.

Little

but

if

could underall,

barge: old order changeth, yielding place to new;

stand

What
I

you

are, root

and

and

all

in

all,

And God fulfills himself in many ways, Lest one good custom should corrupt the world. 1 16. /. 407
More things are wrought by prayer Than this world dreams of. Wherefore,
let thy voice Rise like a fountain for
1

should

know what God and man is. Flower in the Crannied Wall

At

Flores

And

in the Azores Sir Richard Grenville lay, a pinnace, like a fluttered bird,
flying

me

day.

night and 16. L 414


16.

came

''Spanish ships of

from far away; war at sea! we have


[1878],
st. i

From
Cast

the great deep to the great deep


goes.

sighted fifty-three!"

he
all

your cares

L 445 on God; that anchor


[1864], L 222
a card.

The Revenge
I

holds.

Enoch Arden
Insipid as the queen

To

should count myself the coward left them, my Lord Howard,


these
Inquisition

if I

dogs

and the
16. st 2

devildoms of Spain.

upon

Aylmer's Field [1864], I 28

The

The worst

is

2 yet to come.

Revenge ran on sheer into the heart of the foe. 16. st. 5
little

Sea Dreams [1864],


iAlso in Morte
8

I.

301
\

All the

charm of

all

the Muses often


st.

d' Arthur

[184*].

See Browning, p. 666a.

flowering in a lonely word. To Virgil [1882],

654

TENNYSON
Cleave ever doubt.
to

CHANNING
and be the measurements more or less still our Country, to be cherished in all our hearts, to be defended by all our
hands.

the sunnier

side

of

The Ancient Sage

[1885],

I 68

That man's the best Cosmopolite

Who
After

loves his native country best. Hands All Round [1885], L 3


it,

Toast at Faneuil Hall [Fourth of July, 1845]

A star
every

for every State,

and a State

for

follow

it,

star.

Follow the Gleam. 1 Merlin and the Gleam [1889],


Sunset and evening
star,

Address on Boston
St.

Common [1862]

SAMUEL DODGE
fl.

And one clear call for mel And may there be no moaning
bar,

1868
Title of

of the

People Will Talk.

poem

When
But

put out to
a
tide

sea,

HENRY ALFORD
1810-1871

such
asleep,

as

moving seems

Too

full for

sound and foam,

Come, ye thankful people, come,


All

When

that which drew from out the

boundless deep

Turns again home. Crossing the Bar [1889],


Twilight and evening
bell,

st. i,

Raise the song of Harvest-home; is safely gathered in, Ere the winter storms begin. Come, Ye Thankful People,

Come

[1844]

And
I

after that the dark.

16.

st.

PHINEAS TAYLOR

my hope When I have crossed the bar.


to see

Pilot face to face


16.
st.

BARNUM
1810-1891

There's a sucker born every minute. Attributed

ROBERT CHARLES WINTHROP


1809-1894
whether bounded by Our Country the St. John's and the Sabine, or how3 or described, ever otherwise bounded
lfThe

PIERRE BOSQUET
1810-1861
It is

not war. 1 magnificent, but it is On the charge of the Light Brigade at Balaklava [October
25, 1854]

Gleam

signifies

in

my poem
From

the

poetic imagination. TENNYSON, Alfred, Lord Tennyson,

higher

HALLAM A Memoir

[1897], vol. II, p. 366 Follow, follow, follow the gleam, Banners unfurled o'er all the world.

WILLIAM HENRY CHANNING


1810-1884
content with small means; to seek elegance rather than luxury, and refinement rather than fashion; to be worthy, not respectable, and wealthy, not rich; to study hard, think quietly,
live

Follow, follow, follow the gleam Of the chalice that is the Grail. SALLIE HUME DOUGLAS [1923], Follow the Gleam, refrain
a
3

To

See Ennius, p. io6b.

bounded on the north States by the Aurora Borealis, on the south by the

The United

east precession of the equinoxes, on the primeval chaos, and on the west by the

by the

Day

of

talk gently, act frankly; to listen to stars


i

Judgment. JOHN FISKE [1842-1901], Bounding the United States

C'est magnifique, mais ce n'est pas la guerre. See Tennyson, p. 6ssa.

655

CHANNING
and
birds,

POPE LEO
currents

XIII

to

babes and sages, with


all cheerfully,

of

life

must

call

into

life

open heart; to bear

do

all

fresh thoughts along its shores.

never. In bravely, await occasions, hurry a word, to let the spiritual, unbidden

In the

New

York Tribune [1846]

and unconscious, grow up through the common. This is to be my symphony.

For precocity some great price is always demanded sooner or later in life,
Diary.

My
SIR FRANCIS

Symphony

From THOMAS WENT-

HASTINGS DOYLE
his fellow roughs,

HIGGINSON, Life of Margaret Fuller Ossoli [1884], ch. 18


Genius will live and thrive without training, but it does not the less reward
the watering pot and pruning knife.
Ib.
I

WORTH

1810-1888
Last night,

among

He

jested,

quaffed, and swore;

A drunken private of the Buffs,

Who never looked before.


He stands

accept the

universe. 1

Attributed

Today, beneath the foeman's frown,

Ambassador from

in Elgin's place, Britain's crown,


all

ELIZABETH CLEGHORN GASKELL


1810-1865

And

type of

her race.
st. i

The

Private of the Buffs,

A man

is

so in the

way

in the house.
i

Ay, tear his body limb from limb, Bring cord, or axe, or flame, He only knows that not through him
Shall

Cranford [1851-1853], ch.

A
2
111

little

England come

to

shame.
Ib.
st.

through

life

credulity helps very smoothly.

one

on

Ib.ch.ii
not
listen to reason.
.

Reason
else has

FERDINAND FREILIGRATH
1810-1876

always means got to say.

what someone

Ib. ch. 14

Oh

love, as

1 long as you can love. Der Liebe Dauer [1830]

JAMES SLOAN GIBBONS


1810-1892

MARGARET FULLER
1810-1850
I

We are coming,
I

Father Abraham, three hundred thousand more. Three Hundred Thousand

myself

am more

divine than any

More

[i862],

2 st.

see.

Letter to

Emerson [March

i,

POPE LEO XIII [GIOACCHINO PECCI]


1810-1903
has by nature the right to possess property as his own.

It does not follow because many books are written by persons born in America that there exists an American literature. Books which imitate or represent the thoughts and life of Europe do not constitute an American literature. Before such can exist, an original idea must animate this nation and fresh
1

Every

man

Rerwn
letter

Novarum

on the condition
15, 1891]

[encyclical of labor,

May
comment
Song Army.
a

ifiy GodI she'd better.


to

CARLYLE'S reported

See

Anonymous,

Pewigiiium

Veneris,

p.

help raise volunteers for the Union

1503.

6 6

POPE LEO
It is impossible to

XIII

SEARS

reduce

human

so-

ciety to

one

level.

Kerum Novarum
one thing to have a right to the to possession of money, and another have a right to use money as one
It
is

man, the seed however broadcast will catch somewhere and produce its hundredfold. Discourse of Matters Pertainof

ing to Religion [1842]

pleases.

16.

Truth stood on one side and Ease on 16. the other; it has often been so.

WILLIAM MILLER
1810-1872

Man

never

falls

so low that

he can

Wee

Willie Winkie rins through the

see nothing higher than himself. Lesson for the Essay,

Day

town,
Upstairs
Tirlin'

and

downstairs, in his nicht-

All

men

desire to

A Sermon
A
democracy

be immortal. on the Immortal

gown,
at

Life

the window, cryin' at the


in their bed? for
it's

[September 20, 1846]


that is a government the people, by all the people, for 1 of course, a governall the people; ment of the principles of eternal justice, the unchanging law of God; for shortness' sake I will call it the idea of FreeThe American Idea 2 [1850] dom.
of
all

lock,

"Are the weans

now ten

o'clock."

Willie

Winkie

ALFRED DE MUSSET
1810-1857
Doubt,
if

you

will,

the being

who

loves

Woman

you,
or dog, but never doubt love
itself.

EDMUND HAMILTON
SEARS
1810-1876

Premieres Poesies [1829-1835], La Coupe et les L&vres


I

have come too


old.

late into a century too

Poesies Nouvelles [1835-1852], Rolla

came upon the midnight clear, That glorious song of old, From Angels bending near the earth
It

The most
liest
I

know

despairing songs are the loveof all, immortal ones composed only
Ib.

of tears.

La Nuit de Mai
1

To touch their harps of gold; "Peace on the earth, good will to men From Heaven's all gracious King." The world in solemn stillness lay To hear the angels sing.
The AngeFs Song
[1850],
st.

Do

not

trifle

with love.
Title of a

comedy

[1834]

How
painful

and also glorious it is to be an exception.

how
I

Wycliffe, p. iBsb; Webster, p. Garrison, p. 6i6a; and Lincoln, p, 6393. Parker used the same phrase in a speech delivered in Boston [May 31, 1854] and in a sermon

Le Merle Blanc.

Herndon

in Music Hall, Boston [July 4, 1858]. William H. visited Boston and on his return to
Illinois,

Springfield,

took with him some


addresses. In his
65,

of

THEODORE PARKER
1810-1860
Truth never yet
streets; it
1

Parker's sermons

and
p.

Abraham
says

Lincoln,

vol.

II,

Herndon

that

fell

dead in the
with the soul

Lincoln marked with pencil the portion of the Music Hall address, "Democracy is direct selfgovernment, over all the people, by all the
people, for all the people." 3 Speech at the New England

has such

affinity

Anti-Slavery

On ne

badine pas avec 1'amour.

Convention, Boston [May 29, 1850].

657

TOPPER

PHILLIPS

MARTIN FARQUHAR TUPPER


1810-1889
Error
a hardy plant: it flourished! in every soil. Proverbial Philosophy [18381842]. Of Truth in Things False
is

HORACE GREELEY
1811-1872

widow

almost any

of doubtful age will marry sort of a white man.

Letter to Dr.

Rufus Wilmot
Griswold

Well-timed

silence

hath
Ib.

more

elo-

quence than speech.

Of

Discretion

good book is the best of friends, the same today and forever. 16. Of Reading Nature's own Nobleman, friendly and
frank r
Is

If, on a full and final review, my life and practice shall be found unworthy of my principles, let due infamy be heaped on my memory; but let none be thereby led to distrust the principles to which I

man

with his heart in his hand! Nature's Nobleman [1844], st.

proved recreant, nor yet the" ability of some to adorn them by a suitable life and conversation. To unerring time be all this committed. Statement [1846]. From JAMES

PARTON, Life of Horace Greeley

JOHN BRIGHT
1811-1?
of Death has been abroad the land; you may almost throughout hear the beating of his wings. Speech, House of Commons [February 23, 1855]

The
you

best business you can go into

will find

on your

father's

The Angel

his workshop. If you friends to aid you,

farm or have no family

in or

and no prospect

opened to you there, turn your face to the great West, 1 and there build up a

Force

not a remedy. Speech, Birmingham


is
is

home and fortune. To Aspiring Young Men.


The
illusion that times that

Ib.

Novem-

were

are

ber 16, 1880]

better than those that are, has probably

My

opinion

that the Northern


to

pervaded

all

ages.

States will

manage somehow

muddle

The American

Conflict

through. Said during the American Civil War. From JUSTIN MCCARTHY, Reminiscences [1899]

[1864-1866]

Wisdom
article

is

never dear, provided the

be genuine, Address on Agriculture^ Houston,


Texas [May 23, 1871]

FANNY FERN [SARA PAYSON PARTON]


1811-1872

WENDELL PHILLIPS
through Willis Parton
is

The way
his

to a man's heart

stomach. 1

1811-1884

We

live

under a government of

men

THfiOPHILE GAUTIER
1811-1872
Everything passes. Robust art alone is eternal. The bust outlasts the cita2 I/Art [1832] del.
1 See Byron, p. a Tout L'art

and morning newspapers. Speech [January 28, 1852]


Revolutions
are

not
is

made;
as

come.

revolution

they natural a

Le buste
Survit k la tit. See Dobson, p. fSab. * See J. B. L. Soule, p. 678b.

passe.

robuste

Seul a I'6ternit6;

658

PHILLIPS

THACKERAY
of ice presented a hopeless barrier be-

growth

as

an oak.

It

comes out of the


8,

past. Its foundations are laid far back.

Speech [January

1852]

tween her and her pursuer. Uncle Tom's Cabin [1852],


I [Topsy] 'spect I growed. think nobody never made me.

eft.

best use of laws is to teach men to trample bad laws under their feet.

The

Don't

Speech [April 12, 1852]


the Puritans gave the world was not thought, but action.

Ib. ch.

20

What

Fs wicked

I is. I's
it.

mighty wicked,
Ib.

Speech [December 21, 1855]


rock underlies only crops out here.

anyhow.

can't help

The

all

America;

it

Ib.

CHARLES SUMNER
1811-1874
There
is

One on God's
Every
last.

side

is

a majority. 1
if

Speech [November

1859]

the National

flag.

He must
upon
its

be

man
is

meets his Waterloo at


Ib.

cold, indeed, who can look folds rippling in the breeze

without

Truth
opinion

one forever absolute, but


truth
filtered

pride of country. If in a foreign land, the flag is companionship, and country


itself,

is

through the

with

all its

moods, the blood, the disposition of the


spectator.

Are

We

endearments. a Nation? [November


19, 1867]

Idols [October 4, 1859]

Difference of religion breeds more quarrels than difference of politics.

The
trust/'

phrase, "public office is a public has of late become common


1

Speech [November

7, 1860]

property.

Revolutions never go Speech [February 17, 1861]


Aristocracy
is

backward. 2

Speech, U.S. Senate [May 31, 1872]

always cruel.
tare [1861]

Address on Toussaint L'Ouver-

WILLIAM MAKEPEACE

THACKERAY
1811-1863

HARRIET BEECHER
STOWED
1811-1896
desperate across the river just in the dusk of twilight. The gray mist of evening, rising slowly from the river, enveloped her as she disappeared up the bank, and the swollen current and floundering masses
1

This

I set

down
fair

as a positive truth.

woman
retreat

with

opportunities,

and

Eliza

made

her

without a positive whom she likes. 2

hump, may marry

Vanity Fair [1847-1848],


voZ. I, eft.

Them's

my sentiments.

16.21

See Knox, p. i86b. z I know, and all the world knows, that revo-

Everybody in Vanity Fair must have remarked how well those live who are
comfortably and

8 We have seen an American woman write a novel of which a million copies were sold in all languages, and which had one merit, of speaking to the universal heart, and was read with equal interest to three audiences, namely, in the parlor, in the kitchen, and in the nursery of every house. EMERSON, Society and Solitude [1870]. Success

never go backward. WILLIAM HENRY SEWARD, Speech at Rochester on the Irrepressible Conflict [October 1858]
lutions

thoroughly in debt;

iSee Matthew Henry, p. 3860, and note. a I should like to see any kind of a man, distinguishable from a gorilla, that some good and even pretty woman could not shape a husband OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES, The Proout of.
fessor at the Breakfast-Table [1860] The whole world is strewn with snares, traps,

gins and pitfalls for the capture of men by BERNARD SHAW, Man and Superman women.
[1903], Epistle Dedicatory

659

THACKERAY

how they deny

themselves nothing; how are in their minds. and jolly easy they eft. 22 Vanity /unity Fair, vol. I,

they
tell

come by their deserts; but who can the mischief which the very virtuous do? The Newcomes [1853-1855],
eft.

HOW
Year.
I

to

Live

Well on Nothing

20

think
five

had
us

could be a good 1 thousand a year.


I

woman

if I

Ib. II, i

Ah! Vanitas vanitatum! Which of


is

This Bouillabaisse a noble dish is A sort of soup, or broth, or brew. Ballads [1855]. The Ballad of Bouillabaisse, st 2

happy

in this world?
or,

Which

of us

has his desire?

having

it, is

satisfied?

Christmas

is

here:
shrill,

Come,
box and

the children, let us shut up the puppets, for our play is


-

Winds
Icy

whistle
chill.

and

pkyed
is

out.

Ib 2 7
things
eft.

Little care Little

we;

we

fear

He who meanly
a Snob.

admires

mean

Weather without,
Sheltered about

The Book

of Snobs [1848],
2

Rake's Progress.

The Mahogany Tree. Ib. The Mahogany

Tree,

st.

Pendennis [1848-1850],
eft.
I

Away from
I've a

the world and


little

its toils

and
pair

19

[title]

its cares,

Yes,
Fribsbi.

am a fatal man, Madame To inspire hopeless passion is


^23
it's

snug
Ib.

kingdom up four

of

stairs.

my destiny.
Remember,
as easy to

The Cane-Bottom'd
here,

Chair,
st. i

marry a rich
16-

woman

as a

poor woman.

28

I sit

Of the Corporation of the Gooseof the Press ... of the fourth quill
estate.
3
.
.

Alone and merry at forty year, in the Gascon wine. Dipping my nose
Ib.

the great She has her never she sleeps. engine ambassadors in every quarter of the her courtiers upon every road. world Her officers march along with armies, and her envoys walk into statesmen's
.

There she

is

The Age

of

Wisdom,
utter;

st.

Werther had
Such
as

a love for Charlotte


first

words could never

Would you know how

he met her? butter. 1 and bread She was cutting 16. Sorrow of Werther, st. i

cabinets.

They are

ubiquitous.

Ib.

30

Tis not the dying


so hard,

Master Harry

for a faith that's every man of


'tis

done that every nation has 4 it that's difficult. to living up

the

There lived a sage in days of yore, And he a handsome pigtail wore; But wondered much and sorrowed more Because it hung behind him.
Ib.

Henry Esmond Tis strange what


a

[1852],
a

bfe, I, eft.

A Tragic Story

(from Adelbert
st. i

von Chamisso),
There were three
sailors of Bristol

woman
The
i

yet think

man may do, and him an angel.

City
bis-

B-7
wicked are wicked,
astray
-

Who
And
1

took a boat and went to sea. But first with beef and captain's
cuits

no doubt,
fall,

and they go

and they

anc

pickled pork they loaded she.


Ib. Little Billee,
st. i

See Huxley, p. 7*5 a of one o a The Rake's Progress is the title the famous series of paintings and engravings b)

Charlotte held a

brown
the

loaf in her hand, and


little

William Hogarth [1697-1764].


See Carlyle, p. 576a. * See Adlai E. Stevenson, p. io48b.

was cutting
in

slices for

ones

all

round

their age and appetite. proportion to GOETHE, The Sorrows of Werther [1774!

660

THACKERAY

BROWNING
Measure your mind's height by the
shade
it casts!

And

the youngest he was

little

Billee.
st.

Ballads. Little Billee,

Paracelsus, pt. Ill

To

"We've nothing

gorging Jack says guzzling Jimmy, left, us must eat we."


Ib.
st.

And

gain

Ever)* joy is gain is gain, however small.

16.

IV
16.

pedigree reaching as far back as

the Deluge.

Over the sea our galleys went.


I

The Rose and The book

the Ring [1855],


ch. 2

A privacy, an
I

give the fight up: let there be an end, obscure nook for me.

all

of female logic is blotted over with tears, and Justice in their courts is forever in a passion.

want

to

be forgotten even by God.


16.

The

Virginians

[i 857-1859],

Sidney's

self,

ch.

the starry paladin. Sordello l [1840], pt. I

not only to conquer, 16. but to be conquered.


like

Women

Would you have your songs Build on the human heart.


Any nose

endure?
16. II

Next to the very young, I suppose the very old are the most selfish. 16. 61
the doubt and darkness, Through the danger and long tempest of the war, I think it was only the American indomitable soul that releader's *
all

May
Day!

ravage with impunity a rose.


16.

VI

Faster and

more fast,

O'er night's brim, day boils at last. Pippa Passes [1841], introduction

mained
tire

entirely steady.
is

16.

90

To endure

greater than to dare; to

out hostile fortune; to be daunted

The year's at the spring And day's at the morn;


Morning's at seven;

by no difficulty; to keep heart when all have lost it; to go through intrigue spotless;

to forego even ambition


is

when
is

the

The hillside's dew-pearled; The lark's on the wing; The snail's on the thorn:
All's right

end

gained

who

can say this

not
92

greatness?

16.

God's in his heaven with the world. 2


isle

16. pt. I

Bravery never goes out of fashion.

The Four Georges

Some unsuspected
II

[1860],

in far-off seas. 16. II

George

ROBERT BROWNING
Sun-treader,
2

When

In the morning of the world, earth was nigher heaven than

1812-1889 life and light be thine


Pauline [1833]

now.
All service ranks the

16. Ill

forever!
I

With God, whose


worst,

same with God: puppets, best and


last

go to prove

my soul!

see

my way

as birds their trackless

Are we; there

is

no

nor

first.

way.
In

Paracelsus [1835], pt. I


his

16.

IV

some time,
arrive:

good time,

shall

There's a

woman

so purer

He
1
a

guides time!
George
Shelley.

me

and the

bird. In his

good
16.

like a dewdrop, she's than the purest. A Blot in the 'Scutcheon

[1842], act
*See Lombroso, p. 7703, note.
2

I, st.

Washington,

See Voltaire, p. 4173, and Whittier, p. 6260.

661

BROWNING

When

is

man
*

strong

until

he

feels

Rats!

alone?

They fought the dogs and


cats,

killed the

Colombe's Birthday [1842],


act III

You know, we French stormed


bon.
Incident of the French

Ratis-

Camp
5*. 1

And bit the babies in the cradles, And ate the cheeses out of the vats, And licked the soup from the cooks own ladles. The Pied Piper of Hamelin,
7

[1842],

st.

"You're

wounded!"

"Nay," the

sol-

With
In

dier's pride

fifty different

shrieking and squeaking sharps and flats.


Ib.

Touched to the
"I'm
killed, Sire!"

And
fell

quick, he said: his chief beside,

Smiling the boy

dead.
Ib. st.

When

the liquor's out, cannikin?

why

clink the

The
It's

That's

my

last

Duchess painted on the


i [1842], I

Flight of the Duchess [184$, st. 16

waU.

My Last Duchess
She had

a long lane that

knows no

turnings. Ib. st. 17

heart

how

shall I say?

too soon
Ib.
1.

made glad.

21

of silver he left us, Just for a handful to stick in his coat. riband a for Just

The lie was dead, And damned, and truth


stead.

We
stood

The Lost Leader * that had loved him

[1845],

st. i

so, followed

up
st.

in-

Count Gismond
Marching along,

[1842],

13

him, honored him, Lived in his mild and magnificent eye, Learned his great language, caught his
clear accents,

fifty-score strong,

Made him
die!

Great-hearted gentlemen, singing this song. Cavalier Tunes [1842], Marching Along,
st. i

our pattern to live and to


Ib.
us,

Shakespeare was of
us,

Milton was

for

Burns,
Boot, saddle, to horse, and away! 16. Boot and Saddle, refrain

Shelley, were with us watch from their graves!

they
Ib.

One more

devils'-triumph
to

and sorrow
in-

Morning, evening, noon and night,


"Praise

for angels,

God!" sang Theocrite. The Boy and the Angel

One more wrong


[1845],
st. i

man, one more


Ib.

sult to

God!

st. 2

Just

my

vengeance complete,
skirts,

Let him never come back to us! There would be doubt, hesitation and
pain,

The man
Stood

erect,

sprang to his feet, caught at God's


afraid!

and

Forced

prayed!
So, I

on our praise of twilight, glimmer

part

the

was

Never glad confident morning again!


st.

Instans Tyrannus [1845],

7
It

Ib.

Hamelin Town's in Brunswick, By famous Hanover city.

was

roses, roses all the

way.
st. i

The
I
st. i
1

Patriot [1845],
Joris,

The Pied
1

Piper of Hamelin
[1845],

sprang to the stirrup, and


he;

and

See Ibsen, p. 72gb,

Often assumed to refer to Wordsworth.

662

BROWNING
I

galloped, Dirck galloped, all three.

we

galloped

All be as before, Love,

They Brought the Good News from Ghent toAix [1845],


St. 1

How

Only

A Wtmm's

sleep!

Last

Word

[1855],
st. i

Where the apple reddens

And

into

the midnight

we

galloped
16.

Never pry
Lest

abreast.

The gray sea and the long black land; And the yellow half-moon large and
low.

we lose our Edens, Eve and I.

16. st. 5

Beautiful Evelyn

Hope is dead! Evelyn Hope [1855],


16.

st. i

Meeting

at

Night [1845],

st. 1

You
st.

will

wake, and remember, and unst.

Then

a mile beach.

of

warm,

sea-scented
16.

derstand.

Where the
smiles.

quiet-colored

end of evening

Round the cape


sea,

of a sudden

came the

Love

Among

And
And

the Ruins [1855],


st. i

the sun looked over the tain's rim:


straight

mounEarth's returns

was a path of gold for

him,

For whole centuries of


sin!

folly,

noise and
16. st. 7

And
Oh,

the need of a world of

men
[i

for

me.
to

Parting at

Morning

845]

be in England now that


in

April's
sees,

there,

This world, and the wrong Old Pictures in Florence [1855], st. 7
it

does.

And whoever wakes

England

some morning, unaware,


That the lowest boughs and the brush-

What's come to perfection perishes. Things learned on earth, we shall practice in

heaven:
least

wood sheaf Round the elm-tree


leaf,

Works done
bole are in tiny
sings cherishes.

rapidly,

Art most
16.
st.

17

While

the chaffinch orchard bough

on

the

Your ghost

will walk, you lover of trees, (If our loves remain)

In England

now!
Thoughts, from Abroad [1845], L i

In an English lane.

Home

De
Open my
heart,

Gustibus [1855],

st.

and you
it,

will see
i

Graved inside of
That's the wise thrush; he sings each song twice over, Lest you should think he never could
recapture

"Italy."
16.
st.

How well I know what I mean to do When the long dark autumn evenings
come.

The

first

fine careless rapture!

16.

Z.

12

By the

Fireside [1855],

st. i

Nobly, nobly Cape St. Vincent to the northwest died away; Sunset ran, one glorious blood-red, reeking into Cadiz Bay. Home Thoughts, from the Sea
[i8 45 ] 7
Let's
1.

O woman-country! 2 wooed not wed.


16. st. 6

Oh, the
is!

little

more, and how much


less,

it

And

the

little

and what worlds


16.
st.

away!
iSee Mary Tudor, p. i87b.
a

39

contend no more, Love, Strive nor weep:

Italy.

66 3

BROWNING
If

two

lives join, there is oft

a scar.

This high man, with a great thing to


pursue,

They are one and one, with a shadowy


third;

One

near one

is

too

far.

Dies ere he knows it. That low man goes on adding one to
one,

By the
Only
I

Fireside,

st.

46

discern

Infinite passion,

Of finite hearts

Two
This
is

and the pain that yearn. in the Campagna [1855], st. 12

a spray the Bird clung to,


it

His hundred's soon hit; This high man, aiming at a million, Misses an unit. should he That, has the world here need the next, Let the world mind him! This, throws himself on God, and unperplexed Seeking shall find Him. A Grammarian's Funeral [1855], L 113

Making

blossom with pleasure.


st-

Misconceptions [1855],

Escape me? Never


Beloved!

And inasmuch

as

While

am

feeling,

the East's
lo,

and you are you. Life in a Love [1855],


I,

gift,

**

Is

quick and transient


is

comes, and

To dry one's eyes and laugh at a fall, And baffled, get up and begin again.
Ib. st. 2

gone While Northern thought


durable.

is slow and Luria [1855], act

Less is more. 1

Ah, did you once see Shelley plain, And did he stop and speak to you, And did you speak to him again? How strange it seems, and new! x Memorabilia [1855], st. i

Andrea del Sarto [1855],


his grasp,

I.

78

Ah, but a man's reach should exceed

Or what's

a heaven for?

Ib.

Z.

97

Who knows but


night?

the world

may end

to-

Again the cousin's whistle!


love.

Go, my

Ib. last line

The

Last Ride Together [1855], st. 2

How
And

I shall lie through centuries, hear the blessed mutter of the

Fail I alone, in

words and deeds?

Why,

all

men

strive,

and who succeeds?


Ib.
st.

mass,

And
And

see

God made and

eaten

all

day

long,
feel the steady candle-flame,

Sing, riding's a joy!

For

me

I ride.

and

Ib. st.

taste

The instant made

Good
eternity

strong thick stupefying incense

And heaven

just prove that I and she Ride, ride together, forever ride?

smoke!
Saint Praxed's

Ib. st.

10

The Bishop Orders His Tomb at Church [1855],


80

1.

That low man


do, Sees it
1

seeks a

little

thing to

and does

it;

Truth that peeps Over the glass's edge when


done,
1

dinner's

And did you once find Browning plain? And did he really seem quite dear? And did you read the book again?

How

strange it seems, and queer. CHARLES WILLIAM STUBBS [1845-1912],

See Hesiod, p. 67!). G. E. so honest would be more honest. LESSING, Emilia Galotti [1732], act I, sc. 4 A popular aphorism with the architect Lud-

Not

Parody

wig Mies van der Rohe.

664

BROWNING

And body
noise

gets

its

sop and holds


little.

its

Tis not what man does which exalts him, but what man would dol
Saul,
st.
1

And

leaves soul free a

Bishop Blougram's Apology [1855], L 17


Just

The
Lily

on

lily,

sprinkled isles, that o'erlace the sea.

when we
set-touch,

are safest, there's a sun-

A
A

fancy from a flower-bell, someone's death, chorus-ending from Euripides. Ib. L 183
wise man's verdict outweighs all Ib. L 373 the fools*.
interest's

And

Cleon [1855], L i have written three books on the

soul,

One
Our

Proving absurd all written hitherto, And putting us to ignorance again. Ib. I 57 Rafael made a century of sonnets.

One Word More


Does he paint? he
fain

[1855],

on the dangerous edge of


the tender murderer,
atheist,

would write a
a

things.

poem
Does he write? he fain would paint
picture.

The honest thief, The superstitious


That

demirep

Ib. 8

loves and saves her soul in new French books. Ib. I. 396

Where my
also.

heart

lies, let

my

brain
16.

lie

14

You
I

call for faith:

God

show you doubt,


exists.

to prove that faith

be thanked, the meanest of his


creatures

The more
I say,

of doubt, the stronger faith,


16. L 601

Boasts two soul-sides, one to face the world with,

One
Oh, Oh,

to

show a

woman when he

loves

If faith

o'ercomes doubt.

her. 1
their Rafael of the dear

16.

17

When

the fight begins within himself, man's worth something. Ib. L 793
of soul was left, I wonder, when the kissing had to stop? A Toccata of Galuppi's [1855],
st.

Madonnas,

their

Wrote one song


sing
it,

Dante of the dread Inferno, and in my brain I


angel

What

Drew one
bosom!

borne, see, on

my

Ib. 19

14

Dear dead women, with such hair, too what's become of all the gold Used to hang and brush their bosoms? I feel chilly and grown old.
Ib.
st.

That out of three sounds he frame, not a fourth sound, but a star. A6* Vogler [1864]? st. 7

On

the earth the broken arcs; in the heaven, a perfect round.


Ib.
st.

15

The
Is

sin I

impute to each frustrate ghost the unlit lamp and the ungirt

The high

loin.

The
the Bust [1855], st. 82, 83

The Statue and

that proved too high, the heroic for earth too hard, passion that left the ground to lose
itself in

the sky.

16.

st.

10
is

Sorrow

is

How good is
All

hard to bear, and doubt

man's

life,

the mere living!

slow to clear,

how fit to employ


the heart and the soul and the
senses forever in joy!

Each
1

sufferer says his say, his

scheme of

the weal
2

and woe:

Saul [1855],
All's love, yet all's law.

st

16. st.

17

Vogler [1749-1824] was a composer, professor, Kapellmeister, and writer on music.

See Mark Twain, p. The Abt or Abb6 George Joseph

665

BROWNING
But God has a few of us
whispers in the ear;

whom

he
'tis

Fear death?

to feel the fog in

my
j

The

rest may reason and welcome; we musicians know.

The
No!

throat, mist in

my face.
Prospice [1864], I

Abt

Vogfer,
16.

st.
st.

11

The

C Major of this life.

12

me taste the like my peers,


let

whole of

it,

fare

The heroes
the
first

of old,

Grow old along with me! The hest is yet to be, The last of life, for which
made.

Bear the brunt, in a minute pay glad


life's arrears

was

Of pain,

darkness,

and

cold.
16.
Z.

Our times

are in his hand.

17
the

Rabbi Ben Ezra [1864],


Irks care the crop-full bird? Frets

st. i

Hold me but bond

safe

again within

doubt

Of one immortal look.


Eurydice to Orpheus [1864],
Z.

the

maw-crammed beast?
16. st.

Then welcome each rebuff That turns earth's smoothness rough, Each sting that bids nor sit nor stand,
but go!

This could but have happened once And we missed it, lost it forever. Youth and Art [1864], st. 17
All that
I

own

is

a print,

Be our

joys three parts pain! Strive, and hold cheap the strain;

An

etching, a mezzotint.

Likeness [1864],

st.

Learn, nor account the pang; dare, 16. st. 6 never grudge the throe!

He never saw, never before today, What was able to take his breath away.

What I
And

aspired to be, was not, comforts me.


I

A
Ib. st.

With
j

face to lose youth for, to occupy age the dream of, meet death with. 1
Ib.
st.

Therefore

summon

age
Ib. st. 13

To

We
Ib. st.

find great things are

made

of

little

grant youth's heritage.

things,

Look not thou down but up!


30
it

And little things go lessening Comes God behind them.

till

at last

Mr. Sludge, "The Medium"


[1864],
Z.

Such ever was


stoops.

love's way; to rise,

1112

Death in the Desert

'Tis because stiffish cock-tail, taken in

[1864],
Z.

134

Is

time, better for a bruise than arnica. 2


16.
Z.

Progress,

man's distinctive mark alone,

1478
is

Not

God's, and not the beasts':

God

is,

Boston's

hole,

the herring-pond
liberty

they

are;
is,

Man

partly

and wholly hopes


16.

to be.
Z.

wide,

586

V-notes are more.


Beside,
is

something,

still

Letting the rank tongue blossom into speech. Caliban upon Setebos [1864],

he the only

fool in the world?


16.
Z.

1523

It's It's

wiser being good than bad;


safer being

meek than
man might

fierce;

How

sad and bad and mad But then, how it was sweet!
1

it

was

It's fitter

being sane than mad.


that

*A
st.

face

die

for.

SIR

Confessions [1864],
See Swinburne, p. 776a.

ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes: A Scandal in Bohemia [1892]
2 See Irving, p.

666

BROWNING
is, a sun will pierce thickest cloud earth ever stretched; That, after Last, returns the First,

My

own hope
a

Compensate bad in man, absolve him


so:

The

Life's business

being just the

terrible

Though

wide

compass

round be

choice.

fetched;

The Ring and


pt.

That what began best can't end worst, Nor what God blessed once, prove
accursed.

the Book, X, The Pope

You

never

know what

life

means

till

Apparent Failure [1864],

st.

Lyric Love, half angel and half bird, And all a wonder and a wild desire.

you die; Even throughout life, 'tis death that makes life live, Gives it whatever the significance.
16.

The King and

the Boofe [18681869], fit. I

XI, Guido

The

truth was felt

Process which ble and time.

instinct here, saves a world of trou-

by

Save the squadron, honor France, love thy wife the Belle Aurore! Hervt Kiel [1871], st. 11

Ib. IV,

Tertium Quid
kind word to

A man
Which

in

armor

is

his armor's slave.

Herakks [1871]
In God's good time, does not always fall on Saturthe world looks for wages. 1
16.

'Twas a thief said the


Christ:

last

Christ took the kindness and forgave the theft.


Ib.

VI, Giuseppe Caponsacchi


difficult to read,
it is,

When

day

All poetry

is

The

sense of

anyhow. Ib. VII, Pompilia


ever pause for
16.

So absolutely good
hurts

is

truth, truth never

The

teller.

No work

begun

shall

Fifine at the Fair [1872],

st.

32

death!
Faultless to a fault.
16. IX, Juris

That

far

land
is

Where
Doctor JohannesBaptista Bottinius

every

man

we dream about, his own architect.

Red Cotton Nightcap Country

curious crime, the fine Felicity and flower of wickedness.

The

A secret's

safe

Ib.X, The Pope

'Twixt you, me, and the gatepost!

The Inn Album


Ignorance
is

[1875], II
sin.

What I
And

call

God,
16.

fools call Nature. 1

not innocence but

Ib.V
Have you found your life distasteful? My life did and does smack sweet.

Why

comes temptation, but for man to meet And master and make crouch beneath
his foot,

And

so

be pedestaled
shall

in

triumph?
16.

White
1

not neutralize the black,

nor good
Some
call it Evolution,

of pleasure wasteful? saved and hold complete. Do your joys with age diminish? When mine fail me, I'll complain. Must in death your daylight finish? sun sets to rise again. At the "Mermaid" [1876], st. 10

Was your youth


Mine
I

My

And
Some

others call it God. . . of us call it Autumn,

And

others call

it

God.
[1859-1924], Each in

W. H. CAWIUTH

x The old Tuscan proverb, Iddio non paga sabato [God does not pay Saturdays]. Life in Letters of William Dean Howells [1938], vol. to Mrs. James T. Fields II, p. 169, letter

His

Own Tongue

[February 83, 1903]

667

BROWNING
I

DICKENS

find earth not gray but rosy, but fair of hue. Heaven not

grim

And

Do I stoop? I pluck a posy. Do I stand and stare? x All's


"With
more!
this

Never the time and the place the loved one all together! Never the Time and the Place
[1883]

blue.
st.

At the "Mermaid,"
same key
his heart" Shakespeare unlocked

12

Help me

Old
2

once
less

for Life's with knowledge Death's New! Epitaph on Levi Lincoln

Thaxter, 1824-1884

Did

Shakespeare? Shakespeare he!

If

so,

the

minute's success pays the failure of


years.

House
Because a In time and place, since

[1876],

st.

10

Apollo and the Fates [1886],

st.

42

man

has shop to mind


flesh

One who
live,

never turned his back but

must

Needs

all life spirit lack

behind,

All stray thoughts, fancies fugitive, All loves except what trade can give? Shop [1876], st 20

marched breast forward, Never doubted clouds would break, Never dreamed though right were worsted, wrong would triumph, Held we fall to rise, are baffled to fight
better,

Good,

to forgive; Best, to forget!

Sleep to wake.

Living,

we

Asolando [1889]. Epilogue,

$t.

fret;

Dying,

we
La

live.

Saisiaz [1877]. Introduction, st.i

SAMUEL DICKINSON

BURCHARD
1812-1891

Sky
Till,

what a scowl of cloud near and far,

We
pose

Ray on

ray split the shroud: Splendid, a star! The Two Poets of Croisic [1878]. Introduction, st. 2

are Republicans, and don't proto leave our party and identify

ourselves

As

if

true pride

with the party whose antecedents have been Rum, Romanism, and Rebellion. Speaking jor a deputation of

Were

not also humble! Lines -written in an album [1882]


is

clergymen calling upon James the G. Elaine, Republican


Presidential

candidate,

New

Wanting

what?

York [October 29, 1884]

Summer redundant,
Blueness abundant, Where is the blot?

CHARLES DICKENS
[1883]

Wanting
Out of the wreck
i

Is

What?*

1812-1870
smattering of everything, and a knowledge of nothing. Sketches by Boz [1836-1837]. Tales, en. 3

I rise.

Jxion [1883]

What

is

this life

if,

full of care,

We

have-

no time to stand and stare? WILLIAM HENRY DAVIES [1871-1940],


Leisure

He had
its

*See Wordsworth, p. 5173. what? Browning is Riddle redundant, Baldness abundant, Sense, who can spot?

used the word [humbug] in Pickwickian sense. Pickwick Papers [1836-1827],


ch. i

"An
[April 21, 1883]

observer of

human

nature,

sir,"

ANONYMOUS,

in

Punch

said

Mr. Pickwick.

Ib. 2

668

DICKENS
"It wasn't the wine/' murmured Mr. Snodgrass, in a broken voice. "It was the salmon." Pickwick Papers, ch. 8
I
I

only

boys,

know two sorts of boys. Mealy and beef-faced boys.


Oliver Twist, ch. 10

There's light enough for


to do.

wot

I've got

wants to make your


I

flesh creep.

li.

47

Ib.

Can

unmoved

see thee dying


16.

On
Tongue;
thing

"If the law supposes that," said Mr. Bumble . . . "the law is a ass, a
idiot."

a log

Ib. 51

Expiring frog!
well
it

15

when

wery good an't a woman's. Ib. 19


of

that's

but one eye, and the popular in favor of two. runs prejudice Nicholas NicJdeby [1838-1839],
ch.

He had

Mr. Weller's knowledge was extensive and peculiar.

London
Ib.

20

Subdue your

appetites,

my dears,
natur.

and
5

Be wery
life.

careful o' vidders all your Ib.

you've conquered

human

ft.

The wictim o' connubiality, as Blue Beard's domestic chaplain said, with a tear of pity, ven he buried him. Ib.

styles of portrait painting; the serious and the smirk.

There are only two

Ib.

10

Dumb
sir.

as a

drum

vith a hole in
Ib.

Oh!
it,

much
I

they're too too beautiful!

beautiful

to

live,

Ib.

2$
30
pity his ignorance

14

Eccentricities of genius.

Ib.

and despise him.


Ib. 15

Keep

yourself to yourself.

Ib. 32

Poetry's unnat'ral; no talked poetry 'cept a beadle

man

The

unities,

ever
pleteness tailedness
Ib. 33

on Boxin'

a comsir ... are a kind of universal dovewith regard to place and


Ib.

Day.

time.

24

She knows wot's wot, she does. 16.37


"They don't mind holiday to them
skittles. 1
it;

The two
at
all,

countesses had no outlines and the dowager's was a demd


Ib.

it's

all

a regular and porter


Ib. 41

outline.

34
Ib.

A
body!

demd, damp, moist, unpleasant


in

Anythin' for a quiet life, as the man said wen he took the sitivation at the
lighthouse.
Ib.

Bring

the bottled

clean tumbler,

and

lightning, a corkscrew.
Ib.

43
All
is

49
Ib.

Oliver Twist has asked for more! Oliver Twist [1837-1838], eft. 2

gas

and

gaiters.

"The

artful

Dodger."
the

Ib. 8

My
He
wows.

life is

one demd horrid grind.


Ib.

"Hard," replied Dodger. Ib. 9 nails," added Charley Bates.


a passion for hunting something deeply implanted in the human
is

"As

64
Ib.

has gone to the demnition bow-

There

breast.
I'll

Ib.

10

eat

my head.
and
skittles,

J-Life

ain't all beer

Ib. and more's

the odds so long as the fire kindled at the taper of conwiviality, and the wing of friendship never moults a feather!
is

What

of soul

is

the pity. pt. I. See

GEORGE DU MAURIER, Trilby [1894], Hughes, p. 7i8a.

The Old

Curiosity

Shop

[1841], ch. 2

66 9

DICKENS
She's the ornament of her sex. The Old Curiosity Shop, ch. 5

Leave the bottle on the chimleypiece, and don't ask me to take none, but let

In love of home, the love of country 16. 38 has its rise.

me

put

my

lips

to

it

when

am

so

dispoged.

Martin Chuzzlewit, ch. ig


"She's the sort of

That vague kind of penitence which holidays awaken next morning. 16. 40
"Did you
ever taste beer?" "I

woman now,"
almost

said
feel
it

Mould

"one would

had

disposed to bury for nothing: and do 16. neatly, too!"

25

servant. sip of it once/' said the small "Here's a state of things!" cried Mr,
Swiveller.
it
.

He'd make a
a

lovely corpse.
is

16.

""She

never
sip /'
1

tasted

it

Our fellow-countryman
man, quite
fresh

a model

of

can't

be tasted in a

from Natur's mold!


I6. 34 do we know

57
our was a maxim with Foxey father, gentlemen "Always 16. 66 suspect everybody."
It

Oh
wot
I

Sairey, Sairey, little

revered

lays afore us!

16.

40
49

don't believe there's no sich a per16.

son!

Rather a tough customer in argyment.

The words
lambs

Bamaby Kudge
"There
are

[1841], ch. i

she spoke of Mrs. Harris, not could nor forgive


.

worms

forget.

16.

heart Tappertit, ". . . that had better not be wibrated/'

said strings/' in the human

Mr.

Marley was dead, to begin with. There is no doubt whatever about that.

The

16.22

register of his burial

was signed

Oh

gracious,

why

wasn't

born old
16.

by the clergyman, the clerk, the undertaker, and the chief mourner. Scrooge
signed
it.

and ugly?
-^od

70

And

Scrooge's
to.

name was

Any man may be in good spirits and temper when he's well dressed, here an't much credit in that.
Martin Chuzzlewit [1843-1844], ch. 5

good upon 'Change for anything he


chose to put his hand

Old Marley was


nail.

as

dead

as a door-

Christmas Carol [1843], stave

With
other.

affection

beaming
shining

in

one
of

eye,

Secret, and self-contained, tary as an oyster.


I

and
life.

soli-

16.

and calculation

out

the 16. 8
said

wear the chain

forged in

Jfe.

"Do not

repine,

my

friends,"

Mr. Pecksniff, tenderly. "Do not weep for me. It is chronic." 16. 9

fifty

In came a fiddler stomachaches.

In

and tuned like came Mrs.


16. stave II

Fezziwig, one vast substantial smile.

Keep up appearances whatever you


do.
16. 11

"Do other men for they would do you." That's the true business precept.
16.

have the shutters up ... before a man can say Jack Robinson. 1
Let's
Ib.

As good
1

as gold.
as

16. stave III

Buy an annuity cheap, and make your life interesting to yourself and everybody else that watches the speculation. 16. 18

I'd

do

it

soon as say Jack Robinson.


[1778], letter 82

FANNY BURNEY, Evelina


I'd get her off

Robinson.
[1812], ch. 2

before you could say Jack MARIA EDGE-WORTH, The Absentee

670

DICKENS

"God
Tim, the
It

bless us every one!" said last of all.

Tiny

never will desert

Mr. Micawber. David Copperfield^ ch. 12

Christmas Carol, stave III


turkey!
his

was a

He
legs,
7

could never have


that
bird!

stood

upon

He
a

Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure nineteen nineteen


six,

result

happiness.

Annual income

would have snapped

em

off short in

minute, like sticks of sealing wax.


Ib. stave

twenty pounds, annual expenditure twenty pounds ought and six, result
misery.
It's

Ib.

O let us love our occupations,


Bless the squire

mad

world.

Mad

as

Bedlam.
Ib. 14
Ib. 16

and

his relations,

Live

upon our
always

daily rations,

And

know our proper stations. The Chimes [1844], second


quarter
is

I'm a very umble person. 1

some

He's tough, ma'am, tough,

J.B.

mistake was made of putting the trouble out of King Charles's head into my head. 2
of
Ib. 17
I

The

Tough and
I

devilish sly!

Dombey and Son


The

[1848], ch.
.

j
. .

only ask for information.

Ib.
is.

20
It

want to know what it says. sea, Floy, what it is that it keeps


Ib.

It

was

as true

...

as turnips
is.

was

as true

...

as taxes

And

on saying. 1
tain, "in

ing's truer

than them.
a

nothIb. 21

"Wal'r, my boy/' replied the Capthe Proverbs of Solomon you will find the following words, 'May we never want a friend in need, nor a bottle to give him!' When found, make a note of." 16.15

What
spinach

world

of

gammon and
it!

it is,

though, ain't

Ib.

22

Nobody's enemy but his own.


Ib.

25

Accidents

will

occur in

the

best-

Cows

are

my passion.
on
it.

Ib. 21

regulated families.

Ib.

28

The

bearings of this observation lays


Ib.
sir,

in the application

23

You'll find us rough,


find us ready.

but

Ride on! Rough-shod if need be, smooth-shod if that will do, but ride on! Ride on over all obstacles, and win
the race!
Ib.
pull,

you'll

David Copperfield [1849-1850],


en. 3
I am a lone lorn creetur and everythink goes contrairy with me.
. . .

A long
pull
all

and a strong

pull,

and
Ib.

together.

30
Ib.

He's a-going out with the tide. 3

Ib.

Barkis

is

willin'.
it

Ib.
2

there.

Experientia does
to say.

as

Papa used
Ib. 1 1
a

There wasn't room to swing a cat Ib. 35 I ate umble pie with an appetite.
I6.

39

"In case anything turned up," which was his [Mr. Micawber's] favorite expression.
1 a

Not only humble but umble, which I look upon to be the comparative, or, indeed, superlative

Ib.

degree.

ANTHONY

TROLLOPE,

Doctor

Thome
docet

See Carpenter, p. pun on Experientia

[1858], ch. a "King Charles's

4 head" has passed into com-

[Experience

mon

teaches] ch. 6
8

TACITUS

[c.

55-0. 117], History, bk. V,

meaning
8

use in the English language as a phrase G. B. some whimsical obsession.


],

STERN [1890-

Monogram

See Disraeli, p. 6isa.

See Sir James Frazer, p. Saga.

671

DICKENS
Let sleeping dogs rouse 'em?
lie

LEAR
ceived and so finely
felt,

who wants

to

as injustice.
[i 860-1 861]
,

Great Expectations
ch. 39

David Copperfield,

ch.
Professionally as a friend

Skewered through and through with and bound hand and foot office
pens,

and

with red tape.


It's

I&-

43

he declines and falls, he drops into poetry on Silas Wegg]. Boffin [Mr. Our Mutual Friend \i 864-1 86cl,
bk. I, ch

only

my child-wife.

16.

44

A man
lean.
Trifles

must take the fat with the


#>. 5 1

best of wishes for your merry Christmases and your happy New

My

make the sum


said it

of

life.

Years, your long lives

and your

true

tt-53

The seamen
This
is

blew great guns. 16.55

prosperities. if they are delivered, as I

Worth twenty pound good


send them.

Remember? Here's a final prescription added, 'To be taken for life/'


Doctor Marigold's Prescriptions
[1865], ch.
i

London

particular.

...

fog, miss.

Bleak House [1852-1853], ch. 3

Not

to put too fine a point

upon

it.

IVAN GONCHAROV
1812-1891

Ib. 11

be done, the Circumlocution Office was before-

Whatever was required

to

"And he was
people, his soul

as intelligent as other

hand with all the public departments in HOW NOT TO DO the art of perceiving
IT.

Little Dorrit [1857-1858], bk. I,

ch. 10

Papa, potatoes, poultry, prunes, and are all very good words for the Erism, ps: especially prunes and prism.
Ib. II,

was pure and clear as crystal; he was noble and affectionate and yet he did nothing!" "But why? What was the reason?" what reason was "The reason there? Oblomovism!" x Oblomov [1859], pt. IV, ch. 12
. .
.

EDWARD LEAR
1812-1888
There was an Old

Once
tleman.

a gentleman,

and always a genIb. 28


it

Man with

a beard,

It was the best of times, worst of times.

was the

Who

said: "It is just as I feared!

Two
Four

owls and a hen,


larks

A A

Tale of

Two

and a wren

Cities [1859], bk. I, ch. i


reflect

Have all built their nests in my beard." Book of Nonsense [1846]. Limerick

wonderful fact to

upon,

that every human creature is constituted to be that profound secret and

How

Who

pleasant to know Mr. Lear! has written such volumes of

stuff!

mystery to every other.

16. 3

It is a far, far better thing that I do, than I have ever done; it is a far, far

better rest that I go to, than I have ever

known.
*

o,J

" Syj/w

./
I

Co.*- 4

oxT6. Ill, 15

Oblomovism. a country squire talking about the rights of man and urging the necessity of developing personality, I know from the first word he utters that he is an Oblomov.
is

!That word Now, when

I hear

I'Vve/

In the Ettle world in which children

have their existence, whosoever brings them up, there is nothing so finely per-

I hear a government official complaining the system of administration is too complicated and cumbersome, I know that he is an

When

that

NIKOLAI DOBROLIUBOV, What Oblomov. lomovismt [1859]

Is

Ob-

672

LEAR

Some think him


But
a

ill-tempered

and queer,
pleasant

few

think

him

enough.

Calico Pie, The little Birds fly Down to the calico tree,

Nonsense Songs [1871]. Preface,


St.

His body

is

He weareth

perfectly spherical, a runcible hat.

Ib. st. 5

Their wings were blue, And they sang "Tilly-loo!" Till away they flew And they never came back to me! Calico Pie [1871],
Calico Jam, The little Fish swam, Over the syllabub sea.

st. i

The Owl and

the Pussycat went to sea In a beautiful pea-green boat, They took some honey, and plenty of

16. st. 2

money,

"O lovely Pussy! O Pussy, my love, What a beautiful Pussy you are."
The Owl and
[1871],

Wrapped up in a five-pound note. The Owl looked up to the stars above, And sang to a small guitar,
the Pussycat
st. i

Who,
Is

or

why, or which, or what,


*

the

Akond of Swat? The Akond of Swat


sate

[1873], L

She

upon her Dobie,

Pussy said to the Owl, "You elegant


fowl!

To watch the Evening Star, And all the Punkahs as they passed, Cried, "My! how fair you are!" The Cummerbund [1874], st.

On

the top of the Crumpetty Tree


sat,

How

let

charmingly sweet you sing! us be married! too long we have


shall

The Quangle Wangle

But his face you could not

see,

tarried:

On

account of his Beaver Hat.

But what

we do

They

sailed away, for a year

for a ring?" and a day,

The Quangle Wangle's Hat


[1877].
st.

To

the land where the Bong-tree


in a wood a Piggy-wig stood ring at the end of his nose. 16. st. 2

On the coast
Where

grows

And there With a

of Coromandel the early pumpkins blow, In the middle of the woods Lived the Yonghy-Bonghy-B6.
old chairs, and half a candle, old jug without a handle

Two
One

"Dear Pig, are you willing to sell for one shilling Your ring?" Said the Piggy, "I will."
Ib, st. 3

These were

all his

The Courtship

worldly goods. of the Yonghy[1877],


st. i

Bongy-Bd

They dined on mince, and


quince,

slices

of

There he heard a Lady talking, To some milk-white Hens of Dorking


'Tis the

Which
spoon;

they
in

ate

with

runcible

Lady

Jingly Jones!
16.
st.

And hand
sand,

hand, on the edge of the


the light of the
16.
far

They danced by
moon.
Far and few,
live;

"I would be your wife most gladly!" (Here she twirled her fingers madly),

"But

in

England

I've a

mate!"
16.
st.

and few, Are the lands where the Jumblies

'Now

the

Ahkoond

of Swat

is

man

a vague sort o*

Who

Their heads are green, and their hands


are blue,

lives in a country far over the sea; Pray tell me, good reader, if tell me you can, What's the Ahkoond of Swat to you folks or to

And

me?
EUGENE FIELD, The Ahkoond of Swat
i

they went to sea in a sieve. The Jumblies [1871], st.

[1884]

673

LEAR

BERNARD

When

awful

darkness

and

silence

reign Over the great Gromboolian plain,

Nowhere beats the heart so kindly As beneath the tartan plaid! Charles Edward at Versailles on
the
Anniversary
of

Through
nights.

the

long,

long

wintry

Culloden

[1849], I 219

The Dong

with the Luminous

Nose [1877],

st. i

They bore within

their breasts the griet

When

storm-clouds

brood

on

the

That fame can never heal The deep, unutterable woe Which none save exiles feel.

towering heights Of the hills of the Chankly Bore.


Ib.

The

Island of the Scots [1849], st. 12

The Pobble who has no toes Had once as many as we;

When
He

they said,

"Some day you may


fiddle de-dee!"

HENRY WARD BEECHER


1813-1887
nation's
its

lose

them

all"

replied,

"Fish

The Pobble

Who Has No

Toes

thoughtful mind, when it sees a not the flag only, but flag, sees the nation itself; and whatever may be

We We

Ploffskin, Pluffskin, Pelican jee! think no Birds so happy as we!

Plumpskin, Ploshkin, Pelican jill! think so then, and we thought so


stilL

symbols, its insignia, he reads chiefly in the flag the government, the princithe history which beples, the truths, longs to the nation that sets it forth.

The American Flag

The

Pelican Chorus [1877], chorus

Where

is

human

nature so weak as

in the bookstore!

Star Papers [1855]. Subtleties of

SAMUEL SMILES
1812-1904
all

Book Buyers

Now comes

the mystery. Last words [March 8, 1887]

of self-help is the root of genuine growth in the individual; and, exhibited in the lives of many, it constitutes the true source of national
spirit

The

CLAUDE BERNARD
1813-1878
Great
torches

vigor and strength. Help from without is often enfeebling in its effects, but

men may be compared


at
intervals,

to

help from within invariably invigorates.


Self-Help [1859]

guide
light

long shining the advance of science.


their time, either

to

They

up

by

discover-

EDMONDSTOUNE AYTOUN
News
of battle!

WILLIAM

ing unexpected and fertile phenomena which open up new paths and reveal unknown horizons, or by generalizing
truths

acquired scientific facts and disclosing which their predecessors had not
perceived.

1813-1865 news of

battle!

Introduction &
la

And

Hark! 'tis ringing down the street; the archways and the pavement Bear the clang of hurrying feet.

de I' ttude Medecine Exp6rimentale


i

[z86 5]

Edinburgh

after

Flodden [1849],
St.

i An Introduction to the Study of Expertmental Medicine, translated by HENRY COPLEY

GREENE

[1926].

674

BERNARD
may, of course, strike a balance between what a living organism takes in as nourishment and what it gives out in excretions; but the results would be mere statistics incapable of throwing light on the inmost phenomena of nutrition in living beings.
like trying to tell

DWIGHT

We

Man can learn nothing unless he proceeds from the known to the unknown.

From Bulletin of New York Academy of Medicine, vol.


IV, p. 997

According to a Dutch chemist's phrase, this would be

what happens inside a house by watching what goes in by the door and what comes out by the chimney.

must never make experiments to confirm our ideas, but simply to control
them.
Ib.

We

GEORG BUCHNER
1813-1837

Introduction & FEtude de


a

la

Medecine Experimental
Observation
is

experimentation an

passive science, active science.


Ib.

The Revolution is eats its own children.

like

Saturn

it

Danton's Death [1835]

The

science of

life is

dazzlingly lighted hall

a superb and which may be


Ib.

The
inside.

people are like children; they


is

must smash everything to see what

reached only by passing through a long

Ib.

and ghastly kitchen.


Science repulses the indefinite.

JOHN WILLIAM

BURGON
1813-1860

Ib.
stability of the internal is a primary condition for the

The

medium
freedom

A rose-red

1 city half as old as time.

and independence of certain living bodies in relation to the environment


surrounding them.

Petra [Newdigate Prize Poem, 1845]

Legons sur
"Vie

les

Communs

Phenomenes de la aux Animaux et


1

JOSEPH EDWARDS

CARPENTER
1813-1885

aux Vegetaux. [1878-1879]

All the vital mechanisms, varied as they are, have only one object, that of

What are the wild waves


Sister,

saying,

preserving constant the conditions of life in the internal environment. Ib.

the whole day long? What Are the Wild

Waves
st. i

Saying?

to abstain

True science teaches us from ignorance.

to

doubt and

JOHN SULLIVAN

From

Bulletin

of

New

York

DWIGHT
1813-1893

Academy

of Medicine,

vol.

IV
Ere the
toil

[1928], p. 997

Science increases our power in pro16. portion as it lowers our pride.


If I

wilt bless the day be done; They that work not, cannot pray,

Work, and thou

would

to define life in a word, it be: Life is creation. 16.

had

Cannot

feel

the sun.
still,

God

is

living,

working

modern poet has characterized the personality of art and the impersonality of science as follows: Art is I: Science is

All things work Work, or lose the

and move; power to will,

Lose the power to love.


By many a temple half as old SAMUEL ROGERS [1763-1855], Italy
1

Working
as

We.
Lessons on Reactions and Plants, translated by
1

16.

Time.

[1822-1828].

Common
J.

to

Animals

M. D. OLMSTEAD.

Farewell See Dickens, p. 6713.

675

KIERKEGAARD

FABER

S5REN KIERKEGAARD
1813-1855 Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards.
Life
All essential knowledge relates to existence, or only such knowledge as has

thou,

my

gracious evening star.

Tannhduser

To be German means
matter for
its

to carry

on a

own, sake.
Po/fttfei

Deutsche Kunst und Deutsche


[1867]

Ride of the Valkyries.

an essential relationship to existence is essential knowledge. Concluding Unscientific


Postscript

Die Walkure [1876]

The pure

fool.

Parsifal [1882]

The absurd ... the fact that with God all things are possible. The absurd
not one of the factors which can be discriminated within the proper compass of the understanding: it is not identical with the improbable, the unis

HENRY STEVENSON WASHBURN


1813-1903

We

meet, but we shall miss him, There will be one vacant chair.
shall

The Vacant

Chair,

st . i

expected, the unforeseen.

Fear and Trembling [1843]. Problemata: Preliminary Expectoration

THOMAS OSBORNE
DAVIS
1814-1845

JOHN LOUIS
O'SULLIVAN
1813-1895

Come

in the evening, or

come

in the

morning,

Come when

Our manifest destiny is to overspread the continent allotted by Providence for the free development of our yearly
1 multiplying millions. United States Magazine and

you're looked without warning.

for, or

come
st.
i

The Wekome,

Sheep without a Shepherd, when the

Democratic

Review

[July-

August 1845]

snow shuts out the sky Oh, why did you leave us, Owen? Why did you die? Lament for the Death of Eoghan

Ruadh

O'Neill,

si.

EPES SARGENT
1813-1880

A home on the rolling deep; Where the scattered waters rave, And the winds their revels keep!

A life on the ocean wave,

FREDERICK WILLIAM FABER


1814-1863
Hark! Hark!
swelling

my

soul, angelic songs are

A Life

on the Ocean Wave


[1847],
rf. *

O'er earth's green fields, and ocean's wave-beat shore; How sweet the truth those blessed
strains are telling

RICHARD WAGNER
1813-1883 Say, where didst thou tarry
so long?

Of

th^t

new

life

when

sin shall

be no

more!
Oratory Hymns. Pilgrims of the Night
1

Ta
Josh Billings, p. 685^

German Art and German

Politics

676

FABER

BISMARCK
decisions

O Paradise! O Paradise! Who doth not crave for rest?


Oratory Hymns. Paradise

and 1849

that was the error of 1848 1 but by iron and blood.

We will

Faith of our fathers! holy faith! be true to thee till death.


Ib.

Diet Speech to the Prussian [September 30, 1862] newspaper writer is one who has

Pledge of Faithfulness

failed in his calling.

MIKHAIL LERMONTOV
1814-1841

Derived from speech [November 10, 1862]


Politics is

not an exact science. 2

Speech to the Herrenhaus


is

Hero

of

Our Time, gentlemen,

[December

13, 1863]
state-

indeed a portrait, but not of a single


individual; it is a portrait composed of all the vices of our generation in the
fullness of their development.

The gkss house


craft.

of

German

A Hero of Our Time

[1840],

Concerning Austr&German power, to a commission of


the Prussian Landtag [1864]
a completely ready state can the luxury of a liberal governpermit ment. Speech [1866]

Author's Introduction

Only

CHARLES MACKAY
1814-1889
There's a good time coming, boys!

A good time coming.


In the days

to
st. i

Let us put Germany in the saddle, so it already knows how to speak

The Good Time Coming,

ride.

Old Tubal Cain was a man of might,

Speech to the North German Reichstag [March n, 1867]

when

earth was young.

Tubal Cain,

st.

A
will

Not alone
steel

for the

bkde was
first

the bright
1

the border conquering army on not be halted by the power of elo16.

quence.

[September 24, 1867]

made,
plowshare.
Ib. st.

And he

fashioned the

He who
The

has his

thumb on
Ib.

the purse

has the power.

[May 21, 1869]

EDWIN McMASTERS STANTON


1814-1869

luxury of one's own opinion. Speech to the Prussian Diet

[December
the

17, 1873]

Now
ages.

he [Lincoln] belongs

to

The

right people in the right jobs. Speech to the North German

On

the death of Lincoln


[April 15, 1865]

'Reichstag [1875]
Politics ruins the character.

OTTO VON BISMARCK


1815-1898

in Reported by Bernhard Brigl the Berlin Tdgliche Rundschau

[1881]

The
1

great questions

of the time are

We
else in

Germans
the world.

fear

God, but nothing

not decided by speeches and majority


See Isaiah 2:4, p. goa. Tubal fashioned the hand-flung spears And showed his neighbors peace.

to the Reichstag [FebruSpeech r ftm ary6, if


1

KIPLING [1865-1936], Jubal and Tubal

a Politics

Eisen und Blut a science is not


15, 1884]

hut

an

art.

Cam,

st-

Speech [March

677

DANA

TROLLOPS
In Dixie's land, we'll took our stand,

RICHARD HENRY DANA


1815-1882
Six days shalt thou labor thou art able,

To lib an'
all

die in Dixie!

Dixie,

st.

and do

And on

the seventh holystone the decks and scrape the cable. Two Years Before the Mast
[1840],
eft.

LANE JOHN BABSONE SOULE


1815-^1891

Go west, young man. 1


Article in the Terre Haute,

He

seldom went up to town without


"three
sheets
in Ib.

Indiana, Express [1851]

coming down
wind."

the

20

ANTHONY TROLLOPE
1815-1882

Everything was "shipshape and BrisIb. 22 tol fashion."

The

tenth

Muse who now

governs

the periodical press.

DAVID DAVIS
1815-1886
Constitution of the United a law for rulers and people, equally in war and in peace, and covers with the shield of its protection all
States
is

The Warden
his

[1855], ch. 14

The

In these days a man is nobody unless biography is kept so far posted up that it may be ready for the national breakfast table on the morning after his demise.

Doctor

Thome

classes of
all

men,

at all times,

and under

[1858], ch. 25

circumstances.

No

doctrine, involv-

ing more pernicious consequences, was ever invented by the wit of man than that any of its provisions can be suspended during any of the great exigencies of government. Ex Parte Milligan, 4 Wallace 2,
t

Those who offend us are generally punished for the offense they give; but we so frequently miss the satisfaction of knowing that we are avenged! The Small House at Allington
[1864], ch. 50

120-121 [l866]

She understood how much louder a cock can crow in its own farmyard than
elsewhere.

DANIEL DECATUR

The

Last Chronicle of Barset


[1867], vol.
I,

EMMETT

ch. ij

wish I Old times dar am not forgotten. Look away, look away, Look away, Dixie Land. Dixie 1 [1859], **
1

1815-1904 was in de land ob cotton,

Always remember that when you go


into an attorney's office door, have to pay for it, first or last.

you
Ib.

will

20

One
I

of these notes was

known simply

as a dix;

they were dixies, a name which was soon applied to the city of issue as well.
collectively

to

Originally this word [Dixie] applied New Orleans; not until the Civil
.

only

HERBERT ASBURY, The French Quarter


ch. 3
1

[1936],

War,
.

when D. D. Emmett's famous song


came
the
favorite
battle

be-

song

of

the

Con-

federacy, was it in general use to designate the entire South. It came about in this fashion:

few years after Louisiana became a part the United States . one of the New Orleans banks began issuing ten-dollar notes, one side of which was printed in English and the other in French. On the latter, in large . letters, was the French word for ten, dix.
of
. . . .

Horace Greeley [1811-1872] used the expression in an editorial in The New York Tribune (see Greeley, p. 6580). As the saying "Go west, young man, and grow up with the country"
gained popularity, Greeley printed Soule's
cle, to

arti-

show the source

Many men

of his inspiration. have stated that the advice was

given to them by Greeley, among them William S. Verity [1837-1930], who said Greeley had given it to him in 1859.

678

TROLLOPE
comfortable feeling to know on your own ground. Land is about the only thing that can't fly away. The Last Chronicle of
It is a

FREYTAG

CHARLOTTE BRONTE
1816-1855
Life, believe, is not a dream So dark as sages say; 1

that you stand

Oft a

little

Barset, vol. II, ch. 58


It's

morning rain
Life [1846],
st.

Foretells a pleasant day.


i

dogged

as does

it.

16. 61

Nothing reopens the springs of love so fully as absence, and no absence so thoroughly as that which must needs be
endless.
16.

The human

heart has hidden treasures, In secret kept, in silence sealed. Evening Solace [1846], sL i

67

Reader,

married him.

Jane Eyre [1847], ch. 38

PHILIP JAMES BAILEY


1816-1902
Let each

An abundant shower
fallen

of curates has
i

upon the north of England.


Shirley [1849], ch.

man

think himself an act of


life

God,
His mind a thought, his
a breath of

God;

JAMES THOMAS FIELDS


1816-1881

And

each try, by great thoughts and good deeds, To show the most of Heaven he hath in
let

"We

are lost!" the captain shouted,


stairs.

him.
It

Festus [1839].

Proem
but

As he staggered down the

matters not

how
16.

long

we

The Captain's Daughter; or, The Ballad of the Tempest


4 But his little daughter whispered, As she took his icy hand,
[1858],
"Isn't
st.

live,

how.

Wood and Water


years;

We We

in deeds, not live thoughts, not breaths;

in

In feelings, not in figures on a dial. should count time by heart-throbs.

God upon
same
as

the ocean,

Just the

on the land?"

2
Ib. st. 5

He most lives

Who

thinks most
acts the best.
16.

feels

the noblest

How
Is

sweet and gracious, even in com-

mon
that

A Country Town
16.

fine

speech, sense

which

men

call

Courtesy!

Courtesy
Sir Critic,

Envy's a coal comes hissing hot from


hell.

"I'm an owl; you're another. good day!"

The

sole equality

on earth

is

death.
16.

And
the

the barber kept on shaving. The Owl-Critic, last lines

and
America, thou world;
half-brother
of

refrain

With something good and bad of every 16. The Surface land.
There
is

GUSTAV PREYTAG
1816-1895 Madness of the Caesars. Die Verlorene Handschrift
the concerning [1864], proposition that power is
evil
1
2

no disappointment we endure

One
1

half so great as that


selves. 1

we

are to our-

16.

The Sun

Every really able man, if you talk sincerely with him, considers his work, however much admired, as far short of what it should be.

per se

EMERSON, Immortality [1875]

See Longfellow, p. 6200. See Sir Humphrey Gilbert, p. igsa.

HOOPER

THOREAU

ELLEN STURGIS

GEORG HERWEGH
1817-1875

HOOPER

slept

1816-1841 and dreamed that

The poor human


life

heart

must break

was

piecemeal.

beauty.
I

Strophen aus der Fremde


[1840], in Ruckert's

woke

and found that life was duty. Beauty and Duty

Mu-

senalmanach

EUGENE POTTIER
1816-1887
Arise, ye prisoners of starvation, Arise, ye wretched of the earth,

TOM TAYLOR
You
lay a wreath coln's bier,

1817-1880 on murdered

Lin-

For

A better world's in birth.


Ulnternationale [1871]
1

justice

thunders condemnation

You, who with mocking pencil wont


trace,

to

Broad

for

the self-complacent British

sneer,

JOHN GODFREY SAXE


1816-1887
In
battle
or

His length of shambling limb, his furrowed face. Abraham Lincoln Foully Assetssinated*
st.

business,

whatever

the

game,
In law or in love, it is ever the same; In the struggle for power, or the scramble for pelf,

HENRY DAVID THOREAU


1817-1862
I

Let

this

be your motto

Rely on your-

self!

am

For, whether the prize be a ribbon or throne, The victor is he who can go it alone! 2

By

a parcel of vain strivings tied a chance bond together. Sic Vita [1841], st
I

The Game

Great God,
pelf Than that
I

ask thee for

no meaner

of Life,
first

st.

"God

bless the

man who
said,

invented
I.

may not

disappoint myself,
high
clear
i

sleep!"

So Sancho Panza

and so say

That in my action I may soar as As I can now discern with this


eye.

Early Rising,
It

st. i

A Prayer

[1842], st

was

six

men

of Indostan

To

Who went to see the Elephant


(Though all of them were blind), That each by observation Might satisfy his mind. The Blind Men and the Elephant,
st.

learning

much

inclined,

Talk of mysteries! Think of our life daily to be shown matter, to come in contact with it rocks, trees, wind on our cheeks! the solid
in nature

earth!

the actual world! the

common
are we?

sensel Contact! Contact!

Who

where are we?

The Maine Woods, Ktaadn


[1848]
I

Tis wise to
ate.
1

learn;

'tis

God-like to cre-

The

Library

think that

we should be men
is

first,

and
Adolphe Degeyter wrote the music for the International, which was adopted as the rallying song of Communism.
2 He travels the fastest who travels alone. KIPLING [1865-1936], The Winners

subjects afterward. It

not

desir-

1 Printed in Punch, London [May 6, 1865]. Taylor became editor of Punch in 1874. It was at a performance of Taylor's play, Our American Cousin, that Lincoln was shot.

680

THOREAU
able to cultivate a respect for the law, so much as for the right. Civil Disobedience [1849]

Methinks

my own

soul

must be a

bright invisible green.

A Week

on the Concord and


Rivers
[i 849]
.

How
toward
day?
I

does

it

become a man

Merrimack
to behave

this American government toanswered that he cannot without Ib. disgrace be associated with it.

Wednesday
It takes two to speak the truth one to speak, and another to hear.

Ib.

a sixth of the population of a nation which has undertaken to be the refuge of liberty are slaves, and a whole l is country unjustly overrun and con-

When

This

world

is

but

canvas

to

our
Ib.

imaginations.

Dreams
characters.

are the touchstones of our

quered by a foreign army, and subjected to military law, I think that it is not too soon for honest men to rebel and
revolutionize.

Ib.

Go
things,

where we will on the surface of men have been there before us.
Ib.

What
is

makes

this

duty

Thursday

the fact that the country so overrun is not our own, but ours is the invading army. 16,
the

more urgent

not east or west, north or south, but wherever a man


frontiers are

The

fronts a fact.

Ib.
is

wise man will not leave the right to the mercy of chance, nor wish it to prevail through the power of the majority.

true account of the actual

the

There

is

but

little

virtue in the action

sense always takes a hasty and superficial view. Ib.


rarest poetry, for

common

of masses of

men.

Ib.

I came into this world, not chiefly make this a good place to live in, but

to

to

live in

it,

be

it

good

or bad.

Ib.

Any man more right than his neighbors constitutes a majority of one.
Ib.

our birth had at first sundered and we had been thrust up things, through into nature like a wedge, and not till the wound heals and the scar disappears, do we begin to discover where we are, and that nature is one and continuous everywhere.
if

As

Ib. Friday

Under
prisons a just
free

government
is

which
.

imfor
.

What
ests

are the earth

and

all its inter-

any unjustly, the true place

a prison only house in a slave State in


also

man

the
Ib.

deep surmise which Ib. pierces and scatters them?


beside

the

which a

It is so rare to

meet with a man

out-

man

can abide with honor.

doors

in his

saw that the State was half-witted, it was timid as a lone woman with her silver spoons, and that it did not know its friends from its foes, and I lost all my remaining respect for it, and
I

worthy thought mind, which is independent of the labor of his hands. Ib.

who

cherishes a

that

The

eye

may
is

see for the hand,

but
Ib.
as

not for the mind.

Nothing
fear. 1

so

much

to

be feared

pitied

it.

Ib.

Journal [September 7, 1851]


bluebird carries the sky

The

on

his

My

life is like

a stroll

upon the beach,


as I

back.

As near the ocean's edge

can go.

Ib. [April 3, 1852]

My
1

Life Is Like a Stroll Upon the Beach [1849], st. i

The
test.
1

perception of beauty is a moral Ib. [June 21, 1852]

Mexico.

See Montaigne, p. i8gb, and note.

68l

THOREAU

and, at length, the middle-aged man concludes to build a woodshed with

The youth gets together his materials to build a bridge to the moon, or, perchance, a palace or temple on the earth,
them.
Journal \July 14, 1852]
Fire
is

It is characteristic of

wisdom not
i
,

to

do desperate

things.

WdZden,

Economy

hardly so well, an instructor for as youth, for qualified it has not profited so much as it has

Age

is

no

better,

lost.

16.

the most tolerable third party. 16. [January 2, 1853]


circumstantial evidence is very when you find a trout in the
16.
is

Most

of the luxuries,

and many

of

Some
milk.

strong, as

the so-called comforts, of life are not only not indispensable, but positive hindrances to the elevation of mankind
16.

[November n, 1854]

That man

the richest whose pleas-

ures are the cheapest. Ib.

a philosopher is not merely to have subtle thoughts, nor even to found


a school,

To be

[March n, 1856]
is

but so to love wisdom

as to

The

savage in
Ib.

man

never quite

live accordingly to its dictates, a life of

eradicated.

simplicity, independence, magnanimity,

and
[September 26, 1859]
.
.

trust.
all

16.

Beware of

does The fate of the country not depend on what kind of paper you drop into the ballot box once a year, but on what kind of man you drop from your chamber into the street every
.

enterprises that require


16.

new clothes.
Our moulting
fowls,

must be a

season, like that of the crisis in our lives.


16.

morning.
Slavery in Massachusetts [1854]
I

In the long run they aim at.

men

hit only what


16.
is

should not talk so


well.

much about my-

The
afoot.

swiftest traveler

he that

goes
16.

self if

there were anybody else

whom

knew as
I

Walden
cord.

[1854],* i,

Economy
16.

have traveled a good deal in Conis

It is not necessary that a man should earn his living by the sweat of his brow 1 unless he sweats easier than I do. 16.

own private opinion. thinks of himself, that is which determines, or rather, indicates,

Public opinion pared with our

weak tyrant com-

The man who goes alone can start today; but he who travels with another
must wait
till

What

man

that other

is

ready.
16.

his fate.

16.

When
As
for

man

dies

he kicks the
is

dust.
16.

As

if

you could
of

kill

time without

in-

juring eternity.

16.

doing good, that


full.

one of the
16.

The mass
desperation.
1

men

lead lives of quiet 16.

professions which are

Walden is the only book I own, although there are some others unclaimed on my shelves. Every man, I think, reads one book in his life, and this one is mine. It is not the best book I
ever encountered, perhaps, but it is for me the handiest, and I keep it about me in much the same way one carries a handkerchief for relief in moments of defluxion or despair. E. B. WHITE, The New Yorker [May *

There is no odor so bad as that which arises from goodness tainted.2


16.

branches of at the root.

There are a thousand hacking at the evil to one who is striking


16.

1 See Genesis 3:19, p. 6a. 2 See Shakespeare, p. 2933.

682

THOREAU
Philanthropy
tue which
is is

almost the only

vir-

sufficiently appreciated

by

mankind.

Walden,

i,

Economy

number

is rich in proportion to the of things which he can afford to let alone. Ib. 2, Where I Lived, and

A man

we

I never found the companion that was so companionable as solitude. are for the most part more lonely when we go abroad among men than when

We

man thinkstay in our chambers. ing or working is always alone, let him
be where he
will.

What
To him whose
elastic

I Lived

For
I

Walden
for solitude, for society.

5,

Solitude

and vigorous

thought keeps pace with the sun, the T 6. day is a perpetual morning.

had three chairs in my house: one two for friendship, three


16. 6, Visitors

To be awake is to be alive. I know of no more encouraging


than the unquestionable
to
ability or

Ib.
fact

Ministers who spoke of God as if they enjoyed a monopoly of the subject.


16.
I

man
enIb.

elevate his life

by a conscious
I

was determined to know beans.


16. 7,

deavor.
I

The

Beanfield

wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not,

went

to the

woods because

Through want

of enterprise

and

faith

men

are

selling, serfs.

where they are, buying and and spending their lives like 16. 10, Baker Farm

when

came
life
is

to die, discover that

had
Ib.

not lived.

There is never an instant's truce between virtue and vice. Goodness is the
only investment that never
16. iz,
fails.

Our
.

frittered

away by

detail

Simplify, simplify.

16.
railroad; it

Higher Laws
as

We
rides
in.

do not
us.

ride

on the

Heaven

is

under our feet as well

upon
is

16.
I

over our heads.


16. 16,

Time

but the stream

The Pond

in

Winter

go a-fishing
16.

Books must be read as deliberately and reservedly as they are written.


16. 3,

While men believe in the infinite, some ponds will be thought to be bottomless.
16.
is

Reading
in

What
clay?

man but

What
forum
is

is

called

eloquence

the

a mass of thawing 16. 17, Spring

commonly

found

to

be
16.

Through our own recovered innocence

rhetoric in the study.

we
if

discern the innocence of our


16.

The works of the great poets have never yet been read by mankind, for 16. only great poets can read them.
It is

neighbors.

As
alone.

there were safety in stupidity 16. 18, Conclusion

not

all

books that are

as dull as

their readers.

16.

If one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams, and endeavors to


live

How many
era in his life

has dated a new from the reading of a


16.

man

the

will

life which he has imagined, he meet with a success unexpected in

book.
I

love a broad margin to

my life.
Sounds

16. 4,

Our horizon
elbows.

is

never quite at our 16. 5, Solitude

not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, how16. ever measured or far away.

common hours. If a man does

16.

683

THOREAU
life, poor as it is. You may perhaps have some pleasant, thrilling, in a poorhouse. glorious hours, even The setting sun is reflected from the windows of the almshouse as brightly as from the rich man's abode, Wdden 18, Conclusion

ALEXANDER

Love your

No

one can encompass the unen-

compassable.

Kosma Prutkov
If
let

[1884]
it

thou hast a fountain, shut even a fountain have a rest.


are like unto

up:
JJ.

Many men

It is life

near the bone where

it

is

sweetest.

16.

whatever you stuff them with, that they will bear in them. Jj
t

sausages:

Rather than love, than money, than


fame, give

me

truth.
left

16.

Should you read, upon an enclosure with an elephant, a sign saying Buffalo, believe not your eyes. JJ.
If

He would have

a Greek accent

slanting the wrong way, a falling man.

and righted up

you want to be happy, be.

16.

A Plea

for Captain

John Brown
[^859]

CECIL FRANCES

ALEXANDER
1818-1895

hear many condemn these men because they were so few. When were the good and the brave ever in a majority?
I

All things bright and beautiful, All creatures great and small,
All things wise

16.
It

and wonderful,
all.

man
who

was his peculiar doctrine that a has a perfect right to interfere by

The Lord God made them


All Things Bright

and

Beautiful
st. i

force with the slaveholder, in order to rescue the slave. I agree with him. They
are continually shocked by slavery have some right to be shocked by the

[1848],

violent death of the slaveholder, but no others. 16.


I speak for the slave when I say that prefer the philanthropy of Captain Brown to that philanthropy which I

The rich man in his castle, The poor man at his gate, God made them, high or lowly, And ordered their estate. 16.
There
is

st 3

a green hill far away,


a city wall,

Without

Where

Who
i

neither shoots

me

nor liberates me.


16.

the dear Lord was crucified, died to save us all. There Is a Green Hill [1848],
st. i

roosts,

So we defend ourselves and our henand maintain slavery. 16.

Once in

royal David's city

is

He is not Old Brown any longer; he an angel of light. 16.

Men
,

will lie

on

their backs, talking

about the fall of man, and never make aa effort to get up.
Life

Stood a lowly cattle shed, Where a Mother laid her Baby In a manger for his bed: Mary was that Mother mild, Jesus Christ her little Child. Once in Royal David's City
[1848],
1

st.

Without

Principle [1863]

Kosma Prutkov, a pompous and platitudinous clerk who dabbled in the muses, was invented by Tolstoi and the brothers Zhemchuzhnikov, who supplied him with a biography, a portrait, and Collected Works, published in 1884. Individual satirical pieces had been appearing

KONSTANTINOVICH TOLSTOI
1817-1875
His pen
is

ALEXEI

breathing revenge.

under his name since 1851. He became a Russian satirical humor. Translated by B. G. GURNEY.
2

classic of

Vaska Shibanov [1855-1865]

See Coleridge, p. 5263;

BILLINGS

CHANNING
It is better

JOSH BILLINGS [HENRY WHEELER SHAW]


A
sekret ceases tew
iz

to

know nothing than

to

know what

ain't so. 1

Proverb [1874]

1818-1885 be a
it iz

sekret

if it iz

EMILY BRONTE
1818-1848
Sleep not, dream not; this bright day

once confided once broken, it

like a dollar bill,

never a dollar agin. Affurismsi [1865]

Will not, cannot


Bliss like thine

last for aye;

Love
have
life
it

iz

like the meazles;

we kant

bad but

we have

onst, and the later in it the tuffer it goes with

bought by years Dark with torment and with tears.


Sleep

is

Not
and
hills

[1846],

st.

us.

16.

Cold

in the earth

fifteen wild

Put an Englishman into the garden Eden, and he would find fault with the whole blarsted consarn; put a Yankee in, and he would see where he could alter it to advantage; put an Irishman in, and he would want tew boss the thing; put a Dutchman in, and he would proceed tew plant it. 16.
of

Decembers From those brown


into spring.

have melted
[1846],
st.

Remembrance
Once

drinking deep of that divinest anguish, How could I seek the empty world
again?
16. st.
is

Better

make

weak man your enemy


16.

than your friend.

No No
I

coward soul

mine,
storm-

when she makes

Nature never makes any blunders; a fool she means it.


16.
I

trembler in the world's troubled sphere: see Heaven's glories shine,


faith shines equal,
fear.

And

arming
2

me

from
st. i

Last Lines [1846],

don't care

how much
it

man

There
talks,

is

not room for Death.

if

he only says

in a

few words.
16.

As scarce as truth is, the supply has always been in excess of the demand.
16.
I

16. st. 7 round under that them, lingered benign sky: watched the moths fluttering among the heath and harebells; lisI

never knu a

melankolly, did it.

man trubbled with who had plenty to dew, and


16.

to the soft wind breathing through the grass; and wondered how anyone could ever imagine unquiet slumbers for the sleepers in that quiet

tened

earth.

Wuthering Heights [1847],

last

Poverty

iz

the stepmother ov genius.


16.

-words

Manifest destiny iz the science ov going tew bust, or enny other place before yu git thare. 2 Manifest Destiny

WILLIAM ELLERY

CHANNING
1818-1901
castle gray,

The wheel
Is

Habitant of
1 Better

that squeaks the loudest the one that gets the grease. The Kicker

Creeping thing in sober way,


know nothing than half-know many
Zatathustra
NIETZSCHE, Thus Spake [1883-1891], pt. IV, 64 a See Dylan Thomas, p. loyoa.
things.

From Josh

Billings:

His

Sayings.

*See O'SulIivan, p. 676a.

685

CHAINING
Visible sage mechanician, Skillfulest arithmetician.

MARX
own
nes. 1

knees and then upon the aborigi-

The
I

Spider

From HENRY WATTERSON


The
Louisville

in

laugh, for

hope hath happy place with


'tis

Courier-

If

me my bark sinks,

Journal \July 4, 1913]


to another sea.

A Poet's Hope

Most
It is

joyful let the Poet be; through him that all men see. The Poet of the Old and New

JOHN JAMES ROBERT MANNERS, DUKE


OF RUTLAND
1818-1906
Let wealth and commerce, laws and
learning die, leave us still our old

Times

The

hills

are

reared,

the

seas

are

But

scooped in vain
If learning's altar

nobility.
Ill,
Z.

vanish from the plain. l Inscription for the Alcott house

England's Trust, pt.

23!

KARL MARX
1818-1883
Religion ... is the opium of the people. Critique of the Hegelian Philosophy of Right [1844], introduction
It is not the consciousness of men that determines their existence, but on

ELIZA COOK
I

love

it,

love

1818-1889 it; and who

shall dare

To

chide

me

for loving that old

arm-

chair?

The Old Armchair

Than

Better build schoolrooms for "the boy" cells and gibbets for "the

man/'

A Song for
How

the Ragged Schools, st. 12

the contrary their social existence determines their consciousness.


Critique of Political Econ-

busy we are on Tom Tiddler's ground 3 Looking for gold and silver.

omy
The

[1859], preface

Tom

Tiddler's

Ground,

st. i

history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles. Manifesto of the Communist

GEORGE DUFFIELD
1818-1888
Stand up!
stand up for Jesus!

Party

[1848], sec.

Of
face

the classes that stand face to with the bourgeoisie today the
all
is

proletariat alone

Hymn

a really revolution-

WILLIAM MAXWELL EVARTS


1818-1901
pious ones of Plymouth, who, reaching the Rock, first fell upon their
This couplet is painted over the mantel of the Alcott house, Concord, Massachusetts. *Give them a chance if you stint them
1

other classes decay and finally disappear in the race of modem industry; the proletariat is its special
ary ckss.

The

and
1

essential product. 3
also
Bill

16.

The

This pun has Wendell Holmes,

been attributed to Oliver Nye, and George Frisbie

now, tomorrow you'll have to pay


larger bill for a darker
ill.

Hoar. 2 Written in collaboration with FRIEDRICH ENGELS. Translated by SAMUEL MOORZ. 8 By bourgeoisie is meant the class of modern capitalists, owners of the means of social production and employers of wage labor. By proletariat, the class of modern wage laborers who, having no means of production of their own, are reduced to selling their labor power in order to live. FRIEDRICH ENGELS [1820-1895],

DENIS A, MCCARTHY [1870-1931], Give Them a Place to Play, st. 4 3 Here we are on Tom Tiddler's ground, Children's game picking up gold and silver.

footnote to Manifesto of the

Communist

Party

6 6

MARX
In proportion as the antagonism beclasses within the nation vanishes, the hostility of one nation to another will come to an end. Manifesto of the Communist

TURGENEV

JOHN MASON NEALE


1818-1866

tween

Good King Wenceslas looked out

Party, sec. 2

When

The ruling ideas of each age have ever been the ideas of its ruling class. 16.
workers have nothing to lose but their chains. They have a world to win. Workers of the world, unite! Ib. 4

the feast of Stephen, the snow lay round about, Deep and crisp and even.

On

Good King Wenceslas,


In his master's steps he trod,

st. i

The

Where

the

snow lay dinted;


sod

Heat was

in the very

Nothing can have value without being an object of utility. If it be useless,

the Saint had printed. Wherefore, Christian men, be sure, Wealth or rank possessing,

Which

Ye who now do bless the poor

the labor contained in it is useless, cannot be reckoned as labor, and cannot therefore create value.

Shall yourselves find blessing.


16. st 5

Capital* [1867-1883],

pL

II,

O come, O come, Emmanuel,


And ransom

ch. 3

The

intellectual

desolation,

artifi-

captive Israel.

Gome,

Come, Emmanuel;

cially produced by converting immature human beings into mere machines.

translated

from the Latin, Veni,

Veni,

Emmanuel

16.

10

Jerusalem the golden, with milk and

production begets, with the inexorability of a law of nature, its


Capitalist

15 commercial capital occupies a position of unquestioned ascendancy, it everywhere constitutes a system of 16. 21 plunder.
negation.

own

16.

honey blest, Beneath thy contemplation sink heart and voice oppressed.

When

Hymn;
Latin

translated

of
[c.

ST.

from the BERNARD OF


Ib.

CLUNY
Brief life
is

1145]

here our portion.

From each

according to his

abilities,

to each according to his needs.

Critique of the
1

Gotha Program 2
[1875]

FRANCIS EDWARD

SMEDLEY
1818-1864

edition by JULIAN prepared Abridged BORCHARDT, translated by STEPHEN L. TRASK. 2 This phrase is in quotation marks, and
it

You

are looking as fresh as paint.

Frank Fairlegh [1850]

is

believed that

phrasing either tutor Morelly. Let each produce according to his aptitudes and his force; let each consume according to his need. Louis BLANC, Organisation du Travail [1840}
society will belong to anyone, personal possession or as capital goods, except the things for which the person has immediate use, for either his needs, his pleasures, or his daily work. Every citizen will make his particular contribution according to the activities of the community according to
either
as

quoting or paraLouis Blanc, or the obscure


is

Marx

IVAN SERGEYEVICH

TURGENEV
1818-1883

Nothing hi
a

The Diary
in

of a Superfluous Man. 1 Title of a story [1851]


with
the
distributive
laws.

conformity

his capacity, his talent and his age; it is on this basis that his duties will be determined,

MORELLY, Code de Nature [c. 1773] And distribution was made unto every man Acts 4:35 according as he had need. 'The phrase is from Pushkin's Eugene
Onegin.

687

TURGENEV
does no does no take any principle on trust, no matter with what respect that principle is sur
nihilist
1

CLOUGH

is

bow

to any authorities,

man who who

A world
ing.

where nothing

is

had

for noth-

The Bothie

of TobernaVuolich, pt. VIII

rounded. Fathers and Sons

[1862], ch.

As

ships,

With

That vague, crepuscular time, the


time of regrets that resemble hopes, 01 hopes that resemble regrets, when youth has passed, but old age has not
yet arrived.
I

Two

becalmed at eve, that lay canvas drooping, side by side, towers of sail, at dawn of day

Are scarce long leagues apart descried.

Qua Curswn Ventus


It fortifies

[1849],
st.
i

16. 7

share

no man's

opinions;

have

my

my
I

soul to

know

own.

16. 13

The courage not


thing.

That, though I perish, Truth is so: That, howsoever I stray and range,

to believe in anyIb.

14

A picture shows me at a glance what


it

takes dozens of pages of a


3

book to
Ib.

Thou dost not change. when I recall That, if I slip, Thou dost not fall. "With Whom Is No VariabkWhatever
I steadier

do,

step

expound.

16

ness"

[1862]

Whatever a man prays


for a miracle.

for,

he prays

Every prayer reduces itself to this: "Great God, grant that twice two be not four." Prayer
In days
of doubt,
in

age, Disease, or sorrows strike him, Inclines to think there is a God,

And almost everyone when

Or something very like Him.


Dipsychus [1862],
pt. I, sc. 5

days of sad

brooding on my country's fate, thou alone art my rod and my staff


mighty, true, free Russian speech! But for thee, how not to fall into despair,
that happens at home? Yet seeing who can think that such a tongue is not
all

How

pleasant

it is

to

have money!
Ib.

Is true of

That out of sight is out of mind most we leave behind. Songs of Absence [1862]

given to a great people?


Senilia [1882]

Say not the struggle naught availeth,

ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH


1819-1861
Grace
given of God, but knowledge is bought in the market. The Bothie of Tober-na-Vuolich
is

The labor and the wounds are vain, The enemy faints not, nor faileth, And as things have been they remain. Say Not the Struggle Naught
Availeth [1862], st
i

For while the


ing,

tired waves, vainly break-

[1848],
1

pt IV

Seem here no
Far back,

Nihilism was first encountered in 1829 * Nadazhdin's article against Pushkin. It was used throughout the 1830*8 with a variety of meanings, but the meaning which became central was
applied by Turgenev to the psychology of the of the i86o's in Fathers and Sons. It was also used by Katknov in the which

painful inch to gain, through creeks and inlets making, Comes silent flooding in, the main.3

men

And

When
1
fl

magazine

not by eastern windows only, daylight comes, comes in the

published Fathers and Sons four months before the book appeared.
2 *

light;

Translated by
See

HARRY

STEVENS.

Anonymous,

p. i4gb.

See James 1:17, p. 563. See Thomas a Kempis, p. i7ob, and note. See Macaulay, p. 5953.

688

CLOUGH
In
front,

ELIOT

the sun

climbs

slow,
is

how
1

slowly,

But westward,

look, the land

bright.

We hand folks over to God's mercy, and show none ourselves. Adam Bede, ch. 42
I'm not denyin' the
ish;

Say Not the Struggle Naught Availeth, st. 3, 4 Thou shalt not kill; but needst not
strive

women are foolGod Almighty made 'em to match


16. 53
law's

the men.

Officiously to

keep

alive.

The
raskills.

made

to

take

care

o'

The

Latest Decalogue

The Mitt on the


In
stood,

GEORGE ELIOT [MARIAN EVANS CROSS]


1819-1880

Floss [1860], bk. Ill, ch. 4

natural

science,
is

there

I have undernothing petty to the

Tis God

mind
gives
skill,

that has a large vision of rela-

But not without men's hands: not make Antonio Stradivari's violins

He

could

tions,

and to which every single object

sum of conditions. It is the same with the observation of surely


suggests a vast
life.

Without Antonio.

Stradivarius

human

16. IV, i

O may
Of

I join the choir invisible those immortal dead who live again

In minds

made

better

O May I Join the Choir Invisible


Any coward can
fight a battle

by

their presence.

any pity for conceited peobecause I think they carry their 16. V, 4 comfort about with them. 1
I've never
ple,
1

The

happiest

women,

like the happi-

when

est nations,

have no history. 2

he's sure of winning; but give the man who has pluck to fight when he's

me

Ib.VI, 3
Nothing
forehand.
Silas
is

sure of losing. That's my way, sir; and there are many victories worse than a
defeat.

so

good

as

it

seems bech.

Marner [1861],

18

Janet's

Repentance

[1857], ch. 6

Opposition may become sweet to a man when he has christened it persecution.


It's

In our springtime every day has its hidden growth in the mind, as it has in
the earth

when the

little

folded blades

16. 8

but

little

good

you'll

do a-water-

are getting ready to pierce the ground. Felix Holt, the Radical [1866],
eft.

18

ing the last year's crops.

Adam Bede
It

[1859], ch. 18

o'er again, an'

was a pity he couldna be hatched hatched different.


16.

One way of getting an idea of our fellow-countrymen's miseries is to go


and look
at their pleasures.
is

16.

28

Prophecy
of error.

the most gratuitous form


eft.

A
its

patronizing disposition always has


side.

meaner
It's

16.

28
If

Middlemarch [1871-1872],

10

that take advantage that 16. 32 get advantage i' this world.

them

we had a keen vision of all that is ordinary in human life, it would be like
hearing the grass grow or the squirrel's
1

He was

like a cock

who thought

the

sun had risen to hear him crow.


lb. 33

There

is

in the world to throw any of it

not enough of love and goodness away on conceited


[1844-1900],

people.
a

NIETZSCHE

Human,

All

^Both

Sir

Winston Churchill and John


this line.

F.

Too Human, zap


See Carlyle, p. 578a, and note.

Kennedy liked to quote

ELIOT
heart beat, roar which

KINGSLEY

and we should die of that


is

God

give us

men!

time

like this de-

the other side of silence. Middlemarch, ch. 22


entertain

mands
Strong minds, great hearts, true faith, and ready hands; Men whom the lust of office does not
kill;

Hostesses

who

much must

make up their parties as ministers make up their cabinets, on grounds other


than personal liking. Daniel Deronda [1876], bk.
I,

Men whom
buy;

the spoils of office cannot

ch. 5

Men who possess opinions and a will; Men who have honor; men who will
not
lie.

difference of taste in jokes

is

Wanted

great strain

on the

[1872],

I.

affections.
Ife

JULIA
they're

WARD HOWE
1819-1910

Men's men: gentle or simple,

much
ing

of a muchness.
is

Ib. IV, 31

Mine

Blessed
to

the

man who,
fact.

having nothin

say,

abstains

from giving

He

eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord; is trampling out the vintage where

words evidence of the

Impressions of Theophrastus

He

Such [1879]

THOMAS DUNN
ENGLISH
1819-1902 Oh! don't you remember sweet Alice, Ben Bolt? Sweet Alice, whose hair was so brown, Who wept with delight when you gave

the grapes of wrath are stored; * hath loosed the fateful lightning of His terrible, swift sword; His truth is marching on.
Battle

Hymn

of the Republic [1862],**. i

In the beauty of the lilies Christ was bom across the sea, With 3 glory in His bosom that transfigures

you and me;

As

He

And trembled

her a smile, with fear at your frown? Ben Bolt 1

died to make men holy, let us die to make men free. Ib. st. 5

CHARLES KINGSLEY
1819-1875 Oh! that we two were Maying.

JOSIAH GILBERT

HOLLAND
1819-1881
not
reached

The
at

Saint's

Tragedy [1848],
act II,
sc.

Heaven

is

single

Oh

Mary,

bound;

go
. .

and

call

the

cattle

But we build the ladder by which we


rise

home

Across the sands of Dee.

From the
skies,

The Sands
lowly earth to the vaulted
to its

of Dee,
16.

st. i
st.

The
For

cruel crawling foam.

And we mount
round. 2
i

summit round by

men must
weep,

work, and

women must
and many
to

First

Gradatim [1872], st. i published in the New York Mirror,


2,

And

there's little to earn

an adaptation of an old German melody, by NELSON KNEASS, and sung in the play The Battle of Buena Vista. In 1894 GEORGE Du MAURIER used the song in his novel Trilby and it at once beSeptember
1843.
It

was

set

to

music,

keep, Though the harbor bar be moaning.

The Three Fishers,


iSee Isaiah 63:3,

st. i

came popular.
*Step after step the ladder
is

He
ascended.

p. 330.

and

wrath

GEORGE HERBERT, Jacula Prudentum [1640]

treadeth the winepress of the fierceness of Revelation Almighty God.

690

KINGSLEY

LOWELL
The loveliest name is
fairy in

And

the sooner
sleep;

it's

over, the sooner to

the world; and

her
to the bar

Mrs.

And good-bye
ing.

and

its

moan-

bedoneby.

The Three

DoasyouwouldWater Babies, ch. 5

Fishers, St. 3

Be good, sweet maid, and let who will be clever; Do noble things, not dream them, all
day long;

To

discontent,

be discontented with the divine and to be ashamed with the


is

noble shame,

the very germ and

first

And

so make Life, and Death, that For Ever

and

upgrowth of all virtue. Health and Education

The Science
Some

of
is

One

grand sweet song.

A Farewell,

st.

say that the age of chivalry

past, that lie spirit of

romance

is

dead.

In the light of fuller day, Of purer science, holier laws. On the Death of a Certain

age of chivalry is never past, so a wrong left unredressed long on earth. Life [1879], vol. II, ch. 28
as there is

The

Journal

[1848-1849],

st.

More ways

of killing a cat than chok[1855],


^-

ing her with cream.

Westward Ho

2O

JAMES RUSSELL

LOWELL

Clear and cool, clear and cool,

By laughing
pool.

shallow,

and

dreaming

Be

Water Babies

[1863].

Song
st.

I,

1819-1891 and the nobleness that lies In other men, sleeping, but never dead, Will rise in majesty to meet thine own. Sonnet TV [1840]
noble!

When
And And And

the world is young, lad, all the trees are green; every goose a swan, lad,
all

No man
Is

every lass a queen;

is bora into the world whose work not born with him; there is always

Then hey for boot and horse, lad, And round the world away: Young blood must have its course,

work,

And
lad,
st. i

tools to
will;

work withal,

for those

who

And

2 every dog his day.

And

blessed are the horny


toil!

hands of

16.

Song II,

A Glance
They
are slaves
fallen

Behind the Curtain


[1843]

When all the world is

old, lad,

And all the trees are brown; And all the sport is stale, lad, And all the wheels run down.
Ib. st. 2

who

fear to speak

For the

and the weak.

Stanzas on

Freedom

[1843],

st.

God grant you find one face there You loved when all was young!
I

They
16.

are slaves who dare not be In the right with two or three.

16.
soli-

once had a sweet

The prettiest doll


Her cheeks were
dears,

little doll, dears, in the world; so red and so white,

The
Once

nurse of full-grown souls


tude.

is

Columbus

[1844]

And her
i

hair was so charmingly curled.


16.

Song IV,
i,

st.

The

Christian Socialist.
5/5, p. *66a.

to every man and nation comes the moment to decide, In the strife of Truth with Falsehood, for the good or evil side.

*See Shakespeare, Hamlet V,

The Present

Crisis [1844], st.

691

LOWELL
Truth forever on the scaffold, Wrong forever on the throne l Yet that scaffold sways the future, and, behind the dim unknown, Standeth God within the shadow, keeping watch above his own. The Present Crisis, st. 8

Then Heaven

tries

the earth

if it

be in

And

tune, over it softly her

warm

ear lays.

The Vision

of Sir Launfal, prelude to pt. I, st. 5

He

Who

Then to side with Truth is noble when we share her wretched crust.
16.
st.

gives only the worthless gold gives from a sense of duty. 16. pt. I,

st.

Not what

we

11

give,

but

what
is

we
I

occasions teach new duties; time makes ancient good uncouth; They must upward still, and onward, who would keep abreast of Truth.
Ib. st 18

New

Who

share For the gift without the giver

bare;

gives himself with his alms feeds

three Himself, his hungering neighbor, and me. Ib. pt. II, st. 8

drew in New England's air, and from her hardy breast Sucked in the tyrant-hating milk that will not let me rest; And if my words seem treason to the dullard and the tame, Tis but my Bay State dialect our faI first

In creating, the only hard thing's to be-

gin;

grass-blade's

no

easier to

make

than

an oak.

A
'tis

Fable for Critics [1848]

For though he builds glorious temples,

odd

thers spake the same.

On

He
Washington
ladylike of

leaves never a

the Capture of Fugitive

doorway to get
is

in a

Slaves
[1845],

Near
St.

god.

16. [of Emerson]

And

honor the

man who

willing to

The

birch,
trees.

most shy and


Indian

sink

Half his present repute for the freedom


to think,

An

Summer

Reverie [1846], st. 8

Not only around our infancy Doth heaven with all its splendors

his cause strong or weak, Will risk t' other half for the freedom to speak.
Ib.

And, when he has thought, be

lie;

Daily, with souls that cringe and plot, Sinais climb and know it not. 2

We

The Vision
st.

[1848], prelude

of Sir Laurifal to pt. I,

There comes Poe, with his raven, like Barnaby Rudge, Three fifths of him genius and two
fifths

sheer fudge.
all

Ib.

For a cap and bells our lives we pay, Bubbles we buy with a whole soul's
tasking:

Nature

fits

her children with somewrite

thing to do,

He who would
Ez
I

and can't

Tis heaven alone that is given away, Tis only God may be had for the asking.

can surely review. 2


fer war, I call it murder There you hev it plain an' don't want to go no furder

write, 16.

Ib. st.

flat;

And what
Then,
1

if

so rare as a day in June? ever, come perfect days;


is

Worth on

foot,

and

rascals in the coach.


I.

Than my Testyment fer that. The BfgZow Papers. Series


[1848], no.
1

DRYDEN, Art of Poetry

[1685],

376

j, st.

Wrong
sleepsi

rules
J.

G.

the land, and waiting Justice HOLLAND [1819-1881], Wanted


513!).

*See Wordsworth, p.

See Emerson, p. 6070, and Whitman, p. 7oob. 2 See Coleridge, p. 5*8a, and Disraeli, p. 6120,

692

LOWELL
You've gut to
git

Ef you want

to take in

up airly God.

Don't never know.

prophesy

onless

ye

The Bigelow

Papers. Series I, no. i f st. 5


It's

The BfgZow

The
'most enough to
swear.

Papers. Series II. Courtin', No. 2

This goin' ware glory waits ye haint one 1 Ib. 2, st. 6 agreeable feetur.

make

a deacon
Ib.

But John

P.

Folks never understand the folks they


hate.

Robinson, he Sez they didn't know everythm*


in Judee.

Ib.

down
us

Ib. 3, st. 8

Ef you want peace, the thing you've gut

tudu
Is
jes'

marciful
holler

Providunce fashioned

to

show you're up
follers

tu.i

to fightin', Ib.
live.

O' purpose thet we might our principles


swaller.
I

Bad work

Ib. 4, st . 2
like to

ye ez long's ye
to

Ib.

should

shoot
gret

The
1

The
Is,

surest

holl gang,

by the
all

horn spoon!
16. 5, st. 2

pkn
so.

make

Man
Ib.

think

him

du believe with

my soul

To

In the gret Press's freedom, pint the people to the goal 7 An' in the traces lead em.
16. 6,
st.

Our papers don't purtend to wut Guv'ment choose,


An' thet insures us
best o' noose.
all

print on'y

to git the very Ib. 3

7 9

No, never say nothin' without you're


compelled tu, An' then don't say nothin' thet you can be held tu. Ib. 5

don't believe in princerple,


I

But oh
It ain't

du

in interest.

16.

st.

by princerples nor

men

preudunt course is steadied scent wich pays the best, an' then

My

They came three thousand


died,

miles,

and

Go into

To
10

it

baldheaded.

Ib. st

Of my merit thet pint you yourself may jedge; All is, I never drink no spent, Nor I haint never signed no pledge.

On

keep the Past upon its throne; Unheard, beyond the ocean tide, Their English mother made her moan. 2 Graves of Two English Soldiers

on

Concord
st.

Battle-

ground [1849],

16. 7, st. 9

Ez

to

my princerples, I glory
Ib.
st.

In hevin' nothin' o' the sort,

10

God makes
still,

sech nights,

all

white an'

The snow had begun in the gloaming, And busily all the night Had been heaping field and highway With a silence deep and white. The First Snowfall
[1849], st - 1

Fur'z you can look or listen, Moonshine an' snow on field


All silence an'
all

an'

hill,

glisten.

16. Series II [1866].

The
st.

There is nothing so desperately monotonous as the sea, and I no longer wonder at the cruelty of pirates. Fireside Travels [1864]. At Sea
It is by presence of mind in untried emergencies that the native metal of a

Courtin
His heart kep' goin' pity-pat, But hern went pity-Zekle.

9
,

Ib.

st.
'tis

15
to

man
1

is

tested.

My

gran'ther's rule was safer 'n

Abraham Lincoln

[1864]

crow:
*See

Thomas Moore,

p. 54 ib.

See Vegetius, p. 1460, and note. * Inscribed on the memorial to the two British soldiers, Concord, Massachusetts.

693

LOWELL

What men

call treasure

and the gods

call dross.

Ode

Recited at the Harvard


[1865],

able with an east wind is to put on your overcoat. Democracy [October 6, 1884]

Commemoration

They come

transfigured back,

In vain we call old notions fudge, And bend our conscience to our dealing;

Secure from change in their highhearted ways, Beautiful evermore, and with the rays Of morn on their white Shields of Ex* 16. 8 pectation!

The Ten Commandments


budge,

will

not
1

And

stealing

mil continue
International

stealing.

Copyright

When I was a beggarly boy,


I

[November 20, 1885]


These pearls of thought in Persian gulfs were bred, Each softly lucent as a rounded moon;

And lived in a cellar damp, had not a friend nor a toy, But I had Aladdin's lamp.
Aladdin [1868], sr.z

The

diver

Omar

plucked them from

Safe in the hallowed quiets of the past. The Cathedral* [1869], St. 9

their bed,

Fitzgerald strung thread.

them on an English

The

wisest

man

could ask no more of

In a Copy of

Omar Khayyam
[1888],
st. i

Fate

Than

to

be simple, modest, manly,

As

life

runs on, the road grows strange

true,

Safe from the many, honored by the few; To count as naught in world, or church, or state;

With faces new, and near the end The milestones into headstones change,
'Neath every one a friend. Sixty-eighth Birthday [1889]

But inwardly in secret Sonnet Jeffries


,

to

be

great.

Wyman

[1874]
else de-

For

me

Fate gave, whatever she

A
I

nied,

thank her for


arise

nature sloping to the southern side; it, though when clouds


natures
skies.

Things always seem fairer when we look back at them, and it is out of that inaccessible tower of the past that Longing leans and beckons. Literary Essays, vol. I [1864Few Bits of Roman 1890],

Mosaic
Mishaps are like knives, that either serve us or cut us, as we grasp them by the blade or the handle.
16.

Such

double-darken

gloomy

Epistle to George William Curtis


[1874]. Postscript

Cambridge Thirty Years Ago


a sense of security in an old
criticized for us!

The maple

puts her corals on in May.

The Maple

What

[1875]

book which Time has


16.

out of which such men as he are made is good to be bom on,


soil

The

Library of

Old Authors

to

good to live on, good to die for and be buried in.


Garfield [September 24, 1881]

It is curious how tyrannical the habit of reading is, and what shifts we make to escape thinking. 2 There is no bore we dread being left alone with so much

There
1 a

is

no good

the inevitable.

The

in arguing with only argument avail-

as our

own minds.
16.

Moosehead

Journal

See Masefield, p. 947b-g48a. Chartres.

Motto of the American Copyright League. 3 See Sheridan, p. 4810, and Bryce, p. 7783.

694

LOWELL
Truly there is a tide in the affairs of 1 but there is no gulf stream setting forever in one direction.
Literary Essays, vol. II [1870-

MELVILLE
Genius
all

b
over

the

world stands

men,

hand
nition

in hand,

and one shock of recogruns the whole circle round. Hawthorne and His Mosses
sensible things banished from find an asylum among the

1890],
turies

New

England

Two

Cen-

Ago
better ballast for keeping
its

Many
high
life

There
the
it

is

no

mob.
Oh,
life

White
give

Jacket [1850],

eft.

mind steady on
all risk

keel,

and saving
16.

me
the

from

of crankiness, than busi-

again
thrill,

the

joy,

the rover's the whirl! Let

ness.
itself

me

Puritanism, believing quick with the seed of religious liberty, laid, without knowing it, the egg of democracy.
It

me leap into thy saddle once more. I am sick of these terra-firma toils and cares; sick of
feel thee again, old sea! let

16.

the dust and reek of towns. Let me hear the clatter of hailstones on icebergs, and not the dull tramp of these plodders,

common

was in making education not only to all, but in some sense com-

plodding their dull

way from
Let

their

pulsory on all, that the destiny of the free republics of America was practically settled.

to their graves. thee up, sea breeze! and


cradles
spray. Forbid
it,

me

snuff
in thy

whinny

sea gods! intercede for

16.

Talent

is

power; genius

that which is in a man's is that in whose power a

man

is.

16.

Rousseau and the Sentimentalists

with Neptune, sweet Amphi1 that no dull clod may fall on my coffin! Be mine the tomb that swallowed up Pharaoh and all his hosts; let me lie down with Drake where he 16. 19 sleeps in the sea,
trite,

me

Every man feels instinctively that all the beautiful sentiments in the world
weigh
less

Familiarity

with

danger

makes

than a single lovely action.


16.
is

An umbrella Scotch mist.

of

no

avail against a

brave man braver, but less daring. Thus with seamen: he who goes the oftenest round Cape Horn goes the most cir16. 23 cumspectly.

16. Ill [1870-1890],

On

Certain

Condescension in

In time of peril, like the needle to the lodestone, obedience, irrespective of rank, generally flies to him who is best
16. 27 command. Are there no Moravians in the Moon, that not a missionary has yet visited
fitted to

Foreigners
Solitude
tion
as
is

society character.

as needful to the imaginais wholesome for the


16.
is

Dry den
attribute

this

poor pagan

planet

of

civilize

A wise skepticism
of a

the

first

civilization Christendom? 2

and

ours, to christianize

16.

64

good

critic.

16. Shakespeare

Once More

Call

me

Ishmael.

Moby-Dick

[1851],

eft. i

HERMAN MELVILLE
1819-1891 You must have plenty of sea-room to tell the Truth in. Hawthorne and His Mosses [1850]
1

Yes, as everyone knows, meditation and water are wedded forever


. .
.

Why
holy?
Surely
3

did the old Persians hold the sea

Why did
all

arate deity,

the Greeks give it a sepand own brother of Jove? this is not without meaning.

See Shakespeare, Julius Caesar IV, Hi. 2/7,

iWife of Neptune.
See Emerson, p. 6o6b.

p. 2563.

695

MELVILLE

And

deeper the meaning of that Narcissus, who because he story could not grasp the tormenting, mild image he saw in the fountain, plunged
still

and

since then perpetuated through the

of

hereditary

dyspepsias

nurtured
ch.

by
17

Ramadans.
If,

Moby-Dick,
death,

at

into

it

and was drowned. But that same

my

image, we ourselves see in all rivers and oceans. It is the image of the ungraspable phantom of life; and this is the

more properly
precious
I

my
in

MSS.

executors, or creditors, find any

my

my

desk, then here

key to

it all.

Moby-Dick, ch.

prospectively ascribe all the honor and the glory to whaling; for a whale-

ship

was

my

Yale College and


Ib.

my
24
feel

But oh! shipmates! on the starboard hand of every woe, there is a sure delight; and higher the top of that delight, than the bottom of the woe is
deep. Is not the main-truck higher than the kelson is low? Delight is to him a far, far upward, and inward who against the proud gods delight and commodores of this earth, ever stands forth his own inexorable self.
16. 9

Harvard.

That immaculate manliness we


it

within ourselves, so far within us, that remains intact though all the outer character seem gone; bleeds with keenest anguish at the undraped spectacle
of a valor-ruined

man,

16. 26

Thou great democratic God! who didst not refuse to the swart convict,
Bunyan, the pale poetic pearl; Thou who didst clothe with doubly hammered leaves of finest gold, the stumped and paupered arm of old Cervantes; Thou who didst pick up Andrew Jackson from the pebbles; who didst hurl him upon a warhorse; who didst thunder him higher than a throne! Thou who, in all

And
will

eternal delight
his,

and
his

deliciousness

be

who coming
chiefly

to lay
final

him

down, can say with

breath
to

Father!

known

me

by Thy rod
I die. I

mortal or immortal, here have striven to be Thine, more

than to be this world's, or mine own.

Thy

mighty,

earthly

marchings,

ever

Yet this is nothing; I leave eternity to Thee; for what is man that he should
live

cullest thy selectest

champions from the


16.

kingly

commons!
it is,

out the lifetime of his God?


Ib.

This

that forever keeps God's

With
set

the landless gull, that at sun-

true princes of the Empire from the world's hustings; and leaves the highest

folds her wings and is rocked to sleep between billows; so at nightfall,

honors that

this air

can

give, to those

men who become famous more

through

the Nantucketer, out of sight of land,


furls his sails,

their infinite inferiority to the choice

and

lays

him

to his rest,
Ib.

while under his very pillow rush herds


of walruses and whales.

14

hidden handful of the Divine Inert, than through their undoubted superiority over the dead level of the mass.
Jb.33
All that
all

But when a man's


really
frantic;

when

religion it is a

becomes
positive

most maddens and torments; that stirs up the lees of things; all

torment to him; and, in fine, makes this earth of ours an uncomfortable inn to lodge in; then I think it high time to take that individual aside and argue the Ib. 17 point with him.
In

truth with malice in


subtle

it; all that cracks the sinews and. cakes the brain; all the

demonisms of life and thought; to crazy Ahab, were visibly personified, and made practically assailable
all evil,

one

word,

rather digressively;

Queequeg, said I, hell is an idea first

in Moby Dick. He piled upon the whale's white hump the sum of all the

born on an undigested apple dumpling;

general rage and hate felt by his whole race from Adam down; and then, as if

696

MELVILLE
his chest

his

had been a mortar, he burst hot heart's shell upon it. Moby-Dick, ch. 41
this appalling

still; tossing like slumberers in their beds; the ever-rolling waves but made so by their restlessness.

dreaming,

ocean surrounds the verdant land, so in the soul of man


there lies one insular Tahiti,
full

For as

Moby-Dick,
There
is

eft.

in

no steady unretracing and

pro-

of
all

peace and

joy,

but encompassed by

gress in this life; we do through fixed gradations,


last

not advance
at the

the horrors of the half

known

life.

O
far
lives

Nature, and
all

soul of

16.58 man! how


stirs

one pause: through infancy's unconscious spell, boyhood's thoughtless

beyond

utterance are your linked

analogies! not the smallest

atom
its

or

on matter, but has

duplicate in mind.

cunning 16. 70

So, therefore, that mortal man who hath more of joy than sorrow in him, not that mortal man cannot be true true, or undeveloped. With books the same. The truest of all men was the

doubt (the common doom), then skepticism, then disbelief, resting at last in manhood's pondering repose of If. But once gone through, we trace the round again; and are infants, boys, and men, and Ifs
faith, adolescence'

eternally.

Where

lies

the final harbor,


16.

whence we unmoor no more?


114
of
in

But

if

the great sun


is

move not

Man
books

of Sorrows, and the truest of


is

all
is

himself; but

as

an errand boy

the fine

Solomon's and Ecclesiastes hammered steel of woe.

16.96
a condor's quill! Give Vesuvius' crater for an inkstand!

Give

me

me
.

To produce

a mighty book,

choose a mighty theme,

you must 16. 104

heaven; nor one single star can revolve, but by some invisible power; how then can this one small heart beat; this one small brain think thoughts; unless God does that beating, does that thinking, does that living, and not I. By heaven, man, we are turned round and round in
this

Seat thyself sultanically among the moons of Saturn, and take high ab-

Fate

world, like yonder windlass, and 16. 152 is the handspike.

and he seems a a wonder, grandeur, and a woe. But from the same point, take mankind in mass, and for the most part, they seem a mob of unnecessary duplicates, both contemporary and hereditary.
stracted

man

alone;

An old, old sight, and yet somehow so young; aye, and not changed a wink since I first saw it, a boy, from the sandhills of Nantucket! The same!
the same! the same to Noah as to me. There's a soft shower to leeward.
lead

16.

107

Such lovely leewardings! They must to something else somewhere

is, one knows not what sweet mystery about this sea, whose gently

There

than common land, the palms.

more palmy than


16.

awful stirrings seem to speak of some hidden soul beneath; like those fabled undulations of the Ephesian sod over the buried Evangelist St. John. And

meet it is, that over these sea pastures, wide-rolling watery prairies and Potters' Fields of all four continents, the waves
rise and fall, and ebb and flow unceasingly; for here, millions of mixed shades and shadows, drowned dreams, somnambulisms, reveries; all that we

Now small fowls flew screaming over the yet yawning gulf; a sullen white surf beat against its steep sides; then all collapsed, and the great shroud of the
sea rolled

on

as it rolled five

thousand
16.

years ago.

should

call

lives

and

souls,

lie

dreaming,

What we take to be our strongest tower of delight, only stands at the cathe fallprice of the minutest event ing of a leaf, the hearing of a voice, or the receipt of one little bit of paper

6 97

MELVILLE
scratched over with a few small characby a sharpened feather. Pierre [1852], bk. TV

RUSKIN
falseness in all our impressions of external things, which I would generally characterize as the "Pathetic Fallacy." Modern Painters, vol. Ill [1856], pt. IV, ch. 12

ters

One

trembles to think of that mys-

terious thing in the soul, which seems to acknowledge no human jurisdiction,

but in spite of the individual's own


innocent
dreams,
thoughts.
self,

will

still

dream horrid
unmentionable
Ib.

and
is

mutter

In order that people may be happy in work, these three things are needed: They must be fit for it. They must not do too much of it. And they must have a sense of success in it.
their

smile

the chosen vehicle for

all

Pre-Raphaelitism [1851]

ambiguities.

Ib.

Say what some poets will, Nature is not so much her own ever-sweet interpreter, as the mere supplier of that

Remember that the most beautiful things in the world are the most useless; peacocks and lilies for instance.
The Stones
Blue color
is

cunning

alphabet,
as

whereby

and combining

he

selecting pleases, each man

of Venice [1851i853J,voLI, ch. 2

reads his own peculiar lesson according to his own peculiar mind and mood.
16.

everlastingly appointed

XXV

by the Deity to be a source of delight. Lectures on Architecture and


Painting [1853], I

But

me me

they'll lash in

hammock, drop

There

deep.

Fathoms down, fathoms down, how I'll dream fast asleep.


I

is no wealth but life. Unto This Last [1862],

sec.

77

feel it stealing

now. Sentry, are you


1

there?
Just ease these darbies
at the wrist,

And roll me over I am sleepy, and

fair.

me

the oozy weeds about

twist.

the richest which nourishes the greatest number of noble and happy human beings; that man is richest who, having perfected the functions of his own life to the utmost, has also the widest helpful influence, both
is

That country

personal,

Billy Budd, Foretopman [published 1924], Bitty in the Dar-

and by means of

sions, over the lives of others.

his possesIb.

THOMAS WILLIAM
PARSONS
1819-1892
Sorrow and the scarlet leaf, Sad thoughts and sunny weather; Ah me, this glory and this grief Agree not well together!

Life being very short, and the quiet hours of it few, we ought to waste none of them in reading valueless books.

Sesame and
All
classes:

Lilies [1865], preface

books are divisible into two the books of the hour, and the
all

books of

time.

16.

Of

Kings' Treasuries, sec. 8

Song

for

September

JOHN RUSKIN
1819-1900
the greatest artist who has embodied, in the sum of his works, the greatest number of the greatest ideas.
is

Borrowers are nearly always ill-spendand it is with lent money that all evil is mainly done, and all unjust war
ers,

protracted,

The Crown

He

of

[1866].

Wild Olive Work, sec. 34

Modern
1

Painters, vol. I [1843], pt. I, ch. 2

Give a little love to a child, and you Ib. 49 get a great deal back.
There's no music in a "rest," Katie, that I know of: but there's the

Manacles.

making

RUSKIN
of music in it. And people are always missing that part of the life-melody. Ethics of the Dust [1866],

WHITMAN

WILLIAM ROSS WALLACE


1819-1881

Lecture 4, The Crystal Orders


Life without industry
try
is

The hand

that rocks the cradle


rules the world.

is

the

guilt, indus-

hand that

without art

is

brutality.

The Hand That Rules the


World,
st. i

Lectures on Art [1870]. Ill, The Relation oj Art to Morals


if

Trust thou thy Love: she not sweet? Trust thou thy Love: she not pure?

she be proud,
she be mute,

is

WALT WHITMAN
18191892 The United States themselves
essentially

if

is

are
.
.

Lay thou thy


Fail,

soul full in her hands,

low

the
is

greatest

poem.

at her feet;

Here

Sun and Breath! yet, for thy peace, she shall endure. Trust Thou Thy Love

something in the doings of man that corresponds with the broadcast doings of the day and night. Preface to first edition of Leaves of Grass [1855]
at last

MAX SCHNECKEN BURGER


1819^-1849

The

proof of a poet

is

that his coun-

try absorbs

him
it.

as affectionately as

he
16.

has absorbed

Dear Fatherland, no fear be thine, Firm stands thy guard along the Rhine. The Watch on the Rhine, 1 st. 4

Me

imperturbe,
nature.

standing at

ease

in
l

Leaves of Grass [1855-1892]


I

hear

America
16. I

singing,

the

varied

WILLIAM WETMORE STORY


1819-1895 Of every noble work the
best,
I

carols I hear.

Hear America Singing

will

silent part is

is

And

Of all expression that which cannot be The Unexpressed expressed.


I

put in my poems that with you heroism upon land and sea, I will report all heroism from an American point of view.
16. Starting

from Paumanok, 7

QUEEN VICTORIA
We
bilities

the stars say the whole earth and all in the sky are for religion's sake.

16.8
I say

1819-1901 are not interested in the


of defeat.

possi-

the real and permanent grandeur


of these States
gion.

must be

their reli16.

To A.

J.

Balfour [December 1899]

We are not amused.


Upon
self

seeing an imitation of herby the Honorable Alexander

The first edition of Leaves of Grass consisted of 94 quarto pages and included the preface which set forth Whitman's faith and his poetic theory. Enlarged and revised editions followed. The tenth edition (from which the text used
1

Yorke, groom-inwaiting to the Queen. From Notebooks of a Spinster Lady


\January 2, 1900]
i

Grantham

here is taken) was the last edition supervised by Whitman himself, literally from his deathbed, and hence it is sometimes called the "Deathbed Edition." Whitman wrote of it, "as
there are

now several
and

different texts

Die Wacht

am

Rhein.

prefer

and

dates, I wish to say recommend this present one."

editions o Leaves of Grass, that I

699

WHITMAN
beautiful Nothing can happen more

No "sentimentalist
them;

no stander above
or apart from

than death. 1 Leaves of Grass. Starting

men and women,

from Paumanok, 12
I

No more

modest than immodest.


Leaves of Grass. Song
of

celebrate myself
I

And what
I

and sing myself, assume you shall assume. Ib. Song of Myself,

Myself, 24
i

dote on myself, there

is

that lot of

me
Ib.

loafe

and

invite

my soul.
urge,

ItI

and

all

so luscious.
('tis

of the world. Always the procreant urge Ib. 3

Urge and urge and

hear the violoncello,

the young
.

man's heart's complaint)


I

16.26
believe a leaf of grass is no less than the journey-work of the stars.
Ib. 31

kelson of the creation

is

love.

16-5

A child said What is the grass? fetching


it

to

me with
it is

full

hands.

Ib.

I think I could turn

and

live

with

ani-

Or

guess

Lord.

the handkerchief of the !&

mals, they are so placid and selfcontain'd, stand and look at them long and long.
their condition,

They do not sweat and whine about


it

And now

seems to

me
it

the beautiful
Ib.

uncut hair of

graves.

Has anyone supposed


I

lucky to be
it is just
it.

born? hasten to inform him or her,


as lucky to die,

and

know

They do not lie awake in the dark and weep for their sins, They do not make me sick discussing their duty to God, Not one is dissatisfied, not one is demented with the mania of own-

I6.

am he

that walks with the tender and

Not one

ing things, kneels to another, nor to his kind that lived thousands of years
ago,
is

growing night,
I call

to the earth and sea half-held

by

the night. Press close bare-bosom'd night press close magnetic nourishing night! Night of south winds! night of the large

Not one
Behold!

respectable or

unhappy

over

the whole earth.


I

Ib. 32
little

do not give lectures or a


I

charity,

few
Still

stars!

When I give
I

give myself.

Ib.

40

nodding night!
night.

mad naked summer


Ib. 21

Walt Whitman am

of I, a Kosmos, the Manhattan son, mighty Turbulent, fleshy and sensual, eating, drinking and breeding;
only a beautiful [iSQo-igis], last words to a group of friends as the Lusitania was sinking [May 7, 1915] Why should I fear Death's call? Can there

have said that the soul is than the body, And I have said that the body is not more than the soul. And nothing, not God, is greater to one 16. 4^ than one's self is.
In the faces of

not more

*Why

fear death?

Death

is

men and women

I see

adventure.

CHARLES

FROHMAN

God.

16.

Do

e'er

be

Very well then

In

life

To

more beautiful adventure than re-embark upon that unknown sea?


JAMES TERRY WHITE [1845-1920],
Fear?

contradict myself? I contradict myself, I contain multitudes.) (I am large,


I

Ib. 51

Why
st. i

iSee Emerson, p. 6070, and Lowell, p.

692!).

WHITMAN
I

sound

my

barbaric

yawp over the

Do

roofs of the world.

you know that Old Age may come after you, with equal grace, force,
fascination?

Leaves of Grass. Song of Myself, 52

Leaves of Grass. Youth, Day,

grow bequeathe from the grass I love; If you want me again, look for me 16. under your boot-soles.
I

myself to the dirt, to

Old Age and NigAt

Come, my
ready;

tan-faced children,

Follow well in order, get your weapons

A woman

waits for me, she contains


is

Have you your


all,

pistols?

have you your

nothing
16.
If

A Woman Waits For Me


sacred the

lacking.

sharp-edged axes? 16. Pioneers!

O Pioneers!

anything
sacred.

is

human body

is

Through the battle, through defeat, moving yet and never stopping,
Pioneers!

pioneers!

16. 23

16. I
I

Sing the Body Electric, 8

hear

it

was charged against

me

that

Out Out
Out

of the cradle endlessly rocking, of the mocking-bird's throat, the

But

sought to destroy institutions, really I am neither for nor against


institutions.

musical shuttle, of the Ninth-month midnight. 16. Out of the Cradle

16. I

Hear

It

Was

Charged

Endlessly Rocking

Against

Me

Whereto answering, the

sea,

When

I peruse the conquered fame of heroes and the victories of mighty generals, I do not envy the generals. 16. When I Peruse the

Delaying not, hurrying not, Whispered me through the night, and very plainly before daybreak, Lisp'd to me the low and delicious word
death.
16.

Conquer' d
Afoot and light-hearted
I

Fame

Aboard, at a ship's
16.

helm,
steering with care.

take to the

A young steersman,
But

open

road,

Aboard, at a Ship's

Helm

Healthy, free, the world before me, The long brown path before me, leading wherever
16.
I

choose.
i

Song of the Open Road,


I

the ship, the immortal ship! ship aboard the ship! ship of the soul ship of the body
voyaging, voyaging, voyaging.
16.

Henceforth

ask not good-fortune, I


16.
Silent and amazed, even when a

myself am good-fortune.

little

The
I

earth, that

boy,
is

sufficient,

do not want the


nearer,

constellations

any

know they
are,

are very well

where they

remember I heard the preacher every Sunday put God in his statements, As contending against some being or
1

influence.

16.

A Child's Amaze

know they
is

suffice for those

who

be16.

Give

me
all

the splendid silent sun, with

long to them.

his

beams
16.

full-dazzling!

Give

Me

A great
est

the Splendid
Silent Sun, i

city

that which has the great-

men and women.


16.

Song of the Broad-Axe, 4


lusty,

Word

Youth,
full

large,

loving
force,

Youth,

over all, beautiful as the sky! Beautiful that war and all its deeds of carnage must in time be utterly
lost,

of

grace,

fascination,

701

WHITMAN
That the hands of the sisters Death and Night incessantly softly wash again, and ever again, this soil'd
world;

The whole
rected

theory of the universe is diunerringly to one single

individual

namely

to

You.

Leaves of Grass. By Blue


is

For

my enemy is

dead, a man divine as dead. myself Leaves of Grass. Reconciliation


lilacs

Liberty

is

to

Ontario's Shore, 15 be subserved whatever

occurs.
Ib.

When
And
I

last

in

the

dooryard

To a Foil'd European Revolutionaire,


i

bloom'd,
the great star early droop'd in the western sky in the night,

What

mourn'd

and yet

shall

mourn with

do you suppose will satisfy the soul, except to walk free and own

no

ever-returning spring. Lilacs Last in the Ib.

superior? 16.

Laws

When

for Creations, 3

Dooryard Bloom* d,

Not

O sane and sacred death.


Come

Ib.

the sun excludes you do I exclude you. 16. To a Common Prostitute


till

1 lovely and soothing death, Undulate round the world, serenely

We too take ship O soul,


Joyous

O we can wait no longer,


we

arriving, arriving,

too launch out on trackless

In the day, in the night, to all, to each, Sooner or later, delicate death.
Ib.
Prais'd

seas, Fearless for

unknown

shores.

14

Ib. Passage to India, 8

be the fathomless universe, For life and joy, and for objects and
knowledge curious,
for love, sweet love
praise! praise!

And

Passage, immediate passage! the blood burns in my veins! soul! hoist instantly the anAway, chor!

But

praise!

For the sure-enwinding arms of coolenfolding death.


Ib.

haul out shake out every sail! Have we not stood here like trees in the

Cut the hawsers

Captain! my trip is done! The ship has weather'd every rack, the prize we sought is won, The port is near, the bells I hear, the

Captain! our fearful

Have we not
brutes?

ground long enough? grovel'd here long enough, eating and drinking like mere
16. 9

Darest thou now Walk out with

O
me

soul,

toward the unis

people

all

My Captain! Exult O shores, and ring O bells!


Ib.

exulting.

known
i

Captain!

Where

region neither ground

for the feet

nor any path to follow? 16. Darest Thou Now

Soul

with mournful tread, Walk the deck my Qaptain Fallen cold and dead.
I

But

To me
lies,
is

every hour of the

light
is

and dark

16. 3

a miracle, Every cubic inch of space

a miracle.

This dust was once the man,


Gentle, plain, just and resolute, under whose cautious hand, Against the foulest crime in history known in any land or age, Was saved the Union of these States. Ib. This Dust Was Once the Man
,

16. Miracles, 2

Today

a rude brief recitative,

Of

ships sailing the seas, each with its special flag or ship-signal. 16. Song for All Seas, All Ships, i
sea captains

Of

mates
ors

young or old, and the and of all intrepid sail-

See Shakespeare, p.

...

702

WHITMAN
Pick'd sparingly, without noise, by thee, old Ocean chosen by thee, Thou Sea, that pickest and oiliest the
race, in time,

and unitest nations!


I

Suckled by thee, old husky nurse embodying thee


Indomitable, untamed as thee. Leaves of Grass. Song for
All Seas, All Ships,
i

what there and so on have found that none of these or permanently wear finally satisfy, what remains? Nature remains. Specimen Days. New Themes Entered Upon
After you have exhausted
is

in business, politics, conviviality,

Our The The

life is

closed

our

life

begins,
leave,

depths,

Hast Thou, pellucid, in medicine for case


16.

Thy
like

azure

mine?

long, long anchorage

we

The Sky [October 20, 1876]

ship

is

clear at last

she leaps!

She swiftly courses from the shore, joy. Joy! shipmate 16. Joy, Shipmate, Joy! Camerado, this is no book, Who touches this touches a man.
16.

You must not know too much, or be too precise or scientific about birds and trees and flowers and watercraft; a cerand even vagueness perhaps ignorance, credulity helps your enjovment of these things. 16. Birds [May 14, 1881]
tain free margin,

So Long/
soul
in
all

The

world,

the

race,

the

space and time the universes, All bound as is befitting each

To have great poets, there great audiences, too.

must be

surely going somewhere. 16. Going Somewhere

Notes Left Over. Ventures on an Old Theme

democracy, as it exists and in America, with all works practically


Political

No
full
its

really great
till till

purport
singer

threatening evils, supplies a training school for making first-class men. It is life's gymnasium, not of good only, but of all. Democratic Vistas [1871]
its

song can ever attain long after the death of it has accrued and in-

corporated the many passions, many joys and sorrows, it has itself aroused.

November Boughs

[1888].

The

native personality, and that alone, that endows a man to stand before presidents or generals, or in any
It
is

Bible as Poetry

No
who

one
insists

will

ever get at

my

verses
as

distinguished

collection,

with

upon viewing them

aplomb
16.

and not culture, or intellect whatever.

any knowledge or

literary

performance.

Backward Glance O'er Traveled Roads [if

I never see that man [Lincoln] without feeling that he is one to become

personally attached to, for his combination of purest, heartiest tenderness, and native western form of manliness.

Specimen Days [1882]. The Inauguration [March 4, 1 865] He leaves for America's history and biography, so far, not only its most he leaves, in dramatic reminiscence my opinion, the greatest, best, most
characteristic, artistic, moral personality. 16. Death of President Lincoln

Concluding with two items for the imaginative genius of the West, when it worthily rises First, what Herder taught to the young Goethe, that really great poetry is always (like the Homeric or Biblical canticles) the result of a national spirit, and not the privilege of a polish'd and select few; Second, that the strongest and sweetest songs yet re-

main

to

be sung.

16.

[April 16, 1865]

There is no week nor day nor hour, when tyranny may not enter upon this
country, if the people lose their roughness and spirit of defiance Tyranny

The
books.

real

war

will never get in the 16. The Real

War

may 703

always enter

there

is

no charm,

WHITMAN
no bar against
it is

RUSSELL

the only bar against it a large resolute breed of men. Notes for Lecturers on Democracy

O land where
Or
all

all

the

men

are stones,

the stones are

men. Land That Living Warmth


Disowns

C.

J.

and "Adhesiveness" From FURNESS, Walt Whitman's


[1928]

Workshop

THEODORE O'HARA
1820-1867
Fame's eternal camping ground Their silent tents are spread, And Glory guards, with solemn round,

ALICE GARY
1820-1871

On

Work, and your house


fed:

shall

be duly

Work, and rest


I

shall

be won;
better
is

hold that a
alive

man had
his

be dead

The bivouac of the dead. The 'Bivouac of

the

Dead 1
st- i

Than

when

work

done.

[1847],

Work

Sons of the Dark and Bloody ground. 2


Ib.
st.

LUCRETIA PEABODY HALE


18201900
last Elizabeth Eliza said, "They the lady from Philadelphia, that say who is staying in town, is very wise.

GEORGE FREDERICK

ROOT

At

1820-1895
the boys are marching, Cheer up, comrades, they will come, And beneath the starry flag shall breathe the air again Of the free land in our own beloved

Tramp Tramp! Tramp!


I

Suppose

go and ask her what

is

best

to be done."

The

Peterkin Papers [1880]

We

JEAN INGELOW
1820-1897

home.

Tramp! Tramp! Tramp!


forever,

[1862]
boys,

But two are walking apart And wave their hands for
well.

Yes, we'll rally round the


farest.

flag,

mute

we'll rally

once again,

Divided. VI,

sweeter

woman

ne'er

drew breath
of Linst. 11

Than my son's

wife, Elizabeth.
colnshire, 1571,

High Tide on the Coast


There's no
clover,

Shouting the battle cry of Freedom, will rally from the hillside, we'll gather from the plain, Shouting the battle cry of Freedom.

We

The

Battle Cry of

Freedom

[1863]

dew

left

on the

daisies

and

SIR
The

I've said

There's no rain left in heaven: my "seven times" over and


over,

WILLIAM HOWARD RUSSELL


1820-1907

Seven times one are seven.

Russians dashed on towards that thin red-line streak tipped with a line of
steel. 3

Songs of Seven. Seven Times One, st. i

To The Times
the

of

London from

O O

columbine, open your folded wrapper,

Crimea,

British

infantry

the describing at Balaklava

Where two

twin turtledoves dwell! cuckoopint, toll me the purple clapbelli

[October 25, 1854]


1

Written to commemorate Americans

slain in

per That hangs in your clear green

Ib. st.

the battle of Buena Vista, February 22-33, l8 472 Translation of the Indian name Kentucky. 3 Soon the men of the column began to see that though the scarlet line was slender, it was

704

SHERMAN

SPENCER
Life
is

WILLIAM TECUMSEH SHERMAN


1820-1891 You cannot qualify war in harsher terms than I will. War is cruelty, and you cannot refine it.

a wave, which in
its

no two conexistence
1 is

moments of composed of the same


secutive

Fragments of Science,

particles. vol.

II,

Vitality

James M. Calhoun, Mayor of


Atlanta, and others

Letter [September 12, 1864] to

The mind of man may be compared to a musical instrument with a certain


range of notes, beyond which in both directions we have an infinitude of silence.

16.

Matter and Force

Hold the

fort! I

am

coming!

Signal from Kenesaw Mountain


to General John Murray Corse in Altoona [October 5, 1864]

The legitimate object of war is a more perfect peace. Speech [St. Louis, July 20, 1865]
I
all

The brightest flashes In the world of thought are incomplete until they have been proved to have their counterparts in the world of fact. 16. Scientific Materialism
It
is

as fatal as it

facts
taste.

because

cowardly to blink not to our they Ib. Science and Man


is

are

and sick of war. Its glory is moonshine. It is only those who


tired
fired a shot

am

have neither
shrieks

nor heard the

and groans

of the

cry aloud for blood, more desolation.

War is hell. 2

wounded who more vengeance,

Charles Darwin, the Abraham of scia searcher as obedient to men the command of truth as was the patriarch to the command of God. 16.
entific

Superstition

may be

defined as conin-

Attributed to a graduation address


at

structive religion

which has grown

Academy

Michigan Military [June 19, 1879]; from

congruous with intelligence.


as

16.

the National Tribune, Washington, D.C. [November 26, 1914]


I

Religious feeling is as much a verity any other part of human conscious-

ness;
side,

will

will not accept if nominated and not serve if elected. 3 Message to Republican National Convention [June 5, 1884]

and against it, on the subjective the waves of science beat in vain.
16. Professor

Virchpw and
Evolution

HERBERT SPENCER

JOHN TYNDALL
1820-1893

1820-1903
of

Heat Considered
tion.

as a

Mode

Mo-

Title of treatise [1863]

Progress, therefore, dent, but a necessity. of nature.

is

...

not an acciIt is a part


eft.

Social Statics [1851], pt. I,


A. W. KINGLAKE [1809very rigid and exact. 1891], Invasion of the Crimea, vol. Ill, p. 45$ It's "Thin red line of 'eroes" when the drums

^Education has for its object the for16. 17 mation of character??


Opinion
is

begin to
st.

roll.

KIPLING [1865-1936],

Tommy,

ultimately determined by

3
1

the feelings,

and not by the

intellect.

out. Relief is coming. General Corse replied: I am short a cheekbone and an ear, but able to whip all hell yet.

He

actually said:

Hold

am

IV, 30 knows of Morality geographnothing


ical

16.

See Philip Bliss, p. 777b. * See Robert E. Lee, p. 6aoa.

boundaries or distinctions of race,


16.

*The

familiar

version

is:

If

nominated

I
1

will not run; if elected I will not serve.

See Heraclitus, p. 773.

705

SPENCER
one can be perfectly free till all are free; no one can be perfectly moral till all are moral; no one can be perfectly

BAUDELAIRE
This survival of the
fittest.

No

Principles of Biology [18641867], pt. Ill, ch. 12

happy

till all are happy. Social Statics, pt. IV, ch.

30

Architecture,

sculpture,

painting,

music, and poetry, may truly be called the efflorescence of civilized life.
Essays on Education:
of

The Republican form of government the highest form of government: but because of this it requires the highest a type notype of human nature
is

where

at present existing.

Education

[1861].
Is

Essays [1891].

The Americans

What Knowledge

Most Worth?

from the

Every cause produces more than one


effect.

ultimate result of shielding men effects of folly is to fill the world with fools. Ib. State Tampering with

The

Ib.

On Progress: Its Lav? and


Cause

Money

Banks

The tyranny of Mrs. Grundy 1 is worse than any other tyranny we suffer under. Ib. On Manners and Fashion
Old forms of government finally grow so oppressive that they must be thrown off even at the risk of reigns of
terror.

HENRI-FREDERIC AMIEL
1821-1881
Truth is the secret of eloquence and of virtue, the basis of moral authority; it is the highest summit of art and of
life.

Journal [1883]
error
is

Ib.
as the highest

An
more
is

the more dangerous the


Ib.

Music must take rank


of the fine arts
as

truth

it

contains.

more

than
Ib.

any

other,

the one which, ministers to

Doing easily what others find difficult talent; doing what is impossible for
is

human

welfare.

talent

genius.

16,

On

the Origin and Function


of

Music

too often forget that not only is "a soul of goodness in things 2 but evil/' very generally a soul of truth in things erroneous.
there
First Principles [1861]

We

If ignorance and passion are the foes of popular morality, it must be confessed that moral indifference is the Ib. malady of the cultivated classes.

Pure truth cannot be assimilated by the crowd; it must be communicated by 16. contagion.

by a survey of the past that majorities have been wrong must not blind us to the complementary fact that majorities have usually
fact disclosed

The

CHARLES BAUDELAIRE
1821-1867
Hypocrite reader my brother! 2
1

not been entirely wrong.

Ib.

my

fellow

man

Volumes might be
impiety of the pious.

written

upon the
Ib.

Les Fleurs du Mai [1861]


the foremost seer, king of poets, a true God. Even so, he lived in too artistic a

have unmistakable proof that throughout all past time, there has been a ceaseless devouring of the weak by the
strong.
1

We

Baudelaire

is

Ib.
p.

milieu; his so highly praised form is meager. Ventures into the unknown demand new forms. ARTHUR. RIMBAUD [1854-1891], Lettre & Paul

Demeny [May
See

15, 1871]

Thomas Morton,
p. 710*.

5013,

and Lockeri,

Hampson,
2

See Shakespeare, Henry 7, IV,

4, p.

2445.

Hypocrite lecteur frerel (Quoted by T. Land.)

mon
S.

serablable

mon

ELIOT in The Waste

706

BAUDELAIRE
the prince of the the tempest and laughs at the archer; exiled on the ground in the midst of jeers, his giant 1 wings prevent him from walking. Les Fleurs du Mai.
clouds
L'Albatros,
st.

DOSTOEVSKI

The poet is like who haunts

There exist only three beings worthy of respect: the priest, the soldier, the poet. To know, to kill, to create.

Mon
To be
oneself,

Coeur Mis h

Nu XXII
a saint for

a great that is

man and
the

one

important
16.

Perfumes, colors and sounds echo 16. Correspondences one another.

thing.

LTI

Mother
tresses.
2

of memories, mistress of mis16. Le Balcon, $t. i


is

Theory of the true civilization. It is not to be found in gas or steam or table turning. It consists in the diminution of the traces of original sin. 16. LIX

There, everything

order and beauty,


3

richness, quiet and pleasure. 16. L'Invitation au Voyage, refrain

SIR

RICHARD FRANCIS

BURTON
1821-1890

have more memories than a thousand years old. 4


I I I

if I

were

16. Spleen,

Why meet we on the bridge of Time to


'change one greeting and to part? The Kasidah of Haji Abdu ElYazdi, I, ii

am the wound and the knife! am the blow and the cheek! am the limbs and the wheel
victim and the executioner! 5
16.

The

L'H&tutontimoroumenos
it is

Indeed he knows not knows not also

how to know who how to un-know.


16.

VI, 18

Death, old captain,


the anchor!
16.

time! raise

Do what
from

thy

manhood

bids thee do,

Le Voyage, VIII

none but

self

expect
dies

ap-

What
Be

do

care that you are good?


sad! 6

plause;

He

noblest lives

and noblest
keeps
his

who
37

beautiful!

and be

makes

and

self-made

,Nouvelles Fleurs du

Mai [1866st. i

laws.

16. VIII,

1868]. Madrigal Triste,

There can be no progress


is,

(real,

that

moral) except in the individual and by the individual himself. Mon Coeur Mis a Nu [1887],

PEDOR MIKHAILOVICH DOSTOEVSKI


1821-1881

XV

Man
gets

hour,

There are in every man, at every two simultaneous postulations, one towards God, the other towards
16.

is a pliable animal, a being who accustomed to everything!

The House

of the Dead (Prison Life in Siberia] [1861-1862],


I, eft.

Satan.
1

XJX

pt

2
said

Le Poete est semblable au prince des nue*es Qui hante la temp&e et se rit de 1'archer;
Exile* sur le sol

He

[Turgenev]

that

he was

Ses ailes
3

au milieu des huees, de geant Pempfichent de marcher.

writing a long article against the Russophiles and Slavophiles. I advised him
to order a telescope

from

Paris for his

'Mere des

souvenirs, maitresse des mattresses. La, tout n'est qu'ordre et beaut, Luxe, calme et volupte". J'ai plus de souvenirs que si j'avais mille ans.

better

convenience. mean?" he asked.


telescope

"What do you
"The
distance
is

somewhat
be able

great," I replied; "direct the

Je Je Je Et

suis la plaie et le couteaul suis le soufflet et la joute!


suis les

on Russia, and then you


to

will

membres

et la roue,

la victime et le bourreau!

Que m'importe que

tu sois sage?

observe us; otherwise you can't really see anything at all." Letter to Apollon Maikov

Sois belle! et sois tristel

[August 16 (28), 1867]

707

DOSTOEVSKI
I

want to
to

tell

you now about the

in-

whom God gave "sensual lust/' ... I am that insect, brother, and it is said of me especially. All we
sects
insects, and, angel you are, that insect lives in you too, and will stir a tempest in your blood.

they were again led like sheep, and that the terrible gift that brought them such
suffering, was, at last, lifted hearts.

from

their

Karamazovs are such


as

The Brothers Karamazov, bk. V, ch. 5

"How
will

Tempests, because sensual lust is a worse than a tempest tempest! Beauty is a terrible and awful thing! It is terrible because it has not been fathomed, for God sets us nothing but riddles. 1 Here the boundaries meet and all
contradictions exist side

will you escape it? By what you escape it? That's impossible

with your ideas." "In the Karamazov way, again." " 'Everything is lawful,' you mean?"
Ib.

by

side.

Men

broad, too broad, indeed. Fd have him narrower. The devil only knows what to make of it! What to the
Yes,
is

man

them, honor those

reject their prophets and slay but they love their martyrs and

whom

they have

slain.

16. VI, 3

beauty and nothing Is there beauty in Sodom? Believe me, that for the immense mass of mankind beauty is found
is

mind

shameful

is

That was a
ment.
cause
It's for

sign to

me

at that

mo-

else to

the heart.

we

the babe I'm going. Beare responsible for all. Ib. XI, 4
doesn't
desire

in

Sodom. Did you know that

secret?

Who
death?

his

father's

thing is that beauty is mysterious as well as terrible. God and devil


are fighting there, the heart of man.

The awful

Ib. XII, 5
fatal

and the

Our

troika

dashes on in her

battlefield

is

The Brothers Karamazov 2 [1879-1880], bk. Ill, ch. 3

headlong flight perhaps to destruction, and in all Russia for long past men have stretched out imploring hands and
called

halt
if

to

its

furious

reckless

And
forgive,

if

that

is

so, if

they dare not

what becomes

of

harmony?

Is

other nations stand aside from that troika that may be not from
course.
respect, as the poet would fain believe, but simply from honor. And well it is that they stand aside, but maybe they will cease one day to do so and will form a firm wall confronting the hurry-

And

there in the whole world a being would have the right to forgive

who
and

From
I

could forgive? I don't want harmony. love of humanity I don't want it.

would rather be left with unavenged suffering. I would rather remain with my unavenged suffering and unsatisfied
sides,

indignation, even if I -were wrong. Betoo high a price is asked for harit's

ing apparition and will check the frenzied rush of our lawlessness, for the sake of their own safety, enlightenment

and

civilization.

16. 9
still

beyond our means to pay so much to enter on it. And so I hasten to give back .my entrance ticket, and if I aiii an honest man I am bound to give it back as soon as possible. And that I

mony;

They have their Hamlets, but we have our Karamazovs!


But profound
as

16.

psychology

is, it's

knife that cuts both ways.


Ib.

am

doing.

It's

not

God
I

that

don't

10

accept, Alyosha, only fully return Him the ticket.

most

respect16. V, 4

For
truth.

moment
all

the

lie

becomes

16. Epilogue, ch. 2

have corrected Thy work and have founded it upon miracle, mystery and authority. And men that
rejoiced
1 See Einstein, p. 9513. *

We

We
1

have

'come out of Gogol's

Overcoat. 1

Attributed to Dostoevski
This statement, traditionally attributed to Dostoevski, and quoted by most writers on Dostoevski and on Russian realism, appears in

Translated by CONSTANCE GARNETT.

708

EDDY

HELMHOLTZ

MARY BAKER EDDY


1821-1910
Jesus of Nazareth was the most scientific man that ever trod the globe. He plunged beneath the material surface of
things,

One becomes
not be an
a stool
dier.

a critic

when one
a

can-

becomes pigeon when he cannot be a solartist, just as

man

and found the spiritual cause. Science and Health -with Key to
the Scriptures [1875], p. 313

Letter to Madame Louise Colet [October 22, 1846]

Axiom: hatred of the bourgeois 1 beginning of wisdom.


Letter to George Sand,

is

the
10,

Spirit is the real


is

and

eternal;

matter

May

the unreal and temporal.


16. p.

1867

468

call
is

bourgeois
1

anyone whose

Sickness, sin and death, being inharmonious, do not originate in God nor belong to His government.
Ib. p.

thinking

vulgar.

Quoted by Maupassant

What
there
is

is

beautiful
it.

is

moral, that

is all

472

to

How
ence?

would you

define Christian Sci-

Letter to Maupassant [October 26, 1880]

As the law of God, the law of good,


interpreting and demonstrating the divine Principle and rule of universal har-

NATHAN BEDFORD
FORREST
Get there
first

mony.
Rudimental Divine Science
[1891],

1821-1872 with the most men. 2

P.I

Statement reported by General Basil Duke and General Richard


Taylor

GUSTAVE FLAUBERT
1821-1880
not always think that feeling is everything. Art is nothing without form. Letter to Madame Louise Colet
[August 12, 1846]
a horrible invention, the bourx geois, don't you think? Ib. [September 22, 1846]
Eugene Melchior, vicomte de Vogu [1848-1010^ Lc Roman Russe [1886], ch. 3: The more I
read the Russians, the more I understand the observation one of them made to me ... "We have all come out of Gogol's Overcoat" see further how evident the connection is with Dostoevski: the formidable novelist is all in his

One must

HERMANN LUDWIG FERDINAND VON HELMHOLTZ


1821-1894
Nature as a whole possesses a store of force which cannot in any way be either . thereor increased diminished fore, the quantity of force in Nature is
. .

What

just as eternal

and unalterable

as the

of matter.

Quantity :his] general the Conservation of Force/' 3 Vber die Erhaltung der Kraft

kw

... I have named "The Principle of

We

first

book, Poor People, and Poor People has


this

its

origin in the Overcoat. De Vogu6 reiterated

Whoever, in the 'pursuit of science, immediate practical utility, may generally rest assured that he will
seeks after
See note i in left column. Erroneous version usually rendered: Git thar fustest with the mostest. 3 Translated by E. ATKINSON. Helmholtz's "force" is equivalent to the
1 *

speech he centennial

made on the occasion monument to Gogol

statement in the of unveiling a in Moscow in

*I1 faut epater le bourgeois [You the bourgeois]. BAUDELAIRE

must shock

modern

physicist's "energy."

709

HELMHOLTZ
seek in achieve
vain.
is

ARNOLD

All

that

a perfect

science can knowledge and a


I

RUDOLF VIRCHOW
18211902
ical

of perfect understanding of the action natural and moral forces.

Academic

formulate the doctrine of pathologgeneration ... in simple terms:


cellula a cellula*

discourse, Heidelberg

omnis

[1862]

Cellular Pathology [i858]. 2 Disease, Life and Man

FREDERICK LOCKER-LAM PS ON
1821-189;

MATTHEW ARNOLD
1822-1888

The world's as ugly, ay, as Sin And almost as delightful The Jester's

Be
Plea
soul,

his

My special thanks,
From
Ib.
first

whose even-balanced

youth tested up to extreme

And many are afraid of God And more of Mrs. Grundy. 1

old age, Business could not sion wild:

make

dull,

nor pasit

Who

saw

life

GEORGE JOHN WHYTE- MELVILLE


1821-1878

steadily

and saw

whole.

To

a Friend [1849]

Others abide our question.


free.

Thou
and

art

man must

IE the choice of a horse and a wife, a please himself, ignoring the

We

ask and ask:


still,

Thou

smilest

art

opinion and advice of friends. Riding Recollections [1878]

Out-topping knowledge. Shakespeare [1849]


Strong
is

the soul, and wise, and beauti-

ful:

NIKOLAI NEKRASOV
1821-1877 You do not have to be a poet, but you are obliged to be a citizen. Poet and Citizen

The
Gods

seeds of godlike power are in us


still:

are we, bards, saints, heroes,

if

we

will.

Written in Emerson's Essays

Wretched and abundant, Oppressed and powerful, Weak and mighty, Mother Russia!

Come, dear

children, let us away;

Who

Is

Happy

in Russia?

[1873-1876]

Now Now Now

Down and away below! Now my brothers call from

the bay, the great winds shorewards blow, the salt tides seawards flow; the wild white horses play, Champ and chafe and toss in the
spray.

WILLIAM HENRY VANDERBILT


1821-1885

The Forsaken Merman

[1849],
St. 1

The public be damned.


Reply to a newspaper reporter
[October
Spencer, p. 7o6a.

Sand-strewn caverns, cool and deep, Where the winds are all asleep.
16. st.
1

2,

1882]

*See Thomas Morton, p. 5013, and Herbert

A11 cells come from [pre-existing] cells. a Essays translated by LELLAND J. RATHER
8

Sophocles.

ARNOLD

Where
Sail

great whales
sail,

come

sailing by,

and

Round

with unshut eye, the world forever and aye, The Forsaken Merman, st. 4

Down, down, down!

Down
She

sits

to the depth of the sea! at her wheel in the humming


Ib. st. 7

But where will Europe's latter hour find Wordsworth's healing Again power? Others will teach us how to dare, And against fear our breast to steel; Others will strengthen us to bear

But who, ah! who

will

make

us feel?

The cloud
But who,

town,
Singing most joyfully.

of mortal destiny, Others will front it fearlessly


like

him,

will

put

it

by?
st.

Fate gave, what Chance shall not control,

Memorial Verses,
Hither and thither spins mirroring soul; A thousand glimpses wins, And never sees a whole.

His sad lucidity of soul. Resignation [1849]

The windborne,

We
The The

cannot kindle when we


fire

will

that in the heart resides,

Empedocles on Etna [1852],


act I, sc.
ii, I.

bloweth and is still, In mystery our soul abides.


spirit

82

Be
st. i

Morality [1852],

neither saint- nor sophist-led, but be Ib. I. 136 a man!

Calm Soul

of all things!

make

it

mine

We do not what we ought;


What we
And
lean

To

feel,

amid the

city's jar,

That there abides a peace of thine, Man did not make, and can not
mar.
Lines Written in Kensington Gardens [1852], st. 10

ought not, we do; upon the thought That chance will bring us through.
I6./.237
Nature, with equal mind, Sees all her sons at play; Sees man control the wind,

Goethe in Weimar sleeps, and Greece, Long since, saw Byron's struggle cease, But one such death remained to come;

The wind sweep man away.


ib.
Is it so
i.

2 57

The

We

last poetic voice is

dumb
Wordsworth's

stand

today

by

tomb.

To To To

small a thing have enjoyed the sun, have lived light in the spring, have loved, to have thought, to have

When

We

Byron's eyes were shut in death, bowed our head and held our breath. He taught us little; but our soul Had felt him like the thunder's roll.

done;

To

have advanced true friends, and


beat

down

baffling foes? Ib. II, I

397

Memorial Verses, April 1850 [1852], st. 1,2


Physician of the Iron Age, Goethe has done his pilgrimage.

The day in its hotness, The strife with the palm; The night in her silence, The stars in their calm.
The same
breast.

16.

Z.

465

heart beats in every

human
st.

He He

took the suffering human race, read each wound, each weakness
clear;

The Buried
But often
But

Life [1852],

in the world's

most crowded

And And

said:

struck his finger on the place, Thou attest here, and here!
16.
st.

streets,

often, in the din of strife,

1 See

Book of Common Prayer,

p. 59!).

711

ARNOLD
There
rises

an unspeakable

desire
life

Her cabined, ample


It fluttered

spirit,

After the knowledge of our buried

and

failed for breath.

The Buried

Life, st.

Tonight

it

doth inherit
of death.

What

actions are the

Those, certainly, appeal to the great primary human affections: to those elementary feelings which subsist permanently in the race, and which are independent of time.

most excellent? which most powerfully

The vasty hall

Requiescat,

st.

Hark! ah, the nightingale

The

tawny-throated!

Philomela [1853],
Eternal passion! Eternal pain!
Ib.
is

st. i

These

feelings are

permanent and the


is

same; that which interests them manent and the same also.
Preface to

st.

per-

Poems

[1853]

What shelter to grow ripe What leisure to grow wise?


Stanzas
st.

ours?
the

in

Go,

for they call you, Shepherd,

from
st.

Memory

of

the

Author of "Obermann"
18

hill.

i FiScsl ' L

The

Scholar Gypsy [1853],

Truth
Bab-

sits

Crossing the stripling

Thames

at

upon the lips of dying men. Sohrab and Rustum


1.656

lock-hithe, Trailing in the cool stream thy fingers

[1853],

wet,

As the slow punt swings round.


Ib. st. 8

that is the great virtue of Sanity the ancient literature; the want of that is the great defect of the modern, in
spite of
its

variety

Thou

and power.

waitest

for

the

spark

from
casual

Preface to

Poems

heaven: and we,of Light half-believers


creeds,

[1854]

our
nor

Wandering between two worlds, one

Who

The
deeply
.
.

never
.

felt,

clearly

willed

dead, other powerless to be born. Stanzas from the Grande Chartreuse [1855],
st. 2

Who
And

hesitate

lose

and falter life away, tomorrow the ground won


it

to-

day Ah! do not we, wanderer! await


Ib.

And we forget because we must And not because we will.


Peace, peace
is

too?

st.

18

Absence [1857], st. 3 what I seek, and public

Who

And amongst
most
has

us one
takes

suffered,

de-

jectedly His seat upon the intellectual throne.


Ib. st.

Endless extinction of unhappy hates. Merope [1858], I 100

With women
19

mind.

the heart argues, not the Ib. I 341


of

This strange disease of modern

life.

The
21

translator
all

Homer

should

Ib.
Still
Still

st.

nursing the unconquerable hope, clutching the inviolable shade.


Ib.
st.

be penetrated by a sense of four qualities of his author: that he is


above
eminently rapid; that he is eminently plain and direct, both in the evolution of his thought and in the expression of it, that is, both in his syntax and in his
words; that he
1

22

Strew on her roses, roses, And never a spray of yew! In quiet she reposes;

is

eminently plain and

Ah, would that

did too!
st. i

Requiescat [1853],

de S&iancour [1770-1846], French author. His most notable work, Obermann, was published in 1804.
Etienne
Pivert

712

ARNOLD
direct in the substance of his thought, is, in his matter and ideas; and,

that

finally,

that he

is

On Translating Homer
The
style.
,

eminently noble.
[1861]

bear upon politics, he saturates politics with thought. The Function of Criticism
at the Present

Time

Iliad has a great master's genu-

ine stamp,

and that stamp

is

the grand
16.

greatness is that he which neither English Liberalism nor English Toryism is apt

His [Burke's] lived in a world


to enter

these two literatures [France and Germany], as of the intellect of Europe in general, the main effort, for now many years, has been a critical effort; the endeavor, in all branches of knowl-

Of

the world of ideas.

16.

The
ure in

notion of the free play of the


all
itself,

edge
art,

theology, philosophy, history, to see the object as in science


16.

itself it really is.

subjects being a pleasbeing an object of desire, being an essential provider of elements without which a nation's spirit, whatever compensations it may have for them, must, in the long run, die of inanition, hardly enters into

mind upon

The grand when a noble

style arises poetry, nature, poetically gifted, treats with simplicity or with severity a

in

an English16.
definition of

man's thoughts.
I

serious subject.

16.

am bound by my own
a disinterested

criticism:

endeavor to
is

Nations are not truly great solely because the individuals composing them are numerous, free, and active; but they
are

and propagate the best that known and thought in the world.
learn

16.
1 towers the Whispering from her enchantments of the Middle Age
.

numbers, this freedom, and this activity are employed in the service of an ideal higher than that of an ordinary man, taken by himgreat
self.

when

these

last
.
.

Home

Democracy [1861]

beliefs,

of lost causes, and forsaken and unpopular names, and im-

a very great thing to be able to think as you like; but, after all, an important question remains: "what you
It is

possible loyalties! Essays in Criticism, first series

[1865], preface

think.
. .

16.
.

The critical power tends to make an intellectual situation of which


itself
vail.

simply the most beautiful, and wisely effective mode of saying things, and hence its impor16. Heinrich Heine tance.
Poetry
is

impressive

the creative power can profitably avail ... to make the best ideas pre-

Philistine

must

have

originally
in-

The Function

of Criticism at the

Present
Ideas cannot be too

Time

[1864]

meant, in the mind of those who vented the nickname, a strong, do unenlightened opponent of the chil
of the light.

16.

prized in and for themselves, cannot be too much lived with. 16.

much

the breast of that huge Missisof falsehood called History, a sippi foam-bell more or less is no conse2

On

the world of ideas and the world of practice; the French are often for suppressing the one and the English the other; but neither is to be supis

There

quence.
16. Literary Influence of

Academies [1864]
1
2

Oxford.

pressed.

16.
is

great because, alone in England, he brings thought to

Burke

so

almost

appeared only in the first appearance of the essay in Cornhill Magazine [August 1864], History never embraces more than a small

This passage

7*3

ARNOLD

The

great apostle of the Philistines,

Hear
Ah,

it,

Thyrsis,

still

our tree

is

Lord Macaulay.
Essays in Criticism, first series, Joubert

there!
vain! These English fields, this upland dim, These brambles pale with mist engar-

Are ye too changed, ye


See,
'tis

hills?

no

foot of unfamiliar

men

landed,

Tonight from Oxford up your pathway


strays!

That

lone, sky-pointing for him;

tree,

are not
is fled,

Here came I often, often, in old days 1 and I; we still had Thyrsis Thyrsis
then.

To a boon southern country he And now in happier air,


Wandering with the
train

Thyrsis [1866],
2

st. i

great

Mother's

divine

That sweet

city

spires.

with her dreaming 16. st. 2

Within

a folding of the

Apennine.
Thyrsis,
st.

18
I

He

went; his piping took a troubled

sound

Why
Roam

faintest

thou?
light

wandered
is

till

died.

Of storms

that rage outside our happy

on!

The

we sought

shin-

He

ground; could not wait their passing; he is Ib. st. 5 dead.


is

ing

still,

Dost thou ask proof? Our crowns the hill,

tree

yet

The bloom
go
I.

gone, and with the

bloom

Our

16. st.

side.

scholar travels yet the loved hill16. st. 24

Yes, thou art gone! and round

me

too

the night
In ever-nearing circle weaves her shade. I see her veil draw soft across the day, I feel her slowly chilling breath invade The cheek grown thin, the brown hair sprent with gray;
I feel

The sea is calm tonight. The tide is full, the moon Upon the straits.
Dover Beach

lies fair

[1867], **

Begin, and cease, and then again begin,

With
The

tremulous

cadence

slow,

and
16.

her finger light


life's

Laid pausefully upon


train

bring

headlong

eternal note of sadness in.

The
The

foot less

prompt

to

meet the morn-

ing dew, heart less bounding at emotion

Sophocles long ago Heard it on the Aegean.

16.

st. 2

The

sea of faith

new,

And
part
1680],

hope, once crushed,


spring again.
of
reality.

less

quick to
16. st.

Was
Lay

once, too, at the full, earth's shore


like the folds

and round

14

of a bright girdle

LA ROCHEFOUCAULD
sigh

[1613-

furled;

Paul Sabatier

How

oft

we

But now
charm
lie!

"When

histories

to

think

Its

I only hear melancholy, long,

withdrawing

that histories

roar,

THOMAS MOORE
History
is

nothing more

[1780-1852], The Skeptic than the belief in

Retreating, to the breath

Of

the senses, the belief in falsehood. NIETZSCHE [1844-1900], The Twilight of the Idols, "Reason" in Philosophy^ I

the night wind drear

down

the vast edges

And naked
Ah,

shingles of the world.

HENRY History is more or less bunk. FORD [1863-1947], interview with Charles N. Wheeler, Chicago Tribune [May 25, 1916] 1 Arthur Hugh Clough [1819-1861].
2

love, let us

To one

be true another! for the world, which

seems

Oxford.

To

lie

before us like a land of dreams,

7M-

ARNOLD
So various, so
beautiful, so new, really neither joy, nor love,
Surely, has not

been

left vain!

Hath

nor

light,

Somewhere, surely, afar, In the sounding labor-house vast

Nor

certitude, nor peace, nor help for

Of

pain; And we are here as on a darkling plain Swept with confused alarms of struggle

being, is practiced that strength, Zealous, beneficent, firm!

and

flight,

Where
It is

ignorant armies clash by night. Dover Beach, st. 3, 4


last stage of all

Rugby Chapel, Most men eddy about Here and there, eat and drink, Chatter and love and hate,
Gather and squander, are raised
Aloft, are hurled in the dust,

st.

When we
quite

are frozen

up within, and

Striving blindly, achieving Nothing; and then they die.

The phantom of ourselves, To hear the world applaud


ghost

Ib. st.

the hollow

Friends

who

set forth at

our side
Ib.
st.

Which blamed the living man.


Growing OZd [1867],
Creep into thy narrow bed, Creep, and let no more be
said!
st. i
st.

Falter, are lost in the storm!

We, we
7

only, are left!

Then, in such hour of need

Of your

fainting, dispirited race,

The

Last

Word

[1867],

Ye, like angels, appear, Radiant with ardor divine.

Let the long contention cease! Geese are swans, and swans are

geese."
st.

Ib.

Beacons of hope, ye appear! is not in your heart, Weakness is not in your word, Weariness not on your brow.

Languor

Charge
Let the

once

more,

then,

and

be
Herein
lies

16.

st.

13

dumb!
victors, when they come, the forts of folly fall, Find thy body by the wall.

When

Ib.

st.

the reason for giving boys more of Latin composition than of Greek, superior though the Greek literature be to the Latin; but the power of the Latin classic is in character, that of
the Greek
is
is in beauty. Now character capable of being taught, learnt, and assimilated; beauty hardly. Schools and Universities on the

Cruel, but composed and bland, Dumb, inscrutable and grand,

So Tiberius might have

sat,

Had Tiberius been

a cat.

Poor Matthias [1867]


Coldly, sadly descends

Continent [1868]

The autumn

evening.

The

field

Our society distributes itself into Barbarians, Philistines, and Populace;


and America
lace nearly.
is just ourselves, with the Barbarians quite left out, and the Popu-

Strewn with its dank yellow drifts Of withered leaves, and the elms, Fade into dimness apace, Siknt; hardly a shout From a few bovs late at their play!

Culture and Anarchy [1869],


preface
i

Rugby Chapel* [1867], st. O strong soul, by what shore Tamest thou now? For that force,
a

America, that chosen


papers.
I

home

of news16.

am

See Burton, p. 3113.


father,

a Liberal, yet I

am

a Liberal

* Arnold's

Thomas
is

headmaster
Chapel.

of

Rugby,

Arnold, the great buried in Rugby

tempered by experience, reflection, and renouncement, and I am, above all, a


believer in culture.

Ib. Introduction

7*5

ARNOLD
Culture is then properly described not as having its origin in curiosity, but as having its origin in the love of perfection; it is a study of perfection. Culture and Anarchy, Sweetness and Light
a having and a resting, but a growing and a becoming is the character of perfection as culture conceives

measure, and to hold fast our end, and to follow Nature/'

Mixed

Essays. Equality

Not

our upper our middle class, and Ib. brutalizing our lower class.
materializing
class, vulgarizing

sary effect, stances, of

natural and necesInequality has the under the present circum-

it.

Ib.

rest is a

The pursuit of perfection, then, is 1 the pursuit of sweetness and light. ... He who works for sweetness and make reason and light united, works to
the will of

For poetry the idea is everything; the world of illusion, of divine illusion. Poetry attaches its emotion to the

idea; the idea is the fact.

God prevail.
of culture are

Ib.

The strongest our of religion today is its unconpart scious poetry. Introduction to WARD, English
Poets [1880]
Eutrapelia.
flexibility,"

The men
The

the true
Ib.
Pericles
calls
. .

apostles of equality.

"A happy and


this
.

gracious
quality

governing idea of Hellenism is that of Hebraspirit of consciousness, ism, strictness of conscience.


Ib.

of

the

Athenians

Hebraism and Hellenism

thought, clearness and guage, freedom from

of lucidity propriety of lan-

prejudice

and

freedom

Below the surface stream, shallow and


light,

below the say and feel stream, As light, of what we think we feel, there flows With noiseless current, strong, obscure

Of what we

openness of mind, amiability of manners, all these seem to go along with a certain happy
stiffness,

from

flexibility

of

nature,

and to

depend

upon

it.

Irish Essays [1882].

A Speech at
Eton

and deep,

English

civilization

the humaniz-

The

central stream of

what we

feel in-

deed.
St.

Paul and Protestantism [1870]

Culture, the acquainting ourselves with the best that has been known and said in the world.
Literature

one harmonious of the whole that is what of English society body interests me. Ib. Ecce, Convertimur ad Gentes
into ing, the bringing

and

truly

humane

life,

That which
middle
nation.

in

and Dogma

[1873], preface

class is in

England we call the America virtually the


[1882]
a live-

Conduct is three-fourths of our life Ib. ch. i and its largest concern.
Choose
equality.

A Word
lier sort

About America
Philistine

The American

was

of Philistine .than ours.

Mixed Essays

A Word
[1879]. Equality
Ib.

More About America


[1885]

We have the religion of inequality.


To be humanized
the true law of our
vare
r

What
ing, a

really dissatisfies in

American

civilization
is

to

comply with
nature; ser-

human

modum fnemque
sequi, says

ramque
i

NatuLucan; "to keep our


tenere,

is. the want of the interestwant due chiefly to the want of those two great elements of the interestand beauty. ing, which are elevation Civilization in the United States

See Swift, p. s88b.

yi6

ARNOLD
Coleridge, poet and philosopher wrecked in a mist of opium. Essays in Criticism, second series
[1888].

HALE

avoided.

man escape, if it can be personal considerations should stand in the way of performing a
Let no guilty

No

Byron

public duty.

beautiful and ineffectual angel, 1 beating in the void his luminous wings
in vain. Ib.

Indorsement of a
to the

letter relating

Whiskey Ring

[July 29,

1875]

Leave the matter of religion to the

ULYSSES

S.

GRANT

family

altar,

the church, and the private


private

1822-1885

The art of war is simple enough. Find out where your enemy is. Get at him as soon as you can. Strike at him as hard as you can and as often as you 2 can, and keep moving on.

school, supported entirely by contributions. Keep the church

and the
Iowa

State forever separate. Speech at De$ Moines,

[1875]

On the No
cepted.

art of -war

Labor disgraces no man; nately you occasionally find


grace labor.

unfortu-

men

dis-

terms except an unconditional


acI

and immediate surrender can be

Speech

at

Midland International

propose to move immediately

Arbitration Union, Birmingham,

upon your works.

England [1877]

To

General

S. B.

Buckner, Fort

They
nine

[the Pilgrim Fathers] fell

upon

I
if it

Donelson [February 16, 1862] propose to fight it out on this line, takes all summer.
Dispatch to Washington, before House Court Spottsylvania

an ungenial climate, where there were

months of winter and three months of cold weather, and that called out the best energies of the men, and of the women too, to get a mere subsist-

[May 11, 1864] Wherever the enemy


troops go also.

goes let our

Dispatch to General Henry W. Halleck from City Point, Virginia [August i, 1864]

ence out of the soil, with such a climate. In their efforts to do that they cultivated industry and frugality at the same time which is the real foundation of the greatness of the Pilgrims.

Speech at New England Society Dinner [December 22, 1880]

The war

is

over

the rebels are our

countrymen

again.

EDWARD EVERETT
HALE
1822-1909
I

stopping his men from cheering after Lee's surrender

Upon

at

Appomattox Court House

[April 9, 1865]

But
I

am only one, still I am one.

Let us have peace. Accepting nomination for the Presidency [May 29, 1868]
I

know no method

to secure the re-

peal of bad or obnoxious laws so effective as their stringent execution.

cannot do everything, still I can do something; And because I cannot do everything I will not refuse to do the something that I can do. For the Lend-a-Hand Society

But

Inaugural Address [March 4, 1869]


*

Shelley.

Behind all these men you haye to do with, behind officers, and government, and people even, there is the country
herself,

2 See Halsey, p. 9682.

your country, and

you be-

717

HALE

SCHLBEMANN

to your own long to her as you belong mother. Stand by her, boy, as you would stand by your mother. The Man Without a Country

WILLIAM PORCHER
MILES
1822-1899 "Vote early and vote often," the advice openly displayed on the election banners in one of our northern cities.
Speech, House of Representatives [March 31, 1858]

He loved his country as no other man has loved her, but no man deserved less at her hands.
Ib.

Epitaph of Philip Nolan

It is not necessary to finish your sentences in a crowd, but by a sort of

LOUIS PASTEUR
1822-1895

mumble, omitting

sibilants

and

dentals.

This, indeed, if your words fail you, answers even in public extempore speech, but better where other talking is going
on.

My

Double and

How He

Undid
[1868]

No, a thousand times no; there does not exist a category of science to which one can give the name applied science. There are science and the applications of science, bound together as the fruit
to the tree

Me

which bears it. 1 Pourquoi la France

rCa

pas

To look up and not down, To look forward and not back, To look out and not in, and To lend a hand. 1 Ten Times One Is Ten

trow6

d'hommes $uprieurs au moment du peril [Revue


Scientifique, 1871]

In the
[1870]

fields

favors only the

mind

of observation, chance that is prepared.


in

BIRCHARD HAYES
1822-1893
serves his party best the country best.

RUTHERFORD

Quoted by RENE VALLERY-

RADOT

The

Life

of

Pasteur [1927]

He

who
5,

serves

THOMAS BUCHANAN
READ
The
terrible
roar,

Inaugural Address [March

1877]

THOMAS HUGHES
Life isn't
all

1822-1872 grumble, and rumble, and

1822-1896 beer and

skittles;

but

And

beer and skittles, or something better of the same sort, must form a good part of every Englishman's education.

Telling the battle was on once more, Sheridan twenty miles away. Sheridan's Ride, st. i

Tom

Brown's Schooldays
[1857], pt.
I,

ch. 2

HEINRICH SCHLIEMANN
1822-1890
have gazed on the face of Agamemnon. Telegram to the King of Greece
I
t

never wants anything but what's and fair; only when you come to right settle what's right and fair, it's everything that he wants and nothing that Ib. II, 2 you want.
1

He

upon excavating the -fifth and last grave at Mycenae [August


1

Rule of the Harry Wadsworth Club.


Dickens, p. 66ga.

a See

Translated by

I.

BERNARD COHEN

718

BANVTT..T.F.

DOWUNG

THEODORE DE
BANVILLE
1823-1891
We'll to the woods no more,

JULIA

A. FLETCHER CARNEY
1823-1908

The

laurels all are cut. 1

Nous

n'irons plus

aux bois

Little drops of water, Little grains of sand,

Make the mighty ocean And the pleasant land.


Little

BERNARD ELLIOTT
BEE
1823-1861

Things [1845],

**

Little deeds of kindness, Little words of love,


like

There

is

Jackson,

standing
/.

Help

to

make

earth

happy
Ib.
st.

stone wall!
T. Battle of Bull

Like the heaven above.

Of General
1861]

Jackson at the
[July 21,

Run 2

WILLIAM JOHNSON CORY


1823-1892
All beauteous things for which we live By laws of time and space decay.

GEORGE HENRY BOKER


1823-1890

Lay him low,

lay him low, In the clover or the snow!


cares he?

But oh, the very reason why


I

clasp

them,

is

What

he cannot know:

Mimnermus
They
st.
i

because they die. in Church, st 4

Lay him low,


Dirge for a Soldier*

MATTHEW BROWNE
1823-1882 Never do today what you can Put off till tomorrow. 4

told me, Heraclitus, they told me you were dead; They brought me bitter news to hear and bitter tears to shed.
I

[WILLIAM BRIGHTY RANDS]

wept, as

remembered how often you


sun with talking and sent
sky.

and

Had

tired the

him down the

And now

Lilliput Levee

wide, beautiful, world, With the wonderful waters round you


curled,

Great

wonderful

that thou art lying, my dear old Carian guest, handful of gray ashes, long long ago at rest,
ingales,

Still are

thy pleasant voices, thy Night1 awake, For Death, he taketh all away, but

And

the wonderful grass upon your


breast,

them he cannot

take.

Heraclitus. Paraphrase
beautifully dressed, The Child's World, st. i

from
2

World, you are

Callimachus

1 Nous n'irons plus aux bois, les lauriers sont coupes. From an old nursery rhyme. Translated by A. E. HOUSMAN, Last Poems [/paa], epigraph 8 Bee was killed in this battle.

BARTHOLOMEW FOWLING
1823-1863

General Philip Keamy, killed near Chantilly, Virginia [September i, 1862].

Then

*No
today.

idleness,

no
till

never put off


*6, 1749]

no procrastination; tomorrow what you can do


laziness,

We
1
left
2

stand to your glasses steady! drink in OUT comrades' eyes:


title

The Nightingales was the


See Callimachus, p. io4b.

of the

poems

LORD CHESTERFIELD,

Letters [December

by Heraclitus. See p. 77a-b,

719

DOWUNG
One cup
Hurrah
to the dead already for the next that dies!

PABKMAN

GEORGE MARTIN LANE


1823-1897

The Revel*
The

waiter roars
ball!"

it

through the hall:


fish

THOMAS WENTWORTH
HIGGINSON
1823-1911

"We

don't give bread with one

Lay of the Lone Fish Batt*


[1855],
st.

10

When a thought takes one's breath away, a lesson on grammar seems an impertinence. Preface to EMTLY DICKINSON'S
Poems, frst
series [1890]

CAROLINE ATHERTON
BRIGGS MASON
1823-1890

Do

An easy thing; O Power To thank Thee for


Thine,

Divine, these gifts

they miss miss me?

me

at

home

do they
dear,

of

Twould be an assurance most To know that this moment some


one

loved

For summer's sunshine, winter's snow, For hearts that kindle, thoughts that
glow;

Were

Do They Miss Me at Home?

saying, "I wish

he were here."
st. i

But when

shall I attain to this

To

thank Thee for the things I miss? The Things I Miss

FRANCIS PARKMAN
1823-1893

The growth

of

New

England was

JOHN KELLS INGRAM


1823-1907

result of the aggregate efforts of a busy multitude, each in his narrow circle toil2

Who fears to speak of Ninety-eight? Who blushes at the name?


When
cowards

ing for himself, to gather competence or wealth. The expansion of New

mock

the
for

patriot's

fate,

Who hangs his head


The Memory

shame?

of the

Dead*

st.

France was the achievement of a gigantic ambition striving to grasp a continent. It was a vain attempt. Pioneers of France in the New T Vorfd [1865], introduction

A boundless vision
untamed continent;

grows upon

us;

an

vast wastes of forsilent in primeval

LEOPOLD KRONECKER
1823-1891

est verdure;

mountains

sleep; river, lake,

and glimmering

pool;

God made
work of man.

integers,

all

else is

the

oceans mingling with the sky. Such was the domain which France
wilderness

Jahresberichte der Deutschen

Mathematiker
bk. 2

Vereinigung,

conquered for civilization. Plumed helmets gleamed in the shade of its forests, priestly vestments in its dens and fastnesses

of

ancient

barbarism.

Men

Commemorating the

victims of

steeped in antique learning, pale with the close breath of the cloister, here
cholera
lives,

epidemic in India.
Struggle for Irish independence led Tone, Napper Tandy and others.
8 First

by Wolfe

spent the noon and evening of their ruled savage hordes with a mild,

published anonymously in the Dublin Nation [April i, 1843].

1 Lane was professor of Latin at Harvard; the embarrassment of the "lone fish ball" was an

actual experience.

720

PARKMAN
parental sway, and stood serene before the direst shapes of death. Men of courtly nurture, heirs to the polish of a
far-reaching ancestry, here, with their dauntless hardihood, put to shame the

PATMORE
France built
its

best colony on a

of exclusion, and failed: Erinciple nd reversed the system, and

Engsuc-

ceeded.

Montcalm and Wolfe,

ch.

boldest sons of toil. Pioneers of France in the New World, introduction


Faithfulness to the truth of history involves far more than a research, however patient and scrupulous, into special facts. Such facts may be detailed with

COVENTRY PATMORE
1823-1896 Ah, wasteful womanl she

who may

On

her sweet

self set

the most minute exactness, and yet the narrative, taken as a whole, may be unmeaning or untrue. The narrator must seek to imbue himself with the life and spirit of the time. He must study events in their bearings near and remote; in the character, habits, and manners of those who took part in them. He must himself be, as it were, a sharer or a spectator of the action he describes.
16.
If any pale student, glued to his desk, here seek an apology for a way of life whose natural fruit is that pallid and emasculate scholarship of which New England has had too many examples, it

Knowing man

her own price, cannot choose but pay,

How How How

has she cheapened Paradise! given for nought her priceless


gift,

spoiled the bread wine,

and
due

spilled the

Which,

spent
brutes

with

respective
divine!

thrift,

Had made

men and men


I,

The Angel in the House [18541856], bk. Unthrift

canto 3. Prelude

3,

A Woman is a foreign land,


Of which,
though
there

he

settle

A man
The

young,

will

be far better that this sketch had not been written. For the student there is, in its season, no better place than the saddle, and no better companion
than the
rifle

will ne'er quite understand customs, politics, and tongue. 16. canto 9. Prelude 2,

Woman

Why,

or the oar.

Autobiography [1868]

The most momentous and

far-reach-

ing question ever brought to issue on this continent was: Shall France remain here or shall she not?

having won her, do I woo? Because her spirits vestal grace Provokes me always to pursue, But, spirit-like, eludes embrace. 16. II, canto 12. Prelude i, The Married Lover

His mother,
dead.

who was

patient,

being

Montcdm and Wolfe

[1884], introduction

The Unknown Eros [1877], bk. I, canto 10. The Toys, I 6

Versailles was a gulf into which the labor of France poured its earnings, and
it

was never

full.

16, ch. i

A A

He had put, within


stone,

his reach,

box of counters and a red-veined

[French] Revolution began at the top in the world of fashion,


birth,
itself

The

piece of glass abraded And six or seven shells,

by the beach,

and

intellect

and propagated
16.

A bottle with bluebells,


And two French copper
coins, ranged
16.
Z.

downwards.

1 Published in Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society, vol. PI//, p. 353.

To

there with careful art, comfort his sad heart.

15

721

PATMOBE
For want of me the world's course will not fail: When all its work is done, the lie shall
rot;

CURTIS

JOHN SHERMAN
1823-1900
I

have come

home

to look after

The

truth
not.

is

When

none

great, cares whether it prevail or

and

shall prevail,

fences. 1

my

Speech to his neighbors, Mansfield, Ohio

The Unknown Eros, bk. I, canto 12. Magna est Veritas


If I

WILLIAM MARCY

TWEED

were dead, you'd sometimes "Poor child!"


16. canto 14. If I

say,

Were Dead

EDWARD POLLOCK
1823-1858

The one who goes is happier Than those he leaves behind. The Parting Hour

1823-1878 As long as I count the votes, what are you going to do about it? Statement by the "Boss" of Tammany Hall on the bdlot in New York City [November 1871]

PHOEBE CARY
1824-1871
Sometimes, I think, the things we see Are shadows of the things to be;

ERNEST RENAN
1823-1892
of history is incomprehensible without the Christ.

The whole

La Vie de

]6sus [1863]

Lord,

if

there
soul.

is

a Lord, save

my

That what we plan we build; That every hope that hath been crossed, And every dream we thought was lost, In heaven shall be fulfilled. Dreams and Realities, st. 7

soul, if I

have a

And though
''Keep a
stiff

Priere d'un Sceptique

hard be the task, upper lip/' Keep a Stiff Upper Lip

Religion is not a popular error; it is a great instinctive truth, sensed by the


people, expressed by the people,

LesApotres [1866]

An immense
sweeping
abyss.

river

of

us

away

into

oblivion is a nameless

One sweetly solemn thought Comes to me o'er and o'er; I am nearer home today Than I ever have been before. Nearer Home,
For of
all

st. i

the hard tilings to bear and

grin,

Souvenirs d'Enfance et de
Jeunesse [1883]

The hardest is being taken in.


Kate Ketcham (parody of WHITTIER'S Maud Mutter

Immortality
task.

is

to labor at an eternal
la

UAvenir de

Science

GEORGE WILLIAM
[1890], preface

CURTIS
1824-1892
history

Nothing great
chimeras.

is

achieved without
Ib. ch.

While we read
tory.

we make

his-

19

The

Call of Freedom
fences

1 See / Esdras 4:14, p. 360. For great is truth, and shall prevail [Magna est Veritas et THOMAS BROOKS, praevalebit]. The Crown and Glory of Christianity [1662]

1 Senator Sherman referred to the around his farm. Said to be the origin
political

of the

phrase

often

rendered

"to

mend

fences."

722

CURTIS Every great crisis of human history is a pass of Thermopylae, and there is always a Leonidas and his three hundred to die in it, if they cannot conquer. The Call of Freedom

MACDONAU)
in one matter at any given moment word, the reduction of all the phenomena of nature to mechanics. 1 Vber das Ziel der Naturwissen-

schaften [1865]

ALEXANDRE DUMAS THE YOUNGER


1824-1895
Business?
people's
It's

CHARLES GODFREY LELAND


1824-1903 Hans Breitmann gife a barty Where ish dat barty now? Hans Breitmann's Barty

quite simple.

It's

other

money.

La Question

Argent [1857],
act II, $c. vii

[1857],
st.

[STONEWALL] JACKSON*
1824-1863
Coiage.
Alas!

THOMAS JONATHAN

GEORGE MACDONALD
1824-1905

God mend

al.

My duty is to obey orders. A favorite aphorism


Let us cross over the river, and rest under the trees. Last words [May 10, 1863]

His anagram motto

A sigh
And
And

easily things go wrong! too much or a kiss too long, there follows a mist and a weeping
life is

how

rain,

WILLIAM THOMSON, LORD KELVIN


1824-1907 When you can measure what you are speaking about, and express it in numbers, you know something about it; but when you cannot measure it, when you
express it in numbers, your knowledge is of a meager and unsatisfactory kind: it may be the beginning of knowledge, but you have scarcely, in your thoughts, advanced to the stage of
science.

never the same again. Phantasies [1858]. Song

Where Out of

did you come from, baby dear? the everywhere into the here. At the Back of the North Wind.

Baby,

st. i,

They were

all

To sky

looking for a king their foes and lift

them

cannot

high; Thou cam'st, a little baby thing That made a woman cry.

That Holy Thing,


Said the

st. i

Wind

to the

Moon,

"I will
st. i

Popular Lectures and Addresses [1891-1894]

blow you out!" The Wind and the Moon,

GUSTAV ROBERT KIRCHOFF


1824-1887
highest object at which the natural sciences are constrained to aim, but which they will never reach, is the determination of the forces which are present in nature, and of the state of
1 See Bee, p. 7iga.

There is no feeling in a human heart which exists in that heart alone which is not, in some form or degree,
in every heart.

Unspoken Sermons, second


series [1885]

The

You

will

be dead

so long as

you

refuse to die.

What's Mine's Mine [1886],


ch. 31
i

Translated by

J.

B. STAIJJO.

MACDONALD
The world and my being, its life and mine, were one. The microcosm and macrocosm were at length atoned,
at length in harmony.
thing; everything
lived in everyentered and lived in
I
eft.

HUXLEY
which have
wall.

their faces turned to the

On

the Educational Value of the Natural History Sciences

me.
Lilith

[1895],

45

Extinguished theologians lie about the cradle of every science as the stranbeside that of Hercules. gled snakes

Darwiniana.

JOHN WHITTAKER

The Origin of Species [1860]

WATSON

1824-1890 Oh! the snow, the beautiful snow, the earth below. Filling the sly and
Beautiful

of scientific investiganothing but the expression of the necessary mode of working of the
tion
is

The method

human mind.
the

Snow

[1869],

st. i

Our Knowledge of the Causes of Phenomena of Organic

HENRY DE LAFAYETTE WEBSTER


1824-1896

Nature [1863]
Let us have "sweet girl graduates" by means. They will be none the less sweet for a little wisdom; and the "golden hair" will not curl less gracehead by reason of fully outside the
all

The years creep slowly by, Lorena, The snow is on the grass again.
Lorena,
$t. i

there being brains within.

Emancipation

Black and

WILLIAM ALLEN BUTLER


1825-1902
This same Miss McFlimsey of Madison
Square,

White
as

[1865]

For every man the world is as fresh it was at the first day, and as full of

untold novelties for

him who

has the

eyes to see them. Liberal Education [it

The

last

time

we met was

in utter de-

spair,

Because she had nothing whatever to


wear!

pieces are the

Nothing

to

Wear

[1857],

$t.

the world, the phenomena of the universe, the rules of the game are what we call the laws of Nature. The player on
is

The

chess board

the other side

is

hidden from
is

us.

We

THOMAS HENRY HUXLEY


1825-1895
I

know

that his play

always

fair, just,

and patient. But also we know, to our cost, that he never overlooks a mistake, or makes the smallest allowance for igfinds

cannot but think that he

who

norance.

lb.

a certain proportion of pain and evil inseparably woven up in the life of the very worms, will bear his own share with more courage and submission. On the Educational Value of the Natural History Sciences [1854]
a person uninstructed in natural history, his country or seaside stroll is a

M. Comte's philosophy in practice might be compendiously described as


Catholicism minus Christianity. On the Physical Basis of Life

[if'"

To

walk through a gallery derful works of art,

filled

with wonof

Power would agree to make me always think what is true and do what is right, on condition of being turned into a sort of clock and wound
If

some

great

nine-tenths

up every morning before

got out of

724

HUXLEY
>ed, I
>ffer.

PROCTER
Irrationally held truths may be more harmful than reasoned errors.

should instantly close with the

On

Descartes' Discourse
[1870].

on
It is

The Coming

of

Age

of

The

Method
Results

Method and

Origin of Species [1880]


to begin as heresies
stitions.
I

There is the greatest practical benefit n making a few failures early in life.

the customary fate of new truths and to end as super16.

On

Medical Education [1870]


varia-

asserted

and

repeat

that a

man
That mysterious independent
ble

has no reason to

be ashamed of

of

political

calculation,

Public

having an ape for his grandfather. If there were an ancestor whom I should
feel shame in recalling it would rather a man of restless and verbe a man satile intellect who, not content with an equivocal success in his own sphere

Opinion.
Universities, Actual

and Ideal
[1874]

Veracity

is

the heart of morality.


Ib.

of activity, plunges into scientific questions with

which he has no

real ac-

Becky Sharp's acute remark that it is not difficult to be virtuous on ten thousand a year x has its application to nations; and it is futile to expect a hungry

and squalid population to be anything but violent and gross. Joseph Priestley [1874]

quaintance, only to obscure them by an aimless rhetoric, and distract the attention of his hearers from the real point at issue by eloquent digressions and skilled appeals to religious prejudice. Reply to Wilberforces's ques-

Life

Logical consequences are the scarecrows of fools and the beacons of wise

From LEONARD HUXLEY, and Letters of Thomas Henry Huxley [1900], vol. I
tion. 1

men.

Animal Automatism [1874]

GEORGE EDWARD PICKETT


1825-1875 Up, men, and to your posts! Don't forget today that you are from Old Virginia.

Size is not grandeur, and territory does not make a nation.


,

On

University Education [1876]

all

Perhaps the most valuable result of education is the ability to make yourself do the thing you have to do, when it ought to be done, whether you like it
or not; it
is

Command
burg

at the beginning of

his division's charge at Gettys\July 3,

1863]

the

first

be learned; and

lesson that ought to however early a man's

ADELAIDE ANNE

training begins, it is probably the last lesson that he learns thoroughly

PROCTER
1825-1864
ill

Technical Education [1877]

Seated one day at the organ,


I

The

great end of
.

life is

edge but action

not knowlIb
.

was weary and

at ease,
idly

And my fingers wandered


Over the noisy keys.
l

If a little knowledge is dangerous, where is the man who has so much as to be out of danger? OTZ Elemental Instruction in

A Lost

Chord,

st. i

Physiology [1877]
l

anyone were to be willing to trace his descent through an ape as his grandfather, would he be willing to trace his descent similarly on BISHOP SAMUEL the side of his grandmother? WILBERPORCE [1805-1873], at the British Associalf

See Thackeray, p. 66oa.

tion for the

Advancement of Science [1860]

72 5

PROCTER
But
struck one chord of music Like the sound of a great Amen.
I

B AGEHOT

WALTER BAGEHOT
1826-1877
st.

Lost Chord,

BAYARD TAYLOR
1825-1878
Till the

a great experience one thing is an experiencing nature. essential Literary Studies. Shakespeare

To

['853]

The

reason
is,

And And

sun grows cold, the stars are old, the leaves of the Judgment Book

are written

few good boob why that so few people that


so

unfold.

Bedouin Song,

refrain

They sang

of love, and not of fame; Forgot was Britain's glory;

Each heart recalled a different name, But all sang "Annie Laurie." The Song of the Camp, st. 5

can write know anything. In general an author has always lived in a room, has read books, has cultivated science, is acthe style and sentiments quainted with of the best authors, but he is out of the way of employing his own eyes and ears. He has nothing to hear and nothIb. to see. His life is a vacuum.
ing

eral a

constitutional statesman is in genman of common opinions and


abilities.

WILLIAM WHITING
1825-1878
Eternal Father, strong to save, Whose arm doth bind the
restless

uncommon

Biographical Studies. The Character of Sir Robert Peel [1856]

is

wave,

Who
Its

bidd'st the mighty ocean deep

good to be without vices, but it not good to be without temptations. Ib. Sir George Cornewall Lewis
It is

own appointed limits keep, O, hear us when we cry to Thee


For those in
peril

on the

sea!

[Of Guizot] A France by mistake.


16.

Puritan

born

in

of the US. Navy Eternal Father, Strong [i86cj, to Save, st. i

The Hymn

M.

Guizot [1874]

One
nature

is

of the greatest pains to human the pain of a new idea.


eft.

Physics and Politics [1869],

CHARLES HAMILTON
AIDfi
1826-1906
I sit

An
of

inability to stay quiet

...

is

one
of
K>-

the most conspicuous mankind. 1

failings

beside

my lonely fire
to forget.

The most melancholy


flections, perhaps, is that
it is

of

human

re-

And

pray for wisdom yet:

on the whole

For calmness to remember

Or courage

of
or Forget

mankind does most good

a question whether the benevolence or harm.


16.

Remember

The

best reason

why monarchy

is

GROSS HERZOG FRIEDRICH VON BADEN


1826-1907 we makes strength, and, since Unity must be strong, we must also be one. On German unity under Prussian

that it is an intelstrong government is, mass of manthe ligible government:

understand it, and they hardly anywhere in the world understand any
kind
other.

The English Constitution [1872]. The Monarchy


iSee Pascal, p. 36gb; quoted by Bagehot in
the same chapter.

hegemony,

Versailles [Janu-

ary 18, 1871]

726

BAGEHOT
But of all nations in the world, the nglish are perhaps the least a nation f pure philosophers. The English Constitution.

FOSTER

STEPHEN COLLINS FOSTER


1826-1864

The Monarchy

Weep no

more,

my

lady,

Oh! weep no more today!


tucky home, For the old Kentucky

We will sing one song for the

old Ken-

G.

W.
fl.

HUNT
1878

home far away.

My Old Kentucky Home, chorus


by
jingo,

Ve don't want if we do,


Afe've

to fight, but,

Way down
There's
ever;

upon the Swanee River,

got the ships, we've got the men, we've got the money, too. iVe've fought the Bear before, and while Britons shall be true, [Tie Russians shall not have Constantinople.

Far, far away,

where

my

heart

is

turning

There's where the old folks stay. The Old Folks at Home,
All the world
is

st. i

Song

sad

[1878]

and dreary
heart

Everywhere

roam,

Oh!

MULOCK CRAIK
1826-1887
Douglas, Douglas, tender and true! 2 Douglas, Tender and True,
refrain

DINAH MARIA

darkies,

how my

grows

weary,

Far from the old folks at home. 16. chorus

Down in de cornfield
Hear dat mournful sound:
All de darkies

am

a-weeping

Oh,
But

my my
life.

son's

my

son

till

he

gets

him
all

Massa's in de cold, cold ground. Masse? s in de Cold, Cold

wife,

Ground,

st.

daughter's

my

daughter

her

Young and Old

He's gone whar de good niggers go. Uncle Ned, last stanza

JOHN ELLERTON
1826-1893

I'm coming, I'm coming, for bending low;


I

my head is

Now the laborer's task is o'er; Now the battle day is past; Now upon the farther shore
Lands the voyager at last.

hear those gentle voices calling, "Old Black Joe."

Old Black

Joe, st. 3

Hymn,
Father, in

st. i

O, Susanna! O, don't you cry for me, I've come from Alabama, wid my banjo on my knee. O, Susanna* chorus

Leave

Thy gracious keeping we now Thy servant sleeping.


16. refrain

!Sung
(Farrell)

by

Gilbert

Hastings

Macdermott

Gwine to run all night! Gwine to run all day! I'll bet my money on de bobtail nag Somebody bet on de bay.

[1845-1901], "the great Macdermott."^ The song gave the terms "jingo" and "jingoism" to the political vocabulary, though the phrase

Camptown Races, chorus


I

dream of Jeanie with the


hair,
1

light

brown

"by jingo" had been used earlier by Goldsmith and Thomas Hood.
*

Douglas,

DouglasI

Tendir and trewe. SIR RICHARD HOLLAND, The Buke of the Howlat [c. 1450], st. 31

for the first time by Nelson Kneass in Andrews' Eagle tee Cream Saloon, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania [September 11, 1847]. It shortly became a world-wide hit.

Sung

727

FOSTER
Floating, like a vapor,

WALLACE

on the

soft

sum-

CHARLES ELIOT

mer

air.

NORTON
1827-1908

Jeanie with the Light Brown

Hair,

st. i

Beautiful dreamer,
Starlight and thee.

wake unto me, dewdrop are waiting


Beautiful Dreamer,

for

think that a knowledge of Greek thought and life, and of the arts in which the Greeks expressed their
I

st. i

GEORGE BRINTON McCLELLAN


1826-1885
All quiet along the Potomac. 1 Frequent report from his

thought and sentiment, is essential to high culture. A man may know everything else, but without this knowledge he remains ignorant of the best intellectual and moral achievements of his own Letter to F. A. Tupper tace. [1885]

Union

headquarters [1861]

Whatever your occupation may be and however crowded your hours with affairs, do not fail to secure at least a few minutes every day for refreshment
of your inner
life

with a bit of poetry.

EDWARD STUYVESANT
BRAGG
1827-1912

Used by a Boston newspaper as a heading for a column of reprinted poems

They

love

him most
2

for the

enemies

he has made.

Speech seconding presidential nomination of Grover Cleveland


\July 9, 1884]

The voice of protest, of warning, of appeal is never more needed than when the clamor of fife and drum, echoed by the press and too often by the pulpit, is
bidding all men fall in and keep step and obey in silence the tyrannous word
of
is

MORTIMER COLLINS
1827-1876

command. Then, more than

ever, it

the duty of the good citizen not to be True Patriotism [1898] silent.

A man is as old as he's feeling, A woman as old as she looks.


The Unknown Quantity

ALICE HAWTHORNE [SEPTIMUS WINNER]


1827-1902
Listen to the mockingbird, listen to the

mockingbird,
Still

The old America, the America of our hopes and our dreams, has come to an end, and a new America is entering on the false course which has been tried so often and which has often led to calamity. This war will in the long ran result in far more evil to the United States than to Spain. shall nominally win, but at the cost of what infinite loss! Letter to Edward Lee-Childe

We

singing where the weeping willows

[1898]

wave. Listen to the Mockingbird [1855]


1

LEW [LEWIS] WALLACE


A man
the
is

A11 quiet along the Potomac tonight, No sound save the rush of the river,

While soft dead

falls

the

dew on

the face of the

1827-1905 never so on

trial

as in

Hie

picket's off

duty forever.

adaptation of Governor Bragg's expression became a Cleveland campaign slogan: "We love him for the enemies he has made."

*An

ETHEL LYNN BEERS [18*7-1879], The Picket Guard [1861], st. 6

moment of excessive good fortune. Ben Hur: A Tale of the Christ


[1880], bk.

V,

ch. 7

Would you

hurt

man

strike at his self-love.

keenest, 16. VI, 2

728

WALLACE
Beauty
beholder.*
is

IBSEN
revolt.

altogether in the eye of the

What

right have

we
[i

to happi-

ness?

Ghosts

881 ] , act I

The Prince

of India [1893], bk. Ill, ch. 6

am

half inclined to think

we

are all

WILLIAM ALLINGHAM
1828-1889

We daren't go a-hunting
For fear of
little

Up the airy mountain, Down the rushy glen,

not only what we have inherited from our fathers that exists again in us, but all sorts of old dead ideas and all kinds of old dead beliefs and things of that kind. They are not actually alive in us; but
ghosts,
It
is

Mr. Manders.

men.

there they are dormant, and we can never be


Fairies, st.
i

all

rid

the same, of them.

The
Four ducks on

Whenever
read
it,

take

up

a newspaper

and

A grass bank beyond, A blue sky of spring,


White clouds on

a pond,

the wing;

fancy I see ghosts creeping between the lines, TTiere must be ghosts all over the world. They must be as countless as grains of the sands, it
I

What a little thing To remember for years To remember with tears!


Four Ducks on a Pond

seems to me.

And we

afraid of the light, all of us.

are so miserably 16. II


16. Ill

Mother, give
I

me the sun,
is

hold that

man

HENRIK IBSEN
1828-1906
All or nothing.

in the right

who

is

most

closely in league

with the future. Letter to Georg Brandes [January 3, 1882]

Brand [1866]

Out yonder under the skies, men have a common saying: "Man, to thyself be true!" But here, 'mongst Trolls, "Troll,
to thyself

A community is like a ship; everyone ought to be prepared to take the helm. An Enemy of the People [1882],
actl

be

enough!" it runs. Peer Gynt [1867], act I

The minority
You
trousers

is

always right.
16.

round about, Peer! on the mountain.

Go

Room

enough
16.

IV

should

never wear your best


to fight for 16.
is

any man's heart you please, and you will always find, in every one, at least one black spot which he has to keep concealed.
into
Pillars of Society [1877], act III

Look

when you go out

freedom and truth.

The strongest man in the world who stands most alone. 1 Rob
the average

he
16.

The
ety.

spirit of truth

and the

spirit of

man

of his

life illu-

freedom

they are the pillars of soci16. TV

sion, and you rob him of his at the same stroke.

happiness

The Wild Duck


There can be no freedom or beauty about a home life that depends on borrowing and debt. A DoZZ's House [1879], act I
crave for happiness in this world is simply to be possessed by a spirit of 1 See Hume, p. 434!}, and Hungerford, p.
8$ib.

[1884], act

Vine

leaves in his hair.

Hedda Gdder

[1890], act II

To

The younger generation will come knocking at my door. The Master Builder [1892], act I
1 See

Browning, p. 66sa.

729

MEREDITH

GEORGE MEREDITH
1828-1909
expect that Woman will be the last thing civilized by Man. The Ordeal of Richard Feverel
I

Their sense

is

with

their

senses

all

mixed

in,

Destroyed by subtleties these women Modern Love, XLVIII are!

[i859],ch.

When

Ah, what a dusty answer gets the soul hot for certainties in this our
life!

Who
and the

rises
is

his prayer

from prayer a better man, 16. 12 answered.


is

16.

The sun

fields

coming down to earth, and the waters shout to


16. 19

Into the breast that gives the rose Shall I with shuddering fall? The Spirit of Earth in Autumn
[1862],
st. i

TiSn golden shouts.


Kissing don't last; cookery do!

Cynicism
16.

is

intellectual

28
In

The Egoist

dandyism. [1879], ch 7
-

See ye not, courtesy Is the true alchemy, Turning to gold all


tries?

...

the book of Egoism,

it

is

it

touches

and

written, possession without obligation to the object possessed approaches felicity.

The Song
I've studied

of Courtesy

16. 14

[1859],

IV

On

a starred night Prince Lucifer uprose.

men from my topsy-turvy

Close, and, I reckon, rather true. Some are fine fellows: some, right
scurvy:

Tired of his dark dominion swung the


fiend.

Lucifer in Starlight [1883]

Most, a dash between the two.


Juggling Jerry [1859],

Around

VII

the ancient rank on rank,

track

marched,
16.

Two

of a trade,

lass,

never agree. 1
16.

The army

of unalterable law.

IX

Not till the fire is dying in the grate, Look we for any kinship with the stars. Oh, wisdom never comes when it is
gold,

Enter these enchanted woods,

You who

dare.

The Woods
She

of

Westermain
[1883],
st. i

And

We
And

the great price worth;

we pay

for it full

whom

love

is

hard to catch and

conquer,
are half

have
earth.

it

only

when we

Hard, but

the glory of the winning


in the Valley [1883],
valley,
st.

were she won!

Modern Love
if I

[1862],

IV

Love

So shorten

drink oblivion of a day, I the stature of my soul.


16.

Darker grows the


forgetting:

more and more

XII

That

rarest gift

So were it with be willed.

me

if

forgetting could

To

Beauty,

common
life,

sense.
16.

Tell the grassy hollow that holds the

XXXII
Tell

bubbling well-spring,
it

In tragic

God wot,
by what

No

villain

need be! Passions spin the


is

filled.

to forget the source that keeps it Ib.st. 5


so desires

We

plot: are betrayed within.

Love that
false

would

fain keep her

16.

XLIII

changeless;

1 See Hesiod, p. Gyb.

Fain would fling the net, and fain have her free. 16. st. 6

730

MEREDITH
Thence had he the laugh
Broad
as ten
.
.

TOLSTOI

thousand beeves
[1883]

The sweet keen smell. The sighing sound, the


the shore.

lights

around
St. i

At

pasture.

The Spirit of Shakespeare

Sudden Light
Still

[1881],

Civil limitation daunts His utterance never; the nymphs blush, not he. An Orson of the Muse [Walt

we

say as

we go

"Strange to think by the way,

Whitman]

[1883]

Whatever there is to know, That shall we know one day." The Cloud Confines [1881],

st. i

witty
is

woman

is

a treasure; a witty

Was

it

a friend or foe that spread these

beauty

a power. Diana of the Crossways [1885], ch. i

lies?

Nay, who but infants question in such


wise?

The

well of true wit

is

truth

itself.

Twas one
mies.

of

my
a

16.

most intimate eneFragment [1881]

her generals too.

Ireland gives England her soldiers, Ib. 2


patient
inattention

sonnet

is

moment's

monu-

ment
Memorial from the soul's eternity To one dead deathless hour. Sonnets from the House of
Life [1881].

With

hear

him
st.

prate.

Bellerophon [1887],
Full lasting
is

Proem

the song, though he,


in February [1888],
st.

The

singer, passes.

And though
leagues

thy soul

sail

leagues and
leagues,

The Thrush
Cannon Cannon
his

17

beyond Still, leagues beyond there is more sea.


16. no. 73.

those

name,
he came.

The Choice

III

his voice,

Napoleon [1891],

J
I

am

My name is
also

Might-have-been;

called

No-more, Too-late,

DANTE GABRIEL
ROSSETTI
1828-1882

Farewell.
16. no. 97.

Superscription

The blessed damozel leaned out From the gold bar of Heaven;
eyes were deeper than the depth Of waters stilled at even; She had three lilies in her hand,

LEO NIKOLAEVICH TOLSTOI*


1828-1910
"What's
are giving
this?

Her

am

falling?

my

legs

And

the stars in her hair were seven. The Blessed Damozel [1850],
St. i

and
eyes,

fell

way under me," he thought, on his back. He opened his

hoping to see how the struggle of the French soldiers with the artillery-

And

the souls mounting up to Went by her like thin flames.

God
st.

man was
1

ending, and eager to


Tolstoi's
I

know

Of course you have read Peace and Anna Karenina.

War and

never had that

16.

The
I

Stealthy School of Criticism. Letter to the Athenaeum [1871]


or

exquisite felicity before the summer, and now -I feel as if I knew the perfection in the repre-

have been here before,

But when
I

how

cannot

tell;

know

human life. Life indeed seems less than his tale of it. Such infallible veracityl The impression haunts me as nothing literary WILLIAM JAMES, ever haunted me before. letter to Henry James [1872], Letters of William
sentation of
real

the grass beyond the door,

James, vol. II [1896], p. 48

TOLSTOI
whether the red-haired artilleryman was whether the cannons had been taken or saved. But he saw nothing of all that. Above him there was the lofty sky, nothing but the sky not clear, but still immeasurably lofty,
tilled or not,

manity, but even of a single people, ap1


pears to

be impossible. War and Peace, epilogue


families
is

pt. II, ch. i

Happy
way.

are

all

alike;

every

with gray clouds creeping quietly over


it.

unhappy family

unhappy

in

its

own

War

Anna Karenina
and Peace [1865-1869],! pt.IIlch.i6
Ivan Ilych's
life

[1875-1877],
pt. I, ch, i

Three days afterwards the little prinwas buried, and Prince Andrey went to the steps of the tomb to take his last farewell of her. Even in the coffin the face was the same, though the eyes were closed. "Ah, what have you done to me?" it still seemed to 16. IV, 9 say.
cess

had been most simple and most ordinary and therefore most terrible. The Death of Ivan llych*
[1886]

Ivan Ilych saw that he was dying, and he was in continuous despair. In the depth of his heart he knew he

called

so In historical events great men are but the labels that serve to

give a

name

to an event,

and

like labels,

they have the least possible connection with the event itself. Every action of theirs, that seems to them an act of
their

was dying,- but not only was he not accustomed to the thought, he simply did not and could not grasp it. The syllogism he had learned from Kiezewetter's Logic: "Caius is a man,

men
tal,"

are mortal, therefore Caius

is

mor-

own

free will,
all,

sense not free at

in an historical but in bondage to


is

had always seemed to him correct as applied to Caius, but certainly not as man applied to himself. That Caius
was mortal, was perbut he was not Caius, not an abstract man, but a creature quite, quite separate from all others.
in the abstract
fectly correct,
Ib.

the whole course of previous history, and predestined from all eternity. Ib. IX, i
[Platon Karataev] did not understand, and could not grasp the significance of words taken apart from the sentence. Every word and every action
of his was the expression of a force uncomprehended by him, which was his
life.

He

Six

feet

of land

was

all

that he

needed.

How Much Land


The more
will
is

Does a Man Need? [1886]


less

given the less the people


will

16. XII, 13
us,

work for themselves, and the they work the more their poverty
increase. 3

with the rule of right and wrong given us by Christ, there is nothing for which we have no standard. And there is no greatness where there is not
simplicity, goodness,

For

Help for the Starving,


Art
is

pt. Ill

[January 1892]
a

human

and

activity

truth.

having for

its

Ib.XIV,i8
subject of history is the life of peoples and of humanity. To catch and that is, to depin down in words scribe directly the life, not only of hu1

purpose the transmission to others of the highest and best feelings to which

The

men have risen.


.

What

Is

Art? [1898],

eft.

iSee Francis Parkman, p. 7213. a Translated by AYLMER MAUDE.


8 If

support
Translated by CONSTANCE GAKNETT.
30, 7

you stop supporting that crowd, itself. SENECA [8 B.C.-A.D. 65],

it

will

Epistle

73 2

CONKLING

BABNABD
the world if he have a bit of ground that he can call his own. However small it is on the surface, it is four thousand
miles deep; and that
property.
is

ROSCOE CONKLING
1829-1888

He

will

hew

to the line of right, let

the chips

where they may. Speech nominating General Grant for a third term as
fall

a very handsome
in a Garden.

My Summer
What
a

President,

Chicago

Preliminary
[June 5,

CARL SCHUR.Z
1829-1906
Ideals are like stars;

needs in gardening is a cast-iron back, with a hinge in it. Ifc. Third Week

man

The
will

toad, without

which no garden

you

not suc-

would be complete.
16. Thirteenth
Politics

Week
Week
comIb.

ceed in touching them with your hands. But like the seafaring man on the desert of waters, you choose them as your
guides,

makes strane
ib.
;

bedfellows.

fifteenth

and following them you

will

reach your destiny. 1 Address, FaneuiL Hdl, Boston


[April 18, 1859]
I will make a prophecy that may now sound peculiar. In fifty years Lincoln's name will be inscribed close to Washington's on this Republic's roll of

small potatoes pared with what we might be!

What

we

all are,

legislature,

Public opinion is stronger than the and nearly as strong as the


Ib. Sixteenth

Ten Commandments.

Week
city 16.

The
land
is

thing generally raised


taxes.

on

honor.
Letter to Theodore Petrasch

[October 12, 2864]


2 country, right or wrong. be when to wrong, to right, kept right;

Our

When

Everybody talks about the weather, but nobody does anything about it.1 Editorial, The Hartford Courant
[August 24, 1897]

be put

right.

Address, Anti-Imperialistic Conference, Chicago [October 17, 1899]

CHARLOTTE ALINGTON BARNARD [" CL ARIBEL"]


1830-1869
I

cannot sing the old songs


years ago. I Cannot Sing the

sang long

CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER^


1829-1900

Old Songs 2
gavest,

Take back the heart that thou

What is my

anguish to thee?

To own a bit of ground, to scratch it with a hoe, to plant seeds, and watch this is the comthe renewal of life monest delight of the race, the most satisfactory thing a man can do. Summer in a Garden [i 870]

Take back the freedom thou cravest, Leaving the fetters to me. Take Back the Heart
1

The phrase

is

commonly

attributed to

Mark

My

Preliminary

Twain, but the Hartford Courimt has the exact statement in the aforementioned editorial, which is of course unsigned. Warner was associate
editor of the paper (1867-1900). See Mark Twain, p. 7590. * 1 cannot sing the old songs now!
It is

Broad acres are a patent of nobility; and no man but feels more of a man in
See Emerson, p. 6o8b. * See Charles Churchill, p. 4s6a. Warner collaborated with Mark The Gilded Age. See p. 7593.
1

not that I deem them low;

'Tis that I can't

remember how

They
Twain on

go.

C. S. CALVERLEY [1831-1884],

Changed

733

BROWN

DICKINSON
In keen and quivering ratio

THOMAS EDWARD BROWN


1830-1897

To the
To

ecstasy.

No. 125

[c.

1859],

A Garden is
Not God!
cool?

lovesome thing,

God wot!
the eve
is

fight aloud,
I

is

very brave

My Garden
in

Gardens

when

Who charge within the bosom The Cavalry of WoeNo. 126


[c.

But gdlanter,

know

Nay, but

have a

sign:

1859],

st. i

Tis very sure

God

walks in mine.
16.

Who
To

counts the

wampum
due? No. 128
is

of the night
1859],
rf.

see that

none

[c.

PORFIRIO DIAZ
1830-1915 Poor Mexico, so far from close to the United States,

These are the days when Birds come

back-

God and

so

A very
To

few - a Bird or two take a backward look.

Attributed

These are the days when

skies

resume

EMILY DICKINSONi
1830-1886 I never lost as much but twice, And that was in the sod. Twice have I stood a beggar Before the door of God!
Angels -twice descending

The

old

- old

A blue and gold mistake.


No. 130

sophistries of

June

st. i,

[c.

1859],

Oh Oh

Sacrament of summer days,


Last

Communion
join.

in the

Haze -

Permit a child to

Reimbursed
I

my

store

Burglar! Banker!

- Father!
No. 49
[c.

Thy sacred emblems to partake Thy consecrated bread to take And thine immortal wine!
16.

am

poor once more!


1858]
Besides the

st.

5,

Autumn

Surgeons must be very careful When they take the knife!

A few prosaic days A little this side of the snow


And
1859]
that side of the

poets sing

Underneath
Stirs

their fine incisions

Haze[c.

the Culprit - Life!

No. 131
[c.

No. 108

Our share of night to bear Our share of morning Our blank in bliss to fill Our blank in scorning Here a
Here a
star,

Just lost when I was saved! Just felt the world go by! Just girt me for the onset with Eternity,

When breath blew back,


And on
I

and there a

the other side heard recede the disappointed

tide!
i

star,

No. 100

[c.

1860], $L

Some lose their way!


Afterwards mist,

and there a
Day!

mist,

No. 113
For each
1

[c.

1859]

ecstatic instant

distinctly seen As laces just reveal the surge Or Mists -the ApennineIs

The thought beneath


more

so slight a film

We must an anguish pay


edited by

No. 210
I taste

[c.

1860]

The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson, Thomas H. Johnson [1960]. Bates are

From Tankards scooped


No. 214

a liquor never brewed, in


[c.

Pearl st.

of composition, not publication.

1860],

734

DICKINSON
Inebriate of Air - am I And Debauchee of Dew Reeling through endless summer

The The

Steeples

swam

in

Amethyst

~
[1862]
to

news, like Squirrels, ran.

No. 328

days From inns of Molten

BlueNo. 214,

Some keep
st.

the

Sabbath

2
I

Church it,

going

keep

Till

snowy HatsSeraphs swing And Saints to windows runtheir

With a And an

bobolink for a Chorister Orchard, for a Dome-

staying at

Home st.

To

see the

little

Leaning against the Sun


Ib.
st.

Tippler

No. 324
4
last-

[1862],

So instead of getting to Heaven, at


I'm going,
After
all

"Hope"
That

And And

words -

the thing with feathers perches in the soul the tune without the sings
is

along.
pain,

li. st. 3

great

formal

feeling
st. i

comes.

never stops

- at all [c.

No. 341
1861],
st. i

[c.

1862],

No. 254

There's a certain Slant of light, Winter Afternoons That oppresses, like the Heft Of Cathedral Tunes -

Of Course - 1 prayed And did God Care? He cared as much as on the Air A Bird -had stamped her footAnd cried "Give Me"No. 376
[c.

1862]

No. 258

[c.

1861],

st. i

No Rack can

torture

me -

I'm Nobody! Who are you? Are you - Nobody - too?

My Soul - at Liberty Behind this mortal Bone There knits a bolder One -

Then
Don't

there's a pair of us! tell! they'd advertise

- you know!

No. 384

[c.

1862],

st.

How dreary - to be - Somebody! How public - like a Frog To


tell

one's

name -the

Except Thyself may be Thine Enemy Captivity is Consciousness


So's Liberty.

livelong

Ib.

st.

June-

To an
I

admiring Bog!

No. 288

[c.

1861]

- careless - then know the Wine Came once a World -Did Oh, had you told me so tasted
I

Much Madness is divinest To a discerning Eye Much Sense -the starkest Madness In this, as All, prevail Assent - and you are sane

Sense -

did not

Tis the Majority

you?

This

Thirst

would

blister

- easier st.

nowNo. 296
[c.

Demur -you're straightway And handled with a Chain.


The

dangerous
[c.

No. 435
2861],
3

1862]
tired

The Soul selects her own Then - shuts the Door To her divine Majority Present no more No, 303
111 tell

Society

Wind -tapped
Man.
No. 436

like

[c.

1862],

st.

This
1862],
st.

is

[c.

A Ribbon at a time -

you how

the Sun rose

Me The simple News that Nature With tender Majesty.


That never wrote to

my letter to the World

told

No. 441

[c.

1862],

st. i

735

DICKINSON
I died for Beauty -but was scarce Adjusted in the Tomb When One who died for Truth, was

The

lain

Brain -is wider than the SkyFor - put them side by side The one the other will contain With ease - and You - beside.

In an adjoining

Room i I

No. 632
cannot
Life
live

[1862],

st.

And

We
And
It

so, as

No. 449 [c. 1862], st. Kinsmen, met a Night -

with

You [c.

It

would be Life is

talked between the

Rooms -

And
-

over there
Shelf.

Until the Moss had reached our lips covered up - our names -

Behind the

No. 640

1862],
Ib.

st. i

16. st. 3

And

that

White Sustenance st.

was not Death, for I stood up, And all the Dead, lie down It

Despairi

12

I felt Siroccos - crawl I

No. 510 [c. 2862], st. was not Frost, for on my Flesh

Pain -has an Element of It cannot recollect

Blank -

Ib. st. 2

When it begun - or if there were A time when it was not No. 650
I
[c.

reckon -when I count at allFirst- Poets -Then the SunThen Summer -Then the Heaven of

1862],

st. i

dwell in

A fairer House than Prose More numerous of Windows Superior for Doors.
No. 657
[c.

Possibility

GodAnd then - the List is done But, looking back -the First so seems To Comprehend the Whole The Others look a needless Show Sol write -Poets -AH -

1862],

st. i

The Soul unto


Is

itself

No. 569
I like

[c.

1862],

st.

i,

Or the most agonizing Spy An Enemy - could send No. 683


Because
I
[c.

an imperial friend

to see

it

lap

the Miles -

1862],

st. i

And

lick

the Valleys up

[c.

No. 585

1862],

st. i

And neigh like Boanerges Then punctual as a Star Stop docile and omnipotent At its own stable doorAfraid!
Ib.

could not stop for Death, He kindly stopped for me The Carriage held but just Ourselves

And

Immortality.

No. 712
Alter!
st.

[c.

1863],

st. i

Falter!

When the Hills When the Sun


if

do -

Of whom am I afraid? Not Death - for who is He? The Porter of my Father's Lodge As much abasheth me!
No. 608
I
[c.

Question

His Glory

Be the

Perfect

One -

Surfeit!
st. i

When the Daffodil


729

1862],

No

asked no other thing other -was denied I offered Being -for itThe Mighty Merchant sneered
Brazil?

Doth of the Dew Even as Herself - Sir I will - of You No.

[c.

1863]

God
But

gave a Loaf to every Birdjust a

Crumb - to
No.

Me [c.

He

twirled a Button

Ladies

791.

1863],

st. i

Without
That

a glance

"But- Madam -is

my waythere nothing else-

This quiet Dust was Gentlemen and

We can

show - Today?" No. 621 [c. 1862]

And Lads and


1

Girls

-*

See Shakespeare, p. 39 la.

736

DICKINSON

Was
And

laughter and ability and Sighing, Frocks and Curls.

The The
But

living,

I offer

Sweet, even that is

is

costlier

No. 813
Adventure most unto

[c.

1864],

st. i

itself

The Soul condemned to be Attended by a single Hound Its own identity.


No. 822
Dying!
[c.

living, this

The The

trifle, past include dying multifold without Respite to be dead.

Dying,

No. 2013

[c.

2865]

2864],$*. 4

To be afraid of thee One must to thine Artillery Have left exposed a Friend Than thine old Arrow is a Shot
Delivered straighter to the Heart The leaving Love behind.

Twas my one
Let
it

Glory

be

Remembered I was owned of Thee No. 2028


I

[c.

2865]

No. 832

[c.

2864],

st. i

Truth - is as old as God His Twin identity And will endure as long as He

never saw a Moor I never saw the Sea Yet know I how the Heather looks And what a Billow be.
I

A Co-Eternity-

never spoke with


visited in

God

Nor
[c.

Heaven -

No. 836

2864],

st.

The Poets light but Lamps Themselves - go out The Wicks they stimulate If vital

Yet certain am I of the spot As if the Checks were given -

No. 2052

[c.

2865]

Light

Not The

to discover

weakness

is

Artifice of strength

[c.

Inhere as do the Suns

No. 2054
Is

2865],

st. 2

Each Age a Lens


Disseminating their Circumference -

Experiment to me every one I meet


If it contain

No. 883

[c.

1864]

Love -

The

is

anterior to Life

a Kernel? Figure of a Nut

Posterior
Initial of

- to Death -

Presents

upon a Tree

The
If I

Creation, and Exponent of Earth.

Equally plausibly,

No. 927 [c. 2864] can stop one Heart from breaking I shall not live in vain If I can ease one Life the Aching Or cool one Pain

But Meat within, is requisite To Squirrels, and to Me.

No. 2073
like

[c.

2865]

Us is sometimes caught Nature, Without her Diadem. No. 2075 [c. 2866], st. 2

Or help one fainting Robin Unto his Nest again


I

shall

not live in Vain.

We shall not want to use again


Until Eternity.
[c.

The Sweeping up the Heart, And putting Love away


No. 2078

Partake as

No. 929 doth the Bee


an Estate -

2864]

[c.

2866],

st.

Abstemiously.

The Rose is
In Sicily.

No. 994

[c.

2865]

Too scanty 'twas to die for you, The merest Greek could that.

never know how high we are we are called to rise And then, if we are true to plan Our statures touch the skies. 1 No. 2276 [c. 2870], st.
Till
1

We

See William James, p.

79b.

737

DICKINSON

A word is dead
When it is said,
Some say. I say it just
Begins to
live

Built of but just a syllable The hugest hearts that break.

No. 1368

[c.

1876]

That

day.
is

No. 1212
Frigate like a

Bees are Black, with Gilt Surcingles Buccaneers of Buzz.


[c.

1872]

No. 1405

[c.

1877],

st.

no To take us Lands away Nor any Coursers like a Page


There

Book

A Route
With

of Evanescence

Of prancing Poetry This Traverse may the poorest take


Without oppress
of Toll

A Resonance of Emerald A Rush of Cochineal And


every Blossom on the

a revolving

Wheel -

Bush

How frugal is the Chariot That bears the Human Soul!


No. 1263
I
[c.

Adjusts its tumbled Head The mail from Tunis, probably,

1873]

An easy Morning's
He
ate

ride.

thought that nature was enough Till Human nature came But that the other did absorb

No. 1463
and
drank
the

[c.

1879]

Words His Spirit grew robust i

precious

As Parallax a Flame No. 1286


Until the Desert knows That Water grows

[c.

1873], st

He knew no more
Nor

that he was poor, that his frame was Dust -

His Sands

suffice

But let him once suspect That Caspian Fact


Sahara dies.

He danced along the dingy Days And this Request of Wings Was but a Book - What Liberty A loosened spirit brings [c.

No. 1291

1873],
is

st. i

No. 1587

[c.

1883]

Not with Nor with

a Club, the Heart a Stone -

broken
it

The

Pedigree of

Honey

Does not concern the Bee

A Whip
To

so small

you could not see

A Clover, any time, to him,


Is Aristocracy.

Fve known
lash the

Magic Creature

No. 1627

[c.

1884], version II

Till it fell.

No. 1304

A
[c.

Drunkard cannot meet a Cork


a Revery

1874],

**

Without

That short - potential stir That each can make but once That Bustle so illustrious Tis almost Consequence Isthe&latofDeath. Oh, thou unknown Renown That not a Beggar would accept Had he the power to spurn No. 1307 [c. 1874]

And

so encountering a Fly
stir

This January Day


Jamaicas of Remembrance That send me reeling in.

No. 1628
Beauty crowds me till I die Beauty mercy have on me But if I expire today Let it be in sight of thee -

[c.

1884]

A little Madness in the Spring


Is

No. 1654

[n.d.]

wholesome even

for the King.

Eden
1875]

is

that old-fashioned

House

No. 1333
Love's stricken "why" Is all that love can speak

[c.

We dwell in every day


Without
Until
suspecting our abode
drive away.

we

No. 1657

[n.d.], st. i

73 8

DICKINSON
Glory
is

ROSSETTI
It is enough, the freight should be Proportioned to the groove.

That

for

that bright tragic thing an instant

Means Dominion -

Warms some poor name


That never
felt

No. 2765
read a book and whole body so cold no
If
I

[n.d]

the Sun,

it

makes

my
I

Gently replacing In oblivionI

fire

can ever

No. 1660 [n.d]

warm me,
were taken

know
off, I

that

is

poetry. If

Til tell

an existence The market price, they said.


Precisely

took one Draught of Life you what I paid

feel physically as if

the top of
that
I

my
is

head
it.

know

poetry.
Is

These are the only ways there any other way?

know

From MABTHA GILBERT DICKINSON BIANCHI, Life and Letters


of Emily Dickinson [1924]

They weighed me, Dust by Dust balanced Film with Film, They Then handed me my Being's worth -

A single Dram of Heaven!


life

No. 2725

[n.d.]

CHRISTINA GEORGINA ROSSETTI


1830-1894

My
A

closed twice before It yet remains to see If Immortality unveil third event to me

its

close -

Who has seen the wind?


Neither you nor I: But when the trees bow down
heads,
their

So huge, so hopeless to conceive As these that twice befell.


Parting

The wind

is

Who Has Seen


way?
Yes, to the very end.

passing by. the

Wind?,
all

st.

And

all

we know we need of hell.


is all

of heaven,

Does the road wind

up-hill

the

No. 1732 [n.d]


That it will never come again Is what makes life so sweet. No. 1741 [n.d],

Will the day's journey take the whole


long day?
st.

From morn

to night,

my

friend.
st. i

Up-Hill [1861],

To make

One And revery. The revery alone will


If

a prairie it takes a clover and one bee, clover, and a bee,


do,

My heart is like a singing bird. A Birthday [1861], st


The birthday
Is

of

my life
to me.
Ib. st. 2

come,

bees are few.


is

No. 1755

my

love

is

come

[n.d]

Elysium

as far as to

The very
If in

nearest

Room

When I am dead, my dearest,


Sing no sad songs for me; Plant thou no roses at my head,

that Room a Friend await Felicity or Doom-

What
That

Fortitude the Soul contains,


it

The The

can so endure accent of a coming Footopening of a DoorNo. 1760


is all

Nor shady cypress tree. Be the green grass above me With showers and dewdrops And if thou wilt, remember

wet;

And
[n.d.]

if

thou

wilt, forget.

Song

[1862],

st. i

That Love
Is all

there

is,

we know

of Love;

Remember me when I am gone away, Gone far away into the silent land. Remember [1862], Z. i

739

ROSSETTI
Better by far you should forget and smile

DODGE

And Wind,
smote

that

grand

old

harper,

Than

that you should

sad.

remember and be Remember, L 13

His thunder-harp of pines.

A Life Drama

[1853], sc * 2

For there is no friend like a sister In calm or stormy weather; To cheer one on the tedious way, To fetch one if one goes astray, To lift one if one totters down, To strengthen whilst one stands. Goblin Market [1862], last lines
In the bleak mid-winter
Frosty wind

It

is

not of so
say, as

what you

much consequence how you say it. Memo-

memorable on account of some single irradiating word.


rable sentences are

Dreamthorp [1863]. n the Writing of Essays


Death is the ugly fact which Nature has to hide, and she hides it well. 16. Of Death and the Fear
of Dying

made moan,

Earth stood hard as iron,

Water like a stone; Snow had fallen, snow on snow, Snow on snow,
In the bleak mid-winter,

CHARLES STUART CALVERLEY


1831-1884
have a liking old For thee, though manifold
I

Long ago.

Mid-Winter

TOSHIBA SHOIN*
1850-1859

Stories, I

know, are

told,

Not

to thy credit!

To

Ode
The

consider oneself different from

to Tobacco,

st.

ordinary

men

is

hope that one nary men.

will

wrong, but it is right to not remain like ordivol.

farmer's daughter hath soft brown hair

Yoshida Shorn Zenshu,

II

(Butter and cheese)

eggs

and a pound
I

of

And

met with

a ballad,

can't say
lines
like

of the superior man is like Heaven. it is resentful or angry, it thunders forth its indignation. But

The mind

where,

When

That wholly consisted of


these.

once having loosed its feelings, it is like a sunny day with a clear sky: within the heart there remains not the trace of a
cloud.
ness.

Ballad, after

William Morris [The Auld Wife], pt I, st. 6


song
is

Such

is

the beauty of true manli16.

And

this

considered a perfect
it's

Hi

gem,

And

as to the

meaning,

Neither the lords nor the shogun can be depended upon [to save the country], and so our only hope lies in grassroots heroes.
16.

please.

16. II,

what you st. 4

MARY MAPES DODGE


1831-1905
Life
is

ALEXANDER SMITH
1830-^1867
In winter,
1

a mystery as deep as ever death


is

can be;

Yet oh, how sweet it we live and see!

to us, this

life

when

Came down
From

the dismal rain in slanting lines,

The Two

Mysteries,

st.

3
is

Sources of Japanese Tradition, edited


,[1960].

And

as life

is

to the living, so death


16.
st.

by William de Bary

to the dead.

74

GAMTELJD

MAXWELL
Oh, write of me, not "Died
pains/'

JAMES ABRAM GARFIELD


1831-1881
Fellow
citizens!

in bitter

But "Emigrated to another

star!"

God

reigns,

and the
of
ic,

Emigrant

Government

Speech

Washington on assassination Lincoln, New York \April

at

still livesl

For mere vengeance I would do nothing. This nation is too great to look for mere revenge. But for the security of the future I would do everything.
Ib.

BULWER-LYTTON, EARL OF LYTTON [OWEN MEREDITH]


1831-1891 Love thou the rose, yet leave
stem. 1
it

EDWARD ROBERT

on

its

The Wanderer

[1857] . Prologue,

not willing that this discussion should close without mention of the value of a true teacher. Give me a log hut, with only a simple bench, Mark * on one end and I on the Hopkins other, and you may have all the buildings, apparatus and libraries without him. Address to Williams College Alumni, New York [December
I

am

pt.I,i9

We may live without poetry,


art;

music and

live without conscience, and without heart; may live without friends; we may live without books; But civilized man cannot live without

We

may

live

We

cooks.

28, 1871]

Ladle* [1860], pL
Genius does what
it

I,

canto 2,
St.

19

must, and talent


of a Sensitive Second-Rate Poet

HELEN HUNT JACKSON


1831-1885 O suns and skies and clouds of June, And flowers of June together, Ye cannot rival for one hour
October's bright blue weather. Octobefs Bright Blue Weather,
St. 1

does

what

it

can.

Last

Words

JAMES CLERK MAXWELL


1831-1879
For
the

sake

of

persons

of

...

Find

me

the

men on

earth

who

care

different types, scientific truth should be presented in different forms, and

Enough To seek a barren


For simple
1

for faith or creed today

wilderness
st.

liberty to pray.

The
Mark

Pilgrim Forefathers,
[1802-1887],

5
of

should be regarded as equally scientific, whether it appears in the robust form and the vivid coloring of a physical illustration, or in the tenuity and paleness of a symbolic expression. Address to the Mathematics

Hopkins

president

Williams College [1856-1872], and president of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions [1857-1881]. For Education is Making Men; So is it now, so was it when Mark Hopkins sat on one end of a log

and

Physics Section, British Association for the Advancement of Science [1870]


1

See Emerson, p. 6033.

And James

Garfield sat on the other.

ARTHUR GUITERMAN

[1871-1943],

*Lord Lytton, the Viceroy, who still lives in the literary hall of fame as the author of Lucile
a
vast,

Education In BURKE A. HINSDALE, President Garfield and Education [1882], p. 43.

stale
.

Victorian piece

of

poetry,

WILLIAM
1

WOODWARD, Meet General Grant


30

[igsB], pt. IV, ch.

74

MAXWELL

BUSCH

When

at last this little instrument

My
of a
ily

definition

appeared, consisting, as it does, of parts every one of which is familiar to us, and capable of being put together by an amateur, the disappointment arising from its humble appearance was only partially relieved on finding that it was
really able to talk.

man up
him

[of a philosopher]

is

and

in a balloon, with his famfriends holding the ropes which

confine

to earth

and trying

to haul

him down.
Life, Letters,

and

Journals,
eft.

10

The Telephone

[1878]

PHILIP HENRY

ELIZABETH AKERS ALLEN


18321911
Backward, turn backward,

SHERIDAN
1831-1888

Time,

in

The

only good Indians

ever

saw

your

flight,

Make

were dead. 1

Remark

at Fort

Cobb, Indian

rne a child again just for tonight! Rock to Sleep [1860], st. i

Me

Territory [January 1869]

SIR

EDWIN ARNOLD
1832-1904

LOUISA MAY ALCOTT


1832-1888 Christmas won't be Christmas without any presents.
Little

Shall any gazer see with mortal eyes, Or any searcher know by mortal mind?

Veil

after

veil

will

lift

but there

Women

[1868], ch.

must be
Veil upon veil behind. The Light of Asia [1870],
bk. VIII

A little kingdom I possess,


Where thoughts and feelings dwell; And very hard the task I find Of governing it well. From EDNAH D. CHENEY,
Louisa

Nor

ever once ashamed So we be named

May

Letters, ch. 3 [My

Alcott, Her Life, and Journals [1889],

Pressmen; Slaves of the Lamp; Servants


of Light.

Kingdom,*

st.

i]

The Tenth Muse, st

18

Resolved to take Fate by the throat Ib. 5 living out of her. Above man's aims his nature rose. The wisdom of a just content

and shake a

WILHELM BUSCH
1832-1908
Diogenes the wise crept into his vat And spoke: "Yes, yes, this comes from
that."

Made one And tuned


16.
1

small spot a continent, to poetry Life's prose.3


7.

[Thoreau's Flute*

st.

2]

[1840-1916] reported that after Ouster's fight with Black Kettle's band of Cheyenne Indians, the Comanche Chief Toch-

EDWARD SYLVESTER

Ems

Diogenes und die bosen Buben von Korinth [1856]


This thesis remains firm:
Evil which
is

Good

is

the

a-way (Turtle Dove) was presented to General Sheridan. The Indian said: "Me Toch-a-way,
General's reply, as reported by given in the text; the phrase is more often heard in the version: The only
Ellis, is

permitted.

me good

Indian."

The

Fromme Helene

[1872]

good Indian is a dead Indian. a Written at the age of thirteen. s The word "tuned" is frequently misprinted
as "turned."

In general his principle is this: Whatever is popular is permitted.

Julchen [1877]

*In The Atlantic Monthly [September

1863].

To become a To be a father

father
is,

is

not hard,
Ib.

however.

742

BUSCH
Temperance
In tilings
is

CARROLL
"I'll be judge, 111 be jury/' said cunning old Fury; "111 try the whole cause, and condemn you to death." Alice's Adventures in Wonder-

we

the pleasure can't get.


intelli-

Thus

live

moderately and think

He

gently has enough

who

uses nothing.

land, ch. 3

Julchen

Oh my fur and whiskers!


sir,"
self,

Ib.

smart and busy, Always carries a sharp pencil with him.

A true painter,

"I can't explain myself, I'm afraid,


said Alice, "because you see."

Mder Klecksel

I'm not my-

[1884]

WILLIAM CROSWELL DOANE


1832-1913 Ancient of Days, who sittest throned
in

"I don't see," said the Caterpillar.


Ib.

"You

are

old,

Father William," the

man said, /oung your hair has become very white; And yet you incessantly stand on your

To

thee

all

knees are bent,

all

voices
st.
i

pray.

Hymn

[1886],

Do

LEWIS CARROLL [CHARLES LUTWIDGE DODGSON]


1832-1898
All in the golden afternoon Full leisurely we glide,

head * you think, at your age, it is right?" Ib. [You are old, Father William, st. i]

"In

my

youth/' said his father, "I took

to the law,

And And

argued each case with my wife; the muscular strength, which

it

gave to my jaw, Has lasted the rest of

my life."
Ib.
[st.

For both our oars with little skill By little arms are plied While little hands make vain pretense

6]

Our wanderings

to guide. Alice's Adventures in

"I have answered three questions, that is enough,"


airs!

and

Wonderst.

Said his father. "Don't give yourself

land [1865], introduction,

Do
Be

the use of a book," thought Alice, "without pictures or Ib. ch. i conversations?"
is

"What

you think such stuff?


off,

can

listen all

day to

or 111 kick

you downstairs!"
Ib.
[st.

8]

Do
cats?

cats eat bats?

... Do

bats eat
Ib.

"I shall sit here,"


off, for

he

said,

Curiouser and curiouser!

Ib. 2

How doth the little crocodile


Improve his shining tail, And pour the waters of the Nile

and days." "If everybody minded their own business," said the Duchess in a hoarse growl, "the world would go round a
days
deal faster than
it

"on and Ib. 6

does."

Ib.

On

every golden scale!

"Talking of axes," said the Duchess,

"chop
grin,

off

her head!"

Ib.

How cheerfully he seems to How neatly spreads his claws,


And welcomes little fishes With gently smiling jaws!
1

Speak roughly to your

And

in
Ib.

He

little boy, beat him when he sneezes: only does it to annoy,


it teases.

Because he knows
1

Ib.
See Southey, p. 531!).

See Isaac Watts, p. jg6b.

743

CAKROLL
the [Cheshire] vanished quite the end of with slowly, beginning the tail, and ending with the grin, which remained some time after the rest of it had gone.
"All
right/'
this

said

And
love,

Cat;

and

time

it

'tis

round!"

the moral of that is "Oh, 'tis love, that makes the world eo S 1
Alice's

Adventures in Wonderland, ch. 9

Alice's Adventures in

Wonderland, ch. 6

Take care of the sense and the sounds will take care of themselves.
16.

"Then you should say what you mean/' the March Hare went on.
"I do/' Alice hastily replied; "at least that's at least I mean what I say

"We called him Tortoise because he taught us," said the Mock Turtle angrily. "Really you are very dull!"
16.

the same thing, you know." "Not the same thing a bit!" said the Hatter. "Why, you might just as well say that *I see what I eat' is the same
thing as

"Reeling and Writhing, of

course, to

eat

what

see'!"

Ib. 7

begin with," the Mock Turtle replied, "and the different branches of Arithmetic Ambition, Distraction, Uglification,

"It was the best butter," the

March
Ib.

and Derision."

IJ.

Hare meekly

replied.
little

"Will you walk a

little faster?" said a

Twinkle, twinkle,

bat!

How I wonder what you're at! Up above the world you fly,
Like a teatray in the sky. 1
Ib.

whiting to a snail, "There's a porpoise close behind

us,

and

he's treading on my tail." 16. 10 [The Lobster-QuadriUle,


st.
i]

"Take some more tea/' the March Hare said to Alice, very earnestly. "Fve had nothing yet," Alice replied
in an offended tone: "so
I

Will you, won't you, will you, won't you, will you join the dance?
16.

can't take

The

more."

"You mean you

can't take less" said

the Hatter: "it's very easy to take more than nothing." Ib.

from England the nearer is to France Then turn not pale, beloved snail, but come and join the dance.
further
off

IB.
'Tis the voice of

[st.

3]

They drew

all

manner

of things

... everything that begins with an such as mousetraps, and the moon, and
memory, and muchness you say things are "much
ness/'

the Lobster:

heard
I

him declare "You have baked me too brown,


sugar

must

you know
of a

my hair." 2
16.

much16.

[Tis the Voice of the


Lobster]

crimson with fury, and after glaring at her for a moment like a wild beast, began scream"Off with her head! 1 Off ing, " with 16. 8

The Queen

turned

Soup of the evening, beautiful


Sentence
first

soup!

16. [Turtle Soup]

verdict afterwards.
16. 12

"Tut, tut, child/' said the Duchess. ^ "Everything's got a moral if only you
can find
1

Child of the pure, unclouded brow And dreaming eyes of wonder! Though time be fleet and I and thou

it."

16. 9

Are half a
W.
S.

life

asunder,
and Anonymous,

See Ann and Jane Taylor, p. 5463. See Shakespeare, p. siyb, and Gibber,

Gilbert, p. 768a,

p.

p.
a

no5b.
See Isaac Watts, p. 5g6b.

744

CARROLL

Thy loving smile The love-gift of a

will surely hail


fairy tale.
st. i

Speak

in

French when

you can't

Through the Looking-Glass


[1872], introduction,

turn think of the English for a thing and reout your toes when you walk

member who you


"If

are!
eft.

horror of that moment," the King went on, "I shall never, never forget!"

"The

Through the LookingGlass,


said,

"You
"if
it."

will,

though," the Queen

said,

you think we're waxworks," he "you ought to pay, you know. Waxworks weren't made to be looked
at for nothing.

you don't make a memorandum of


16. ch. i
brillig,

Nohow!"

16.

and the slithy toves Did gyre and gimble in the wabe; All mimsy were the borogoves,

Twas

dee, "if

"Contrariwise," continued Tweedleit was so, it might be; and if it


so, it

were
ain't.

would be; but as That's logic."

it isn't, it

Ib.

And

the

mome raihs

outgrabe.

The sun was

Beware the Jabberwock,

my

son!

jaws that bite, the ckws that catch! Beware the Jubjub bird, and shun The frumious Bandersnatchl
16. \Jabberwocky, st. i, 2]

The

shining on the sea, all his might: with Shining He did his very best to make

The billows smooth and bright And this was odd, because it was The middle of the night.
16.

[The Walrus and the Carpenfer,


st. i]

And,

as in uffish

The

Came
And

thought he stood, Jabberwock, with eyes of flame, whiffling through the tulgey
it

The Walrus and the Carpenter Were walking close at hand:


They wept
like

anything to see

wood,
burbled as

came!

Such quantities of sand: "If this were only cleared away," They said, "it would be grand!"
"If seven

One, two! One, two! And through and through The vorpal blade went snicker-snack! He left it dead, and with its head

maids with seven mops

He went galumphing back.


"And
hast thou slain the Jabberwock? Come to my arms, my beamish boy! frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!" He chortled in his joy.
16.
[st.

Swept it for half a year, Do you suppose," the Walrus said, 'That they could get it clear?" "I doubt it," said the Carpenter,

And shed

a bitter tear.

I6.[tf.4, 5 ]

"O

Oysters,

come and walk with


talk,

us!"

4-6]

The Walrus did beseech. "A pleasant walk, a pleasant


Along the briny beach/'

say. It saves time.

Curtsy while you're thinking what to 16. 2

16.

[st.

6]

"Now!

Now!"

cried

the

Queen.
16.

And thick and fast they came at And more, and more, and more

last,

"Faster! Faster!"

"A

slow sort of country!" said the

All hopping through the frothy waves, And scrambling to the shore.
16.
[st.

Queen. "Now, here, you see, it takes all the running you can do, to keep in the same place. If you want to get somewhere else, you must run at least twice
as fast as that!"

9]

16.

"The time has come," the Walrus said, "To talk of many things: and ships and sealingOf shoes wax

745

CARKOLL
and kings Of cabbages And why the sea is boiling hot And whether pigs have wings."
ch.

6
nice
ob-

"But 'glory' doesn't mean 'a knockdown argument,'" Alice


jected.

Through the Looking-Glass, 4 [The Walrus and the Carst.

"When
Dumpty
"it

use

word,"

Humpty

penter,

11]

said, in rather a scornful tone, means just what I choose it to

"But wait a

bit," the Oysters cried,

"Before we have our chat; For some of us are out of breath,

mean "The

neither

more nor
is,"

less."

question

said

Alice,

"whether you can make words mean so


12]

And

all

of us are fat!"

16.

[st.

many different things." "The question is/'


Dumpty, "which
that's all."
is

said

The Carpenter said nothing but "The butter's spread too thick!"
16.
[st.

Humpty

to

be master

16}

Through the Looking-Glass,


ch. 6
It's as
ral.

"I

weep

for you," the

Walrus

said:

"I deeply sympathize." With sobs and tears he sorted out

large as life

and twice

as natu-

Those of the
Holding

16. 7

largest size,

his pocket-handkerchief Before his streaming eyes.


16.
[st.

His answer trickled through Like water through a sieve.


17]

my

head, 16. 8

What's
dee?
It

the

French

for

fiddle-de-

But answer came there none And this was scarcely odd, because
They'd eaten every one.
16.
[st.

16. 9
isn't

etiquette

to

cut

anyone
the
16.

18]

you've been introduced to.


joint!

Remove

Twopence a week, and jam


other day.

every
16. 5

"The

rule

is,

jam tomorrow, and jam

but never jam today." yesterday "It must come sometimes to 'jam to" day/ Alice objected.

answer to "Hi!" or to any loud cry Such as "Fry me!" or "Fritter my wig!" To "What-you-may-call-um!" or "What-was-his-name!"

He would

"No, it can't," said the Queen. "It's jam every other day: today isn't any other day, you know." 16.
"It's a poor sort of memory that only works backwards," the Queen remarked. 16.

But

especially "Thing-um-a-jigl"

The Hunting

of the Snark [1876]. Fit I, #.9

Consider anything, only don't

cry!

16.

"What's the good of Mercator's North Poles and Equators, Tropics, Zones and Meridian Lines?" So the Bellman would cry: and the crew would reply,

"There's no use trying," she said: "one can't believe impossible things." "I daresay you haven't had much
practice," said the Queen. "When I was your age, I always did it for half-anhour a day. Why, sometimes I've believed as

"They
It

are merely conventional signs!" 16. Fit II, st. 3

frequently breakfasts at five-o'clock


tea,

And

dines

on the following day.


16.
st.

many as six impossible things before breakfast." 16.


They gave
it

17
a

me

for

present.

an unbirthday 16, 6

silence supreme! Not not a scream, Scarcely even a howl or a groan,

There

was

shriek,

746

CARROLL
As the

WORK

man

they called "Ho!" told his

story of

woe
of the Snark. Fit III, st. 3

BENJAMIN HARVEY HILL


1832-1882
was a foe without hate, a friend without treachery, a soldier without cruelty, and a victim without murmuring. He was a public officer without vices, a private citizen without wrong, a neighbor without reproach, a Christian without hypocrisy, and a man without guile. He was a Caesar without his ambition, a Frederick without his tyranny, a Napoleon without his selfishness, and a Washington without his reward. Tribute to Robert E. Lee; from THOMAS NELSON PAGE, Robert E. Lee [1911]

In an antediluvian tone.

The Hunting
It is this, it is this

He

that oppresses

my

soul.

16. st. ii
is

And my
as a

heart

like

nothing so

much

bowl
quivering curds.
Ib.

Brimming over with

You may

charge

me

with murder
:

or

want of sense

(We
Was

are all of us
slightest

weak

But the

at times) approach to a false

pretense never among

my crimes!
16. Fit

IV,

st.

JUAN MONTALVO
1832-1889

with thimbles, they sought it with care; They pursued it with forks and hope; They threatened its life with a railway

They sought

it

Old age
death.

is

an island surrounded by On Beauty


is

Beauty

is

harmony, grace

melody.
16.

share;

They charmed
For the Snark

it

with smiles and soap.


Ib. Fit

The
is

soul does not

V,

st. i

hunger

for flesh,

it

horrified
it is

by

it;

it

does not thirst for

-was a

Boojum, you

see.
st.

wine,

killed

by it.

On

Genius

16. Fit VIII,

Sensibility is

most strong among our

He
He

thought he saw an Elephant,

young

nations

who

That practiced on a fife: looked again, and found it was A letter from his wife. "At length I realize," he said, "The bitterness of Life!" Sylvie and Bruno [1889], eft. 5

older ones in science

outdistance the and culture by

means

of their imagination.

Chapters Forgotten by Cervantes. Epilogue

There

is

nothing harder than the


16.

softness of indifference.

He thought he saw a Buffalo Upon the chimneypiece: He looked again, and found it was
His
sister's

HENRY CLAY WORK


1832-1884
Father, dear father,

husband's niece.

come home with

16.6

me
The You

now,

He

thought he saw an Albatross That fluttered round the lamp: He looked again, and found it was

clock in the belfry strikes one;


said

penny postage stamp.


said,

"You'd best be getting home/' he "The nights are very damp."

you were coming right home from the shop As soon as your day's work was done. Come Home, Father [1864], st. i
Bring the good old bugle, boys, we'll sing another song;

16. 12

747

WORK
with a spirit that will world along, Sing it as we used to sing thousand strong, While we were marching
Sing
it

INGAIXS

start

the

And And

a horror of outer darkness after, dust returneth to dust again.1

it

fifty

The Swimmer

through

Georgia.

Marching Through Georgia


[1865],
st. i

JOHN MARSHALL HARLAN


1833-1911
In view of the Constitution, in the eye of the law, there is in this country

"Hurrah! hurrah! we bring the Jubilee! Hurrah! Hurrah! the flag that makes

you free!" So we sang the chorus from Atlanta to


the sea,

While

we

were

marching

through

Georgia.

Ib. chorus

dominant, ruling class of There is no caste here. Our Constitution is color-blind, and neither knows nor tolerates classes among citisuperior,
citizens.

no

ISAAC HILL BROMLEY


1833-1898
Conductor, when you receive a Punch in the presence of the
jare!
.

zens. In respect of civil rights, all citizens are equal before the law. The humblest is the peer of the most powerful.

Dissenting
fare,

Ferguson
[1896]

opinion, 163 U.S.

Plessy

v.

537,

559

passen-

Punch, brothers! Punch with

care!

Punch

in the presence of the passen-

jare!

Punch, Brother, Punch

JOHN JAMES INGALLS


1833-1900
Every

[1875]

man

MARY ABIGAIL DODGE [GAIL HAMILTON]


1833-1896 Whatever an author puts between the two covers of his book is public property; whatever of himself he does
not put there
is

whose
pass.

fatal

is the center of a circle, circumference he cannot

Eulogy on Benjamin

Hill, U.S.

Senate [January 23, 1882]

his private property, as

The purification of politics is an iridescent dream. Government is force. Article in the New Yorfe WorZd
[1890]

much
word.

as

if

he had never written a

Country Living and Country Thinking [1862], preface

What's

virtue in

man

can't

cat.

be vice in a Both Sides

Next in profusion to the divine profusion of water, light and air, those three physical facts which render existence possible, may be reckoned the universal beneficence of grass.

Blue Grass

ADAM LINDSAY GORDON


1833-1870 A little season of love and laughter, Of light and life, and pleasure and
pain, 1 Based on a
ously

knock unbidden once at every


wake;
is

If sleeping,

if

gate! feasting, rise befate.

fore
I

turn away. It

the hour of

Opportunity [1891]

New York

streetcar sign. Errone-

attributed to Mark Twain, who wrote about the verse in A Literary Nightmare [1876].

^See
82ib.

Du

Maurier, p. 75ib, and Marston,

p.

748

INGERSOLL

ACTON
Happiness
is

ROBERT GREEN
INGERSOLL
1833-1899
Like an armed warrior, like a plumed knight, James G. Blaine marcheid down the halls of the American Congress and threw his shining knee full and fair against the brazen forehead of every
traitor

the only good.

The time to be happy is now, The place to be happy is here, The way to be happy is to make
so.

others

Creed

PETROLEUM
The
contract 'twixt

V.

NASBY

[DAVID ROSS LOCKE]


1833-1888

to his country and every maof his fair reputation. ligner Speech nominating Elaine for
President, National Republican Convention [June zc,

Hannah, God and

me,

Was

not for one or twenty years, but


for eternity.

.876] the inferior of any man whose rights I trample under foot. Men are not superior by reason of the accidents
I

am

Hannah Jane

[1871],

st.

29

of race or color.

They

have the best heart

are superior who the best brain.

EDMUND CLARENCE STEDMAN


1833-1908
Prison mate and dockyard fellow, Bkdes to Meg and Molly dear, Off to capture Porto Bello
Sailed with

Liberty

The superior man is the providence of the inferior. He is eyes for the blind, strength for the weak, and a shield for
the
defenseless.

Morgan the Buccaneer!


Morgan,
1 st.
i

He

stands

erect
rises

bending above the


lifting others.

fallen.

He

by by
16.

Every and every

cradle
coffin,

us, "Whence?" "Whither?" The poor

asks

MATILDA WOODRUFF
1833-1909

JULIA LOUISE

barbarian, weeping above his dead, can answer these questions as intelligently
as the
tic

Out

robed priest of the most authenAddress at a child s grave

of the strain of the Doing, Into the peace of the Done.

Harvest

creed.

Home

[1910]

We,
this:

too, have our

religion,

and

it is

Help

for the living,

hope

for the 16.

dead.

erty.

Few rich men own their own The property owns them. 1

JOHN EMERICH EDWARD DALE ERG-ACTON, LORD ACTON


There
fails
is

prop-

Address to the McKinley League,

no

1834-1902 error so monstrous that

it

New Yorfe
God

[October 29, 1896]


the noblest work of

An
man.

honest

is

The Gods

the ablest men. Imagine a congress of eminent celebrities such as More, Bacon, Groto find defenders

among

[1876]

tius,

In nature there are neither rewards nor punishments there are consequences.
Justice
is

Pascal, Cromwell, Bossuet, Montesquieu, Jefferson, Napoleon, Pitt, etc.


result

The

would be an Encyclopedia of
Letter to

Some Reasons

Why

[1896]

Error.

the only worship. Love is the only priest. Ignorance is the only slavery.
1

Mary Gladstone
Stratton's

The

old bold

(April 24, 1881] mate of Henry Morgan.

JOHN MASEETELD [1878-1967], Captain


Fancy

See Bion, p. io4b.

749

ACTON
Power tends
power corrupts
to corrupt

BROWNE

and absolute

SABINE

absolutely.

BARING-GOULD
1834-1924
Onward, Christian soldiers, Marching as to war, With the Cross of Jesus

Letter to Bishop Mandell

Creighton [April

5,

1887]

Advice to Persons About to Write


History

Don't.

16. postscript

Going on

before!

Liberty is not a means to a higher political end. It is itself the highest political

Onward, Christian

Soldiers

[1864],

end.

The History
It

of

Freedom and
i

Now the

Other Essays [1907], ch.

day is over, Night is drawing nigh; Shadows of the evening


Steal across the sky.

was from America that the plain ideas that men ought to mind their business, and that the nation is responsible

to

Heaven

for

the acts of the

Over [1865], st * Through the night of doubt and sorrow


the

Now

Day

Is

ideas long locked in the breast of solitary thinkers, and hidden among Latin folios burst forth like a con-

State

queror upon the world they were destined to transform, under the title of the Rights of Man and the prin.
.

Onward goes the pilgrim band, Singing songs of expectation, Marching to the promised land. Through the Night of Doubt and Sorrow, st i; translated [1867] from the Danish of B. S.

ciple gained ground, that a nation can never abandon its fate to an authority it

INGEMANN

[1825]

cannot control.

16. 2

CHARLES FARRAR

pervading evil of democracy is the tyranny of the majority, or rather of that party, not always the majority,
that succeeds, by force or fraud, in carI

The one

[ARTEMUS WARD]
1834-1867

BROWNE

now

rying elections.

16. 3

bid you a welcome adoo.


[1862]
like

Artemus Ward, His Book

Truth is the only merit that dignity and worth to history.

gives 16. 4

My pollertics,
of an exceedin
ter.
1

religion, being accommodatin' charac-

my

Writers the most learned, the most accurate in details, and the soundest in tendency, frequently fall into a habit which can neither be cured nor pardoned the habit of making history into the proof of their theories. 16. 8

16.
is

The

Crisis

N.B. This
16.

rote sarcastikul.

A Visit

to

Brigham Young
is

The
greatest

female

woman

institooshuns
16.

of

one of the which this


Rights

land can boste.

Woman's

GEORGE ARNOLD
Life for the living,

1834-1865 and

not a politician, and my other habits are good. Fourth of July Oration
I

am

rest

for the
lic

deadl

The

Jolly

Old Pedagogue,
16.

The prevailin' weakness of most pubmen is to Slop over. G. Washington


16.
I

st.

never slopt over.


can't sing. As a singist I

The

living

need charity more than the


st.

am

not a

dead.

success. I

am

saddest

when

I sing. So

750

BROWNE
are those

ELIOT
Lovely female shapes are terrible complicators of the difficulties and dangers of this earthly life, especially for their owner. Trilby [i 894] , pt. I

even than

hear me. They are sadder am. 1 Artemus Ward, His Travels [1865].
I

who

Lecture

so,

Did you ever have the measels, and if how many? Ib. The Census

That
ple

is

Puritans nobly fled from a land despotism to a land of freedim, where they could not only enjoy their own religion, but could prevent everyof

The

who have charm; they are so terrible to do without, when once you have got accustomed to them and all their ways.
Ib.

the worst of those dear peo-

body

else

from enjoyin

his.

To

A little work, a little play,


keep us going

and

so,

good day!

London Punch

Letters,

no. 5

[1866]

A little warmth, a
Of
love's

little light,

Why

is

this thus?

What is

of this thusness?

the reason Moses, the Sassy

bestowing
i

and

so,

good

night!

He [Brigham Young] is dreadfully married. He*s the most married man I ever saw in my life. 16.
Let us all be happy and live within our means, even if we have to borrow the money to do it with. Natural History

A little
Of

fun, to match the sorrow each day's growing and so, good

morrowl

A little

trust that

when we

die

We reap our sowing!

and so

goodby!
Ib.

VIII

The sun
wants hen.
to,

and

A Mormon
cherish his

has a right to "set" where it so, I may add, has a

CHARLES WILLIAM ELIOT


1834-1926
world the intelligence of public opinion is the one indispensable condition of social progress.
Inaugural address as president of
In the

Romance,

ch.

They
as
sell

mem'ry, and them


etc.,

modem

make

picturs of his birthplace, it prof tible cherishin* it.

At the Tomb

of Shakespeare

Harvard [1869]

GEORGE LOUIS PALMELLA BUSSON DU MAURIER


1834-1896 The wretcheder one is, the more one smokes; and the more one smokes, the wretcheder one gets a vicious circle!
Peter Ibbetson [1891]

Enter to grow in wisdom. Depart better to serve thy country and mankind.
Inscriptions

on the 1890 Gate to Harvard Yard


Regiment
of

To the Fifty-fourth Massachusetts Infantry:


1

La

vie est vaine:

Songs without words are

best.

Ib.

Un peu d'amour, Un peu de haine


.

Et puis

bonjourl

All will be well for us all, and of such a kind that all who do not sigh for the

La

vie est breve:

moon
1

will

be well content.

16.

Un peu d'espolr, Un peu de reve


Et puis
bonsoirl
[b.

See T.

The

Bayly, p. 5 88a. Puritan's idea of Hell

H.

LEON MONTENAEKEN
a place where own business.
is

1859],

Peu de

everybody has to mind his Attributed to WENDELL PHILLIPS

[1811-1884]

See A. p. 8aib.

L.

Chose Gordon, p. 748b, and Maiston,

ELIOT

KITTREDGE
well equipped in both the arts of war and peace as those of the Western

The white
honor in
in war,
servile

officers,

taking

life

and

their hands, cast in their lot with men of a despised race unproved

world.

Autobiography [1898]

and

risked death as inciters of


if

insurrection

besides encountering march and battle. perils of camp


all

taken prisoners, the common

As long as I remain in private life, I can watch and laugh. But joining the
government would draw

me

into the

The black rank and file volunteered when disaster clouded the Union cause,
served without pay for eighteen months till given that of white troops, faced threatened enslavement if captured, were brave in action, patient under

practice of those ridiculous pretensions which I cannot allow myself to do.


IB.

ERNST HEINRICH

heavy and dangerous labors, and cheerful amid hardships and privations. Together they gave to the nation and
the world undying proof that Americans of African descent possess the pride, courage, and devotion of the patriot soldier. One hundred and eighty thousand Americans such enlisted under the Union flag in 1863-1865. Inscription on the back of the Robert Gould Shaw Monua ment, Boston Common [1897]

HAECKEL
1834-1919

Ontogenesis, or the development of the individual, is a short and quick re1 or the capitulation of phylogenesis, development of the tribe to which it
belongs, determined by the laws of heritance and adaptation.
in-

The

History of Creation

[if

Carrier of news and knowledge, instrument of trade and commerce, promoter of mutual acquaintance among men and nations and hence of peace

general theory of evolution assumes that in nature there is a great, unital, continuous and everlasting
.

The
.

process natural

of development,

and

that

all

phenomena without

and good

will.

Carrier of love and sympathy, messenger of friendship, consoler of the lonely, servant of the scattered family, enlarger of the public life.

rolling stone up to the growth of the plant and the consciousness of man, are subject to the same great law of causation that

from the motion and the fall of the

exception, of the celestial bodies

West

Inscriptions for the East and Pavilions, Post Office,

they are ultimately to be reduced to atomic mechanics. Freie Wissenschaft und Freie

2 Washington, D.C.

Lehre [1878]

FUKUZAWA YUKICHJ3
1834-1901
purpose of all my work was to create in Japan a civilized nation as
final
1
2

WALTER KITTREDGE
1834-1905

The

We're

tenting

tonight

on

the

old

See Robert Lowell, p. 10765. These inscriptions were edited by Woodrow

campground,

Wilson, to read:
Carrier of news and knowledge, instrument of trade and promoter of mutual acquaintance, of

Our weary

Give us a song to cheer hearts, a song of home


friends

And
1

we love

so dear.
St. i

peace and good will among men and nations. Messenger of sympathy and love, servant of parted friends, consoler of the lonely, bond of the scattered family, enlarger of the common life.
3

Tenting Tonight,
lates

From

Sources of Japanese Tradition, edited


[1960].

by William Theodore de Bary

Frequently quoted as "Ontogeny recapituphylogeny." See Freud, p. 833^ 3 Translated by E. R. LANKESTER. 3 Translated by J. B. STALLO.

75 2

MORRIS

WEBB
procured,

WILLIAM MORRIS
1834-1896
I

which

immediately
.
.

sprang

know a

little

garden close,
lily

Set thick with

and red

rose,

Where I would wander if I might From dewy morn to dewy night. The Life and Death of Jason
[1867].
St. 1

upon him, and tore him to pieces, as a But if . punishment for his guilt. the accused person opened the other door, there came forth from it a lady, the most suitable to his years and station

that

his

Majesty

could

select

Garden by the Sea,


an empty day.

among his

fair subjects.

it with all of you: the opened door

... So I leave Which came out of


the lady
or

the

The

idle singer of

tiger?

The

1870],

Earthly Paradise [1868An Apology, st. i


of

The Lady

or the Tiger? [1884]


is

The board money


and our conscience

in the ginger jar

Dreamer of dreams, born out


time,

my
Ib.

due

is clear.

The Casting Away


st.

of Mrs. Leeks

Why
Love

should

I strive to set

the crooked

and Mrs. Aleshine

straight?
is

4
a-

enough, though the world be

JAMES THOMSON
1834-1882
Give a man a pipe he can smoke, Give ,a man a book he can read: And his home is bright with a calm
delight,

waning, And the woods have no voice but the


voice
of

complaining.

If
fit

Enough [1872] a want you golden rale that will everybody, this is it: Have nothing
useful, or believe to

Love

Is

Though the room be poor indeed.


Sunday

in

your houses that you do not know

Up

the River [1869],

to

be

be beautiful.

The Beauty
mean by

of Life [1880]

The
But

City

is

of Night; perchance of

What I Socialism is a condition of society in which there should be neither rich nor poor, neither master nor master's man, neither idle nor overworked, neither brain-sick brain workers

Death,
certainly of Night.

The

City of Dreadful Night


[1874].

Proem

nor heart-sick hand workers, in a word, in which all men would be living in equality of condition, and would manage their affairs unwastefully, and

CHARLES HENRY

WEBB

with the
to

full consciousness that

harm

Friends

have

1834-1905 had both

old

and

the realization at last of the meaning of the word commonwealth.


to all

one would mean harm

young,
ale we drank and songs we sung: Enough you know when this is said,

And

Written

for "Justice" [1884]

That, one arid all they died in bed. In bed they died and 111 not go

FRANK RICHARD STOCKTON


1834-1902

Where
That

all

Dum
'tis

friends have perished so. Vivimus Vigilamus, st. i well to be off with the old

my

love

He

could

open

either

door

he

pleased. ... If he opened the one, there came out of it a hungry tiger, the fiercest and most cruel that could be

is on with the new Has somehow passed into a proverb,1

Before one
1

It's

It's

gude gude

to

to

be merry and wise, be honest and true;

753

WEBB
But who
follows
its

AUSTIN

teaching

may

rue.
st.
i

Proverbum Sap,

Were the proverb not wiser if mended, And the fickle and wavering told To be sure that they're on with the new
love

no mission to to explain its presence a joy to the artist, a delusion fulfill a puzzle to the to the philanthropist
botanist

an

and

alliteration to

accident of sentiment the literary man.


of

The Gentle Art

Making

Before being

off

with the old?


16.
st.

Enemies, Propositions, 2
3

JAMES McNEILL

Art should be independent of all should stand alone, and apclaptrap peal to the artistic sense of eye and ear,

WHISTLER
1834-1903

without confounding this with

emo-

continue to make four, in spite of the whine of the amateur for three, or the cry of the critic for five.

Two and two

tions entirely foreign to it, as devotion, pity, love, patriotism, and the like. All these have no kind of concern with it
16.

Whistler

v.

Ruskin* [1878]

The
rid

rare few, who, early in life, have themselves of the friendship of the

imitator is a poor kind of creature. If the man who paints only the tree, or flower, or other surface he sees

The

many.

The Gentle Art


Enemies

of Making [1890], dedication


is

To
its

say of a picture, as

often said in

praise, that it

nest labor, is and unfit for view.

shows great and earto say that it is incomplete


16. Propositions, 2

him were an artist, the king of would be the photographer. It is for the artist to do something beyond this: in portrait painting to put on canvas something more than the face the model wears for that one day; to paint the man, in short, as well as his feabefore
artists

tures.

16.

One cannot continually disappoint a Continent. 1 16.


I

a necessity not a of the same, in the production, is a blemish, not a quality; a proof, not of achievement,

Industry in art

is

virtue

and any evidence

am

not arguing with you


I

am
16.

telling you.

but of absolutely

insufficient work, for

work alone
work. 2

will efface the footsteps of 16.

wish I'd said that. Whistler: You will, Oscar, you will. From L. C. INGLEBY, Oscar

Wilde:

Wilde
"I only

[1907]

The

masterpiece should appear as the


perfect in
its

know

flower to the painter bud as in its bloom

with no reason

It's gude to be off with the old love, Before you are on with the new.

world," said nine enthusiast to Whistler, "yourself and Velasquez." "Why," answered Whistler in dulcet tones, "why drag in

two painters in the a newly introduced femiof

ANONYMOUS [1816]. Quoted hy ANTHONY TROLLOPE in Barchester


Towers [1857], ch. 46. See G. B. Shaw, p. 8s6a. *In Whistler's lawsuit for libel. Ruskin had written of Whistler's Nocturne in Slack and Gold, "I have seen, and heard, much of Cockney impudence before now; but never expected to hear a coxcomb ask two hundred guineas for
flinging a pot of paint in the public's face."

Velasquez?"

From D. C.

SEITZ, Whistler
Stories [1913]

ALFRED AUSTIN
1835-1913

An
1

earl

by

right,

by courtesy a man.

JOHN RUSKIN, Fors


2

Clavigera, Letter 79 [1877]


lies

The Season
Referring
States.

Ars

art].

artem [Art Latin proverb


est celare

in concealing

to

contemplated

visit

to

the

United

754

BISHOP

BUTLER

THOMAS BRIGHAM
BISHOP
1835-1905 Brown's body lies a-moldering in John
the grave,

A hen is only an egg's another egg.


Life

way

of

making
oh. 8

and Habit [1877],

Stowed away in a Montreal lumber

His soul

room

is

marching on. John Brown's Body,


don't bodder me!
I

The
st. i

Discobolus standeth and turneth


his face to the wall;

Shoo,
I

fly!

belong to

Dusty,

cobweb-covered, naught,
attic

maimed and
and no man

Company G,
feel like a

set at
star.

morning

Beauty crieth in an

Shoo, Fly. Refrain

regardeth.

God!

PHILLIPS BROOKS
O little
1835-1893 town of Bethlehem!
sleep

O Montreal! A Psalm of Montreal


is

[i

884],
st.

The

Discobolus
vulgar has neither
is

put here because he

How still we see thee lie;


Above thy deep and dreamless

He

The silent

stars

go by;

vest nor pants with which to cover his limbs;

Yet in thy dark

streets shineth

I, Sir,

The everlasting Light; The hopes and fears of all


Are met in thee tonight.

am a person of most respectable connections


brother-in-law
is

the years

My

haberdasher

to

Little

Town

of

Bethlehem
i

Mr. Spurgeon. God! O Montreal!


It is far safer

Ib. st. 5

[1867], st

Life comes before literature, as the material always comes before the work. The hills are full of marble before the

world blooms with statues.


Literature

and Life

know too little than People will condemn the one, though they will resent being called upon to exert themselves to follow the other. The Way of All Flesh i [1903],
to

too much.

not pray for easy lives. Pray to be stronger men! Do not pray for tasks
equal to your powers. Pray for powers equal to your tasks.

Do

ch. 5

by degrees,

man is set down to it more supportable with equanimity by most people than any
Adversity,
if

is

Sermons. Going up to Jerusalem


all, spite of its name, appears to be not so much a certain size as a certain quality in human

Greatness after

in

great prosperity arrived at in a single lifetime. 2 Ib.


It is
less conscious thoughts and conscious actions which mainly our lives and the lives of those

our

our

less

lives. It

range

is

may be present in lives whose very small.


and Use
of

mold

who

spring from us.


it

Ib.
is

Ib. Purpose

Comfort

To me
spring,

seems that youth

like

SAMUEL BUTLER
1835-1902

The man who


is

lets himself be bored even more contemptible than the

season debe a favored lightful if one, but in practice very rarely favored and more remarkable, as a general rule,
over-praised it happen to
for biting breezes.
1
*

an

east

winds

than

bore.

genial Ib. 6

The Fair Haven

[1873].

Memoir,
ch. 3

See John Webster, p. See Carlyle, p. 577*5.

755

BUTLER
Taking numbers into account, I should think more mental suffering had been undergone in the streets leading from St. George's, Hanover Square, than in the condemned cells of Newgate.

Though analogy
it
is

is

often

misleading,

the

least

misleading

thing

we

have.

Notebooks. Music,

Pictures,

and Books

The

Way

of All Flesh, 13
it

Every man's work, whether

be

The phrase "unconscious humor" the one contribution I have made the current literature of the day.
16.

is

to

lit-

Homo

Unius

Libri

erature or music or pictures or architecture or anything else, is always a porIb. 14 trait of himself .

One great reason why clergymen's households are generally unhappy is because the clergyman is so much at home and close about the house.
16.24

Ideas and opinions, like living organisms, have a normal rate of growth which cannot be either checked or forced beyond a certain point. The

more unpopular an opinion


necessary
is it

is, the more that the holder should be

somewhat punctilious

in his observance of conventionalities generally. 16. The Art of Propagating

The

advantage of doing one's prais-

Opinion

ing for oneself is that one can lay it on so thick and exactly in the right places.

Genius

has been defined

as a
1

16.34

supreme capacity for taking trouble. ... It might be more fitly described as a supreme capacity for getting its possessors

The
way.

best liar

is

he who makes the


16.

into

trouble of

all

kinds and
as the

smallest

amount

of lying go the longest

keeping them therein so long


genius remains.
I

16. Genius
terrible,

39

am

the enfant
16.

of literature

An empty house

is

like a stray
life

dog or

and

science.

a body from which

has departed. 1

Enfant

Terrible: Myself

I6./2
man's friendships are, like his will, but they are by marriage also no less invalidated by the marriage of his friends. 16. 75
invalidated

apology for the Devil: It must be remembered that we have only heard

An

one

side of the case.

God

has written

all

the books.
16. Higgledy-Piggledy: An Apology for the Devil

Life is the art of drawing sufficient conclusions from insufficient premises. Notebooks [191-2]. Life
All progress is based upon a universal innate desire on the part of every organ-

God

is

Love

dare say. But what

a mischievous devil

Love

is!

16.

God Is Love
all

To
it.

live is like to love


it,

reason

is

against

and

all

healthy instinct
16. Life

for

and Love

ism to

live

beyond

its

income.
16.

taken so well
*I suppose
I've passed it a hundred times, but I always stop for a minute And look at the house, the tragic house, the house with nobody in it.

The Ancient Mariner would not have if it had been called The Ib. Titles and Subjects Old Sailor.

JOYCE KILMER [1886-1918], The House With Nobody In It

as it public buys its opinions its milk, on in or takes meat, buys the principle that it is cheaper to do
its
1

The

See Buffon, p. 4z$b,

and

note.

756

BUTLER
this than to keep a cow. So it is, but the milk is more likely to be watered. Notebooks. Sequel to "Alps

GARNETT Thus is the problem of Rich and Poor to be solved. The law of accumulation will be left free; the laws of distribution free. Individualism will continue, but the millionaire will be but a trustee of the poor; entrusted for a sea-

and Sanctuaries"
I

do not mind
16.

lying,

but

hate inac-

curacy.

Truth and Convenience: Falsehood

son with a great part of the increased wealth of the community, but administering it for the community far better than it could or would have done for
itself.
1

ANDREW CARNEGIE
1835-1919
of our age is the proper administration of wealth, so that the ties of brotherhood may still bind together the rich and poor in harmonious
relationship.

Wealth
dies
.
.
.

The man who


disgraced.

rich

dies

16.

The problem

ReWealth [North American~~


view, June

is the true GosWealth, obedience to which is destined some day to solve the problem of the Rich and the Poor, and to bring "Peace on earth, among men

Such, in

my

opinion,

pel concerning

Goodwill/'
Three generations from
to shirtsleeves. 2

16.
shirtsleeves

While the law [of competition] may be sometimes hard for the individual, it
is

Attributed

best for the race, because it insures the survival of the fittest in every de-

partment.

accept and welcome, therefore, as conditions to which we


ourselves, great inequality of environment, the concentration of business, industrial and commercial, in the hands of a few, and the

We

RICHARD GARNETT
1835-1906 and woman may only enter Paradise hand in hand. Together, the myth tells us, they left it and together must they return. De Flagello Myrteo [1905],

must accommodate

Man

law of competition between these, as being not only beneficial, but essential for the future progress of the race.
16.

preface, 12

Perfect love

casts

out prudery
16.

to-

gether with fear.

59

Upon the sacredness of property civithe right of lization itself depends the laborer to his hundred dollars in the savings bank, and equally the legal right of the millionaire to his millions.
16.

When
has

Silence speaks for Love she


to say.
16.

much

99

Sweet are the words of Love, sweeter


his thoughts: Sweetest of all what Love nor says nor

thinks.

16.

Surplus wealth is a sacred trust which its possessor is bound to administer in his lifetime for the good of the community.

250

16.

Ascend above the restrictions and conventions of the world, but not so high as to lose sight of them.
iSee Maimonides, p. issb; Spinoza, p. 3743;

Those who would administer wisely must, indeed, be wise, for one of the serious obstacles to the improvement of our race is indiscriminate charity.
16.

and Johnson, p. 4313. 4 There's nobbut three generations atween Lancashire proverb, which dog and dog.
Carnegie liked to quote.

757

MC CHEERY

TWAIN

JOHN LUCKEY McCREERY


1835-1906
is no death! The stars go down To rise upon some other shore, And bright in heaven's jeweled crown

HARRIET PRESCOTT SPOFFORD


1835-1921

There

The awful phantom


poor.

of

the

A Winter's Night

hungry

They shine forevermore. There Is No Death

[1863],

st. i

CELIA LAIGHTON

ADAH ISAACS MENKEN


1835-1868

THAXTER
1835-1894

Where
Once

is

the promise of

written on

my years, my brow?

Ere errors, agonies, and fears Brought with them all that speaks in
tears,

Sad soul, take comfort, nor forget That sunrise never failed us yet. The Sunrise Never Failed Us
Yet,
st.

Ere

had sunk beneath


El Suspiro

Across the narrow beach

we

Where

my peers sleeps that promise now?


(Infelix)

flit,

[1868]

One little sandpiper and I; And fast I gather, bit by bit, The scattered driftwood, bleached
dry.

and

LOUISE CHANDLER

MOULTON
1835-1908

The The

wild waves reach their hands for


it,

wild wind raves,


high,

the tide runs


flit,

Bend

low, O dusky Night,

And give my spirit rest,


Hold

me to your deep breast,

As up and down the beach we One little sandpiper and I.

And put old cares to flight. Give back the lost delight That once my soul possessed, When Love was loveliest.
Tonight
I

The Sandpiper,

st.

hied

Arcady The month it was the month of

me off to

[SAMUEL LANGHORNE CLEMENS]


1835-1910
he can outjump any frog in Calaveras county. The Celebrated Jumping Fro^
Fll resk forty dollars that
[1865;

MARK TWAIN*

May,

And all along the pleasant way The morning birds were mad
glee,

with

And
As
I

the flowers sprang up to see, went on to Arcady. Arcady


all

don't see no p'ints about that frog that's any better'n any other frog.
I

BISHOP HENRY CODMAN

Ib.

POTTER

We
plicity,

1835-1908 have exchanged the Washing-

tonian dignity for the Jeffersonian simwhich was in truth only another name for the Jacksonian vulgarity. Address at the Washington Centennial Service in St. Paul's

Chapel,

New

York

[April

30,

in The New Orleans Picayune. phrase "mark twain," meaning "two fathoms deep," was employed in making soundings on the Mississippi riverboats.

was a fresh, new journalist, and needed a de guerre; so I confiscated the ancient mariner's discarded one ["Mark Twain"], and have done my best to make it remain what it was in his hands a sign and symbol and warrant that whatever is found in its company may be gambled on as being the petrified truth. Life on the Mississippi [1883], ch. 50. The earlier use of the pen name was by Captain

1 1

nom

Isaiah

Sellers,

The

758

TWAIN
Soap and education are not as sudden as a massacre, but they are more
deadly in the long run. The Facts Concerning the Recent Resignation [1867]

Tomorrow
time
before
critics.

night I appear for the first a Boston audience

The minister gave out his text and droned along monotonously through an argument that was so prosy that many a and head by and by began to nod in dealt that it an was yet argument limitless fire and brimstone and thinned
the predestined elect down to a company so small as to be hardly worth the
saving.

4000

Letter to Pamela Clemens Mo/-

The Adventures

They

spell

it

[November 9, 1869] Vinci and pronounce it


fet

of

Tom

Sawyer, ch. 5

Vinchy; foreigners always spell better than they pronounce. The Innocents Abroad [1869],
ch. 19

do not want Michael Angelo for for luncheon breakfast for dinner for supper for tea for between
I

There was no getting around the stubborn fact that taking sweetmeats was only "hooking/' while taking bacon and hams and such valuables was plain and there was a comsimple stealing mand against that in the Bible. So they
inwardly resolved that so long as they remained in the business, their piracies should not again be sullied with the Ib. 13 crime of stealing.

meals.

16.

27

Lump

the whole thing! say that the

Creator made Italy from designs by Ib. Michael Angelo! Guides cannot master the subtleties Ib. of the American joke.
There's millions in The Gilded Age
it!

To
surest

is the promise not to do a thing a body make to the world in way

want

to go

and do that very thing.


16. 22

[1873]

all

She makes me wash, they comb me The widder eats by to thunder


.

lainy

Barring that natural expression of vilwhich we all have, the man looked honest enough.

a bell; she goes to bed by a bell; she gits everything's so awful up by a bell Ib. 35 can't stand it. a body reg'lar

Mysterious Visit [1875]


one-horse town. Undertaker's Chat [1875]

A baby is
bother.

an inestimable blessing and


Letter to Annie Webster

This poor

little

The

[September

i,

1876]

appeared on the sidewalk with a bucket of whitewash and a long-handled brush.


all

Tom

There
the

He

surveyed the fence, and

New

a sumptuous variety about England weather that compels


is

gladness left him and a deep melancholy settled down upon his spirit. Thirty yards of board fence nine feet high. Life to him seemed hollow, and existence but a burden.

and regret. the stranger's admiration The weather is always doing something busithere; always attending strictly to and ness; always getting up new designs how to see on them they people trying
will go. But it gets through more business in spring than in any other season.

The Adventures

of

Tom

Sawyer

[1876], ch. 2

Work
obliged

consists of whatever a

body

is

to

do ... Play
is

consists

of
16.

In the spring I have counted one hundred and thirty-six different kinds of 1 weather inside "of twenty-four hours.

whatever a body

not obliged to do.

New
to

1 Written in collaboration with CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER.

England Weather. Speech New England Society [December 22, 1876]


the

See Charles Dudley Warner, p.

759

TWAIN
Probable nor*east to sou'west winds, varying to the southard and westard and eastard and points between; high and low barometer, sweeping round
I

was

gratified to
I

be able
I

to answer
I

promptly, and

did.

said

didn't

know.

Life
true

on the

Mississippi, ch. 6

from place to
rain,

snow, ceeded or preceded by earthquakes with thunder and lightning. New England Weather. Speech
to the

place; probable areas of suchail, and drought,

Your pilot cares nothing about anything on earth but the river, and his pride in his occupation surpasses the
pride of kings.

J.

By

the

Shadow of Death, but

he's a

New

England Society

lightning pilot!

jj

We haven't all had the good fortune


to
als,

A limb of Satan. 1
I'll

Ib. 8

ladies; we haven't all been generor poets, or statesmen; but when the toast works down to the babies, we

be

learn

him

or

kill

him.

JJ.

stand on

common

ground.

Answering a toast "To the babies" at a banquet in honor of General U.S. Grant {November 14, 1879]

Give an Irishman lager for a month, and he's a dead man. An Irishman is lined with copper, and the beer corrodes it. But whiskey polishes the copIb. per and is the saving of him. 23
All the

modem

inconveniences.
ft.

cradles

Among now

the

three

or

four

million

43

some which

rocking in the land are this nation would preserve


if

for ages as sacred things,

we

could
Ib.

educated Southerner has no use for an r, except at the beginning of a word. Ib.
44
is

The

know which ones


It is

they

are.

the longest river in the world four thousand three hundred miles. ... It is also the crookedest river in the world, since in one part of its jour-

In the South the war is what elsewhere; they date from it.

A.D.

Ib. 45

War
war
is

talk

by men who have been

in a

ney it uses up one thousand three hundred miles to cover the same ground that the crow would fly over in six hundred and seventy-five. Life on the Mississippi [1883],
ch.
i

always interesting; whereas moon talk by a poet who has not been in the
is

moon
Sir

likely to

be

dull.

16.

Walter
in

[Scott]

had

hand
it

making Southern existed before the war that he

so large a character as
is

in

great measure responsible for the war.


Ib.

The world and


customed to

the books are so acIt

46

"new"
that

use, and over-use, the word in connection with our country,

was without a compeer among swindles. It was perfect, it was rounded,


symmetrical, complete, colossal.
16.53

we early get and permanently retain the impression that there is nothIb. ing old about it.
Sired

Persons attempting to find a motive

by

a hurricane,

dam'd by an
j

earthquake.

Ib. 3

I'm playful I use the meridians of longitude and parallels of latitude for a seine, and drag the Atlantic

When

be prosecuted; persons attempting to find a moral in it will be banished; persons attempting to find a plot in it will be shot.
in this narrative will

BY ORDER OF THE AUTHOR.


Adventures
of

Ocean

for whales. I scratch

my

head

Finn

Huckleberry [1884]. Notice

with the lightning and purr myself to Ib. sleep with the thunder.

The Child

of Calamity.

16.

don't know about me without have read a book by the name of you 1 Also in The Prince and the Pauper, ch. 15.

You

760

TWAIN
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer; but that ain't no matter. That book was made by Mr. Mark Twain, and he told
the truth, mainly. There was things which he stretched, but mainly he told

A monstrous big river.


Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. ch. 19
Hain't

we

got

all

the truth.

on our

side?

And

the fools in town ain't that a big


*

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, ch. i

enough majority in any town?

16.26
I was trying to make my mouth say I would do the right thing and the clean thing, and go and write to that nigger's owner and tell where he was; but deep down in me I knowed it was a lie, and He knowed it. You can't pray a lie I found that out. 16. 31
I was a-trembling because I'd got to decide forever betwixt two things, and I knowed it. I studied for a minute, sort of holding my breath, and then says to myself, "All right, then, I'll go to

Jim was most ruined for a servant, because he got stuck up on account of having seen the devil and been rode by
witches.
Ib. 2
fish

and talked, and we took a swim now and then to keep off sleepiness. It was kind of solemn, drifting down the big, still river, laying on our backs looking up at the stars, and
catched
didn't ever feel like talking loud, it warn't often that we laughed only a little kind of a low chuckle. had mighty good weather as a general

We

we

and

We

hell."

16.

thing, at all.
It
.

and nothing

ever

happened to us
Ib. 12

An
tious,

experienced, industrious, ambiand often quite picturesque liar.

most froze me to hear such talk. Thinks I, this is what comes of my not thinking. Here was this nigger, which I had as good as helped to run away, coming right out flat-footed and saying he would steal his children
. .

The

Private History of a

Cam-

paign That Failed [1885]

He

is

now

fast rising

from affluence

to poverty.

Henry

Ward

Beecher's

Farm
[1885]

children that belonged to a man I didn't even know, a man that hadn't
ever

done

me no harm.
why.

Ib.

16

Pilgrim's Progress, about a


left his family, it didn't say

man
I

that read

considerable in it now and then. The statements was interesting but tough.

He [George Washington Cable] has taught me to abhor and detest the Sabbath day and hunt up new and troublesome ways to dishonor it. Letter to William Dean Howells
[February 27, 1885]

Whenever the
There wam't anybody at the church, except maybe a hog or two, for there warn't any lock on the door, and hogs likes a puncheon floor in summertime because it's cool. If you notice, most
folks

literary
is

German

dives

into a sentence, that going to see of him

don't go to church only

when
16. 18

the kst you are till he emerges on the other side of his Atlantic with his verb in his mouth. A Connecticut Yankee at King Arthur's Court [1889], ch. 22

they've got to; but a

hog

is

different.

Weather is a literary speciality, and no untrained hand can turn out a good
article

We said there warn't no home like a


Other places do seem so and smothery, but a raft cramped up don't. You feel mighty free and easy 16. and comfortable on a raft.
raft, after
all.

on

it.

The American Claimant


Pudd'nhead
p. 763*.

[1892],

foreword
Wilson's

New

Calendar,

76

TWAIN
Tell the truth or trump the trick.

but get

If

make him

you pick up a starving dog and prosperous, he will not bite

Pudd'nhead Wilson [1894]. Pudd'nhead Wilson's Calendar, ch. i

you. This is the principal difference between a dog and a man.

Adam
because

was but

human

this

ex-

plains it all. He did not for the apple's sake, he


it

want the apple wanted it only


16. 2

Pudd'nhead Wilson. Pudd'nhead Wilson's Calendar, ch. 16

was forbidden.
lived long

Few things are harder to put up with than the annoyance of a good example.
It

Whoever has
find out

what

life is,

enough to knows how deep a

16. 19

were not best that

we

should

all

debt of gratitude we owe to Adam, the first great benefactor of our race. He 16. 3 brought death into the world.
everything. Training was once a bitter almond; cauliflower is nothing but cabbage with a college
is

think alike; it is difference of opinion Ib. that makes horse races.

Be good and you


on
first

The peach

will be lonesome. Following the Equator [1897]. Caption for author's photograph

education.

16. 5

shipboard, edition

frontispiece

of

Habit is habit, and not to be flung out of the window by any man, but coaxed downstairs a step at a time.

When in doubt tell the truth.


16. vol. I,

Pudd'nhead Wilson's

New

Calendar^ ch. 2

16.6

One of the most between a cat and a


only nine
lives.

lie is

striking differences that a cat has


16. 7

Truth is the most valuable thing we 16. 7 have. Let us economize it.
It

could probably be shown by facts


figures that there
is

and

no

distinctly

passion of Friendship is of so sweet and steady and loyal and enduring a nature that it will last through a whole lifetime, if not asked to lend 16. 8 money.

The holy

native American criminal class except 16. 8 Congress.

Everything

human
There

is

pathetic.
itself is

The
joy in

secret source of

Humor
is

not

but

sorrow.

no humor

Why

is it

that

we

rejoice at a birth

heaven.

16. 10

and grieve at a funeral? It is because we 16. 9 are not the person involved.
All say,
to die"

"How hard

it is

that

a strange complaint to

from the mouths of people had to live.


angry, count four; 1 angry, swear.

we have come who have


16. 10

should be careful to get out of an experience only the wisdom that is and stop there; lest we be like in it the cat that sits down on a hot stove lid. She will never sit down on a hot
stove lid again

We

and that

is

When

when

also she will never sit

down on

well; but a cold

very
16.

Courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear not absence of fear. 16.12

16. one anymore. can secure other people's apbut proval, if we do right and try hard; our own is worth a hundred of it, and no way has been found out of securing

We

Nothing

people's habits.

so needs reforming as other 16. 15

that.
It is easier to stay

16, 14

out than get out.


16. 18
is

Put all your eggs in the one basket 16. and WATCH THAT BASKET.
Pity
1

is

for the living,

envy

for the 16. 19

See Jefferson, p.

dead.

TWAIN
It is by the goodness of God that in our country we have those three unspeakably precious things: freedom of speech, freedom of conscience, and the prudence never to practice either of

A
fit

round

man cannot be

expected to

in a square hole right away. have time to modify his shape.

He must
[1897]

More Tramps Abroad


In Boston they ask,

them.
Following the Equator, vol. I, Pudd'nhead Wilson's New Calendar, ch. 20
"Classic.
praise
9'

How much

does

he know? In New York, How much is he worth? In Philadelphia, Who were


his parents?

What
which
people
Ib.

book
read.

Paul Bourget Thinks of

and don't
is

Us [1899]

25
is

Man

the only animal that blushes.


to.

The

silent colossal

Or needs
for

Ib.
for the fools.

Let us be thankful

27 But
28

the support and confederate of

National Lie that all the

them the

rest of us

could not suc16.

tyrannies and shams and inequalities and unfairnesses that afflict the peoples that is the one to throw bricks and

ceed. 1

sermons

at.

good protections against temptations, but the surest is cowardice. 2 16. 36

There are

several

My First Lie, and How I Got


Out
of It [1900]
trust,

The
wisely

blessings-of-civilization

There

is

an old-time

toast

which

is

golden for its beauty. "When you ascend the hill of prosperity may you not

meet a

and cautiously administered, is a daisy. There is more money in it, more territory, more sovereignty, and other kinds of emolument, than there
is

friend/'
is

16. II, 5

in

Each person
breath.
It takes

born to one possession


his others

But

any other game that . has Christendom


.
.

is

been

played. so

which outvalues

all

his last
16.

eager to get every stake that appeared on the green cloth, that the people who sit in darkness 1 have noticed it

your enemy and your friend,

working together, to hurt you to the heart; the one to slander you and the other to get the news to you. 16. 9
Grief can take care of itself, but to get the full value of a joy you must

and have become suspicious of the blessings of civilization. To the Person Sitting in Darkness [1901]
.

Always do right. This will gratify some people, and astonish the rest. 2

have somebody to divide

it

with.
16. 12

To

the

Young

People's Society,

right,

In statesmanship get the formalities never mind about the moralities.

Greenpoint Presbyterian Church, Brooklyn [February 16, 1901]

powerful agent

is

the right word.

I6.2 9
side

Everyone is a moon, and has a dark which he never shows to anybody. 3


16.

Whenever we come upon one of those intensely right words in a book or a


newspaper the resulting effect
cal as well as spiritual,
is

physi-

and

30

electrically

The

reports of

my

death are greatly

prompt. Essay on William


1

Dean Howells
[1906]

exaggerated.

Cable from London to the


Associated Press [1897]
1 2
8

See Huckleberry Finn, p. 76 ib. See Wilde, p. 8393. See Robert Browning, p. 66sb.

See Psalms 107:10, p. sib. The people which sat in darkness saw great Matthew 4:16 light 2 President Truman kept this saying on his

desk in the White House.

763

TWAIN
It may be called the Master Passion, the hunger for self-approval.

ALDRICH
Familiarity children. 1

breeds

and contempt Notebooks

What Is Man?

[1906], ch. 6
right

The

fact that

man knows

from

wrong proves

to the other creatures;

his intellectual superiority but the fact that

Good breeding consists in concealin how much we think of ourselves ancj how little we think of the other person.
16.

he can do wrong proves his moral inferiority to any creature that cannot.
16.

Death, the only immortal


us

who

treats

Thunder
sive;

is

but

it is

good, thunder is impreslightning that does the

work.
Letter to an Unidentified Person
[1908]

all alike, whose pity and whose peace and whose refuge are for all the soiled and the pure, the rich and the poor, the loved and the unloved. 16. Memorandum written on his

deathbed
Loyalty to petrified opinion never yet broke a chain or freed a human soul.
Inscription beneath his bust in

As out of place
Hell.

as a Presbyterian in

From ALBERT BIGELOW Mark Twain


You
is.

PAINE,
[1912]

the Hall of

Fame

tell

me whar a man
tell

gits his

corn

The calm confidence of a Christian with four aces. Attributed

pone, en 111

you what his

'pinions

Europe and Elsewhere [1925]. Corn Pone Opinions


Its

THOMAS BAILEY
ALDRICH
1836-1907 "Root Beer Sold Here/' It seemed to me the perfection of pith and poetry.

name
it is

is

Public Opinion.

It is

held
Ib.

in reverence. It settles everything.

Some
and

think

the voice of God.

Biographies are but the clothes

The
Somewhere
In

Story of a
in

Bad Boy

[1870]

buttons of the man the biography of the man himself cannot be written.

desolate

windswept

Autobiography [1924],

vol. I, p. 2

the creatures that were made is the most detestable. Of the entire brood he is the only one the solitary one that possesses malice. That is the basest of all instincts, vices the most hateful. passions, ... He is the only creature that inall.

Of

space Twilight land

land

in

No-man's

he [man]

Two

And bade

hurrying Shapes met face to face, each other stand.

"And who

are you?" cried one agape, Shuddering in the gloaming light. "I know not," said the second Shape,

pain for sport, knowing it to be Also in all the list he is pain. the only creature that has a nasty mind. Ib. II, p. 7
flicts
.
.

"I only died last night!"

Identity [1877]

We knew
The white

it

would

rain, for

the poplars

showed
of their leaves.

The

trade

of

critic,
is

in

literature,

music, and the drama,

the most de16. p.

Before the Rain,

st.

graded of
I

all trades.

69

believe that our Heavenly Father

invented man because he was disappointed in the monkey.

Some weep because they part, And languish brokenhearted, And others O my heart!
Because they never parted.

From BERNARD DE Voxo, Mark


Twain
in Eruption [1940]
1

The
See Aesop, p. 76a.

Difference

764

ALDRICH

GILBERT
Provided that the City of London remains as it is at present, the clearinghouse of the world.

My

mind lets go a thousand things, Like dates of wars and deaths of kings.

Memory
was very pleasant to me to get a letter from you the other day. Perhaps I should have found it pleasanter if I had been able to decipher it. I don't think that I mastered anything beyond the date (which I knew) and the signature
It

Speech, Guildhall, London [January 19, 1904]

The day
come.

passed away.

of small nations has long The day of Empires has

Speech, Birmingham

[May

12,

guessed at) There's a singular and a perpetual charm in a letter of yours; it never grows old, it never loses . Other letters are read its novelty. and thrown away and forgotten, but unread. One yours are kept forever of them will last a reasonable man a

(which

1904]

WILLIAM SCHWENCK GILBERT*


1836-1911
the ships upon the blue, No ship contained a better crew Than that of worthy Captain Reece7
all

Of

lifetime.

Letter to

Edward

Sylvester

Morse
So take him, Earth, and this his mortal
part With that shrewd alchemy thou hast,

Commanding of the Mantelpiece. The "Bab" Ballads [1866-1871].


Captain Reece,
st. i

transmute

The Times and Saturday Review Beguiled the leisure of the crew.
16.
I
st.

To

flower

and

leaf in thine

unending
write the pretty mottoes find inside the crackers.
16.

springs!

Inscription on his gravestone

which you

ISABELLA MARY BEETON


A place
for

Ferdinando and Elvira

1836-1865 everything and everything


of Household

And down

in fathoms many went the captain and the crew; Down went the owners greedy men

in its place.

The Book

Manage[1861]
16.

ment
Clear as you go.

whom hope of gain allured: Oh, dry the starting tear, for they were
heavily insured.
16. Etiquette, st.
i

EDWARD ERNEST BOWEN


1836-1901
Forty years on, when afar and asunder Parted are those who are singing today.

Oh,

am

And And a

a cook and a captain bold the mate of the Nancy brig, bo'sun tight, and a midship-

mite,

And

the crew of the captain's gig.

The "Bab"
As innocent

Ballads.

the

The Yarn of "Nancy Bell," st. 3


act I
lit-

Forty Years On, Harrow football song [1872]

as a new-laid egg.

Engaged [1877],
I'm called Little Buttercup
Buttercup, Though I could never
tle
tell

JOSEPH CHAMBERLAIN
1836-1914
I

dear

never like being hit without striking

HMS. Pinafore

why,
[1878], act I

back.

Speech on
ocfe,

tariff

reform, Green7,

Scotland [October

1903]

*His foe was folly and his weapon wit. ANTHONY HOPE HAWKINS, inscription on Gilbert Memorial, Victoria Embankment, London

765

GILBERT
I am the Captain of the Pinafore; And a right good captain too!

It

is, it is

To be
act I
I

H.M.S. Pinafore,

a glorious thing a Pirate King. Pirates of Penzance [1879], act

And

I'm never, never sick at


never?

sea!

am

What,
What,
Hardly

the very model of a General.

modern MajorIfc.

No, never!
never?
ever!

know the Kings of England, and quote the fights historical,


categorical.

From Marathon
and one cheer

He's hardly ever sick at seal

to Waterloo, in order
Jfc.

Then

give three cheers,

more
For the hardy Captain of the Pinafore!
Ib.
I

When the foeman bares his

steel,

We uncomfortable feel,
Tarantara.

Tarantara, tarantara!
ft. II

never never use a big, big D.

Ib

When
The

And

so do his sisters, and his cousins, and his aunts! His sisters and his cousins, Whom he reckons up by dozens,

constabulary duty's to be done, policeman's lot is not a happy


16.

one.

Come,

friends,

who plow
station;

the sea,

And
As
I

Truce to navigation,

his aunts!
I

Ib.
I

Take another

When

was a lad

served a term
I

office

boy

to an Attorney's firm.

Let's vary piracee With a little burglaree. 1

Ib.

cleaned the windows and


floor
I

swept the

Twenty

love-sick
all

maidens we,
Patience [1881], act
I

Love-sick

polished up the handle of the big front door. I polished up that handle so carefullee That now I am the Ruler of the

And

against our will.

You must

Queen's Navee!
Stick close to your desks to sea,

16.

The

and never go

upon the daisies and discourse in novel phrases of your complicated state of mind, meaning doesn't matter if it's only idle chatter of a transcendental
lie

kind.

And you

all

may be Rulers of the


16.

And

Queen's Navee!

everyone will say, As you walk your mystic way,

"If this

Things are seldom what they seem, Skim milk masquerades as cream. 1
16. II

young man expresses himself

in

terms too deep for me,

Why, what a very singularly deep man this deep young man
be!"

young must
Ib.

He is

an Englishman! For he himself has said


it's
is

it,

Then
16.

And

greatly to his credit,

ble fashion

a sentimental passion of a vegetamust excite your lan-

That he

an Englishman!

guid spleen,

An

attachment a

For he might have been a Roosian, A French or Turk or Proosian,

young

Plato for a bashful a not too French or potato,


la

French bear!

Or perhaps
But

Itali-an.

To He remains
1

in spite of all temptations belong to other nations,

Though
16.
1

will

an Englishman.
1290, and Longfellow,

may jostle, you rank as an apostle in the high aesthetic band,


the gang's roistering chorus "Hail, hail, is sung to Sir Arthur Sullivan's music

the Philistines

The

See Phaedrus, p. 6sob.

p.

all

here"

for these lines.

766

GUJBERT
If

you walk down Piccadilly with a

poppy
hand.

or a

lily

in your medieval

Pretty young wards in Chancery. lolanthe, act I

And everyone

will say,

As you walk your flowery way,


"If he's content with a vegetable love,

A pleasant occupation for A rather susceptible Chancellorl


For I'm not so
old,

Ib.

and not so

plain,

which would certainly not suit me, Why, what a most particularly pure

And

I'm
again.

quite

prepared

to

marry
Ib.

young man

this

pure

young man
you marry

must be!"

Spurn not the nobly born

Patience, act I

Prithee, pretty maiden, will

me?
(Hey, but I'm hopeful, willow, willow,
waly!)
Ib.

With love affected, Nor treat with virtuous scorn The well-connected.
Hearts just as pure and
fair

16.

May beat in Belgrave


As

Square
16.
fish!

While

this magnetic,

Peripatetic Lover, he lived to learn, By no endeavor, Can magnet ever Attract a silver churn!

Of Seven

in the lowly air Dials.

Here's a pretty kettle of

16. II
as

When
Ib. II

went to the Bar

a very
16.

man
/oung I to myself,
I

Sing Sing
Sing

"Hev "Hey
you"

to

you

good
ha!

day
ha!

to

said I).

am an

"Bah
you"

to

you you

to

And
I

"Booh
you."

to

pooh, pooh to
16.

intellectual chap, think of things that would astonish you. often think it's comical How nature always does contrive
gal,

Francesca di Rimini, miminy, piminy,


Je-ne-sais-quoi

That every boy and every


Is either

That's born into the world alive,


a

young man!
Grosvenor

16.

greenery-yallery,
lery,

Gal16.

Or else
war,

little Liberal, a little Conservative!

16.

The House

Foot-in-the-grave young
I

man

of Peers,

throughout the

see

no objection
eration,

to stoutness, in

mod-

Did nothing

in particular,

lolanthe [1882], act I

And

did

it

very well.

16.

None shall part us from each other, One in life and death are we:
All in all to
I

one another and thou to me! Thou the tree and I the flower
to thee

Oh, Captain Shaw! Type of true love kept under! Could thy Brigade

With cold cascade Quench my great love,

wonder!
16.

Thou the idol; I the throng Thou the day and I the hour Thou the singer; I the song!
Bow, bow, ye lower middle classes! Bow, bow, ye tradesmen, bow,
masses.

16.

When you're lying awake with a dismal headache, and repose is tabooed by
anxiety,
I

conceive you

may use any language you choose to indulge in, without


impropriety.
16.

The Law is the true embodiment Of everything that's excellent.


has no kind of fault or flaw, And I, my Lords, embody the Law.
It

Ib.

For you dream you are crossing the Channel, and tossing about in a steamer from Harwich Which is something between a large

767

GUJBERT
bathing machine and a very small second class carriage.
lolanthe, act II

Ah, pray make no mistake,

We are not shy;


The moon and

We're very wide awake,


I!

Faint heart never

won

fair lady!
1

Nothing venture, nothing win Blood is thick, but water's thin


It's

The Mikado,
Here's a pretty state of things! Here's a pretty how-de-do.

act I

In for a penny, in for a pound Love that makes the world go Ib. round! 2
Politics

16.

My object all sublime


I shall

we bar,
are not our bent:

To make

achieve in time the punishment

fit

the crime.
16. II

They

On

the whole

we are
Princess Ida [1884], act I

A source of innocent merriment!


On
a cloth untrue
I

16.

Not
I

intelligent.

love my fellow creatures the good I can

do

all

With a twisted cue And elliptical billiard balls.


I

16.

Yet everybody says I'm such a able man!

disagree16.

drew

my

snickersnee!

16.

The

flowers that
trala,

bloom

in the spring,
case.
16.

And

I can't

think why!

Darwinian Man, though well-behaved,

Have nothing

to

do with the
little

At best is only a monkey shaved!


16. II

On

a tree by a river a
I said to

tomtit

A wandering minstrel I A thing of shreds and patches,


Of ballads, songs and snatches, And dreamy lullaby! The Mikado [1885],
I can't

Sang "Willow,

titwillow, titwillow!"

And

him, "Dicky-bird, why do

you
act I
"Is
it

sit

Singing "Willow, titwillow, titwillow!'

weakness of

intellect, birdie?"

cried,

help

it. I

was born sneering.


16.
vic-

"Or

a rather tough inside?" a shake of his

worm
poor

in your
little

little

As some day it may happen that a tim must be found,


I've

With

head he

replied,

ot a

litfle list

I've got a little

"Oh, willow,

titwillow, titwillow!"
16.

Of

society offenders

who might

well be

underground,

And who never would be missed 16. who never would be missed. The idiot who praises, with enthusiastic
tone, All centuries
try

There's a fascination frantic In a ruin that's romantic; Do you think you are sufficiently de-

cayed?
uses language that hair curl. your

16.

He

would make

but this, and every coun16. but his own.3

Three

little maids from school are we, Pert as a schoolgirl well can be, Filled to the brim with girlish glee.

Ruddigore [1887], net I For you are such a smart little craft Such a neat little, sweet little craft, Such a bright little, tight little,
Slight
little,

light little

16.
iSee Heywood, p. i84b. See Lewis Carroll, p. 744b, and Anonymous. p. no5b. *See Over-bury, p. 315^ and Canning, p.
5o6b.

Trim
I

little,

prim

little craft!

16. II

have a song to sing O! Sing me your song, O! The "Yeomen of the Guard
[1888], act I

7 68

GILBERT
It's

HARTE

a song of a merryman,
sad,

moping

mum, Whose soul was

BRET HARTE [FRANCIS BRETT HARTE]


1836-1902

and whose glance

Who

was glum,

sipped no sup, and who craved no crumb, As he sighed for the love of a lady.

smile

lit

the eyes of the expiring

The Yeoman

of the

Guard, act I

Kentuck. "Dying!" he repeated. "He's me with him tell the boys I've got the Luck with me now"; and the strong man, clinging to the frail
a-taking

babe

He led his regiment from behind He found it less exciting.


The Gondoliers
That celebrated,
Cultivated,
[1889], act I

as a drowning man is said to cling to a straw, drifted away into the shadowy river that flows forever to the un-

known sea. The Luck

of Roaring

Camp

[i

Underrated nobleman, The Duke of Plaza Toro!

Ib.

No

Hid half

soldier in that gallant band as well as he did.

At the head of the gulch, on one of the largest pine trees, they found the deuce of clubs pinned to the bark with a bowie knife. It bore the following, written in pencil in a firm hand* "Beneath this tree lies the body of

He lay concealed throughout the war, And this preserved his gore, Ol
16.

Of

that

there

is

no

manner
shadow

of of
16.

doubt

JOHN OAKHURST, who struck a streak of bad luck on the 23rd of November, 1850, and handed in his checks on the yth of December, 1850."

No

The Outcasts of Poker

Flat

probable,

possible

doubt

[1858]

No possible doubt
Life's a

whatever.

pudding

full of

plums;

Which I wish to remark, And my language is plain,


That
for

Care's a canker that

benumbs,

ways that are dark

Wherefore waste our elocution


impossible solution? pleasant institution, Let us take it as it comes!
Life's a Life's

On

And for tricks that are vain, The heathen Chinee is peculiar.
Plain Language
16.

from Truthful James [1870], st. i


16.
st.

perhaps the only riddle


16.

Ah

Sin was his name.

That we shrink from giving up.

The

gratifying feeling that our duty has 16. been done.


eyes.

With

the smile that was childlike and bland. 16. st. 4


are
labor.

Take a pair of sparkling

16.

We

ruined

by

Chinese

cheap
st.

16.

When

everyone is somebodee, Then no one's anybody.


incessantly

Ib.

And on
And

that grave

where English oak

The world has joked


over
fifty centuries,

for

and holly
laurel wreaths entwine,
it

And

every joke that's possible has long

Deem

not

all

a too presumptuous

ago been made.

folly,

His Excellency: The Played-Out Humorist [1894]

This spray of Western pine! Dickens in Camp [1870],


I

st.

10

Humor

is

a drug

which

it's

the fashion
16.

reside at Table

Mountain, and

my

to abuse.

name

is

Truthful James;

769

HAUTE
I

BURROUGHS

am

not up to small

deceit, or

any

The

ignorant

man
The

always

adores

sinful games.

what he cannot understand.

The Society Upon the Stanislaus,


St. 1

Man

of Genius

pt. Ill, ch. 3

And he

smiled a kind of sickly smile,


floor,

Men
larly

in

general,

but more

particu-

and curled up on the

And

the subsequent proceedings interested

him no more.
fair as she,

16. st.

the insane, love to speak of themselves, and on this theme they even become eloquent. 16. IV, i

For there be women,

Whose

verbs

agree.

and nouns do more Mrs. Judge Jenkins, st. 19

FITZHUGH LUDLOW
1836-1870

Oh, yer's yer good old whiskey, Drink it down.

While we wait
gets cold, act

for the napkin, the soup


is

Two Men

of Sandy Bar [1876],

IV

One big vice in a man is apt to keep out a great many smaller ones. 16.
capable of a devotion to anything, rather than a cold, calculating average of all the virtues!
that
is

trimming, the face grows When we've matched our buttons, the
old,

While the bonnet

And

Give

me

man

pattern is sold, everything comes too late late. Too Late,

too
st.

JOHN BURROUGHS
1837-1921
Serene, I fold my hands and wait, Nor care for wind, nor tide, nor I rave no more 'gainst time or fate,
sea;

16.

JANE ELLICE HOPKINS


1836-1904
Genius
ing pains.
is

an

infinite capacity for tak-

For

lo!

my own

shall

come

to me.
st.
i

Waiting,

Work Amongst Working Men


[1870]

I was born with a chronic anxiety about the weather.

Is It

Going
all

to Rain?

CESARE LOMBROSO
1836-1909 was Klopstock questioned regarding the meaning of a passage in his poem. He replied, "God and I both knew what it meant once; now God alone
knows."
2

Literature
times.
It is

is

an investment of genius
subsequent
Literary

which pays dividends to

Fame

always easier to believe than to deny. Our minds are naturally affirmative.

The Light

of Day.

The Modem
Skeptic

The Man

of Genius

pt. I,

ch. 2

The appearance of a single great genius is more than equivalent to the birth of a hundred mediocrities.
16. II, 2

Time does not become sacred to us until we have lived it. The Spell of the Past
Nature
stones. It

teaches

more

"Lawsuit

mania" ...

continual

preaches. There are no

than she sermons in

craving to go to while considering


jured party,
1 2

law against others,


themselves
the
in-

is easier to get a spark out of a stone than a moral.

16. Ill, 3

Time and Change. The


Life
is

See Buffon, p. 4sgb, and note. Also attributed to Browning, apropos of his

Gospel of Nature

Sordello.

a struggle, but not a warfare. The Summit of the Years

77

CLEVELAND

HOWELLS
government, its functions do not include the support of the people. Inaugural Address [March 4,

GROVER CLEVELAND
1837-1908
Public officers are the servants and agents of the people, to execute the laws which the people have made. Letter accepting the nomination
for

have

tried so

hard to do the right. Last -words

Governor

of

New

York

[October 1882]

ADMIRAL GEORGE

Your every
chief
trust.
1

voter, as surely as your magistrate, exercises a public

DEWEY
1837-1917

Inaugural Address [March 4, 1885]

You may
Gridley.

fire

when you

are ready,

However plenty
gifts

silver dollars

may

beas

come, they will not be distributed

To the captain of Dewey's flagship at the Battle of Manila Bay


[May
i,

among
First

the people.

1898]

Annual Message [December 8, 1885}

WILLIAM DEAN

HOWELLS
1837-1920

debtor class ... are not dishonest because they are in debt.
so-called
Ib.

The

We live, but a world has passed away


With
the years that perished to

make

After an existence of nearly twenty years of almost innocuous desuetude these laws are brought forth.

us men.

The

Mulberries

Lord, for the erring thought

Not

Message [March

into evil wrought:

i,

1886]

Lord, for the wicked will

more of the people's susteexacted through the form of taxation than is necessary to meet the
nance
is

When

Betrayed and baffled still: For the heart from itself kept,

Our thanksgiving

accept.

just obligations of

government and

ex-

Thanksgiving
feet,

penses of its economical administration, such exaction becomes ruthless extortion

Though

move with leaden

and a violation of the fundamental

principles of a free government.

Second Annual Message [December


It is a

Light itself is not so fleet; And before you know me gone Eternity and I are one.

Time
is

He who

sleeps

in

continual noise

condition which confronts us

wakened by
See See

silence.

not a theory. 2

Pordenone,

TV

Third Annual Message [December 6, 1887]

how

today's achievement morrow's confusion;

is

only to-

how

The
be

lessons of paternalism ought to unlearned and the better lesson

possession always cheapens the Ib. thing that was precious.

taught that while the people should patriotically and cheerfully support their
"Public office is a public trust" was used by the Cleveland administration as its motto. See Matthew Henry, p. gSSb; Burke, p. 454b; Jefferson, p. 4720; Clay, p. sjSb; and Calhoun,
1

The wrecks
Their

of slavery are fast grow[1872]

ing a fungus crop of sentiment.

Wedding Journey

P. 545b8

They were Americans, and they knew how to worship a woman. The Lady of the Aroostook
[1879]
]

See Disraeli, p. 61 ib.

77

HOWELLS

SWINBURNE
for this land of freedom, I do not give a damn. I'm glad I fought agin her, I only wish we'd won, And I ain't axed any pardon for anything I've done.

The
exile.

Bostonian

who

leaves

Boston

And

ought to be

condemned

to perpetual

The

Rise of Silas

Lapham
eft.

[1885],

The man
mind
a

of letters must

make up

his

that in the United States the fate book is in the hands of the women. Literature and Life [1902]
of

A Good
damn.

Old Rebel

[c.

1870],
st. i

won't be reconstructed, and


give a

don't

Does
wearing

it afflict

you to

find your books


literally.
. .
.

out?

mean

Ib. st

mortality of all inanimate things is terrible to me, but that of books most of all.

The

ALGERNON CHARLES SWINBURNE


1837-1909

Letter to Charles Eliot Norton


[April 6, 1903]

Maiden and
stars

mistress of the

not sorry for having wrought in common, crude material so much; that is the right American stuff; and perhaps
I

am

months and
fields of

Now

hereafter,

one
was,

is

curious to

when my din is done, if anyknow what that noise

folded in the flowerless heaven. Atalanta in Calydon


winter's traces,

[1865],

it will be found to have proceeded from a small insect which was scraping about on the surface of our life and

When

the hounds of spring are on of

The mother
plain
Fills

months

in

meadow

or

trying to get into its meaning for the sake of the other insects larger or smaller.

That

is,

such has been

my

uncon-

scious work; consciously, I was always, as I still am, trying to fashion a piece of
literature

With And
Is

the shadows and windy places lisp of leaves and ripple of rain; the brown bright nightingale

amorous
half assuaged for Itylus,
foreign

out of the

life

next at hand.

16. [April 26, 1903]

For the Thracian ships and the


faces,

Clemens was
Lincoln of our

sole, incomparable, literature.

the

The

tongueless

vigil,

and

My Mark
Some

all the pain. Ib. chorus, st.

Twain

Come
With

people can stay longer in an hour than others can in a week. Attributed

with bows bent and with emptyperfect, lady of light,

ing of quivers,

Maiden most
a a
rivers,

noise

of

winds

and many

HORACE PORTER
1837-1921

With

clamor of waters, and with


sandals,

A mugwump
beyond

is

a person educated

might; Bind on thy


fleet,

thou most
of thy

his intellect.

slogan of the ClevelandElaine campaign [1884]

Over the splendor and speed


feet,

INNES RANDOLPH
1837-1887

For the faint east quickens, the wan west shivers, Round the feet of the day and the feet
of the night.
Ib.
st. 2

Oh, I'm a good old I am,

rebel, that's

what
j

For winter's rains and ruins are over, And all the season of snows and sins;

SWINBURNE

The The

days dividing lover and lover, light that loses, the night that wins;
is

wise among women, and Our Lady of Pain.

wisest,
st.

Dolores [1866],

And time remembered


ten,

grief forgot-

And

frosts are

skin and flowers begot-

Change in a trice The lilies and languors of virtue For the raptures and roses of vice.
16. st.

And

ten, in green

underwood and cover


splendid and sterile Dolores, Our Lady of Pain.

Blossom by blossom the spring begins. Atdanta in Calydon, chorus, St. 4


Before the beginning of years There came to the making of Time, with a gift of tears; Grief, with a glass that ran; Pleasure, with pain for leaven; Summer, with flowers that fell;
fallen

16.

Ah

man

beautiful passionate body That never has ached with a heartl


16.
st.

11

The The

delight that consumes the desire, desire that outruns the delight.
16. st.

14
16.

from heaven, Remembrance And madness risen from hell; Strength without hands to smite; Love that endures for a breath;
Night, the shadow of light, And life, the shadow of death.
16. chorus,
st.
i

Despair the twin-bom of devotion.


1

have

passed

from

the
sin
is

outermost
a prayer. 16. st. 17

To

portal the shrine

where a

For the crown of our


Eyesight and speech they wrought For the veils of the soul therein, A time for labor and thought,
Is

life as it closes

darkness, the fruit there of dust;

No

thorns go as deep as a rose's,

A time to serve and to sin; l


They gave him light in his ways, And love, and a space for delight, And beauty and length of days, And night, and sleep in the night.
His speech
is

And love is more cruel than lust. Time turns the old days to derision,
Our loves

And marriage and death and Make barren our lives.

into corpses or wives; division


16.
st.

20

a burning

fire;

What

ailed us,

gods, to desert you

With

his lips

he

travaileth;

In his heart is a blind desire, In his eyes foreknowledge of death; He weaves, and is clothed with derision;

For creeds that refuse and restrain? Come down and redeem us from virtue,

Our Lady
Lo,
light.

of Pain.

16. st.

35

this is

she that was the world's de-

Sows, and he shall not reap; His life is a watch or a vision Between a sleep and a sleep.
Ib. st. 3

LausVeneris [1866],
Ah, yet would might be

st.

God

this flesh of

mine

We

have seen thee, O Love, thou art fair; thou art goodly, O Love.
16. chorus

Where

air

might wash and long leaves

cover me; Where tides of grass break into


flowers,

foam of

For words divide and rend; But silence is most noble till the end.
16.
iSee Ecclesiastes
3:2, p. ayb.

Or where the wind's


the sea.

feet shine along 16. st. 14

sad kissed
it is!

mouth,

how

sorrowful
16. st.

79

773

SWINBURNE

To have known
it is.

love,

how

bitter a thing
st.

For there

is

no God found
is

Lous Veneris,

103
If

than death; and death

There

will

no man do

Hymn
you loved
I

stronger a sleep, to Proserpine

for your sake, I

think,

me

ever so

little,

What
I

would have done for the least word said. had wrung life dry for your lips to
I

could bear the bonds that gall, could dream the bonds were brittle; You do not love me at all.
Satia

drink,

Te Sanguine

[1866], st

Broken it up your daily bread. The Triumph of Time [1866], St. 12


for

While he

lives let a man be glad, For none hath joy of his death. A Lamentation [1866]. I,
If love

st.

At the door of life, by the gate

of breath, There are worse things waiting for men Ib. st. 20 than death.
I

were what the rose is, And I were like the leaf,

Our lives would grow

will

go back to the great sweet mother,


lover of

together In sad or singing weather.

Mother and

men, the

sea.

Match
May.

[1866], st

Ib.
I

st.

33

If

you were April's kdy,

shall

never be friends

again

with
If

And I were

lord in

Ib. st 5

roses;
I shall

loathe sweet tunes.

Ib. st.

45
i

Marvelous mercies and infinite love. Les Noyades [1866], st


I

you were queen of pleasure, And I were king of pain, We'd hunt down love together,
Pluck out his flying feather,

am

and chafe:

sick of singing; the bays I fain

burn deep

And teach his feet a measure, And find his mouth a rein.
Ib. st 6

am

To

rest a

from praise and grievous and pain. pleasure


little

For in the time we know not of

Did

to Proserpine: After the Proclamation in Rome of the

fate begin

Hymn

Weaving the web of days Your doom, Faustine.

that wove
st.

Christian Faith [1866]

Faustine [1866],
1

24

Thou hast conquered,

O pale Galilean;

the world has grown gray from thy

We

breath;

have drunken of things Lethean, and fed on the fullness of death. Laurel is green for a season, and love is
sweet for a day;

Take hand and part with laughter; Touch lips and part with tears; Once more and no more after, Whatever comes with years. Rococo [1866], st.
Forget that
I

remember,
that
I

But love grows


Sleep, shall

bitter with treason, laurel outlives not May.

and

And dream
The burden
fear

forget.

Ib.

st.

we

world is For the old faiths loosen and new years ruin and rend.
I

sleep after all? for the not sweet in the end;


fall,

of long living.

Thou

shalt

the
Ib.

Waking, and sleeping mourn upon


bed;

thy

And
And

say at night

"Would God

the day

shall die as

my

fathers died,

and

sleep

were here,"
say at

even so. For the glass of the years is brittle wherein we gaze for a span. Ib.
as they sleep;
1

dawn "Would God


*

the day
st.

were dead."

A Ballad of Burdens [1866],


*See Deuteronomy 28:63, p. lob.

See Julian, p. i44b.

774

SWINBURNE
For life is sweet, but after life is death. This is the end of every man's desire. Ballad of Burdens. UEnvoy

And
If

the best and the worst of this That neither is most to blame,

is

shall

remember while the


I

light lives

you have forgotten my kisses And I have forgotten your name,

An
And
Rang

yet

Interlude,

st.

14

And

in the nighttime

get

not forErotion [1866]


shall

through the trumpet of a child of

Rome
the pure music of the flutes of Greece.

Here, where the world is quiet; Here, where all trouble seems Dead winds' and spent waves' riot In doubtful dreams of dreams.

Song for the Centenary of Walter Savage Landor [1866],


st.
I

The Garden
I

of Proserpine

17

[i866\,st.

am

am tired of tears and laughter, And men that laugh and weep; Of what may come hereafter For men that sow and reap: I am weary of days and hours,
Blown buds of barren flowers, Desires and dreams and powers

that which began; Out of me the years roll;

of me God and man; am equal and whole; God changes, and man, and the form of them bodily; I am the soul.

Out
I

Hertha [1871],
Before ever knd was, Before ever the sea, Or soft hair of the grass, Or fair limbs of the tree, Or the flesh-colored fruit
branches,
in
I

st. i

And

everything but sleep.


Ib.
st.

We are not sure of sorrow,


And
joy was never sure.
Ib. st. 10

We thank with brief thanksgiving


Whatever gods may be That no life lives forever; That dead men rise up never; That even the weariest river Winds somewhere safe to sea. 1
Ib. $t. 11

From too much love of living, From hope and fear set free,

me.
is

of my was, and thy soul was Ib. st. 2

A creed
And
But
this

a rod,
is

crown
thing

of night;

is

God,
of thy
life as

To be man with thy might, To grow straight in the strength


spirit,

and to

live

out thy

the light.

Ib. st. 15

Ah

that such sweet things should be


fleet,

Such

fleet things sweet!

Felise [1866],

st.

22

In the gray beginning of years, in the twilight of things that began, The word of the earth in the ears of the world, was it God? was it

man?

Those eyes the greenest of things blue, The bluest of things gray. Ib. st. 24

Hymn

of

Man

[1871]

remember the way we parted, The day and the way we met; You hoped we were both brokenI

hearted

And knew we

should both forget.


st.

Ask nothing more of me, sweet, All I can give you I give; Heart of my heart, were it more, More would be laid at your feet: Love that should help you to live, Song that should spur you to soar.

An
1

The Oblation
11
It is

Interlude [1866],
long the

[1871],

st. i

No

matter
the sea.

how

river, the river will

reach

EUGENE FrrcH WARE ("IRON-

his opinion that if

QUILL") [1841-1911],

The

Blizzard

long since Mr. Carlyle expressed any poet or other could creature really be "killed literary

775

SWINBURNE
off by one critique" or many, the sooner he was so dispatched the better; a sentiment in which I for one humbly but heartily concur. Under the Microscope [1872]

ADAMS
Body and
spirit

are twins:
is

God

only

knows which

which.
in a Nutst.

The Higher Pantheism


God,

shell [1880],

whom we

see not,

is:

and God,

blatant

rampant Maenad

Bassarid of Boston, a of Massachusetts. 1


Ib.

Fiddle,

who is not, we see: we know, is diddle: and diddle, Ib. st. 12 we take it, is dee.

To wipe off the froth of falsehood from the foaming lips of inebriated virtue, when fresh from the sexless orgies of morality and reeling from the delirious riot or religion,
charitable office.

HENRY BROOKS ADAMS


1838-1918
Accident counts for

much

in com-

may

doubtless

be

panionship as in marriage.

Ib.

The Education

of

Henry Adams

The

tadpole poet will never grow

into anything bigger than a frog; not though in that stage of development he

bursts with

should puff and blow himself till he windy adulation at the heels Ib. of the laureled ox.
so frayed

commonly, a very which they will, is right; that which they reject, is wrong; and their will, in most cases; ends by settling the moral. Ib. 6
have,
positive moral sense; that

Women

Poor splendid wings soiled and torn!

and

All experience

is

an arch, to build
Ib.

upon.

A
name. 2

Ballad of Frangois Villon


[1878],
st.

Only on the edge of the grave can

man conclude

anything.

Ib.

Villon, our sad

bad glad mad brother's


16. refrain

In a coign of the cliff between lowland and highland, At the sea-down's edge between wind-

Although the Senate is much given to admiring in its members a superiority less obvious or quite invisible to outsiders, one Senator seldom proclaims his

own

more seldom

inferiority to another, and likes to be told of

still
it.

ward and lee, Walled round with rocks


island,

Ib. 7

as

an inland

Friends are born, not made.

Ib,
2

The

ghost of a garden fronts the sea.

A friend in power is a friend lost.


The
effect of
is

A Forsaken Garden
if life

[1878],

st. i

Ib.

Sleep;
If

and

was

bitter to thee, par-

power and

publicity on
sort
vic-

all

don,
sweet,

more

give thanks; thou hast to live;


is

no

the aggravation of self, a of tumor that ends by killing the


tim's sympathies.

men

Ib. 10

And

to give thanks
give.

good, and to forof

Young men have

a passion for
is

re-

garding their elders as senile.


st.

Ib. 11

Ave atque Vale: In Memory


Charles Baudelaire [1878],
1

17

Knowledge of human nature beginning and end of political


tion.

the

Beecher Stowe, whose accusations Byron in "The True Story of Lady Byron's Life" [Atlantic Monthly, September 1869] and in Lady Byron Vindicated [1870]
Harriet
against

educaIb. 12

of
1
2

These questions of taste, of feeling, inheritance, need no settlement.


See Tennyson, p. 6460. See ch. 38, p. 777b.

aroused strong protests in England. 8 See Browning, p. 666a.

776

ADAMS
Everyone carries his own inch-rule of taste, and amuses himself by applying it, triumphantly, wherever he travels. The Education of Henry

BLISS

Nothing in education is so astonishing as the amount of ignorance it accumulates in the form of inert facts.

The Education

of

Adams,
Intimates are predestined.

ch. 12
I&. 13

Adams,

ch.

Henry 25

Chaos often breeds


breeds habit.

life,

when
broken

order
Ib.
rela-

energy

Power when wielded by abnormal is the most serious of facts. Ib. 28

At
tions

best, the renewal of


is

a nervous matter.

16.

Sumner's x mind had reached the calm of water which receives and reflects images without absorbing them; it Ib. contained nothing but itself.

Those who seek education in the paths of duty are always deceived by the illusion that power in the hands of 16. friends is an advantage to them. 1

The
by
five

difference

is slight,

to the influis

A certain chronic irritability a sort of Bostonitis which, in its primitive Puritan forms, seemed due to knowing
too too

ence of an author, whether he

read

hundred

readers, or

by

five

hun-

much much

of his neighbors of himself.


politics
is,

and thinking
16.

dred thousand; if he can select the five hundred, he reaches the five hundred Ib. 17 thousand.

Modem

at

bottom,

a
16.

struggle not of

men but of

forces.

more than most men, a double personality; and his


is,

The newspaperman

We

combat obstacles in order to get

person feels best satisfied in its double instincts when writing in one sense and 16. thinking in another.

repose, and,

when

supportable.
Simplicity
is

got, the repose is in16. 29

A
never

teacher
tell

affects

eternity;

he can
16.20

tress that ever

the most deceitful mis16. 30 betrayed man.

where

his influence stops.

One
are

friend in a lifetime
are

is

much; two

many; three

No one means all he says, and yet very few say all they mean, for words are slippery and thought is viscous.
16. 31

hardly possible.

Friendship needs a certain parallelism of life, a community of thought, a 16. rivalry of aim.

What
tle

one knows

is,

in youth, of

lit-

moment; they know enough who Ib. 2 1 know how to learn.

in America, the Indian summer should be a little sunny and a little sad, like the season, and infinite in but never wealth and depth of tone

Even
-life

of

hustled.

16.

35

He had
death,

often

noticed
resurrection
if

that
is

six

months' oblivion amounts to newspaper

PHILIP PAUL BLISS


1838-1876

and that
is

rare.
it,

Nothing
than
rest,

easier,

man

wants

Hold the

fort, for I

profound
is

as the grave.

coming! Gospel Songs [1874], Hold


the Fort, refrain
776b.

am

Ib. 22

Morality
luxury.

private

and

See ch.

costly Ib.

7, p.

Popular version of what General William Tecumseh Sherman signaled to General John
2

facts.
1

Practical politics consists in ignoring 16.


Charles

Murray Corse from Kenesaw Mountain when Corse was attacked at Allatoona Pass [October 5, 1864]: "Hold out; relief is coming."
See Sherman, p.

Sumner

[1811-1874].

777

BOOTH

HAY

JOHN WILKES BOOTH


1838-1865
Sic

JOHN MILTON HAY


1838-1905
is

semper

tyrannis!

The South

keerless

man

in his talk

avenged!

And an awkward hand


Presi-

was Jim, in a row,

His -words after shooting

He
I

dent Lincoln [April 14, 1865]

never flunked, and he never lied reckon he never knowed how.

Jim Bludso,
I'll

st.

JAMES BRYCE
Law
unless
will
it

hold her nozzle agin the bank


Ib.

Till the last galoot's ashore.

or respected has the sentiment of the peo-

1838-1922 never be strong

And

they
ness,

all

had

trust in his cussed-

behind it. If the people of a state make bad laws, they will suffer for it. They will be the first to suffer. Suffering, and nothing else, will implant that sentiment of responsibility which is the
ple
first

And knowed he would keep

his word.
Ib. 6

step to reform.

seen his duty, a dead-sure thing And went for it thar and then; And Christ ain't a-going to be too

He

hard

The American Common-wealth


[1888], vol.
I, p.

On a man
I

that died for

men.
Ib. 7

352

To the vast majority of mankind nothing is more agreeable than to escape the need for mental exertion. ... To most people nothing is more troublesome than the effort of thinking.*

don't religion, I never ain't had no show; But Pve got a middlin' tight grip, sir, On the handful o' things I know. I don't pan out on the prophets And free will, and that sort of

go much on

Studies in History and Jurispru-

thing

dence [1901!. Obedience

But

b'lieve in

God and

the angels
i

The

greatest liberty

that

man

Ever sence one night


has

last spring.

Little Breeches, st

taken with Nature. 3

South America [1912]


Medicine, the only profession that labors incessantly to destroy the reason for its own existence.

And I think that saving a little child, And fetching him to his own,
Is

a derned sight better business

Than

loafing

around The Throne.


Ib. last stanza

Address at dinner for General W. C. Gorges [March 23, 1914]

There are three species of creatures who when they seem coming are
going,

GEORGE COOPER
1838-1927
Sweet Genevieve, The days may come, the days may go, But still the hands of memory weave The blissful dreams of long ago. Sweet Genevieve [c. 1877]
Motto of Virginia always to tyrants. See R. B. Sheridan, p. 48 ib, and note. *The Panama Canal.
a

When

they seem going they come: Diplomats, women, and crabs.


Distichs, no. 2

Who

would succeed in the world should be wise in the use of his

pronouns. Utter the You twenty times, where you 16. 13 once utter the I.

True luck

consists

not in holding the

best of the cards at the table:

77 8

HAY
Luckiest he
rise

MORLEY
to

who knows and go home.

just

when

Distichs, no, 15

The open door. To the cabinet

played an effective part in popular lectures, but in the workshop of the serious inquirer it has discharged scarcely the least function.

regarding comfor the pletion of negotiations 7 in door' China "open January 2, 1900]

On

the Principle of the Conservation of Energy [1894]

JOHN, VISCOUNT MORLEY OF BLACKBURN


1838-1923
Evolution is not a force but a process; not a cause but a law. OTZ Compromise [1874]

GEORGE WASHINGTON JOHNSON


And now we
are aged

1838-1917 and

gray,

Mag-

gie, The trials of life nearly

Those who would


done,

treat politics

and

Let us sing of the days that are gone, Maggie, When you and I were young.

morality apart will never the one or the other.

understand

When You

and

Were Young,
refrain

Maggie [1866],

Rousseau [1876] You cannot demonstrate an emotion or prove an aspiration. 16.


It
is

WILLIAM EDWARD HARTPOLE LECKY


1838^1903 Offspring of an idle hour,

must do

not enough to do good; one it the 16. right way. converted a

You have not

man

be16.

cause you have silenced him.

Whence has come


The The
stately ship
fragile skiff
is

thy lasting power? On an old song

great interpreter of life ought not himself to need interpretation. Emerson [1884]

The
seen no more, attains the shore;
do, to

great business of life

is

to be, to

And while the great and wise decay, And all their trophies pass away, Some sudden thought, some careless
Still floats

do without, and to depart. Address on Aphorisms [1887]

rhyme, above the wrecks of Time.


16.

Simplicity of character is no hindrance to subtlety of intellect. Life of Gladstone [1903]

No man

can climb out beyond the

limitations of his

own

character.

Critical Miscellanies

[1908],

ERNST MACH
1838-1916
Physics experience, arranged economical order. The Economical Nature of
Physical Inquiry
Intelligible
efforts
is

Robespierre

in

There are some books which cannot be adequately reviewed for twenty or thirty years after they come out.
Recollections [1917], voZ. I, bk. 2, ch. 8

[1882]

as

it

is

...

The
that

the

proper

memory

for a politician

is

of thinkers have always been bent upon the "reduction of all physical processes to tihe motions of atoms,"
yet be affirmed that this is a chimerical ideal. This ideal has often
it

one that knows what to remember 16. II, 4, 2 and what to forget.
In
is

my

creed, waste of public

money
H>.

must

like the sin against

the Holy Ghost.

779

MORLEY
Success

GEORGE
There's a minute of life passing! Paint it in its reality and forget everything to do that! Become it itself give the image of what we actually see, forgetting everything that has appeared before us.
.
. .

who
it;

depends on three things: how he says says it, what he says,

and of these three things, says is the least important.


Recollections, vol.
I,

what he

bk. 5, ch.

Excess of severity is not the path to order. On the contrary, it is the path to 16. the bomb.

From JOACHIM GASQUET,


Paul Cezanne [1926]

MARGARET ELIZABETH
SANGSTER
1838-1912
Never yet was a springtime, Late though lingered the snow, That the sap stirred not at the whisper Of the southwind, sweet and low; Never yet was a springtime When the buds forgot to blow.

FRANCIS PHARCELLUS

CHURCH
18391906

Awakening

PHILIPPE AUGUSTE VILLIERS DE L'ISLE-ADAM


1838-1889
Living? We'll leave that to the servants. 1 Axel [1890]
I

your little friends are wrong. They have been affected by the skepticism of a skeptical age. They do not believe except they see. They think that nothing can be which is not comprehensible by their little minds. All minds, Virginia, whether they be men's or children's, are little. In this great universe of ours man is a mere insect, an ant, in his intellect, as compared with the boundless world about him, as measured by the intelligence capable of grasping the whole of truth and knowlVirginia,

edge.
Editorial: Is

There a Santa Claus? l

have thought too

much

to stoop to
Ib.

action.

GEORGE LEYBOURNE
d.

1884
air

He

flies

through the

with the greatthe flying

est of ease,

in Santa Claus? You not believe in fairies. ... No Santa Claus! Thank God, he lives, and he lives forever. A thousand years from now, Virginia, nay, ten times ten thousand years from now, he will continue to make glad the heart of

Not

believe

might

as

well

This daring young


trapeze;

man on

childhood.

16.

His figure

is

handsome,

all girls

he can

HENRY GEORGE
1839-1897 So long as all the increased wealth which modern progress brings goes but
to build

please,

And my love he purloined her away! The Man on the Flying Trapeze
[1860]

PAUL CfeZANNE
1839-1906
Treat nature in terms of the cylinder, the sphere, the cone, all in perspective.

up great fortunes, to luxury and make sharper the between the House of Have House of Want, progress is not
cannot be permanent.

increase

contrast

and the
real

and

From EMILE BERNARD,


Paul Cfaanne [1925]
1

Progress and Poverty [1879]. Introductory: The Problem


1 First

published in the
21,

New

York Sun

[Sep-

tember

from 1897] in reply to an inquiry

Vivre? Les serviteurs feront cela pour nous.

Virginia O'Hanlon.

780

PATER

BLUNT

WALTER PATER
1839-1894
Every intellectual product must be judged from the point of view of the age and the people in which it was produced. The Renaissance [1873]. Mirandola

What we
curiously

have to do

is

to be forever

opinions and new courting impressions. The Renaissance. Conclusion


testing

new

Art comes to you proposing frankly to give nothing but the highest quality to your moments as they 16. pass.

That sweet look of devotion which

men have
love, saint

and which

never been able altogether to still makes the born an object almost of suspicion to
16. Botticelli

his earthly brethren.

Hers is the head upon which all "the ends of the world are come/' and the eyelids are a little weary. It is a beauty wrought out from within upon the flesh, the deposit, little cell by cell, of
strange thoughts

A book, like a person, has its fortunes with one; is lucky or unlucky in the precise moment of its falling in our way, and often by some happy accident counts with us for something more than its independent value. Matins the Epicurean [1885],
ch.

To know when
ested,
is

one's self

is

inter-

the

first

condition of interest16.

ing other people.

and

fantastic reveries
it

and exquisite passions. Set

for a

mo-

ment beside one


goddesses

of those white Greek or beautiful women of an-

We need some imaginative stimulus, some not impossible ideal such as may shape vague hope, and transform it into
effective desire,

tiquity, and how would they be troubled by this beauty, into which the soul with all its maladies has passed?

to carry us year after


is

year,

without disgust, through the rou-

tine
life.

work which

so large a part of
16.

16.

Leonardo de "Vinci

25

\Mona

Lisa]

She is older than the rocks among which she sits; like the vampire, she has been dead many times, and learned the secrets of the grave; and has been a diver in deep seas, and keeps their fallen day about her; and trafficked for strange webs with Eastern merchants: and as Leda, was the mother of Helen of Troy, and, as Saint Anne, the mother of Mary, and all this has been to her but as the sound of lyres and flutes, and lives only in the delicacy with which it has molded the changing lineaments, and tinged the eyelids and the
hands.
16.

JAMES RYDER RANDALL


1839-1908
Hark
to an exiled son's appeal,

Maryland,

my Maryland!
thee I kneel.
St.

My Mother State to
Maryland,

My Maryland [1861],
2

WILFRID SCAWEN

BLUNT
1840-1922

He who
Out

has once been happy

is

for

aye of destruction's reach.

All art constantly aspires towards the

With
Ay, this
is

Esther

condition of music.
16.

The School

of Giorgione

the famed rock, which Herus.

cules

To burn

always with this hard, gem-

And Goth and Moor bequeathed


this

At

like flame, to

success in life.

maintain this ecstasy, is 16. Conclusion

door
sentry.

England stands

Gibraltar

781

BURTON

HAIO)Y

HENRY BURTON
1840-1930 Have you had a kindness shown? Pass It On, Pass it on.
st. i

But Rose crossed the road


I

In her latest new bonnet; intended an ode; And it turned to a sonnet.

Urceus Exit
All passes. Art alone Enduring stays to us;

TIMOTHY
What's
friends? 1

J.

CAMPBELL
between
[c.

1840-1904
the
Constitution Attributed
1885]

The bust outlasts the throne The coin, Tiberius. 1


Ars Victrix,
st.

HENRY AUSTIN DOBSON


1840-1921

Fame
I

is a food that dead men eat have no stomach for such meat. Fame Is a Food That Dead

Once

at the Angelus

Men

Eat,

st. i

(Ere I was dead), Angels all glorious Came to my bed.

THOMAS HARDY
Babette!"
st.
i

"Good Night,

Time goes, you say? Ah no! Alas, Time stays, we go. The Paradox of Time,
The ladies
of St. James's! They're painted to the eyes;
it stays forever,
it

These
st. i

1840-1928 purblind Doomsters

had

as

readily strown Blisses about my pilgrimage as pain.

Hap

[1866]

When

set out for

Their white Their red

A hundred miles away,


When
I Set

Lyonnesse,

never dies:

But Phyllida, my Phyllida! Her color comes and goes;


It

The rime was on the spray, And starlight lit my lonesomeness.


Out
for Lyonnesse

trembles to a lily It wavers to a rose. The Ladies of St. James's,

[1870],
st.

st.

Good, but not religious-good. Under the Greenwood Tree


[1872], ch. 2

Ah, would but one might lay his lance


in rest,

And

charge in earnest
mill!

were

it

but

Don

Quixote

Form is the cage and sense the bird. The poet twirls them in his mind, And wins the trick with both combined. The Toyman

The kingly brilliance of Sinus pierced the eye with a steely glitter, the star called Capella was yellow, Aldebaran and Betelgueux shone with a fiery red. To persons standing alone on a hill during;

roll

a clear midnight such as this, the of the world eastward is almost a

He

praised the thing he understood; Twere well if every critic would.

palpable movement. Far from the


2

Madding Crowd
[1874], ch. 2

The
I

'Squire at Vauxhall.

Moral

intended an ode, And it turned to a sonnet.

Like the British Constitution, she owes her success in practice to her inconsistencies in principle. The Hand of Ethelberta [1876]

It
I

began a

la

mode,

intended an ode;
1

Reported comment to President Cleveland, who refused to support a bill on the grounds that it was unconstitutional.

A
1

lover without indiscretion


all.

is

no
16.

lover at

See Thfophile Gautier, p. 6583.

782

HARDY
In fact, precisely at this transitional point of its nightly roll into darkness the great and particular glory of the Egdon waste began, and nobody could be said to understand the heath who had not been there at such a time. It could best be felt when it could not
clearly

William Tranter Reuben, Dewy, Farmer Ledlow late at plow, Robert's kin, and John's and Ned's,

And

the Squire, and Lady Susan, lie in Mellstock churchyard now! 1 Friends Beyond [1898], st. i

be seen.

leant

The Return

of the Native [1878], ch. i

When

The place became full of a watchful intentness now; for when other things
sank brooding to sleep the heath appeared slowly to awake and listen.
16.

And The weakening eye of day. The DarWng Thrush An aged thrush, frail,
small, In blast-beruffled

upon a coppice gate Frost was specter-gray, Winter's dregs made desolate
[1900],
st. i

gaunt,
16.

and
st.

plume.

The
cient

So
great inviolate place had an ansea

little

cause for carolings


ecstatic

permanence which the

Of such

sound
terrestrial things

cannot

claim.

Who
is

that

it

can say of a particular sea old? Distilled by the sun,


it is

Was written on
That

kneaded by the moon,


year, in a day, or in

Afar or nigh around, I could think

there

trembled

renewed in a

an hour.

The

sea

changed, the

changed, the rivers, the villages, and the people changed, Ib. yet Egdon remained.
fields

through His happy good-night air Some blessed hope, whereof he knew And I was unaware. 16. st. 4

That cold accretion

called the world,

You

Yes; quaint and curious war shoot a fellow down

is!

which, so terrible in the mass, is so unformidable, even pitiable, in its units. Tess of the D'Urbervilles [1891]
,

You'd

treat if met where any bar is, Or help to half-a-crown. The Man He Killed [1902], st.

ch. 13

What
It

of the

Immanent Will and

its

That shabby corner of God's allotment where He lets the nettles grow,
and

designs?

where

works unconsciously as heretofore,


artistries in

all

unbaptized

infants,

External

circumstance.
I,

notorious and drunkards, suicides, others of the conjecturally damned are


laid.

The Dynasts [1904-1908], pt

forescene

16.

14

A local cult called


Ere systemed
lit

Christianity.

chronic melancholy which is taking hold of the civilized races with the decline of belief in a beneficent power. 16. 18

The

16. Spirit of the Years, sc. vi

suns

were globed and

The

The
lection

debatable land between predi-

slaughters of the race were writ. 16. II, v, semichorus

and

love.

16.20

My
Patience,
that

blending

of

moral

tling

argument is that War makes ratgood history; but Peace is poor


16. Spirit Sinister

courage with physical timidity.

reading.

16.43
"Justice" was done, and the President of the Immortals (in Aeschylean phrase) had ended his sport with Tess.

the aisles each window smiles on grave and grass and yew-tree bough While Tranter Reuben, Gordon Selfridge, Edna Best and Thomas Hardy lie in Mellstock Churchyard now.

From

16.59

JOHN BETJEMAN, Dorset

[igtf], st. 3

783

HAUDY

MAHAN
Yonder a maid and her wight

A star loolcs down at me,


And
says:

"Here

and you

Come whispering by;


st. i

Stand, each in our degree: What do you mean to do?"

War's annals win cloud into night Ere their story die.
In Time of "The Breaking of Nations" [1915]

Writing Both,

We
I

The

two kept house, the Past and Past and I;

I,

When
st. i

the

Present

has

latched

its

tended while it hovered nigh, Leaving me never alone. The Ghost of the Past,
I

postern
stay,

behind

my

tremulous

And

To

seem but a dead man held on end sink down soon. ... O you could
not know That such swift fleeing

May month flaps its glad green leaves like wings, Delicate-filmed as new-spun silk, will
the

"He was

the neighbors say, a man who used to notice such things"? Afterwards, st. i

No soul foreseeing
Not even
I

would undo me so! The Going [1912],


missed,

Ah, no; the years O!


st. 6.

Down

their chiseled

names the
Rain,

rain-

drop plows.

Woman much
me,
call to

how you

call to

During
This
is

Wind and

st.

me, Saying that now you are not as you were When you had changed from the one who was all to me, But as at first, when our day was fair. The Voice [1912], st i

the weather the shepherd shuns,


so

And

do

I;

When

beeches

drip

in

browns and

duns,

And thresh, and ply; And hill-hid tides throb,


throe,

throe

on

What of the faith and fire Men who march away


Night

within us

Ere the barn cocks say is growing gray, Leaving all that here can win us?

And meadow rivulets overflow, And drops on gate bars hang in a row, And rooks in families homeward go, And so do I. Weathers [1922], st. 2

Men Who March Away


[1914],
st. i

ROSSITER JOHNSON
1840-1931

That night your great guns, unawares, Shook all our coffins as we lay, And broke the chancel window-

O
O O

for a lodge in a bers! i for


for a vale

garden of cucum-

We thought

squares,

was the Judgment Day. Channel Firing [1914], st. i


it

an iceberg or two at control! which at midday the dew

cumbers!

Only a man harrowing

for a pleasure trip

clods

up to the Pole! the Shade, st. in Ninety-nine

In a slow silent walk With an old horse that stumbles and

nods Half asleep

ALFRED THAYER
as they stalk.

MAHAN

1840-1914
Only thin smoke without flame

From

the heaps of couch grass; Yet this will go onward the same
dynasties pass.

never seen a more imof the influence demonstration pressive

The world has

Though

i See Isaiah 1:8, p. goa.

784

MAHAN
of sea power upon its history. Those far distant, storm-beaten ships, upon which

WORDSWORTH
where
case,
is

the Forgotten
will

Man

in this

who

the

Grand Army never


it

looked, stood

have to pay for it all? Speech: The Forgotten Man


[1883]

between
world. 1

and the dominion of the

The
and

Influence of Sea Power Upon the French Revolution

Empire,

1793-1812

JOHN ADDINGTON SYMONDS


No
seed shall perish

[1892], vol. II, p. 118

Whether they
must begin

will or no, Americans to look outward. The Interest of America in Sea

1840-1893 which the soul

hath sown. Sonnet: Versohnung,

A Belief

Power [1897]

WORTHINGTON RAYMOND
Life
is

ROSSITER
1840-1918 and love

fade; but God abides and in man's heart Spealcs with the clear unconquerable

Gods

cry

Of

energies

and hopes that cannot

die.

Sonnet:

On

the Sacro

Monte

and death
zon
is

is immortal; only a horizon; and a horinothing save the limit of our

eternal;
is

She smiled, and the shadows departed; She shone, and the snows were rain; And he who was frozen-hearted

sight.

Commendatory Prayer

Bloomed up
These things

into love again.

Eyebright

WILLIAM GRAHAM SUMNER


18401910

Than

e'er

a loftier race shall be the world hath known shall

rise

Man delving patient industry, supporting his family, paying his taxes, casting his vote, supporting the church and the but he is the only one for school whom there is no provision in the great scramble and the big divide. Such is the
The
Forgotten
2
.
.

away

in

With flame of freedom in their souls, And light of knowledge in their eyes. The Days That Are to Be

HENRY WATTERSON
1840-1921
Things have come to a helluva pass

Forgotten Man. He

works, he votes,
. . .

but his chief busigenerally he prays and ness in life is to pay.

When

man

can't

Who

cudgel his

own

jackass.

Apart from the accidents of weather and the tides and currents, about which he admits he
could not obtain information, trustworthy Julius Caesar saw no difficulty in invading the Island. There was not then that far-off line of
storm-beaten ships which about two thousand years later stood between the great Corsican conqueror and the dominion of the world. SIR WINSTON S. CHURCHILL, A History of the English-Speaking Peoples. The Birth of Britain [1956], p. 5 Also quoted by Churchill in the same work

Reply -when rebuked for criticizing the Governor of Kentucky

WORDSWORTH
If all the

ELIZABETH

1840-1932 good people were

clever,

under The Age of Revolution,

And all clever people were good, The world would be nicer than ever

p. 300.

See Themistocles, p. ySa. *See Franklin D. Roosevelt, p. 97ob.

We thought that
785

it

The Clever and the Good

possibly could. [1890]

ZOLA

HOLMES
America is the only nation in history which miraculously has gone directly from barbarism to degeneration without the usual interval of civilization. Attributed

MILE ZOLA
1840-1902
I

am

little

concerned with beauty or

perfection. I don't care for the great centuries. All I care about is life, struggle, intensity. I

am

at ease in

my genera[1866]

There

is

tion.

man

Mes Haines

spirit

nothing harder for the huto bear than being cold-

shouldered.

a negation of society, an affirmation of the individual, outside all rules and demands of society.
art
is

My

own

Quoted by CHARLES DE GAULLE, Le Fil de V Epte [1932], eft. 2

Ib.

Truth
can stop

is
it.

on the march and nothing


Article in

OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES, JR.


1841-1935

Le Figaro

The

life

of the law has not been

[November 25, 1897]


J'accuse. Title of letter to the President

logic: it has

been experience.

The Common Law

[1881]

The law embodies


tion's
turies,

of

the

Republique,

UAurore

the story of a na-

[January 13, 1898]

JOHN WILSON
d.

development through many cenand it cannot be dealt with as if it contained only the axioms and corollaries of a book of mathematics. Ib.
life is action and required of a man that he should share the passion and action of his time at peril of being judged not to
I
it is

1889
either

Oh

for a
in

book and a shady nook,

think that, as

door or out.

passion,

For a catalogue of secondhand


books

have

lived.

ROBERT BUCHANAN
1841-1901

Memorial Day Address [1884]

The

Fleshly School of Poetry. Title of article [1871]


post-prandial cigar.

Through our great good fortune, in our youth our hearts were touched with
fire.

Ib.

The sweet

De

Berny

The Law, wherein, as in a magic mirror, we see reflected not only our own
lives,

but the

lives of all

men

that have

GEORGES CLEMENCEAU
War
is

been!

When I think on 1 theme, my eyes dazzle.


To

this majestic

18411929 much too serious


military.

the Suffolk Bar Association


[1885]
in all sadness of convic-

a matter to
2 I

be entrusted to the

From G. SUAREZ, Clemenceau


[1886]

say to

you

tion, that to

think great thoughts you


idealists.

The good Lord had

only ten.

must be heroes as well as The Profession

of the

Law

In reference to Wilson's Fourteen Points 3

[1886]

Thus only can you gain the


isolated joy of the thinker, that, a hundred years after

secret

*A London
Dobson.
2

bookseller,

friend

of

Austin

who knows

guerre! c'est une chose trop grave pour la confier a des militaires. See Wilson, p. 84*0.

La

and forgotten,

men who

he is dead never heard of

See John Webster, p. sisa.

786

HOLMES
be moving to the measure of the subtle rapture of a thought postponed power, which the world knows not because it has no external trappings, but which to his prophetic vision is more real than that which commands an army.
will

him

his

The Fourteenth Amendment does not enact Mr. Herbert Spencer's Social
Statics.

Lochner

v.

New

York, 198 U.S. 45> 75 [*95l

The

Profession of the

Law

General propositions do not decide concrete cases. The decision will depend on a judgment or intuition more
subtle than any articulate
ise.

The
will

prophecies of what the courts

in fact, and nothing more pretentious, are what I mean by the law.

do

major premIb. 78
is

The

great act of faith

when man

The Path

of the
is

Law

[1897]

decides that

Certainty generally illusion, and Ib. repose is not the destiny of man.

he is not God. Letter to William James [1907]


painting a picture, not doing a
Class of '61 [Speeches, 1913]

Life

is

sum.

The remoter and more general aspects df the law are those which give it universal interest. It is through them that you not only become a great masyour calling, but connect your subject with the universe and catch an echo of the infinite, a glimpse of its
ter

The
I

class

in

learned in the regiment and in the the conclusion, at least, of what I think the best service that we can do

for our country

see so far as

unfathomable process, a hint of the


universal law.
Ib.

tail

great forces ... to

and for ourselves: To one may, and to feel the that are behind every de-

hammer
it first

and

The

solid a piece of

rule of joy

seem to

me

and the law of duty

try to

make

out as compact work as one can, to rate, and to leave it


Ib.

all

one.

unadvertised.

Speech at Bar Association Dinner, Boston [1900]


Life is an end in itself, and the only question as to whether it is worth living 1 is whether you have 16. enough of it.

The only prize much cared for by the powerful is power. The prize of the general is not a bigger tent, but comLaw and the Court [1913] mand.
Judges are apt to be naif, simpleminded men, and they need something of Mephistopheles, We too need education
leave
to
in the transcend our

great

man

represents

great

ganglion in the nerves of society, or, to vary the figure, a strategic point in the campaign of history, and part of his
greatness consists in his being there.

obvious

to

learn

to

room

for

own convictions and to much that we hold dear

John Marshall [1901]


Taxes are what we pay for
society.
civilized

be done away with short of revolution by the orderly change of law.


16.
I do not think the United States would come to an end if we lost our power to declare an Act of Congress void. I do think the Union would be imperiled if we could not make that

Compania de Tabacos v. Collector, 275 US. 87, 100 [1904]


Great cases
law.
like

hard cases make bad

Northern Securities Co. v. United States, 193 U.S.


197, 400 [1904]
1

declaration as to the laws of the several 16. states.

See William James, p. 7943.

The attacks upon the Court are merely an expression of the unrest that seems to wonder vaguely whether law

787

HOLMES
and order pay.
taught to

the ignorant are doubt, they do not know

When

what they
I

safely

may believe. Law and the Court

can be carried out. That at any rate is the theory of our Constitution. It is an experiment, as all life is an experiment.

Abrams

v.

United States, 250 U.S.


616, 630 [1919]

do not think we need trouble our-

with the thought that my view depends upon differences of degree. The whole law does so as soon as it is
selves
civilized.

LeKoy
St.

Fibre Co.
Ry.,

v. C.,

M.

I dare say that I have worked off my fundamental formula on you that the chief end of man is to frame general propositions and that no general proposition is worth a damn.

P.

232

U.S.

340,

Letter to Sir Frederick Pollock


[1920]

354
I

to 1 *]
Upon
this point a

recognize without hesitation that judges do and must legislate, but they can do so only interstitially; they are confined from molar to molecular motions.

page of history

is

worth a volume of logic. New York Trust Co.

v. Eisner,
[i 921 ]
is

256 U.S. 345, 349


It is said that this

Southern Pacific Co.

manifesto

v. Jensen, U.S. 221, 244 205, [1917]

more

The common law is not a brooding omnipresence in the sky but the articulate voice of

than a theory, that it was an incitement. Every idea is an incitement. Gitfow v. New York, 268 U.S.

652

>

sovereign

some sovereign or that can be identified.


is

quasi-

16.

222

Certitude
tainty.

not the test of cerNatural Law [1918]

Three generations of imbeciles are enough. Buck v. Bell, 274 17.S. 200, 207

But

if

we

The most
speech
falsely

stringent protection of free would not protect a man in


fire
. .
.

conventions,

are to yield to fashionable it seems to me that thea-

shouting

in a theater

and

The question in causing a panic. every case is whether the words used are used in such circumstances and are of such a nature as to create a clear and
present danger that they will bring about the substantive evils that Congress has a right to prevent.

ters are as much devoted to public use as anything well can be. have not that respect for art that is one of the

We

glories of France. But to many the 1 and it superfluous is the necessary, seems to me that Government does not

go beyond

its

sphere in attempting to

make

life livable for

them.

Tyson

&

Schenck

v.

United

States,

249

v. Banton, 273 U.S. 418, 447 [1927]

Bro.

U.S. 47 [1919]

When men
has upset

have realized that time

The power to tax is not the power to 2 destroy while this Court sits.
Panhandle Oil Co.
For
v.

fighting faiths, they to believe even more than they believe the very foundations of their own conduct that the ultimate good desired is better reached by free trade in ideas that the best test of truth is the power of the thought to get itself accepted in the competition of the market, and that truth is the only

many

Knox, 277

may come

U.S. 223 [1928]

some
part.

my part I think it a less evil that criminals should escape than that
district attorneys to

the government should play an ignoble ... If the existing code does not

permit

in such dirty business, it does 'See Voltaire,


3

have a hand not permit

ground upon which their wishes

p. 41 6b. p. 4855.

safely

See

John Marshall,

788

HOLMES
the judge to allow such iniquities to
succeed.

MILLER

What
Look

are

you weaving? Labor and

sor-

row?
v.

Olmstead

United States,
438, 470(192

to your
faster

looms again;

faster

and

US.
If there is

any principle of the Con-

stitution
for

that

more imperatively

calls

attachment than any other it is the not free principle of free thought for those who with us agree thought but freedom for the thought that we
hate.
v. Schwimmer, 279 US. 644, 653 [1928] The riders in a race do not stop short when they reach the goal. There is a

Fly the great shuttles prepared by the Master. Life's in the loom! Room for it, room!

Song of Hope,

st. i

United States

JOAQUIN* [CINCINNATUS HINER or HEINE] MILLER


c.

1841-1913
lives for self

That man who

alone

Lives for the meanest mortal

finishing canter before coming to a standstill. There is time to hear the kind voice of friends and to say to one's
little

Walker

in Nicaragua.

known. Chant
st.

I, i

done." But just as one says that, the answer comes: "The race is over, but the work never is done while the power to work remains." The
self:
is

"The work

do not question school nor creed

Of Christian, Protestant, or Priest; I only know that creeds to me Are but new names for mystery,
That good
is

canter that brings you to a standstill need not be only coming to rest. It cannot be, while you still live. For to live is to function. That is all there is in living.

good from east to

east,

And more I do not know nor need To know, to love my neighbor well.
The Tale
In
I

of the Tall Alcalde

Radio address on

his ninetieth

birthday [March 8, 1931]


Life seems to
ture

me

like a Japanese pic-

men whom men condemn as ill much of goodness still, 2 In men whom men pronounce divine I find so much of sin and blot,
find so

which our imagination does not allow to end with the margin. We aim at the infinite and when our arrow falls
to earth
it is

do not dare to draw a line Between the two, where God has not.8 Byron
I

in flames.
ciation [February 29, 1932]

The

bravest

battle

that

ever

was

Message to the Federal Bar Asso-

fought;
^In a paper, How I Came to Be a Writer of Books [Lippincotfs Magazinef 1886], quoted in STUART P. SHERMAN'S introduction to The
Poetical

WILLIAM HENRY HUDSON


You cannot
1841-1922 like an eagle with the fly
eft.

Works of Joaquin Miller [1923], Miller explains that his first -writing was a public letter in defense of Joaquin Murietta, the outlaw.
Sacramento newspaper banteringly identified

wings of a wren.

him with the outlaw and the name Joaquin dung to him. Miller accepted it and used it in
the
a
s

Afoot in England [1909],

title

of his

first

book and

thereafter.

MARY ARTEMISIA LATHBURY


1841-1913
Children of yesterday, heirs of tomorrow,

See Shakespeare, Henry V, IV, i, 4, p. 244b. There is so much good in the worst of us, And so much bad in the best ot us,

That

it

hardly behooves any of us

To

talk about the rest of us.


First

printed in the Marion (Kansas) Record, owned by Governor Edward Wallis Hoch [1849-1925]; assumed to have been written by him

789

MILLER
Shall
I tell

SHX
Not
for the sins

On
It

the
it

maps

you where and when? of the world you will

find

But the things

committed, I have not done.

not;

Things Not Done

was fought by the mothers of men.

The

Bravest Battle,

st. i

man's truest

monument must be
of a

man.

The
I

soul that feeds on books alone count that soul exceeding small

The Song

Man

[Phillips
st.

Brooks],

That

alone by book and creed soul that has not learned to read.
lives

The Larger

College,

st.

10

CLEMENT WILLIAM SCOTT


1841-1904 Oh, promise me that some day you and I
Will take our love together to some
sky

The biggest dog has been a pup. William Brown of Oregon,

st.

Behind him lay the gray Azores, Behind the Gates of Hercules; Before him not the ghost of shores,
Before

him

only shoreless seas.

Where we
i

can be alone and faith

re-

Columbus,

st.

new,

He
Its

And

find the hollows


ers

where those

flowi

gained a world; he gave that world l grandest lesson: "On! sail on!"
16. st. 5

grew.

Oh, Promise

Me

[1888]

The Lightning reached a fiery rod, And on Death's fearful forehead wrote The autograph of God. With Love to You and Yours,
pt. I,

EDWARD ROWLAND
SILL
1841-1887

canto 3

At the punch bowl's brink


Let the

PIERRE AUGUSTE

What they say


"First the

thirsty think in Japan:

RENOIR
1841-1919

man takes a drink, Then the drink takes a drink, Then the drink takes the man!"

I have a predilection for painting that lends joyousness to a wall.

An Adage from

the Orient

No

From AMBROISE VOLLARD,


Renoir [1919]
a racehorse.

pity,

Lord, could change the heart

From red with wrong to white as wool; The rod must heal the sin: but Lord,
Be merciful
by our
to

In a few generations you can breed The recipe for making a


like

me, a

fool!

The
'Tis

Fool's Prayer

man

Delacroix

is

less

well

known.

From JEAN RENOIR, Renoir

My

Father [1958]

We
The

follies that so long hold the earth from heaven away.

ft.

MINOT JUDSON
SAVAGE
1841-1918 Thfere comes an hour of sadness

ill-timed

truth

we might have
it

Who
1

kept

knows how sharp

pierced and

stung?
the music for sung in Chicago at the second performance of his opera Robin Hood, by the famous contralto Jessie Bartlett

With
1

the setting of the sun,


it

Reginald

De Koven wrote
which was
first

Scott's ballad,

said,

was Martin Alonso Pinzon who adelante, I can't hold with turning back without sighting land." See Columbus, p. i7ib.
Actually,

"Adelante,

Davis [June 10, 1890]. 2 See Herbert, p. jasb, and Swift, p.

79

SELL

BIERCE

The word we had not

Who

sense to say

AMBROSE BIERCEi
i842-c. 1914

knows how grandly it had rung? The Fool's Prayer

Mark how my fame


to zone:

rings out

from zone

Men

Earth bears no balsam for mistakes; crown the knave, and scourge the
tool

thousand

critics

shouting: "He's un-

known!"

That did

his will.

Ib.

SIR

HENRY MORTON
STANLEY

Cynic, perforce, kind In the false volume of his single mind, He damned his fellows for his own unworth,

Couplet from study of man-

And,

1841-1904 Doctor Livingstone, I presume? On meeting David Livingstone in Ujiji, Central Africa [November 10, 1871]

He
And

bad himself, thought nothing good on earth. yearned to squander what he lived
to save

did not, for he could not, cheat An Epitaph the grave.

Peyton Farquhar was dead; his body, with a broken neck, swung gently from side to side beneath the timbers of the

IRONQUILL [EUGENE FITCH WARE]


Human
Have
1841-1911 and human creeds hopes
their root in

Owl Creek

In the Midst of Life 2 [1891], An Occurrence at OwZ Creek


Bridge

bridge.

human needs. The Rhymes of Ironquill, preface

To men

man
he

is

but a mind.

Who

cares

What

face

carries or

what form he

O Dewey was the morning


Upon the first of May, And Dewey was the Admiral

wears?

But woman's body


Stay thou,

is

the

woman.

Down

my

sweetheart, and do never

in

Manila Bay;
eyes,

And Dewey were the Regent's "Them" orbs of royal blue! And Dewey feel discouraged? I Dew not think we Dew.
Capital

gThe
Devil's Dictionary* [1906]

Achievement, n. the death deavor and the birth of disgust.

of

en16.

In the Topeka (Kansas) Daily

Advice, n. the smallest current coin.


16.

[May

3,

1898]
Bore, wish him to
n. a

Work brings its own relief; He who most idle is


Has most of
grief.

person who
listen.

talks

when you
16.

Today

No
1

Cynic, n. a blackguard whose faulty vision sees things as they are, not as

evil

deed

live

oN.

they ought to be.

16.

The Palindrome
The law
locks

Who
But

steals the

goose from

up both man and woman off the common,

some
1

Edible, adj. good to eat, and wholeto digest, as a worm to a toad, a

lets

Who

the greater felon loose steals the common from the goose. ANONYMOUS. From EDWARD POTTS

zation

In 1913 Bierce wearied of American civiliand disappeared into Mexico, to seek "the good, kind darkness." a First published as Tales of Soldiers and
Civilians, retitled in 1892. 8 First published as The Cynic's retitled in 1911.

CHEYNEY,

Social

and Industrial

History of England [1901], introduction

Word Book,

79 1

BEERCE
toad to a snake, a snake to a pig, a pig
to a

JAMES

WILLIAM JAMES
1842-1910
have often thought that the best way to define a man's character would be to seek out the particular mental or moral attitude in which, when it came upon him, he felt himself most deeply and intensely active and alive. At such moments there is a voice inside which speaks and says: "This is the real me!"
I

man, and a man

to a

worm. 1

The

Devil's Dictionary

Habit, n. a shackle for the free.


Ib.

which

Labor, n. one of the processes by A acquires property for B.


16.

into as a pig
sage.

Lawsuit, n. a machine which you go and come out as a sauIb.

The
vol.

Letters of
I,

p.

William James, 199, to Mrs. James


eternal
task.

[1878]

Marriage, n. a community consisting of a master, a mistress, and two slaves, Ib. making in all, two.
Prejudice, n. a vagrant opinion without visible means of support. Ib.
Saint, n. a dead sinner revised edited.

Nothing so fatiguing as the hanging on of an uncompleted


16. p. 249, to Carl

Stumpf "
i,

\January

The

difference

between the
in
art

first-

and

and
Ib.
if'

things absolutely seems to escape verbal definition it is


a

second-best

Woman
one could
falling into

would be more charming

fall into her arms without her hands. Epigrams

matter of a hair, a shade, an inward quiver of some kind yet what miles away in the point of preciousness! 16. II, p. 87, to Henry Rutgers
Marshall [February
7, 1899]

You

are

woman who

not permitted to kill a has wronged you, but noth-

ing forbids you to reflect that she is growing older every minute. You are Ib. avenged 1440 times a day.
Self-denial
sity to forego.
is

live, physically, intellectually or morally, in a very restricted circle of their potential being.

Most people

whether

indulgence of a propenIb.

Thev make use of a very small portion of their possible consciousness, and of their soul's resources in general, much like a man who, out of his whole bodily
organism, should get into a habit of using and moving only his little finger. Great emergencies and crises show us how much greater our vital resources
are than

CHARLES EDWARD CARRYL


18421920

we had

Was the Walloping Window Blind No gale that blew dismayed her crew
Or troubled the captain's mind. The man at the wheel was taught
feel

A capital ship for an ocean trip

16. p. 253, to

supposed. W. Lutoslawski

[May

6, 1906]

to

Contempt

And

it

for the wildest blow. often appeared, when

the

flabbiness born of the exworship of the bitch-goddess SUCCESS. That with the squalid cash interpretation put on the word success is our national disease.
clusive
16. Letter to

The moral

weather had cleared, That he'd been in his bunk below. Davy and the Goblin: Nautical Ballad, st.
1 See

H. G. Wells
tember

[Sep11, 1906]

A
i
1

Habit

is

... the enormous


its

of society,

most precious

flywheel conserva-

Wallace Stevens, p.

955!).

See Emily Dickinson, p. 737!).

792

JAMES
alone is what keeps us within the bounds of ordinance.
tive agent. It
all

is

The
There
is

Principles of Psychology [1890], ch. 4

rough description of its stream it is always interested more in one part of its object [thought] than in another, and welcomes and
this first

that

...

no more miserable human

rejects,

or

chooses,

all

the while

it

being than one in whom nothing is habitual but indecision. Ib.

thinks.

The

Keep the
by a
little
is,

That

faculty of effort alive in you gratuitous exercise every daybe systematically ascetic or
little

Principles of Psychology, ch. 4

An
all

act has
it

ever unless

no ethical quality whatbe chosen out of several


16.

unnecessary points, do every day or two something for no other reason than that you would rather not do it, so that when the hour of dire

heroic in

equally possible.

In

its

a man's Self

widest possible sense, however, is the sum total of all that

he can

call his,

need draws nigh, it may find you not unnerved and untrained to stand the
test.

not only his body and

his psychic powers, but his clothes and his house, his wife and children, his ancestors and friends, his reputation and works, his lands and horses, and yacht and bank account. All these things give him the same emotions. If they wax

Ib.

be endured hereafter, of which theology tells, is no worse than


hell to

The

the hell

we make

for ourselves in this

world

by habitually fashioning characters in the wrong way.

our
16.

and prosper, he feels triumphant; if they dwindle and die away, he feels cast
down.
So our
16. 10
self-feeling in this world depends entirely on what we back our16. selves to be and do.

We are spinning our own fates, good


or evil,

and never to be undone. Every


, .

smallest stroke of virtue or of vice leaves its never so little scar . Nothing we
ever

do

wiped

in strict scientific literalness, out. 16.


is,
. .

Consciousness
to itself

does not appear


in
bits.

chopped up

...

"river" or a "stream" are the metaphors by which it is most naturally described.

Creatures extremely low in the intelmay have conception. All that is required is that they should recognize the same experience again. would be a conceptual thinker if polyp of "Hello! a feeling thingumbob
lectual scale

In talking of it hereafter, let us call it the stream of thought, of consciousness, or of subjective life. 16.

again!" ever flitted through

its

mind.
16. 12

take, in fact, a general view of the wonderful stream of our consciousness, what strikes us first is this different pace of its parts. Like a bird's life, it seems to be made of an alternation of
flights

As we

Let anyone try, I will not say to but to notice or attend to, the present moment of time. One of the
arrest,

Where

occurs. experiences baffling this present? It has melted in our grasp, fled ere we could touch it,
is it,

most

and perchings.

16.

gone in the instant of becoming.


16. 15

As the brain changes are continuous, so do all these consciousnesses melt into
each other like dissolving views. Properly they are but one protracted consciousness,

Genius

means

little

more than

the faculty of perceiving in an unhabit16. 19 ual way.

one unbroken stream.


16.

The
The

impulse to take
art of

life strivingly is

indestructible in the race.

16. 21
is

The
to

last peculiarity of consciousness


is

being wise

the art of
16.

which attention

to

be drawn in

knowing what to overlook.

22

793

JAMES

The more rational statement is that we feel sorry because we cry, angry because we strike, afraid because we tremble, and not that we cry, strike, or tremble, because we are sorry, angry, or fearful, as the case may be. Without
the bodily states following on the perception, the latter would be purely cognitive in form, pale, colorless, destitute

his

subjective

propensities

his

pre-

eminence over them simply and solely in the number and in the fantastic and
unnecessary
character
of
his

wants,
intellec-

physical, moral, aesthetic, tual. Had his whole life


for

and

not been

superfluous, he would quest never have established himself as inex-

the

pugnably
essary.

as

he has done in the necto Believe. Reflex

of emotional warmth.

The

Principles of Psychology, ch. 25

The Will
All

Action and Theism


the higher, more penetrating are revolutionary. They present themselves far less in the guise of effects

A
tion

is

purely disembodied a nonentity.


is

human emo16.

ideals

A
it

thing

important

if

anyone think

Ib. 28, note important. In the deepest heart of all of us there is a comer in which the ultimate mystery of things works sadly. The Will to Believe [1897]. Is

of past experience than in that of probable causes of future experience.


16.

The Moral Philosopher and


the Moral Life

There
seek

is

but one unconditional comis

Life

Worth

Living?

mandment, which

that

we

should

Need and struggle are what excite and inspire us; our hour of triumph is what brings the void. Not the Jews of
the captivity, but those of the days of Solomon's glory are those from whom the pessimistic utterances in our Bible

incessantly, with fear and trembling, so to vote and to act as to bring about the very largest total universe of

good which we can

see.

16.

come.
It is

16.

An unlearned carpenter of my acquaintance once said in my hearing: "There is very little difference between
one

only by risking our persons from one hour to another that we live at all. And often enough our faith beforehand in an uncertified result is the only thing that makes the result come true.
16.

man and
is,

another; but

what

little

very important." This distinction seems to me to go to the root of the matter.


there
is

16.

The Importance

of

Individuals

This
since

life is

worth

living,

we can
it,

say,

it is

what we make

from the
16.

friends

Wherever you are it is your own who make your world.

moral point of view. 1 If this life be not a

real

fight,

in

From RALPH BARTON PERRY, The Thought and Character of


William James [193^,
Tell
voZ.
II

which something is eternally gained for the universe by success, it is no better than a game of private theatricals from which one may withdraw at will. But it
feels like a real fight.

[1899], ch. 91, conclusion

him

to live

to everything good,

yes by yes and no no to everything


Ib.

16.

bad.
Religion
vidual
. .

Be not afraid of life. Believe that life worth living, and your belief will * help create the fact 16. p. 62
15

shall

mean

for us the
indi-

feelings, acts,

and experiences of

men

in their solitude.

Man's
brutes
lies

chief

difference

from

the
and
j

in the exuberant excess of


Wendell Holmes,
Jr., p.

The Varieties of Religions Experience [1902]. Lecture 2


Religion tion upon

1 See Oliver

7873,

...
life.

is

man's

total reacIb.

Santayana, p. 867a.

794

JAMES
can act as if there were a God; we were free; consider Nature as if she were full of special designs; lay plans as if we were to be immortal; and we find then that these words do make a genuine difference in our moral life.
feel as if

We

courage which Robert Shaw showed when he marched with you, men of the Seventh Regiment. It is that more lonely courage which he showed when

The

he dropped his warm commission in the glorious Second to head your dubious
Negroes of the Fifty-fourth. of courage (civic courage, as we call it in times of peace) is the kind of valor to which the monuments of nations should most of all be
fortunes,

Varieties of Religious Experience. Lecture 3

That lonely kind

There is no worse lie than a truth misunderstood by those who hear it. Ib. Lectures 14 and 15

reared. 1

The philosophy which


tant in each of us
is

is so impornot a technical

Robert

Memories and Studies [1911]. Gould S/imv: Oration


the
31,

matter; sense of

it

is

our more or
life

less

dumb

honestly and deeply means. It is only partly got from books; it is our individual way of just seeing and feeling the total push and pressure of the cosmos. Pragmatism [1907]. Lecture i

what

Upon the Unveiling of Shaw Monument [May

The

deadliest

enemies of nations are


foes;

not their foreign

within their borders.

they always dwell And from these


is

internal enemies civilization

always in

myself believe that the evidence for God lies primarily in inner personal ex16. Lecture 3 periences.
I

need of being saved. The nation blessed above all nations is she in whom the
civic genius of

the people does the sav-

Our minds thus grow we keep unaltered


as

in spots;

and

like grease spots, the spots spread. But we let them spread as little as possible:

ing day by day, by acts without external picturesqueness; by speaking, writing, voting reasonably; by smiting corruption swiftly;
parties;

as

much

of our old

knowledge, many of our old prejudices and beliefs, as we can. patch

We

by good temper between by the people knowing true men when they see them, and prefer-

and tinker more than we renew. The


novelty soaks in; it stains the ancient mass; but it is also tinged by what absorbs it. 16. Lecture 5

ring them as leaders to rabid partisans Ib. or empty quacks.

Democracy
civic genius

is still

upon

its trial.
is

The
only
16.

of our people

its

Truth happens to an idea. It becomes true, is made true by events. Its verity is in fact an event, a process: the process namelv of its verifying itself, its
veri-fication.
Its validity is

bulwark.

So long
tion,

as antimilitarists

propose no
func-

substitute for war's

disciplinary

of

its

valid-ation.

the process Ib. Lecture 6

Pluralism lets things really exist in the each-form or distributively. Monism thinks that the all-form or collectiveunit form is the only form that is
rational.

moral equivalent of war, analogous, as one might say, to the mechanical equivalent of heat, so long thev fail to realize the full inwardness
16.

no

of the situation.

The Moral Equivalent

of

War

Pluralistic Universe [1909].

Lecture 8

What we
orator's

really

need the

poet's

and

Our colleges ought to have lit up in us a lasting relish for the better kind of man, a loss of appetite for mediocrities. Ib. The Social Value oj
the College-Bred
iSee Robert Lowell,
p.

help to keep alive in us is not ... the common and gregarious

795

JAMES
Real culture lives by sympathies and admirations, not by dislikes and disdains; under all misleading wrappings it

LANIER

SIDNEY LANIER
1842-1881

pounces unerringly upon the


core.

human
The
So-

And

the sun

is

a-wait at the ponderous

gate of the

West.
of Glynn 22
.

The Marshes

Memories and
cial

Studies.

Value of the College-Bred


universe

The "through-and-through"
seems to suffocate

Ye Ye

marshes,

me

with

its infallible

how candid and simple and nothing-withholding and free


Ib. I

It all-pervasiveness. ... impeccable seems too buttoned-up and whitechokered and clean-shaven a thing to unspeak for the vast slow-breathing conscious Kosmos with its dread abysses

publish yourselves to the sky and offer yourselves to the sea!

65

As the marsh hen

secretly builds

on the

and

its

unknown

tides.

Essays in Radical Empiricism


[1912], ch. 12, Absolutism

watery sod, Behold I will build

me

a nest on the

and

Empiricism
with
of the mathematician the poet, fervor with measure, passion with correctness, this surely is the ideal. Collected Essays and Reviews
[i

greatness of God: I will fly in the greatness of

God

as the

The union

marsh hen flies In the freedom that fills all the space 'twixt the marsh and the skies: By so many roots as the marsh grass
sends in the sod
I

will heartily lay

me

a-hold on the

920]

c/i. 1 1

Clifford's ''Lec-

tures

and Essays" [1879]

Oh,

greatness of God: like to the greatness of

God

is

the

I wished, by treating Psychology like a natural science, to help her to become

The
Out

one.
Ib.

greatness within range of the marshes, the liberal marshes of Glynn. 16. Z. 71

Plea for Psychology as a Natural Science [1892]

of the hills of

Habersham,

Down

JOHN ALEXANDER
JOYCE
1842-1915
I shall

the valleys of Hall. Song of the Chattahoochee


[1877],
st. i

Downward
Downward,
*
st.

the voices of
to toil

Duty

call

and be mixed with

With the

love you in December love I gave in May!

the main.

The
8

Question and Answer,

dry

fields

burn, and the mills are to


Ib.
st.

turn.

5
of

PRINCE PETR ALEKSEEVICH

The

incalculable

Up-and-Down

Time.
Into the woods

Clover [1877]

KROPOTKIN
1842-1921
is

Sociability
as

as

much
.

a law of nature
.

mutual

as

much

mutual aid is struggle a law of animal life as mutual


.

my Master went, Clean forspent, forspent. Into the woods my Master came, Forspent with love and shame.

A Ballad of Trees and the Master


[1877],
st.
i

struggle.
1

Mutual Aid [1902]

me in December as you do in JAMES J. WALKER; set to music by ERNEST R. BALL [1905]


Will you love

Twas on

May?

When

a tree they slew Him out of the woods He came.


Ib.

last

st.

796

MALLARME

JAMES

STtPHANE MALLARMfc
The
all

And

flesh is

1842-1898 sad, alas, and

have read

draw right here a picture of the face that drove me mad. Give me that piece of chalk with which
111

the books. 1
Po6sies. Brise

Marine

You

Such as into himself 2 has changed him.


Ib.

at last Eternity

you mark the baseball score, shall see the lovely Madeleine upon the bar-room floor." The Face Upon the Floor [1887] *
chalk in

Le Tombeau d'Edgar Poe


will never abolish

With

hand the vagabond bemight buy

gan

throw of the dice

To

chance. 3

Ib. Title of

poem

sketch a face that well the soul of any man.

object is to take away three-fourths of the pleasure given by a

To name an

Then

poem. This pleasure consists in guessing little by little: to suggest it, that is the
ideal.

as he placed another lock upon the shapely head, With a fearful shriek he leaped and fell Ib. dead! across the picture

Rtponse h une enqu&te sur


revolution don't make a but with words. 4
litt&raire

SARAH DOUDNEY
1843-1926

[1891]

You

poem

with ideas,

From PAUL VALERY,

Degas, Danse, Dessin

Oh, the wasted hours of life That have drifted byl Oh, the good that might have been,
Lost without a sigh! The Lesson of the

Water Mill
[1864]

DAVID LAW PROUDFIT [PELEG ARKWRIGHT]


A
A
1842-1897 man sat on a rock and sought Refreshment from his thumb; dinotherium wandered by

But the waiting time,


Is

my brothers,
all.

the hardest time of

Psalms of Life. The Hardest

Time

of All

His

And scared him some. name was Smith. The kind of rock He sat upon was shale. One feature quite distinguished him

HENRY JAMES*
18431916
The
this

face of nature
is

and

civilization in

He had

tail.

Prehistoric

Smith

our country

to a certain point a

Nature abhors imperfect work And on it lays her ban;

yield
1

very sufficient literary field. But it will its secrets only to a really grasping
Often called

"The Face on

the Barroom

And

creation must despise tailless nian.


all

Floor/*

Ib.

HUGH ANTOINE D'ARCY


1843-1925
"Say, boysl
1

if

whiskey
La chair
Tel
livres.
2

I'll

you give me be glad,

just

another

2 You know how opposed your whole "third manner" of execution is to the literary ideals which animate my crude and Orson-like breast, mine being to say a thing in one sentence as straight and explicit as it can be made, and then to drop it forever; yours being to avoid naming it straight, but by dint of breathing and sighing all round and round it, to arouse in the reader who may have had a similar perception already

est triste, helasl et j'ai lu tous les

qu'en

Lui-Mfime

enfin

l'eteniit

le

the illusion of a solid object, made . . . wholly out of impalpable materials, air, and the prismatic interference of light, ingeniously fo. . .

change.
*

Un

coup de des n'abolira

jaraais le hasard.

*Ce

n'est point avec des idees

que Ton

fait

cused by mirrors upon empty space. But you do WILLIAM JAMES, letter it, that's the queerness! to his brother Henry James [1907]
See Guedalla, p.

des vers, c'est avec des mots.

ionb.

797

JAMES
imagination. ... To write well and worthily of American things one need even more than elsewhere to be a master.

novelist, is that there is no limit to what he may attempt as an executant no limit to his possible experiments,
efforts, discoveries, successes.

Letter to Charles Eliot Norton


[January 16, 1871]

The Art

of Fiction

complex fate, being an American, and one of the responsibilities it


It's a

entails

is fighting against a superstitious valuation of Europe. Letter [1872] quoted in PERCY

The power to guess the unseen from the seen, to trace the implications of the whole piece by the things, to judge pattern, the condition of feeling life in general so completely that you are well
on your way to knowing any particular this cluster of gifts corner of it may almost be said to constitute experience.

LUBBOCK, James [1920],


cal note
It

Letters

of

Henry

vol. I, Biographi-

...

If
it

experience

takes a great deal of history to


little literature.

produce a

pressions

impressions, are
fore,
if

may be

consists of said that im. .

Hawthorne
his

[1879], c ^-

should

experience. certainly
I

Thereto

say

novice,

Whatever question there may be of [Thoreau's] talent, there can be


I

"Write from experience and


should feel that
this

experience only,"

none,
slim

think, of his genius. It was a

and

crooked

one,

eminently personal.
unfinished, inartistic;
provincial

He

but it was was unperfect, he was worse than


Ib.

was rather a tantalizing monition if I were not careful immediately to add, 'Try to be one of the people on whom
nothing
is

lost."

Ib.

he was parochial.
monkeys,

Cats
cats

and
all

monkeys

4 and

We

must grant the

artist his subject,


is

his idea, his

donnee: our criticism

human life is there. The Madonna of the Future


[1879]

applied only to what he makes of it. ... If we pretend to respect the artist at all, we must allow him his freedom of choice, in the face, in particular
cases,

There are few hours in life more agreeable than the hour dedicated to
the ceremony

of

innumerable

presumptions

known

as afternoon tea.

The

Portrait of a
as

Lady \i88i]

that the choice will not fructify. Art derives a considerable part of its "beneficial exercise from flying in the face of

she ultimately perceived, was her having a mind of her


real

The

offense,

presumptions.

Ib.

own

at

all.

Her mind was


to
his

There are few things more exciting

to

to be his
a

me

than a psychological reason.


Ib.

attached

own

like

small
Ib.

garden plot to a deer park.

You were ground


the conventional!

in the very mill of Ib.

a novel

only reason for the existence of is that it does attempt to repreThe Art of Fiction [i 888] sent life.

The

The practice of "reviewing" ... in general has nothing in common with the art of criticism. Criticism [1893]
critical sense is so far from frethat it is absolutely rare, and the quent possession of the cluster of qualities that minister to it is one of the highest

The

The only obligation to which in advance we may hold a novel, without incurring the accusation of being arbiIb. trary, is that it be interesting.

The advantage, the luxury, as well as the torment and responsibility of the

... In this light one sees the real helper of the artist, a torchbearing outrider, the interpreter, as the brother. Just in proportion
distinctions.

the

critic as

he

is

sentient

and

restless, just in pro-

79 8

JAMES
portion as he reacts and reciprocates and penetrates, is the critic a valuable Criticism instrument.

prime sensibility, which is the of which his subject springs.


Prefaces.

soil

out

The

Portrait

However incumbent

it

may be on
is,

of a

Lady

most of us to do our duty, there

in

spite of a thousand narrow dogmatisms, nothing in the world that anyone is un-

see deep difficulty braved is at for the really addicted artist, to feel almost even as a pang the beau-

To

any time,

der the least obligation to like not even (one braces one's self to risk the declaration) a particular kind of writFlaubert [1893] ing.

tiful incentive,

and to

feel it verily in

such sort as to wish the danger intensified.

can

The time-honored
happy ending.
Theatricals:
I

bread sauce of the

difficulty most worth tackling only be for him, in these conditions, the greatest the case permits of.

The

16.

Second Series [1895]


yes, I

caught him,

may be imagined

held him it with what passion;

and confudiscrimination and selection, the latter, in search of the hard latent value with which it
Life being
all

inclusion
all

sion,

and

art

being

but at the end of a minute I began to feel what it truly was that I held. were alone with the quiet day, and his
little

We

heart, dispossessed,

The Turn

had stopped. of the Screw

is concerned, sniffs round the mass as instinctively and unerringly as a dog suspicious of some buried bone. Ib. The Spoils of Poynton

alone

[1898], ending

The

fatal futility of Fact.

Ib,
as

It

Live all you can; it's a mistake not to. doesn't so much matter what you do

No

themes are so

human

those

long as you have had vour life. If you haven't had that what have you had? What one loses one loses; make no mistake about that. The right time is any time that
in particular, so
.
.

that reflect for us, out of the confusion of life, the close connection of bliss and
bale, of the things that help with the things that hurt, so dangling before us forever that bright hard medal, of so

one

is

still

so lucky as to have.

Live!

The Ambassadors

[1903], bk. V, ch. 2

one face of which is somebody's right and ease and the other somebody's pain and wrong. Ib. What Maisie Knew
strange an alloy,

The

effort reallv to see

and

really to

Really, universally, relations stop nowhere, and the exquisite problem of the artist is eternally but to draw, by a geometry of his own, the circle within

represent is no idle business in face of the constant force that makes for mud-

which they
so.

shall happily

appear to do

dlement. The great thing is indeed that the muddled state too is one of the very sharpest of the realities, that it also has color and form and character, has often
in fact a

Prefaces [1907-1909]. Roderick

broad and rich comicality.


Ib.

Hudson
think, or suggestive truth
is,

There

no more nutritive
. .
.

To

criticize is

than that of the perfect dependence of the "moral" sense of a work of art on the amount of
felt life

propriate, sion, to establish in fine a relation with

to

to appreciate, to aptake intellectual posses-

the criticized thing and to

make

it

one's
Ib.

concerned in producing; it. The question comes back thus, obviously, to the kind and the degree of the artist's

own.

The

historian,

essentially,

wants

more documents than he can

really use;

799

JAMES
the dramatist only wants more than he can really take.
Prefaces.
liberties

BRIDGES

The

effect, if
is

not the prime

office, of

criticism

The Aspern Papers


murmur,

The

ever
it,

"Dramatize

importunate dramatize it!"

Ib.

The

Altar of the
beauty.

Dead
Ib.

absorption and our enjoyment of the things that feed the mind as aware of itself as possible, since that awareness quickens the mental demand, which thus in turn wanders
further

to

make our

In art

economy is always

and further for pasture. This action on the part of the mind praca reaching out for tically amounts to
the reasons of
its interest,

The

terrible fluidity of self-revelation. Ib. The Ambassadors

ascertaining

them can the


This
is

as only by its interest grow

more

various.

the very education


[1914]
inter-

The anomalous
rism, but that
tion.

fact

is

that

the

of our imaginative

life.

The New Novel


life,

theater, so called, can flourish in barba-

any drama worth speaking of can develop but in the air of civilizaLetter to C. E.

It is art that
est,

makes

makes

Wheeler

[April 9, 1911]
I adore I'm glad you like adverbs them; they are the only qualifications I

makes importance, for our consideration and application of these things, and I know of no substitute whatever for the force and beauty of its process, Letter to H. G. WeZb
[July 10, 1915]

really

much

The
tion

full,

the monstrous demonstra-

respect.

Letter to Miss

M. Betham
5,

that

Tennyson was not Tenny[1917], ch. 6

Edwards [January

sonian.

1912]

The Middle Years

We must know, as
in our beautiful art

much as possible, ... what we are

know

and the only way to talking about is to have lived and loved and

summer afterafternoon noon; to me those have always been the two most beautiful words in the English

Summer

cursed and floundered and enjoyed and suffered. I think I don't regret a single I "excess" of my responsive youth

language.

Quoted by EDITH WHARTON in A Backward Glance [1934],


ch.

10
is,

only regret, in
occasions brace.

my

chilled age, certain

and

possibilities I didn't

em-

To

take what there

and use

it,

Letter to

Hugh Walpole
life
.
.
.

[August 21, 1913]


I still,

without waiting forever in vain for the to dig deep into the acpreconceived tual and get something out of that this doubtless is the right way to
live.

in presence of
as

have
.
.

Notebooks

[1948]

reactions
It's, I

many

as
I

possible.

suppose, because the artist monster,


finality,

am
an

that queer obstinate


sensibility.

FREDERIC WILLIAM HENRY MYERS


1843-1901
Coldly sublime, intolerably
just.

an
the

inexhaustible
reactions

Hence

appearances, memories, many things, go on playing upon it with consequences that I note

Saint Paul

and "enjoy" (grim word!) noting. It all takes doing and I do. I believe I it is still an act of shall do yet again
life.

ROBERT BRIDGES
1844^1930

When

first

we met we

Letter to

Henry Adams

That Love would prove


ter.

did not guess so hard a mas-

[March 21, 1914]

800

BRIDGES

FRANCE
Till Beauty, are one.

Of more than common friendliness When first we met we did not guess.
Shorter Poems, bk. I [1873], no. 16, Z. i

Truth, and Love in thee

Later

Poems

Hymn
Wisdom
why

[19*3]* no. 19 (A of Nature), VII, st. i


if

For beauty being the best of

all

we

know
Sums up the unsearchable and
aims
secret

will repudiate thee, think to inquire things are as they are or they came: thy task

thou

whence

Of

nature.

is first

to learn

what

is,

and

in pursuant

The Growth
Whither,
sails

of Love [1876]. Sonnet 8

knowledge
pure intellect will find pure pleasure and the only ground for a philosophy comformable to truth.

splendid ship, thy white crowding, Leaning across the bosom of the urgent

The Testament of Beauty [1929] Man,


in

West, That fearest nor


clouding,

the

unsearchable

darkness,
Ib.

sea rising,

nor sky

knoweth one thing That as he is, so was he made.

Whither away,

and what thy quest? Shorter Poems, bk. II [1879], no. 2 (A Pdsser-By), st. i
fair rover,

ROBERT JONES BURDETTE


1844-1914
There are two days in the week about which and upon which I never worry.

have loved flowers that

Within whose magic

fade, tents

Rich hues have marriage made

Two
from
st. i

With sweet unmemoried


Perfect
little

scents.

carefree days, kept sacredly free fear and apprehension. One of


.

Ib. no. 13,

body, without fault or


strength
fair!

And the these days is Yesterday. . other day I do not worry about is To.

morrow.
It isn't

stain

With

thee, promise of
full

on

The Golden Day

and man-

hood

and

drives

Ib. Ill [1880-1884], no. 4

(On

a "Dead Child]

st. i

the experience of today that It is the remorse for something that happened yesterday, and the dread of what tomorrow may

men mad.

disclose.

Ib.

When

So sweet love seemed that April


first

mom,

we

kissed beside the thorn,

We

So strangely sweet, it was not strange thought that love could never
change.
16.

FRANCOIS THIBAULT]
1844-1924
I

ANATOLE FRANCE [JACQUES ANATOLE


more

[1893], no. 5,

st. i

My delight and thy delight


Walking,
like

do not know any reading more


fascinating,

easy,

two angels white,


-

more
9

delightful than

In the gardens of the night. New Poems [1899] no

a catalogue.

The Crime

Gird

on

thy

sword,

man,

thy

of Sylvestre Bonnard* [1881]. The Log, December 24, 1849

strength endue, In fair desire thine earth-born joy re-

All the historical books


tain

which con-

new.
Live thou thy sun
life

no

lies

are extremely tedious.

beneath the making


1

Translated by LAFCADIO HEARN.

801

FRANCE
Lovers

HOPKINS

down

who love truly do not write their happiness. The Crime of Sylvestre Bonnard. November 30, 1859
nothing at
to imagine Ib. pt. II, ch. 2
all;

A tale without love is like beef without mustard: an insipid dish. La Revolte des Anges [1914], ch. 8

To know is
is

RICHARD WATSON GILDER


What
1844-1909 Tis a pearly shell That murmurs of the far-off murmuris

everything.

He

flattered himself

without any prejudices;


sion itself
is

on being a man and this pretenIb.

a sonnet?

a very great prejudice.

Those who have given themselves the most concern about the happiness of peoples have made their neighbors very
miserable.
Ib.

ing sea; precious jewel carved most curiously; It is a little picture painted well.

The Sonnet

GERARD MANLEY
HOPKINSi
1844-1889

that he can only find relaxation from one kind of labor by


is

Man

so

made

taking up another.

Ib.

People
terrible;

who have no
is

weaknesses are
of taking adIb.
is

there

no way

And I have asked to be Where no storms come, Where the green swell is in
dumb,

the havens

vantage of them.

And

The whole
art of

art of teaching

only the

out of the swing of the sea. 2 Poems, no. 20, Heaven-

awakening the natural curiosity of young minds for the purpose of satisit

Haven,
Elected Silence, sing to And beat upon my whorld ear,

St.

me

fying

afterwards.
critic is

Ib.

The good

one who

Pipe
tells

me

of his

The music

to pastures still and be that I care to hear.

mind's adventures

among

masterpieces.

No.

La Vie

Litteraire [1888], preface

24, The Habit of Perfection, st. i

reproach people for talking about themselves; but it is the subject they treat best.
16. Journal des

We

Thou
God!

mastering

me

giver of breath and bread; World's strand, sway of the sea;

Goncourt

Thou

Chance

is

God when He
The

perhaps the pseudonym of did not want to sign. 1

And

living and dead; hast bound bones and veins in me, fastened me flesh, after it almost unmade, what with

Lord of

Lejardin d'Epicure [1894]


law, in its majestic equality, forbids the rich as well as the poor to sleep under bridges, to -beg in the streets, and
to steal bread.

dread,

Thy

doing: and dost thou touch


I

me
find

afresh?

Over again
thee.

feel

thy finger and

Le Lys Rouge[i 894]


*He

No. 28, The Wreck

We
speak;

have medicines to make women we have none to make them

of the Deutschland, st i

keep

silence.

The Man Who Married a Dumb 2 Wife [i9i2], act II, sc. iv

but so has left us only ninety poems that they will color and convert the development of English poetry for many decessential

1
3

See Einstein, p. 950!}. Translated by CURTIS HIDDEN PAGE.

in HERBERT READ [1893ades to come. ] The Criterionf April, 1931 2 First Robert published in 1918, edited by ediBridges. Poem numbers are from the third

tion [1948], edited

by W. H. Gardner.

802

HOPKINS

The world
of

is

charged with the grandeur


I.

When

God. No. 31, God's Grandeur,

Look

at the stars! look, look


all

up at the
the

skies!

thou at the random grim forge, powerful amidst peers, Didst fettle for the great gray drayhorse his bright and battering sandal! No. 53, Felix Randal, st. 4
Margaret, are you grieving

look at
air!

the

fire-folk sitting in

No.
1

32,

The

Starlight Night, L i

Over Goldengrove unleaving? No. 55, Spring and

Fall,

caught this morning minion, king-

morning's

Nor mouth had, no nor mind,


pressed What heart heard of, ghost guessed: It is the blight man was born for,
It is

ex-

dom
Of
High

dawn-drawn Falcon,
steady
air,

of daylight's dauphin, dapplein his riding the rolling level underneath him

there, of a wimpling

and striding how he rung upon the


wing

Margaret you mourn


catch

for.

Ib.

L 12

rein

As
i

In his ecstasy!

kingfishers draw flame.

fire,

dragonflies
Z.

No. 57,

No.

36,
of,

The Windhover, L
the

How

The

achieve
thing!

mastery of the 16. Z. 8


act, oh, air,

there

there any any, is is none such, nowhere known some, bow or brooch or braid or
to keep

Brute beauty and valor and here pride, plume, Buckle!

brace, lace, latch or catch or key

to keep

16.

Z.

9
i

Glory be to
All

God
No.

for dappled things.

37, Pied Beauty, L


original,

Back beauty, keep it, beauty, beauty, from vanishing away? beauty No. 59, The Leaden Echo and the Golden Echo, I. i
. .
.

things
strange;

counter,

spare,

Whatever is fickle, knows how?)

freckled

(who
sour;

I say that we are wound With mercy round and round

As

if

with

air.

With

No.
sweet,
is

swift,

slow;

60,

The
to

He

adazzle, dim; fathers-forth whose beauty

Compared
past

Blessed Virgin the Air

We

Breathe, L 34

change: Praise him.

World-mothering
16. I

air, air

wild,

Wound with
Fold home,

Summer ends now; now,

barbarous in beauty, the stocks arise Around; up above, what wind-walks! what lovely behavior

thee, in thee isled, fast fold thy child.

16.

Z.

124

Not,

Of

silk-sack

clouds!

Has

wilder,

willful-wavier

Not
In

111 not, carrion comfort, Despair, not feast on thee; slack they may be untwist

Meal-drift molded across skies?

ever

and melted

these last strands of

man
I

me

or,

most weary, cry


I

can no

No.
Felix

38, Hurrahing in Harvest, st. i

more.

can;

Can

Randal the
then?

farrier,
all

is

he dead

something, hope, wish day come, not choose not to be. No. 64, Carrion Comfort, L i

Who

his mold of man, big-boned and hardy-handsome,

My duty have watched


No.

ended,

That

night, that year

Of now done
wrestling

darkness

wretch lay

Pining, pining.
53, Felix Randal,
st.
i

with

(my

God!)
16.
Z.

my
13

God.

803

HOPKINS

NIETZSCHE
There's a joy without canker or cark, There's a pleasure eternally new, Tis to gloat on the glaze and the mark

No

worst, there is none. Pitched past pitch of grief,


will,

More pangs
the mind, of fall

schooled at forepangs,

wilder wring.

No. 65,

I.

Of China
The

that's ancient

and

blue.
st. i

mind has mountains;


no-man-fathomed.

cliffs

Ballade of Blue China,

surge and thunder of the Odyssey.

Frightful, sheer,

Sonnet,

The

Ib. I 9
1

Odyssey

wake and

feel

the

fell

of dark, not day.

JAMES HILARY

What

hours,

what black hours we

MULLIGAN
1844-1916
is

have spent This night.


I

No. 69, I
Ib.
is,
I.

The moonlight
tucky,

the softest, in Ken-

am

gall, I

am heartburn.
once what Christ
I

am all

Summer

at

since

he

was what

am, and

This Jack, joke, poor potsherd, patch,

matchwood, immortal diamond, Is immortal diamond. No. 72, That Nature Is a Heraclitean Fire and of the Comfort
of the Resurrection, last lines

days come oftest, in Kentucky, Friendship is the strongest, Love's fires glow the longest, Yet a wrong is always wrongest, In Kentucky.

In Kentucky,

st. i

Songbirds are sweetest, in Kentucky, Thoroughbreds the fleetest, in Kentucky;

No doubt my poetry errs on the side of oddness. I hope in time to have a


more balanced and Miltonic style. But as air, melody, is what strikes me most of all in music, and design in painting, so design, pattern, or what I am in the habit of calling inscape is what I above all aim at in poetry. Now it is the virtue of design, pattern, or inscape to be distinctive, and it is the vice of distinctiveness to

The mountains tower


Thunder

proudest,

peals the loudest,

The landscape is the grandest, And politics the damnedest,


In Kentucky.
Ib.
st.

FRIEDRICH WILHELM NIETZSCHE


1844-1900

become

queer.

This vice

Our

destiny exercises

its

influence

cannot have escaped.


Letter to Robert Bridges [February 15, 1879]

The poetical language of an age should be the current language heightened, to any degree heightened and unlike itself, but not ... an obsolete
one.
16.

over us even when, as yet, we have not learned its nature: it is our future that lays down the law of our today. Human, All Too Human l
[1878], 7

One must have

able to keep the promises

good memory to be one makes.


tt-59

[August 14, 1879]

One

ANDREW LANG
1844-1912

be

will rarely err if extreme actions ascribed to vanity, ordinary actions

to habit,

and mean actions to


tradition

fear.

16.74 Every
grows
ever

You can

cover a great deal of country in books. To the Gentle Reader, st 5


are

more

Why, why

rhymes so

rare to love?

venerable the more remote is its origin, the more confused that origin is. The reverence due to it increases from
1

Ballade of Difficult

Rhymes

Translated by ALEXANDER HARVEY.

804

NIETZSCHE
generation to generation. The tradition becomes holy and inspires awe. Human, All Too Human, 96
I teach you the Superman. Man is something that is to be surpassed. Thus Spake Zarathustra * [1883-

finally

Blessed are the forgetful: for they get the better even of their blunders. Beyond Good and Evil VII, 217
Is

not

life

hundred times too short


16,

for us to bore ourselves?

227

1891], prologue, ch. 3

One

does not know cannot the best that is in one.

know
249

Man is a rope stretched between the a rope animal and the Superman 16. 4 over an abyss.
their existence,

16. VIII,

melancholia of everything com16. IX, 277 pleted!

The

the sense of the Superman, the lightning out of the dart cloud Ib. j man.
I

want

to teach

men
is

The

masters have been

which

done away

with; the morality of the

common man

has triumphed.

This

is

the hardest of

all:

to close the

Genealogy of Morals [1887], essay i, aphorism 9

open hand out of love, and keep modest


as a giver. 16. pt. II, ch.
all in

At the core of

all

23

races the beast of prey

these aristocratic is not to be mis-

Distrust

whom

the impulse to
16.

taken, the magnificent 6Zond beast, avidly

punish

is

powerful.

29

rampant for spoil and


effects

victory. 16. 11

ought to learn from the Kne one 16. IV, 68 thing: ruminating.
ye would go up high, then use your own legs! Do not get yourselves carried aloft; do not seat yourselves on other 16. 73 people's backs and heads!
If
It is certainly

We

The broad
tained

by punishment

which can be obin man and beast

are the increase of fear, the sharpening of the sense of cunning, the mastery of the desires; so it is that punishment

tames man, but does not make him


"better."
16. 2, 15

not the least charm of


refutable.

a theory that

it is

2 Beyond Good and Ev#

[1885-1886],

I,

18

The sick are the greatest danger for the healthy; it is not from the strongest that harm comes to the strong, but 16. 3, 14 from the weakest.

No
man.

one

is

such a

liar as

the indignant
16. II,

strong and well-constituted

man

26

digests his experiences (deeds and misdeeds all included) just as he digests his

It is

tion
great

not the strength but the duraof great sentiments that makes
16.

meats, even when he has morsels to swallow.

some tough
16. 16

men.

IV, 72
is

Two

great

European

narcotics, alco-

In revenge and in love more barbarous than man.

woman
16.
is

139

hol and Christianity. The Twilight of the Idols [1888]. Things the Germans Lack, 2

The thought
consolation: 3

by means

of suicide of

a great

it

one gets
night. 16. 157

What

is it: is

man

only a blunder of
16.

successfully through

many

bad

God, or God onlv a blunder of man?


If a man have a strong faith he can indulge in the luxury of skepticism. 16. 12

Translated by THOMAS COMMON. Translated by HELEN ZIMMERN. *We are in the power of no calamity while SIR THOMAS BROWNE, death is in our own.
1

Religio Medici [1645] (Everyman ed.), p. 50

Liberal institutions straightway cease

805

NIETZSCHE
liberal the moment they are soundly established: once this is at-

O REILLY
calls
itself
I

from being
tained no

"culture"

as

misunder-

standing.

do not even take the Ger-

more grievous and more thorough enemies of freedom exist than


liberal institutions.

man

kind into consideration.

Ecce

Homo
her
Ib.

The Twilight of the Things the Germans


38
It is

Wherever
Idols.

Germany

extends

Lack,

sway, she ruins culture.

As an
Europe

artist, a man has save in Paris.

no home
to

in

my ambition to say in ten sentences what everyone else says in a whole book what everyone else does not say in a whole book. Ib. 51
Love is the state in which man sees things most widely different from what
they are. The force of illusion reaches its zenith here, as likewise the sweetening and transfiguring power. When a man is in love he endures more than at other times; he submits to everything.

j^

Simply by being compelled keep constantly on his guard, a man may grow so weak as to be unable any longer to defend himself. Jfc.

My
some

time has not yet come


are born posthumously.

either;
Ib.

one can draw more out of things, books included, than he already knows!

No

A man

The

Antichrist

has no ears for that to which experience has given him no access.
Ib.

[1888],

aphorism 23

God
did

created

woman. And boredom

The Germans

are like
1

women, you
Ib.

indeed cease from that moment but many other things ceased as well! Woman was God's second mistake.

can scarcely ever fathom their depths


they haven't any.
All prejudices

Ib.

48

the intestines.

may be

traced back to
life is

sedentary

the

Life always gets harder toward the the cold increases, responsisummit
Ib. 57 one Christianity great curse, the one enormous and innermost perversion, the one great instinct of revenge, for which no means are too
bility increases.
I

real sin against the

2 Ib. Holy Ghost. One must separate from anything

that forces one to repeat


again.

No

again and
Ib.

call

the

JOHN BOYLE O'REILLY


1844-1890

venomous, too underhand, too underI call it the ground and too petty one immortal blemish of mankind.
Ib. 62

They who

see the

Flying Dutchman

never, never reach the shore.

The
Doubt
is

Flying Dutchman

My doctrine is: Live that thou that is thy mayest desire to live again for in any case thou wilt live duty Eternal Recurrence, 1 27 again!
Even a thought, even a possibility, can shatter us and transform us.
Ib.

brother-devil to Despair.

Prometheus

The world

is large when weary two loving hearts divide

leagues

But the world

is

small

when

your

enemy

is

loose

on the other

side.

Distance

30

Nothing on earth consumes a man more quickly than the passion of


resentment.
I

The red

And
1

rose whispers of passion the white rose breathes of love;

EcceHomo 1

[1888]

believe only in French culture,

and
I

regard everything else in Europe which 1 Translated by ANTHONY M. LTJDOVICL

Man thinks woman profound why? Because he can never fathom her depths. Woman is not even shallow. The Twilight of the Idols,
Maxims and
2

Missiles, 37 Translated by CLIFTON P. FADIMAN.

806

O REILLY
O, the red rose
is

VERLAINE

And

the white rose

a falcon, is a dove.

A
You may
same
mill,

And three with a new song's measure Can trample an empire down.
$t. i

White Rose,

Ode,

st.

grind their souls in the

self-

For each age is a dream that is dying, Or one that is coming to birth.
16. st. 3

You may bind them,


still,

heart and brow; But the poet will follow the rainbow
his brother will follow the plow.

And
Be

The Rainbow's
silent

WILLIAM ARCHIBALD SPOONERi


5

Treasure,

st.

1844-1950
Kinquering Congs their titles take, Announcing the hymn in college
chapel

and

safe

silence never be-

trays you.

16.

This truth keep in sight on the planet

every

man
You have
worms and you can next town drain.
deliberately tasted two leave Oxford by the

Has

just as

much

the road.

right as yourself to 16.

Dismissing a student (attributed)

The

organized
iced,

charity,

scrimped and

In the

name

of a cautious, statistical

This audience of beery wenches. At a -woman's college


I

Christ. 1

In Bohemia,

st.

5
I

remember your name

perfectly,

but

Well

blest

is

he who has a dear one


face will never

just can't

think of your face.

dead;

greeting

A
A

friend

he has whose

change
dear

communion
of a love

that will not


is

grow

PAUL VERLAINE
1844-1896
I

strange;

The anchor

death. Forevei

st.

ARTHUR WILLIAM
EDGAR O'SHAUGHNESSY
1844-1881

moving dream Of an unknown woman, whom I love and who loves me. Po&mes Saturniens [1866]. Mon Reve Familier

often have this strange and

We are the music-makers,


are the dreamers of dreams, Wandering by lone sea breakers,

And we
And

The long sobbings Of the violins Of autumn

Wound my heart
Wjth monotonous
Languor.
1

sitting

by desolate streams;

16.

Chanson d'Automne

World-losers and world-forsakers, On whom the pale moon gleams: Yet we are the movers and shakers Of the world forever, it seems.

Canon Spooner, for many years warden of for uninCollege, Oxford, was famous tentional transposition of (usually initial) word sounds, giving rise to the term "spoonerism."

New
3

Ode,

st. i

Les sanglots longs

Des violons

One man with


1

a dream, at pleasure,

De Tautomne
Blessent

Shall go forth

and conquer

a crown;

mon

coeur

See Southey, p. sssa, and Hood, p. 5934.

D'une langueur Monotone.

807

VERLAINE There
is

CAKLETON

weeping in

my heart
1

And

each must make, ere

life is

flown

Like the rain falling on the

city.

A
and

Romances
Here are

sans Paroles [1874], III


flowers,

stumblingblock or a steppingstone. Stumblingblock or Steppingstone,


st.

fruits,

leaves

And

branches, here is my heart which beats only


for you.
2

JOHN
When
a

B.

BOGARTi
man, that
is

Ib.

Green
news, because
if

1845-1921

What have you done, you


Weeping without cease,
Tell me, yes you,

there

dog

bites a

not

it

happens so often. But

what have you done


3
st.

With

all

your youth?

Sagesse [1881], III,

man bites a dog, that is news. From FRANK M. O'BRIEN, The Story of The [New York] Sun
[1918]

Music above all, and for this Prefer an uneven rhythm. 4


Jadis et

WILL CARLETON
1845-1912

Nagu&re [1884]. I/Art Poetique


its

Worm
Each

Take eloquence and wring

neck!
Ib.

or beetle drought or tempest on a farmer's land may fall,


is

loaded

full

o'

ruin,

but a
Story

mortgage beats 'em

all.

And

all else is literature.

Ib.

The Tramp's
Not
a log in this buildin'
ries

but

its

memobut

BREWSTER HIGLEY
fl.

And

1873
the buffalo

has got, not a nail in this old touches a tender spot.

floor

Oh,

give

me

home where

Out

of the

Old House, Nancy,


st.

roam,

17

Where the deer and the antelope play, Where seldom is heard a discouraging
word

Draw up

the papers, lawyer, and make


stout,
at

'em good and


For things

home

And

the skies are not cloudy all day. Home on the Range [1873]

are crossways, and


st. i

Betsey and I are out. Betsey and I Are Out,

So

R, L.
fl.

SHARPE
1890
rules;

And

have talked with Betsey, and Betsey has talked with me, so we've agreed together that we Ib. st. 3 can't never agree.
like all good women, had a 16. st 4 temper of her own.
.

Each
1 II

is

A shapeless

given a bag of tools,

mass and a book of

Betsey,

pleure dans mon coeur Comme il pleut sur la ville. See Rimbaud, p. 8 gob.
Voici des fruits, des fleurs, des feuilles des branches,
et

The more we arg'ed the more we didn't agree.

question the 16. st. 5

Et puis voici
vous.
8

mon

coeur qui ne bat que pour

Tis good

Qu'as-tu fait, O Pleurant sans

toi

que voila

cesse,

Dis, qu'as-tu fait, toi De ta jeunesse?


*

que

voila

appreciate heaven well man to have some fifteen minutes of hell. Gone with a Handsomer Man, st. 20
for a
editor of

To

De

la musique avant toute chose, Et pour cela pr6fere 1'Impair.

The Sun, New York,

1873-

1890.

808

CARLETON
Over the
hill

SAINTSBURY
Tinge
his

to

the poorhouse

Fm
St.

brow Vith sunset glow. he


is

trudgin'

my weary way.
Hill to the Poorhouse,
1

Why should good words ne'er be said


Of a
friend
till

Over the

dead?
[1878],
st. i

A Sermon in Rhyme

WILLIAM KINGDON CLIFFORD


1845-1879

GEORGE KENNAN
1845-1924
Heroism, the Caucasian mountaineers say, is endurance for one moment more.
Letter to

Remember,
the

guide
it

which

then, that it [science] is action; that the truth arrives at is not that which we
of

can ideally contemplate without error, but that which we may act upon without fear; and you cannot fail to see that scientific thought is not an accompaniment or condition of human progress, but human progress itself. Aims and Instruments of Scientific

Henry Munroe Rogers


\July 25, 1921]

EUGENE LEE-HAMILTON
1845-1907
Things bygone are the only things that

Thought [1872]

The

CHARLES FLETCHER DOLE


1845-1927

present away;
past
is

is

mere

grass,

quick-mown

The

stone,

and stands forever

Roman

Baths

Good

will

is

the mightiest practical

force in the universe.

Cleveland Address

HAMILTON WRIGHT
MABIE
1845-1916

Democracy is on trial in the world, on a more colossal scale than ever beThe Spirit of Democracy fore.

The peculiarity of the New England hermit has not been his desire to get near to God, but his anxiety to get
away from man. Backgrounds of Literature. Emerson and Concord

EDWARD HARRIGAN
1845-1911

The drums and


did play,

fifes,

how

sweetly they

As we marched, marched, marched in the Mulligan Guard. The Mulligan Guard [1873]

GEORGE SAINTSBURY
1845-1933
I

have never tried to be in the fash-

dom,

DANIEL WEBSTER

HOYT

ion for the sake of being in it, and selI think, to be out of it for the sake of being out of it. Notes on a Cellar Book [1920],

1845-1936
If

preface
I have never yet given a secondhand opinion of any thing, or book, or per-

you have a friend worth loving, Love him. Yes, and let him know
ere
life's

That you love him,

evening

son.

Ib.

STUBBS

BURNHAM
It's

CHARLES WILLIAM
STUBBS
my
1845-1912

worse than wicked,

my

dear,

it's

vulgar.

Almanac
at

[1876]

To

Don't look
me. 1
[1876]

sit

alone with

conscience

me,

sir,

with

ah

in that tone of voice.

Will be judgment enough for Conscience and Future

XCVII, 38

[1884]

ment

I'm afraid you've got a bad egg, Mr.


Jones.

JOHN BANISTER TABB


1845-1909

Oh
of
it

no, my Lord, are excellent!

assure you! Parts

CIX, 222

[1895]

Out

of the dusk a shadow, Then a spark;

Out

of the clouds a silence, Then a lark;


of the heart a rapture, Then a pain;

Look here, Steward, if this is coffee, want tea; but if this is tea, then I wish for coffee. CXXIII, 44 [1902]
I

Out

Out of

the dead, cold ashes, Life again.

CHARLES DUPEE BLAKE


Evolution

1846-1903
Rock-a-bye-baby on the tree top, When the wind blows the cradle
rock,
will

PUNCH
Advice to persons about to marry. "Don't." Vol. VIII, p. i [1845]

When

the bough breaks the cradle will


will

fall,

You

And down
pays your

money and you

takes

come baby,

cradle and

all.

Attributed

your choice.

X, 16 [1846]

What is Matter? Never mind. What is Mind? No matter.


XXIX,
It ain't

19 [1855]

JOSEPH IGNATIUS CONSTANTINE CLARKE


1846-1925
"Well, here's to good honest fighting blood!" Said Kelly and Burke and Shea.

the 'ammer, 'ammer,


'ard'ighroad.
It

the 'unting as 7

'urts 'un, it's

ammer

along the

XXX,

218 [1856]

appears the Americans have taken

The Fighting Race,

st.

umbrage. The deuce they have! Whereabouts is that? LXIII, 189 [1872]

"Oh, the fighting races don't die out, If they seldom die in bed." Ib. st 5

Go
and

directly

see

what
Ib.

she's doing,

tell

her she mustn't.

202 [1872]

DANIEL HUDSON

There was an old owl liv'd in an oak, The more he heard, the less he spoke; The less he spoke, the more he heard, O, if men were all like that wise bird! LXVIII, 155 [1875]
i

BURNHAM
1846-1912
little

Make no
magic to
stir

plans; they have no

men's blood.
Attributed
1

There's just ae thing I cannae bear,

An'

that's

my

conscience.
Scots,

1 This quotation is now doubted. See HENRY M. SAYLOR, "Make No Little Plans?': Daniel Burnham Thought It but Did He Say It?"

R. L. STEVENSON [1850-1894], In

Journal of the American Institute of Architects,


vol.

XIV,

My

Conscience

XXVII,

p. 3 [1957]

8lO

ROSE

LOCKE

ALEXANDER MacGREGOR ROSE


1846-1898
Der Kaiser auf der Vaterland Und Gott on high, all dings gommand, Ve two, ach, don'd you understandt?
Meinself

JOHN PETER ALTGELD*


1847-1902
In
writing
his

Progress

and

Poverty,

pen into the tears of the human race, and with celestial clearness wrote down what he conceived to be?
eternal truths.

he dipped

und Gott. Hochl Der Kaiser


CO.)
1 I

(Kaiser

Memorial Address on Henry George [1897]

[1897],

St. *

Gott pulls mit me, und

mit him.
Ib.
st.

ALEXANDER GRAHAM
16

BELL

1847-1922

CHARLES PRESTWICK SCOTT


1846-1932

Mr. Watson, come here,


you.

want
10,

To
.

his assistant

[March

The primary office of a newspaper is comment is the gathering of news free, but facts are sacred. In the Manchester Guardian
.
.

the first intelligible worcfe transmitted by tele1876];

phone

[May

6,

1926]

THOMAS ALVA EDISON


1847-1931

HENRYK SIENKIEWICZ
1846-1916

There
work.

is

no

substitute

for

hard

Life [1932], ch.

24

more

greater philosopher a man is, the him to answer the foolish questions of common people.
difficult it is for

The

Genius is one per cent inspiration and ninety-nine per cent perspiration.
Tb.

Quo

Vadis? [1896]

eft.

19

EDGAR FAWCETT
1847-1904

EDWARD NOYES WESTCOTT


Do
like

At some

glad choice
a

moment was
scrap
of

it

nature's

1846-1898 unto the other feller the way he'd to do unto you an' do it fust. David Harum [1898], eft. 20
say
a

To dower
voice?

sunset with
Oriole,
st.

To an

a 2

WALTER LEARNED
A
1847-1915 more strong, a wish more faint, Makes one a monster, one a saint.
lure

reasonable number of fleas is good fer a dog keeps him from broodin' over bein' a dog.

They

16.32
The'
ain't nothin' truer in the Bible
'n that sayin' thet

On the flyleaf of Manon Lescaut

them

that has

gits.

Jb.
1

35

JOHN LOCKE
1847-1889

an international incident by Captain Joseph Bullock Coghlan [1844-1908] at a dinner given in his honor at the Union League Club, New York [April 21, 1899]. 8 Its one-hundredth anniversary. 8 Translated by JEREMIAH CURTIN [1838-1906].

These

verses caused

when

recited

O
1

Ireland, isn't it grand you look Like a bride in her rich adornin'?
See

Vachel

Lindsay,

p.
i.

The

Eagle

That

Is Forgotten

and note

LOCKE

PRIMROSE

And
I

with
heart

all

the pent-up love of


o'

my

bid you the top

the mornin'!

Perhaps it was "Lord Byron's" fault And perhaps it was not. His life was full of misfortunes,

Return [TV an'am an Dhia: My Soul to God], sL i


Exile's

The

ALICE MEYNELL
1847-1922
the lady of my delight A shepherdess of sheep. Her flocks are thoughts. She keeps

Ah, strange was his lot. A Sketch of Lord Byron's Life Leave off the agony, leave off style,
Unless you've got
while.
If

money by you

all

the

She walks

you look about you


to smile

you'll often have

To

see so
style.

many poor people

putting on

them white; She guards them from the

steep.
st. i

Leave Off the Agony in Style

The
I

Shepherdess,

must not think of


strong,
'

thee; and, tired yet


all

MILTON NOBLES
1847-1924

shun the thought that lurks in


delight
of thee

The villain

still

pursued her.
[1875], act
I, sc.
iii

The Phoenix
and
in the blue

The thought

And

heaven's height in the sweetest passage of a song.

Sonnet, Renouncement

WILLIAM EDWARD NORRIS


1847-1925
If

With
I

the first dream that comes with the first sleep


I

run, I run,
heart.

am

gathered to thy
16.

your lips would keep from slips, Five things observe with care:
speak;
of

To whom you
speak:

whom
where.

you

LLOYD MIFFLIN
Inscrutable, colossal,

And how, and when, and


Quoted

1847-1921 and alone.


Sesostris

in Thirlby Hall

JAMES JEFFREY ROCHE


1847-1908

JULIA
And now,
wrote
I

A.

MOOREi
I

1847-1920
kind friends, what
will pass o'er,

Fd rather be handsome than homely; Fd rather be youthful than old;


have
If I can't
I'll

have a bushel of

silver

do with a

barrel of gold.

hope you

Contentment

And not

criticize as

some have done

Hitherto herebefore. To My Friends and Critics

With an

All loved Art in a seemly way earnest soul and a capital A.

TheV-A-S-E

"Lord Byron" was an Englishman,

A poet I believe
first

His

Was poorly received.


1

works in old England


of

ARCHIBALD PHILIP PRIMROSE, EARL OF ROSEBERY


It is

"The Sweet Singer of Michigan," Mark Twain wrote: "The one and
great

whom

unfailing

quality which distinguishes her poetry from Shakespeare's and makes it precious to us is its stern and simple irrelevancy." Following

1847-1929 beginning to be hinted that we


Rectorial Address, Glasgow

are a nation of amateurs.

the Equator [1897], vol. II, ch. 8

[November

16, 1900]

8l2

SIMS

HARRIS

GEORGE ROBERT SIMS


1847-1922
It

JOHN CHURTON COLLINS


1848-1908
Truth is the object of philosophy, but not always of philosophers. From LOGAN PEARSALL SMITH, A Treasury of English Aphorisms

was Christinas Day in the workhouse.

Christmas Day in the Workhouse,


st. i

MARY DOW BRINE


fl.

Mistrust a

subordinate

who
is

never
Ib.

finds fault with his superior.

1878

The
you

secret of success in life

known
Ib.

She's

somebody's mother, boys,

only to those

who have not

succeeded.

know,
For
all she's

aged and poor and slow, Somebody's Mother [1878]

If men were as unselfish as women, women would very soon become more
selfish

than men.

Ib.

ARTHUR JAMES
BALFOUR
1848-1930

SIR FRANCIS
But

DARWIN

1848-1925
in science the credit goes to the

The
cay,

the

energies of our system will deglory of the sun will be

man who convinces the world, not to the man to whom the idea first occurs. 1
First

ert, will

dimmed, and the earth, tideless and inno longer tolerate the race which

has for a

moment

Galton Lecture before the Eugenics Society [1914]

disturbed

its

solitude.

Man
his

go down into the pit, and all thoughts will perish. The Foundations of Belief
will

DIGBY
The world
is

DOLBEN
1848-1867

MACKWORTH

[1895], pt.

I,

ch.

Biography should be written by an acute enemy. Quoted by S. K. RATCLIFFE in


the

young today: Forget the gods are old, Forget the years of gold When all the months were May.

London Observer

\January

A Song

3,

SAMUEL MILLER

HAGEMAN
1848-1905

JOHN VANCE CHENEY


1848-1922

Who

drives the horses of the sun

Every sound shall end in the silence never dies.


Earth
st. i

silence,

but
10
si-

Shall lord it but a day; Better the lowly deed were done,

Silence [1876],
is

st.

but the frozen echo of the

And

kept the humble way. The Happiest Heart,

lent voice of

God.

Ib. st.

19

The happiest heart that ever beat Was in some quiet breast
That
found
sweet,
left to

JOEL CHANDLER

HARRIS
1848-1908

the

common
rest.

daylight

How many po* sinnersTl be kotched


late

out

And

Heaven the

Ib.

st.

iSee Zinsser,

p. 9493,

and Fleming,

p.

813

HARRIS

PARETO

No

no latch ter de golden gate? use fer ter wait twefi ter-morrer, De sun mustn't set on yo' sorrer Sin's ez sharp ez a bamboo-brier, Lordl fetch de mo'ners up higher!
fin'

En

When you've got a thing to


Say
it!

say,

Don't take half a day. When your tale's got little in it, Crowd the whole thing in a minute!
a fleeting vapor the whole blamed paper With a tale which, at a pinch, Could be cornered in an inch! Boil her down until she simmers, Polish her until she glimmers. Advice to Writers for the Daily
Life
is

short

Uncle Remus: His Songs and His Saying? [1881]

Don't you

fill

Hit look lak sparrer-grass, hit feel lak sparrer-grass, hit tas'e lak sparrer-grass, en I bless ef 'taint sparrer-grass.

Nights with Uncle Remus [1883], eh. 27

Press

No 'pollygy aint gwine ter make h'ar come back whar de baling water hit.
16.45
Tar-baby ain't sayin' nuthin', en Brer Fox, he lay low. Uncle Remus and His Friends
[1892]

JORIS KARL HUYSMANS


18481907

The

loveliest

comes vulgar and insupportable

tune imaginable beas soon

Ez soshubble

ez a baskit er kittens.
16.

as the public begins to hum it and the hurdygurdies make it their own. 1 Against the Grain, ch. 9

Bred en bawn in a brier-patch, Brer


Fox.
16.

Perfumes, in fact, rarely come from the flowers whose names they bear with the exception of, the inimitable
.
.

You do de
de gruntm'.

pullhV, Sis

Cow, en

I'll

do
16.

jasmine,

which

it

is

impossible

to

counterfeit.

16. 10

Wen
Lazy
'

ole

man Rabbit

say "scoot,"

Art

is

the only clean thing on earth,

dey scooted, en w'en old Miss Rabbit 16. say "scat," dey scatted.
fokes'

except holiness.

Les Foules de Lourdes [1906]

stummucks

don't

git

tired.

Uncle Remus: Plantation Proverbs


Jaybird don't rob his

RICHARD JEFFERIES
1848-1887
in the midst the sunshine; I am in it, as the butterfly in the lightladen air. Nothing has to come; it is now. Now is eternity; now is the immortal life.
It is eternity now. I of it. It is about in

own

nes'.

am

16.

me

Licker talks mighty loud w'en


loose

it

gits

fum de

jug.

16.

Hongry
fine a

rooster don't cackle w'en

he
16.

wum.

The

Story of

My

Heart [1883]

Youk'n hide de fier, but w'at you 16. gwine do wid de smoke?
out w'en youer gittin' all you want. Fattenin' hogs ain't in luck.
16.

Watch

VILFREDO PARETO
1848-1923
Give

me

a fruitful error any time,

Hop

light, ladies,

Oh, Miss Loo! Oh, swing dat yaller Do, boys, do!

gal!

full of seeds, bursting with its own corrections. You can keep your sterile truth for yourself.

Comment on
1

Kepler

Plantation Play Song

Translated by JOHN HOWARD.

814

KEXFORD

HENLEY

EBEN EUGENE REXFORD


1848-1916
Darling, I am growing old, Silver threads among the gold

LORD RANDOLPH SPENCER CHURCHILL


1849-1895
old gang [members of the servative government].

The

Con-

Shine upon
Life
is

my brow today;
Threads

fading fast away.


Silver

Speech f House of
the

Commons
be

Among

Gold
st. i

[March j 9 1878]
Ulster will fight; Ulster will
right.

[1873],

Letter

HENRY AUGUSTUS ROWLAND


1848-1901

[May
I

7, 1886]

All great

men make

mistakes. Naforgot

poleon forgot Bliicher,


schen. 1

Go-

American science is a thing of the and not of the present or past; and the proper course of one in my what must be position is to consider done to create a science of physics in
future,

Quoted by LADY DOROTHY NEVILL, notebooks

EDMUND GOSSE
1849-1928

the country, rather than to

call

tele-

grams, electric veniences by the

lights,

and such conof science.

name

Address before the American Association, for the Advance-

The Past is like a The Future comes


guest.
I
I

funeral gone by,


like

an unwelcome

May Day
for a well-stored

ment

of Science [1883]

do not hunger

mind,

FREDERIC EDWARD

My

WEATHERLY
1848-1929

only wish to live my life, and find heart in unison with all mankind, Lying in the Grass

Always the same, Darby, my own, Always the same to your old wife Joan.
1 Darby and Joan,

WILLIAM ERNEST HENLEY


1849-1903
Far in the
stillness

refrain

The

sailor's

wife the

sailor's star shall

a cat

be.

Nancy Lee,

refrain

Languishes loudly. In Hospital [1888]. VII, Vigil

BERNHARD VON BULOW


1849-1929

Bland

as a Jesuit, sober as a hymn. H>. XVI, House Surgeon

A place in the sun. A Promise for


6,

Germany. Speech

Valiant in velvet, light in ragged luck, Most vain, most generous, sternly critical,

before the Reichstag [December

1897]

sia in

The king in Prussia forward; Prusforward; Germany in Germany


forward!
his side,

Buffoon and poet, lover and sensualist: A deal of Ariel, just a streak of Puck,

Much And

the world
1

Antony, of Hamlet most of all, Shorterthe of something


16.

Catechist.

Old Darby with Joan by


He's dropsical, she
is

XXV,

You've often regarded with wonder;


sore-ey'd.
i

Apparition [Robert Louis Stevenson]

Yet they're ever uneasy asunder.

HENRY WOODFALL, The Gentleman's


Magazine [March 1735

ish

George Joachim Goschen [1831-1907], Britstatesman who helped form the Liberal

Unionist party [1886].

8l 5

HENLEY
As dust that
drives, as straws that blow,
all.

JEWETT
something from the world and has something to give in return. Country Byways. River Driftwood

Into the night go one and


Ballade of

Dead

Actors [1888]

Out of the night

that covers me,

Black as the Pit from pole to pole, I thank whatever gods may be

For

my unconquerable soul.

had overset his Captain Littlepage mind with too much reading. The Country of the Pointed
Firs [1896], ch. 5

In the fell clutch of circumstance, I have not winced nor cried aloud;

The

old poets

little

knew what comIb.

Under the bludgeonings

of chance

fort they could be to man.

My head is bloody, but unbowed.


["Invictus"],
It
st. i,

Echoes [1888]. IV, In Memoriam R. T. Hamilton Bruce


2

Wrecked on the

lee shore of age.

We were standing where there was a


view of the harbor and its long stretches of shore all covered by the of the pointed firs, darkly great army cloaked and standing as if they waited
fine

matters not
scroll,

how

strait

How
I

charged with

punishments

the gate, the

am I am

the master of my fate; 1 the captain of my soul.


Ib.
st.

to embark. As we looked far seaward among the outer islands, the trees

Night with her

train of stars

And her

great gift of sleep.


Ib.

steadily over the heights water's edge.

seemed to march seaward still, going and down to the


Ib.

XXXV,

In

Memoriam
st.

Tact
reading.

is

after

all

a kind of mind16- 10

Margaritae Sororis,

Or ever the knightly years were gone With the old world to the grave,
I

was a King in Babylon And you were a Christian


Ib.

Yes'm, old friends is always best, 'less that's fit to you can catch a new one Ib. 12 make an old one out of.
i

Slave.

XXXVII, To

W.

A.,

st.

In the

life

of each of us, I said to

These poor Might-Have-Beens, These fatuous, ineffectual Yesterdays! To James McNeill Whistler [1892]

is a place remote and ismyself, there or and landed, given to endless regret Ib 1 5 secret happiness.
.

What have I done for you, England, my England? What is there I would not do, England, my own?

Tain't worthwhile to wear a day all Ib. 16 out before it comes.

The

road was

new

to

me,

as roads

always are, going back.

Ib. 19
eyes; lives come to

For England's Sake. Pro Rege


Nostro [1892],
st. i

So we die before our own


see

so

we

some chapters of our

their natural end.

!&

SARAH ORNE JEWETT


1849-1909

The

the mind^over thing that teases


for years,
rightly

and over
little

A
bor,
life

harbor, even
is

if

it

is

a little har-

put down

and at last on paper

gets

itself

whether

come
in

good thing, since into it as well as go out,


a
it

adventures and the


it

or great,

because grows strong,


and
note.

takes

it belongs to Literature. Letter to Willa Gather. Quoted in preface to The Country of the

Pointed Firs and Other

Stories

^-See Sallust, p. ii6a,

16

LAZARUS

OSLER
are here to add what we can to, not to get what we can from, Life. 1 From HARVEY GUSHING, Life of Sir William Osier, vol. I, eft.

EMMA LAZARUS
1849-1887

We

Your

Give me your tired, your poor, huddled masses yearning to


refuse of your teeming

breathe free,

*4

The wretched
shore,

Send
I lift

these, the homeless, tossed, to me:

tempest-

Humanity has but three great enemies: fever, famine and war; of these by far the greatest, by far the most terrible, is fever.

16.

my

lamp beside the golden door.

The Colossus: Inscription for the Statue of Liberty,

New

The

New

master word [work]

...

is

the

York Harbor

open sesame

to every portal, the great

equalizer in the world, the true philosopher's stone which transmutes all the base metal of humanity into gold.2

SIR

WILLIAM OSLER
1849-1919
aggravations,
cultivate

16.22
Things cannot always go your way. Learn to accept in silence the minor
the
gift

The greater the ignorance the greater the dogmatism.


Montreal Medical Journal [1902]
philosophies of one age have beabsurdities of the next, and the foolishness of yesterday has become the wisdom of tomorrow. 16.

of

consume your own taciturnity and smoke s with an extra draught of hard
work, so that those about you may not be annoyed with the dust and soot of

The

come the

your complaints.

16.

Take the sum of human achievement


in action, in science, in art, in literature subtract the work of the men above
forty,

natural man has only two primal passions, to get and to beget. Science and Immortality

The

and while we should miss great


even priceless treasures,

[1904],

C/l.

treasures,

we
are
vir

would
today.
talizing
.

practically
. .

be

where
is

we

Tact is the saving virtue without which no woman can be a success,

The
ages
16.

effective,

moving,

work of the world


the
of

Commencement
nurses, Johns
versity

address

to

tween
4

done betwenty-five and

Hopkins Uni1913]

forty.

24 [The Fixed Period]

[May

7,

Speck in cornea, 50$. Entry in his account book, first fee as a practicing physician.

second fixed idea is the uselessmen above sixty years of age, and the incalculable benefit it would be
ness of
sional

My

From HARVEY GUSHING,


Sir
T

Life of

eft.

William Osier /* 6

[1925], vol. I,

in commercial, political, and in profeslife, if as a matter of course, men Ib. work at this age. 5

stopped

The
guishes

desire to take medicine

is

1 Also in Doctor and Nwrse, in Aequanimitas and Other Addresses [1904]-

per-

Lecture,

The Master
i,

Word

in

Medicine,

haps the greatest feature which distin-

man from
is

Toronto [October
tas.

1903]; also in

Aequanimi-

animals.

16.

14

5
*

See Carlyle, p. 5760, and note.

yet the childhood of the world, and a supine credulity is still the

This

Address

at

Johns

Hopkins

University,

most charming

characteristic of

man.
16.

Baltimore, February 22, 1905. a This valedictory address caused


cussion

much

dis-

and misquotation. It was headlined in the press OSLER RECOMMENDS CHLOROFORM AT

817

OSLER

PAVLOV
life is more wonderful the one great moving force which we can neither weigh in the balance nor test in the crucible.

Nothing

will

sustain

you

more

Nothing in
faith

potently than the power to recognize in your humdrum routine, as perhaps it may be thought, the true poetry of life the poetry of the commonplace, of the ordinary man, of the plain, toil-

than

From HARVEY GUSHING,


of Sir ch. 30

Life
II,

William Osier,

vol.

worn woman, with


joys,

their loves

and

their

their sorrows
Sir

and

their griefs.

From HARVEY GUSHING,


William
Osier, vol.
I,

In the

life

of a

Life of
ch.

young man the most


is

24

essential thing for happiness

the
16.

gift

\The Student
I

Life]

of friendship.

31

No
have three personal
day's
ideals.

bubble

is

so iridescent or floats

One, to

do the

work well and not to


. .
.

longer than that blown


ful teacher.

by the

success16.

The secbother about tomorrow. ond ideal has been to act the Golden Rule, as far as in me lay, toward my professional brethren and toward the
patients committed to my care. And the third has been to cultivate such a measure of equanimity as would enable

The
tal,

quest for righteousness is Orienthe quest for knowledge, Occi16.

dental. 1

34

Save the fleeting minute; learn gracefully to dodge the bore.

me

affection of

to bear success with humility, the friends without pride,

From W.

S.

THAYER, Osier

the

my

and to be ready when the day of sorrow and grief came to meet it with the courage befitting a man.
16. [Farewell Dinner,

Johns Hopkins Hospital Bulletin 30:198 [1919]


Teacher,

May

2,

1905]

IVAN PETROVICH

PAVLOV
18491936

the beer and spirits into the Irish Channel, the English Channel, and the North Sea for a year, and
all

Throw

What
country ence?

can

who

wish to the youth of devote themselves to

my
sci-

England would be infinitely better. It would certainly solve all the problems with which the philanthropists, the physicians, and the politicians have to deal. 1 16. II, 26
people in

Firstly, gradualness. About this most important condition of fruitful scientific work I never can speak without emotion. Gradualness, gradualness and

happy or safe without a hobby, and it mates precious little difference what the outside interest
is

No man

really

gradualness. From the very beginning of your work, school yourselves to severe gradualness in the accumulation

may be
roses,

botany, beetles or butterflies,


or
irises;

of knowledge. Learn the

ABC
its

of science before you

tulips

fishing,

moun-

try to ascend to

or taineering antiquities anything will do so long as he straddles a hobby and rides it hard. 2 16. 29
SIXTY, and occasioned many columns of letters, caustic cartoons, and the like, until to "Oslerize"

summit. Bequest to the Academic Youth


of Soviet Russia [1936]

Learn, compare, collect the

facts!

Ib.

became a byword.
1

Secondly, modesty. Never think that

Address at Working Men's College,


17,

Camden

Town [November
a

you already know


i

all.

However

highly

1906].

Address, Medical Library Association, Belfast

Address, Jewish Historical Society of England

[July *8, 1909].

[April 27, 1914]-

818

PAVLOV
you are
norant.
appraised,

BIKREIX
Tell you what
I like the best 'Long about knee-deep in June, 'Bout the time strawberries melts On the vine some afternoon Like to jes' git out and rest, And not work at nothin' else.

always

have
I

the
ig-

courage to say to yourself

am

Bequest to the Academic Youth


of Soviet Russia

Thirdly, passion. Remember that science claims a man's whole life. Had

he

two

lives

they would not

suffice.
alle-

Oh! the
last

old

Knee-Deep in June, st. swimmin' hole! When

i
I

Science

demands an undivided

its followers. In your work and in your research there must always 16. be passion.

giance from

saw the place, The scenes was all changed, like the change in my face. The Old Swimmin' Hole, st. 5

JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY


1849-1916
O'er folded blooms

When

is the least o' my idees the green, you know, gits back in the trees! When the Green Gits Back in the Trees, st. i

Work

On

swirls of

musk,

The beetle booms adown the glooms And bumps along the dusk.
The
Beetle,
st.

O, the Raggedy Man!


Pa; An' he's the goodest

He

works

fer

man

ever you saw!


st. i

The Raggedy Man,


O,
it

The
An'

ripest

peach

is

highest on the

tree.
st. i

sets

The
all

my

heart a-clickin' like the

Ripest Peach,

We

us other children, when the supper things is done, r set around the kitchen fire an has

When

tickin' of a clock, the frost is on

the punkin and the fodder's in the shock. When the Frost Is on the

the mostest fun


A-list'nin' to the witch-tales 'at
tells

Punkin,

st.

Annie

about,
'at gits

EDWARD BELLAMY*
to periodical convulsions, overwhelming alike the wise and unwise, the successful cutthroat as well as his victim. I refer to

An' the Gobble-uns

you

Ef you Don't

1850-1898 Your system was liable

Watch
Out!
It

Orphant Annie, st. i hain't no use to grumble and complain,


It's jest as

Little

the business crises at intervals of Eve to ten years, which wrecked the industries of the nation.

When God

easy to rejoice; sorts out the weather and

Looking Backward [1887]

sends rain,

Why rain's my choice.


Heaven holds
There!
all

AUGUSTINE BIRRELL
Talk

Wet Weather

1850-1933
Libraries are

for

which you sigh


st.

Obiter Dicta.
3

little girl;

don't cry! A Life Lesson,


as the vine

not made; they grow. Book Buying


to inherit a library,
it is

Good
1

as

it is

better to collect one.


There
is

16.

"As surely

Grew 'round the stump,"

An

she loved me that old sweetheart of mine. Old Sweetheart of Mine, st. 12

at least a fair chance that another

fifty

years will confirm Edward Bellamy's position as one of the most authentic prophets of our age.

HEYWOOD BROUN

[1931]

819

BIRRELL

FIELD

That
tory."

great dust heap called 'TiisObiter Dicta. Carlyle

He

quoth:

"A large cold bottle, and a small hot bird!" The Bottle and the Bird, st. j

EUGENE FIELD
1850-1895
I feel

Have you

When

a sort of yeamin' 'nd a chokin* in my throat


I

It

ever heard of the Sugarplum Tree? Tis a marvel of great renown! blooms on the shore of the

Lollipop

think of

Red Hoss Mountain

Sea In the garden of Shuteye Town.

'nd of Casey's tabble dotel Casey's Table d'Hote, st i

The Sugarplum

Tree,

st. i

He could whip his

weight in wildcats. Modjesky as Cameel, st. 10

Wynken, Blynken, and Nod one Sailed off in a wooden shoe


Sailed

night

on a river of crystal light Into a sea of dew.

No matter what conditions


Dyspeptic come to feaze,

Wynken, Blynken, and Nod,

st. i

The

physicians Is apple pie and cheese!

best of

all

The
st.

little toy dog is covered with dust, But sturdy and staunch he stands;

Apple Pie and Cheese,


I'm sure no
That's

And

the
rust,

little

toy soldier

is

red with

human

heart goes wrong

told

"Good-by

God

bless

And his musket molds in his hands; Time was when the little toy dog was
new,

you!"

"Good-6y
never lost a
to say
It always

God

Bless You/",
st.

And the soldier was passing fair; And that was the time when our Little
Kissed

little fish

yes, I
fish I

am

free

was the biggest

Boy Blue them and put them there. Little Boy Blue, st.
street

caught
st.

that got away.

The Rock-a-Bye Lady from Hushaby


Comes
stealing;

Our Biggest

Fish,

comes creeping.
st. i

How
At

gracious those dews of sokce that over my senses fall the clink of the ice in the pitcher the boy brings up the hall! The Clink of the Ice, st. i

The Rock-a-Bye Lady,


Have you
ever

heard

the wind

go

"Yooooo"? Tis a pitiful sound to hear!


It

seems

to

chill

you through and

When

one's

all

right, he's prone to

through

spite The doctor's peaceful mission; But when he's sick, it's loud and quick He bawls for a physician. 1

With

a strange

and speechless

fear.
st. i

The Night Wind,

The Dinkey

Bird goes singing In the amfalula tree!

Doctors,

st.

The Dinkey
wow!"

Bird,

st. i

When
1

viands
Three

demanded of my he preferred,
wears
the

friend

what

The gingham dog went "Bow-wow-

faces

doctor:

when

first

sought

An

angel's;

and a god's the cure

half-

And the calico cat replied "Mee-ow!" The air was littered, an hour or so, With bits of gingham and calico.
The Duel,
st.

wrought; But when, the cure complete, he seeks his The Devil looks less terrible than he.

fee,

Father

calls

me William,

sister calls

me

ANONYMOUS

Will,

820

FIELD

RICHARDS

Mother
call

calls

me Willie, me Bill!

but the

fellers

HENRY CABOT LODGE


1850-1924
love the land of his birth and the race from

Jest 'Fore Christmas,

st. i

Let every

man honor and

'Most all the time, the whole year round, there ain't no flies on me, But jest 'fore Christmas I'm as good as
I

kin be!

I&.

FRED GILBERT
1850-1903

The Man Who Broke the Bank at Title of song [1892] Monte Carlo.

which he springs and keep their memory green. It is a pious and honorable duty. But let us have done with BritishAmericans and Irish-Americans and German-Americans, and so on, and all be Americans. ... If a man is going to be an American at all let him be so without any qualifying adjectives; and if he is going to be something else, let him drop the word American from his
personal description.

SAMUEL GOMPERS
1850-1924
trade unions are the legitimate outgrowth of modern societary and industrial conditions. They were born of the necessity of workers to protect and defend themselves from encroachment, injustice and wrong. . To protect the workers in their inalien.
.

fathers Day]

The

Address, New England Society of """ Brooklyn [December 21,


9
.

The Day

We

Celebrate [Fore-

as much of the man It is the flag just who was naturalized yesterday as of the man whose people have been here many

generations.

Address [1915]

able rights to a higher and better life; to protect them, not only as equals before the law, but also in their health, their homes, their firesides, their liberties as

He was a great patriot, a great man; above all, a great American. His counof try was the ruling, mastering passion his life from the beginning even untc
the end.

to

men, as workers, and overcome and conquer

as citizens;

Theodore Roosevelt: Address Before Congress [February 9, 1919]

prejudices

and antagonism; to secure to them the


life, and the opportunity to maintain that life; the right to be full sharers in the abundance which is the result of their brain and brawn, and the civilization of which they are the founders and the mainstay; to this the workers are entitled. . . The attainment of these is the glorious mission of the trade unions. Speech [i~

right to

PHILIP BOURKE

MARSTON
1850-1887

A little time for laughter, A little time to sing, A little time to kiss and cling,
And no more kissing after. 1
After,
st.
3

JOHN CHEEVER GOODWIN


1850-1912
For that elephant ate all night, And that elephant ate all day;

LAURA ELIZABETH RICHARDS


Be you clown
food,
EleStill

1850-1943 or be you King,


I
*

Do what he

could to furnish

him

your singing

The cry was still more hay. Wang: The Man with an

Tina
i

is the thing. Lirra [1930], dedication,

See A. L. Gordon, p. 7480, and

Du

Mauriei

phant on His Hands [1891]

p.75ib.

821

RICHARDS
Every
little

STEVENSON
meadows, where you may innocently
linger,

wave had its nightcap on. Song for HaZ, refrain

but

the

road

lies

long
I,

and
eft.

Once

Who

there was an elephant tried to use the telephant


I

straight

and dusty to the


is

grave.
2

Virginibus Puerisque,

No! No!

mean an elephone
the telephone. Eletelephony,
I.

Man
i

a creature

who

lives

Who

not upon
It.

tried to use

bread alone but principally by catchwords.

The

crudest

lies

are often told in

si-

ROBERT RICHARDSON
1850-1901

lence.

Ib. 4,

Truth of Intercourse
are all

Old and young, we


cruise.

on our

last

Warm

summer

sun,

shine

friendly

Ib. II,

here;

Crabbed Age and Youth


be a fool than to be
Ib.

Warm
Green

western wind, blow kindly here; sod above, rest light, rest

It is better to

dead.

light

Give
1

Good

me

night, Annette! Sweetheart,

the young
to

night.

good To Annette

brains
self!

enough

make

man who has a fool of him16.

ROBERT LOUIS
STEVENSON^
when
it

Books are good enough in their own way, but they are a mighty bloodless
substitute for
life.

1850-1894 Mankind was never so happily


spired as

Ib. Ill,
in-

An

Apology for

Idlers

made

a cathedral.

An Inland Voyage [1878], Noyon Every man is his own doctor of divinity,

Perpetual devotion to what a man only to be sustained by perpetual neglect of many other
calls his business, is

things.

Ib.
is

in the last resort.

Ib.

There

no duty we

so

much

underIb.

For
sake.

my

where, but to go.

part, I travel not to go anyI travel for travel's


is

rate as the

duty of being happy.

The great affair


is

to move.

To

than to
[1878] that
it

Travels with a

travel hopefully is a better thing Ib. VI, El Dorado arrive.

Donkey

Marriage
is

like life in this

a field of battle,

and not a bed of


I,

roses.

To be what we are, and to become what we are capable of becoming, is the only end of life.
Familiar Studies of

Men

and

Virginibus Puerisque [1881],

Books
I

ch. i

[1882]

Times
marries;

changed with him who there are no more bypath


are

am

in th.e habit of looking not so

much

to the nature of a gift as to tie spirit in which it is offered.

Twain adapted this verse by the Australian poet Richardson for the stone marking the grave of his daughter Olivia Susan Clemens, who died August 18, 1896, aged twentyfour:

New
Fifteen

Arabian Nights [1882]. The Suicide Club


the

men on
1

Dead Man's

Warm summer sun, shine kindly here; Warm southern wind, blow softly here;
Green sod above,
lie light, lie light

Chest
1

Good

night,

dear heart, good night,

good
p.

Last, that

Treasure Island came out of Kingsley's Ai and where I got the Dead Man's Chest was the seed. R. L. STEVENSON, Letter

night.

to Sidney Colvin

See Euripides, p. 83b;


15 ib;

Anonymous
p.

Latin,

and Beaumont and Fletcher,

See Henley, p.

were crawling slowly along, looking out for Virgin Garda; the first of those numberless isles which Columbus, so goes the tale, discovered

We

822

STEVENSON
Yo-ho-ho, and a bottle of rum! Drink and the devil had done for the
rest
little shadow that goes in and out with me, And what can be the use of him is more than I can see. He is very, very like me from the heels up to the head; And I see him jump before me, when I
I

have a

Yo-ho-ho, and a bottle of rum! Treasure Island [1883],

eft. i

Doctors

is all

swabs.
Ib. 3 [Billy Bones]

jump

Many's the long night


of cheese
Ib.

I've

dreamed

into my bed. Child's Garden of Verses.

toasted, mostly.

My
The
I

Shadow,

st.

15 [BenGunn]

In winter I get up at night And dress by yellow candlelight. In summer, quite the other way,
I

friendly love with

cow
all

all

red and white,

my heart:

She

To
The

have to go to bed by day. have to go to bed and see


tree,

cream with all her might, gives eat with apple tart. Ib. The Cow, st. i
world
is

me

so full of a

number
as

of
as

The birds still hopping on the Or hear the grown-up people's


Still

things, I'm sure we should all

be

happy

feet

going past me on the street. A Child's Garden of Verses


[1885].

kings.

Ib.

Happy Thought
Crow,

Bed

in

Summer,

st. i,

Little Indian, Sioux or Little frosty Eskimo,

A
At

child should always say what's true

Little Turk or Japanee, O! don't you wish that you were me? 16.

And speak when he is spoken to, And behave mannerly at table;


least as far as

Foreign Children

Am I no a bonny fighter?
Kidnapped [1886], ch. 10
[Alan Breck]
are set,

he

is

able.

Ib.

Whole Duty

of Children

Whenever the moon and stars Whenever the wind is high,


All night long in the dark

and wet,
fires

my verse, like not a single line; But like my title, for it is not mine. That title from a better man x I stole:
all

Of

A man goes riding by.


out,

Ah,
the
are

how much
whole!

better,

had

stoVn the

Late in the night

when

Underwoods [1887], foreword


Life
is

Why

does he gallop and gallop about?


Ib.

over, life

Windy Nights,

st. i

We have come the primrose way.


Ib.

was gay:

Dark brown is the river, Golden is the sand,


It flows

Envoy
hair. 2

Dear Andrew, with the brindled


Ib.

along forever,
trees
Ib.

To Andrew Lang

With
The
on

on

either hand.

Where Go

the Boats,

st. i

Ib.
St.

pleasant land of counterpane. The Land of Counterpane,

Under the wide and starry sky, Dig the grave and let me lie. Glad did I live and gladly die, And I laid me down with a

will.

st.

4
This be the verse you grave for me: Here he lies where he longed to be;
1

Ursula's day, and named them after the saint and her eleven thousand mythical virgins. Unfortunately, English buccaneers have since given to most of them less poetic names. The

Ben Jonson.

Dutchman's Cap, Broken Jerusalem, The Dead Man's Chest, Rum Island, and so forth, mark a time and race more prosaic. CHAKLES KINGSLEY, At Last [1870], ch. i

Who

Dear Louis of the awful cheek! told you it was right to speak, Where all the world might hear and

stare,

Of other fellows' "brindled hair"? ANDREW LANG [1844-191?], To R, L.

S.

823

STEVENSON

Home
And
If I

is

the sailor, home from sea, the hunter home from the hill.

I will

make you brooches and

toys for

Underwoods. Requiem
have faltered more or
Ib.
less

your delight Of birdsong at morning and starshine


at night. Songs of Travel.

In

my great task of happiness.


The
Celestial Surgeon

Romance,

st.

Yet,

stricken heart,

remember,

God, That

if

this

were enough,

re-

How
April

member of human
part.

see things bare to the buE. Ib. If This Were Faith


is

days he lived the better

Bright

the ring of words


Ib.

When the right man rings them.


XIV
In

came to bloom and never dim December Breathed its killing chills upon the head
or heart.
16.

the

highlands,

in

the

country
rosy

places,

Where
In Memoriam F. A.
StflweD
1

the old plain


fair

men have

faces,

[1881]

And

the young
eyes.

maidens
Ib.

Let first the onion flourish there, Rose among roots, the maiden-fair Wine-scented and poetic soul Of the capacious salad bowl. 16. To a Gardener

Quiet

XV

Trusty, dusky, vivid, true, With eyes of gold and bramble dew,
Steel-true

The

and blade-straight great artificer


16.

My body, which my dungeon is,


And
I

Made my mate.
Be
it

yet

my parks

and

palaces. Ib.

XXXVII

granted

XXV, To My Wife, st i me to behold you again in

to Hazlitt, to

have thus played the sedulous ape Lamb, to Wordsworth, to Sir Thomas Browne, to Defoe, to Hawthorne, to Montaigne, to Baudelaire and to Obermann.

dying, Hills of home!


16.

Not

every

XLV, To S. R. Crockett man is so great a coward as


is

he thinks he
Christian.

nor yet so good

Memories and

A
A
ored.

Portraits [1887].

College Magazine

The Master of Ballantrae[i88()].


Mr. Mackellar's Journey
Nothing like a little judicious levity. ch. 7 The Box

Penny Plain and Twopence Col16. Essay

About Skelfs

Wrong

[1889],

Juvenile

Drama

Wealth I ask not, hope nor love, Nor a friend to know me;
All I ask, the heaven above

the Governor of South Carolina said to the Governor of North Carolina? It's a long time between drinks, observed that powerful
thinker. 1
Ib. 8

Do

you know what

And

the road below me.

Songs of Travel The Vagabond, st. 4

The untented Kosmos my abode,


I

iQf the several traditions relating to the origin of this remark, the most reasonable one traces it to John Motley Morehead [1796-1866], who was Governor of North Carolina 1841-1845.

pass, a willful stranger;

He was
1864],

visited

by James H.

Hammond

[1807-

My

mistress

still

And the bright eyes

the open road of danger.


16.

Youth and Love


first

of South Carolina 1842-1844. They engaged in discussion arid argument, and when the latter waxed hot, Governor Morehead was reported by a servant to have

who was Governor

exclaimed: "It's a long time between drinks."

*Lady Colvin's son by her died at the age of eighteen.

marriage; he

JOHN

MOTLEY

MOREHEAD,

letter

[Novem-

ber ai, 1934]

824

STEVENSON
So long
as

WELCOX
Long, long years I've rung the curfew from that shadowed gloomy,
tower;
just at sunset, it has tolled the twilight hour; I have done duty ever, tried to do it

we

as we love we serve; so long are loved by others, I would al-

no man
friend.

most say that we are indispensable; and is useless while he has a


Across the Plains
[1892].

Every evening,

Lay Morals

my

just

and

To be honest,

to

be kind

to earn a

Now

I'm old,
bell

little and spend a little less, to make upon the whole a family happier for his presence, to renounce when that shall be necessary and not to be embittered, to keep a few friends, but these without above all, on the same capitulation

not miss it. Curfew must ring tonight! Curfew Must Not Ring Tonight,
st.

right, I will

Out

she

swung

far

out;

the

city

seemed a speck of light below, There 'twixt heaven and earth sus-

grim condition, to keep friends with here is a task for all that a himself man has of fortitude and delicacy. A Christmas Sermon
your morals make you dreary, depend upon it, they are wrong. I do not say give them up, for they may be all you have, but conceal them like a vice lest they should spoil the lives of better Ib, and simpler people.
If

pended
fro.

as the bell

swung

to
Ib.

and
st.

ELLA WHEELER

WILCOX
1850-1919

Talk

happiness.

The world

is

sad

enough

Without your woe.


rough.

No
is

path is wholly Speech, st. i


better off with-

Here
little,

lies

one who meant

well, tried a

Talk

faith.

failed

much:

The world

surely that

may
Your

be his epitaph of which he need not be Ib. ashamed.


Ice

out
uttered

ignorance

and morbid
Ib.
st.

doubt.

and

iron cannot be welded.

Weir

of Hermiston [1896]

Give us grace and strength to forbear and to persevere. Give us courage and gaiety and the quiet mind, spare to us
our friends, soften to us our enemies.

ship drives east and another drives west With the selfsame winds that blow. Tis the set of sails and not the gales Which tells us the way to go. Winds of Fate

One

Prayer

No! the two kinds of people on earth


that I

Youth

is

wholly experimental. Letter to a Young Gentleman

mean
lift

Are the people who

who lean.
It

To

Lift or to

and the people Lean

ever has

ROSE HARTWICK

And

ever

THORPE
1850-1939

been since time began, will be, till time lose


a

breath,

She breathed the husky whisper "Curfew must not ring tonight." Curfew Must Not Ring Tonight
[1882],
St.

That love man,

is

mood

no more
is life

to

And

love to

woman

or death. 1
st. i

Blind,

2
St.

^On

the bronze memorial to Stevenson in

Laugh, and the world laughs with you; Weep, and you weep alone;
1

Giles Cathedral, Edinburgh, Scotland.

See Byron, p. 5$oa.

825

WDLCOX
For the sad old earth must borrow
its

MARKHAM
The mind has a thousand And the heart but oie;
Yet the
light of a

eyes,

mirth, But has trouble enough of its own. Solitude, st.

whole

life dies

When

love

So many gods, so many creeds, So many paths that wind and wind, When just the art of being kind Is all this sad world needs. The World's Need

The

done. Night Has a Thousand Eyes


is

ROBERT PONTINE CUNNINGHAME-

GRAHAM
1852-1936

No

question is ever settled Until it is settled right.


Settle the Question Right
it

Success, which touches nothing that does not vulgarize, should be its own
.
.

FERDINAND POCH
1851-1929

reward the odium of success is hard enough to bear, without the added ignominy of popular applause.
.

My

center
1

is

giving way,

pushed back, situation


attacking.

right excellent, I

my

is

am

Success [1902]
forbid that I should go to any heaven in which there are no horses. Letter to Theodore Roosevelt

God

Said at the Second Battle of the

Marne

[1918]. From B. H. LIDDELL HART, Reputations Ten

Years After [1928]

EDWARD SMITH
UFFORD
1851-1929

EDWIN MARKHAM
1852-1940

Bowed by the weight


leans

of centuries he

Throw out
wave,

the lifeline across the dark

Upon
The And

There

a brother is should save. Tftrow

whom
Out

someone

the Lifeline
[1884],
st.
i

his hoe and gazes on the ground, emptiness of ages in his face, on his back the burden of the world. The Man with the Hoe * [1899],
st.

Throw out
lifeline,

the

lifeline,

throw out the

O
16. refrain

masters, lords

Someone is

sinking today.

Is this

and rulers in all lands, the handiwork you give to God?


16.
st.

FRANCIS WILLIAM

Here was a man to hold against the

BOURDILLON
1852-1921

A man
2

world, to match the mountains 2 and the sea.

The night has a thousand And the day but one;


Yet the
1

eyes,

Lincoln, the

Man

of the People

[1901],
1
2

st. i

light of the bright world dies

With the dying


Mon
centre cede,

sun.
droite recule, situation

Inspired

A man

by
to

Millet's painting.

match his mountains, not

to

ma

creep

excellente, j'attaque, *On the stars thou gazest, my star; would I were heaven to look at thee with many eyes.

Dwarfed and abased below them.


WHTTTIER,

Among

the Hills [1869], prelude

Greek Anthology, J. W. MACKAIL.


See Lyly, p.

pt. VIII, no. 7.

Translated by

Bring

me men

to

match

my

mountains.

SAM WALTER
American

Foss

[1858-1911],

The Coming

826

MARKHAM
The The
color of the ground was in him, the red earth, smack and tang of elemental
things.

VAN DYKE

A man
search of

travels

the

world

over in

what he needs and returns


Kerith [1916], ch.
1 1

home to find it. The Brook

Lincoln, the

Man

of the
st. 2

People,

He went down
As when a
boughs,
lordly
cedar,

HENRY VAN DYKE


1852-1933
If all

green with

the skies were sunshine,


faces

Goes down with a


hills,

great shout

upon the

Our

would be fain
plash of rain.
If

To

feel

once more upon them

And

leaves a
sky.

lonesome place against the Ib. st. 4

The cooling

An the Skies, st.

He drew

a circle that shut me out Heretic, rebel, a thing to flout. But Love and I had the wit to win: drew a circle that took him in.

We

Raise the stone, and thou shalt find me; cleave the wood and there am I. 1 The Toiling of Felix
pt. I, prelu

Outwitted

So

it's

home
is

ALBERT ABRAHAM MICHELSON


1852-1931

America

again, for me.

and home

again,

My

heart

turning

home

again,

and
st.

there I long to be.

America for Me,

The more important fundamental


laws and facts of physical science have all been discovered, and these are now so firmly established that the possibility of their ever being supplanted in conse-

Oh, London is a man's town, there's power in the air; And Paris is a woman's town, with
flowers in her hair.
Ib.
st.

quence of
.

remote must be looked for in the


. .

new discoveries is Our future

exceedingly
discoveries

sixth place of

decimals.

Not to the swift, the race: Not to the strong, the fight: 2 Not to the righteous, perfect Not to the wise, the light.

grace:
st. i

Address,

dedication

ceremony,

Reliance,

Ryerson

Physical Laboratory, University of Chicago [1894]

The The

lintel

pomp

low enough to keep out and pride:

GEORGE MOORE
1852-1933
After
all

threshold high
ceit aside.

enough

to turn de-

For the Friends at Hurstmont,


one
race
Self
is

there

is

but

The Door
the only prison that can ever
soul.

humanity.

The Bending
The
difficultv in life
is

of the

Bough
act III
i

bind the

[1900],

The

Prison and the Angel

the choice.
Ib.

IV

Unwritten Oxyrhynchus Logia Agrapha, The

The wrong way alwavs seems the 16. more reasonable.


English, Scotchmen, Jews, do well in Irishmen never; even the Ireland patriot has to leave Ireland to get a
hearing.

Sayings of Jesus, Fifth Logion. Raise ye the stone or cleave the wood to malce a path more fair or flat; Lo, it is black already with blood some Son of Martha spilled for that.

RUDYARD KIPLING [1865-1936]. The Sons of Martha a See Ecclesiastes and John 9:11, p. *8b,

Ave

[1911]- Overture

Davidson, p. 844b.

827

VAN DYKE
It is with rivers as it is with people: the greatest are not always the most agreeable nor the best to live with. Little Rivers, ch. 2

BLAN0
country. Government is nothing but the balance of the natural elements of a country. Our America
[1891]

of the

and the

day of spring is one thing, spring day is another. The difference between them is sometimes
first

The

first

have lived in the monster [the United States] and I know its insidesand my sling is the sling of David.
I
'

Letter to

Manuel Mercado

as great as a

month.
Fisherman's Luck, ch. 5

[1895]

CECIL JOHN RHODES


1853-1902
I

EDGAR WATSON

HOWE
Town

desire to

encourage and

foster

an

1855-1937

reaDy busy person


weighs.

never knows

how much he

Country

Sayings [1911]

people say behind your back is Ib your standing in the community.


is nothing so well known as should not expect something for nothing but we ail do and call it

What

appreciation of the advantages which will result from the union of the English-speaking peoples throughout the world, and to encourage in the students from the United States of America an attachment to the from

There

which they have sprung without I hope withdrawing them or their sympathies from the land of their or
adoption
birth.

country

that

we

Will, establishing the Rhodes


Scholarships

Hope,

16.

Educational
strongest
tie.

relations

make

the
jj> t

JOSE MARTI
1853-1895

So

little

done

so

much

to do.

Last words
is

A knowledge of different literatures


the best way to free one's tyranny of any of them.
self

from the

IRWIN RUSSELL
1853-1879

On

Oscar Wilde [1882]


to give
it

De man what
leas'.

To
ject.

beautify

life is

an obIb.

keeps pullin' de grapevine shakes down a few bunches at


Precepts at Parting [1888],
$t.

Terrible times in which priests no longer merit the praise of poets and in which poets have not yet begun to be
priests.

You mus'

reason with a mule.

Nebuchadnezzar

[1888],

$t.

On
This
look
is

"El Poema de Nidgpra" of

Ptrez

Bondde

[1883]
hills

JAMES

A,

BLAND

1854-1911
the age in which

can
16.

down upon the mountains.

Carry me back to old Virginny, There's where the cotton and the corn

Only those who hate the Negro see hatred in the Negro.
Manifesto of Montecristi [1895]

and taters grow; There's where the birds warble sweet the springtime,
There's where this old darky's heart long'd to go.

in

The

am

spirit

of a government

must be

that of the country.

The form of a government must come from the makeup

Carry

Me Back

to

Old

Virginity
st. i

[1875],

828

FRAZER

WMBATH)

SIR

JAMES GEORGE FRAZER


1854-1941

BENJAMIN PIERCE
1854-1914
Mathematics is the science which draws necessary conclusions. Linear Associative Algebra. In the American Journal of Mathematics, vol.

Dwellers by the sea cannot fail to be by the sight of its ceaseless and are apt, on the prinand flow, cbo
impressed
of that rude philosophy of symciples resemblance ... to trace a pathy and subtle relation, a secret harmony, between its tides and the life of man. The belief that most deaths . . happen at ebb 'ide is said to be held along the east oast of England from Northumberland to Kent. 1 The Golden Bough* ch. 3
.

IV

[1881], p. 97

JULES HENRI POINCARfc


1854-1912
of science is not comparable to the changes of a city, where old edifices are pitilessly torn down to give place to new, but to the continu-

The advance

tory,

heaviest calamity in English histhe breach with America, might never have occurred if George the
Ib.

The

Third had not been an honest dullard.

ous evolution of zoologic types which develop ceaselessly and end by becoming unrecognizable to the common sight, but where an expert eye finds always traces of the prior work of the past
centuries.

then, propitiation or conciliation of powers superior to man which are believed to

By

religion,

understand a

Vcdeur de

la

Science

[1904]

direct

and control the course of nature


life.

and of human
It is

Ib.

common

rule with primitive

people not to
his soul is

waken a sleeper, because away and might not have


Ib. 1 8

Science is built up with facts, as a house is with stones. But a collection of facts is no more a science than a heap of stones is a house. La Science et rHypoth&se * [1908]

time to get back.

The awe and dread with which the


untutored

ARTHUR RIMBAUD
I

savage contemplates mother-in-law are amongst the most familiar facts of 16. anthropology.

his

1854-1891 went out under the sky, Muse! and was your vassal.

its

The world cannot great men.

live at

the level of
16.

Ma

Boh&me.

Fantaisie

37

My

tavern was
stars in

THOMAS RILEY MARSHALL


1854-1925

the Big Bear. the sky rustled softly.

My
Ib.

My sad heart foams at the stem.


good

Le Coeur VoU

What

this country needs is a

five-cent cigar. 8

Remark

to

Clerk of Senate
*See
*43b,

John Crockett, Chief the United States


Henry
V, II ,

Lighter than a cork I danced on the Le Bateau Ivre [1871] waves.

The
m,
11,

Sweeter than apples to children green water spurted through m; "

Shakespeare,

p.

wooden hull.

and Dickens, p. 67 ib. 1 Abridged one- volume edition [1922]. The original appeared in twelve volumes from 1890
to 1915.

have bathed in the


sea

poem

of the
16.

...

What
,

this

country needs

is

a good five-cent

Devouring the green azures.


1

FRANKLIN P. ADAMS [1932]

Translated by G. B. HAXSTED.

829

RIMBAUD
Sometimes I saw what men have only dreamed of seeing.

BRENNAN
fashioned myself a sorcerer angel, who dispensed with all morality, I have corne back to the
I!

who

or an

Le Bateau
I

Ivre

earth.

have seen the sunset, stained with

mystic wonders, llhimine the rolling waves with long purple forms, Ib. Like actors in ancient plays.
I

Une Saison en Enjer. Adieu One must be absolutely modern.


Ib,
I

have embraced the summer dawn,


Illuminations [1874]. Aube

long

for

Europe

of

the

ancient
Ib.

parapets.
I

It rains softly

on the town. 1

have seen
lands

starry archipelagoes!

and

From
is-

say one must be a

seer,

poem make one-

lost

Whose

heavens are opened to the voybottomless nights that you


birds,

self a seer.

ager:
Is it in these

The poet makes himself a seer by an immense, long, deliberate derangement


of
all

A million golden

sleep, in exile,

O future Vigor?
Ib.

the senses. 2 Lettre <i Paul

Demeny [May

15,

1871]

I, green U, blue O: vowels, Someday I shall recount your latent

Black A, white E, red

EDITH MATILDA

THOMAS

births. 1
It is

Voyettes [1871]

found again.
Eternity. the sea

The God
doors.

of

1854-1925 Music dwelleth out

of

What?
It is

Music

Gone with

the sun.

L'&emitf

[1872]

WILLARD DUNCAN VANDIVER


1854-1932
I

O seasons, O chateaux,
What soul
is

without flaws?

come from

a state that raises corn

Bonheur, refrain

One evening, I And I found


cursed her.

sat

Beauty in her bitter.

my

lap.
I

And

and cotton and coclcleburs and Demoand frothy eloquence neither crats, convinces nor satisfies me. I am from Missouri. You have got to show me.
Speech at a naval banquet
in

Une
I

Season en Enfer (1873)


all

Philadelphia [1899]

found

could extinguish

human
Ife.

hope from

my soul.

GERALD BRENNAN
fl.

Baptism enslaved me. Ifc. Nuit de VEnfer


I

1899
like a

Th' memory comes


self an'

banshee me-

am

the master of fantasv.


large part in

Ib.

An'

Old poetics played a alchemy of the word.


* 1

my
Ib.
1 II

between, long for a mornings mornin* in Shanahan's ould shebeen. Shanahan's Ould Shebeen
[1899],
la ville.
st.

me wealth

devised odors for the vowels!


I

A
Une

black,

E white,

red,

O yellow, U

green.

Saison

en JEnfer [/*;$], Dtlires //, Alchimie de Verbe O saisons, O chateaux

Qudlc Ame

cst sans dtfauts?

pleut doucement sur Verlaine used this as an epigraph for his Aricttes Oublitcs, III. See Verlaine, p. Sofia. * Dereglement de tous les sens. See Baudelaire, footnote *, p. 7ob.

830

BRENNAN
If

PINERO

afford good whiskey, you couldn't he'd take you on trust for beer.

EUGENE VICTOR DEBS


1855-1926
there is a lower class I am in it, while there is a criminal element I am of it; while there is a soul in prison,

Shanahan's Quid Shebeen,

st.

While

WILLIAM COWPER BRANN*


1855-1898
Boston runs to brains as well as to beans and brown bread. But she is cursed with an army of cranks whom or a nothing short of a straitjacket will ever control. club elm swamp

am

not

free.

On

labor

and freedom
hands of
wealth

The
one.

savings of

many

in the

On

From The

Iconoclast.

Beans and Blood

MARGARET WOLFE HUNGERFORD


1855-1897
Beauty
is

can be a patriot on an stomach. empty Ib. Old Glory [July 4, 1893]


It

No man

in the eye of the beholder. 1

Molly Bawn [1878]

has the subtle flavor of an old pair


16. Godey's

FRANK FRANKFORT

of socles.

Magazine

MOORE
1855-1931

The Lydian notes of Andrew Carnegie as


praise

he warbles a riant roundelay in


with American Czars

He knew
ship

of poverty, or laments in pathetic

when

that to offer a man friendlove is in his heart is like

spondees the woes of the


spondulix.

man

16.

Our

giving a loaf of bread to dying of thirst.

one who

is

The Jessamy

Bride, ch. 9

HENRY CUYLER BUNNER


1855-1896
Off with your hat as the flag goes by!

To

strike at a serpent that hisses


it

may

only cause

to spring.

Ib. 19

And
You're

let

the heart have

its say;

man enough
will

for a tear in your

WALTER HINES PAGE


1855-1918 one thing better than good government, and that is government in which all the people have a part.
There
is

eye

That you

not wipe away.

The Old
I

Flag,

st. i

have a bookcase, which is what Many much better men have not.
TTiere are
I

Life

and Letters [1922-1925],


vol. Ill, p. 31

no books
might

am

afraid,

inside, for books, spoil its looks.

But I've three busts, all secondhand, Upon the top. You understand I could not put them underneath
Shake,

SIR

ARTHUR WING
PINERO
1855-1934
till fifty

Mulleary and Go-ethe. Shake, Mulleary and Go~ethe,


st. i

a forty either a stoic or a satyr.

From

man

is

at heart

as
erf

"The
first

his

paper,

Iconoclast" from the name published in Austin, Texas,


1

The Second Mrs. Tanqueray


See

aad later in Waco.

Hume,

p. 4340,

[1893], act I and Wallace, p. 7*gb.

83,

SCHREINER

BEANDEIS

OLIVE SCHREINER [RALFH IKON]


1855-1920
I

FRANCIS BELLAMY
1856-1931
pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America and to the
republic for which
it

The barb
suffering
its
is

in the arrow of childhood


this: its intense loneliness,

stands, one nation,

intense ignorance. The Story of an African


[1884],

under God,

indivisible,

with

liberty

and

Farm
eft.

1 justice for all.

The Pledge

of Allegiance to the

There never was a man who said one word for woman but he said two for man and three for the whole human
race.
lib.

Flag [1892]

THEOBALD VON BETHMANN-HOLLWEG


1856-1921 word Just "neutrality," a word which in wartime has so often been
for

FIONA MACLEOD [WILLIAM SHARP]


1855-1905

My heart

a lonely hunter that hunts on a lonely hill.


is

The Lonely Hunter,

st.

disregarded, just for a scrap of paper Great Britain is going to make war. To Sir Edward Goschen [August
4,

CY
knows it

WARMAN
1855-1914 dell knows
tell,

1914]; dispatch from Goschen

to the British Foreign Office

Every daisy in the

my secret,
st. i

LOUIS

D.

BRANDEIS

well,

And

1856-1941
sweet Marie.

yet I dare not

Sweet Marie [2893],

Those who won our independence


believed that the final end of the State was to make men free to develop their faculties; and that in its government the deliberative forces should
prevail

GEORGE EDWARD WOODBERRY


1855-1930
She from old fountains doth new judg-

over the arbitrarybelieved liberty to


2
liberty.

They

valued

liberty

ment draw,
Till,

both as an end and as a means. They

word by word, the ancient order

To

swerves the true course more nigh; in every age little she creates, but more preserves.

be the secret of hapand to be the secret of courage piness

Whitney

v.

Gdiforniaf 274 U-S. 357> 375 1*9*7]


and

My
fl.

Country

Fear of serious injury cannot alone


justify suppression of free speech

JOSEPH TABRAR
1892

assembly.

Men

feared
It is

burned women.
speech to free
irrational fears,

witches and the function of

And Pm very fond of that, But Pd rather have a bow-wow, wow. Daddy Wouldn't Buy Me a Bow-

I've got a little cat,

men from

the bondage of Ifc. 376

Wow

[1892]

LYMAN FRANK BAUM


1856-1919 The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Title of book [1900]

*In i8S8 JAMES B. UPHAM [1845-1905] nrrote a rough draft of the pledge which Bellamy, a* chairman of a committee for a national school program to celebrate the four-hundredth annito versary of the discovery of America, helped put into its final form.

The

phrase "under

God" was added

by

joint resolution of Congress approved by President, June 14, 1954. * See Thucydides, p. goa.

the

'832

BRANDEIS
ConstituThey [the makers of the the Governas conferred, against tion] the ment, the right to be let alone
most comprehensive of rights most valued by civilised
light

FREUD

KENYON COX
1856-1919

and the men.

Work
The

thou

for

pleasure

paint,

or

sing, or carve

Olmstead

v.

United States,

thing thou lovest, though the body


starve

277 US. 438, 478 [1928] Hie


zeal,

Who Who

works for glory misses oft the

goal;

in insidious

encroachment by men of well-meaning but without under16.

to liberty lurk greatest dangers

works for money coins his very


work's sake, then, and
shall
it

soul.

standing.

Work for the maybe


thee.

479

That these things

be added unto
of Art [1895]

Our Government

is

the potent, the


or for
its

The Gospel

good omnipresent iH it teaches the whole people by


example.
Ib.

teacher. For

SIGMUND FREUD*
1856-1939
Being entirely honest with oneself
a good exercise.
is

485

we would guide by the light of reason, we must let our minds be bold. New State Ice Co. v. Liebmann, 285 US. 262, 311 [1932]
If

Origins of Psychoanalysis. Letter to Fliess [October 15, 1897]


like me, conjures up the those half-tarned demons that inhabit the human breast, and seeks to wrestle with them, can expect to come through the struggle un-

No

one who,

Stare decisis is usually the wise pol-

most

evil of

because in most matters it is more the applicable rule of important that law be settled than that it be settled
icy,

in cases involving the Federal Constitution, where correction through legislative action is practically Court has often overimpossible, this
right.
.

But

scathed.

Complete Psychological Works.

Dora [1905]
Conscience is the internal perception of the rejection of a particular wish operating within us.
16.

ruled its

earlier decisions.

The Court

bows to the lessons of experience and the force of better reasoning, recognizing that the process of trial and error, so fruitful in the physical sciences, is appropriate also in the judicial function.

Totem and Taboo [1912is

At bottom God an exalted father.

nothing more than


Ib.

Burnet
Co.,

v.

Coronado Oil and Gas

285 US. 393, 406 [1932]

The psychic development of the individual is a short repetition of the 2 course of development of the race.
Leonardo da Vinci [1916]
the wayfarer whistles in the dark, he may be disavowing his timidity, but he does not see any the more
clearly for

There
spark of

most Americans some idealism, which can be fanned


is

in

When

into a flame. It

takes sometimes a divin-

ing rod to find

found,
cfesed

what it is; but when and that means often, when disto the owners,

doing

so.

the results are


Justice Brandeis

The Problem of Anxiety [1925]


i$ee Auden, p.
io6oa,

often extraordinary.

and Whitehead,

The Words of

p.

86ib. * See Haeckel, p. 752!*.

833

FREUD
poets and philosophers before discovered the unconscious; what I discovered was the scientific method by which the unconscious can be studied. On his seventieth birthday

The

me

If one wishes to form a true estimate of the full grandeur of religion, one must keep in mind what it undertakes to do for men. It gives them informa-

tion about the source

[1926]; from LIONEL TRILLING, The Liberal Imagi-

universe, it assures

and

final

and origin of the them of protection happiness amid the changing


and
it

nation
voice of the intellect is a soft one, but it does not rest until it has a hearing. Ultimately, after endgained lessly repeated rebuffs, it succeeds. This is one of the few points in which one may be optimistic about the future of mankind, out in itself it signifies not a
little.

vicissitudes or life,

guides their

The

thoughts and motions by means of precepts which are backed by the whole
force of
its

authority.

New

Introductory Lectures on

Psychoanalysis. Philosophy of Life (Lecture 35)

Future of an Illusion [2928]

true, but at home.

Analogies prove nothing, that is quite they can make one feel more

Religion is an attempt to get control over the sensory world, in which we ate placed, by means of the wish-world,
result

which we have developed inside us as a of biological and psychological


necessities.
16.
it derivts
it falls in

New

Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis [1932]

the relation of the ego to the id with that between a rider and his horse. The horse provides the locomotor energy, and the rider has the prerogative of determining the goal and of guiding the movements of his powerful mount towards it. But all too often in the relations between the ego and the id we find a picture of the less ideal situation in which the rider is obliged to guide his horse in the direction in which
16.
it

One might compare

its

Religion is an illusion and strength from the fact that with our instinctual desires.

16.

The Mosaic

religion

had been a

Fa-

ther religion; Christianity became a Son religion. The old God, the Father, took

second place; Christ, the Son, stood in His stead, just as in those dark times every son had longed to do.

Moses and Monotheism

[1938]

itself

wants to go.
of the Mental

The Anatomy

Personality (Lecture 31)

Man found that he was faced with the acceptance of "spiritual" forces, that is to say such forces as cannot be apprehended by the senses, particularnot by sight, and yet having undoubted, even extremely strong, effects. If we may trust to language, it was the movement of the air that provided the image of spirituality, since the spirit borrows its name from the breath of wind (animus, spiritus, Hebrew:
ly

ego has a still harder time has to serve three harsh masters, and has to do its best to reconcile the
of
it; it

The poor

The

claims and demands of all three. three tyrants are the external Ib. world, the superego and the id.
. .

Where

id was, there shall ego be. Ib.

ruach

= smoke)
bom

The

idea of the soul

Thinking is an experimental dealing with small quantities of energy, just as a general moves miniature figures over a map before setting his troops in action.

as the spiritual principle the realm in the individual. . . .

was thus

Now

of spirits had opened for man, and he was ready to endow everything in nature with the soul he had discovered in Ib. himself. _ ^

16. Anxiety

and Instinctual Life


(Lecture 32)

A man who

ble favorite of his

has been the indisputamother keeps for life

8 34

FREUD
that confithe feeling of a conqueror, of success that often induces real

REESE

and understands,

(j

cace

success*

too, that it is no proof of greatness. The final proof of greatness lies in being able to endure con-

From ERNEST JONES, Life and Works of Sipnund Freud, vol. I


[1953],
eft. i
. which I question to able been answer, not despite have of research into the years thirty my feminine soul, is "What does a woman

tumely without resentment.

Get Out
This
will

or

Get

in Line

never be a civiEzed country


for boots
Philistine

The

great

until

we expend more money than we do for chewing gum. From The


The path
of civilization
is

[1895-1915]

want?"

Quoted

in

CHARLES ROLO,

paved with
Ib.

Psychiatry in American Life

tin cans.

EDMOND HARAUCOURT
1856-1941

EDWARD SANDFORD MARTIN


1856-1939

To leave is to die a little; To die to what we love.

A Little Brother of the Rich.


Title of

We

leave

behind a bit of ourselves

poem

Wherever we have been. 1

Chozx de Poesies [1891]. Rondel de l Adieu


f

ROBERT EDWIN PEARY


1856-1920

ELBERT HUBBARD
1856-1915
not book learning young men need, nor instruction about this and that, but a stiffening of the vertebrae which will cause them to be loyal to a trust, to act promptly, concentrate their
It is

The Eskimo, Ootah, had his own explanation. Said he: "The devil is asleep or having trouble with his wife, or we should never have come back so easily/' The North Pole [1910]

HENRI PHILIPPE
1856-1951

energies,

do a thing
2

"carry a message

to Garcia."

A Message to
The man who
is

Garcia [March

They

shall

not pass. 1

Attributed.

Verdun

anybody and who does anything is surely going to be criticized, vilified, and misunderstood. This
is

[February 26, 1916]

a part of the penalty for greatness,

and every great


1

man

understands

LIZETTE WOODWORTH REESE


1856-1935

it;

mourir un peu; Cat mourir a ce qu'on aime. On laisse un peu de soi-mme En toute heure et dans tout lieu. Translated by NORBERT GUTERMAN.
Partir, c*est

When

consider

life

and

its

few

years wisp of fog betwixt us


1

and the sun;

Sec Schopenhauer, p. 563!).

Us ne passeront
first official

pas.

After the declaration of the Spanish-American


tenant,

War. Andrew Summers Rowan, then LieuUnited States Bureau of Military Intelligence, was sent to communicate with General Cattxto Garcia. He landed in an open boat near
Torquino Peak, April 24, 1898, executed the mission, and brought back information regarding the insurgent army.

record of the expression apOrder of the Day pears in General of [June *3, 1916] to his troops at the height battle: Vous ne les laisstrez pas passer [You will ALAN HORNE, New York not let them pass]!
Nivelle's

The

Times Magazine [February 20, 1966] The inscription on the Verdun medal ne passe pas.

is:

On

835

REESE

SHAW

A
I

call

to
.

battle,
. .

and

the

battle

We
nation

don't bother

much

about

dress

done wonder at the

and manners
idleness of tears.

we

in England, because as a don't dress well and we've no

Tears

manners.

The

burst of music

down an

unlistenIb.

You Never Can

Tell

[1898],

ing

street.

<tcU
great advantage of a hotel that it's a refuge from home life.

Creeds grow so thick along the way, Their boughs hide God. Doubt

The

is

Ib.II

GEORGE BERNARD SHAW


My
1856-1950 method is to take the utmost
trouble to find the right thing to say, and then to say it with the utmost Answers to Nine Questions levity.
It's

There

is

only one religion, though

there are a

hundred versions

of

it.

Plays Pleasant

and Unpleasant

[1898], vol II, preface

You're not a man, you're a machine. Arms and the Man [2898], act III
worst sin towards our fellow is not to hate them, but to be indifferent to them: that's the essence
creatures

The

well

to be

off

with

Woman
New. 1

before

you're

the Old on with the

The

Philanderer [2893], act

H
is

of inhumanity. The Devil's Disciple [1901], act

II

The

fickleness of the

women

love

only equaled by the infernal constancy Ib. of the women who love me. 2

The
ing
is

test of a

how

man or woman's breedthev behave in a quarrel.


16.

IV

People are always blaming their circumstances for what they are. I don't
believe
in

This is the true joy in life, the being used for a purpose recognized by yourself as a mighty one; the being thoroughly worn out before you are thrown on the scrap heap; the being a force of nature instead of a feverish selfish little clod of ailments and grievances complaining that the world will not devote
itself to

circumstances.

The people
they can't

who who

get on in this world are the people get up and look for the circumif

making you happy. Man and Superman


of

[1903!,

epistle dedicatory

stances they want, and, find them, make them.

A
earth.

lifetime

happiness!

No man
hell on
Ib. act I

alive could bear it: it

would be

Mrs. Warren's Profession


[1893], act II

The more
of,

There are no

things a

man

is

ashamed
Ib.

secrets better

kept than
Ib. Ill

the

more respectable he

is.

the secrets that everybody guesses.

A great devotee of the Gospel of 16. IV Getting On.


have no more right to consume happiness without producing it than to consume wealth without producing it.

Marry Ann; and at the end of you'll find no more inspiration


than in a plate of muffins.

a week in her
Ib. II

We

An

Englishman thinks he
is

is

moral
Ib. Ill

when he

only uncomfortable.
that there

Candida [1898], act I


I'm only a beer
teetotaler,

The
golden

golden rule
rule.

is

is

no

not a
16. Ill

champagne
*

teetotaler.

16.

Maxims

for Revolutionist

See C, H. Webb, p. See Cervantes, p. ig4b.

He who
teaches.

can, does.

He who

cannot,

&

836

SHAW
it comMarriage is popular because of maximum the temptation with bines the maximum of opportunity.
is a the only great force motive force in the world; but what you fellows don't understand is that you must get at a man through his own religion and not through yours.

Religion

real

Man

and Superman, Maxims


for Revolutionists

If you strike a child, take care that vou strike it in anger, even at the risk of blow in cold it for life.

Getting Married
I

like

a bit
it's

maiming
given.

whether

blood neither can nor should

be

of a mongrel myself, a man or a dog; they're the

for-

#>
Virtue consists, abstaining 16. from vice, but in not desiring it.

best for every day. Misalliance [1910], episode I

not in

parents would only realize bore their children! they


If

how
16.

Lack of

money

is

the root of

all evil. 1

He's a gentleman: look at his boots.

16.

Pygmalion [1922], act

The
crimes

evils greatest of
is

and the worst of

Women
let

poverty.

them

Major Barbara [1907], preface


can't talk religion to a 2 bodily hunger in his eyes.
I

woman

into your life, is driving at

upset everything. you you find that the

When

one thing and


16. II

man

with

you're driving at another.

Not bloody likely.


16. act II

16. Ill

Blood and

fire!
it is
is

16.

Home life as we understand more natural to us than a cage ral to a cockatoo.

no

I have to live for others and not for myself; that's middle-class morality. 16.

natu-

Getting Married [1908], preface

Independence? That's middle-class are all dependent on blasphemy.

We

one another, every soul of us on earth.


16.

When two
fluence of
sane,

people are under the inthe most violent, most in-

All great truths begin as blasphemies.

most delusive, and most transient

Annajanska [1919]

of passions, they are required to swear that they will remain in that excited,

abnormal, and exhausting continuously until death do

condition

The nauseous sham goodfellowship our democratic public men get up for
shop
use.

them

part. 16.

Back
bas

to

Methuselah

[1921].

a-dozen records.

A man is like a phonograph with halfYou soon get tired of


all;

Gospel of the Brothers BarnaEverything happens sooner or later if there


16.

diem

and yet you have to

sit

at

to
is

table whilst

he

reels

them
16.

off to every
(

everybody time enough.

new visitor.

The

Play)

As Far As Thought Can Reach


is

The whole strength of England lies in the fact that the enormous majority
of the

Silence of scorn.

the most perfect expression


16.

English people are snobs.

16.

The

worst cliques are those which

consist of one

man.
is

16.

You don't learn to hold your own in the world by standing on guard, but by attacking, and getting well hammered
ywnself.
*See I

Assassination
censorship.

the extreme form of


I

16.

The Rejected Statement, pL

Timothy 6:10, p. 555. See Conrad, p. 843!).

The Jews generally give make you pay; but they

value.

They

deliver the

SHAW
goods. In

WILDE

my

experience the

men who

want something

for nothing are invari-

OSCAR FINGAL O'FLAHERTIE WILLS

ably Christians. Saint Joan [1923], $c. iv


that has a mind and knows it can always beat ten men who haven't and don't. The Apple Cart [1929], act I

WILDE
she
is

1854-1900
Tread
lightly,

One man

near

Under the snow,


Speak gently, she can hear

The

daisies grow.

have defined the hundred per cent American as ninety-nine per cent an
I

Requiescat,

&t,

idiot.

Remarks on Sinclair Lewis receiving the Nobel Prize [1930]

And yet, and yet, These Christs that die upon the
ricades,

bar-

God knows
things.

it I

am

with them,

in

some

An American has no sense He does not know what


There
is

of privacy.
it

means.
1
,

Sonnet to Liberty: Not That I

no such thing
Speech,

in the country.
[April 1

Love Thy

Children

New York

You

And down the long and silent street, The dawn, with silver-sandaled feet,
Crept
like a frightened girl.

in

America should

trust to that
I

volcanic political instinct which divined in you.

have
Ib.

The

Harlot's House

LOUIS HENRI SULLIVAN


1856-1924

Lo! with a little rod did but touch the honey

of

ro-

mance And must I

lose a soul's inheritance?

HOas
Artis-

[1881], I 12
a

Form ever follows function. The Tall Office Building


tically

poet can survive everything but

Considered, Lippincotfs [March 1890)

misprint.

The Children
As
ideas

of the Poets

JOSEPH JOHN THOMSON


1856-1940
the point of view of the physicist, a theory of matter is a policy rather than a creed; its object is to connect or coordinate apparently diverse phenomena, and above all to suggest, stimulate and direct experiment.

From

for borrowing Mr. Whistler's about art, the only thoroughly original ideas I have ever heard him express have had reference to his own

superiority as a painter over painters greater than himself.

Reply to an attack by James McNeill Whistler. In Truth


[January 9, 1890]

The

Corpuscular Theory of Matter [1907]

Meredith
is

is

a prose Browning, and so

Browning.

He

used

poetry

as

BOOKER TALIAFERRO WASHINGTON


1856-1915

medium for writing in prose. The Critic as Artist [1891], pt


It
is

through

art,

and through

art

No race can prosper till it learns


there
is

that

only, that we can realize our perfection: through art and art only that we can

as

much

dignity in tilling a field

shield ourselves

from the sordid

perils

as in writing a

poem, Up from Slavery [1901]

of actual existence.
1

lb. II

See I Samuel 14:27, p. isa.

WILDE
As long as war
it

is

regarded as wicked,

will

When
will

always have its fascination. it is looked upon as vulgar, it

cease to

be popular.
Critic as Artist,

When a woman marries again it is because she detested her first husband. When a man marries again, it is because he adored his first wife. 1 Women
try their luck;

The
There
is

pL
1

II

men risk theirs.


Picture of Dorian Gray, ch. i

no

sin except stupidity.

The

Ib.

There is no such thing as a moral or an immoral book. Books are well written, or

Over the piano was printed a notice: Please do not shoot the pianist. He is
doing his best. Impressions of America. Leadville

badly written. That

is all.

The
All art
is

Picture of Dorian

Gray
Ib.

[1891], preface

quite useless.

Nowadays we are all of us so hard up that the only pleasant things to pay are
compliments. They're the only things we can pay.

There is only one thing in the world worse than being talked about, and that Ib. ch. i is not being talked about.
Conscience and cowardice are really
the

Lady Windermere's Fan [1892],


act I
I

can

resist

same things. 2

Ib.

everything except temptaIb.

tion,

A man

cannot be too careful in the


Ib.

3 choice of his enemies.

We are all in the gutter, but some of


us are looking at the stars.
Ib. Ill

The only way to get rid of a temptaID. 2 tion is to yield to it.

He knew the precise psychological Ib. moment 4 when to say nothing.


The only
difference between a caand a lifelong passion is that the
Ib.

In this world there are only two tragOne is not getting what one wants, and the other is getting it.
edies.

Ib.

What

is

a cynic?

A man who

knows

price a little longer. caprice lasts

the price of everything, and the value of Ib. nothing.

Children begin by loving their parents; as they grow older they judge them; sometimes they forgive them.
Ib. 5

Experience

is

the

name

everyone
Ib.
I

gives to their mistakes.


I

have never admitted that

am

more than twenty-nine, or


most. Twenty-nine
shades, thirty

Conscience
all.'

makes

egotists

of

us

when

thirty at the there are pink


Ib.

Ib. 8

when

there are not. 2

IV

*See Marlowe, p. 2120.


1
*

Sec Mark Twain, p. 7633. Sec Conrad, p. 84sa.


all

Mrs.

Allonby:

They

say,

Lady

considerations the psychological mofactor must be allowed to play a prominent part, for without its cooperation there is little to be hoped from the work of the

*In

mentum or

Hunstanton, that when good Americans die they go to Paris. 3 Lady Hunstanton: Indeed? And
1

artillery.

cember
Paris.

16,

Preussische Kreuzzeitung [De1870], commenting upon the siege of

Neue

When
let

See Samuel Johnson, p. 4313. you come to write my epitaph, Charles, it be in these delicious words, "She had a

error in translation gave us "psychological (i.e. the critical moment). The Parisians ridiculed the of Gerphrase as an

An

long twenty-nine." 1937], Rosalind


*

JAMES M. BARBIE [1860-

moment"

man pedantry, but


s See

it

example speedily became universal.

Good Americans, when they die, go to Paris. THOMAS GOLD APPLETON [1812-1884]; from OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES, The Autocrat of the
Breakfast Table [1858]

Shakespeare, p. s62a.

839

WIL0E
when bad Americans
die,

where do they

goto? Lord Iltingworth: Oh, they go to


America.

Democracy means simply the bludgeoning of the people by the people for
the people. 1

The Soul
The
fact

A Woman
The youth
three

of

No
is

Importance
],

of Man Under Socialism


[1895]

act I

of America

their oldest

tradition. It has

been going on now

for Ib.

that civilization requires slaves. The Greeks were quite ri^ht there. Unless there are slaves to do the
is,

hundred

years.

ugly, horrible, uninteresting work, cul-

ture

and contemplation become almost


is

Lord llUngwarth: The Book of Life a begins with a man and a woman in
garden.

impossible. Human slavery secure, and demoralizing.


cal

wrong,
of

in-

On

mecnamthe
deIfa.

slavery,
2

on

the

slavery

Mrs. Attanby:
tions.
I

It

ends with RevelaIfr-

machine, the future of the world


pends.

suppose society

lightful.

To be

in
it

it is

But to be out of

wonderfully demerely a bore. simply a tragedy.


is

Charity creates a multitude of

sins.

Ib.

Ib. Ill

Art is the most intense mode of individualism that the world has known.
16.

the lower orders don't set us a good example, what on earth is the
Really,
if

use of them?

Now art
lar.

The Importance
I

The

of Being

should never try to be popupublic should try to make itself


Ib.

Earnest [1895], act I

artistic.

have invented an invaluable permanent invalid called Bunbury, in order that I may be able to go down into the 16. country whenever I choose.

about
cate

The only thing that one really knows human nature is that it changes. Change is the one quality we can predion
it.

Ib.

Of
culty.

course the music

is

a great diffi-

Anybody can make


great
I

history.

You see. if one plays good music, people don't listen, and if one plays bad 16. music people don't talk.

man

can write

it.

Only a Aphorisms

To lose one parent may be regarded as a misfortune, to lose both


.
.

never saw a man who looked With such a wistful eye Upon that little tent of blue Which prisoners call the sky. The Ballad of Reading
[1898], pt.

Gad

looks like carelessness.

16.

I, st. 3

Relations are simply a tedious pack of people, who haven't got the remotest knowledge of how to live, nor the
smallest instinct about

When

a voice behind

me

whispered

low,

"That
Yet each

when

fellow's got to swing."


16.
tt.

to die.
16.

4
4

I never travel without my diary. One should always have something sensation16. II al to read in the train.

the thing he be let this each heard, By Some do it with a bitter look, Some with a flattering word.
kills
1

man

loves,

should ever be quite accurate about her age. It looks so calculating.


16. Ill

No woman

*
8

Sce See Sec < See

Lincoln, p. 851 a. Havelock Ellis, p. 6593.

Heraditus, p. 77!). Shakespeare, p.

840

WILDE
The coward does it with a kiss, The brave man with a sword!

WILSON

You

deal in the
if

ion, and,
validity,

my

raw material of opinconvictions have any

The

Ballad of Reading Gaol,


pt. I, st.

opinion ultimately governs the

world.

Address to the Associated Press


It is

sweet to dance to violins

When
To dance
Is

Love and Life


and
rare:

are fair:

[April 20, 1915]

to flutes, to dance to lutes

delicate
it is

But

not sweet with nimble feet


the
air!

There is such a thing as a man being too proud to fight. Address to Foreign-Born Citizens

To dance upon

[May
Ib. II,
st.

10, 1915]
in
this

[The
Something was dead in each of us, And what was dead was Hope.
Ib. st. 31

Civil

War]

created

And the wild


sweats,

regrets,

and the bloody


I:

country what had never existed before a national consciousness. It was not the salvation of the Union; it was the rebirth of the Union.

Memorial Day Address [1915]

For he

None knew who lives more lives than one More deaths than one must die.
so well as
Ib. st.

The

things that the flag stands for

37

know not whether laws be right, Or whether laws be wrong; AH that we know who lie in gaol
I

were created by the experiences of a great people. Everything that it stands for was written by their lives. The flag is the embodiment, not of sentiment, but of history. It represents the experiences

made by men and women, the

Is

that the wall

is

strong;

experiences of those

who do and

live

And that each day is like a year, A vear whose days are long.
16.

under that

flag.

Address [June 14, 1915]

V,

st. i

We
neutral.

have

stood

apart,

studiously

The vilest deeds like poison weeds Bloom well in prison air: It is only what is good in man That wastes and withers there:
Pale

Message to Congress [December 7, 2915]

Anguish keeps the heavy gate


the

And

Warder

is

America cannot be an ostrich with head in the sand.


st.

its

Despair.
16.

How else but through a broken May Lord Christ enter in?
Where
ground.

Speech, Des Moines \February i, 1916]

heart

16. st.

14

there

is

sorrow there

There must be, not a balance of power, but a community of power, not organized rivalries, but an organized

is

holy

De

common

peace.

Profundis [1905]

Address to the

US.

Senate

WOODROW WILSON
1856-1924 The United States must be neutral in feet as well as in name. We must
.

[January 22, 1917]

be impartial in thought as well as in


action.

must be a peace without victory. Victory would mean peace forced upon the loser, a victor's terms imposed upon the vanquished. It would be acat cepted in humiliation, under duress, an intolerable sacrifice, and would leave
It
.
. .

Message to the U.S. Senate


[August 19, 1914]

a sting, a resentment, a bitter memory upon which terms of peace would rest,
.1

WILSON
not

BROWN
1.
:

but only as upon permanently, between equals a peace quicksand. Only can last. Address to the US. Senate

Open covenants

of peace, opeaty

arrived at.
j

2,

Absolute freedom
seas.

of

navigation

upon the
5.

free,

group of willful men, repretheir own, have seating no opinion but rendered the great Government of the
little

impartial lutely colonial claims. Address to

open-minded, and absoadjustment of all


Congress (The Four*

United States
ble.

helpless and contempti14.

teen Points)

[January 8, 1918]

Statement made in reference to * certain members of the Senate

general association of nations


for the purpose guarantees of
territorial

[March

4, 1917]
is

must be formed ... of affording mutual


political
' integrity

independence and
to
great

Armed
enough

neutrality at best.

ineffectual

and

small

states
Ib,

alike.

Address to Congress, asking for a declaration of wrr [April 2,


1917]

The

world must be
2

made

democracy.
It is

safe for Ib.

Sometimes people call me an idealist. Well, that is the way I know I am an American. America is the only idealistic nation in the world. Address at Sioux Palls
[September
8, 1919]

a fearful thing to lead this great the most peaceful people into war, into
terrible and disastrous of all wars, zation itself seeming to be in the balance. But the right is more precious than peace, and we shall fight for the carried things which we have always for democracy, for nearest our hearts of those who submit to authe
civili-

highest and best form of effithe spontaneous cooperation ciency of a free people. From BERNARD BARUCH, American Industry at War: Report of the War Industries Board

The

is

[March 1921]

right thority to

have a voice

in

their

own

governments, for the rights and liberties of small nations, for a universal doright by such a concert of free peoples as shall bring peace and safety

minion of
to
all

EDWARD FRANCIS
ALBEE
Never give

nations and

at last free.

To

cate our thing that

lives

make the world itself such a task we can dediand our fortunes, every-

1857-1930 2 a sucker an even break. Remark

we are and everything that we have, with the pride of those who know that the day has come when

America is privileged to spend her blood and her might for the principles that gave her birth and happiness and the peace which she has treasured. God helping her, she can do no other.
16.
1 Eleven Senators had conducted a filibuster against a bill authorizing the arming of American merchant vessels. See James Harvey Robinson, p. 866b.

ALICE

BROWN

1857-1948
Praise not the critic, lest he think You crave the shelter of his ink;

But pray his halo, when he

dies,

May 7 tip K the


i

steelyards of the skies.

The

Critic

See Clemenccau, p. 786a. Often attributed to W. C. Fields.

842

CONRAD

JOSEPH CONRAD
1857-1924 humthat work aspires, however A
the condition of art should carry Hy, to in every line. its justification The Nigger of the Narcissus
[1898], preface

youthl

...

flick

of sunshine upon a

strange shore, the time to remember; the time for a sigh, and goodbye!

Night

Goodbye

Youth [1902]
She strode like a grenadier, was strong and upright like an obelisk, had a beautiful race, a candid brow, pure
eyes,

But the
our being

artist

appeals to that part of


is

which

wisdom; to that in us

not dependent on which is a gift


and, there-

and not a thought of her own in


Tales of Unrest [1902].

her head.

and not an acquisition

The

He fore, more permanently enduring. our capacity for delight and to speaks winder, to the sense of mystery surto our sense of pity, rounding our lives: 16. and beauty, and pain.
The
ship, a

Return

Running

all

over the sea trying to get

behind the weather.

Typhoon

[1902], ch. 2

fragment detached from


swift like
16. ch. 2

The

sea never changes

and

its

works,
16.

the earth,

went on lonely and

for all the talk of

men,

are

wrapped in

a small planet.

mystery.

Goodbye, brothers! You were a good crowd. As good a crowd as ever fisted with wild cries the beating canvas of a heavy foresail; or tossing aloft, invisible
the night, gave back yell for yell to a 16. 5 westerly gale.
in
I

We live, as we dream
I

alone.

Heart of Darkness [1902],* I


don't
I

like

but chance
reality

like

work no man does the what is in work


yourself.

to
for

find

Your own

am

lic life,

a great foe of favoritism in pubin private life, and even in the

yourself,

what no other man

not for others can ever know.


16.

delicate relationship of

an author to his

works.

Lord Jim [1900], author's note


There
word.
.
.

The mind
anything all the past

of man is capable of because everything is in it,


as well as all

is
.

a weird

And

power a word

in a

spoken
far

the future.
16. II

carries

deals destruction very far time as the bullets go flying


space.

through through 16. ch. 15

That faculty of beholding at a hint and the shape of his dream, without which the earth
the face of his desire

up to hunger, no it out, disgust simply can wear patience does not exist where hunger is; and as

No

fear can stand

to superstition, beliefs,

and what
less

may
1

call principles,

they are

than
16.

you

would

know no
shall

lover

and

no
16.

ad-

chaff in a

breeze. 2

venturer.

16

You

judge of a

man by
tricks

his foes
16.

is experience . . . but experience pushed a little (and only very the actual facts of the case for the little) beyond

"Heart of Darkness"

it

is

as well as

by his

friends. 1

34

Vanity plays lurid memory.

with our
16. 41

I believe, purpose of bringperfectly legitimate, of the ing it home to the minds and bosoms That somber theme had to be readers. . .
.

Only

moment;

moment

of of

strength, of

romance, of glamour

of its own, given a sinister resonance, a tonality a continued vibration that, I hoped, would hang in the air and dwell on the ear after the last CONRAD, Youth: A Narnote had been struck. rative, and Two Other Stories, author's preface
*

See Wilde, p. 8 39 a.

See G. B. Shaw, p. 8373.

843

CONRAD
Exterminate
all

DAVIDSON
In plucking the fruit of memory one runs the risk of spoiling its bloom. The Arrow of Gold [1919],

the brutes!

Heart of Darkness

II

The horror! The


Mistah Kurtz

horror!

16.
Ifc.

he dead. 2

authors note
Historian of fine consciences.

The air of the New World seems favorable to the art of declamation. Nostromo [1904)7 ch. 6
Efficiency of a practically flawless kind may be reached naturally in the struggle for bread. But there is somea higher point, a subthing beyond tle and unmistakable touch of love and
skill; almost an into all work that which gives spiration which is finish which is almost art

Notes
[1921]. ciation

on Life and Letters Henry James, An Appre-

COUt
1857-1926
Every day, in every way, I'm getting
better

pride beyond mere

and

better.

Formula of

his faith cures

art.

The Mirror of

the Sea [1906]. The Fine Art

CLARENCE SEWARD

A
him

man's

real life

is

that accorded to

DARROW

in the thoughts of other men reason of respect or natural love.

by

Under Western Eyes


cording to his

[1911], pt. I

Let a fool be made serviceable acfolly.

1857-1938 do not consider it an insult, but rather a compliment to be called an agnostic. I do not pretend to know
I

16, 3

where many ignorant


that
is all

men

are

sure

that agnosticism means.


trial,

The
evil
is

belief in a supernatural source of

Scopes

Dayton, Tenne$$ce
[July 13, 1925]

not necessary; men alone are quite capable of everv wickedness.


Ifc. II,

I don't believe in God because don't believe in Mother Goose.

All ambitions are lawful except those

which climb upward on the miseries or credulities of mankind. A Personal Record [1912],
preface

Speech, Toronto [1930]

There

is

no such thing

as justice

in or out of court.

Interview, Chicago [April 1936]

men's imagination does truth find an effective and unevery deniable existence. Imagination, not

Only

in

JOHN DAVIDSON
1857-1909

invention, as of life.

is

the supreme master of art


16. ch.
i

1 For two hundred years, the Judges of England sat on the Bench, condemning to the penalty of death every man, woman, and child who stole property to the value of five shillings; and, during all that time* not one Judge ever remonstrated against the law. We English are a nation of brutes, and ought to be exterminated

My feet are heavy now but on I go, My head erect beneath the tragic yean,
I Felt the

World A-Spinnmg

A new
The The
1

In anguish
race
is

we

uplift

unhallowed song:
to the swift;

man. JOHN BRIGHT [1888]; quoted by Henry Adams, The Education of Henry Adto the last

1 battle to the strong.

War Song,

st.

ams

[1907], ch. 73
S.

Used by T. Hollow Men

Eliot as an epigraph for

The
p.

See Ecclesiastes

$>;//,

p. *8b,

and Vin Dyke,

87b.

844

DAVIDSON
Aad Wood in torrents pour always in vain, la vain
For war breeds war again.

VEBLEN

Dunno what ter call


But
Song,
st.

'im,
7

he's

mighty

hi

a rose!
st. i

Mighty Ldk' a Rose,


7

THORSTEIN VEBLEN
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN
KING, JR.
1857-1894
but work, Nothing to do Nothing to eat but food, to wear but clothes

1857-1929
Conspicuous consumption of valuable goods is a means of reptitability to the gentleman of leisure. The Theory of the Leisure Class
[1899], ch.

Nothing

To keep one from going nude.

The

With
i

Pessimist, st

the exception of the instinct of


is

self-preservation,

Nowhere to go but out, Nwhere to come but back.


16.
st.

the propensity for probably the strongest and most alert and persistent of the economic motives proper. 16. 5

emulation

KARL PEARSON
1857-1936
science, as training the mind to an exact and impartial analysis of feds, is an education specially fitted to

wastefulness

requirement of conspicuous is not commonly present, consciously, in our canons of taste, but it is none the less present as a constraining

The

Modern

norm

selectively

shaping and sus-

taining our sense of

what

is

beautiful,

promote sound citizenship. The Grammar of Science [1892]

and guiding our discrimination with respect to what may legitimately be approved as beautiful and what may
not.
16. 6
Priestly vestments show, in accentuated form, all the features that have been shown to be evidence of a servile

EDGAR SMITH
1857-1938
You may tempt the upper classes With your villainous demitasses, But Heaven will protect the working
girl.

status

and

a vicarious life.

16. 7

The dog commends himself to our favor by affording play to our pro. . .

Heaven Witt Protect the 1 Working Girl

pensity for mastery, and as he is also an item of expense, and commonly serves
industrial purpose, he holds a wellassured place in men's regard as a thing 16. of good repute.

no

FRANK LEBBY STANTON


1857-1927
Jest

The
is

adoption of the cap and

gown

a-wearyin' fer you All the time a-feelin' blue;

one of the

of modern

striking atavistic features 16. 14 college life.

Wishin* fer you Youll be comin*

wonderin*

when
i

home again.

Wearyin* for You, st


Sweetes'liT feller

The classics have scarcely lost in absolute value as a voucher of scholastic it respectability, since for this purpose
is

only necessary that the scholar should

Everybody knows;

W*

*Sung by Marie Dressier [1873-1934] in TilNightmare.

be able to put in evidence some learning which is conventionally recognized


as evidence of wasted time.

16.

845

HALL

PLANCK

OWEN HALL
[JAMES DAVIS]
d.

REMY DE GOURMONT
1858-1915
Aesthetic emotion puts man in a state favorable to the reception of erotic emotion. Art is the accomplice of love, Take love away and there is no
longer
1

1907

tell me, pretty maiden, are there any more at home like you?

Floradora [1900], act II

art.

JOHN BURNS
The
sir, is

Dicadence
is

St.

1858-1943 Lawrence is water, and the


is

because peoples do not know each other that they hate each other so
It

Mississippi
&ttrf

muddy

water; but that,

liquid history.

of

terrace of the House Commons, to transatlantic

on the

ik There are too few obscure writers in French. accustom ourselves like

little.

We

visitors

who

belittled the

me

cowards to love only writing that and that will soon be elementary.

is

easy
ft.

of

the

Thames

Man
all.

is

a successful animal,

that's

SAM WALTER FOSS


1858-1911

Promenades Philosophiqucs

And men two


Trod
in the

centuries

and a half
st.

JOHN TROTWOOD

footsteps

of that calf.

MOORE

The Cdf*Path, 1
I.

A bloodless sportsman,
The

A rodless Walton of the brooks,


2

1858-1929 Only the gamefish swims upstream. 2

The

Vnafraid

Bloodless Sportsman
for the hunters of

The woods

are

made

ADOLPH
All the

S.

OCHS

dreams,
TTie brooks for the fishers of song; To the hunters who hunt for the gunless

1858-1935 news that's fit to print. Motto of the New Yorfe Times 3

game

The
Let

streams and the woods belong.


16.

MAX PLANCK
1858-1947

me

live in

my

house by the side of

Where
They

the road the race of

We have no right to assume that any


physical laws exist, or
if

men go by;

they have

ex-

are good, they are bad, they are weat, they are strong,

Obliged the wealthy, and relieved the POPE, translation of HOMER'S


1

poor.
Iliad.

Wise, foolish

so

am

I.

bk. VI, L it

Then why
seat/

should

I sit in

the scorner's

Translated by

W.

A. BRADLEY.

Or hurl
Let

me

And

the cynic's ban? live in my house by the side of the road be a friend of man. The House by the Side of the

The Ballade Theme.

Quoted by GRANTLAND RICE [1880-1954] in of the Gamefish and Expanding the


Only the gamefish swims upstream, But the sensible fish swims down. OGDEN NASH [b. 190*], When Jou

Sev

Road,
l

3 st.

Thc

to the streets of Boston. See Emerson, p. 6033. He held his seat; a friend to human race. Fast by the road, his ever-open door
is

reference

That, Smilt When Adolph Ochs bought the New York Times in 1896 he adopted this motto, which has been printed in every issue since. It is hard to think of any group of seven words
that have aroused

more newspaper

controversy,

GERALD
[1946]

W.

JOHNSON,

An

Honorable Titan

PLANCK
isted

ROOSEVELT
Death is always and under all circumstances a tragedy, for if it is not, then it means that life itself has be-

up to now7
in a

to

exist

similar

that they will continue manner in the

future.

The Universe in the Ligfit of Modern Physics [1931]


Anybody who has been seriously enin scientific work of any kind gaged'
the entrance to the of the temple of science are writgates ten the words: Ye must have faith. It is a quality which the scientist cannot dispense with. Where Is Science Going? [1932]
realizes that over

come

one.

Letter to Cecil Spring-Rice

[March
I

22, 1900]

am

you can use

as strong as a bull me to the limit.

moose and
[June 27, 1900]
evil

Letter to

Mark Henna.

No man

is

justified in

doing

on

the ground of expediency.

An

important

scientific

innovation
If

The Strenuous
we
ease and

Life [2900]

rarely makes its way by gradually winning over and converting its opponents: it rarely happens that Saul becomes

Paul. What does happen is that its opponents gradually die out and that the growing generation is familiarized with the idea from the beginning.

The Philosophy

of Physics [1936]

seek merely swollen, slothful ignoble peace, if we shrink from the hard contests where men must win at the hazard of their lives and at the risk of all they hold dear, then bolder and stronger peoples will pass us by, and will win for themselves the domination of the world. Ib.

THEODORE ROOSEVELT
1858-1919
wish to preach, not the doctrine of 1 ignoble ease, but the doctrine of the
I

There is a homely adage which runs, "Speak softly and carry a big stick; you will go far." If the American nation will
speak softly and yet build and keep at a pitch of the highest training a thor-

strenuous

life.

Speech before the Hamilton Club, Chicago [April 10,


1899]
it is to dare mighty things, win glorious triumphs, even though checkered by failure, than to take rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy much nor suffer much, because they

oughly efficient navy, the trine will go far.

Monroe Doc-

Speech at Minnesota State Fair [September 2, 2902]

Far better

The
in this

first

to

requisite of a
is

good

citizen

Republic of ours

that he shall

be able and willing to pull his weight. Speech, New York [November
22, 2902]

live in

the gray twilight that knows not 16. victory nor defeat.

A man who
his

is

We must remember not to judge any


public servant
pecially

blood

for

his

good enough to shed country is good

by any one act, and esshould we beware of attacking

wards.

the men who are merely the occasions and not the causes of disaster. Ib.
1

enough to be given a square deal afterMore than that no man is entitled to, and less than that no man
shall have.

Me ...

dulcis

alebat

Speech at Springfield, Illinois [711^4,2903]

Parthenope, studiis florentem ignobilis otii. [Sweet Parthenope nourished me, flourishing in studies of ignoble
ease.]

No man
is

is

VIRGIL [70-19

below
it.

B.C.].

Georgics, bk. IV, 1. 56^

it;

above the law and no man nor do we ask any man's


require

permission

when we

him
is

to de-

Parthenope: ancient

name

of Naples.

obey

Obedience to the law

847

ROOSEVELT

SMITH
to regulate its use to whatever degree the public welfare may require it.

manded
favor.

as

right;

not asked as

Third Annual Message [December 7, 1903]


IB the Western Hemisphere the adherence of the United States to the Monroe Doctrine may force the United
States, however reluctantly, in flagrant cases of such wrongdoing or impotence,

Speech, Osawatomie [August 31,


1910]

The

lunatic

fringe

in

all

reform

movements.

Autobiography [2913]

to the exercise of
lice

an international poto Congress:

power.

Annual Message
Corottary to the
trine

demand that big business give the people a square deal; in return we must insist that when anyone engaged in big business honestly endeavors to do right he shall himself be given a square
deal.
Jfc.

We

Monroe Doc6,

[December

1904]

We stand equally against government


by a plutocracy and government by a mob. There is something to be said for government by a great aristocracy which has furnished leaders to the nation in peace and war for generations; even a democrat like myself must admit this. But there is absolutely nothing to
be said for government by a plutocracy, for government by men very powerful
in certain lines

with the muckrake are often indispensable to the well-being of society,

Men

but only if they know when to stop 1 raking the muck.


Address, laying of the corner""

House Office Washington [April


stone,

B\

Malefactors of great wealth. Speech at Provincetown, Massachusetts [August 20, 1907]


Nature-faker.

money

and gifted with "the touch/' but with ideals which in their essence are merely those of so
glorified

many

pawnbrokers.

Everybody's Magazine [September 1907]


waste, to destroy, our natural resources, to skin and exhaust the land instead of using it so as to increase its
usefulness, will result in

Letter to Sir

Edward Grey
15,

[November

1913]

To

undermining in
right to

There is no room in this country- for The Americanism. . hyphenated one absolutely certain way of bringing
.
.

the days of our children the very prosperity

which we ought by
to

hand
devel-

down
oped.

them

amplified and

to ruin, of preventing all of its continuing to be a napossibility tion at all, would be to permit it to become a tangle of squabbling nationalities.

this nation

Message to Congress [December


3,

1907]

Speech before the Knights of Columbus, New York [Ocrfober 12, 1915]

object of government is the welof the people. The material fare progress and prosperity of a nation are
desirable chiefly so far as they lead to the moral and material welfare of all

The

Put out the light. Last words [January

6, 1919]

good

citizens.

LANGDON SMITH
When
1858-1908 were a tadpole and you
I

The New Nationalism


Every

[1910]

holds his property subject to the general right of the community


*

man

was a

fish,

In the Paleozoic time.

See

John Bunytn,

p. s66a.

Evolution [1895],

rf- *

WATSON

DOYLE

SIR

WILLIAM WATSON
1858-1935

April, April,

Laugh thy girlish laughter; Then, the moment after,

The present contains nothing more than the past, and what is found in the effect was already in the cause. L' Evolution Cr&itrice [1907] *
Intelligence

...

is

the

faculty

of
16.
Ib.

Weep
To

thy

girlish

tears.

Song

making
to

artificial objects, especially tools

make

tools.

No

dress, to call, to dine, to break canon of the social code,


little

L'<3an vital [the vital spirit].

laws that lackeys make, The The futile decalogue of Mode How many a soul for these things

lives,

HAROLD EDWIN BOULTON


1859-1955
Speed, bonnie boat,
like a bird

With
While

The

pious passion, grave intent! Nature careless-handed gives things that are more excellent.

on the

The Things That Are More


Excellent, st . 6

The

sense of greatness keeps a nation


great.

wing; Onward, the sailors cry: Carry the lad that's bom to be king Over the sea to Skye.

Our Eastern Treasure

Skye Boat Song,

st. i

SIR

ARTHUR CONAN
DOYLE
1859-1930

KATHARINE LEE BATES


1859-1929
beautiful for spacious skies, For amber waves of grain,

London, that great cesspool into which all the loungers of the Empire
are irresistibly drained.

For purple mountain majesties Above the fruited plain! America! America! God shed his grace on thee And crown thy good with brotherhood

Study in Scarlet [1887]

possible,

From

sea to shining sea!

you have eliminated the imwhatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth. The Sign of Four [1890], ch. 6

When

America the Beautiful [1893],


St. 1

The Baker Street irregulars.


It
is

Ib.

my

belief,

Watson, founded

O beautiful

for patriot

dream

That sees beyond the years Thine alabaster cities gleam

Undimmed by human

tears!

upon my experience, that the lowest and vilest alleys of London do not present a more dreadful record of sin than does the smiling and beautiful
li.
st.

countryside.

The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes Copper [1891].


Beeches

HENRI BERGSON
1859-1941

To
eman*

Sherlock

Holmes she

is

woman.
actions

16.

A Scandal in
finishing
it I

always the

Bohemia

We
ate

are free

when our
total

from our
it,

personality,

when

ray Bergson, you are a magician, and your book is a marvel, a real wonder in the history
of philosophy. such a flavor

they express

in the indefinable

when they resemble it way a work of art


artist.

... In
of

found

sometimes does the


Essai sur les

Donntes Imm&diates
la

euphony, as of a rich river that never foamed or ran thin, but steadily and firmly proceeded with its banks full
persistent
to the brim.

de

Conscience [1889]

WILLIAM JAMES, The Letters o/ William James, vol. 11, p. 290 [7907]

DOYLE
the curious incident of the dog in the nighttime/' "The dog did nothing in the night".
.

E1XIS

God is an Unutterable Sigh b the Human Heart said the old German And therefore said the last mystic.
1

time,"

word.
I

Impressions and

Comments

"That was the curious incident, remarked Sherlock Holmes. The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes [i 894] Silver Blaze
.

Without an element of the obscene there can be no true and deep aesthetic
or moral conception of life. ... It is only the great men who are truly obscene. If they had not dared to be

You know my methods, Watson. 16. The Crooked Man


"Excellent!"
I [Watson] "Elementary/* said he [Holmes],

cried.

obscene they could never have dared to be great. Ib.


process of sex, as into the whole texture of our man's or woman's body, is the pattern of all the process of our life.
it
is

16.

The omnipresent
woven

They were the


tic

footprints of a gigan-

hound!

The Hound

of the Baskervilles [1902], eft. 2


is

The New
Every
raphy.
artist writes his

Spirit

own

auto
16.

Come, Watson, come! The game


afoot.
1

The Return of Sherlock Holmes [2904]. The Adventure of the


Abbey Grange

The

fair sex is

your department.
16. TA<?

Second Stain

If men and women are to understand each other, to enter into each other's nature with mutual sympathy, and to become capable of genuine comradeship, the foundation must be kid in

youth.

It is a great

small

thing to start life with a number of realty good books

The Task

of Social Hygiene, ch.

which are your very own. Through the Magic Door [1908]
Mediocrity knows nothing higher than itself, but talent instantly recognizes genius.

There are few among us who have not suffered from too early familiarity with the Bible and the conceptions of
religion.
16. 7

The Valley of Fear

[1914]

The bow was made in England: Of true wood, of yew wood, The wood of English bows. The Song of the Bow,

There has never been any country at every moment so virtuous and so wise that it has not sometimes needed to be 16, 10 saved from itself.

The
$t. i

family only represents one

as-

however important an pect,

aspect, of a

HAVELOCK ELLIS
18^9-1939 men one must turn one's back on men.

To be

a leader of

Introduction to HUYSMANS, Against the Grain

functions and activiis beautiful and ideal or the reverse, only when we have taken into our consideration the social as well as the family relationship. Little Essays of Love and

human being's ties. ... A life

Virtue [1922],

ch.

The text of the Bible is but a feeble symbol of the Revelation held in the text of Men and Women. Impressions and Comments
*See Shakespeare, Henry
*44*.
F,
777,
f,

One can know nothing of giving aught that is worthy to give unless one B. also knows how to take.
iGod is an unutterable sigh, planted in the JEAN PAUL RICHTW [1765depths of the soul.

33,

p.

850

ELLIS

FOWLER
had they happened to be within the
i

The byproduct

is

sometimes more

valuable than the product.


Little Essays of

Love and
eft.

reach of predatory

human

The Dance

hands. of Life, ch. 7

Virtue,
All civilization has

from time to time


Ib.

Had there been a lunatic asylum in the suburbs of Jerusalem, Jesus Christ
would infallibly have been shut up in it at the outset of his public career. That interview with Satan on a pinnacle of
the

become

a thin crust over a volcano of

revolution.

greatest task before civilization at present is to make machines what they ought to be, the slaves, instead of
1 the masters of men.

The

him,

Temple would alone have damned and everything that happened


could

after

It.

but have confirmed

the

diagnosis.

The art of dancing stands at the source of all the arts that express themselves first in the human person. The art of building, or architecture, is the beginning of all the arts that lie outside the person; and in the end they unite. The Dance
Dancing
is

Impressions and Comments, series 3

H. W.

FOWLER
AND

1859-1933
F. G.
Prefer

of Life [1923],
loftiest,

eft.

the most moving, the most beautiful of the arts, because it is no mere translation or abstraction

the

FOWLER
to grammar.
eft.

1871-1918

from

life; it is life itself.

The
16.

geniality

King's English [1906],


. .

place where optimism flourishes is the lunatic asylum.

The

most
16. 5

Thinking in
parable
to

its

lower grades

is

com-

higher forms

paper money, and in its it is a kind of poetry.


16.
it
is

HACKNEYED PHUASES. The purpose with which these phrases are introduced is for the most part that of giving a fillip to a passage that might be humdrum without them . but their true use when they come into the
. .
.

writer's

mind

is

as

danger

signals;

he

should take warning that when they suggest themselves it is because what

In philosophy,

not the attain-

he

is

writing

is

bad

stuff,

or

it

would

ment of the goal that matters, it is the things that are met with by the way.
16.

not need such help; let him see to the substance of his cake instead of decorating with sugarplums.

The mathematician has reached the highest rung on the ladder of human
thought.
16.

A Dictionary

of

Modern English
Usage
1

[1926]

QUOTATION. ...

writer expresses

A man

must not swallow more

beliefs

than he can digest.

16. 5

The Promised Land

always

lies

on
16.

the other side of a wilderness/

What we

call

"morals"

is

simply

blind obedience to words of

command. 16.6
stars
. , .

The sun and the moon and the would have disappeared long ago
1

himself in words that have been used before because they give his meaning better than he can give it himself, or because they are beautiful or witty, or because he expects them to touch a chord of association in his reader, or because he wishes to show that he is learned and well read. Quotations due to the last motive are invariably illadvised; the discerning reader detects it and is contemptuous; the undiscern*

See Oscar Wilde, p. 84ob.

Written by H.

W.

Fowler.

851

FOWLER
ing
is

HOUSMAN
Loveliest of trees, the cherry
Is

perhaps impressed, but even then same time repelled, pretentious quotations being the surest road to tedium.
is

now
j

at the

hung with bloom along the bough, A Shropshire Lad 2, st,


of

Dictionary of Modern English Usage

my threescore years and ten, Now, not come again, will Twenty And take from seventy spring? a score,
It

KENNETH CRAHAME
1859-1932
indeed, grown-up people are fairly correct on matters of fact; it is in the higher gift of imagination that
rule,

only leaves

me

fifty

more.

And

As a

since to look at things in Fifty springs are little room, About the woodlands I will go

bloom

To

see the cherry

hung with snow.


Ib.
st. 2, 3

they are so sadly to seek.

The Golden Age

[1895]. The Finding of the Princess

Monkeys, who very sensibly refrain from speech, lest they should be set to'
9

lies still, but blood's a rover, Breath's a ware that will not keep. Up, lad: when the journey's over Therell be time enough to sleep.

Clay

earn their livings.

Ib. "Lusisti Satis

Ib.

4 (Remit)

absolutely nothing half so much worth doing as nothing simply messing about in boats ... or with 'boats. ... In or out of *em, it

There

is

Lovers lying two and two Ask not whom they sleep beside, And the bridegroom all night through Ib. 12 Never turns him to the bride.

doesn't matter.

The Wind

in the

Willows
eft.

When
I

[1908],

"Glorious, stirring sight!" murmured "The poetry of motion! Toad The red way to travel! The only way to in next week totravel! Here today
.

I was one-and-twenty heard a wise man say, "Give crowns and pounds and guineas But not your heart away;

cities

morrow! Villages skipped, towns and jumped always somebody else's horizons! O bliss! O poop-poop! O my!

Give pearls away and rubies But keep your fancy free." But I was one-and-twenty, No use to talk to me.

When
I

my!"

Ib. 2

ALFRED EDWARD HOUSMAN*


1859-1936

I was one-and-twenty heard him say again, "The heart out of the bosom Was never given in vain; 'Tis paid with sighs aplenty 7 And sold for endless rue/

From Clee to heaven the beacon burns, The shires have seen it plain. A Shropshire Lad [1896] i, st. i
Oh, God will save her, fear you not: Be you the men you've been, Get you the sons your fathers got,
Arid
1 1

And I am two-and-twenty, And Oh, 'tis true, 'tis true,


His folly has not fellow Beneath the blue of day

Ib. 13

That

gives to

man

or

woman
Ib.
1

God will save

His heart and soul away.

the Queen.
Ib. rt. 8

not a pessimist but a pejorist (as George Eliot taid be was not an optimist but a meliorist); and that philosophy is founded on my observation of the world, not on anything so trivial Autobioand irrelevant as personal history. grtphicel note written /or a French translation of
kit

am

Oh, when I was in love with you, Then I was clean and brave, And miles around the wonder grew How well I did behave.

poems

And now the fancy passes by, And nothing will remain,

HOUSMAN
And
mites around they'll say that
I

The

Am M quite myself again. A Shropshire


And
silence

By

poplars stand and trembk pools I used to know.

Lad 18

Shropshire

Lad

52,

st.

sounds no worse than

There, by the

starlit fences,

cheers

The wanderer halts and


Dying Young), st. 4
About the glimmering

hears

the ears. After earth has stopped Ib. 19 (To an Athlete


they sound on Bredon,

My soul that lingers sighing


weirs.

16.

st.

The

bells

With

And still "Come all


I

the steeples hum. to church, good people"


bells,
I will

rue rny heart

is

laden

Oh, noisy

hear you,

be dumb; come.
Ib. 21,
st.

For golden friends I had, For many a rose-lipped maiden

And many a
7

lightfoot lad.
16. 54,
st. i

The

lads that will die in their glory and Ib. 23, st. 4 never be old.

By brooks too broad for leaping The lightfoot boys are kid. Ib.

st.

Now

hollow

fires

burn out to black,

The

the keeper goal stands up, Stands up to keep the goal.


Ib. 27,
st.

And
4

lights are guttering low:

Square your shoulders, lift your pack, And leave your friends and go.

And fire and ice within me fight 1 Beneath the suffocating night.
Ib. 30,
st.

Oh
4
in

never

fear,

man, nought's to dread,


nor right:

Look not
In
all

left

There, like the


riot,

wind through woods

the endless road you tread There's nothing but the night.
16.

60

Through him the gale of life blew high; The tree of man was never quiet: Then 'twas the Roman, now 'tis I.
16. 31, st.

Oh many a

Livelier liquor

Oh

tarnish late
I

on Wenlock Edge,
16. 39, st. 3

And To justify God's ways


Ale, man,
ale's

peer of England brews than the Muse, malt does more than Milton can
to

man. 1

Gold that

never see.

the stuff to drink For fellows whom it hurts to think.

16.62
2 Mithridates, he died old.

Into

my heart

an

air

that

kills

16.

From yon

far country blows:

What

are those blue


spires,

What
That
I
is

remembered hills, what farms are those?

Pass

the can, lad; there's an end of Last Poems 9, st. i May.


troubles of our

me

The
the land of lost content,
it

proud and angry

dust

see

shining plain,
I

The happy highways where And cannot come again.


Earth

went
16.

Are from eternity, and shall not fail Bear them we can, and if we can we

40

and high heaven are and founded strong,

fixed of old

must. Shoulder the sky, your ale.


1

my

lad,

and drink
16. st.

16. 48,

st. i

Far in a western brookland

That bred
1

me long ago
and
Frost, p. 9*72.

Sec Dante, p. i$gb,

See Milton, p. s4ib. *Housman's passage is based on the belief of the ancients that Mithridates the Great [c. 15563 B.C.] had so saturated his body with poisons that none could injure him. When captured by the Romans he tried in vain to poisoe himself, then ordered a Gallic mercenary to kill him.

853

HOUSMAN
But men
at whiles arc sober

What God
Tell
st.

abandoned, these defended


Last

And think by fits and starts. And if they think, they fasten
Last

Poems

37,

$t.

Their hands upon their hearts*

Poems

jo,

me What

not here, it needs not saying, tune the enchantress plays

In aftermaths of soft September

The laws of God, the laws of nian, He may keep that will and can; Not I: let God and man decree
Laws
for themselves

Or under blanching mays, For she and I were long acquainted

And

knew

all

her ways.
16. 40,
st.
i

and not

for

me*
16. 12

They

say

my

verse

is

sad:

no wonder;

And how am I to face the odds Of man's bedevilment and God's?


I,

Its

narrow measure spans

a stranger
I

and

afraid

Tears of eternity, and sorrow, Not mine, but man's.


Ib.
I

In a world

never made.

More Poems
to

[1936], foreword

He stood, and heard the steeple Sprinkle the quarters on the morning
town.

my perils
in

Of cheat and charmer

Came clad

armor

One, two, three, four, to marketplace and people It tossed them down.
Strapped, noosed, nighing his hour, He stood and counted them and cursed
his

By stars benign. Hope lies to mortals

And most believe her,


But man's deceiver

Was
The

never mine.
rainy Pleiads wester,

Ib. 6, st.

luck;

And

then the clock collected in the tower

Orion plunges prone, And midnight strikes and hastens,

Its strength,

and

struck.

And

I lie

down

alone. 1
16. 11,
st.
i

Ib. i j (Eigfit O'Clock)

Happy bridegroom, Hesper brings


All desired

and timely

things.

My kind and foolish comrade That breathes all night for me.
16. 13,
Life,
st. 3

AH whom morning sends

to roam,

Hesper loves to lead them home.

Home return who him behold,

to be sure,
lose,

is

nothing much
it is,

to

Child to mother, sheep to fold, Bird to nest from wandering wide: l Happy bridegroom, seek your bride. 16. 24 (Epitfadamium) st. 3
,

But young men think


young.

and we were
16,36

We now to peace and darkness


And earth and thee restore Thy creature that thou madest And wilt cast forth no more.
16.

These, in the day when heaven was


ing,

fall-

The hour when


fled,

earth's

foundations

47 (For My Funeral),

st,

Followed their mercenary calling And took their wages and are dead. Ib. 37 (Epitaph on an Army of
Mercenaries),
*See Sappho, p. 690; and Meleager,
2 st.
i

Good

night; ensured release.

Imperishable peace,

Have
*

these for yours. 2


6o,l>.

See Sappho, p.

p.

uoa.

*The

British regulars

who made
14,

the retreat

These three lines are on the tablet over Housman's grave in the parish church at Ludlow,
Shropshire.

from Moos, beginning August

1914.

854

HOUSMAN
While sky and sea and land

TSUBOUCHI SHOYO
Love is like the measles; we all have to go through it Idle Thoughts of an Idle Fellow. Being in Love

And earth's foundations stand And heaven endures. More Poems 48 (Alta Quies),
St.
1

On

Oh

they're taking color of his hair.

him

to prison for the

Additional

Poems

[1937], *8,

St. i

Good

literature continually read for

pleasure reader: good to the

do some must quicken his dull, and sharpen his perception though and meldiscrimination though blunt,
must,
let

us hope,

"Nothing, so it seems to me/* said the stranger, "is more beautiful than the love that has weathered the storms of life. . The love of the young for the young, that is the beginning of life. But 'the love of the old for the old, of things that is the beginning of
.
.

longer/'

The

Passing of the Third Floor Back [1908]

low the rawness of his personal opin-

The Name and Nature of Poetry

WILLIAM JAMES

LAMPTON

when I Experience has taught me, to a of keep morning, am shaving watch over my thoughts, because, if a
memory, line of poetry' strays into skin bristles so that the razor ceases

my

my
to'
is

seat of this sensation 16. the pit of the stomach.


act.
.

The

1859-1917 Same old slippers, Same old rice, Same old glimpse of Paradise. June Weddings,

st.

10

Where the com is full of kernels And the colonels full of corn.
Kentucky

JEROME KLAPKA JEROME


1859-1927 Let your boat of life be light, packed a homely with only what you need home and simple pleasures, one or two someone to friends, worth the name, 2 love and someone to love you, a cat, a to eat dog, and a pipe or two, enough more a little and to and enough wear, than enough to drink; for thirst is a
dangerous
tiling.

TSUBOUCHI SHOYOi
1859-1935
writers of popular fiction seem to have taken as their guiding principle

The

the dictum that the essence of the novel lies in the expression of the apaccordproved moral sentiments. They erect a framework of morality into ingly which they attempt to force their
plots.

The Essence of the Novel

[1885]

Three

Men

in a

Boat [1889],
ch. 3

The

out the

indiscriminate readers throughcountry also must shoulder

thorimpossible to enjoy idling to work of has one unless plenty oughly


It is

their share of the blame. It has long been the custom in Japan to consider

do.

Idle

Thoughts of an Idle Fellow Idle [1889]. On Being


Lecture,
.

the novel as an instrument of educa... In actual practice, however, or only stories of bloodthirsty cruelty are welcomed. else of
tion

The Leslie Stephen versity [May 9, 1953].


1

Cambridge Unii

pornography

Ib.

Find someone to love


to love

you.

and, oh, someone SACHA GUITRY, Deburau [1918]


,

From Modern

edited Japanese Literature,

by

Donald Keene [1960}

855

STANTON

THOMPSON
For we are born in other's pain, And perish in our own.
Daisy,
$t.

CHARLES
Lafayette,

E.

STANTONi
of LafayCemetery, Paris

we

are here. 2

15
1

Address at the
ette,

Tomb

Look

for

Picpus

me in the nurseries of Heaven. To My Godchild

The innocent moon, which nothing

JAMES KENNETH STEPHEN*


1859-1892

Moves
I fled

does but shine, all the laboring surges of the Sister Songs, pt. II world.

When
And

the Rudyards cease from Kipling the Haggards ride no more. Lapsus Calami. To R. K.

Him, down the nights and down

the days;
I

fled

Him, down the arches

of the

years;

There s one beyond

Of sentences that stir my bile, Of phrases I detest,


all

Him, down the labyrinthine ways Of my own mind; and in the mist of
I fled'

others vile:
I

tears

"He

did
Ib.

it

for the best."

hid from

Him, and under running


of

The Malefactors

Plea, st. i

laughter.

The Hound

Heaven

[1893],

FRANCIS THOMPSON
The
fairest things

1859-1907 have fleetest end,


close:

But with unhurrying chase,

Their scent survives their

But the

rose's scent is bitterness

To him

that loved the rose.

Daisy [1893],

st.

10

And unperturbed pace, Deliberate speed, majestic instancy, and a Voice beat They beat More instant than the Feet "All things betray thee, who betrayest
Me."
Ib.
Z.

10

She went her unremembering way, She went and left in me

The pang of all the partings And partings yet to be.

gone,
Ib. st.

Across the margent of the world I fled, And troubled the gold gateways of the
stars.

16.

L 25 Be L 30
in

12

said to

dawn, Be sudden; to

eve,

Nothing begins, and nothing ends, That is not paid with moan;
disbursing officer of the American Expeditionary Forces in France [1917], deputed General by Penning to speak on behalf of the A.E.F. on this occasion. He used the phrase
1

soon.

Ib.

My
All

days have crackled and gone up

smoke.

Ib. L 122

Chief

which

took from thee

did but

again on July

14.

Not
But

take, for thy harms,


just that

The remark
eral

has also been attributed to Gen-

PershJng, who in My Experiences in the World Wmr [1951] says he cannot remember having said "anything so splendid/' However Naboth Hedin, one of the uniformed American

thou might'st seek


Ib.
Z.

it in

My
There
is

arms.

171

correspondents present upon the July 4, 1917, occasion, states that he heard Pershing pronounce the phrase three weeks earlier, on June 14, his

no expeditious road To pack and label men for God, And save them by the barrel load. A Judgment in Heaven,, epilogue

second day in Paris: " Pershing stepped

up

and saluted in
in
a.

his best

to it [Lafayette's grave] manner and then said

Thou

canst not

stir

a flower
star.

loud voice, 'Lafayette, we are here.* I was about twenty feet away" [letter from Naboth

Without troubling of a

The

Mistress of Vision

Hedrin

to

S&muel Eliot

Morison, June si,


i,

1954].

See Wordsworth, note

p. 5i6a.

line is inscribed on Thompson's tombstone in Rensal Green.

856

THOMPSON

BARJRIE

O world invisible, we view thee, O world intangible, we touch thee,


world unknowable,

JANE ADDAMS
1860-1935
Private beneficence is totally inadequate to deal with the vast numbers of

we know

thee.

The Kingdom
The
drift

of God ("In No Strange Land?') [1913], st. i

the

city's disinherited.

of

pinions,

would

we

Twenty Years at Hull House [1910]

hearken, Beats at our

own

clay-shuttered doors.
16. st. 3

The angels keep

Turn Tis ye, 'tis your estranged faces, That miss the many-splendored thing.
16. st.

their ancient places; but a stone, and start a wing!

The common stock of intellectual enjoyment should not be difficult of access because of the economic position of him who would approach it. 16.

JAMES MATTHEW BARRIE


18601937 The most gladsome thing
world
is

thy so sore loss Shall shine the traffic of Jacob's ladder Pitched betwixt Heaven and Charing

Upon

that few of us

fall

in the very low; the

Cross.

16.

st.

arm needs man to reach to Heaven So ready is Heaven to stoop to him. Grace of the Way, st. 6
Short

saddest that, with such capabilities, seldom rise high.

we
3

The Little Minister


It's

[1891],

eft.

Know you what


is

it is

to be a child? It

be something very different from the man of today. It is to have a spirit yet streaming from the waters of bapto
tism; it is to believe in love, to believe in loveliness, to believe in belief; it is to

and nobody bides 16. 4 in't. You canna expect to be baith grand 16. 10 and comfortable.
a weary warld,

Let no one

who

gether unhappy. has its rainbow.

loves be called altoEven love unreturned 16. 24

be so little that the elves can reach to whisper in your ear; it is to turn pumpkins into coaches, and mice into horses, lowness into loftiness, and nothing into
everything, for each child has its fairy godmother in its soul.

that has china plates themsels the maist careful no to break the 16. 26 china plates of others.
is

Them

We
loss of

never understand
this

need in
it.

world until

how little we we know the


eft.

Shelley. In

The Dublin Review


[July 1908]

Margaret Ogilvy [1896],

Few poets were so mated before, and no poet was so mated afterwards, until Browning stooped and picked up a faircoined soul that lay rusting in a pool of
tears.

In dinner talk it is perhaps allowable to fling on any fagot rather than let the fire go out.

Tommy and Grizel


Shall

[1900],

eft.

16.

SIDNEY WEBB [LORD PASSFIELD]


1859-1947

AND

a new rule of life from always to try to be a little kinder than is necessary? The Little White Bird [1902],

we make

tonight:

eft.

BEATRICE WEBB
1858-1943

The inevitability

of gradualness. Presidential address, British La-

may compel us to equal upstairs, but there will never equality in the servants' hall.
His lordship

be be

The Admirable Crichton


[1903], act
i

bour Party Congress [1923]

857

BAWUE

CHEKHOV

When
first

the first baby laughed for the time, the laugh broke into a thou-

WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN


1860-1925

sand pieces and they all went skipping about, and that was the beginning of
fairies.

P^ter Pan [1904], act

The humblest citizen of all when clad in the armor of a


j

the land,
righteous

beEvery time a child says "I don't


licve

in

fairies*'

there
falls

somewhere that

a little fairy Ib. down dead.


is

cause, Error.

is

stronger than all the hosts of

cratic
fairies?

Speech at the National Demo Convention, Chicago


[1896]

Do
you
It's

you believe in

...
Ib.

If

believe, clap your hands!

IV
If

You
shall

shall

a sort of

bloom on

woman.

brow of labor
of gold. 1

not press down upon the this crown of thorns. You


'

to you have it [charm] > you don't need have anything eke, and if you don't have it, it doesn't much matter what
else you have. Some women, the few, have charm for all; and most have charm for one. But some have charm for none. 1

not crucify mankind upon a crow


Ib.

ANTON PAVLOVICH CHEKHOV


1860-1904 more contented when I remember that I have two professions, and not one. Medicine is my lawful wife and literature my mistress* When I am bored with one I spend the night
I

What

Every

Woman Knows
[1908], act I

feel

of a The tragedy ' himself out.

man who

has found
Ib.

TV

One's religion is whatever he is interested in, and yours is Success.

most

with the other. Though this is irregular, it is not monotonous, and besides neither really loses anything through
infidelity.

The Twelve-Pound Look

[1910]

my

JOHN COLLINS BOSSIDY


1860-1928

Letter to A. S, Suvorin

[August 29, 1888]

And this is good old Boston, The home of the bean and the cod, Where the Lowells talk to the Cabots And the Cabots talk only to God. 2
Toast,

We shall rest! We
gels,
?11

shall

hear the anall diaevil,

we

shall see the


shall see

whole sky
all

monds, we

how

earthly

Hdy

Cross Alumni

Dinner [1910]
*

our sufferings are drowned mercy that will fill the whole And our life will grow peaceful, sweet as a caress. I believe, I
lieve.

in the

world.
tender, do be-

What

is

charm?

It is

what the

violet has

and

Uncle Vanya [1897],


to

act

IV

MARION CRAWFORD [1854the camellia has not. ch, 5 1909], Children of the King, which means the power to effect "Charm" is indiswork without employing brute force pensable to women. Charm is a woman's strength
just as strength is

To Moscow,
All
see
I

Moscow,

to

Moscow!

Three

Sisters [1901], act II


to

a man's charm.

HAVELOCK

wanted was to say honestly

Ems
ch. 3

[1859-1939],

The Ti*

of Social Hygiene,

people: "Have
are!"

a look at yourselves and

how bad and

'Patterned on the toast given at the twentyfijfth anniversary dinner of the Harvard Class of 1880, by a Westerner.
Here's to old Massachusetts, The home of the sacred cod, Where the Adamses vote for Douglas,

lives dreary your Letter to Alexander Tikhonov

a cro$ I 1 shall not help crucify mankind upon of gold. I shall not aid in pressing down upon the bleeding brow of labor this crown of thorns.

And

the Cabots walk with God.

WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN, speech, Representatives [December 22, 1894}

Howe

of

COPELANB

CARMAN
I

CHARLES TOWNSEND

COPELAND
1860-1952
I

That

ran against a Prejudice quite cut off the view.

An
should have
There's
old
a

Obstacle,

st. i

Jf

had not been there

whining

at

the

thresh-

very

party. From WALTER LIPPMANN, William

much bored. 1 Comment on a tea

To

Bolitho:

Memoir

There's a scratching at the floor work! To work! In Heaven's name! The wolf is at the door!

The Wolf

at the

Door,

st.

HARRY MICAJAH DAUGHERTY


1860-1941
In

The

people people have for friends

Your common sense appall, But the people people marry


Are the queerest folk of
all.

a
2

smoke-filled

room

in

some

Queer People

hotel

Republican National Convention, Chicago [June 1920]

WILLIAM RALPH INGE


1860-1954
Literature flourishes best half a trade and half an art.

when

it is

HAMLIN GARLAND
A
1860-1940 Son of the Middle Border
Title of autobiographical narrative [1917]

The Victorian Age

[1922]

A man may

build himself a throne

of bayonets, but

he cannot sit on it. From Wit and Wisdom of Dean Inge, edited by MARCHANT, no. 108

CHARLOTTE PERKINS STETSON GILMAN


1860-1935
Cried
all,

JAMES BALL NAYLOR


1860-1945 King David and King Solomon Led merry, merry lives, With many, many lady friends And many, many wives; But when old age crept over them

"Before

such

things

can

come,

You idiotic child, Yoa must alter human nature!"


.And they all sat

back and smiled.


Similar Cases

With many, many qualms,


King Solomon wrote the Proverbs And King David wrote the Psalms. Ancient Authors

"I

do not want to be a I want to be a worm!"

fly!

A Conservative, st. 6
l

when asked

quite agree with Alexander Dumas who, how he had enjoyed a fearfully dull

OWEN WISTER
1860-1938

pwtf, said, "I should not have enjoyed it if I had not been there." LAURA TENNANT, letter
to

When

you

call

me

that, smile!

Sidney Colvin

[December

1884];

from

E. V.

The Virginian

[1902],

eft.

Laos,
for

The Colvins and Their Friends

Diugherty, presidential campaign manager Senator Warren G. Harding, predicted that Ac convention would be deadlocked and would
be decided

WILLIAM BLISS CARMAN


1861-1929

by a group of

men who

"will

sit

down

about two o'clock in the morning around a table in a smoke-filled room." The room was in the wtte occupied rooms

An open hand, an easy shoe, And a hope to make the day go


through.

by George Harvey,

804-805

the Blacfcstone Hotel.

The
8 59

Joys of the Road,

st.

CARMAN

TAGORE

No fidget and

no reformer,

just

EDWARD MacDOWELL
1861-1908

calm observer of ought and must. The Joys of we Road, st. 22


scarlet of the
like a cry

A house of Dreams untold


That looks out over the
whispering

The
Of

maples can shake

me

bugles going by.


is

And
in October sets the
Ib. st. 3

A Vagabond Song, st. 2


astir,

treetops faces the setting sun.

House

of

Dreams

There
I

something

gypsy blood

BYRON RUFUS NEWTON


1861-1938
Vulgar of manner, overfed,
Overdressed and underbred;
Heartless, Godless, hell's deli

took a day to search for God,


un-

And found Him not- But as I trod By rocky ledge, through woods
tamed,
Just saw

where one scarlet lily flamed, His footprint in the sod.


Vesti&a,
st. i

Rude by day and lewd by nig

Owed

to

New

LOUISE IMOGEN GUINEY


He has done with
1861-1920 roofs and men, Open, Time, and let him pass.
Ballad of

A squirming herd in Mammon's A wilderness of human flesh;

Purple-robed and pauper-clad, Raving, rotting, money-mad;

mesh,

Crazed with avarice, lust, and nim t New York, thy name's Delirium.
Ib,

Kenelm

A short life in the saddle, Lord!


Not long life by the fire. The Knight
I

ALBERT BIGELOW PAINE


st.

Errant,
its

18611937 The Great White Way. 2


Title of novel [1901!

hear in

my heart,

hear in

ominous

pulses All day, on the road, the hoofs of invisible horses, All night, from their stalls, the

SIR
I tfrish I
I

WALTER RALEIGH
1861-1922
loved the human race; loved its silly face; liked the way it walks; liked the way it talks;

impor-

tunate pawing and neighing. The Wild Ride, st. i and

I I

Quotations (such as have point and lack triteness) from the great old authors are an act of filial reverence on the part of the quoter, and a blessing to a public grown superficial and external. 1

wish wish wish wish

I I

And when I'm


I
I

introduced to one

thought,

What jolly fun!


party

Wishes of an Elderly Man;


wished at a garden
[June 1914]

In Scribner's Magazine [January 1911]

JOHN LUTHER LONG


To
1861-1927 die with honor when one can no
with
honor. 2
there
1900],

RABINDRANATH TAGORE
When
is

1861-1941 one knows thee, then


is

alien

longer live

none, then no door

shut.

Oh,
in

Butterfly [1897] (inscription on Samurai blade) 1 See Kipling, p. 8742, and note.

Madame

The Twilight

of the Idols, Skirmishes

with the Age, 36 1 Preface to his composition From a Log Cafrin, and inscribed on the memorial tablet near b
grave.
1

War

One should
possible

to

live

die proudly proudly.

when

it is

no longer

NIETZSCHE

Later a

name

for

Broadway.

860

TAGORE
.

WHTTEHEAD
qualities
art,

me my

prayer that

may

never

of

truth,

"the touch of the


the

one

beauty, adventure,

in the play of

peace.

many.

Gitanjali [1913]

Adventures of Ideas, ch. 19


TTie deliberate aim at Peace very easily passes into its bastard substitute, Anesthesia. 16. 20

When I bring you colored toys, my there is such a child, I understand why
on clouds, on water, and pby of colors are painted in tints. flowers why The Crescent Moon [1913].

When and Why


is

do not love him because he

good,

There are no whole truths; all truths are half-truths. It is trying to treat them as whole truths that the devil. plays Dialogues of Alfred North

but because

he

is

my little child.
16.

Whitehead [i953],x

p. 16

The Judge

ALFRED NORTH

WHITEHEAD

vitality of thought is in adventure. Ideas -won't keep. Something must be done about them. the idea is new, its custodians have fervor, live for it, and, if need be, die for it.

The

When

1861-1947 The study of mathematics is apt to commence in disappointment. We are told that by its aid the stars are weighed and the billions of molecules
.
. .

16. p. 100

hend

Intelligence as distinct

is

quickness

to

appreis

from

ability,

which
16. p.

capacity to act wisely

on the thing

ap-

drop of water are counted. Yet, like the ghost of Hamlet's father, this great science eludes the efforts of our mental
in a

prehended.

Our minds

are finite,

135 and yet even in

weapons to grasp

it.

An

Introduction to Mathematics [1911]

these circumstances of finitude we are surrounded by possibilities that are infinite, and the purpose of human life is
to grasp as
infinitude.

much
is

as

we can out

of that

world over and at all times have been practical men, absorbed in irreducible and stubborn facts; all the world over and at all times there have been men of philosophic temperament, who have been absorbed
All the
there
in

16. p. 163
in its finest flower before
itself.

A
it

culture

begins to analyze

16. p.

169

The ideas of Freud were popularized by people who only imperfectly understood them, who were incapable of the great effort required to grasp them in their relationship to larger truths, and who therefore assigned to them a prominence out of all proportion to their true importance. 16. p. 211

the weaving of general principles.

Science and the

Modern World

science of pure mathematics, in modern developments, may claim to be the most original creation of the human spirit. 16.
its

The

Art

is

the imposing of a pattern on

The greatest invention of the nineteenth century was the invention of the method of invention. 16.
The human body
for
is

experience, and our aesthetic enjoyment in recognition of the pattern. 16. />. 228

an instrument

the production of art in the life of

A philosopher of imposing stature doesn't think in a vacuum. Even his most abstract ideas are, to some extent,
conditioned by what
in the time
is

or

is

the human soul.

not known
16. p.

when he

lives.

Adventures of Ideas [1933], eft. 1 8

229

general definition of civilization: a


society
is

the sense of sight, the idea communicates the emotion, whereas, 1 As recorded by LUOEN PRICE.
*

With

civilized

exhibiting the five

See Freud, p. Sjjb.

86l

WHTTEHEAD
with sound, the emotion communicates the idea, which is more direct and
therefore

BUTLER

ALBERT JEREMIAH BEVERIDGE


1862-1927
This party comes from
roots. It

more powerful
Dialogues of Alfred North Whitehead, p. 231

the
soil

grass

has grown from the

of the

emotion as our clothes are to our bodies: we could not very well have civilized life without clothes, but we would be in a poor way if we
Intellect is to

people's hard necessities. Address as temporary chairman of the Bull Moose Convention,

Chicago [August

5,

1912]

had

only clothes without bodies.


Ib. p,

232

has ever been period of history that does not act be ever can or great on some sort of high, idealistic motives, and idealism in our time has been shoved aside, and we are paying the

No

JAMES W. BLAKE
1862-1935
East Side, town,

West

Side, all around the

The

tots

penalty for

it.

Ib. p.

276

sang "Ring-a-rosie," "London Bridge is falling down";

The
They

English never abolish anything. put it in cold storage.


16. p.

Boys and girls together, O'Rourke,

me

and Mamie

309

Tripped the light fantastic on the sidewalks of New York. The Sidewalks of New York

for Shakespeare wrote better poetry not knowing too much; Milton, I think,

knew too much


his poetry.

finally for

the good of
16. p-

369

CARRIE JACOBS BOND


1862-1946
Well,
this is

the end of a perfect day f


too.
st.

JOHN KENDRICK BANGS


1862-1922
I

Near the end of a journey,

Perfect Day,
this

think mankind by thee would be less bored If only thou wert not thine own reA Hint to Virtue ward,

For mem'ry has painted day

perfect

With colors that never fade, And we find at the end of a


day

perfect

The

soul of a friend we've made.


Ib.

ARTHUR CHRISTOPHER
BENSON
1862-1925

Land

of hope and glory, mother of the


shall

NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER


1862-1947 one who knows more expert and more about less and less.

free T

How

we

extol thee,

who

are born

of thee?

An

is

Wider

still

and wider

shall

thy bounds

beset;

Commencement
Columbia

address,

God, who made thee mighty, make


thee mightier yet. Land of Hope and Glory, chorus

University

J-The music of the song was composed by Charles B. Lawlor [1858-1915].

862

CHAPMAN

O.

HENRY

JOHN JAY CHAPMAN


bige

1862-1933 The New Testament, and to a very extent the Old, is the soul of man.
criticize
it. It criticizes you. Letter [March 26, 1898]

EDWARD, VISCOUNT GREY OF FALLODON


1862-1933

YOB cannot

The lamps are going out all over Europe; we shall not see them lit again in
our lifetime.

The present
erful

in

New

York

is

so

pow-

that the past

is lost.

Ib. [1909]

love soft words and hate that reform consists iniquity forget this, a dog. Phiin taking a bone away from

People

who

Comment [August 3, I 9 2 4] standing at the windows of his room in the Foreign Office, London, as the lamplighters were turning on the lights in
1

St.

James Park

losophy

will

not do

this.

Saying

O.

GOLDSWORTHY LOWES
DICKINSON
1862-1932
Dissatisfaction
live

[WILLIAM SYDNEY PORTER]


1862-1910
the pass time when they are alone, they d never
If

HENRY

with

the

world

in

men knew how women

and determination to rewhich we alize one that shall be better, are the characteristics of the modern prevailing
spirit.

marry.

The Four Million [1906]. Memoirs of a Yellow Dog

The Greek View

of Life [1898], ch. 5

What
out
it's

of.

a woman wants is what you're She wants more of a thing when


[i 907]
.

Chinese poetry is of all poetry I know the most human and the least or romantic. It contemplates symbolic life just as it presents itself, without any
veil

scarce.

Heart of the West


Perhaps there

Cupid
Carte
in life

a
is

la

no happiness

of ideas,

any rhetoric or sentiment;

so perfect as the martyr's.

it simply clears away the obstruction which habit has built up between us and the beauty of things.

The Trimmed Lamp [1907]. The Country of Elusion


Bohemia
little
is

An

India, China,

Essay on the Civilizations of and Japan [1914]


States of

country in

nothing more than the which you do not


Ib.

live.

The United
greatest

America

the

potential
spiritual, in

force,

material,

You're the goods.

moral,

and

the world.
[1917], ch. i
It

The Choice Before Us


Government
is

The Voice of the City From Each According


Ability

[1908]. to His

everywhere to a great dtent controlled by powerful minorities,

was beautiful and simple

as

all

truly great swindles are.

The Gentle

of

with an interest distinct from that the mass of the 16. 4 people.

Grafter [1908].

The

Octopus Marooned
never
is

LUDWIG FULDA
1862-1939 You remain the King even
underwear.
in your

There are two times when you can tell what is going to happen. One when a man takes his first drink; and
is

the other
latest.
1

when

woman

takes her
Ib.

Der Talisman

[1093]

War was

declared 11 P.M. August 4, 1914.

863

O.
as a

HENRY

HUGHES
pose of welcomin* Irish immigrants into the Dutch city of New York.
Sixes

Busy

one-armed

man

with the

nettle-rash pasting

on wallpaper*

The Gentle Grafter. The Ethics of Pig


Bagdad-on-the-Subway. Roods of Destiny [1909!. The Discounters of Money
History
is
1

and Sevens [191 ij. T/itf Lady Higjier Up i

A straw vote only shows which way the hot air blows.
Rolling Stones [1913].

Ruler

of

Men

bright

and

fiction dull

with

Take
goods.

it

from

homely

men
16.

who
Next

have

charmed

The

got the Unprofitable Servant

me

he's

women.
to Reading Matter

Turn up the
go

home in

You
left it>
till

can't appreciate

home

till

you've

I don't want to lights the dark, 2 Last Words \June 5, 1910]

OM

spent, your wife she's joined a woman's club, nor Glory till you see it hanging on a

money

till it's

CHARLES EVANS

HUGHES
1862-1948

broomstick on tiie shanty of a consul in a foreign town. Ib. The Fourth in Salvador

We

are under a Constitution, but

my lapel the invisible strand of lint (the universal act of


woman
to proclaim ownership)
.

She plucked from

the Constitution is what the judges say it is, and the judiciary is the safeguard of our liberty and of our property under the Constitution.

Strictly Business [1910].

A
How

Speech at Elmira, amazing


it is

New

Yori

Ramble
East
cisco,
is

in Aphasia

[May
of controversies
subject,

3, 1907]

East,

and West

is

San Fran-

on every

that, in the midst conceivable


of

according to Californians. Californians are a race of people; they are not merely inhabitants of a State.
16,

one should expect unanimity

A Municipal Report

Take of London fog 30 parts; malaria 10 parts; gas leaks 20 parts; dewdrops gathered in a brickyard at sunrise 25 parts; odor of honeysuckle 15 parts. Mix. The mixture will give you an approximate conception of a Nashville
drizzle.

opinion upon difficult legal questions! In the highest ranges of thought, in theology, philosophy and science, we find differences of view on the part of the most distinguished experts theologians,

philosophers

and
is

scientists.

The

history of scholarship

a record of

disagreements. And when we deal with questions relating to principles of law

and

16.

their applications,
rise into

denly

we do not suda stratosphere of icy cerInstitute

It couldn't have happened anywhere but in Kttle old New York. 2

tainty.

Speech to the American Law

W/ifr/zgigs [1910].

A Little
The

[May

7, 1936]

Local Color

to the

was made by a Dago and presented American people on behalf of the French Government for the purI

Abo
Night in
1

Also
at

A Madison Square Arabian Night, A New Arabia, and What You Want. in A Midsummer Knighfs Dream, Past
in

greater the importance of safeguarding the community from incitements to the overthrow of our institutions by force and violence, the more imperative is the need to preserve inviolate the constitutional rights of free
Statue of Liberty. reference is to a popular song of the day, 'Tm Afraid to Go Home in the Dark,**
1

The The

One

Roonef$ and The Rubber

Plant's Story.

HUGHES
free press and free assembly in speech, order to maintain the opportunity for free political discussion, to the end that

WHARTON
Drake he's in
great
his

hammock

till

the

Armadas come.
tha sleepin' there beDrake's Drum, st. 3

be government may

responsive to the wttl of the people and that changes, if desired, may be obtained by peaceful means. Therein lies the security of the the very foundation of conRepublic,
stitutional

(Capten, art low?)

Now the sunset breezes shiver,


And
she's fading

down

the

river,

But in England's song forever


She's the

government. Dejonge v. Oregon, 299 U.S. 353>3 65 l>937]

Play

The Fighting Ttm&raire, st. 6 up! play up! and play the game! Vitai Lampada

Fighting

Tem&aire.

MAURICE MAETERLINCK
1862-1949
always a mistake not to close one's eyes, "whether to forgive or to
It is

EDEN PHILLPOTTS
1862-1960
His father's sister had bats in the fry and was put away.
bel-

took better into oneself. PelUas et Melisande [1892]

Peacock House

There are no dead. The Blue Bird [1909], act TV,

sc.

ROBERT CAMERON ROGERS


1862-1912

SIR

HENRY NEWBOLT
1862-1938

The

hours

spent

with

thee,

dear

To set the cause above renown, To love the game beyond the prize, To honor, while you strike him down, The foe that comes with fearless eyes; To count the life of battle good And dear the land that gave you birth, And dearer yet the brotherhood
That binds the brave of

heart, Are as a string of pearls to me; I count them over, every one apart,

My rosary, my rosary.

My

Rosary

EDITH WHARTON
1862-1937 There are two ways of spreading to be
light:

The
Qui procul

the earth. Island Race. Clifton Chapel, st. 2


all

The

it.

candle or the mirror that reflects Vesalius in Zante

/line,

the legend's writ,

The

frontier grave is far

away
Ib.
st.

Qua ante diem periit: Sed miles, sed pro patria*


Take

who
4
et

Mrs. Ballinger is one of the ladies pursue Culture in bands, as though it were dangerous to meet it
alone.

my drum
the shore,

to England,

Xingu [igiS]

hang

by
I

Strike et

when your powder's

runnin'

lar

was never allowed to read the popuAmerican children's books of my

Devon, I'll quit the o' Heaven, port An* drum them up the Channel as we
If

low, the Dons sight

day because, as my mother said,, the children spoke bad English without the
author's

knowing it. A Backward Glance [2954],


ch. 3

drummed them long ago. Drake's Drum,


a

st.

Who

died far away, before his time: but as

ever,

a soldier, for his country.

how[Henry] James's intimates, elaborate hesitancies, far from being an obstacle, were like a cobthese

To

865

WHAETON
web
one
bridge
flung

SANTAYANA

from his mind to

We

might, for aught that

can

theirs,

invisible passage over which knew that silver-footed ironies,

an

Be homd Chimpanzees today. The Chimpan&u


Ermined
and

say,

veiled jokes, tiptoe malices,


feet.

were

steal-

minked

and

at one's ing to explode a huge laugh

Peniaa-

backward Glance,

eft.

lambed,
Be-puffed (be-painted, too, alasl) Be-decked, be-diamonded

REVEREND
fi.

E.

Jf.

HARDY

be-damned!

1910

How To
ried.

Be Happy Though MarTitle of book [1910]

The women of the better class. The Women of the Better Ctej,

SIR

HENRY HOLCOMB BENNETT


1863-1924
Hats
off!

ARTHUR THOMAS QUILLER- COUCH


is

Literature
to

1863-1944 not an abstract

science,

A blare of bugles, a raffle of drams, A flash of color beneath the sky:


Hats
off!

Along the

street there

comes

which exact definitions can be applied. It is an art, the success of whfcn depends on personal persuasiveness, on the author's skill to give as on ours to
receive.

The flag

is

passing by.

Inaugural Lecture at Cambridge By,


st. i

The Flag Goes

University [1913]

GAMALIEL BRADFORD
1863-1932
sometimes wish that God were back In this dark world and wide; 1 For though some virtues he might
I

JAMES HARVEY

ROBINSON
1863-1935

campaigns are designedly made into emotional orgies which endeavor to distract attention from the
Political
real issues involved,

lack,

He had his

and they

actually

pleasant side.

Exit

God

paralyze what slight powers of cerebration man can normally muster.

The Human Comedy


irony,

[1937],
cfc.

DAVID LLOYD GEORGE, EARL OF DWYFOR


1863-1945

9
to

With supreme
safe in tlie

the

war

What
fit

is our task? To make Britain a country for heroes to live in.

"make the world safe for democracy" * ended by leaving democracy more onworld than at any time since the collapse of the revolutions of 1848.

Speech, Queen's Hall, [September 19, 1914]

London

OLIVER HERFORD
1863-1935
Children, behold the Chimpanzee: He sits on the ancestral tree

GEORGE SANTAYANA
1863-1952

World, thou choosest not the


parti

better

It is

From which we sprang in ages gone. Fm glad we sprang: had we held on,
1

And on
i

not wisdom to be only wise, the inward vision close the


eyes,

See Milton, p. 341 a.

See

Woodrow

Wilson, p. 84**.

866

SANTAYANA
wisdom to believe the heart, Columbus found a world, and had no
But
it is

Perhaps the only true dignity of


is

man

his capacity to despise himself.

chart,

The Ethics
faith deciphered in the

Save

one that

of Spinoza, introduction

To

skies; trust the soul's invincible


all

surmise

Was

his science

and his only art, World, Thou Choosest Not


[1894]

Miracles are propitious accidents, the natural causes of which are too complicated to be readily understood. Ife.

The

Bible

is

literature,

not dogma.
Ib.

Beauty as
describable:

we

feel it
it is

is

something

in-

what

or

what

it

means

can never be said.

The Sense
a

of

Beauty [1896].
Expression

American life is a powerful solvent. It seems to neutralize every intellectual element, however tough and alien it may be, and to fuse it in the native

good
ness,

will,

complacency,

thoughtless-

Beauty conformity
ture,

is

pledge of the possible between the soul and naa

and optimism.
Character and Opinion in the

and'

faith in

ground consequently the supremacy of the good.


worth living
is

of
All his life

United States [1920]


he [the American] jumps into the train after it has started and jumps out before it has stopped; and he never once gets left behind, or breaks a
leg.
is

Ib.

That

life is

the most

necessary of assumptions, and, were it not assumed, the most impossible of

Ib.

conclusions.

The
Fanaticism
your efforts vour aim.

Life of Reason [1905-

1906], voZ. I
consists

the paradise of individuEngland ality, eccentricity, heresy, anomalies, hobbies, and humors.
Soliloquies in

England [1922].
British Character

when

redoubling you have forgotten


Ib.

in

The
The world
itself;
is

a perpetual caricature of

Those
are

who cannot remember


to repeat
it.
is

the past
Ib.

condemned

it is the mockand the of what it is contradiction ery Ib. Dickens pretending to be.

at every

moment

The highest form of vanity


'

love of
Ib. II

There

is

no cure for birth and death

fame.

save to enjoy the interval. Ib.


I

War Shrines

The human
al life,
is

race,

in

its

intellectu-

organized like the bees: the soul is a worker, sexually atrophied, and essentially dedicated to impersonal and universal arts; the femimasculine
nine
is

present
passive

a queen, infinitely fertile, omniin its brooding industry, but

walk about amidst the beautiful things that adorn the world; but private wealth I should decline, or any sort of personal possessions, because they would take away my liberty.
like to

Ib.

The Irony

of Liberalism
is

abounding in intuitions without method and passions without


justice.

and

My
true

atheism, like that of Spinoza,

Ib.

Let a
tude

terror at his
is,

man once overcome his selfish own finitude, and his finione sense, overcome. The Ethics of Spinoza [1910],
introduction

piety towards the universe and denies only gods fashioned by men in their own image, to be servants of their
interests.

human

Ib.

in

On My

Friendly Critics
is

The young man who has not wept


a savage, and the old laugh is a fool.

man who
Limbo

will

not

Scc William James, p. 7943.

Dialogues in

[1925*], III

86 7

SANTAYANA
There is nothing impossible in the existence of the supernatural: its existence seems to me decidedly probable.

HOWE

SIR

ROGER CASEMENT
1864-1916
all

The Genteel

Tradition at

your rights become only an accumulated wrong; where men must beg with bated breath for leave to
subsist in their

Where

ERNEST LAWRENCE

THAYER

1863-1940 There was ease in Casey's manner


stepped into his place,

own land, to think their to thoughts, sing their own songs, to gamer the fruits of their own la. then surely it is braver, a bors .
own
.

as

he

There was pride in Casey's bearing, and a smile on Casey's face. And when, responding to the cheers, he

saner and truer thing, to be a rebel in act and deed against such circumstances as these than tamely to accept it as the natural lot of men.

Statement from
[June 29,

prison

No

lightly doffed his hat, stranger in the crowd could doubt 'twas Casey at the bat. 1 Casey at the Bat, sL 6

RICHARD HOVEY
1864-1900
always fair weather When good fellows get together With a stein on the table and a good song ringing clear. Stein Song
it's

Oh! somewhere
sun
is

in this favored land the

For

The band

shining bright; is playing somewhere, and


are light;

somewhere hearts

And somewhere men


But

are laughing and somewhere children shout, there is no Joy in Mudville

mighty Casey has struck out. Ib.sL 13

HARRY BRAISTED
e.

do not know beneath what sky Nor on what seas shall be thy fate: only know it shall be high, I only know it shall be great. Unmanifest Destiny [1898], st.

1896

O, Eleazer

Wheelock was a

You're Not the Only Pebble on the Title of song [1896] Beach.

very pious
to teach

man; He went into the wilderness


the Indian,

JOSEPH HAYDEN
fl.

1896

Therell be a hot time in the old town

tonight

A Hot Time

in the

Old Town

a Gradus ad Parnassian, a Bible, and a drum, And five hundred gallons of New England rum. . Eleazar was the faculty, and the whole
. .

With

curriculum

[1896]
1 First

Was

five

hundred gallons of

New

Eng-

printed in the San Francisco Examiner

[June

3. 1888).

land rum. Eleazer

Wheelock [Dartmouth
College song],
st. 2

Yet I'd take

my

chance with fame,

Calmly

let it

go at

that,

With the right to sign my name Under "Casey at the Bat."


GRANT-LAND RICE [1880-1954], The Masterpiece Hayden's text for a march, A Hot Time in

DE WOLFE
Now,
thieving Time,

MARK ANTONY HOWE


1864-1960
take what you
see;

Town Tonight [1886], by Theodore August Metz [1848-1956], later a favorite of Theodore Roosevelt's Rough Riders in Cuba, and
the Old
still

must
Quickness to hear, to move, to

later Roosevelt's

campaign song.

868

HOWE
When dust is drawing near to dust Such diminutions needs must be. leave exempt from plunder Yet leave,

UNAMUNO
I

am

saying that

not sincere even when I am not sincere.

am

Journal

My

curiosity,

my

wonder!

Thieving

Time

We
[1951]

don't understand
it.

life

any better

at forty than at twenty, but

we know

it

and admit

Ib.

ROBERT LOVEMAN
1864-1923
It
is not raining rain to It's raining daffodils;

MIGUEL DE UNAMUNO
1864-1936

me,
I

In evcrv

dimpled drop Wihiflowers on the

see
st. i

hills.

The man of flesh and blood; the one who is born, suffers and dies above all, who dies; the man who eats and
drinks and plays

April Rain [1901],

and

sleeps
is

A health unto the happy! A fig for him who frets!


It is

and

wills;

the

man who

and thinks seen and is

heard; the brother, the real brother.

not raining rain to me,


raining violets.
16. st. 4

The

Tragic Sense of Life [1913],


ch.
i

It's

[BANJO] PATERSON
1864-1941

ANDREW BARTON
swagman camped by

Man, by the very fact of being man, by possessing consciousness, is, in


comparison with the ass or the crab, a diseased animal. Consciousness is a disease.

16.
is

Once a jolly

a billa-

Pantheism

said

...

bong, Under the shade of a coolibar tree, And he sang as he sat and waited for
his billy-boil,

atheism in disguise.

to be merely 16. 5

Science is a cemetery of dead ideas, even though life may issue from them.
Ib.

'TouTI come a-waltzing, Matilda, with

me/'

Waltzing Matilda (Australian soldiers* marching song)

True science teaches, above doubt and be ignorant.

all,

to
16.

To
as
if

believe in

God

is

existence and, furthermore,

to yearn for His it is to act


16.

STEPHEN PHILLIPS
1864-1915

He

did

exist.

A man

not old, but mellow, like good


Ulysses, act III, se.
i

Martyrs create faith, faith does not 16. 9 create martyrs. 1

wine.

To

fall

into a habit

is

to begin to
16.

cease to be.

JULES RENARD
1864^1910 To succeed you must add water to yonr wine, until there is no more wine.
Journal

The intellectual world is divided into two classes dilettantes, on the one hand, and pedants, on the other. I6.ii
Warmth, warmth, more warmth! for we are dying of cold and not of darkness. It
is

gpes well; don't


last.
1

There are moments when everything be frightened, it won't


16.

the frost.

not the night that kills, but 16. Conclusion


is

The
i

devil

Swagman: tramp. Billabong: pool. Coolibar: gum tree. Billy: tin container used for brewing
tet.

an angel

too.

Two Mothers
See Tertullian, p. i43b,

and

Suares, p. 896*.

UNAM17NO
There are pretenses which are very their school. sincere, and marriage is Two Mothers
perhaps the eskilling sence of comedy, just as the essence of

FISHER

ISRAEL ZANGWILL
1864-1926
Scratch the Christian and you the pagan spoiled.
find

And

time

is

Children of the Ghetto [1692]

tragedy

is

killing eternity.

San Manuel Bueno, prologue


would say that teleology is theolGod is not a "because," ogy, and that' Ifebut rather an "in order to."
I

God's crucible, the great all the races of Euwhere melting pot rope are melting and re-forming! The Melting Pot [1908], act I
America
is

Let us go on committing suicide by and let working among our people, them dream life just as the lake dreams '& the
sky.

FRANK MOORE COLBY


1865-1925

Men
humor?

will confess to treason, murder,

of those leaders of what they call the social revolution has said that 1 is the opiate of the people.

One

arson, false teeth, or a wig. of them will own up to

How

many

a lack of
I

The Colby Essays

[1926], vol.

religion

Opium

opium

opium,

yes.

Let us give them opium so that they Ib. can sleep and dream.

Nobody can
life,

describe a fool to the

without

much

patient

tion.

self-inspecIb.

Use harms and even

The

destrovs beauty. noblest function of an ofcject is to

A new
to

movement

is

not a stampede

be contemplated.

Mist [1914]

some new object, but a stampede ID. II away from some old person.

In Homeric times people and things had two names: the one given them by men and the one given by the gods. I 16wonder what God calls me?
Isolation
selor.
is

Were

and the half-educated, the formless, queer and incomplete, the unreasonable and absurd, the infinite
unwashed
tadpole, shapes of the delightful the horizon would not wear so wide a

it *

not for the presence of

the

the worst possible counCivilization Is Civilism

human

grin.

Imaginary Obligfttiom

of Every peasant has a lawyer inside matter no as him, just every lawyer, how urbane he may be, carries a peasliant within himself.
lt is

HERBERT ALBERT LAURENS FISHER


1865-1940
All political decisions are taken under a treat}' serves its great pressure, and if turn for ten or twenty years, the wis-

much

sad not to be loved, but it is sadder not to be able to love. To a Young Writer
terrible sociologists,

These

who

are

dom

of

its

framers

is

sufficiently con-

the astrologers and alchemists of our twentieth century. Fanatical Skepticism


Faith which does not doubt
faith.
is

firmed. 2

Political Prophecies [1918]

It is easier for

eight or nine elderly

men
ity if

to feel their

dead

way towards unanim-

The Agony

of Christianity

their converging
1
*

to conduct they are not compelled maneuvers under tht


press,

We
we

never know, believe me, have succeeded best.

when

of the microscopes and telescopes


See

Brougham,
is

p. 54ob.

Essays and Soliloquies


See Marx, p. 686b.

Thirty years

R. B. MOWAT,

the life of most great treatiw. A History of Great Briton

870

FISHER
to shuffle but arc permitted
tle

KtPUNG

about a

lit-

Where

are you

now?

Who lies beneath

in slippers.

An

International Experiment

[1921]
race does not exist Europe Purity of a continent of energetic mongrels. A History of Europe [1934], ch. i
Politics is
ness.

your spell? Indian Love Lyrics. Kashmiri Song, $t. i

is

RUDYARD KIPLING
1865-1936
have eaten your bread and salt. I have drunk your water and wine. The deaths ye died I have watched beI

the art of

human

happi31

KING GEORGE V
1865-1936

side

And

the

How is

the Empire? Last -words January 21, 1936]

lives ye led were mine. Departmental Ditties [1886].

Prelude,
Little

st.

FREDERIC WILLIAM

Tin Gods on Wheels. Ib. Public Waste,


that
flies

st.

GOUDY
1865-1947

The blush
Is fixed

at seventeen

at forty-nine. Ib.

My

Rival,

st.

the voice of today, the herald of tomorrow. ... I coin for you the enchanting tale, the philosopher's moraland the poefs visions. ... I am izing, the leaden army that conquers the
I

am

The

toad beneath the harrow knows Exactly where each tooth point goes; The butterfly upon the road Preaches contentment to that toad.
Ib. Pagett,

world

am

TYPE.

M.P., prelude

The Type Speaks

LAURENCE HOPE [ADELA FLORENCE CORY NICOLSON]


1865-1904
Less

Cross that rules the Southern Sky! Stars that sweep, and turn, and fly, Hear the Lovers' Litany:

"Love

like ours

Ib.

can never die! 9 The Lovers Litany,


is

"

st.

And

woman

only a

woman, but a

than the dust beneath thy chariot

good

wheel, Less than the rust that never stains thy sword.

cigar is a smoke. Ib. The Betrothed, st. 25-

And

Indian Love Lyrics. Less Than the Dust, st. i


Less

YouTl never plumb the Oriental mind, if you did, it isn't worth the toil. Ib. One Viceroy Resigns
It takes

than the thy door.

weed that grows beside


Ib. st. 2

a great deal of Christianity


infirst

to

wipe out uncivilized

stincts,

Eastern such as falling in love at

sight.

For this

To take

wisdom: to love, to live, what Fate, or the Gods, may


is

Plain Tales from the Hills


[1888]. Lispeth

give.

Ib.

The Teak Forest


and
in time Ib.

To have
Pile

to

hold

Never praise a sister to a sister, in the hope of your compliments reaching the
proper
ears.

let go!

Ib.

Fake Dawn

hands

loved beside the Shali-

mar, 1 The League

picious.
of Nations.

people are deeply susfor purely relito know of course gious purposes,

Many

religious

They seem

87 l

KIPLING

more about
crate.

iniquity than the unregea*

Plain

Tdes from the Hills. Watches of the Night

He became an officer and a man, which is an enviable thing. Under the Deodar$
\ \

Only a
Tea
1

Subaltern
Jfc,

She was as immutable as the hills. But not quite so green. Ib. Venus Annodomini

fights.

Youth had been a habit of hers for so it. long that she could not part with
16.

Oh, East is East, and West is West, and never the twain shall meet, Till Earth and Sky stand presently at God's great Judgment Seat; But there is neither East nor West,

Everyone
point.* Ib.

is

more or

less

mad on one

When

border, nor breed, nor birth, two strong men stand face to

On

the Strength of a Likeness

face, though they come from the ends of the earth! The Ballad of East and West
[if

silliest woman can manage a man; but it needs a very clever woman to manage a fool! an Extra 16. Three and

The

clever

For
price

all

we

take

we must

pay, but the

is

cruel high,

of the cient profession in the world.


is

Lakh

member

most anIf I
I

The Courting

of Dinah Shadd,
[1890]

In Black and

White

On
Steady the Buffs.

[1888]. the City Wall

were damned of body and soul, know whose prayers would make me
whole,
?

Soldiers

Three [1888]

Mother o mine, O mother o' mine. Mother o' Mine [1892]

Being kissed by a man who didn't like eating his moustacie was an egg without salt.

wax

And And

the end of the fight is a tombstone white with the name of the late
deceased, the epitaph drear: "A Fool lies here who tried to hustle the

The

Story of the Gadsbys

Dear [1888]. Poor

Mamma
to

Down He

to

Gehenna
the

or

up

the

East."

Throne,
travels
fastest

The Naulahka
travels

[1892], ch. ;

who

alone.2
16.

When

The Winners (U Envoi:


Is the killed

and the tubes


dried,

Earth's last picture is painted, are twisted and

What
More men
are

Mord?),

st.

When
it

by overwork than the importance of the world justifies.

We shall rest, and,


lie

the oldest colors have faded, and the youngest critic has died,
faith,

we

shall need

down

for

an eon or

two,

The Phantom 'Rickshaw

[i

Till the

1 Scmel insanrvimus omncs [We have all once been mad], JOHANNES BAPTTSTA MANTUANUS

Master of All Good Workmen shall put us to work anew.

When

Earth's Last Picture

Is

[1448-1516], Eclogues,, no. / * He may well win the race that runs
self.

Painted [1892],

st. i

by himBENJAMIN FRANKLIN, Poor Richard?* Al[1757]


alone,

menec

Who

Ever the wide world over, lass, Ever the trail held true,
i

travels

without
to

lover

or

friend,

But hurries from nothing,

nought at the end. ELLA WHEELER WILCOK, Reply to

Giggle, gabble, gobble, git.

Oura

WEN-

DELL HOLMES [1809-1894], description


party

of a

Rudyard Kiplings Poem

872

KIPLING

the*

&c

And back

world and under the world ' at the last to you.


Trail [1892],
st.

By

The Gipsy

They rise to gentlemen unafraid. Ballads and Barrack


lads
st.

their feet as

He

passes by,
Bal-

the old Moulmein Pagoda, lookin* eastward to the sea. There's a Burma girl a-settin', and I know she thinks o' me;

For the wind

Room

[1892,

1893], Dedication,
for?*'

is in the palm trees, and die temple bells they say: "Come you back, you British soldier; come you back to Mandalay!"

5
bugles blowin'

Come you back


Where the old

to

Mandalay,

"What

are the

said Files-on-Parade.

"To turn you out, to turn you out/' the


Color-Sergeant said.
Ib.

chunkin' Can't you from Rangoon to Mandalay?

Flotilla lay; 'ear their paddles

On
st.
i

the road to Mandalay,


flyin' fishes play,

Danny Deever,

Where the

of his buttons off an" cut They've taken his stripes away, An' they're hangin' Danny Deever in
the mornin'.
Ib.

An' the dawn comes up like thunder outer China 'crost the Bayl
Ballads

and Barrack

Room
st.
i

Ballads.
I've

Mandalay,

We aren't no
Single

thin red 'eroes. 1


Ib.

Tommy,
grow

st.

4
Ship

a neater, sweeter maiden in a Ib. s*. 5 cleaner, greener land.

men

in barricks don't
saints.
this, an'

into
Ib.

plaster

me somewheres east of Suez, where the best is like the worst,


ments,
thirst.

For

it's
r

Tommy

Tommy

that,

Where

an "Chuck 'im out, the brute!" But it's "Savior of 'is country" when the guns begin to shoot.
Ib.
st.

there aren't an' a

no Ten Command-

man

can

raise

Ib.

st.

The

Devil whispered behind the leaves,

"It's pretty,

but
Ib.

is it

Art?"
of the
st. i

So

'ere's
y

to you,

Fuzzy-Wuzzy, at your
but a
st. i

The Conundrum

ome in the Soudan;


man. Ib. Fuzzy-Wuzzy, wore
before,

Workshops,

You're a pore benighted 'eathen


first-class fightin'

To

the legion of the lost ones, to the cohort of the damned.


Ib.

Gentlemen Rankers,
lambs who've

st. i

The uniform

'e

Was

nothin'

much

We're poor

little

lost

our

An' rather less than 'arf o' that be'ind. Ib. Gunga Din, st. 2 An' for all'is dirty 'ide *E was white, clear white, inside

way, Baa! Baa! Baa!

We're

little

bkck sheep whoVe gone

astray,

When

'e

went to tend the wounded


fire!

under

Ib.

st.

you an* flayed you, Though By the livin* Gawd that made you, You're a better man than I am, Gunga Ib. St. 5 Din!
*Ave

I've belted

aa aa! Baa Gentlemen rankers out on the spree, Damned from here to Eternity, God ha* mercy on such as we, Baa! Yah! Baa!
Ib. refrain

We

have done with

you 'card
sor

o*

the

Widow
at

at

Wind'ead?
st. i

we

are lost to

Hope and Honor, Love and Truth,


the ladder rung
is

We are
*er

dropping

down

With a hairy gold crown on


Ib.
*See Sir

The Widow
W. H.

Windsor,

Russell, p. 7045.

bv rung; And the measure of our torment measure of our youth.

the

8 73

KIPLING

God

help us, for

we knew the worst too

young!
lads.

An' what he thought 'e might require, 'E went an' took the same as mel

Ballads

and Barrack Room BalGentlemen Rankers, si. 4

When 'Omer Smote 'Is B/oomin'


Lyre [1894],
si. a

And what should they know of England who only England know? 16. The English Flag, st. i

Back to the Army again, sergeant, Back to the Army again.

Out

o'

And

the naked soul of Tomlinson grew white as a rain-washed bone. 16. Tomlinson, L 10
sin ye do by two and pay for one by one.

the cold an' the rain. Back to the Army

The

two ye must Ib. L 60


'listed,

There's a legion that never was

That

carries

no colors or crest. Ib. The Lost Legion,


find out

For to admire an' for to see, For to be'old this world so It never done no good to me But I can't drop it if I tried! For to Admire [1894],

refrain

st.

We be of one blood, ye and


Brother, thy
16.
tail

I.

To go and

and be damned
Ib.

The Jungle Book

[1894].

(Dear boys!).

Raa's Hunting

There are nine and

sixty

ways of con-

structing tribal lays,

Road Song

hangs down behind. of the Bandar-Lo&


refrmn

And

every single one of them is right. 16. In the Neolithic Age, st. 5
triple

When
Lie

There be

ways to take, of the

Jungle,

Pack meets with Pack in the and neither will go from


trail,
till

Or
But

eagle or the snake, tne way of a man with a maid; l the sweetest way to me is a ship's

the

down
it

the leaders have spoken


fair

may be

words

shaft pre-

upon the

sea
16.

vail.

In the heel of the Northeast Trade.

The Long

Trail, st. 5
2

The Second Jungle Book [1895]. The Law of the Jungle, $t. 6

He wrapped
as a beggar

himself in quotations

Now

these are the

Laws

would enfold himself

in

of the Jnngfe,

the purple of emperors. Many Inventions [1893]. The Finest Story in the World

and many and mighty are they, But the head and the hoof of the Law and the haunch and the hump
is

Obey!
Ib.
st.

modern notions, But, spite found her first and best


all

I've

19

The

onlv certain packet for the Isknds of the Blest.

He who

rebukes the world


16.

is

rebuked

by the world.

The Three-Decker
They copied
all

The

Undertaker*

[1894],

st.

they could follow, but thev couldn't copy my mind. The Mary Gloster [1894], l 59

They change
But not

their skies above them,


st.

their hearts that roam. 1

The Nativeborn

[1895],

When
He'd
1

'Omer smote

'card

men

bloomin* lyre, 7 sing by land an sea;


'is

The Liner

she's a lady, an* she never


7

looks nor 'eeds

Sec Proverbs 30:19, p. t6b. literature quotation is good only when the writer whom I follow goes my way, and, being better mounted than I, gives me a cast.

The Man-o'-War's
But,
1

er 'usband, an'

>

"In

gives *er all she needs, oh, the little cargo boats that safl

EMEISON, Quotation and Originality [1876]


See Louise Imogen Guiney, p. 86oa.

the wet seas roun\


See Horace, p. 1*30.

8 74

KIPLING
the same as you an
7

me

Lord
Lest

God
we

They're just

of Hosts,
lest

be with us

yet,
st.

a-phin'

up and downl

forget

we

forget!
i

The Liner

She's a
[1895],

Lady
st.

Recessional [1899],

I've

taken

my

fun where I've found it. The Ladies [1895], st. i

The tumult and the shouting dies; The captains and the kings depart:
Still

stands

Thine ancient

sacrifice,

An humble and
all

a contrite heart.
Ib. st. 2

An'

learned about

women from
Ifa.

'er.

refrain

For Are

the

Colonel's

Lady

an'

Judy

our pomp of yesterday Lo, Is one with Nineveh and Tyre!


Ib.
st.

O'Grady sisters under

their skins!
Ib. st. 8

Lesser breeds without the


all

Law.
Ib. st.

Though

there's never a

wave of

her

For heathen heart that puts her trust


In reeking tube and iron shard, All valiant dust that builds on dust, And guarding, calls not Thee to guard,

waves
But marks our English dead. The Song of the
[1896], II,

Dead
st.

For

frantic boast

and

foolish

word
Ib. st. 5

of admiralty, If blood be the price Lord God, we ha' paid in full!


Til's

Thy mercy on Thy


16.

People, Lord!

a sort of a

bloomin' cosmopolouse
Soldier an' Sailor
[1896],

soldier an' sailor too.

He's an absent-minded beggar, but he heard his country call,

Too
St.

And

his reg'ment didn't find him!

need to send to

fool

there was

and he made

his

The Absent-Minded Beggar


[1899], **
3

prayer (Even as you

To

a rag hair

and I!) and a bone and a hank


her the

of

Take up the White Man's burden. 1 The White Man's Burden


[1899],
st. i

(We

called

woman who
called

did not

care)

Your new-caught, sullen peoples, Half devil and half child.


serves us jolly well right!

Ib.
it

Bat the fool


fair

he

her his lady

We have had a jolly good lesson, and


The Lesson
[1901],

(Even as

you and

I!)

The Vampire

[1897],

st. i

st. 2

Make ye no truce with Adam-zad * the Bear that walks like a Man! Bear the Truce The of
[1898],
St.

We

have forty million reasons for failure, but not a single excuse.
Ib. st. 8

Little Friend of All the

World.
[1901], ch.
i

Daughter

am

in

my

mother's house;
of the Snoivs
[1898],
st.

Kim

But mistress in

my

own.
2
i

Our Lady

Then ye returned to your trinkets; then ye contented your souls

With

God of our fathers, known of old, Lord of our far-flung battle line, Beneath whose awful Hand we hold Dominion over palm and pine
Russia.

or the

the flanneled fools at the wicket muddied oafs at the goals.

Islanders [1902], ^Pile on the brown man's burden

The

Z.

31

To

satisfy

your greed.
in

London Truth; reprinted


bury
1899]

Middle17,

[Vermont] Register [March

The Dominion of Canada.

875

KIPLING

When
And

the ship goes

wop

(with a wig-

gle between)

Something lost behind the Ranges, Lost and waiting for you. Go! *

the steward tureen . . .

falls

into the soup

The Explorer

[1903],

*f.

Why,

then

you

will

know

(if

you

haven't guessed) You're "Fifty north and forty west!"

Creation's cry goes up on high From age to cheated age:

The

How

Just-So Stories [1902],

"Send us the men who do the work For which they draw the wage!"

the

Whole Got

Its

The Wage

Slaves

[1903],

st.

Throat

We get

the

Cameelious

hump hump
is

Boots movin' up and


re's no There's

boots

boots

boots

again! 2 discharge in the war!

down

The hump

black and blue! 16. How the Camel Got His


that

Boots [1903],$*.

Hump
keep six honest serving men (They taught me all I knew); Their names are What and Why and
I

If England was what England seems, An' not the England of our dreams, But only putty, brass, an' paint, 'Ow quick we'd drop 'er! But she ain't. The Return [1903], refrain

When

And How and Where and Who. 16. The Elephant's Child
great gray-green, greasy LimaD set about with feverRiver, popo 16. trees.

Tisn't beauty, so to speak, nor good


It's necessarily. just It. Some women'Il stay in a man's memory if they once walked down a street.

talk

The

Traffics

and

Discoveries [1904].

Mrs. Bathurst
If

Yes, weekly from Southampton, Great steamers, white and gold, Go rolling down to Rio Roll down roll down to Rio! ) ( And I'd like to roll to Rio

once you have paid him the Danegeld never get rid of the Dane.
16.

You

What

Dane-Geld Means,
st.

Some day before

Fm old!
The Beginning
of the Armadilloes, st. 4

16.

What

say the reeds at


16.

Runnymede?
of Runnymede,
rf.i

The Reeds

The
all

walked by himself, and places were alike to him.


Cat.
16.

He

When
It

The Cat That Walked By


Himself

crew and captain understand each other to the core, takes a gale and more than a gale to

through the wet wild woods, waving his wild tail, and walking by his wild lone. But he never told

He went

put their ship ashore.


16. Together,
st.

anybody.

16.

Who

hath desired the sea? the sight of salt water unbounded. The Sea and the Hills [1903], st. i
hillmen desire
16.

the trees that grow so fair, Old England to adorn, Greater are none beneath the Sun, Than oak, and ash, and thorn* Puck of Poofe's Hill [1906]. A

Of all

Tree Song,
i

st.

So and no otherwise
their hills!

Because

it is

there.

GEORGE LEIGH MALLOW


to climb

Something hidden. Go and find it. and look behind the Ranges

Go

[1886-1924], Mt. Everest


8
3

when asked why he wanted

See Ecclesiastcs 8:8, p. s8a. See Glasgerion, p. io88a.

876

KIPLING
Land of our birth, we pledge to thee Our love and toil in the years to be. Puck of Pook's Hill The
Children's Song,
st.
i

SMITH

By

singing

"Oh, how beautiful!" and


the shade.
of the Garden
[1911},
st.

sitting in

The Glory
Oh,

Teach us delight in simple things, And mirth that has no Ditter springs.
Jb. st.

Adam was a gardener, 1 and God who made him sees


is

Enough work to do, and strength enough to do the work.

That half a proper gardener's work done upon his knees.


16.
st.

Doctor's Work. Address


1

at

Middlesex Hospital
1908]
Brothers

[October

For all we have and are, For all our children's fate, Stand up and take the war.

bid you beware Of giving your heart to a dog to tear. the Power of the Dog [1909]

and

Sisters, I

The Hun

is

at the gate!

For All
There

We Have and Are


[1914],
rt. i

Take of English earth as much As either hand may rightly clutch. In the taking of it breathe lie beneath. Prayer for all who

is

One What stands

but one task for all life for each to give.


if

Freedom

fall?

Who dies if England live?


16. st.

Rewards and Fairies 2 [1910].

C/KZT772, St.

That
which we

packet

of

assorted

miseries

If

you can meet with Triumph and


Disaster
treat those

call a Ship.

The
Hot and bothered.

First Senior [1918]

And
If

two impostors

just the
$t.

same.

Ib. If,

you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue, nor lose the Or walk with Kings

Independence. Rectorial Address, St. Andrew's [October


10, 1923]

Never again

will

spend

another

common
Yours
is

touch.

Ib.

st.

winter in this accursed bucketshop of a


refrigerator called

the

Earth
it,

and

everything

England.

that's in

And

which

is

more

you'll

be a
16.

Letter to Sidney Colvin. From E. V. LUCAS, The Colvins and

Man,
One man
Will stick

my

son!

Their Friends [1928], p. 294

in a thousand, Solomon says, more close than a brother.3

When
not

your

Daemon

is

in charge,

do

try to think consciously. Drift, wait,

16.

The Thousandth Man,

st. i

But the Thousandth

Man

will stand

by

To

your side the gallows foot

and obey. Something of Myself for My Friends Known and Unknown


[1937], ch. 8

and

after!

Ib. st.

The female of the species

is

4 more

deadly than the male. The Female of the Species


[1911],
st.
i

LOGAN PEARSALL SMITH


2

1865-1946
it is, waking up in the morning always the same person. I wish

What

a bore

Our England
1

is

a garden,

and such

gar-

dens are not

made
in 1936.

Where Kipling died

"See Corbet, p. 315!). *See Eeclesiastes 7:28, p. *8a.

See Shakespeare, p, 9153. weeks before his death, a friend asked him half jokingly if he had discovered any meaning in life. "Yes," he replied, "there is

*Two

8 77

SMITH
I

SYMONS
Thank
and
it.

had

were unflinching and emphatic, and and a Message big, bushy eyebrows fox the Age. I wish I were a deep
Thinker, or a great Ventriloquist. Trivia [1902], Green Ivory

heavens, the sun has gone don't have to go out and

in.

enjoy

Afterthoughts

ARTHUR SYMONS
1865-1945
Twitched
strings, the clang of metal, beaten drums, Dull, shrill, continuous, disquieting And now the stealthy dancer comes Undulantly with catlike steps that

There are two things to aim at in life: first, to get what you want; and, after that, to enjoy it. Only the wisest of mankind achieve the second.
Afterthoughts [1931]
a wine of the rarest insipid to a vulgar
16.

Happiness
vintage,
taste.

is

and seems

cling.

Javanese Dancers [1889]


love
is over,

How

awful to
is

reflect that

what peo16.

And I would have, now An end to all, an end:

ple say of us

true!

I cannot, having been your lover, Stoop to become your friend!

Solvency

is

entirely

matter

of
16.

After Love [2892],


Life
is

rf.

temperament and not of income.


It is almost always worth while to be cheated; people's little frauds have an interest whkh more than repays what

dream
fears,

in the night, a fear


lost

among
spears.

naked runner
In the

in

storm of
[1896],
st.
i

Wood

of

Finvam

they cost us.

16.

When

they

come

downstairs

from

My life is like a music hall.


Prologue [1895]

their Ivory Towers, idealists are apt to 16. walk straight into the gutter.

The

gray-green stretch of sandy grass,

indefatigable pursuit of an unattainable perfection, even though it consist in nothing more than in the pounding erf an old piano, is what alone gives

The

Indefinitely desolate; sea of lead, a sky of slate; Already autumn in the air, alas!

a meaning to our
star.

life

on

this unavailing

16.

One stark monotony of stone, The long hotel, acutely white,


Against the after-sunset light

Eat with the


with the poor,

rich,

who
is

are capable of

but go to the play


j

Withers gray-green, and takes the


grass's tone.

CoZor Studies [1895]. At Dieppe

best seller

the gilded

tomb of

My soul is like this


ring.
I

cloudy, flaming opal

mediocre

talent.

16.

Opals

[1896]

What
what he

I like in a
says,

good author is not but what he whispers.


16.
life is

People say that


prefer reading.

the thing, but

16.

broider the world upon a loom, broider with dreams my tapestry; Here in a little lonely room I am master of earth and sea, And the planets come to me.
I

The Loom

of

Dreams

[1900],

a meaning; at least, for me, there is one thing that matters to set a chime of words tinkling in the minds of a few fastidious people/'

Logan

CYKIL CONNOLLY [b. 1905], Pearsall Smith, in The

A Tribute to New Statesman

He knew

that the whole mystery of

beauty can never be comprehended by

878

SYMONS
fte

YEATS

crowd,

and that while

clearness
is

is

But

I,

virtue of style, perfect explicitness necessary virtue.

not
in

being young and foolish, with her would not agree.

Down

The Symbolist Movement

by the Salley Gardens


[1869]
life

Literature [1899]. Gerard de

She bid

Nemd
Without charm there can be no fine there can be no perfect literature, as
flower

me

take

But

grows on was young and foolish, and

easy, as the grass the weirs;

now
Ib.

am

full of tears.

without fragrance.
16.

The

Stfyhane Mallarme
full

years like great

black oxen tread

The mystic too


intelligibly

of to the world.
Ib.

God

to speak

And God,

the world the herdsman, goads on behind.

them
[1892]
all

Arthur Rimbaud
very

The Countess Cathleen

Red

Rose, proud Rose, sad Rose of

Many

excellent

writers,

many
16.

painters, tedious on

and most musicians are so any subject but their own.

my days! Come near me,


ways.

while

sing the ancient

To

the Rose

Upon Time

the

Rood

of

is properly the rod of divihazel switch for the discovery of buried treasure, not a birch twig for the cassation of offenders. An Introduction to the Study of

[1893],

st. i

Criticism

nation: a

When

you are old and gray and


the
fire,

full of

sleep,

And nodding by
book. 1

take

down

this

Browning [1906], preface


The
at

When You Are Old

[1893]

How many
grace,

loved your

moments

of glad

the

great things in poetry are but externally core,

song

mere

And

loved your beauty, with love false


or true,

speech.

Dramatis Personae [1923]. Sir

William Watson

But one man loved the pilgrim soul in

And

you, loved the sorrows of your changing


face.

HERBERT TRENCH
I

16.

1865-1923 A circumnavigator of the soul.


Shakespeare,,
st.

will arise
free,

and go now, and go to Innis-

And
4

a small cabin build there, of clay

and wattles made: Nine bean-rows will I have there, a hive

WILLIAM BUTLER
YEATS*
1865-1939
Down by the
I

And

for the honeybee, live alone in the bee-loud glade.

And

salley gardens

my love and

did meet;

She passed the salley gardens with little

I shall have some peace there, for peace comes dropping slow, Dropping from the veils of the morning to where the cricket sings;

She bid

snow-white feet. me take love easy, as the leaves grow on the tree;
uas the greatest poet of our times . . the greatest in this language, and so far able to judge, in any language. T. S.
.

There midnight's all a glimmer, and noon a purple glow,

And

evening

full of

*Yeat*
certainly
I

The Lake
1

the linnet's wings. 2 Isle of Innisfree


[1893],
st. i,

tm

fiUQT
See

W. H. Auden,

p. io6oa.

See Ronsard, p. 1870. * I had still the ambition, formed in Sligo in my teens, of living in imitation of Thoreau on

879

YEATS
I

hear

it

in the

deep heart's

core.
\

All
st.

things

uncomely and broken,

all

The Lake

Me

of Innisfree,

The

A pity beyond all telling


Is

aid in the heart of love.

The
Love [1893]
in

things worn out and old, cry of a child by the roadway, the creak of a lumbering cart, heavy steps of the plowman,

The Pity

of

The

brawling
eaves,
brilliant
Sty>

of

sparrow
all

the

the wintry mold, splashing Are wronging your image that blossoms

a rose in the deeps of

my heart.
2

The Lover

The And

moon and
famous

the milky
r

Tells of the Rose in

His Heart [18993,**.

all

that

harmony

or

Had

the

heavens'

embroidered

leaves,

cloths,

Had

blotted out man's image and his


cry.

The Sorrow The


grave,

of Love [1893],
st. i

Enwrought with gold and silver light. He Wishes for the Cloths of Heaven [1899]
But
I, being dreams;

poor,

have

only

my

land of faery,
gets old

Where nobody
Where nobody
wise,

and godly and


and
crafty

have spread
feet;

my

dreams under your

gets old
gets old

and

Tread

softly

because you tread on

my
16.

dreams.

Where nobody
tongue.

and

bitter of
*

When

play on

my

fiddle in Dooncy,
sea.

The Land

of Heart's Desire

Folk dance like a wave of the

The

Fiddler of

[1894]

Dooney

[1899],
rf.
i

Land of Heart's Desire, Where beauty has no ebb, decay no


flood,

heart!

heart! if she'd but turn her

head,

But joy

is

wisdom, time an endless


!&
stands winding His lonely

You'd know the


forted.

folly

of being com-

song.

The

Folly of Being Comforted

And God
horn,

And time and


flight.

the world are ever in

Into the Twffigfet [1899]

And pluck till time and times are done The silver apples of the moon, The golden apples of the sun. The Song of Wandering Aengus

_
my poem
1

Never give all the heart, for love Will hardly seem worth thinking of To passionate women if it seem Certain, and they never dream That it fades out from kiss to kiss; For everything that's lovely is But a brief, dreamy kind of delight. Never Give All the Heart [1904]
Better go

[1899],
little

st.

down upon

your marrow-

island in Lough Gill, and when walking through Fleet Street very homesick I heard a little tinWe of water and saw a fountain in a shop window which balanced a its jet, and began to remember little ball
Innisfree, a

bones

And

scrub a kitchen pavement, or break

npon

lake water.

Innisfree.

From the sudden remembrance came The Trembling of the


.

stones Like an old pauper, in all kinds of weather; For to articulate sweet sounds together and Is to work harder than all these,

See Samuel Rogers, p. Excluded by Yeats from his Collected

Poems

['933}

Be thought an

idler

by the

noisy

set

880

YEATS
and clergyOf bankers, schoolmasters,
Romantic
It's

men
The martyrs
call

the world.
st.

Ireland's dead and gone, with O'Leary in the grave. September 1913 [1914]

Adam's Curse [1904],


It's

Be
la-

secret

and
all

exult,

certain there

is

no

fine thing

Because of

Since

Adam's

fall

but needs

much

things

known

That

is

boring.

Ib- $t-

most difficult. To a friend Whose

Work Has

heard the old, old men say, "All that's beautiful drifts away
I

Come

to

Nothing [1924]

Uke the waters/' The Old Men Admiring Themselves in the

I made my song a coat Covered with embroideries

Water

[1904]

Out of old mythologies From heel to throat;


But the
fools

Why, what could she have done, being


what she
is?

caught

it,

Wore it

in the world's eyes

Was
The

there another

bum?

No

Troy for her to Second Troy [igio]


difficult

fascination of what's Has dried the sap out of

As though they'd wrought it. Song, let them take it, For there's more enterprise A Coat [1914] In walking naked.
I know that I shall meet my fate Somewhere among the clouds above; Those that I fight I do not hate, Those that I guard I do not love;

my

veins,

and

rent

and natural content Spontaneous joy


Out of

my heart.
The
Fascination of What's
Difficult [1910]

My country Kiltartan Cross, My countrymen Kiltartan's poor.


is

Wine comes
And
love
That's all

in at the

mouth
eye; for truth

An Irish Airman Foresees His


Death [1919]

comes in at the

Before

we shall know we grow old and die.


leaves are
all

A Drinking Song

[1910]
is

Nor law, nor duty bade me fight, Nor public men', nor cheering crowds,

A lonely impulse of delight


Drove to
this

Though
one;

many, the root

tumult in the clouds.


I&.

Through I swayed
sun;

the lying days of


leaves

my youth
in the

my

and flowers
the truth.
of

Now I may wither into ^he Coming


In

And I may dine at journey's end With Landor and with Donne. To a "Young Beauty

[1919],

Wisdom
Time

with

[1910]

Did
dreams begins responsibility. 1 Old Play. Epigraph, Responsibilities
it

Lord, what would they say their Catullus walk that way? The Scholars [1919],

st.

All the wild witches, those


ladies,

most noble
and
their

Was

The gray wing upon every

for this the wild geese spread tide;

For

all

their

broomsticks

For this that all that blood was shed, For this Edward Fitzgerald died,

tears,

And Robert
All that
l

Emmet and Wolfe Tone,


Responsibilities.

Their angry tears, are gone. Lines Written in Dejection [1919]


I

delirium of the brave?


DELof book of

ln

MOM

Dreams Begin
SCHWARTZ,
title

knew a phoenix in my youth, them have their day.

so let

poems [1938]

His Phoenix [1919]

881

YEATS
Bring the balloon of the mind

That
Into

bellies
its

and drags narrow shed.

in the

wind
[1919]

The

Lose natural kindness and maybe heart-revealing intimacy


right,

That chooses

and never

find a

The Battoon

of the

Mind

friend.

We
And

A
It's

have

lit

upon the

Prayer for

gentle, sensitive

My

Dau$it&
*.
3

mind
lost

the old nonchalance of the


chisel,

certain that fine

women

eat

hand;

A crazy salad with

their meat.
Ib.*t.

Whether we have chosen

pen

or

We

brush, are but

critics,

or but half create.

Ego Domnus Tuus


All changed, changed utterly:

[1919]

In courtesy I'd have her chiefly learned; Hearts are not had as a gift but hearfe are earned. lb. sf,
5

And many
From

a poor

man

that has rovtd,

A terrible beauty is born.

Loved and thought himself


eyes.

Easter 1916 [1921]

beloved, a glad kindness cannot take his


ft.

Nothing that we love overmuch


Is

ponderable to our touch. Towards Break of

no hatred in a mind Assault and battery of the wind


If there's

Day

[1921],
st.

Can

never tear the linnet from the


leaf.

16.
is

st.

Turning and turning in the widening


falcon cannot hear the falconer; Things fall apart; the center cannot

An
So

intellectual hatred
let

the worst,

The

Have

her think opinions are accursed. not seen the loveliest woman

born
of the mouth of Plenty's horn. Because of her opinionated mind Barter that horn and every good By quiet natures understood For an old bellows full of angry wind?
Ib.st.8

Out

Mere

anarchy

is

loosed
tide
is

upon
loosed,

the

world,

The blood-dimmed
everywhere

and
is

The
The

ceremony
drowned;

of

innocence

That

best lack all conviction, while the worst Are full of passionate intensity.

no country for old men. The young In one another's arms, birds in the
is

trees

The Second Coming

[1921],
St. I

Those dying generations


song,

at their

And what
round

rough beast,
at

its

hour come
to
16.

The

salmon-falls, the mackerel-crowded


seas,

last

Slouches towards born?

Bethlehem

be
2

Fish, flesh, or fowl,

commend

all

sumdies.

$t.

Imagining in excited reverie That the future years had come, Dancing to a frenzied drum, Out of the murderous innocence of the
sea.

mer long Whatever is begotten, born, and Caught in that sensual music all
lect

neg-

Monuments

of unaging intellect.
st.
i

A Prayer for My Daughter


[1921],
st.

An

Byzantium [1928], aged man is but a paltry thing,

Sailing to

tattered coat
its

upon a

stick, unless

Soul clap

hands and
its

sing,

and

tooder

For such,
Being made beautiful overmuch, Consider beauty a sufficient end,

For

sing every tatter in

mortal

dress.

Ib.rf.3

882

YEATS

Consume
sire

my

heart away; sick with de-

Everything that

man

esteems

Endures

And fastened to a dying animal what it is; and gather It knows not

The

day. Love's pleasure drives his love away,


painter's

moment or a
brush

consumes

his

me
Into the artifice of eternity. Sailing to Byzantium,
st.

dreams.

Two Song* from a


3

Play [1928], JI,*f.a

Once out of nature I shall never take My bodily form from any natural thing, Biit such a form as Grecian goldsmiths

Whatever flames upon the night Man's own resinous heart has fed.
Ib.

make Of hammered gold and gold enameling To keep a drowsy Emperor awake; Or set upon a golden bough to sing To lords and ladies of Byzantium
Of what
is

shudder
there

in

the

loins

engenders

The broken
tower

wall,

the burning roof and

past,

or

come. 1

passing, or to Ib. $t. 4

And Agamemnon dead.


Leda and the Swan [1928]

What

shall I

heart,

this absurdity this caritroubled heart

do with

chestnut

tree,

great

rooted

blos-

cature,

Decrepit

age

that

has been tied to

somer, Are you the leaf, the blossom or the


"bole?

me
As to a dog's
tail?

O
Never had
I

more

Excited, passionate, fantastical Imagination, nor an ear and eye That more expected the impossible. The Tower [1928], I Does the imagination dwell the most Upon a woman won or a woman lost? Ib. II, st. 13

brightening glance, How can we know the dancer from the dance?

body swayed to music,

Among

School Children [1928], st. 8

Never to have lived

is best, ancient writers say; Never to have drawn the breath of life,

Come let us mock at the great That had such burdens on the mind And toiled so hard and kte
To leave some monument behind,
Nor thought of the leveling wind. Nineteen Hundred and Nineteen [1928],

never to have looked into the eye


of day

The second

best's a

gay goodnight and


at

1 quickly turn away.

From "Oedipus

Colonus"
st.

Mock mockers

after that

That would not lift a hand maybe To help good, wise or great To bar that foul storm out, for we
Traffic in

The innocent and the beautiful Have no enemy but time. In Memory of Eva Gore-booth and Con Markiemcz [1933]
Ib.

mockery.
I

Much

did

rage

when young,

My

Sdf:

Being by the world oppressed, But now with flattering tongue


It

What matter if the ditches are impure? What matter if I live it aH once more?
Endure that
toil

living drinks his drop.

man

is

blind and

speeds the parting guest.

Youth and Age [1928]


1 1

of growing up;

palace at

hare read somewhere that in the Emperor's Byzantium was a tree made of gold and and artificial birds that sang. YEATS'S

The ignominy of boyhood; the distress Of boyhood changing into man; The unfinished man and his pain
1 See

Theognis, p. 77a, and note.

883

YEATS
Brought face to face with his own
clumsiness,

Speech
All

after

other

lovers
. .

A
I

long silence; it is right, being estranged


.

or

Dialogue of Self and Soul


live it all again

dead

am

content to
yet again,

That we descant and yet again descant Upon the supreme theme of Art and
Song: Bodily decrepitude is wisdom; young loved each other and were ignorant.

And

if it be lire to pitch Into the frog-spawn of a blind man's

ditch.

Ib. st. 3
I

We

When

such as

cast out remorse

Words
I

for

Music

So great a sweetness flows into the


breast

Perhafn,
Silence

After

Long

We must laugh and we must We are blest by everything,


Everything

sing,

The moon
4

carry the sun in a golden cup,


in a silver bag. 16. Those Dancing

we

look upon
is

is

blest.

Ib.

st.

Days Are Gone, refrain

But what

Whiggery?

leveling, rancorous, rational sort of

mind That never looked out


saint

of the eye of a

Or out

of a drunkard's eye.

The Seven Sages

[1933]

I gave what other women gave That stepped out of their clothes, But when this soul, its body off, Naked to naked goes, He it has found shall find therein What none other knows. A Woman Young and Old

No man
Of

has ever lived that had enough


gratitude or woman's Vacillation [1933], st* 3

[1933].
rf.

Last Confession,

children's
love.

He

that sings a lasting song Thinks in a marrowbone.

Swift has sailed into his rest; Savage indignation there

A
I

Prayer for

Old Age

[1935],

**

Cannot
Imitate

lacerate his breast,

you dare, World-besotted traveler; he Served human liberty*


Swift's

him

if

for fashion's word is out pray prayer comes round again That I may seem, though I die old,

And

A foolish, passionate man.


There
struts

Ib.

st.

Epitaph* [1933]
is

All perform their tragic play,

The

intellect

of

man

forced

to

Hamlet, there

is

Lear.

choose

Lapis Lazuli [1936-1939]

And

Perfection of the life, or of the work, if it take the second must refuse

Heaven blazing
Tragedy wrought to
its

into the head:


Lear

heavenly
"

dark.

mansion, raging in the The Choice [1933], st. i


his

Though

Hamlet

uttermost rambles and

rages,

But Love has pitched

mansion in

The place of excrement.


Crazy Jane Talks with the Bishop [1933], st. 3

And all the drop-scenes drop at once Upon a hundred thousand stages,
It

cannot grow by an inch or an

ounce.
16.

What were all the world's alarms To mighty Paris when he found
Sleep upon a golden bed That first dawn in Helen's arms?

may look and body touch, Which is the more blest?


If soul

The

Lady's Second Song {19362939],**. J

Words
1

for Music Perhaps


st. a

My

temptation
at life's

is

quiet.

See Swift, p. 591 a,

[1933]. Lullaby, and note.

Here

end

Neither loose imagination,

YEATS
Nor the mill of the mind Consuming its rat and bone, Can make the truth known.

DACM
Cast a cold eye

On

life,

on death.
1

Horseman, pass byl

An
Grant
Till I

Acre of Grass [1936-1939], St. 2

Under Ben Bulben,

The

me an

old man's frenzy,


I

Myself must

remake

have it I do wrong remake a song Should know what issue is at stake,


friends that

When
is

ever

am Timon and Lear


William Blake
the wall
call.

It

myself that

remake.
of

Or

that

Variorum Edition of the Poems

Who beat upon


Till

W.

B. Yeats

Truth obeyed his

16.

st.

3
still of opinion that only two can be of the least interest to a topics
I

Hurrah for revolution and more can-

am

non-shot! horseback lashes a begbeggar upon


gar

serious

and studious

mood
of

sex

and

the dead.

on

foot.

The Great Day [19361939], I


i

The Letters
If

W. B.
poem

Yeats
of his
16.

a poet interprets a
its

You think
rage

it

horrible

that lust and

own he limits

suggestibility.

Should dance attention upon


age;

my

old
I

We poets would die of loneliness but


for

They were not such a plague when


was young; What else have
song?
I

friends that
talk

women, and we choose our men we may have somebody to


about

women

with.

to spur

me

into

16. Letter to Olivia

Shakespeare
[1936]

The Spur [1936-1 939]


In

Down

the mountain walls From where Pan's cavern is


Intolerable

music

falls.

life courtesy and self-possession, in the arts style, are the sensible impressions of the free mind, for both

and

Foul goat-head, brutal BeIlvT shoulder, bum,


Flash fishlike;

arm appear,
satyrs

nymphs and

out of a deliberate shaping of all and from never being swept the emotion, into conwhatever away,
arise

things

Copulate in the foam. News for the Delphic Oracle [1936-1939], st. 3

fusion or dullness.

and Introductions Poetry and The

What shall I do for pretty Now my old bawd is dead?

girls

John KinseTUfs Lament for Mrs. Mary Moore [19361939], refrain


Irish

HARRY DACRE
fl.

1892

poets, learn
is

Sing whatever

your trade, well made.

Under Ben Bulben [1936Under bare Ben Bulben's head In Drumcliff churchyard Yeats

Daisy, Daisy, give your answer, do! I'm half crazy, all for the love of you! It won't be a stylish marriage, I can't afford a carriage, But you'll look sweet upon the seat

me

is

laid.

Of

a bicycle built for two!

16.

VI
last

Daisy BeU [1892]


three lines are inscribed

On

limestone quarried near the spot By his command these words are cut:

on

Yeats's

grave.

SAYERS

BURGESS
Stay with the procession or you never catch up.

HENRY
d.
'

J. 1952

SAYERS
show number
j

Ta-ra-ra-boom-de-ay! Title of minstrel


ji],

Forty
Lottie
j

Modern

Fable*.

Old-Time

made famous by
1892

ins in

The time to enjoy a European trip about three weeks after unpacking
Ib,

5$

GEORGE W. YOUNG
fl.

The Hungry

Draw

1900

your salary before spending


Ib.

it

The

People's Choice

The

lips that touch liquor must never touch minel

The Lips That Touch Liquor,


st.

The man was a pinhead in a good many respects, but he was wise as a 16. The Wise Piker serpent.
For parlor use the vague
a life-saver.
generality
is

GEORGE
A
1866-1944 good folly is worth what you pay
Fables in Slang [2899], A Lot for Three Dollars
for it

'15.

Last night at twelve

I felt

immense,

But now

I feel like

thirty cents.

The
But,
It is

Sultan of Sulu [1902].

R-e-m-o-r-s-e!
is

In uplifting, get underneath.


It.

The Good

The water-wagon
Fairy

the place for me;

no time
cold,
after!
*

for mirth

and

laughter,
Ib.

been kicked in the head by a mule when young and believed everything he read in the Sunday papers.
Ib.

He had

The

gray

dawn of the morning

The Slim

Girl

TRISTAN BERNARD
1866-1947
are always sincere. sincerities, that's all.

Only the more rugged mortals should attempt to keep up with current literature.
I&.

Men

They

change

Didn't Care for Storybooks


off until

Ce que Ton

dit

aux femmes

Never put
enties.

tomorrow what

should have been done early in the Sev-

Forty Modern Fables [1901]. 'The Third and Last Call

To live happily with other people one should only ask of them what they can L'Enfant prodigue du Vesinet give.

HENRY BLOSSOM
1866-1919

To
rules

insure peace of
regulations. Ib.

mind ignore the

and

The Crustacean

Want What Want It.


I

Want When

were not for the presents, an elopement would be preferable. 16. The General Manager of the
If
it

Mademoiselle Modiste

[190;].

Tif le of song

Love
i

Affair

Somehow I always like to think Of Gcorgeade as a summer drink,


Sparkling and cool, with just a tang
I

GELETT BURGESS
1866-1951
never saw a purple cow, I never hope to see one;
*

Of

pleasant effervescent slang.

OLIVE* HERFORD [1863-1935], Celebrities


I

Have Never Met

See Byron, p. 5600, and Dickens, p. 670*.

886

a
But
I

BURGESS
can
tell

TAYLOR

you, anyhow,

THOMAS
[1895]

L.

MASSON

I'd

rather see than oe one.

The Purple Cow

1866-1934

Ah, yes* I wrote the "Purple I'm sony, now, I wrote it!

Cow"

Obey That Impulse.


Subscription slogan, Life

A Safe and

Sane Fourth.

But

can

tell

you, anyhow,
if

Sfogem

111 kill

you

you quote Cinq Ans AprSs

it.

GEORGE BARR McCUTCHEON


1866-1928

EDMUND VANCE COOKE


1866-1932
The woman tempted

"You

brute!** hissed

me

the Countess. Grausterk [1901], eft. 16

and tempts

me

still!

Lord God,

pray

You

that she ever will!

BEATRIX POTTER
1866-1943

Adam

And

it

isn't

the fact that you're hurt

that counts,

Once upon a time there were four little Rabbits, and their names were
Flopsy, Mopsy, Cottontail,

But only

how did you take it. How Did You Die?

and Pe-

st. i

ter.

PHILANDER JOHNSON
TTie

They lived with their Mother in a sandbank underneath the root of a very
big
fir

tree.

1866-1939 world would sleep if things were


run
say, "It can't

The Tale
garden.

of Peter Rabbit
Ib.

But don't go into Mr. McGregor's


water was all slippy-sloppy in the larder and the back passage. But Mr. Jeremy liked getting his feet wet; nobody ever scolded him, and he never

By

men who

be done!"

It

Can't Be

Done

The

Cheer up, the worst

is

1 yet to come. Shooting Stars

RICHARD LE GALLIENNE
1866-1947
The
cry of the Little Peoples goes God in vain,
is

caught a cold.

The Tde of Mr. Jeremy Fisher

No more twist!
up
to

The

Tailor of Gloucester

For the world

given over to the cruel


of the Little Peoples

sons of Cain.

LINCOLN STEFFENS
1866-1936
"So you've been over into Russia?" said Bernard Baruch, and I answered very literally, "I have been over into the * future, and it works." Autobiography [1931], ch. 18

The Cry

WALTER MALONE
1866-1915
a lowly singer dries one tear, Or soothes one humble human heart in
if

And

pain,

Be sure his homely verse to


dear,

God

is

BERT LESTON TAYLOR


1866-1921

And not one stanza has been sung in


vain.

When men
i

are calling

names and mak-

The Humbler
1

ing faces,
Poets,
st.

On

Stefifens's

return from the Bullitt mission,

See Tennyson, p. 6543.

TAYLOR
the world's ajangle and meditate on interstellar spaces And smoke a mild seegar.

SUN TAX-SEN

And

al!

ajar,

Human
of ideas.

history

is

in essence a

history

The Outline
lions of

of History, ch. 40
milis
.

Canopus

Every one of these hundreds of

human

A bore is a man who, when you ask him how he is, tells you. The SoGdkd Human Race [1922]

beings
.

in

some form

seeking happiness.
together

HERBERT GEORGE WELLS


1866-1946

Not one is alnoble nor altogether trust worthy nor altogether consistent; and . not one is altogether vile. Not a at some time single one but has wept.
.
.

io,

Our

true nationality

is

mankind.

The Thne Machine.


Title of book [1895]

Human
more
a

history becomes more and race between education and

but the beginning of a all that is and has been and beginning, is but the twilight of the dawn. The Discovery of the Future

The

past

is

Ib. catastrophe. Life begins perpetually. Gathered together at last under the leadership of man . . unified, disciplined, armed
.

[1902]

Nothing could have been more obvious to the people of the early twentieth which century than the rapidity with
war was becoming impossible. And as did not see it. certainly they did They not see it until the atomic bombs burst
in their

with the secret powers of the atom and with knowledge as yet beyond dreaming, Life, forever dying to be born
forever young and eager, will presently stand upon this earth as upon a footstool, and stretch out its realm
afresh,

amidst the

stars.

Ib.

An
work
is

artist

who

theorizes about his

fumbling hands.

The World

Set Free [2914]

no longer artist but critic. The Temptation of Hamngfiy


to rely

catastrophe of the atomic bombs which shook men out of cities and busi-

The

In England we have come upon a comfortable time lag

of

fifty

nesses

and economic

relations,

shook

years or a century intervening between the perception that something ought to

them
habits

also out of their old-established

be done and a serious attempt


it.

to do

of thought, and out of the beliefs and prejudices that held lightly came down to them from the past.
Ib.

The Work, Wealth and HappiMankind [1931], ch. n The Shape of Things to Come, 2
ness of
Title of book [1933]

The War That Will End War.


Title of

book [1914]

SUN YAT-SEN3
It
is

The

professional military

mind

is

by

necessity an inferior and unimaginative mind; no man of high intellectual qualin ity would willingly imprison his gifts

only after

1866-1925 mature

deliberation
I

and thorough preparation that


i

have

such a

calling.

The Outline

of History [1920], ch. 40

See Matthew 5:34-35, p. 4ob; Pope, p. 4081 and Clarence Day, p. 9*50. See Cicero, p. ma; Shakespeare, Trailta awi and Campbell, p. Cressida I, Hi, 334* P-

a^

The Great War and


Peace.

the

Petty
Ib.

and note. * From Sources of Chinese Tradition, William Theodore de Bary [1060).
5382,

edited by

SUN YAT-SEN
decided
tion

DOWSON
Being a husband
is

upon the Program of Revoluand defined the procedure of the

a whole-time

job.

The

Title [1918], act I

revolution in three stages.

The

first

is
\

the period of military government; the second, the period of political tutelage; and the third, the period of constitutional

Pessimism,
is

when you

get used to

it,

just as agreeable as

optimism.

Things That Have Interested

Me

government. The Three Phases of National Reconstruction [1918]

[19183

The
licity.

price of justice is eternal pubIb. Second Series [i 923]

The Chinese people have only family and clan solidarity; they do not have . national spirit they are just a . Other men heap of loose sand. arc the carving knife and serving dish; we are the fish and the meat. China As a Heap of Loose Sand
.

VICENTE RLASCO-IBA$EZ
1867-1928
was the roar of the real, the only beast [the crowd in the arena].
It

[1924]

Blood and Sand [1908]

China is now suffering from poverty, not from unequal distribution of


wealth.

there are inequalities of wealth, the methods of Marx can, of course, be used; a class war can be advocated to destroy the inequalities. But

Where

DAMPIER-WHETHAM
1867-1952 Beyond the bright searchlights of
ence,
sci-

WILLIAM CECIL

in China, where industry is not yet developed* Marx's class war and dictatorship of the proletariat are impracticable.

Out of

Capital and the State [1924]

In the construction of a country it is not the practical workers but the idealists

sight of the windows of sense, Old riddles still bid us defiance, Old questions of Why and of Whence. The Recent Development of

Physical Science [1904]

and planners that are

difficult

to

find.

ERNEST DOWSON
1867-1900

Chung-shan

Ch'iian~$hu, vol. II

STANLEY BALDWIN
1867-1947
you think about the defense of England you no longer think of the chalk cliffs of Dover. You think of the Rhine. That is where our frontier lies
today.

They saw the


played;

glory of the world disbitter

They saw the


sweet;

of

it,

and the

When

They knew the

And

roses of the world should fade, be trod under by the hurrying


feet.

Speech

in the

House of Com[July 30, 1934]

Nuns of the Perpetual Adoration


[1891],

mons

A5

ENOCH ARNOLD BENNETT


1867-1931

Last night, ah r yesternight, betwixt her

There

and mine 1 thy shadow, Cynaral thy breath was shed


lips
fell

The Old Wives'

Tale. 1

Title of novel [1908] 1 But refuse profane and old wives' fables, and exercise rather unto / Timothy godliness.

fool he is to believe the tales of an old wife. ALEXANDER BARCLAY, The Ship of Fools [1508] Old wives' foolish tales of Robin Hood. NICHOLAS UDALL [154*]
1

See T.

S. Eliot, p.

10032.

DOWSON
Upon
niy soul between the kisses and

DUNNE
From
troublous sights and sounds
set

the wine;

free;

And
Yea,
I

was desolate and

sick of

an old

passion,
I

In such a twilight hour of breath, Shall one retrace his life, or see,

was desolate and bowed

my

Through

head: have been faithful to thee, Cynara! in

shadows, death?

the

true

face

of

Extreme Unction [1896],

*f.

my

fashion.

*Non Sum Qudis Eram Boncte Sub Regrto Cynarae 1 [1896],


st. i

MR. DOOLEY [FINLEY PETER

DUNNE]

have forgot much, Cynara! gone with the wind, 3 Flung roses, roses riotously with the
I

1867-1936
Life'd not be worth livin'
if

we

didn't

throng.
I

Ib. st. 3

keep our inimies. Mr. Dooley in Peace and in


[1898]. tions

War

cried

for

madder
feast
is

music
finished

and

for

On New
ar-re

Year's Resolu-

stronger wine,

But when the

and the

Th'

dead

always

poplar.

lamps expire, Then fells thy shadow, Cynara! the Ib. st. 4 night is thine.

knowed a society wanst to vote a monyment to a man an' refuse to help hk fam'ly, all in wan night.
Ib.

They

are not long, the weeping and the

On

Charity

laughter, Love and desire


I

and hate:

think they have no portion in us


after

We pass the gate.


They
are not long, the days of

wine and

Mr. Dooley, "that if th' Christyan Scientists had some science an th' doctors more Christianity, it wudden't make anny difFrence whidi if ye had a good nurse." ye called in Mr. Dooley 's Opinions 1900],
"I think," said
7
1

Christian

roses;

Out of a misty dream Our path emerges for


closes

No
a while, then

matther whether th* constitution

follows

th' flag or not, th' supreme coort follows th' iliction returns.

Within a dream.
Vitae Summa Brevis Spem Nos Vetat Incohare Longpm 3 [i 896]
I

Ib.

The Supreme

Court's

Decisions

Because

am

idolatrous

and have be-

th'

think a lie with a purpose is wan worst kind an th' mos* profitable.
7

iv

With

sought, grievous supplication


prayer,

Ib.

On Lying
ain't

and con-

Th'

dimmycratic
Ib.

party

on

suming

The

admirable image that my dreams have wrought Out of her swan's neck and her dark, abundant hair: The jealous gods, who brook no worship save their own, Turned my live idol marble and her
heart to stone.
*

speakin' terms with

itsilf.

Mr. Dooley Discusses

Party

Politics

Th' raypublican party broke

ye, but

now

that ye're down we'll not turn a cold shoulder to ye. Come in an' well

keep ye

broke.

Ib.

Epigram [1896]
5, p.

See Horace, Odes IV, i, See Rutebeuf, p. isSa. See Horace, p. isob.

utb.

Hogan's r-right whin tice is blind." Blind she

he
is,

says:

"Jus-

an'"deef an'

dumb

an' has a

wooden

leg.

Ib. Cross-Examinations

DUNNE

No wan
calls

"TV

cares to hear what Hogan short an' simple scandals iv

called a rayformer an'

th'

poor,"

Mr. Dooley's Opinions. CrossExaminations


Puritans to bein' Fr thanks rive presarved fr*m th' ... we keep it to give hidyans, an' thanks we are presarved fr'm th' Purith'
tans.

tu-rmed into angels be an iliction is remains at large. Mr. Dooley's Opinions. Casual Observations

Twas founded be

Miracles are laughed at be a nation that r-reads thirty a

millyon newspapers 16. day an' supports Wall sthreet.

J6.

Thanksgiving

Vice
heejous

...
mien
Ib.

is
.

a
.
.

creature of such y that th more ye see

Th' flag i floats free an' well guarded over th' govermint offices, an' th' cheery people go an* come on their errands go out alone an' come back with th'
throops. Iverywhere happiness, contint, love iv th' shtep-mother excipt in places
ple.

itth'bettheryelikeit.

The Crusade

Against Vice

counthry,

where there

ar-re peo-

Glory be, whin business gets above tinpinny nails in a brown paper coroucopy, 't is hard to tell it fr'm mur16- On "Wall Street ther.
sellin*

Observations by Mr. Dooley [1902]. The Philippine Peace

"D' ye think th' colledges has much to do with th' progress iv th' wurruld?" asked Mr. Hennessy.

"D
"'tis

ye
th'

think/' said Mr. Dooley, mill that makes th' wather


Ib.

an alley without blushin', but a businessman who is in pollytics jus' to see that th' civil sarvice faw gets thurly enfoorced, will give Lincoln Park an'
th' public libr'y to th' beef thrust, charge an admission price to th* lake front an* make it a felony Fr annywan to buy stove polish outside iv his store, an' have it all put down to public improvemints with a pitcher iv him in th'

reglar pollytician can't give

away

run?" "
said

Twill civilize th' Mr. Hennessy. w Twill civilize thim


Ib.

Chinnymen/'
stiff,"

said

Mr.

Dooley.

The Future of China (on German intervention in China]


If ye live enough befure thirty ye won't care to live at all afther fifty.

cornerstone.
If a

16.
is

wise, gets rich, an* if he gets rich, he gets foolish, or his wife does. That's what keeps the money

man

he

16. Casual Observations

movin' around.

"Oh,

well/' said

Among

men,
is

Hinnissy,

wet

16. Newport Mr. Hennessy, "we

eye
16.

manes dhry heart.

fanatic

man

that does
if

what he
th'

Lord made us/' "No/' said Mr. Dooley, "lave us be fair. Lave us take some iv th* blame
are as th'
oursilves."

thinks th'

Lord wud do

He knew
is

16.

facts iv th' case.

16.

in the

vote on th' tallysheet box.

worth two
16.

best thing about a little judicyous swearin' is that it keeps th' temper. Twas intinded as a comproth*

But

Tis as hard Fr a rich

man

to enther

th' kingdom iv Hiven as it is f r man to get out iv Purgatory.

a poor
Ib.

mise between runnin* away an* fightin*. Befure it was invinted they was on'y th' two ways out iv an argymint.
16. Swearing
I don't
sufferin',

Thrust ivrybody, but cut th' ca-ards.


16.

think

we

infye other people's

that'd expict to thrain lobto fly in a year is called a loonytic; but a man that thinks men can be
sters

A man

Hinnissy. It isn't acshally injyement. But we feel betther Fr it.


16.
1

Enjoyment

The American

flag in the Philippines.

DUNNE
*'Ye

GALSWORTHY
ivry

a lot about [raising chilMr. Hennessy. dren]/' said 1 "I do/ said Mr, Dooley. "Not bein'

know

man
j

is

bcfure th law

th' equal iv ivry other if he isn't careful,

man

Dissertations

an author, I'm a

by Mr. DooJev
Eat

gr-reat critic/

The Food Wei

Dissertations by

Mr. Dooley

[2006].

The

Bringing

Up

of

Children

think dhrink is a ra-aly nicissry evil?" said Mr. Hennessy. "Well," said Mr. Dooley, "if it's an
evil to a

"Ye

do

Th' old story iv th' ant an' th' tn' ant that ye can step grasshopper on an' th' grasshopper ye can't catch. Ib. The Labor Troubles

man,
an

it's

not

nicissry, an' if

it's

nicissry

it's

evil,"

16.

The Bar

had a boy wud ye sind him to colledge?" asked Mr. Hennessy. "Well" said Mr. Doolev, "at th' age whin a boy is fit to be in colledge I
"If ye

"He made [money]/' said Mr. Dooley, "because he honestly loved it with an innocint affiction. He was throe to it. Th' reason ye have no money is because ye don't love it f r itsilf alone.

Money won't
flirt."

iver surrinder to such a

wudden't have him around


Ib.

th'

house/'

The
is th'

Intellectual Life

Mr. Dooley on Making a Wfll and Other Evil Necessities


[2919]
.

Th'

prisidincy

highest office in

tV
is

On Making a Will

iv th' people. Th' vice-prisidincy gift in' next highest an' th' lowest. It

isn't a
jail

Fr

crime exactly. Ye can't be sint to it, but it's a kind iv a disgrace.

JOHN GALSWORTHY
Justice
is

It's

like writin'

anonymous
Ib.

letters.

1867-1933 machine
it

that,

when

The

Vice-President

th' rules iv th' Sinit.

It is his jooty to rigorously enforce There ar-re none.

someone has once given push, rolls on of itself.

the starting

Justice [1910], act II

Th'

ruled be courtesy, like th' 16. longshoreman's union.


Sinit
is

Public opinion's always in advance of Windows [1922], act I the law.

Slug-ye'er-spouse is an intemaytional spoort that has niver become pop'lar on our side iv th' wather. An American lady is not th' person that anny man but a thrained athlete wud care to raise his hand again' save be way iv

The

value

of

sentiment

is

the

amount of sacrifice you make for it.

are prepared to
16. II

smoothin' her hair.


Ib. Corporal

Punishment

By the cigars they smoke, and the composers they love, ye shall know the texture of men's souls. Indian Summer of a Forsyte
[1920],
cfc. i

[public flogging] be fine? Th' govermint gives us too little amusemint nowadays. Th' favorite pastime iv civil-

Won't

He
but,

ordered himself a dozen

oysters;

ized

man

is

man.

croolty to other civilized 16.

suddenly remembering that the month contained no r, changed them

to a fried sole. 1

The White Monkey


pt.

"Spare th' rod an' spile th' child/' said Mr. Hennessy. *Tes," said Mr. Dooley, "but don't spare th' rod an' ye spile th' rod, th'
child, an' th' child's father."

Ill

[1924], ch. 7

*It is unseasonable and unwholesome in a!! months that have not an r in their name to eat WILLIAM BUTLER, Dyefs Dry Dinan oyster.

16.

ner [1599]
Let's

sing a song of glory to Themistodes

This

home

iv

opportunity where

O'Shea,

GALSWORTHY
If you do not think about the future, vou cannot have one. Swan Song [1928], pt. II, ch. 6

ALAIN

CHARLES EDWARD

MONTAGUE
1867-1928

A man
of

of action forced into a state


is

thought
it.

unhappy
in

until

he can get

was born below par to of two whiskies.


I

th' extent

out of

Fiery Particle* [1923]

Maid

Waiting

[1931], ch. 3
,

There's just one rule for politicians all over the world: Don't say in Power

"A.E." [GEORGE WILLIAM RUSSELL]


1867-1935

what you say in Opposition; if you do, to cany out what the you only have other fellows have found impossible,
I6. 7

Our hearts were drunk with a beauty Our eyes could never see. The Unknown God
Twilight, a timid fawn,

One's eyes are what one is, one's mouth what one becomes. Flowering Wilderness [1932],
ch. 2

went glimmer-

And

ing by, Niht, Night, the dark-blue hunter, followed East Refuge

The beginnings and endings of all human undertakings are untidy, the
building of a house, the writing of a novel, the demolition of a bridge, and,

HENRY LEWIS STIMSON


1867-1950

eminently, the finish of a voyage. Over the River [1933], ch.

The
worthy

only
is

way to make a man


and the

trust-

to trust him;

surest

save the old that's worth saving, whether in landscape, houses, manners, institutions, or human types, is

How to

way

to

distrust

make him untrustworthy is to him and show your distrust. The Bomb and the Opportunity
[March 1940!
only deadly sin
I

one of our greatest problems, and the one that we bother least about. Over the River, ch. 39

The
cism.

know

is

cyni-

On

Active Service in Peace and War [1948], introduction

LIONEL JOHNSON
1867-1902 The saddest of all kings Crown'd, and again discrown'd.

HARRY LEON WILSON


1867-1939
I

By

the Statue of King Charles at Charing Cross, st. 2

can be pushed just so far. Ruggles of Red Gap [1915]

Vanquished in life, his death By beauty made amends.


I

Ib. st.

ALAIN CHARTIER]
To
think
is

know you:

solitary griefs,
st.
i

Desolate passions, aching hours! The Precept of Silence,

to say no.
les

Le Citoyen contre
Nothing
idea,
is
it's

Pouvofrs

Who

ate a dozen oysters

on the second day of

May.
STODDARD KING [1889-1955], The

Man

when

more dangerous than an the only one we have.


Systfane des Beaux-Arts

Who

Dared

8 93

CLAUDEL

GORKI

PAUL CLAUDEL
1868-1955
explain nothing, thanks to you all things
plicable.

WILLIAM EDWARD BURGHARDT DuBOIS


1868-1963
Herein aH men know not that men are poor something of poverty; not that men arc who is good? Not that men wicked what is truth? Nay, bat are ignorant
lies

You

poet, but
ex-

become

the tragedy of the age:

L*
use

Vfflc [1892]

The words I

Are everyday words and yet are not the samel You will find no rhymes in my verse, no
magic.

that

men know so little


The Souls

of

men.

of Black Folk [1903]

There are your very own phrases. La Muse QudEstla Grace [2910]
imagine Paradise on earth, the immediate result is a very

It is a peculiar sensation, this doubleconsciousness, this sense of always lookthe eyes of ing at one's self through

When man

tries to

others.

One

feels

his

two-ness

respectable

Hell.
le Loir-et-

Conversations dans

Cher [1929]

an American, a Negro; two souls, two thoughts, two unreconciled strivideals in one dait ings; two warring whose dogged strength atone body, it from being torn asunder. keeps *
Ib.

NORMAN DOUGLAS
1868-1952

[ALEKSEI MAKSIMOVICH

MAXIM GORKI*
PESHKOV]
1868-1936

You can
its

teH the ideals of a nation by

advertisements.

South

Wind

[1917],

ch.

The

brave man's folly

that

is life's

Men
horizons.
for

have

lost

Nobody

civilization;

they

distant sight of writes for humanity, write for their

wisdom.

The Song

of the Falcon [1895]


that once

Former people [Creatures

country, their sect; friends or annoy their enemies.

to

amuse

their

Ib.

Title of story [1897] were men]. 2 storm the Let rage ever stronger!

Song of a Stormy
Lies
slaves

Petrel [1901]
religion of

one can expect a majority to be stirred bv motives other than ignoble.

No

Ib.

10

and taskmasters.8 The Lower Depths


marvelous
is

there you have the

[1903]

No
is

great

man

is

or too late.

When

not ripe for this or that celebrity, we confess by implication that this very man, and no other, is required.
Ib. 13

ever born too soon we say that the time

How

Man! How
!

proud
Ib.

the word rings

Man

The proletarian state must bring up thousands of excellent "mechanics of 4 culture," "engineers of the soul." 9 Speech at the Writers Congress
i

For three consecutive months they could barely afford the most unnecesIb. 20 life. sary luxuries of

Gorki,

"the bitter one," was the


for his
first

writer's

pseudonym

sketch in a Tiflb newsrevolu-

paper [1892]This became a rallying cry of the


tionaries.

Many a man who thinks to found home discovers that he has merely
opened a tavern

The
on the
*

censor forbade this line to be spoK


.

stage.

for his friends.

Attributed

to

Stalin

in

conversation

wltft

Ib.

24

Gorki [October

s6, 1934]. See Stalin, p. 954b-

894

GORKI
Life, as asserted by socialist realism, deeds, creativeness, the aim of which the uninterrupted development of the

ROSTA>J1>

is
is

Americans are people who prefer the Continent to their own country, but refuse to learn
its

priceless

individual qualities of man. Speech at the Writers' Congress


basic hero of our books should

languages.

Wanderings and Diversions.

The Continental
Ticket collector never wants to see

Dictionary

The

the

man

be labor; that is, man organized of labor.

who
J6.

by the
16.

your ticket unless

you are asleep.


People in hotels strike no roots. French phrase for chronic hotel

ABE MARTIN [FRANK McKINNEY "KIN" HUBBARD]


1868-1930
she Miss Fawn Lippincut says wouldn' marry th' best man on earth, she wuz much but we supposed
younger.

The

guests even says so: they are called dwellers sw fa branche. 16. To Be Let or Sold

There can be no defense


rate

like elabo-

courtesy.

Reading, Writing and

Remembering

[1932]

Abe
It's

Martin's Sayings and Sketches [1915]


r

WILLIAM TYLER PAGE


I

no disgrace
a

be poor, but

it

might as well be.

16.

believe in

1868-1942 the United States of

power politically fer years, but he never got prominent enough t*


have his speeches garbled.
J6.
it

He was

When

fellow says

hain't

the

America as a Government of the people, by the people, for the people; whose just powers are derived from the consent of the governed; a democracy in a republic, a sovereign Nation of

money but the principle o' the thing, it's th' money. Hoss Sense and Nonsense [1926]

many

one and

sovereign States; a perfect Union inseparable; established upon

those principles of freedom, equality, justice and humanity for which Ameri-

Nobuddy

ever

fergits

where

he

buried a hatchet.

can patriots sacrificed their lives fortunes. I therefore believe it is

and

Abe Martin's Broadcast


If

my

[1930]

capital

an'

labor

ever
fer th
?

do

together it's
us.

good night
all

git rest of

to support its Constitution, to obey its laws, to respect its flag, and to "defend it
it,

duty to

my

country to love

Saying

against all enemies.

The American's Greet

Knowin'
te.

about baseball

is

just

about as profitable as bein* a good whit16.

EDMOND ROSTAND
1868-1918

Now

and then an innocent man

is

sent to the legislature.

16.

A great nose indicates


Virile, courageous.

a great man Genial, courteous, intellectual,

EDWARD VERRALL
LUCAS
1868-1938 The French never allow
a
distin-

Cyrano de Bergerac
Free
fighters, ers

[1897], act I

free lovers,

free spend-

guished son of France to laclc a statue.

Wanderings and Diversions


[1926]. Zigzags in France

Adopted by the House of Representatives


Translated by BRIAN HOOKER.

[April 3, 1918].
*

895

ROSTAND

CHAMBERLAIN
deAll dressed

b
up with nowhere
?

The Cadets
fenders

of

Gascoyne
old

the

to go.
in

Of
names, and old
II

the

Progressive

Party

Of

old

homes,

splendors.

1926, after Theodore Roosvi/f retired from Presidential competition


fear out of your heart. This nation will survive, this state will prosper, the orderly business of life will go for-

act Cyrano de Bergerac9

I fall

bad

Put

dazzled at beholding myself

At

rosy red, the sun to having, I myself, caused


rise.

all

ward

if

only

men
them

can speak in whatever

Chanteckr [1907],
It is at

act II, $c.


is

m
I fo -

way

night that faith in light mirable.

ad-

given' hearts hold by letter, or


failed

to utter what their by voice, by posted card, by press. Reason never has men. Only force and oppression

have made the wrecks in the world. Emporia Gazette [July 27, 2922]
Consistency is a paste jewel that only 1 cheap men cherish.
16.

ROBERT FALCON
SCOTT
1868-1912

[November
a

17, 1923]

we lived, I should have had tale to tell of the hardihood, endurance,

Had

The
morals

talent

of

meat-packer, the

and courage of my companions which would have stirred the heart of every notes and Englishman. These rough 1 our dead bodies must tell the tale. Public the to Journal? Message

of a moneychanger and the manners of an undertaker. Obituary of Frank A. Mtinsey

[December

23, 1925]

LAURENCE BINYON
They
1869-1943 grow not old, as we that are left grow old: not weary them, nor the years shall Age condemn. At the going down of the sun and in the morning We will remember them. For the Fdlen, st. 4
shall

ANDRt
Heresy
is

SUARfcS

1868-1948
the lifeblood of religions. It is faith that begets heretics. There are no heresies in a dead religion.8

WILLIAM ALLEN

WHITE

ELLIS PARKER BUTLER


1869-1937
Pigs
is

1868-1944 What's the Matter with Kansas? Title of editorial, Emporia


Gazette [August 15, 1896]

Pigs.

Title of story [1906]

NEVILLE CHAMBERLAIN
1869-1940 For the second time in our British Prime Minister has
1

Tinhorn

politicians.

history, a

Emporia Gazette [October 25,


1901]
1 Inscribed on the memorial to Captain Scott and his companions, Waterloo Place, London. * Found by searching party, November 1912. See Tertullian, p. 1430, and Unamuno,

returned

Commenting on an item in the Topeki Gazette is the best-toted Capital: "The Emporia
editor paper in Kansas because its in yesterday's files to see if what he write today is consistent." See Emerson, p. 6o6a.

new

look

proper

to

p. 869b.

CHAMBERIAIN
from
honor.
time.

GELLILAN
other.
truth.

Germany
I

bringing
it
is

believe
1

peace with peace for our


get a

There

is

no god higher than

... Go home and


Address from
after

nice

True Patriotism:
of

qtriet sleep.

Some Saying* Mahatma Gandhi [1939] *

i o Downing Street, London [September 30, 1938]

GIDE
1869-1951
Families!
I

returning from

the

Mu-

nich Conference
Hitler has

hate you! Shut-in homes,

missed the bus. Speech in the House of

Com-

closed doors, jealous possessions of happiness.

mons

[April 4, 1940]

Les Nourritures Tenestres


another would have done as do not do it. What another would have said as well as you, do not say it; written as well, do not write it. Be faithful to that which exists nowhere but in yourself and thus make
well as you,
yourself indispensable.
Ib.

[MAHATMA] GANDHJ2
1869-1948
Nonviolence
faith.
is

MOHANDAS KARAMCHAND

What

It is also

the first article of the last article of

my my

Envoi

creed.

Sin

is

whatever obscures the soul.

Defense against charge of sedition [March 23, 1922]

La Symphonie Pastorale [1919]

The term Satyagraha was coined by me ... in order to distinguish it from Ac movement then going on ...
under the Its root
truth,"
I

The most decisive actions of our ... are most often unconsidered
tions.

life

ac-

Les Faux, Monnayeurs [1925]


at the Art begins with resistance point where resistance is overcome. No human masterpiece has ever been created without great labor. Poetique
It is

name

of Passive Resistance.
is

meaning

'Tiolding

on to

hence "force of righteousness." have also called it love force or soul force. In the application of Satyagraha, I discovered in the earliest stages that of truth did not permit violence pursuit being inflicted on one's opponent, but
he must be weaned from error by patience and sympathy. For what appears truth to the one may appear to be
that

with noble sentiments that bad


Letter to Frangois Mauriac

literature gets written.2

[1928]

STRICKLAND GILLILAN
1869-1954
Bilin'

erro to the other.


self-suffering.

And patience means So the doctrine came to

down

mean vindication of truth, not by the of suffering on the opponent, bat on one's self 8 16.
infliction

An' he

repoort, wuz Finnigin! writed this here: "Musther


's

Nonviolence and truth


inseparable
1

(Safya)

and

presuppose

one

are anI

Flannigan Off agin, on agin, FINNIGIN." Gone agin.


Finnigjin to Flannigan,
st.

Adam
Had
*em.

While we endeavor to maintain peace,

should be the last to forget that if peace cannot be maintained with honor, it is no LORD JOHN RUSSELL, Speech at feqger peace, Grnnack, Scotland [September 19, 1853]
certainly

Lines on the Antiquity of

Microbes s
fait

Edited by

S.

See Disradi, p. 6133.

* C'est avec

Hobhouse. de beaux sentiments qu'on

de

*Mahatma

Great Soul. 'See Martin Luther King,

la
p. io8ab.
8

mauvaise litterature. Said to be the shortest poem in the language,

897

KNOWLES

MOODY
Out The
of me unworthy and unknown vibrations of deathless music.

FREDERIC LAWRENCE

KNOWLES

1869-1905 Each little lyrical Grave or satirical


Musical miracle! On a
flyleaf

Spoon River Anthology.

Anne

Rutledge

am Anne

Rutledge

who

sleep beneath

of Burns's songs

these weeds, Beloved in life of

Abraham

Lincoln.
Ib.

Joy is a partnership, Grief weeps alone;

Many

guests had Cana, Gethsemane had one.

Grief and Joy

Immortality is not a gift, Immortality is an achievement; And only those who strive mightily
Shall possess
it.

STEPHEN BUTLER LEACOCK


1869-1944
flung himself from the room, flung himself upon his horse and rode

Ib.

The

Village Atheist

HENRI MATISSE
I

He

1869-1954 want to reach that

state of conconsti-

madly

off in all directions.

densation of sensations which


tutes a picture.

Gertrude the Governess


[1911]
general idea, of course, in any first-class laundry, is to see that no shirt
or collar ever

Notes <Tun Peintre

[1908]
neither

The

What
still life

interests

me

most

is

comes back

twice.

Winnowed Wisdom

[1926], ch. 6

By American literature in the proper sense we ought to mean literature written in an American way, with an American turn of language and an American cast of thought. The test is that it couldn't have been written anywhere else. Mark Twain as National
Asset [1932]

nor landscape, but the human figure. It is through it that I best succeed in expressing the almost religious Ib. feeling I have towards life.

WILLIAM VAUGHN

MOODY
18691910

This earth

EDGAR LEE MASTERS


All, all, are sleeping

not the steadfast place landsmen build upon; From deep to deep she varies pace, And while she comes is gone. Gloucester Moors [1901], *. 4
is

We

1869-1950 on the

To be out of the
hill,

moiling street

With

its

swelter

and

its sin!

Spoon River Anthology [1915]. The Hill, refrain


Seeds in a dry pod, tick, tick, tick, Tick, tick, tick, what little iambics,

Who has given to me this sweet,


And given my brother dust to And when will his wage come in?
Then not
Seemed
to kneel, almost
eat?

Ib.st.8

While Homer and Whitman


the pines!
Life

roar in

Ib. Petit, the

Poet

Degenerate sons and daughters, is too strong for you


It takes life to love life.

like a vulgar boast.

Good

Friday [1901],

$t.

Ib.

Lucinda Matlock

Chicago

Gigantic, willful, young, sitteth at the northwest

gates,

MOODY
With restless violent hands and casual tongue fates. MoMing her mighty
.

ROBINSON
Life
is

the

game that must be played:


least,

This truth at

good

friends,

we

An Ode

in

Time

of Hesitation

[1901],

st.

know; So live and laugh, nor be dismayed As one by one the phantoms go.
Bdllaae by the Fire.

Now limb doth mingle with dissolved limb 1 In nature's busy old democracy.
16. st.

Envoy

The songs of one who strove The broken flutes of Arcady.

to play

Ballade of Broken Flutes

The

spring-laden breeze

Out of the gladdening west is sinister With sounds of nameless battle over2 I&- st- 7 seas. Our fluent

There be two men of all mankind That I'm forever thinking on:

They

chase me everywhere Melchizedek, Ucalegon.

Two Men
footsteps

go

men

of place and conse-

Like dead, remembered


old floors.

on

quence Fumble and fill their mouths with hollow phrase, Or for the end-all of deep arguments Intone their dull commercial liturgies.
16.

The And
Still

Pity of the Leaves

thus

we

die,

searching, like poor old

astrono-

mers

Who totter off to bed and go to sleep


To dream of untriangulated
stars.

O ye who lead,
Take heed!
Blindness

Octaves,

XI
this

we may

forgive,

but baseness
16. st.

The
Met

saddest

among
a

kings of earth,

we

will smite.

Bowed

with

galling

crown,

man

EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON


1869-1935

rancor with a cryptic mirth,

Laconic

and Olympian.

The Master: Lincoln


Wearing upon
fear,

We cannot Icnow how much we learn


From those

his forehead, with

no

who

never will return,

Until a flash of unforeseen

The laurel

of approved iniquity.

Remembrance

falls

on what has been.

Uncle Ananias
Miniver Cheevy, child of scorn,

Flammonde

To shake
Of
life

the tree
fruit

Grew

lean while

he

assailed the sea-

itself

and bring down


Entertains a

sons;

unheard-of.

He wept that he was


And he had
reasons.

ever born,
st. i

Ben Jonson
I

Man

from Stratford
would have rid the earth of him
. .

Miniver Cheevy [1910], Miniver loved the Medici, Albeit he had never seen one; He would have sinned incessantly Ib. Could he have been one.

Once, in my pride. . I never knew the worth of


Until

he died.

him An Old Story

st.

Colonel

*The reference is to the battlefield grave of Robert Gould Shaw and the men of the
Regiment (the
first

Miniver Cheevy, born too late, Scratched his head and kept on thinking;

54ti Massachusetts

enlisted
fell

Negro regiment of the Civil War) Fort Wagner [July 18, 1863]. The war in the Philippines.

who

at

Miniver coughed and called And kept on drinking.

it fate,

Ib. st. 8

899

ROBINSON

BARUCH

Who of us, being what he


May
However we may shine

is,

WILLIAM STRUNK,
1869-1935

JR.

scoff at others' ecstasies?

today,

More-shining ones are on the way.

Athertons Gambit
I

shall

have more to say when

am

dead.
Art's long hazard,

John Brown
where no

man may
toil

choose

Vigorous writing is concise. A sentence should contain no unnecessary words, a paragraph no unnecessary sentences, for the same reason that a 'drawing should have no unnecessary lines and a machine no unnecessary parti. This requires not that the writer make all his sentences short, or that he avoid
all detail

Whether he
lose.

play to win, or

to

and

treat his subjects only in

Caput Mortuum

outline, but that every

word

tell.

The Elements

of Style [2918],
eft. 2,

Love that's wise Will not say all it means,


Tristram [1927], pt. VII

we* 13

BOOTH TARKINGTON
1869-1946 There are two things that
lieved of
will

Love must have wings


love,

to

fly

away from
Ib.

And

to

fly

back again.

VIII
of

be

be-

any

Here where the wind

And

is always northnortheast children leam to walk on frozen

them

is

whatsoever, and one that he has taken to drink.

man

Penrod [1914],

eft.

20

toes.

New
all

England
st,

They were upon

their great theme:

"When

Are you to pay for With all you are?

you have
Cassandra,

get to

be a manl" Being
considered

12

human, though boys, they


their present estate too

commonplace

He

glittered

when he

walked.
st.

to be dwelt upon. So,


2

when

the old

Richard Cory,

men
that

gather, they say:


It really is

So on we worked, and waited


light,

for the

boy!"

we

I was a the land of nowadays 16. 26 never discover.

''When

And went
And

without the meat, and cursed the bread; Richard Cory, one calm summer
night,

FRANK LLOYD

WRIGHT
1869-1959

Went home

his head.

and put a bullet through Ib. 4

"Drink to the bird."

He

raised

up

to

The And answered

the light jug that he had gone so far to


huskily:
it,

house should ever be on any hill or on anything. It should be of the hiH could belonging to it, so hill and house
live

No

the together each the happier for

fill,

"Well,

Mr.

other.

An

Autobiography

[1932]

Flood, Since you propose

believe

I will."
st.

Mr. Flood's

Party,

BERNARD MANNES BARUCH


1870-1965 America has never forgotten
will

GEORGE STERLING
Thou
art

and

1869-1926 the star for which

all

evening

waits.

Aldebaran at Dusk

the nobler things never forget that brought her into being and that the path that was enlight her path

900

BARUCH
upon only one hundred and fifty How young she is! It .
.
j '

BEtl/X:

vcars ago.
^ill

Of cutting all the pictures out! Preserve it as your chiefest treasure.

that

be centuries before she will adopt the clothing maturity of custom


is

A Bad
people

Chil<T$

of the grave

she

that some people believe already fitted for.

Book of Beasts [1896], dedication


beast to mind,

When
So

call this

Address

on

We

Churchman Award, New York [May 23, 1944] arc here to make a choice be-

accepting

The

They marvel more and more At such a little tail behind,


large a trunk before. Ib.

The Elephant

tween the quick and the dead. That is our business. Behind the black portent of the new atomic age lies a hope which, seized upon with faith, can work out salvation. If we fail, then we have damned every man to be the slave of fear. Let us not deceive ourselves: we must elect world peace or world destruction.

shoot the Hippopotamus bullets made of platinum, Because if I use leaden ones His hide is sure to flatten 'em.
I

With

Ib.

The Hippopotamus
round the

The Whale
Is

that wanders
fish.

Pole not a table

Address to the United Nations

Atomic

Energy

Commission
war
l

You cannot bake or boil him whole Nor serve him in a dish. Ib. The Whale
Here

[June 14, 1946]

We
which

are in the midst of a cold


is

getting warmer. Speech before the Senate

The

richly, with ridiculous display, Politician's corpse was kid away.


all

While
I

of his acquaintance sneered

Committee [1948]

and slanged,
wept; for I had longed to see him hanged. Epitaph on the Politician

The

role of

government and

its rela-

tionship

to the individual has been so radically that today governchanged ment is involved in almost every aspect
Political,

Himself

of our lives.

smell of burning
air

fills

the startled
there!

economic and

racial forces

have developed which we have not yet learned to understand or control. If we are ever to master these forces, make certain that government will belong to the people, not the people to the government, and provide for the future better than the past, we must somehow learn from the experiences of the past.

The

Electrician

is

no longer

Newdigate Poem

Oh, he didn't believe in Eve He put no faith therein;


His

Adam and
fall

Speech on presenting his papers


to Princeton University

doubts began with the man, And he laughed at original sin.

of

[May

11,

Song of the Pelagian Heresy

1964]

How slow the


'tis

shadow

creeps:
fall.

but when

HTLAIRE BELLOC
Child!

How

past fast the shadows

How

fast!

How fast!
one,

For a Sundial
life

1870-1953 do not throw this book about; Refrain from the unholy pleasure
1

Loss and Possession, death and

are

There

falls

The phrase was

first

used by Baruch in 1947.

shines

no shadow where there I&. no sun.

901

BELLOC

CARDOZO
I

And

the

men

that were boys

when

was a boy Shall sit and drink with me. The South Country,

$t.

10

For every time she shouted "Firel" They only answered "Little liar!" And therefore when her aunt returned, Matilda, and the house, were burned,
Cautionary Tales. Matilda

Of courtesy, it is much less Than courage of heart or holiness,


Yet in my walks it seems to That the Grace of God is

The nicest child

ever

knew

me
in courtesy.

Was Charles Augustus Fortescue.


16. Charles

Augustus Fortescue
it

Courtesy

Pale Ebenezer thought

wr
kitifed

Do you remember an inn,


Miranda?
Tarantella
fleas that tease in

But

Roaring Bill (who thought it right.


I

The
it

Pacifist

And
And

the

the High

When
"His

am

dead,

hope
but

may

be

Pyrenees,

said:
sins were were read."
scarlet,

the wine that tasted of the tar?


16.

his books

On

His Booh

I said

to Heart,

'How

goes it?" Heart

replied: "Right as a Ribstone Pippin!"


lied.

But it The False Heart

BENJAMIN NATHAN CARDOZO


1870-1938
has once been settled by a precedent will not be unsettled overnight, for certainty

Now just imagine how it feels When first your toes and then
heels,

What

your

And then by
Your
shins

and uniformity

arc

gradual degrees,

gains

not
all is

and

ankles,

calves

and

Above

to be sacrificed. lightly this true when honest men

knees,

Are slowly eaten, bit by bit. No wonder Jim detested it! Cautionary Tales [1907]. Jim

have shaped their conduct on the faith of the pronouncement. The Paradoxes of Legal
Science [1928]
search the archives of my memory, I seem to discern six types or methI

The

chief defect of

Was chewing little bits of string.


li.

Henry King

As

Henry King

"Oh, my friends, be warned by me, That breakfast, dinner, lunch and tea Are all the human frame requires
. .

ods [of judicial writing] which divide themselves from one another with measurable distinctness. There is the
type magisterial or imperative; the type laconic or sententious; the type conversational or homely; the type refined or 1 artificial, smelling of the lamp, verging at times upon preciosity or euphuism; the type demonstrative or persuasive; and finally the type tonsorial or agglutinative, so called from the shears and the pastepot which are its imple-

."

With

that the wretched child expires.


16.

Matilda told such dreadful


It

lies,

made one
eyes;

gasp and stretch one's

Her

aunt, who, from her earliest youth, Had kept a strict regard for truth, Attempted to believe Matilda:

The effort very nearly killed her.


16.
It

ments and emblem. Law and Literature


was

[1931]

Matilda
later

happened that a few weeks Her aunt was off to the theater

[The Constitution] upon the theory that the peoples of several states must sink or swim
gether, and that in the long run
1

framed
the
to-

To see that interesting play The Second Mrs. Tanqueray.

pros-

16.

See Pytheas, p. ioib.

9O2

CARDOZO
nerity

SAKI

and salvation are in union and


Baldwin
v. Seelig,

B0t division.

vanced countries and outdistance them, 1 too, in economic matters.

294 US. 512,


52 3
I

The Impending Catastrophe and

935]

How
is

to Fight It [1917]

Freedom of expression
fte indispensable
every

is the matrix, condition, of nearly

Communism
plus the country.

electrification

Soviet government of the whole

other

form of freedom.
v.

Pdko

Connecticut, 302 US. 319, 327 [1937]

New External and Internal Position and the Problems of the Party [1920]
"the state," the state it we, it is the proletariat, it is the advanced guard of the working class.
is

ARTHUR
gold, She's a bird in

J.

LAMB

When we say

1870-1928 sold for an old man's was Her beauty

Speech [May 27, 1922]


so precious that it must be rationed. Attributed. Quoted by SIDNEY AND BEATRICE WEBB in Soviet
It is true that liberty is precious

A
SIR

a gilded cage. Bird in a Gilded Cage [1900]

HARRY LAUDER
1870-1950

Communism:

A New
1036

Civiliza-

tion? [1936], p.

Oh, it's nice to get up in the monrin', But it's nicer to lie in bed. Song
Joit

ROSCOE POUND
1870-1964

wee doch-an'-dorris
r
. .
.

Before we gang awa


If y'

The law must be


not stand
still.

stable,

but

it

must

can say
a

It's

braw brecht moonlecht necht,


a'.

Yer a' recht, that's

Song Song
Title of song

Introduction to the Philosophy of Law [1922]

Roamin* in the gloamin*.


!

Love a Lassie.

[HECTOR HUGH MUNRO]


1870-1916

SAKI

NIKOLAI LENIN [VLADIMIR ILICH

The cook was


go; and

good cook, as cooks

ULYANOV]
1870-1924

as cooks go she went.

Political institutions
ture
tion.

are a superstruc-

Reginald [1904]. Reginald on Besetting Sins


1

resting

on an economic founda-

We

the

have caught up with and outdistanced advanced countries politically by having

The Three Sources and Three Constituent Parts of Marxism l


Every

built the proletarian dictatorship. But this is have to catch up with and outnot enough.

We

cook has to

learn

how

to

govern the state.

distance the advanced countries also economically. JOSEPH STALIN, Speech [November 19, 1928] When we sent the first Sputniks into cosmos ... the whole world saw that the Soviet Union has by far outdistanced the United States of

America

in

important branches of science and

Will the Bobheviks Retain Government Power [1917]


The war
perish,
1

technology. Even President John Kennedy was forced to admit that the United States are confronted by the difficult problem of catching up

is

relentless:

it

puts the
ad-

with the Soviet Union in this

field.

As you

see,

alternative in

a ruthless relief: either to

or to

catch

up with the

Translated

by

MAX

EASTMAN.

the expression "catch up with'* has appeared in NIKITA KHRUthe American vocabulary too. SHCHEV, Report to the XXII Congress of the Party [October 17,

903

SAKI

CRANE

Women
an
injury.

and elephants never

forget

Waldo
would
death.

is

one of those people


enormously
improved
by

be

Re&ndd. Repndd on Besetting Sins

Beasts and Super-Beasts. The Feast of Nemesu

in a might have been a goldfish I got. all the for bowl glass privacy 16. The Innocence of Re&nald
I

Children with Hyacinth's tempera-

ment

don't

know

better as they grow

The Western custom


hardly any
mistresses.

of

one wife and

older; they

merely

know more.
of Peace [1919]. Hyacinth

The Toys

A Reginald in Russia [1910]. Young Turkish Catastrophe


ill-

In baiting a mousetrap with cheese, always leave room for the mouse.

of Hating anything in the way

The Square Egg

[1924]. The

natured gossip ourselves, those who do grateful to

we
it

are always
for us

Infernal Parliament
little inaccuracy sometimes saves tons of explanation. 16. The Comments of Moung Ka

and

do

it

well.

16.

The Soul

of Laploshka

Poverty keeps together than it breaks up. The Chronicles of Clovis

more homes

T.
01 1] [i

LAURENCE SEIBERT
fl.

1900

Esmt
"After
all,
it's

not

my

Axminster,"

Casey Jones! Orders in his hand. Casey Jones! Mounted to the cabin,

was Tobermory's

Took

rejoinder. Ib.

his farewell journey to that prom-

Tobermory

ised

knd.
Jones
[1900];

Sredni Vashtar went forth, His thoughts were red thoughts and his teeth were white.

from verses by WALLACE SAUN1 DERS, set to music by EDDIE

Casey

adapted

NEWTON

His enemies called for peace, but he brought them death. Sredni Vashtar the Beautiful. 16. Sredni Vashtar His socks compelled one's attention without losing one's respect. 16. Ministers of Grace
Sherard Blaw, the dramatist discovered himself, and who had given so ungrudgingly of his discovery to the world.

STEPHEN CRANE
1871-1900
the They were going to look at war, red animal war, the blood-swollen

god.

The Red Badge


the many versions the most familiar
of
is

who had

of Courage [1895], ch, 3


this
traditional

Of

ballad,

CAKL printed in
lfc

SANDBURG'S
begins:

The American Songb&g [97lyou rounders, for


I

The Unbearable Bassington

[1912]

Come

all

want you

to

hear

The sacrifices of friendship were beautiful in her eyes as long as she was not asked to make them.
Beasts and Super-Beasts [1914]-

Fur
is a common murderer." common murderer, possibly, but a very ery uncommon cook/* 16. The Blind Spot

The man
*A

The story of a brave engineer. name, Casey Jones was the rounder's On a big eight- wheeler of a mighty fas*. To the memory of the locomotive engineer whose name as "Casey Jones" became a ptrt of I'm folklore and the American language. "For the rail or saak* going to run till she leaves mail." /* it on time with the southbound
Tenin Calvary Cemetery, Jackson, [1864-1900],
scription

on monument

to

JOHN LUTHER JONO

904

CRANE
was surprising that Nature had on with her golden gone tranquilly in the midst of so much devilIt

HODGSON

THEODORE DREISER
1871-1945

process

Our
longer
scarcely

ment.

civilization is still in a

middle
it is

The Red Badge of Courage, ch. 5 At times he regarded the wounded


soldiers

stage, scarcely beast,

in

that

no

wholly

guided

by
it
is

instinct;

in

an envious way.
happy.

He

con-

ceived persons with torn bodies to


peculiarly

be

human, in that wholly guided by reaw>u.

not yet

wished that he, too, had a wound, a red badge of courIfc. 9 age. The red sun was pasted in the sky
wafer.
Ib.

He

Sister Carrie [1900]


I acknowledge the Furies, I believe in them, I have heard the disastrous beat-

ing of their wings.

like a

He had

fought like a pagan

who

de-

fends his religion.

16. 17

Oh, the Wabash,

To Grant Richards [1911] moon is fair tonight along the


comes the breath

From

the fields there

He had been to touch the great death, and found that, after all, it was but the great death. He was a man.
16.24

of

new-mown
the

hay;

Through

On

None
sky.

of

them knew the came

color of the

The Open Boat


it

sycamores the candle gleaming the banks of the Wabash, far away. On the Banks of the Wabash, chorus 1
lights are

[1898]

night, the white waves paced to and fro in the moonlight, and the wind brought the sound of the great sea's voice to the men on shore, and they felt that they could then be 16. Last line interpreters.

When

ARTHUR GUITERMAN
1871-1943

The

finest

A man

said to the universe:

Bobby; Benignant information is his hobby. The Lyric Baedeker. London

thing in

London

is

tfr*

"Sir, I exist!"

Amoebas

at the start

"However/' replied the universe, *TTie fact has not created in me

Were not complex;


They
tore themselves apart

A sense of obligation."

War

And started
Fragment

Sex.

Is

Kind

Sex,

st. i

[1899].

THOMAS AUGUSTINE DALY


1871-1948
Sing clear,

Of all cold words of tongue or pen The worst are these: "I knew him "3 when
Prophets in Their

Own

Country

O throstle,

Thou golden-tongued apostle And little brown-frocked brother Of the loved Assisian! To a Thrush

RALPH HODGSON
1871-1962

WILLIAM HENRY
DAVIES
1871-1940
if,

Twould ring the bells of Heaven The wildest peal for years,
1 Dreiser's brother, Paul Dreiser, is credited with writing the song, but according to H. L. Mencken, Dreiser wrote the chorus. 1 The constable with lifted hand

What

is

this life

We have
1

full of care,

no time to stand and

stare?

Leisure
See Browning, p. 668a.

Conducting the orchestral Strand. STEPHEN PHILLIPS [1864-1915],

The Wift
* See Whittier, p. 6x6a.

905

HODGSON
If

JOHNSON
I

Parson

lost his senses

saw with open eyes

And people came to theirs, And he and they together Knelt down with angry prayers
For tamed and shabby tigers And dancing dogs and bears, And wretched, Wind pit pomes, And little hunted hares.

Singing birds sweet Sold in the shops For the people to eat, Sold in the shops of
Stupidity Street.
I

saw

in vision

The
The

Bells of

Heaven

But oh, the den of wild things


darkness of her eyes!

in

The worm in the wheat, And in the shops nothing


For people to
eat;

The Gypsy

Girl

Nothing

for sale in

God

loves

an

Stupidity Street.

idle

rainbow
seas.

Stupidity Street

No less

than laboring

A Wood Song

JAMES WELDON

JOHNSON
1871-1938

Time, you old gypsy man, Will you not stay, Put up your caravan Just for one day? Time, You Old Gypsy Man,
Pity him, this fallen chief,
All'his

We

We
st. i

have come over a way that with tears has been watered, have come, treading our path through the blood of the slaughtered.

all his strength, splendor, All his beauty's breadth and length

Lift Every Voice and Sing [1900], $t. 2

Dwindled down with shame and Half the bull he was before, Bones and leather, nothing more.

grief,

black and
ago,

unknown

bards of long

The Bull
Oh, had our simple Eve Seen through the make-believe! Had she but known the Pretender he was!

How came your lips


fire?

to touch the sacred

How, in your darkness, did you come to know The power and beauty of the minstrel's
lyre?

Out

of the boughs he came,

Black and

Unknown

Bards,
st. i

Whispering still her name, Tumbling in twenty rings


Into the grass.

Eve,

st.

And God stepped out on space, And He looked around and said,
"I'm lonely
I'll

How
I

they

all

pitied 16.

Poor motherless Eve!


climbed the
rooks
sort.
I

hill as light fell short,

make me a world." God's Trombones

[1927],

The
st.
i

And

came home in scramble The Song of Honor

Creation,

My

stood upon that silent hill And stared into the sky until eyes were blind with stars and I stared into the sky.

And God smiled again, And the rainbow appeared, And curled itself around his

shoulder.
16.
rf.

still

16.

Reason has moons, but moons


hers

not

With his head in his hands, God thought and thought, Till he thought: III make me
Find
Sister Caroline
.

a man!
16.
.
.

Lie mirrored on her sea, Confounding her astronomers,

rf.

10

But O! delighting me.

Reason

And

she's tired

906

JOHNSON
She's weary
i

PROUST
after the

Go

down, Death, and bring her to me. God's Trombones. Go Down, Death, st. 5

tered,

still,

things are broken and scatalone, more fragile, but with

more

vitality,

more

unsubstantial,

more

CHARLES RANN KENNEDY


1871-1950
peculiar courage.

persistent, more faithful, the smeD and taste of things remain poised a long time, like souls, ready to remind us,

waiting and hoping for their ainid the ruins of all the rest;
call

moment, and bear

kind of fear they


Terrible

The

Meek

[1912]
!

unfaltering, in the tiny and almost impalpable drop of their essence, the vast structure of recollection. Remembrance of Things Past 1

The meek,
fierce

the terrible meek, the agonizing meek, are about to enIb.

[1933-2926], Swann's
In his younger days a
possessing

Way

man

dreams of

ter

into their inheritance.

WILBUR DICK NESBIT


1871-1927 Each page of them Quotations that this Bartlett man got out Ibid's prose or Is sure to have old

of the woman the feeling that he possesses the heart of a woman may be enough to make him fall in love with

the heart

whom

he

loves; later,

her.

Ib.
artists call posterity is

What
terity of

the pos-

the work of art.


Ib.

poems strung about. Old

Within a Budding Grove,


i*. i

Ibid,

st.

HERBERT GEORGE PONTING


1871-1935

On

the outside grows the furside, on the inside grows the skinside; So the furside is the outside, and the 1 skinside is the inside.

Not only does one not retain all at once the truly rare works, but even within such works it is the least precious parts that one perceives first. Less deceptive than life, these great masterpieces do not give us their best at the beginning. 2

The time which we have

at our dis-

The Sleeping Bag*

posal every day is elastic; the passions that we feel expand it, those that we
inspire contract
it;

MARCEL PROUST
When
*

and habit

fills

up
Ib.

what remains.

1871-1922 from a long distant past nothkilled the Mudjofcivis,

ing subsists, after the people are dead,

When he

Like everybody who is not in love, he imagined that one chose the person whom one loved after endless deliberations and on the strength of various
qualities

Of the skin he made him mittens, Made them with the fur side inside, Made them with the skin side outside,
He, to get the warm side inside, Fat the inside skin side outside; He, to get the cold side outside, Put the warm side fur side inside. That's why he put the fur side inside,

and advantages.
Ib. Cities of the Plain, pt. I

We passionately long that there


be another
similar to
life

may

be what we are here below. But


in
shall

which we

Ponting was the


expedition.
i

photographer

for

the Scott

Why Why
*

he put the skin side outside, he turned them inside outside Anonymous, The Modem Hiawatha For The South Polar Times, Midwinter Pay

, [June 1911], prepared by the men of Captain Robert Falcon Scott's last Antarctic expedition.

Recherche du Temps Perdu, translated SCOTT MONCRIEFF, except the last section, The Past Recaptured, which was translated by FREDERICK A. BLOSSOM. See Daniel Gregory Mason, p. 9150.
la

by

C. K.

907

PROUST

SYNGE
Only through art can we get outside and know another's view of the universe which is not the same as ours and see landscapes which would otherwise have remained unknown to
of ourselves

we do not pause

to reflect that, even without waiting for that other life, in this life, after a few years we are unfaithful to what we have been, to what we wished to remain immortally.

Remembrance
It is often

of Things Past. Cities of the Plain, pt. II

simply from want of the we do not go to the full extent of suffering. And the most our terrible reality brings us, with suffering, the joy of a great discovery, because it merely gives a new and clear form to what we have long been rumiJb. nating without suspecting it.
creative spirit that

the landscapes of the moon. to art, instead of seeing a singk world, our own, we see it multiply until we have before us as many worlds as
us like

Thanks

are original artists. And centuries after their core, whether many we call it Rembrandt or Vermeer, is
. . .

there

extinguished, they continue to send us


their special rays.

The Maxims

of Marcel Proust

The bonds

that unite another person

to oursetf exist only in GUI mind. Memory as it grows fainter relaxes them, and

ERNEST RUTHERFORD
1871-1937
cannot control atomic energy to an extent which would be of any value
likely ever to

notwithstanding the illusion by which we would fain be cheated and with which, out of love, friendship, politeness, deference, duty, we cheat other people, we exist alone. Man is the creature that cannot emerge from himself,

We

commercially, and I believe we are not be able to do so. Speech to the British Association for the Advancement of Science

when he
lying.

that knows his fellows only in himself; asserts the contrary, he is


16.

The Sweet Cheat Gone


changing our desire, but
in

We

do not succeed

JOHN MILLINGTON SYNGE


1871-1909
the price of a thousand horses against a son where there is one Riders to the Sea [1904] son only?
is

things according to gradually our desire changes. The situation that we hoped to change because it

What

was intolerable becomes unimportant. We have not managed to surmount the obstacle, as we were absolutely determined to do, but life has taken us round it, led us past it, and then if we turn round to gaze at the remote past, we can barely catch sight of it, so imIb. perceptible has it become.

There is not a woman in the world the possession of whom is as precious as that of the truths which she reveals to us by causing us to suffer. 16.
are healed of a suffering only by 16. experiencing it to the full.

When I was writing The Shadow of the Glen I got more aid than any learning could have given me from a chink in the floor of the old Wicklow house where I was staying, that let me hear what was being said by the servant girb in the kitchen. The Playboy of the Western
World
Western world, the
[1907], preface

Drink a health to the wonders of the


pirates, preachers*

We

poteen-makers, with the jobbing jockies; parching peelers, and the juries fill
their stomachs selling judgments of the

Happiness is beneficial for the body but it is grief that develops the powers of the mind.
16.

English law.
i Edited

16. act II
translated

and

The

by JUSTIN

Past Recaptured

[1948].

SYNGE

May
it

in the twists of sew* and seventy divils timber leg on old one and the road,

meet him with one tooth and one eye to be seeing aching, and
I

PAUL VALtRY
1871-194?

The

folly of

mistaking a paradox for

him

limp into the scalding grave. is now crossing the strands, he There God would send a and that the Lord
to

a discovery, a for a proof, a metaphor torrent of verbiage for a spring of capital truths,

and oneself

for

an

oracle,

is

high world

wave to wash him from the


1

inborn in us. Introduction to the

Method
*

of

The Playboy

of the

Western World, act II

Leonardo da Vinci
Collect
all

[1895]

the facts that can be col-

and IH be stretch a hand to you in asking and lead you short the hour of death, of Ease, and Meadows the cuts through the Footstool op the floor of Heaven to
Aid

lected about the life of


will never learn

me for God to

to

win

her,

his verse. All

Racine and you from them the art of criticism is dominated by


the the the the
to-

*.

ci

TK

the outworn theory that the man is cause of the work as in the eyes of law the criminal is the cause of crime. Far rather are they both
efifects.

a young lad, the They're cheering of the Western champion playboy Ib IU

The sea,

the ever renewing seal


[1922].

World.

Charmes

Le Cimit&re
Marin
at-

will

soon be drowned, he said, for he wiD be going out on a day he shouldn't. and we But we do be afraid of the sea, do only be drownded now and again.

A man who

is

not afraid of the sea

The wind

is

rising

... we must

5 tempt to live.

16-

The Aran

Islands [1907]
Irish

no language like lie for soothing and quieting.


There
is

Ib.

translation

is

no

translation,

he

reduced to Poetry is simply literature the essence of its" active principle. It is of realispurged of idols of every land, tic illusions, of any conceivable equivocation between the language of "truth" and the language of "creation." Utttrature [1930]

the music of said, unless it will give you it. a poem along with the words of
Ib.
I

An

intelligent

woman

is

woman

knew the
birds,

stars,

the flowers, and the


sides

with whom one can be as stupid as one wants. Mauvaises Pensfes et Autres

The gray and wintry


glens,

of

many
The

And did but half remember


words,

human

he

sees,

not paint painter should but what will be seen.

what
Ib.

In converse with the mountains, moors,

and

fens.

Prelude [1910]

and the *May the grass grow at your door fox build his nest on your hearthstone. May fade from your eyes, so you never see the
light

That which has always been accepted almost cerby everyone, everywhere, is Tel Qud [1943] tain to be false.

God

created

man, and finding him

what you love. May your own blood rise against take be the yew, and the sweetest drink you without bitterest cup of sorrow. May you die a beaefit of dergy; may there be none to shed of teir at your grave, and may the hearthstone Traditional tell be best bed forever.

not sufficiently alone, gave him a female companion so that he might feel
his solitude
i

more

acutely.

Ib-

jvur

Watford curse

Translated by THOMAS La mer, la mer tonjours recommence! de vivre. * Le vent se leve . . il feut tenter
.

909

VALERY

BLUM
don't

The
is

purpose of psychology is to give a completely oifierent idea of the

things

we know

best.

Td Qud

She was one of the people who say "I know anything about music * really, but I know what I like,"
Zuleika

Dob$onr

ch.

WILBUR WRIGHT
1867-1912

Of all the objects of hatred, a once loved is the most hateful.

woman

AND

ORVILLE WRIGHT
1871-1948
four Thursday Success/ flights morning/ all against twenty-one-mile wind/ started from level with engine power alone/ average speed through
air thirty-one

I have known no man of genius who had not to pay, in some affliction or

defect either physical or spiritual, for

what the gods had given him. No. 2. The Pine*


It

miles/ longest fifty-nine

seems to be a law of nature that


is

seconds/ inform press/ mas.

home

Christ-

no man ever
trait.

loth to

sit for

Telegram to the Reverend Milton Wright, from Kitty Hawk, N.C. [December 17,
1903]

be old, he may be ugly, he may be burdened with grave responsibilities to the nation, and that nation be at a crisis of its history; but none of these considerations, nor all of them together, will deter him from sitting for his portrait.

A man may

his por-

EVERARD JACK APPLETON


1872-1931

Quia Imperfectum
say that a man is vain means merely that he is pleased with the effect he produces on other people. con-

To

Somewhere she waits to make you win, Your soul in her firm white hands; Somewhere the gods have made for you

ceited

man

is

satisfied

with the

effect

he
Ib.

produces on himself.
Strange, that of

The woman who


The

understands.

Woman Who

Understands

it,

SIR

MAX BEERBOHM
1872-1956 are not so young
as

to think of the countless folk who have lived before our time on this planet not one is known in history or in legend as having died of laughter.
all

when you come

Laughter

Most women

they are painted.

The

past

is

work of

art,

free of

A Defense of Cosmetics

irrelevancies

and loose ends.

Comment

on a desert island, would have spent most of her time in looking for a man's footprint.
Zuleika,
Ziileika

Dobson

[1911], ch. 2

BLUM
18721950
tries

She was hardly more


cameo.

affable

than a
Ib. 3

The dullard's envy of brilliant men is always assuaged by the suspicion that Ib. 4 they will come to a bad end.
Ordinary saints grow faint to posterity;

Life does not give itself to one who to keep all its advantages at once. I

1 GELETT BURGESS, Are You Bromide no. i. a Bromide? [1906] In art I pull no highbrow stuff, I know what I like, and that's enough.

WlLUAM W. WOOLLCOTT
/

whilst quite ordinary sinners pass

Am

[1877-194$],

a One Hundred Percent Amcri*


3

vividly

down

the ages.

16.

canf

st.

BLUM
have often thought morality may perconsist solely in the courage of haps On Marriage making a choice.

HAND
I

do not choose to run

for President

in 1928.

No government can remain stable in an unstable society and an unstable

Statement to reporters [August 2, 2927]


I

love

Vermont because of her

hills

and

A VEchelle Humaine

[1945]

JAMES BONE
1872-1962

her scenery and invigorating climate, but most of all because of her indomitable people. Address from train platform,
valleys,

The mighty
thdr
stone.

fleet

of

Wren, with
mainsails

Bennington, Vermont [September 21, 1928]


If

topgallants

and

of

be

called

The London Perambulator [1925]

you don't say anything, you won't on to repeat it. Saying


being asked w/urf a clergyman preaching on sin had said

He said he was

PATRICK REGINALD CHALMERS


1872-1942
"I find," said 'e, "tilings very 'ow I've always found,

On

against

it.

much

as

PAUL LAURENCE

DUNBAR
1872-1906

For mostly they goes

up and down or else goes round and round." Roundabouts and Swings, st. 2
lost

What's

pulls

upon the roundabouts we Ib. up on the swings!

Folks ain't got no right to censuah otha folks about dey habits; Him dat giv' de squir'ls de bushtails

made de
It's

bobtails fu' de rabbits.

CALVIN COOLIDGE
1872-1933
TTiere
public
is

Accountability
easy 'nough to titter w'en de stew is smokin' hot, But hit's mighty ha'd to giggle w'en
dey's nuffin' in

no

right to strike against the

safety

by anybody, anywhere,

de pot.
Philosophy

anytime.

Telegram to Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor 7 on the Boston
police
strike

LEARNED HAND
1872-1961
ask what then will become of the fundamental principles of equity

[September
a majority.

14,

1919]

One with the law is


Speech

You may
fair

[July 27, 1920]

and

play which our constitutions

Inflation is repudiation.

Speech, Chicago January 11, 1922]

enshrine; and whether I seriously believe that unsupported they will serve

The business of America

is

business.

Speech to the Society of American Newspaper Editors [January


*?> 1 9 2 5\

They hired the money, didn't they? Referring to the European war
debts [1925]

merely as counsels of moderation. I do not think that anyone can say what will be left of those principles; I do not know whether they wiu serve only as counsels; but this much I think I do that a society so riven that the know of moderation is gone, no court spirit can save; that a society where that spirit
flourishes,

no court need

save; that in a

91:

HAND
society

RUSSELL

which evades

its

responsibility

The mutual
else

by thrusting upon the courts the nurture of that spirit, that spirit in the end

wiH perish.

The Contribution of an Independent Judiciary to Civilization


1*94*]
Justice, I think, is

an open mind and a brave upon free discussion. Sf>eech to the Board
Yorfe

confidence on which aD can be maintained depends only by


reliance

University of the State of

the tolerable ac-

commodation of the conflicting interests of society, and I don't believe there


is

JOHN McCRAE
1872-1918
In Flanders fields the poppies blow Between the crosses, row on row. In Flanders Fields ft.
[1915],

any royal road to attain such accom-

modations concretely, From PHILIP HAMBURGER, The Great Judge [1946]


beseech ye in the bowels of think that ye may be mistaken." 1 I should like to have that written over the portals of every church,
"I
Christ,

Take up our quarrel with the foe: To you from failing hands we throw The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If

We

ye break faith with us


shall

who die

not

sleep,

though poppies
16.
rf.

every

school,
I say,

and, may in the United States. I should like to have every court begin, "I beseech ye in the bowels of Christ, think that we may 7 be mistaken/ Morals in Public Life [1951]
I had rafter take my chance that some traitors will escape detection than

and every courthouse, of every legislative body

grow
In Flanders
fields.
3

PATRICK
Say
It

F.

O'KEEFE

1872-1934
with Flowers.1 Slogan for the Society of American Florists [1917]

spread abroad a spirit of general susand distrust, which accepts rumor and gossip in place of undismayed and unintimidated inquiry. Speech to the Board of Regents, University of the State of New
picion

JOSt ENRIQUE ROD6


1872-1917

To govern
selecting.

is

in the beginning,

to populate, assimilating then educating a&d


Ariel

York [October 24, 1 952]

BERTRAND RUSSELL
1872-1970

Hiat community

is

already in the

process of dissolution where each man begins to eye his neighbor as a possible

Thus mathematics may be

defined

as

enemy, where nonconformity with the


accepted creed, political as well as religious, is a mark of disaffection; where denunciation, without specification or backing, takes the place of evidence; where orthodoxy chokes freedom of diswhere faith in the eventual sent, supremacy of reason has become so timid that we dare not enter our convictions in the open lists, to win or
lose.
1

the subject in which we never know what we are talking about, nor whether

what we are saying is true. Recent Work on the Principles of Mathematics [1901], in International Monthly, vol. 4,
p.

s4

Mathematics, rightly viewed, posesses not only truth, but supreme beauty a beauty cold and austere, like that of
iSay It with Music. IRVING BERLIN [19x1]

Ib.

TitU of sof

See Oliver Cromwell, p.

912

RUSSELL
sculpture,

BENNA1D

our weaker

without appeal to any part of nature, without the gor-

ALBERT PAYSON

TERHUNE
1872-1942

of painting or music, geous trappings and capable of a yet sublimely pure,


stern perfection such as only the great1 est art can show.

The Study

of Mathematics [1902]

red-gold-and-snow of coat, a big slender youngster, with the true "look of eagles" in his deepset dark
eyes.

He was

Mathematics takes us still further from what is human, into the region of absolute necessity, to which not only the actual world, but every possible Ib. world, must conform.
It is preoccupation with possession, more than anything else, that prevents men from living freely and nobly.

The Heart of a Dog [2924],

eft.

CARL LOTUS BECKER


1873-1945

Economic

distress will teach

men,

if

Principles of Social Reconstruction [1917]

anything can, that realities are less dangerous than fancies, that fact-finding is more effective than fault-finding.
Progress

of adultery has been falsified by conventional morals, which assume, in monogamous countries, that attraction to one person cannot coexist with a serious affection for another.

The psychology

and Power [1935]

significance of man is that he is that part of the universe that asks the question, What is the significance of Man? He alone can stand apart imaginatively and, regarding himself and the universe in their eternal aspects, pro-

The

Everybody knows that this is untrue. Marriage and Morals [1929], eft. 16

To fear who fear


dead.

love
life

is

to fear

life,

and those
Ib.

are already three parts

nounce a judgment: The significance of man is that he is insignificant and is


aware of
it.

Ib.

A
life

good society
For

is

means to a good
it;

those

who compose

not

something having a kind of excellence on its own account. Authority and the Individual
the main source of superstition, and one of the main sources of cruelty. To conquer fear is the beginFear
is

are a of starry-eyed idealists 1 who have been twice tricked by the British into a European war in order to pull

Those of us who think that we

nation

their chestnuts out of the fire 2 have read the history of this country to little The truth is rather that purpose. the existence and friendliness of the
. .

British

Empire and the power of the

ning of wisdom.

An

Outline of Intellectual

have for more than a century enabled us to roast our own chestnuts at leisure and eat them in security.
British Fleet
16.

Rubbish [1950]

ELLERY SEDGWICK
1872-1960
Autobiographies ought to begin with Chapter Two.

GEORGE BENNARD
1873I will cling

The Happy

Profession [1946],

And
In America, getting

on

in the world
16.

to the old nigged cross, exchange it some day for a crown.

means getting out of the world we have

The Old Rugged


*See Henry Agard Wallace, p. zoiob. 'See Moliere, p. 3605.

Cross

known before.
1

[1913] refrain

See Millay, p. ioz$b.

913

CAKKYL

DE LA MARE
"Is

GUY WETMORE CARRYL


Thank God
peace,

1873^904 Thank God for when the great gray ships


for peace!

there anybody there?" said the Traveler, Knocking on the moonlit door;
his horse in the silence champed the grasses the forest's ferny floor.

And
Of

come

in!

When
Come

the Great Gray Ships In [New York Harbor,


st.

The
"Tell

Listeners

August 20, 1898],

them
I

that I came, and no one

ARTHUR CHAPMAN
1873-1935

answered,

That

kept

my word/' he said*
on
all

Ib.

Look thy
a
little

last

things lovely,

Out where the


stronger,

handclasp's

Every hour

let

no night

Out where
longer,

the smile dwells a

little

Seal thy sense in deathly slumber Till to delight

Thou
Since

That* s where the

West begins. Out Where the West Begins,


St. 1

hast paid thy utmost blessing; that all things thou womdst

praise

Beauty

took

from those who

loved

Out where Out where

the skies are a

trifle

bluer,

them
In other days.

friendship's a little truer. Ib. st. 2

Fare Wett,

st.

Nought but

Where
Where

there's

more

of singing

and

less

The sweet The old

vast sorrow was there cheat gone. The Ghost

of sighing,
there's

more of

giving and less

Who said "Peacock Pie"?


Who said "Crops are ripe"?
Rust to the harrow.
king to the sparrow:

And

of buying, a man makes friends without half


trying.

16. st. 3

The Song

of the

Mad Prince
Ib.

SIDONIE-GABRIELLE

COLETTE
1873-^1954
so

Who said,

"Ay,

mum's

the word"?

Life's troubled

bubble broken.

16.

Those
physical.

pleasures

lightly

called

Melanges

No

lovelier hills

than thine have kid

Whether you are dealing with an animal or a child, to convince is to Le Pur et Flmpur weaken.

No peace of lovelier valleys made Like peace within my breast. England,


Poor Jim Jay

My tired thoughts to rest:

st. i

WALTER DE LA MARE
1873-1956
Slowly, silently, now the moon Walks the night in her silver shoon.
Silver

Got

stuck fast In Yesterday.


It's a very odd thing As odd as can be That whatever Miss T. Turns into Miss T.

Jim

Jcry

eats

Here

most beautiful lady, Light of step and heart was she; I think she was the most beautiful
lies

Miss T,

lady

That

ever

was in the West Country. An Epitaph

folly gentlemen, In coats of red, Rode their horses Up to bed.

Three

The Huntsmen

914

DE LA MARE
Be not too wildly amorous of the far, to its utmost >}or lure thy fantasy
scope.

NOCK

might have created

the despair of Pygmalion, who a statue and only

made a woman!

The Imaginations
the animal

Pride

L'Amour Absolu [1899]

Bang!
Is

Now

dumb and done. Nevermore to peep again, creep again,


dead and
leap again, fit or sleep or drink again, oh, fun!

DANIEL GREGORY

MASON

what

1873-1953

The
Hi/

ideal of

independence requires

resistance

MARK FENDERSON
1873-1944
What's the use? Yesterday an egg,
tomorrow a feather duster. Caption of cartoon: The Dejected Rooster

the herd spirit now so to our worship of quantity widespread, and indifference to quality, to our unto devotion thinking organization,
to

standardization,
vertising.

propaganda,

and ad-

Artistic Ideals [1927]

preciated

Art of any profundity can be aponly slowly, 'gradually, in 1 16. leisurely contemplation.

[HUEFFER] FORD
1873-1939
This
heard.
is

FORD MADOX
the saddest story
I

GEORGE EDWARD

MOORE

1873-1958
have ever
[1915],

The Good
Only two
classes of

Soldier

appears to me that in Ethics, as in all other philosophical studies, the difficulties and disagreements, of which
It

first line

books are of universal appeal: the very best and the verv worst. Joseph Conrad [1924]

history is full, are mainly due to a very simple cause: namely to the attempt to

ing precisely

WILLIAM GREEN
1873-1952
labor union is an elemental response to the human instinct for group action in dealing with group problems. Speech [1925]

answer questions, without first discoverwhat question it is which you desire to answer. Principia Ethica [1903], preface

The

DWIGHT WHITNEY

MORROW

PERCY HAMMOND
1873-1936 The female knee is a joint and not an Dramatic review entertainment.

1873-1931 which takes credit for the rain must not be surprised if its opponents blame it for the drought.

Any

party

Saying

ALBERT JAY NOCK


1873-1945
All Souls College, Oxford, planned better than it knew when it limited the

ALFRED JARRY
1873-1907 Mother Ubu, you're very ugly today, b it because we have company? Ubu Roi [1896]

number
four
i

of

its

undergraduates to four;

is

exactly the right

number

for

any

See Proust, p.

9*5

NOCK
college
results.

TOMLINSON

T
which
is

really intent

on getting

Sticks

Nix Hicks

Fix.

Memoirs of a Superfluous

Man
j '

Headline, meaning that rurd audiences do not care for

[1943], III, ch. 3

moving pictures dealing with


country themes

Money does not pay for anything, never has r never will. It is an economic axiom as old as the hills that goods and services can be paid for only with goods
and
services.

ALFRED EMANUEL
SMITH*
1873-1944

16. 13

find the English dictionary the teresting book in our language.


Ib.

As sheer casual reading matter, I still most inIV, ch.


i

The

kiss

of death. Alluding to Hearst's

New

support of Smith's unsuccessful opponent for Governor of

Ogden

Mz'Zfe,

York State [1926]

Let's look at the record.

CHARLES PiGUY
1873-1914
It's

Campaign speeches

[1928]

No

a nuisance, God said. When those French are gone, one will be left to understand certain things I do. Les Sept Contre Paris
is

The Governor of New York State does not have to be an acrobat. Speech in behalf of Franklin D. Roosevelt [1928]
Nobody shoots at Santa Glaus. Campaign speeches [1936]

Surrender

essentially

by means of which we
plaining instead of acting,

set

an operation about exla

No
still

matter

how

thin you slice

it, it's

baloney.

Ib.

Les Cahiers de

Quinzaine

Homer

ing, tired as today's

is new and fresh this momand nothing, perhaps, is as old and

HENRY MAJOR TOMLINSON


1873-1958

Note

newspaper. M, Bergson et la PhiloBOphie Bergsonienne [1914]


sur
is

The
arms

midnight,

Freedom
courage.

system

based

on

glowing voyages you will never make. The Sea and the Jungle [1912]

best at London, near are within the of a capacious chair, before a fire, selecting phases of the
sea
is

at

its

when you

From HALVY,

Life of Charles P&guy

The

reader

who

is

illuminated

is,

in a

real sense,

the

poem. Between the Lines

[1930]

SIME SILVERMANi
1873-1933
is

Bad and
just

indifferent criticism of books


serious
as

as

city's

careless

Wall

Street Lavs

An

Egg.

drainage.

'&
the

Headline announcing stock market crash [October 1929]


who founded and edited the femora theatrical trade paper Variety [1905], had perhaps more influence on American slang than any man of his time.

Happy Warrior of the political FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT, NomiConvention nating speech, Democratic National [June s6, 1984]- See Wordsworth, p. 515*. Al Smith knew as much as any living man of ELLOT the art of democratic government.
is

iHe

battlefield.

SEDCWICK,

The Happy

* Profession [1946]. cn *7

916

FORD

BUULER
ble person called himself or herself a

LENA GUILBERT FORD


d.

1915

democrat.

Keep the home fires burning, While your hearts are yearning;

America in Midpassage [1039],


en. 17

Though your lads are far away They dream of home.


There's a silver lining Through the dark cloud shining; Turn fte dark cloud inside out,
Till

GORDON BOTTOMLEY
1874-1948

the boys

come home.

Many deaths have place in Before they come to die;


Joys

men

Keep the

Home

Fires Burning

must be used and spent, and then Abandoned and passed by. New Years Eve, 1913
you destroy a blade of grass

When

SIR

NORMAN ANGELL
1874-1967
Illusion.

You poison England at her roots. To Ironfounders and Others


Your worship is your furnaces, Which, like old idols, lost obscenes, Have molten bowels; your vision is Machines for making more machines.
16.

The Great

Title of

book [1910] on the futility of war

MAURICE BARING
1874-1945 what a eood play is, or how a good play should be written, are futile* A good play is a pky which when acted upon the beards makes an audience interested and pleased. A play that fails in this is a bad play. Have You Anything to Declare?
All theories of

ANNA HEMPSTEAD BRANCH


1*74-1937
Order
is

a lovely thing;
it

On

disarray

lays its wing,


sing.

Teaching simplicity to
His

The Monk in the Kitchen

screaming stallions maned with whistling wind. Nimrod Wars with the Angds
of loveliness,
stars

CHARLES AUSTIN BEARD


1874-^1948

AMD

and birds, But made not anything at aH So beautiful as words. Songs for My Mother: Her Words, st. 5

God wove a web Of clouds and

MARY RITTER BEARD


1876-1958 At no time, at no place, in solemn convention assembled, through no chosen agents, had the American peothe United ple officially proclaimed States to be a democracy. The Constitution did not contain the word or any word lending countenance to it, except the peopossibly the mention of "We,
ple," in the

REGINALD BULLER
1874-1944
There was a young lady named Bright, Whose speed was far raster than light, She set out one day In a relative way, And returned home the previous night. Limerick *
i JPttncfc,

ARTHUR HENRY

preamble

When

the
December
19, 19*5-

Constitution was framed

no

respecta-

917

CHESTERTON

GILBERT KEITH

CHESTERTON
1874-1936

Likelier the barricades shall blare

good joke is the one ultimate and sacred thing which cannot be criticized. Our relations with a good joke are direct and even divine relations.
Preface
to

Slaughter below and smote above, And death and hate and hell declare That men have found a thing to love.

DICKENS, Pickwick
Paper*

The Napoleon

The world
ders;

of Netting Hill

[1906]

will never starve for wonbut only for want of wonder. Inscription, General Motors

"has not been tried and found wanting; it has been found difficult and left unChristian ideal,"
it is said,

"The

Building, Century of Progress Exposition, Chicago

tried."

But they that fought


Following a fallen
Alas, alas for

for England,

What's Wrong

with the

World
I, eft.

star,

[1910],

England
their graves afar.

They have

Nothing sublimely artistic has ever arisen out of mere art, any more than
anything essentially reasonable has ever arisen out of pure reason. There must
always be a rich moral
aesthetic growth.
soil for

Elegy in a
Strong

Co 'ountry

Churchyard
the guns

gongs

groaning
Austria
is

as

boom far
(Don John of
war);
Stiff flags straining in

any great

going to the
blasts

Defense of Nonsense [1911]

the night

cold

For the great Gaels of Ireland Are the men that God made mad, For all their wars are merry,

And

all their

The Bdlad

1 songs are sad. White Horse the of

In the gloom black-purple, in the glint old gold; Torchlight crimson on the copper kettledrums, Then the tuckets, then the trumpets, then the cannon, and he comes.

And if ever ye ride in Ireland, The jest may yet be said,


There

Lepanto

[1915]

And

is the land of broken hearts, the land of broken heads.

Ib.

Every great
allegorical

literature has always

been
Ib.

allegorical of

some view of

Cervantes on his galley sets the sword back in the sheath (Don John of Austria rides homeward with a wreath). And he sees across a weary land a straggling road in Spain,

the whole universe.

Up

which a lean and

foolish knight

for-

ever rides in vain.

16.

The whole

difference

between con-

struction and creation is exactly this: that a thing constructed can only be loved after it is constructed; but a thing

created

is

loved before it exists. Preface to DICKENS, Pickwick

To an open house in the evening Home shall men come, To an older place than Eden And a taller town than Rome.
The House
Burn from
breast
Sloth,

of Christmas

Papers
1

my

brain

and from my
clings. arrest:

For the Young Gads of Ireland Are the lads that drive me mad; For half their words need footnotes,

And

half their rhymes are had.

ARTHUR GUTTERMAN [1871-1943], The Young Celtic Poets, st. 3

And And

stiffness

and the cowardice that and the soul's

feed

mv

A Ballade of a

brain with better things. Book Reviewer

918

CHESTERTON

CHURCHILL

The
.

strangest
.

whim

has

seized

me

He
I

tells

.lAeral
I

you how he hustles and him quite a time,


frank,

it

takes

think

wffl

not
\de of Suicide

like his hospitality that's cordial

and

Don't ever take a fence down until the reason why it was put you know
1

do not mind his money but


like his

do not

swank.

A
SIR

Song of

Self-Esteem

up.

Ascribed to Chesterton by John F. Kennedy in a 1945 notebook

WINSTON SPENCER CHURCHILL*

The face of Father Brown . . . could shine with ignorance as well as with knowledge. The Scandal of Father Brown
George he was for England, And before he killed the dragon He drank a pint of English ale Out of an English flagon. The Englishman

1874-1965 from the tossing sea of Cause and Theory to the firm ground of Result and Fact.
I

pass with relief

The Mdahand Field Force


St.

[it

to be making the news than taking it; to be an actor rather 16than a critic.
It is better

to

Nothing in life is so exhilarating as Ib. be shot at without result.

snow or rain, Step softly, under To find the place where men can pray; The way is aU so very plain That we may lose the way.

The Wise Men


wife
if it

There are men in the world who deas stem an exaltation from the as others proximity of disaster and ruin, 16from success.
rive

And Noah he often said to his when he sat down to dine,


"I don't care

Victory is the beautiful, brightcolored flower. Transport is the stem

where the water goes

without which blossomed.

it

could

never

have
[1899]

The River War

doesn't get into the wine."

Wine and Water


Before the Roman came to to Severn strode,

Rye

or out

Terminological inexactitude. Speech, House of Commons [February 22, 1906]

The

rolling English

drunkard made the

rolling English road.

The

Rolling English

Road

The maxim of the British people is "Business as usual." Speech, Guildhall [Novenriber 9, 1914]
Politics are

Tea, although an Oriental, Is a gentleman at least;

almost as exciting as war,

Cocoa is a cad and coward, Cocoa is a vulgar beast.

and quite as dangerous. In war you can but in politics only be killed once,

The Song
I also

of Right

and Wrong

many times.

Remark

[1920]

One

far fierce

had my hour; hour and sweet:

There was a shout about

And palms before The Yankee


crime,
1

my ears, my feet.

By being so long in the lowest form I gained an immense ad[at Harrow] the cleverer boys, ... I over vantage the essential strucbones got into my ture of the ordinary British sentence
which
i

The Donkey
and
it

is

a noble thing. Naturally I

is

a dab at electricity

See Robert Frost, p. gs6a.

mobilized the English language and sent JOHN F. KENNEDY, on conferring honorary citizenship on Churchill [April 9, 1965] Sec Roosevelt and Churchill, p. 974.

He

into battle.

919

CHURCHILL

am

biased in favor of boys learning English; I would make them all learn
I

have watched this famous

island

English: and then ones learn Latin Greek as a treat.

as

would let the clever an honor, and

descending incontinently, fecklessly, the stairway which leads to a dark gulf. It is a fine broad stairway at the beginning, but after a bit the carpet ends. A little
farther
a little farther

Roving Commission:
It
is

My

Early

Life [1930]

on there are only flagstones, and on still these break befeet.

man
lett's

a good thing for an uneducated to read books of quotations. Bart-

neath your

Whik

England

Slept
erf

Familiar Quotations is an admirable work, and I studied it intently.

The German

dictator,

instead

The
the

quotations when engraved upon memory give you good thoughts* They also make you anxious to read the
authors and look for more.
lb.
all

snatching the victuals from the table, has been content to have them served to him course by course. Speech on the Munich agree-

ment,

House

of

Commons

Come on now, all you young men,

[October 5, 1938]

over the world. You are needed more than ever now to fill the gap of a generation shorn by the war. You have not an hour to lose. You must take your
places in
life's

That long [Canadian]


the
Atlantic
to

frontier from

fighting line.

Twenty

to

twenty-five!

These are the

be content with things 'The earth is yours and the

years! Don't as they are.

Occam, guarded only by neighborly respect and honorable obligations, is an example to every country and a pattern for the future of the world. Speech in
nett,

the

Pacific

fullness

thereof." Enter upon your inheritance, the accept your responsibilities. Raise

honor of R, B. BenCanada Club, London

[April 20, 1939]


I cannot forecast to you the action of Russia. It is a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma.

them upon glorious flags again, advance the new enemies, who constantly gather upon the front of the human army, and have only to be assaulted to be overthrown. Don't tale no for an answer, never submit to failure. Do not be fobbed off with mere personal success
or acceptance. You will make all kinds of mistakes; but as long as you are generous and true, and also fierce, you cannot hurt the world or even seriously distress her. She was made to be wooed 16 and won by youth.
-

Radio broadcast [October

i,

1939]

For each and for all, as for the Royal Navy, the watchword should be, "Cany on, and dread nought" Speech on traffic at sea, House
of

Commons

[December

6,

toil, tears

solved

Decided only to be undecided, to be irresolute, adamant

re-

for

have nothing to offer but blood, and sweat. 1 First Statement as Prime Minister, House of Commons [May
13, 1940]
with
thy
tears,

drift, solid

for fluidity, all-powerful to


i

be impotent. 1

England Slept [1936] Dictators ride to and fro upon tigers which they dare not dismount. And the
tigers are getting
*

Whih

Mollify it blood, JOHN

or

sweat,
of

or
the

DONNE,

An Anatomy

hungry.

16.

World [1611], 7, 430-431 Year after year they voted cent per cent, Blood, sweat, and tear-wrung mittkfl*
why?
for rent!

Stanley Baldwin's policies. *He who rides a tiger is afraid to dismount. WILUAV SCARBOROUGH, Chinese Proverbs [1875]. no. aoSa

Of

BYRON, The Age

of Bronit

[,823].

X/F

See Truman, p.

See Prescott, p. 5873, and Garibaldi, p. 6soalink It [poetry] is forged slowly and patiently, and by link, with sweat and blood

Q2O

CHURCHILL
Victory at
terror,
all costs,

victory in spite of

us

therefore

brace

ourselves

to

our

victory however long and all hard the road may be; for without victory

duties, British

and so bear ourselves that, if the Empire and its Commonwealth


still

there is no survival. First Statement as


ister,

last for a

Prime Min-

say:

thousand years, men will "This was their finest hour."


Speech, House of

House of

Commons
shall

Commons
mass of

We shall not flag or fail. We


on to the end.

We shall fight in France,


on the
seas

go

We

shall

defend every
city.

town and every

village, every

The

vast

shall fight with growing confidence and growing strength in the air, we shall defend our island, whatever the

we we

shall fight

and oceans,

London

itself,

may be, we shall fight on the we shall fight on the landing we shall fignt in the fields and grounds, in the streets, we shall fight in the hills;
cost

could easily army; and we would rather see London laid in ruins and ashes than that it should be tamely and abjectly enslaved.

fought street by street, devour an entire hostile

beaches,

Radio broadcast [July 14, 1940]

we shall never surrender. Speech on Dunkirk, House of

Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so


few.

Commons

[June 4, 1940]

Tribute to the Royal Air Force,

a quarrel between the the and we shall find that present, past we have lost the future.
If

we open

House of Commons [August 20,


1940]

Speech,

House

of

Commons
de-

[June 18, 1940]

The British Empire and the United States will have to be somewhat mixed
up together
in

some of

their affairs for

Upon [of Britain] pends the survival of Christian civilization. Upon it depends our own British fife, and the long continuity of our inand our Empire. The whole and might of the enemy must very soon be turned on us. Hitler knows that he will have to break us in this island or lose the war. If we can stand up to him, all Europe may be free and the life of the world may move forward into
stitutions

this

battle

fury

mutual and general advantage. For my own part, looking out upon the future, I do not view the process with any misgivings. I could not stop it if I wished; no one can stop it. Like the Mississippi, 1 it just keeps rolling along. Let it roll. Let it roll on full flood, inexorable, irresistible, benignant, to broader lands and
better days.
Ib.

This wicked
tory

man

Hitler, the reposi-

broad, sunlit uplands.

But

if

we
that

and embodiment of many forms of

fail,

then the

whole world, including


including
all

tihe

United
have

States,

we

known and cared for, will sink into the abyss of a new Dark Age made more sinister, perhaps more protracted,
by the lights of perverted science.

soul-destroying hatred, this monstrous product of former wrongs and shame. Radio broadcast [September n, 1940]

Let

tote ALFRED DOUGLAS, Collected Poems [1919] Their sweat, their tears, their hlood bedewed
the endless plain.

Death and sorrow will be the companions of our journev; hardship our garment; constancy and valor our only
shield.

We must be united, we must be

Unknown War
the

CHURCHILL, The [1931], referring to the armies of Czar before the Russian Revolution
S.

WINSTON

undaunted,

we must be inflexible, Report on the war, House of Commons [October 8, 1940]


along.

toQ, tears

Qrarchni referred to his promise of blood, and sweat in subsequent speeches on


,

OV Man
rollin*

October 8, 1940, May 7 and December and January yj and November 10, 1942.

1941,

on

River [Mississippi] ... he keeps OSCAR HAMMERSTEIN *ND

[1927], music by

JEROME KERN

921

CHURCHILL

We

are

waiting

for

the

long-

This

is

one of those cases


is

in

which
facts.

promised invasion.

So are the

fishes.

the imagination

baffled

by the

Radio broadcast to the French


people [October 21, 1940]

Remark in the House of Commons following the parachute


descent in Scotland of Rudolf

History with its flickering lamp stumbles along the trail of the past, tyto revive ing to reconstruct its scenes, its echoes, and kindle with pale gleams the passion of former days. What is the worth of all this? The only guide to a

Hess [May 13, 1941]

The

respect. like to

who

unique in this are the only people who be told how bad things are, like to be told the worst.

British nation is

They

man
his

his conscience; the only shield to memory is the rectitude and sinis

Report on the war, House

of

Commons

[June 10, 1941]


*

cerity

of his actions.

It

is

very

prudent to walk through this shield, because we are so often mocked by the failure of our hopes and the upsetting of our calculations; but with fliis shield, however the fates may
life

imwithout

A
the
of

vile

race of quislings

to use
scorn

new word which will carry the mankind down the centuries.
Speech at

St. James's Pdace,

London

[June 12, 1941]

play,

we march

always in the ranks of

honor.

Tribute to Neville Chamberlain,

House of Commons [November


12, 1940]

The destiny of mankind is not decided by material computation. When great causes are on the move in the world ... we learn that we are spirits, not animals, and that something is
going on in space and time, and beyond space and time, which, whether we like
it

To
reer,

die at

the height of a man's

ca-

the highest

moment

of his effort

or not, spells duty.

here in this world, universally honored and admired, to die while great issues are still commanding the whole of his interest, to be taken from us at a moment when he could already see ultiis not the most mate success in view

Radio broadcast to America on receiving an honorary degree of Doctor of Laws from the University of Rochester,

New

York

[June 16, 1941]

unenviable of fates. 1

satiable

Report on the war, House of Commons [December 19,


1940]
resent criticism, even when, for the sake of emphasis, it parts for the
I

a monster of wickedness, inhis lust for blood and plunder. Not content with having all Europe under his heel, or else terrorized into various forms of abject submission,
Hitler
is

in

do not

time with

reality.

Speech, House of

Commons
I will
.

he must now carry his work of butchery and desolation among the vast multitudes of Russia and of Asia. The terrible military machine, which we and the
rest of the civilized

world so

foolishly,

[January 22, 1941]

Here is the answer which . to President Roosevelt.


.

give

Give us

the tools, and we will finish the job. Radio broadcast [February 9, 1941]
*Lord Lothian,
United
States,
i*, 1940-

so supinely, so insensately allowed fte Nazi gangsters to build up year by year from almost nothing, cannot stand idle lest it rust or fall to pieces. It must be continual motion, in grinding up

Ambassador to the died in Washington, December


British

Vidkun Quisling, head of the Nasjonal who cooperated and ling party in Norway, collaborated with the Nazis when Germany in1

Sam-

vaded Norway [April


ecuted [October 23,

9, 1940].

Quisling

ww

ex-

See Lord Lothian, p. g6gb.

922

CHURCHILL

human lives and trampling down the homes and the rights of hundreds of millions of men. Moreover it must be fed, not only with flesh but with oil. So
new
new
this bloodthirsty -guttersnipe

there will
i

be a

light
sea.

which shines over

all

the land

and

Speech

on war with Japan, House of Commons IDeceniber


8,1941]
kind of people do they [the

must

launch

his

mechanized armies
of
slaughter,
pillage

fields

upon and

What

devastation.

Japanese] think

we

are?

Radio broadcast on the German


invasion

Speech to United States Congress

of

Russia

[June

22,

[December 26, 1941]

1941]

have no truce or parley with or the grisly gang who [Hitler], you work your wicked will. You do your and we will do our best. worst Speech, London County Council
\July 14, 1941]

We will

have not journeyed all this way across the centuries, across the oceans, across the across the mountains,
prairies,

We

because

we

are

made

of sugar

candy.

Speech to the Canadian Senate

The
tories,

conquerable will of the


ing the

the symbol of the unoccupied terriand a portent of the fate awaitis

V sign

and House of Commons, Ottawa [December 30, 1941]


TTiis
is

of the

no time to speak of the hopes


or the

future,

broader world

Nazi tyranny. Message to the people of Europe an launching the for Victory

propaganda campaign
1941]

[July 20,

beyond our struggles and our victory. We have to win that world for which lies beyond our struggles and our sacrifices. We have not won it yet. The
lies

which

crisis is

terrible

Nothing

is

more

dangerous

in

wartime than to live in the temperamental atmosphere of a Gallup Poll, 1 always feeling one's pulse and taking one's temperature. Report on the -war, House of

everyone, man and woman, old and young, hale and halt; service in a thou-

upon us. ... In this strange, world war there is a place for

sand forms

is

now

open. There

is

no room

for the dilettante, the weakling, for the shirker, or the sluggard. The mine,

Commons
Do
not
let

[September 30, 1941]

let us speak of darker days; speak rather of sterner days. These are not dark days: these are great the greatest days our days country has ever lived; and we "must all thank God that we have been allowed, each of us according to our stations, to play a

us

the factory, the dockyard, the salt waves, the fields to fall, the home, hospital, the chair of the scientist, from pulpit of the preacher

sea

highest to the humblest tasks, all equal honor; all have their part to play.
16.

the the the are of

When
Britain

part in

making these days memorable


our race.
Address,

I warned [the French") that would fight on alone whatever

in

the historv of

Harrow School [October 29, 1941]

they did, their generals told their prime minister and his divided cabinet, "In
three weeks

England

will

have her neck

In

the past

we have had

wrung like some neck.

a chicken/'

Some

chicken;
Ib.

light

which flickered, in the present we have a light which flames, and in the future
'Dr. George H. Gallup founded the British Institute of Public Opinion in 1936.

The
that
1

late
all

M. Venizelos*
her wars
Venizelos

observed

in

England

he
Greek

EJeutherios statesman.

[1864-1936],

923

CHURCHILL
should

have said

Britain,

always wins one battle


at the

of course the last

Lord Mayor's Day Speech Luncheon, London [November


10, 1942]
|

sailors and airmen who died side by side with ours and carrying out their tasks to the end all over the world. What an enviable death was his.

say in battle harness, like his soldiers,

Now

this is

not the end.

It is

not
it

Speech, House of

Commons

1 even the beginning of the end. But the of end the beginning. is, perhaps,

[April 17, 1945]

Ib.
I have not become the King's First Minister in order to preside^ over the British Empire. liquidation of the

In Franklin Roosevelt there died the American friend we have ever and the greatest champion of known freedom who has ever brought help and comfort from the New World to the
greatest

It.

Old.

Ib.

The

soft underbelly of the Axis. Report on the war, House

"No comment" is expression. I am using it


I

think
I

of

Commons [November n,

again.

got

it

from Sumner

a splendid again and Welles.

1942]

has once of the saying, again proved the truth 'The Hun is always either at your throat or at your feet" States ConSpeech to United

The proud German Army

reporters at Washington airport, after conferring with President Truman at the White

To

House [February

12, 1946]

gress

[May
lived

19, 1943]

From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste 1 has in the Adriatic an iron curtain descended across the Continent.
Address, Westminster CoZfege, Fulton, Missouri [March 5,

TTiere was a

man who
still

sold a

skin while the beast

hyena and who

was

killed in

hunting it Speech on AUied

1946]

war

House
1944]

of

Commons

gains, [August 2,

This address to which I have the title, "The Sinews of Peace."

given
16.

"Not may be the pride of those who survived and the epitaph of
in vain"
fell.

those

who

Speech, House of Commons [September 28, 1944]

1 Between them [Germany] and me there is now a bloody iron curtain which has descended forever! QUEEN EUZABETH OF BELGIUM [187*German-born, ihe itood 1965], in 1914. Though her adopted country in WorW

staunchly
I.

by

War

The United
speech.

States

is

a land of free

France ... a nation


frontier.

of forty millions with a

not Nowhere is speech freer even here where we sedulously cultivate it even in its most repulsive form.
Ib.

and an iron curtain at Itt deep-rooted grievance GEORGE WASHINGTON CRILE, A MetkView of War and Peace [1915] roar, an iron curtain i* VASLY Hot descending on Russian history. ANOV, Apocalypse of our Time [1918] We were behind the "iron curtain" at Ust. ETHEL ANNAKIN SNOWDEN, Through Bolshevik
anistic

With a rumble and a

He [President Franklin D. Roosedied in harness, and we may well velt]


See Talleyrand, p. The eight thousand paratroopers of the First British Airborne Division who landed in Arnhem, Holland, behind the German lines in September and nights, 1944 and held the area for nine days with a loss of six thousand. Major General R. E,
to Urquhart, the division commander, radioed
*

Russia [1920] The Nazi Minister of Enlightenment and Profh Goebbels [1897-1945], used aganda, Dr. Josef ^the in reference to the US5*. phrase "iron curtain" Minin Das Reich [February 25, 1945]* Hitler's Schwerln von ister of Finance, Count Lutz

^^

Field Marshal Bernard

Montgomery: All

will

he

1945} [May Krosigk, also used in a topnot publicly Churchill used it Truman [May u. secret telegram to President
it

a,

ordered to break out rather than surrender.

1945]-

924

CHURCHUXL
In
fiance

FROST

War: Resolution. In Defeat: DeIn

Victory: ptocel Good Will.

Magnanimity. In

Are one of those functions That poison their lives.


Scenes from the Mesozoic
It is possible that our race may be an accident, in a meaningless universe, living its brief life uncared for, on this

The Second World War: Moral vol. I, The Gathof the Work,
ering

Storm [1948]
it.

No one

can guarantee success in war,

dark, cooling star:


all

bat only deserve


Ib. II,

the more

but even so what marvelous


fairy story,

and
crea-

Their Finest Hour [1949]


kill

tures
tale

we

arel

What

what

When

nothing to

you have to be polite.


Ife.

man

it

costs

from the Arabian Nights of the jinns, is a hundredth part as wonderful

Ill,

The Grand

as this true fairy story of simians! It is

Alliance

so

Attlee is a very modest [Clement] . And with reason. On Clement Attlee, the Labor Prime Minister

much more heartening, too, than the we invent. A universe capable of giving birth to many such accidents
tales

is

blind or not a good world to a promising universe. . . . once thought we lived on God's footlive in,

We

and some days Everyone has his day last longer than others.
1952]

stool; it

1 may be a throne. This Simian World [1920].

XIX

House of Commons [January


a
is

new

Father declared he was going to buy plot in the cemetery, a plot afl

one who can't change his mind and won't change the subject.

for himself.

"And

111

fanatic

buy one on

a corI

ner," he added triumphantly,

"where

Saying

can get out!" Mother looked at him, startled but


admiring, and whispered to me, "I almost believe he could do it." JJfe with Father [1935]

The inherent

vice of capitalism

is

the

the inherunequal sharing of blessings; ent virtue of socialism is the equal sharing of miseries.

Ib.

Short words are best and the old 16. words when short are best of all.
It is

ROBERT FROST
1874-1963
I'm
going out to clean the pasture
spring; 111 only stop to rake the leaves

hard,

beautiful

beautiful

not impossible, to snub they remain I&. and the rebuke recoils.
if

woman

away
clear, I

This is the sort of English up with Attributed which I will not put. 1

(And wait to watch the water may):


I

shan't
too.

be gone long.

You come
Pasture, st .
i

The

CLARENCE DAY
1874-1935

When
Are

eras die, their legacies


left

They would not find me changed from him they knew Only more sure of all I thought was
true.

to strange police. Professors in England guard

New

Into

My Own

[1913],

st.

The
TTie

glory that

was Greece. Thoughts Without Words

Ah, when to the heart of man Was it ever less than a treason

parting injunctions

Of mothers and wives


*See Wolcott Gibbs, p.

To go with the drift of things, To yield with a grace to reason,


1 See Matthew 5:34, p. 4ob; Pope, H. G. Wdls, p. 888b.

p. 4082;

and

925

FROST

And bow and accept the end Of a love or a season? *


Reluctance [1913],
sf.

Pressed into service of shape.

means

pressed out

4
I

The
shall

Self-Seeker

Something there
wall.

is

that doesn't love a

be

Wending Wall [1914]

Somewhere

telling this with a sigh

Two
I

My
And

apple trees will never get across cat the cones under his pines, I tell

ages and ages hence: roads diverged in a wood, and

him.

And
"Good
fences

He

only says,

make good
Jb

took the one less traveled by, that has made all the difference

The Road Not Taken

[1916],

si.

neighbors/'

Before

I built
I

a wall I'd ask to

know

The Hyla breed


That shouted
in the mist a month ago Like ghost of sleighbells in a ghost of snow. Hyla Brook
[1916]

What

was walling

in or walling out. 2 Ib.

And nothing
pride,

to look backward to with

We
And

love the things

we

love for what

And

nothing to look forward to with hope. The Death of the Hired Man
['9*4]

they are.
I'd like to get

j^

then come back to


over.

away from earth awhile it and begin


willfully

Home

is

the place where,


in.

when you
Ifc.

have to go there, They have to take you

May no me
And
Not

fate

misunderstand

half grant

what

wish and snatch

me away
to return. Earth's the right place
for love:
I

The nearest friends can go With anyone to death, comes so


short

far

don't

know where

it's

likely to go bet-

They might
all.

as well not try to

Home
we

go

at

ter.

Birches

[igi6]

Burial [1914]

One
I

Most
Is

could do worse than be a swinger


of birches.
Ib.

of the change

think
in

we

see in

life

due to truths being


favor.

and out of

wonder about the trees: Why do we wish to bear


Forever the noise of these

The The
blue's

Black Cottage [1914]

More than another noise


So
close to our dwelling place?

but a mist from the breath

of the wind, tamish that goes at a touch of the

The Sound of the


I

Trees [1916]

hand.

Blueberries [1914]
is

shall set forth for

somewhere,

The

best

wav out

A Servant
The woodchuck
like his

always through.
to Servants [1914]
it is.

This sleep of mine, whatever sleep Were he not gone,

And tossing so as to scare The white clouds over them


I shall

make the reckless choice Some say when they are in voice
I shall

on.

have

less to say,

could say whether

it's

But
I

shall

be gone.

16.

met

a Californian

Long sleep, as I describe its coming Or just some human sleep.


1

who would
none had
ever died

on,

Talk California

a state so blessed,

He

After Apple-Picking [1924]


See Pope, p. 4iab. *See Chesterton, p.

said, in climate,

A
926

there natural death.

New

Hampshire

[2923]

FROST

Do you know,
Considering

the

market,

there

are

And saved some part Of a day I had rued.


Dust of Snow [1923]

more
Poems produced than any other thing? No wonder poets sometimes have to seem than busiSo much more businesslike
nessmen. Their wares are so
rid of.
I

We heard
he

the miniature thunder where

fled.

The Runaway
these
are
I

[1923]
I

Whose woods
know. His house
is

think

much

New Hampshire
say

harder to get

Anything
YVill

can

about

New

He will not see me stopping here To watch his woods fill up with snow. Stopping by Woods on a Snowy
Evening [1923],
st. i

in the village though;

Hampshire
serve almost as well

about Verin

mont,
Excepting
that

they

differ

their

To

My

horse must think it queer stop without a farmhouse near.


little

mountains.

Ib. $t. 2
ex-

The Vermont mountains stretch


tended straight;

He gives his harness bells a shake To ask if there is some mistake.


Ib. st. 3

New Hampshire mountains


coil.

curl

up

in a
Ib.

The woods
But
I

The snake stood up for evil in the GarThe Ax-Helve [1923] den.

And

are lovely, dark and deep. have promises to keep, miles to go before I sleep. 1
Ib.
st.

Why make
blue
In

so

much

of fragmentary

Love at the As sweet as

lips
I

was touch

here and there a


flower,
eye,

Or

bird, or butterfly, or wearing-stone, or open

And once
I

that
air.

could bear; seemed too much;


[1923],
st. i

lived

on

To Earthward
presents in sheets the
st. i

When heaven
solid

hue?

Now no joy but lacks salt


That
is

Fragmentary Blue [1923],

not dashed with pain

And
I

Some say the world will end in Some say in ice. From what I've tasted of desire
I

fire,

weariness and fault; crave the stain

hold with those


if it

who

favor

fire.

But
I

had

to perish twice,

think I

know enough

of hate

Of tears, the aftermark Of almost too much love, The sweet of bitter bark And burning clove.

Ib.

st.

5,

To
Is

say that for destruction ice

And would

also great suffice.

Fire

and

Ice

[1923]

Keep cold, young orchard. Goodbye and keep cold. Dread fifty above more than fifty below.

The wav a crow


Shook

Goodbye and Keep Cold [1923]


Heaven

down on me The dust of snow

From a hemlock tree


Has given my heart A change of mood
*See Dante, p. 159!),

Not in
1

gives its glimpses only to those position to look too close.

Passing Glimpse [1928]

The And

stars look very cold


I

and Housman, p. 8533.

about the sky, have many miles on foot to fare. KEATS, Keen, fitful gusts are whispering here and there [i8zj\

927

FROST
Tree at

my window, window
is

tree,

And

you're

two months back

in the

My

sash

lowered

when night comes

middle of March.

on;

Two Tramps

in

Mud

Time

But let there never be curtain drawn Between you and me.
Tree at

My Window

[1928],

st. i

But

yield

who

will to their

separation,

That day she put our heads together, Fate had her imagination about her, Your head so much concerned with
outer,

My object in living is to unite My avocation and my vocation


As

Mine with
It

inner, weather.

Ib. st.

my two eyes make one in sight. Only where love and need are one, And the work is play for mortal stakes, Is the deed ever really done For Heaven and the future's sakes.
16. st 9

looked as
age.

Was

if a night of dark intent coming, and not only a night, an

No memory
Atones for

of having starred

Someone had
rage.

better be prepared

for

later disregard,

Or keeps

the end from being hard.

There would be more than ocean-water broken Before God's last Put out the Light was
spoken.

down dignified With boughten friendship by your side Than none at all. Provide, provide! l
Better to go
Provide, Provide,
I

Once by
I

the Pacific [1928]

st. 6, 7

never dared be radical


it

have been one acquainted with the


night.

For fear

would make
old.

me

when young
conservative
[2936]

when
some dust thrown
talk

Precaution

Acquainted with the Night [1928]


If,

as they say, eyes

in

my

Where

Never ask of money spent


the spender thinks
it

went.

Will keep
wise,

my

from getting overoff

Nobody was ever meant To remember or invent

What he

I'm not the one for putting


proof.

the

The Hardship

did with every cent. of Accountin

Let

it

be overwhelming. Dust in the Eyes [1928]


join too

The

land was ours before


land's.

we

were the

Don't
Join

many

gangs. Join few

if

She was our land more than


years

a hundred

any. the United States and join the family But not much in between unless a colBuild Soil [1932] lege.

Before

we were her people. The Gift Outright

[1941]*
for

What

Happiness Makes Up in Height It Lacks in Length.


Title of

The sun was warm but


chill.

the wind was

poem

[1942]

You know how

it is

When

the sun

is

with an April day out and the wind

Far in the pillared dark Thrush music went


is

Almost

like a call to

come

in

still,

You're one month on in the middle of

To
i

the dark and lament.

May.
But

A A

you so much as dare to speak, cloud comes over the sunlit arch, wind comes off a frozen peak,
if

Read
at
later

Sec Samuel Johnson, p, 43*b. first before the Phi Beta Kappa Sodetf
5, 1941]'

William and Mary College [December


at

inauguration of President John F. Kennedy [January 20, 1961].


the

928

FROST
But no, I was out for stars: not come in. J would not even if asked, I meant And I hadn't been.
It

takes

all

sorts

of in and outdoor

To
st. 4,

schooling get adapted to


It

Come

my kind of fooling, Takes All Sorts [1962]

In [1942],

Unless
I

Fm wrong
1

And were an epitaph to be my story one ready for my own. I'd have a short have written of me on my I would
stone:
I

but obey
urge of a song: bound away!
I

The
Fin

had a lover's quarrel with the world. The Lesson for Today [1942]

And

may

return

If dissatisfied

We dance

round in a ring and suppose, But the Secret sits in the middle and
knows.

With what I learn From having died.


Away! [1962],
It
is

st.

The

5,

Secret Sits [1945]

Here arc your waters and your watering

way and

absurd to think that the only to tell if a poem is lasting is to wait


see
if it lasts.

The
tell

right reader of a

and be whole again beyond conElace.


fusion.

good poem
strikes

can

the

moment

it

Directive [2947]

him that he has taken an imthat he will never get mortal wound
over
it.

Any eye

is

an

evil

eye
apart.

That looks in on to a

mood

A Mood Apart
It It

[1947]

asks a little of us here.

asks of us a certain height,

The Poetry of Amy Lowell From the Christian Science Monitor [May 16, 1925] A poem begins as a lump in the
.
.

So when at times the mob is swayed To carry praise or blame too far, We may take something like a star To stay our minds on and be staid. Take Something Like a Star [1949]
Forgive,

throat, a sense of wrong, a homesickness, a lovesickness. ... It finds the thought

and the thought

finds the words.

Letter to Louis Untermeyer

[January

i,

1916]

Lord,

my

little

jokes

on

Thee And HI forgive Thy great big one on


me.

Everything written is as good as it is dramatic. It need not declare itself in form, but it is drama or nothing.

A Way Out [1929], preface


a

From In
Have
I

the Clearing [1962]

It should

be of the pleasure of

poem

itself to tell

how
It

it

can.

The

figure a

not walked without an upward

poem makes.
for love.

look Of caution under stars that very well

ends in wisdom.

The

begins in delight and figure is the same

Might not have missed


shot and fell?
It

me when

they

preface

The Figure a 'Poem Makes? to Collected Poems


[*939l

was a

risk I

had to take and took. Bravado [1962]


any rate

No

tears in the writer,

no

tears in the

am

assured at

reader.3

Ib.

Man's practically inexterminate. Someday I must go into that. TTiere's always been an Ararat

Like a piece of ice on a hot stove the poem must ride on its own meltSee Shenandoah (chantey), p. noia. See Coleridge, p. 5*80; also see The Figure a Poem Makes, this column. 8 See Charles Churchill, p. 4563, and note.
1

Where someone someone else begat To start the world all over at.

A'Wishing Well [1962]

929

FROST
. Read it a hundred times; it ing. wul forever keep its freshness as a metal
. .

HOOVER

ELLEN GLASGOW
1874-1945
Preserve, within a wild sanctuary, an inaccessible valley of reveries.

keeps

fragrance. It can never lose its sense of a meaning that once unfolded
its

by

surprise as

The Figure

went. 1 a Poem Makes, Collected Poems to preface


it

Certain Measure
fertile soil

[1943]

Tilling the
ity.

of man's vanIb.

How many times it thundered before Franklin took the hint! How many apples fell on Newton's head before he took the hint! Nature is always hinting at us. It hints over and over again. And suddenly we take the hint.
Comment
It is

HARRY GRAHAM
1874-1936
one of his nice new sashes, Fell in the fire and was burnt to ashes;
Billy, in

only a
there

moment
that

here and a
greatest

moIb.

Now, although the room grows


I

chilly,

ment
has.

the

writer

haven't the heart to poke poor Billy. Ruthless Rhymes for Heartiest

Homes
ness

[1899].

Tenderhearted-

Love

is

an

irresistible

desire to

be
16.

irresistibly desired.

Poetry throat

is

a way of taking

life

by the
Ib.

HERBERT CLARK HOOVER


I

Talking is a hydrant in the yard and writing is a faucet upstairs in the house, aing the first takes all the pressure 16. the second.

1874-1964 do not favor the repeal


.
.

of the
.

Amendment. Our Eighteenth country has deliberately undertaken a


great social

The

and economic experiment,

greatest thing in family life

is

to

take a hint
isn't

when

a hint

is

intended
16.

and not to take a hint when a hint


intended.

noble in motive, far-reaching in purSpeech [August 1928] pose.

The American system


vidualism. 2

of rugged

indi-

Always fall in with what you're asked to accept. Take what is given, and make it over your way. aim in life has always been to hold my own with whatever's going. Not against: with.

Campaign speech, New Y'ark


[October 22, 1928]
Conditions are fundamentally sound.

My

Speech [December

1929]

16.

There's absolutely no reason for being rushed along with the rush.

The fundamental
nation's

strength

of the

Everybody should be free to go very . . . What you want, what you're hanging around in the world
slow.

unimpaired. Message to Congress [December 2, 1930]

economy

is

waiting you.

for, is

for

something [March 21,

to occur to
1

954]

Education

is

... hanging around


[January 30, 1963]

until you've caught on.


oee Coleridge, p. 5*8b, and Frost, of Amy Lowell, p. $2gb.
*

1 Hoover used the phrase also in a letter to Senator William E. Borah [February *8, 1918], While I can make no claim for having introduced the term "rugged individualim," I should be proud to have invented it. It has been used by American leaders for over a hillaJ century in eulogy of those God-fearing men women of honesty whose stamina and charade? and fearless assertion of rights led them to

The

Poetry

their

own way

in

life.

HOOVER, The
$

to Liberty [1934]. ch.

930

HOOVER
The
grass
will

MAUGHAM
ever wise its genius may be, can do nothing without the privileges which

grow in the

streets of a

hundred

cities.

Speech [October 31, 2932]


go around in the dark besides Santa Glaus. Address, John Marshall Republican Club, St. Louis, Missouri

the community affords.

A good many things

Canadian Club Speech, Montreal [March 17, 1919]


Government, in the
last analysis, is

[December 16, 1935]


declare war. But it is must fight and die. And it is youth must inherit the tribulation, youth who the sorrow, and the triumphs that are

Older

men

that

organized opinion. Where there is little or no public opinion, there is likely to be bad government, which sooner or later becomes autocratic government. Message of the Carillon [1927]

1 tbe aftermath of war.

AMY LOWELL
1874-1925

Speech, Republican National Convention, Chicago [June


Christ!

A pattern called a war.


What are patterns for?
Patterns
I

HAROLD
I

L.

ICKES

Sappho would speak,


openly,

think,

quite
si-

1874-1952

am

And

against government by crony. On resigning as Secretary of the Interior [February 1946]

Mrs. Browning guard a careful


lence,

But Emily would slam them

set doors

ajar

and

And love you

for

your speed of observa-

HEWLETT JOHNSON
1874-1966
Nothing
is

tion.

The
and faded,

Sisters

You

are beautiful

better calculated to drive

men

to desperation than when, in attempting to carry out beneficial reform,


find

Like an old opera tune Played upon a harpsichord.


Heart-leaves of lilac all over
land,!

A
New
of

Lady
Eng-

ftey

the

whole world aligned

The more especially so if amongst those so aligned they discover men who had preached the same ideal, tot now dreaded its concrete realizaagainst

them.

Roots of like under

all

the

soil

New
Eng-

Like

England, in me because I

am New

knd.

Lilacs

tion.

The Soviet Power: The Socialist Sixth of the World [1940], bk. II, ch. 3

WILLIAM SOMERSET

MAUGHAM

W. L.

MACKENZIE

KING-'
capi-

1874-1965 weak men he kid an exaggerated stress on not changing one's


Like
all

1874-1950 Labor can do nothing without


tal,

mind.

Of Human Bondage
People ask you only want praise.
1

[1915], ch. 39

capital nothing without labor, and neither labor nor capital can do anything without the guiding genius of management; and management, how1

for criticism,

but they Ib. 50

Stands the

lilac bush tall-growing with heartshaped leaves of rich green.

See Grantland Rice, p. 9623.

WALT WHITMAN, When


the Dooryard

Lilacs Last in

'Sec

Truman, Joint Declaration,

p. gSab.

Bloomed [1865-1866]

93 1

MAUGHAM
There is nothing so degrading as the constant anxiety about one's means of . livelihood. . Money is like a sixth sense without which you cannot make a complete use of the other five.
.

SERVICE

As
is all

far as I

can judge, with


give.

women

it

take

and no

There must be
liars.

some women who

are not

From Time [October

17, 1960]

Of Human Bondage,

ch. 51

ALICE DUER MILLER


1874-1942

The

mystic sees the ineffable,

and

the psychopathologist the unspeakable. The Moon and Sixpence [1919],


ch.
I

The white
Out

cliffs

of Dover,

saw

rising

steeply of the sea that

once made her


CliffS[I<HQ]

who it was that recommended men for their soul's good to do


forget

[England] secure.

The White
I

each

day two
it is

...

things they disliked a precept that I have followed


I

am American bred,
have seen

scrupulously; for every day and I have gone to bed.

have got up
16. 2

But
I

Impropriety

is

the soul of wit. 2

much to hate here to forgive, in a world where England ished and dead,
live.

much
is

fin-

16.4
Conscience is the guardian in the individual of the rules which the community has evolved for its own preservation.

do not wish to

ft.

PAUL RICHARD
1874-

16.

14
is

The vagabond, when


tourist.

rich,

is

called a

Do

you know

that conversation
in life?

one of the greatest pleasures it wants leisure.

But

The Scourge

of Christ [1929]

The Trembling

of a Leaf [1921],
ch. 3
indifference.

JOHN DAVISON ROCKEFELLER, JR.


1874-1960
believe that every right implies a responsibility; every opportunity, as
I

The
I

tragedy of love

is

16*

would sooner read

a timetable or a

catalogue than nothing at all. They are much more entertaining than half the
novels that are written.

obligation; every possession, a duty.

Ten Principles: Address in behalf of United Service Organizations,

The Summing Up

[1938]

New

York

[July

8 1943]
T

If a nation values anything more than freedom, it will lose its freedom; and the irony of it is that if it is com-

ROBERT WILLIAM
SERVICE
1874-1958
This
the Law of the Yukon, that only the strong shall thrive; That surely the weak shall perish, and
is

fort or

money

that

it

values more,

it

will lose that too.

Strictly Personal [1941], ch. 31

As mean

as cat's meat.

From THOMAS
Eighty Years of

F. BRADY,

New
1

The Mr. Maugham,


Magazine

only the
Dissolute,
1

fit

survive. 1
despairful, crip-

damned and

York

Times

\January 24, 1954]


See William James, p. 7933, and T. H.

pled and palsied and slain, Now this is the Law of the Jungle
and as true

as o3d

Hux-

And

the

Wolf

as the sky; that shall keep

it

may
it

prosper,

ley, p.

7$a.

but the Wolf that shall break


KIPLING,

must dk.

See Shakespeare, p. s6ob.

The Law

of the Jungle [1895]

932

SERVICE
This
is the Will of the Yukon how she makes it plainl

STICKNEY
Before the Flowers of Friendship Faded Friendship Faded.
Title [written 1930]

Lo,

T]ie

Law of the Yukon

Back of the bar, in a solo game, sat

Remarks are not

Dangerous Dan McGrew, And watching his luck was his light-o'as love, the lady that's known Lou. The Shooting of Dan McGrew,
St.

literature [said to

Hemingway]. The Autobiography of Alice B.


Toklas [written 1930]

my home
and
air

America is my country and Paris is town and it is as it has come


all

The Northern Lights have seen queer


sights,

to be. After
is.

anybody
is

is

as their land

Anybody

as the

sky

is

low

But the queerest they ever did see Was that night on the marge of Lake
I

Lebarge cremated Sam

McGee. The Cremation of Sam McGee,


St. I
is

or high, the air heavy or clear and anybody is as there is wind or no wind there. It is that which makes them and the arts they make and the work they

do and the way they eat and the way they drink and the way they learn and
everything. And so I am an American and I have lived half my life in Paris, not the half

Ar promise made

a debt unpaid. 16.

st.

Fate has written a tragedy; its name is "The Human Heart." The theater is the house of life, Woman the mummer's part; The Devil enters the prompter's box and the play is ready to start. The tiarpy, st. 12

that

made me but the half in which I made what I made. An American and France [1936]

In the United States there is more space where nobody is than where any-

body is.
This
is.

is

what makes America what

it

When we the workers, all demand: 'What are we fighting for?"


y
. .

The Geographical History

of

Then, then well end that stupid crime,


that devil's

madness

War.
Michael

GERTRUDE STEIN
1874-1946
Rose
is

America [1936] What is the answer? [I was silent.] In that case, what is the question? Last words. From ALICE B. TOKLAS, What Is Remembered [1963]

a rose

is a rose is a rose. Sacred Emily [written 1913]

TRUMBULL STICKNEY
Be
It's
still.

You are all a lost generation. 1 Used by Ernest Hemingway as an epigraph for The Sun Also
Rises [1926]
Pigeons

18741904 The Hanging Gardens were a Be Still [1905] dream.


in the country
I

autumn

remember.

on the grass alas. Four Saints in Three Acts


[written 1927]

Mnemosyne
The
swallows veering skimmed the golden grain At midday with a wing aslant and
limber;

Hemingway states that the remark was origittDy made by a garage owner in the Midi to Gertrude Stein in reference to his young raechante, who were "une generation perdue."

And

yellow cattle browsed


plain.

upon the
16.

933

STICKNEY

BUCHAN
I like about Clive that he is no longer alive. There is a great deal to be said For being dead.

We

woods at sang together in the


night.

What
Is

Mnemosyne

HARRY WILLIAMS
1874-1924
It's

Biography for Beginners Clan

It's

Goodbye,
It's

a long way to Tipperary, it's a long way to go; a long way to Tipperary, to the sweetest girl I know! Leicester Piccadilly, farewell,

JOHN BUCHAN, LORD TWEEDSMUIR


1875-1940

We can only pay our debt to the past


by putting the future in debt to
selves.
our-

Square, a long, long

way

to Tipperary,

but

my

heart's right there!

Tipperary [1908]*

Address to the people of Canada, on the coronation of George VJ [May 12, 1937]

In the Tree.

Shade of the Old Apple


Title of song
1

EDMUND CLERIHEW^
BENTLEY
1875-1956
Sir Christopher

Wren

Said "I
If

am

some going to dine with

He [Raymond Asquith] disliked emotion, not because he felt lightly but because he felt deeply. He most sincerely loved his country, but he loved her too much to identify her with the pasteboard goddess of the music halls . and the hustings. Austerely selfbeen used to hide his had he respecting, devotions under a mask of indifference, and would never reveal them except in
.

men.
anybody calls
I

deeds.

Our

roll

of honor

is

long, but

it

holds

Say

am

designing St. Paul's." Sir Biography for Beginners. Wren Christopher

no nobler

of us who the spirit of the land he loved. . He loved his youth, and his youth has
.

will stand to those figure. are left as an incarnation of


.

He

John Stuart Mill By a mighty effort of will

become

eternal.

Pilgrim's

Way

[1940]

Overcame his

natural

bonhomie

And

omy.

wrote Principles of Political EconIb. John Stuart Mill

the essential thing as demodistinguished from this or that

Democracy

cratic

government

was

primarily an

George the Third to have occurred. One can only wonder At so grotesque a blunder. 3 Ib. George

Ought never

attitude of mind, a spiritual testament, and not an economic structure or a inpolitical machine. The testament

volved certain basic beliefs


III

that the

which was personality was sacrosanct, the meaning of liberty; that policy
should be settled by free discussion; that normally a minority should be in ready to yield to a majority, which turn should respect a minority's sacred
things.

*Set to music by JACK JUDGE [1878-1958] A quatrain in the form Bcntlcy popularized is known as a clerihew. George the First was always reckoned Vile, but viler George the Second; And what mortal ever heard Any good of George the Third? When from earth the Fourth descended God be praised, the Georges ended!

Public
a career,

life is

regarded as the crown


it
is

of

and to young men

the

WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR, Epigram


hearing THACKERAY'S
[1855]
lectures

after

on the four

greatest
ture.

worthiest ambition. Politics is still the and the most honorable advenJ6
-

934

GREY

JUNG
Seldom, or perhaps never, docs a develop into an individual without relationship smoothly and

ZANE GREY
1875-1939
We'll use a signal I have tried and found far-reaching and easy to yell.
VVaa-hoo!

marriage
crises;

there is no ness without pain.

coming

to conscious-

The

Last of the Plainsmen,

eft.

Contributions to Analytical Psychology, p. 193


In studying the history of the human is impressed again and again by the fact that the growth of the mind is the widening of the range of consciousness, and that each step forward has been a most painful and laborious Ib. p. 340 achievement.

CARL GUSTAV JUNG


1875-1961

mind one

The dynamic

principle of fantasy

is

which belongs also to the child, play, and as such it appears to be inconsistent with the principle of serious work. But without this playing with fantasy no creative work has ever yet come to birth. The debt we owe to the play of
is incalculable. imagination Psychological Types [1923], eft. i, p. 82

The meeting
stances:

like the contact of


if there are transformed,

of two personalities is two chemical subis

any reaction, both


in

Modern Man

Search of a Soul [*933l> P- 57


of

of life sexualgreat problems are alof course, among others the primordial images ways related to

The

The

great

decisions

human

life

ftv,

of

the collective unconscious. These or compenimages are really balancing

have as a rule far more to do with the instincts and other mysterious unconscious factors than with conscious will

correspond sating factors the problems life presents in actuality.


This
these
is

which

with

not to be marveled

at,

since

and well-meaning reasonableness. The shoe that fits one person pinches another; there is no recipe for living that suits all cases. Each of us carries his

images are deposits representing the accumulated experience of thousands of years of struggle for adaptation
and existence.
Ib.
eft.

own
any

life-form an indeterminable form which cannot be superseded by

other.

Ib. p.

69

5, p.

271

We

stand the

should not pretend to underworld only by the intellect;

we apprehend it just as much by feelthe judgment of the ing. Therefore intellect is, at best, only the half of
truth,

and must, if it be honest, also come to an understanding of its inIb. conclusion, p.


is

Aging people should know that their lives are not mounting and unfolding but that an inexorable inner process forces the contraction of life. For a and young person it is almost a sin to be too much certainly a danger occupied with himself; but for the
aging person
it is a duty and a necessity to give serious attention to himself. 16. p. 125

adequacy.

628

The woman
that love

increasingly

aware

alone can give her her full stature, just as the man begins to discern that spirit alone can endow his life
with
tally,

in

All ages before ours believed in gods some form or other. Only an unparalleled impoverishment in symbol-

its

highest meaning.

Fundamen-

therefore, both seek a psychic relation one to the other, because love
needs the spirit, their fulfillment,

and the

spirit love, for

ism could enable us to rediscover the gods as psychic factors, which is to say, as archetypes of the unconscious. No doubt this discovery is hardly credible
as yet.

Contributions to Analytical Psychology [1928], p. 185

Tfte Integration of the Person-

[1939],

.72

935

JUNG
to anything that we wish first exchange in the child, we should amine it and see whether it is not somebe changed in thing that could better
If there is

ego and

will

be soul

far

beyond what

conscious ego could ever reach. From Psychological Reflections:

Jung Anthology,

ourselves.

10,

The

PerIntegration of the
sonality, p.

for

The Meaning Modern Man

p. 46: vol

of Psychology [1934]

285

The conscious mind allows itself to be trained like a parrot, but the unconscious

which is why St. not for not making God thanked Augustine
does

Emotion is the chief source of all becoming-conscious. There can be no transforming of darkness into light and of apathy into movement without emotion.

him

responsible

for his dreams.

16. p. 32: vol. 9,

Psychologcd
Arche-

Psychology md Alchemy

[1953], p. 51

Aspects of the type [1938]

Modern

unconscious is not just evil by nature, it is also the source of the highest good: not onlv dark but also light,

The

immune

not

only

bestial,

demonic

but

semflmman, and superhuman, spiritual,


the word,

flatter himself that he is to the spirit of his own epoch, or even that he possesses a full understanding of it. Irrespective of our con-

No

one can

and, in the "divine."

classical sense of

The Practice of Psychotherapy


The
little

scious convictions, each one of us, without exception, being a particle of the general mass, is somewhere attached to, colored by, or even under-

mined by the spirit which goes through the mass. Freedom stretches only as far
as the limits of our consciousness. 16. p. 143: voZ. 15, Paracebu*

world of childhood with


is

its

familiar surroundings

greater world.

The

a model of the more intensively the

the Physician [2942]


love rules, there is no will to and where power predominates, power;

family has stamped its character upon the child, the more it will tend to feel and see its earlier miniature world again in the bigger world of adult life. Natua conscious, intellectual rally this is not
process.

Where

there love is lacking. shadow of the other.


16. p. 87: vol. 7,

The one

is

the

From

Psychological Reflections: Anthology* [1953], vol. 4 p. 83: Collected Worfe, The Theory of Psychoanalysis

The Psychology of the Unconscious [1943]


instinct
will
is

Jung

The

erotic

something

This whole creation is essentially suband the dream is the theater where the dreamer is at once scene,
jective,

always questionable, and whatever a future set of laws may have to say on the matter. It belongs, on the one hand, to the original animal nature

be so

actor, prompter, stage

manager, author,

audience, and

critic,

of man, which will exist as long as man has an animal body. On the other hand, it is connected with the highest forms of the spirit. But it blooms only

16. p. c8: vol. 8, General Aspects

when

of

Dream Psychology

[2928]

spirit harmony. If

and instinct are in true one or the other aspect is or at missing, then an injury occurs,
least there
is

in

is the small hidden door deepest and most intimate sanctum of the soul, which opens into

The dream
the

which

easily slips into

a one-sided lack of balance the pathological


tht
cul-

that primeval cosmic night that was soul long before there was a conscious
i Edited

Too much of the animal disfigures civilized human being, too much
ture

makes a

sick animal.

by Jolande Jacob!.

93 6

MANN

THOMAS MANN
We
are
excited in

1875-1955 most likely to get angry and our opposition to some idea

All interest in disease and death is only another expression of interest in


life.

The Magic Mountain,

ch. 6

ourselves are not quite certain of oar own position, and are inwardly to take the other side.

when we
tempted

The

invention of printing

and the

Reformation are and remain the two


outstanding services of central Europe to the cause of 16. humanity.

Buddenbrooks [1903],

pt. VIII, ch. 2

Be2Uty can pierce one like a pain. 16. XI, 2


Space, like time, engenders forgetfulaess; but it does so by setting us bodily

Speech is civilization itself. The word, even the most contradictory word, preserves contact it is silence

which

isolates.

Ib.

A
affair

from our surroundings and giving back our primitive, unattached us Time, we say, is Lethe; but state.
free
. . .

man's dying is more the survivors' than his own. Ib.

change of air
if it

is

works

less

a similar draught, and, thoroughly, does so more


[1924],! ch. i

quickly.

call mourning for our dead perhaps not so much grief at not being able to call them back as it is grief at not being able to want to do
is

What we

The Magic Mountain

so.

ft. 7
clarifies;

Time cook, time


can

no mood
unaltered
16.

A man
yfet

not only his personal as an individual, but also, conlives

quite through the course of hours.

be

maintained

sciously or

unconsciously, the life of his I&. 2 epoch and his contemporaries.

Seven i$ a good handy figure in its way, picturesque, with a savor of the
filling to

The only
death
is

religious way to think of as part and parcel of life; to

mythical; one might say that it is more the spirit than a dull academic
Ib.

regard it, with the understanding and the emotions, as the inviolable condition of life.

half-dozen.

Ib. 5 divisions
to

Time has no
passage,
or

mark

its

is involved the unity of humanity, the wholeness of the human problem, which permits nobody to

In the

Word

sep-

never a thunderstorm bfare of trumpets to announce the


there
is

arate the intellectual

beginning of a new month or year. Even when a new century begins it is only we mortals who ring bells and fire
off

the political himself within the ivory tower of the


"cultural" proper. Letter * to the dean of the Phil-

and artistic from and social, and to isolate

pistols.

Ib.

osophical Faculty,
sity [January

Bonn

Univer-

1937]

steps

Order and simplification are the first toward the mastery of a subject
the actual

Hold
over
it,

fast the time!

Guard

it,

watch

enemy

is

the unknown.
16.

every hour, every minute! Unregarded it slips away, like a lizard, smooth, slippery, faithless, a pixy wife.

Human
n&Ore

only to will strongly than fate, and she is


16.
if

reason needs

fcfe

moment sacred. Give each and meaning, each the weight of thine awareness, each its true and due
every
clarity

Hold

fulfillment.

Opinions cannot survive no chance to fight for them.


'Translated

one has
16.
1

The Beloved Returns


Mann, who had
left

[1939]

by H. T. LOWE-PORTER.

in 1953, wrote rom Zurich, after being informed that his name had been struck off the list of Honorary Doctors.

Germany

937

MEAKNS

SABATTNI

HUGHES MEARNS
1875-^5
As I was going up the stair I met a man who wasn't there,

Love

consists

in

this,

that

two
greet
*

solitudes protect each other.

and touch and

Letters to a

Young Po$t

He wasn't
I

wish,

there again today. wish he'd stay away.

The

transform

future enters into us, in order to itself in us, long before it


jf>

The Psychoed

happens.

We're never single-minded,

HASEGAWA NYOZEKAN*
1875must direct our efforts towards turning in the reverse direction the cultural nature of the Japanese, which hitherto has had a propensity for the until it shows instead a intuitive, for the intellectual. propensity The Lost Japan [1952]

uaper-

plexed, like migratory birds.

The Duino

Ekgjet, 4

We

The most visible joy can only reveal itself to us when we've transformed it,
within.
If>.

Death is the side of life which is turned away from us. Letter to W. von Hulewkz

The war was started

as the result of a

A good marriage is that in which each appoints the other guardian of his
solitude.

mistaken intuitive "calculation" which transcended mathematics. believed with a blind fervor that we could triumph over scientific weapons and tactics by means of our mystic will. .

Letters*

We

the realization is accepted that even between the closest human


beings

Once

The

characteristic reliance

on

intuition

by Japanese had blocked the objective Ife. cognition of the modern world.

distances continue to exist, a wonderful living side by side can grow up, if they succeed in loving the disinfinite

tance between them which makes it possible for each to see the other whole Jfc, against the sky.

FRANK WARD O'MALLEY


1875-1932
Life is just one another.2

In
forces,

the difficult are the friendly the hands that work on us.
16.

damned

thing after

Attributed. (Also attributed to Elbert Hubbard)

of art are indeed always products of having been in danger, erf having gone to the very end in an experience, to
ther.

Works

where

man

can go no

furIb.

RAINER MARIA RILKE


1875-1926 Her smile was not meant to be seen by anyone and served its whole purpose
in

RAFAEL SABATINI
1875-1950 Born with the gift of
laughter and

being smiled. The Journal of

My

Other

Self

the sense that the world was mad, 3 and


that was his only patrimony.

He was
imate.

a poet

and hated the approxIb,


i

Scaramouche,

ch.

*From

Sources of Japanese Tradition, edited


[1960].

by William Theodore de Bary

The

phrase probably precedes both O'Malley

Translated by M. D. HERTER NORTON [1954} Translated by JANE BARNARD GREENE and M. D. HERTER NORTON. * Inscribed over a door in the Hall of Gradual* Studies, Yale University. The architect, Jotffi

and Hubbard.
Translated by JOHN LTNTON [1950].

Donald Tuttle, explained in a letter in The Yorker [December 8. 1934] his recoiling

Nw

from

938

SCHWEITZER

GATHER

ALBERT SCHWEITZER
1875-1965
Late on the third day, at the very

The Master Speaker

is

the Tear:

it

is

moment when, at sunset, we were maka herd of hippoing our way through there flashed upon my potamuses, the mind, unforeseen and unsought,
phrase,
1 . "Reverence for Life/' the idea to in Now I had found my way and world the of affirmation which now I ethics are contained side by side; of the ethical the that acceptance Inew with the \iorld and of life, together
.

the Great Intapreter, The House of a Hundred Lights. The Conclusion of the Whole

Matter

SHERWOOD ANDERSON
1876-1941
Everyone
they are
in the world is Christ

and

all crucified.

Winesburg, Ohio [2919]- The rhilosopher


I

ideals

concept,

of civilization contained in this has a foundation in thought.

am

a lover

and have not found


16.

my

Out

of

My

Life and Thought


[1949]

thing to love.

Tandy

the spiritual act Affirmation of ceases to live unreflecman which by and begins to devote himself to tively with reverence in order to raise life bis affirm life is to it to its true value. To
life is

WJLLA SIBERT GATHER


No
1876-1947 one can build his security upon
the nobleness of another person. Alexander's Bridge [1912], ch. 8

deepen, to exalt the will to live.

make more

inward, and to
16.
its

There are only two or three human stories, and they go on repeating themselves as fiercely as if they happened before.

Its

Truth has no special time of hour is now always.

own.
Ib.

had never

You don't live in a world all alone. Your brothers are here too. On Receiving the Nobel Prize

O Pioneers!

[1913], pt. II, ch. 4

The history of every country begins in the heart of a man or a woman. Ib.
I like trees

JOEL ELIAS SPINGARN


1875-1939 The gibe of European scholars that three sexes in America there are
men, women, and professors.
Creative Criticism and Other

because they seem more

resigned to the way they have to live 16. 8 than other things do.
I
tell

you there

is

such a thing as

creative hate!

The Song
Artistic

of the Lark [1915], pt. I


is,

Essays [1931]

growth

more than

it

is

RIDGELY TORRENCE
1875-1950
Of
all

of the sense of truthfulness. The stupid believe that to be truthful is easy; only the artist, the

anything

else, a refining

the languages of earth in which the human kind confer

great artist

knows how

difficult it

is.

16.

VI
1

collegiate Gothic, "a type of architecture that hid been designed expressly ... to enable

That
into

>eomen to pour molten lead through slots on their enemies below. As a propitiatory gift to my
gods
.

be happiness; and something complete


is

to

dissolved
great.
I,

My
1

Antonia 2 [2918], bk.

ch. 2

to their
1

and to make them forget by appealing senses of humor, I carved the inscription
.

Inscribed on Willa Gather's grave in Jaffrey,

New
It

Hampshire.
lifts

era the
Sec

door.**

me

to all

my

superlatives.

W. E. Charming,

p. 5443.

WENDELL HOLMES,

JR., letter to Ferris

OLIVER Grcendet

939

GATHER
Winter lies too long in country towns; hangs on until it is stale and shabby, old and sullen. My Antonia, bk. II, ch. 7
seems to me, should simplify. Art, That, indeed, is very nearly the whole
it

LITVINOV

SARAH NORCLIFFE

CLEGHORN
1876-1959
lie

The golf links

so near the mill

That almost every day

of the higher artistic process; finding what conventions of foim and what detail

The laboring children can look out And watch the men at pky.
Quatrain

one can do without and yet preserve the spirit of the whole so that all that one has suppressed and cut away is

IRVIN SHREWSBURY

there to the reader's consciousness as much as if it were in type on the page. On the Art of Fiction [1920]

COBB

1876-1944
I

hope

it's

nothing trivial.

and intimate quality of things made entirely by the human


irregular

That

New
[c.

hearing that hk bm, Charles S. Chopin of the

Upon

York World, w<u

02

hand.

1910]

Death Comes
In

for the Archbishop [1927], bk. I, ch. 3

It

smells like gangrene starting in a

Mexico he always awoke a ... He had noticed that man. young


this peculiar quality in the air of new countries vanished after they were tamed by man and made to bear har-

New

mildewed silo, it tastes like the wrath to come, and when you absorb a deep swig of it you have all the sensations of having swallowed a lighted kerosene lamp. sudden, violent jolt of it has been known to stop the victim's watch, soap his suspenders and crack his glass eye

vests

that lightness, that dry aro. .

matic

. one could breathe that only on the bright edges of the world, on the great grass plains or the

odor

right across.

sagebrush desert,

and wild and

free;

Something soft something that whis.

NRA

Definition of "corn ticker" grven 9 to the Distillers Code Authority

pered to the ear on the pillow, lightened the heart, softly, softly picked the lock, slid the bolts, and released the prisoned spirit of man into the wind, into the blue and gold, into the morning, into the morning! *
16.

CHARLES FRANKLIN KETTERING


A man
of

1876-1958 must have a certain amount


ignorance
to
get
any*

intelligent

IX, 3

where.

Only

solitary

men know

On

the full joys

his seventieth birthday

of friendship. Others have their family; but to a solitary and an exile his friends are everything. Shadows on the Rock [1931], bk. Ill, ch. 5
l

[August 29, 1946]


should all be concerned abort the future because we will have to spend the rest of our lives there.

We

Seed for Thought

[1949]

The moment

saw

morning shine high up


Fe,

the brilliant proud over the deserts of Santa


in

something stood

still

my

soul,

and

MAXIM MAXIMOVICH
LITVINOV
1876-1951
is

started to attend.

... In

morning of

New Mexico

the magnificent fierce one sprang awake, a

new part

of the soul

woke up suddenly, and the

D. H. LAWRENCE, old world gave way to a new. Neut Mexico [Survey Graphic,

strengthen the League of Nations to abide by the principle of collective

To

94

LTTVOTOV
jeca
tfcat

TOEVELYAN

...
is

to abide by the principle


1

peace GeSpeech, League of Nations, neva, condemning Italian aggression Ethiopia \July i, 1936]

indivisible.

POPE PIUS XJI [EUGENIC PACELLI]


1876-1958
Private property is a natural fruit of labor, a product of intense activity of

WILSON MJZNER
1876-1933
J4o

opium-smoking in Hotel Rand, New York, Siffi which Mizner managed [1907]

in the elevators.

Carry out your

own

dead.

Ib.

man, acquired through his energetic determination to ensure and develop with his own strength his own existence and that of his family, and to create for himself and his own an existence of just freedom, not only economic, but also political, cultural and religious.
Radio broadcast [September
If a i,

Life's a tough proposition, and the fost hundred years are the hardest.

Saying

because youTl

Be nice to people on your way up meet 'em on your way


16. (Also attributed to

worker is deprived of hope to acquire some personal property, what other natural stimulus can be offered him that will inspire him to hard work,
so

down*

Jimmy
it's
it's

Durante)

and sobriety today, when and men have lost and all they have left is their everything
labor, saving

many

nations

When you
plagiarism; research.
if

steal

from one author, you steal from many,


like a lady

capacity for work?

16.

16.

A.
After

S.

W.

ROSENBACH
is

Treat a
like

whore

and a lady
16.
love,

a whore.

1876-1952 book collecting

the

everywhere,

good listener is not only popular but after a while he gets to 16. know something,
It's

most

exhilarating sport of alL Boofe Hunter's Holiday [1936]

bottomed boat. 2

a trip through a sewer in a glass-

GEORGE MACAULAY TREVELYAN


1876-1962 and what he loves and builds have but a day and then disappear; nature cares not and renews the annual round untired. It is the old law, sad but

Comment on Hollywood
You sparkle with larceny.
You're a

Remark
to

A man

mouse studying
I talk

be a

rat.

16.

Why
1

should

to you? I've fust

not
life

bitter.

been talking to your boss. On his deathbed, to a priest [1933]


In an earlier speech at the League [September 5, 1935] during the Italian preparations for UK Branca, Litvinov used a similar phrase:

Only when man destroys the and beauty of nature, there is the
Grey of FdHodon [1937], bk.
I,

outrage.

ch. 3
Disinterested intellectual curiosity
is

"Tbe
It

thesis

of the indivisibility of peace.


clear to the
is

has

now become
war

whole world

the lifeblood of real civilization.


English Social History [1942], preface

that eacfe

ad

the

generator of

the creation of a preceding war new present or future


p.

wm."
See

Hafle Selassie,

io*oa,

and Wendell

WBliie, p. 10*53. *This was later

Walker as

"A reformer

adapted by Mayor James J. is a guy who rides in a glass-bottomed boat/


1

has produced a vast Education population able to read but unable to


.

distinguish

what

is

worth reading.
Ib. ch. 18

94

CROWELL

MALLOCH
tined to live for threescore years and ten, humanity, although it has been

GRACE NOLL CROWELL


1877-

God

wrote His

loveliest

poem on the
poplar tree.
i

born in a house seventy years


itself

oM

is

day

only three days old.

He made

the

first tall silver

Silver Poplars, st.

The Wilder Aspects Cosmogony

of

ANTHONY EUWER
1877As a beauty I'm not a great star. TTiere are others more handsome, by
far,

All the pictures which science now draws of nature and which alone seem capable of according with observational fact are mathematical pictures.

But my face I don't mind For I am behind it;


It's

it

the intrinsic evidence of his creaGreat Architect of the Universe now begins to appear as a
tion, the

From

pure

mathematician.

the people in front get the

The Mysterious
jar.
1

Universe

[1930]

Limeratomy

ROSE FYLEMAN
1877-1957 There are fairies at the bottom of our
garden!

Physics tries to discover the pattern of events which controls the phenomena we observe. But we can never know

what
nates;

this pattern

means

or

how

it

origi-

and even if some superior intelligence were to tell us, we should find the

The

Fairies, st.

The Queen
(She's a

now

can you guess

who

explanation unintelligible. Physics and Philosophy [1942]

that could be
little girl

she

steals
it's

Well

by day, but at night away)? 16. st. 3 me!


'

RICHARD
1877-

R.

KIRK

GODFREY HAROLD HARDY


1877-1947

Thrice blessed are our friends: they come, they stay, And presently they go away. Thrice Blessed

A
it is

mathematician, like a painter or a

poet, is a terns are

maker of patterns. If his patmore permanent than theirs,

because they are made with ideas. Mathematician's Apology

book's an inn whose patrons* praise Depends on seasons and on days, On dispositions, and in fine Not wholly on the landlord's wine.

Book's an Inn

[1940]

SIR JAMES
a very

HOFWOOD

DOUGLAS MALLOCH
1877-1938
If it's
If it's yours, If it's your

JEANS
1877-1946
Taking gloomy view of the future of tiie human race, let us suppose that it can only expect to survive for two thousand million years longer, a period about equal to the past age of the
earth.
1

your Mississippi in dry time, Uncle Sam, when it's wet


Mississippi in fly time, it's your Mississippi
yet,
st.

In flood time

Uncle Sam's

River,

Then, regarded

as a being desWilson.

Courage

is

to feel

Often quoted by

Woodrow

The daily daggers of relentless steel And keep on living. Courage, st.

942

PATRI

BURR

ANGELO PATRI
1877-1965 there is no death. The sense one In Kfc of a soul on earth lasts beyond his

The optimist

sees the doughnut But the pessimist sees the hole. Optimist and Pessimist

You will always feel that life departure. voice speaking to touching yours, that out of other vou, that "spirit looking
eyes,

YOSANO AKIKO
1878-1942

He lives on in your and in the lives of all others that 1 knew him. Keep Children from Funerals
life

things as familiar friends.

the famiEar you talking he touched, worked with, loved


to
in

my songs are brief, People think I hoarded words.


There
is

Because

nothing
fish,

can add.
soul swims without

Unlike a
gills.

my

[November

30, 1938]

sing

on one breath.

My Songs

CHARLES HANSON

TOWNE
1877-1949
are

LOUIS KAUFMAN

ANSPACHER
is

Youth,

there

countless

stories

spread

Marriage

that
in

relation

By gentlemen whose hair is gray. Believe them not, but me instead The Nineties were not really gay. Bdlade of Gentle Denid

man and woman


tual,

between which the inde-

pendence is equal, the dependence muand the obligation reciprocal. Address, Boston [December 30,

WOOLLCOTT
1877-1949
I I

WILLIAM W.

KARLE WILSON BAKER


1878-Let me grow lovely, growing old So many fine tilings do:
Laces,

am a One Hundred Percent American; am a superpatriot. I Am a One Hundred Percent


American, sL
i

and

ivory,

and

gold,

And

silks

EMILIANO ZAPATA
c.

need not be new. Old Lace: Let Me Grow Lovely


have grown
trees.

18771919
is

Today
better to die

taller

from walking

Men
knees!
2

on your

of the SouthI It feet than to

with the

Good Company

live

on your Attributed

AMELIA JOSEPHINE

McLANDBURGH WILSON
1915 Twixt the optimist and pessimist
fl.

BURR

The
l

difference

is droll:

Evea the death of friends will inspire us as


.

acfa as their lives. . . be incrusted over with

Their memories will sublime and pleasing

1878As one who looks on a face through a window, through life I have looked on God. Because I have loved life, I shall have no
sorrow to die.

thoughts, as with moss.

monuments are overgrown THORZAU, A Week on the Concord


their
1

A Song of Living,
From Modern Japanese
[1960].

st.

**d Merrimack Rivers [1849], Concord River


*$ec Roosevelt, p, 9733,

Literature,

edited

and

note.

by Donald Keene

943

CANS Y

DUNSANY

HENRY SEIDEL CANBY


1878-1961
can put our children on wheels we cannot give them the kind of home that any town provided in the Nineties, not at any
to see the world , but
price.

He who gives a
Always asks
it

passion flower back.

We

ALFRED EDGAR COPPARD


1878-1957

The h%e

of Confidence, ch. 14

Adam and Eve and

Pinch Me.

Skunk cabbages! a thousand sonnets died in that misnomer. Meditations in the Woods

Title of story [1921]

GEORGE MICHAEL COHAN


1878-1942
Always Leave Them Laughing When Title of song You Say Goodbye.

Truth is truth and love is love, Give us grace to taste thereof; But if truth offend my sweet, Then I will have none of it.
Mendacity,
it. i

Ere

this trick of truth

undo me,
to me.

Little love,

my

love,

come

Give

to Broadway, to Herald Square, Tell all the gang at Forty-second Street

Remember me
I

my regards
will

ADELAIDE CRAPSEY
1878-1914 These be Three silent things:

That

soon be there.

Give

My

Regards to

Broadway
[1904]

The Yanks are coming,

The drums rum-tumming everywhere,


Over There [1917]

The falling snow the hour Before the dawn ... the mouth
.

of

one
Just dead.

Cinquain: Triad

And we won't come back


over there.

till

it's

over
Ib.

What's

all

the shootin' for? The Tavern [1920]

EDWARD JOHN MORETON DRAX PLUNKETT,


LORD DUNSANY
1878-1957 came and they thing

GRACE HAZARD CONKLING


1878-1958
I have an understanding with the hills At evening when the slanted radiance
fills

A
A

new

could not

see,

new wind blew and


feel
it.

they would not

In His
let

Own

Their hollows, and the great winds

Countryr

st. i

them be,

May
and look down
at

you go

safe,

my

friend, across that

And

they are quiet

me.

After Sunset

word so brief flower can say it or a shaken leaf, But few may ever snare it in a song.

Invisible beauty has a

Ib.

wider than a hair, by which your people go From earth to Paradise; may you go safe today With stars and space above, and time and stars below.

No

dizzy way

To

build the trout a crystal

stair.

May You Go
of

Safe:

On

the

The Whole Duty

Death of a Mohammedan
Friend,
st. i

Berkshire Brooks

944

FOSDICK

MARQUIS
But have not
little

HARRY EMERSON
FOSDICK
1878The Sea of Galilee and the Dead Sea the same water. It flows ait made of from the heights d<wn, clear and cool, the roots of the cedars of Hermon and Sea of Galilee makes of Lebanon. The
for the Sea of Galilee has beauty of it, It outlet. an gets to give. It gathers in
its

maidens gone,

And

Lesbia's sparrow, 1 all alone? Per Iter Tenebricoeum

DONALD ROBERT PERRY MARQUIS


1878-1937

My

heart hath followed all


I

my

days
st. i

Something

cannot name.

riches that it

may pour them out

The Name,

to fertilize the again the Dead Sea with


jnakes
outlet. It

Jordan plain. But the same water horror. For the Dead Sea has no
gets to keep.

The saddest ones are those The jester's motley garb.


The

that wear
of Despair
tell,

The Tavern
and
it is

world hath just one tale to


very old, tale a simple tale

The Meaning of Service

[1920]

little

tale

WILFRID WILSON GIBSON


1878-1962 on to another, leads Qae song
Oac friend to another friend.
So

that's easy told:

"There was a youth in Babylon who


greatly loved a maid!**

News from Babylon

And similar goddamned phrases. Ballade of Goddamned Phrases 2


I

ni

travel

along

With a friend and a song.

pray Thee

The Empty
Daily bread.

Purse,

st. i

And give me
I

make my column
thus

read,

my daily bread.
Prayer

AD life moving to one measure

love you as

AH Life Moving to One Measure


it

New Englanders love pie! Sonnets to a Red-Haired Lady


[1922],

XII

Just

what
let

meant
.

to smile

and smile
all

And

my son
.

My

son . while

go cheerily and wondering

One boob may die, but deathless The royal race of hicks

is

the

When Ahab
They
sold

went to Askelon

him

What

stranger

would come back

gilded bricks.

to

me.
st.

Boob
There
will

Ballad

The

Return,

be no beans in the Almost


[1927]

Perfect State.3

OLIVER

GOGARTY
1878-1957

ST.

JOHN

The Almost Perfect State


dedicated to babs with babs knows what

Only the lion and the cock, As Galen says, withstand love's shock. 1
So, dearest,
If I

and babs knows why archy* and mehitabel [1927]


dedication
See Catullus, p. n4a. 2 Inspired by a protest from General Ian Hamilton, Commander of the Mediterranean Expeditionary Force [1915], against turning his
cables into hackneyed phrases.
1

do not think

me rude

yield

now to lassitude,
After Galen

Bx sympathize with me. I know You would not have me roar, or crow.

only gladiators died, Of heroes, death would


1 See

If

be

his pride;

See Robert Burton, p. 3iob. *archy a cockroach is unable to use the shift key on the typewriter for capitals and punctuation

Donne, p. 3073.

945

MARQUIS
oh i should worry and fret death and i will coquette there is a dance in the old
toujours gai toujours gai

MASEFIELD
but
if

you are a tyrant you can

arrange
to

dame

yet

things so that most of the trouble happens other people


archy's newest

archy and mehitabel

the song
there
is

ded

of mehitabel
procrastination art of keeping
is

always

the

a comforting thought in time of trouble when


it is

up with yesterday
ib
certain
is

not our trouble


ib

maxims of archy
had
ib

comforting thoughts

an optimist

much
have

guy

that has never

too

many

creatures

experience

both insects and humans


estimate their

own

value
irritation

what in hell done to deserve


ib

these kittens mehitabel and her kittens


all

by the amount of minor


they are able to cause

to greater personalities than themselves


ib pride

dance mehitabel dance caper and shake a leg what little blood is left will fizz like wine in a keg ib mehitabel dances
i

the females of

all

species are
ib

most
a farewell
it

dangerous
-with

when they appear to retreat

boreas

To
have noticed that when chickens quit quarreling over their food they
often find that there is enough for all of them i wonder if it might not be the same with the human race
like

stroke a platitude until

an epigram.

The Sun Did

pum

Publishing a volume of verse

is like

dropping a rose petal down the Grand

Canyon and waiting for the

echo.

archy 's

life

of mehitabel [1933]

B.

random thoughts by archy


so unlucky that he runs into accidents which started out to happen
to

JOHN MASEFIELD
I

somebody

else

ib

archy says

1878-1967 must down to the seas again, lonely sea and the sky,
all I

to the

And
And And

ask

is

tall

theres life in the old dame yet ib the retreat from hoUywood
it is a cheering thought to think that god is on the side of the best digestion x

ship and a

star to

steer her by,

the wheel's kick and the wind's song and the white sail's shaking,
a gray mist on the sea's face and gray dawn breaking.
a

archy does his part [1935] the big bad wolf


there
is

Sea Fever [1902],


I

rf. i

must down
call of

bound

to

be a

certain

amount
Is

to the seas again, for the the running tide

of trouble running any country if you are president the trouble happens
to vou
1

a wild call and a clear call that may Ib. st. 2 not be denied.

must down

to the seas again, to the

Give

me
also

a good digestion, Lord,

To
st.

And

something to

digest.

vagrant gypsy life, the gull's way and the whale's way where the wind's like a whetted
knife;

ANONYMOUS, A Pilgrim's Gracef

946

JtRk i KI T>

And

And quiet Mien the long trick's over.


If$ a

ask is a merry yarn from a laughing fellow rover, sleep and a sweet dream
all I

Road

rail,

Firewood,
trays.

pig lead, ironware,

and
fine

cheap

tin
st.

Cargoes,

Sea Fever,

Oh London
st.

Town's a

town, and

London

warm wind, the west wind,

full of

And London
the

sights are rare, ale is right ale,


air.

and

brisk's

birds' cries.

The West Wind


One road leads to London, One road runs to Wales,

London

[1902],

si. i

London Town,

st. i

When

Life knocks at the door

no one

My road leads me seawards To the white dipping sails.


Roadways,
$t. i

can wait,

When

Death makes

his arrest

we have

to go. 1

The Widow

in the

The schooners and the meny crews are laid away to rest, A little south the sunset in the Islands
of the Blest.

Bye Street [1912], pt. 2

What
I

No harm in
Ballad of John Silver
[1902],
st.

good can painting do to anyone? don't say never do it; far from that
sometimes painting just for
fun,

fun.

Keep

it

for

and

stick

to

what

To get the whole world out of bed And washed, and dressed, and warmed,
and fed,

you're at.

To work, and back to bed again, Believe me, Saul, costs worlds of pain.

Spit brown,
breast.

my

Dauber [1913], pt. II son, and get a hairy


Ib.

The

Everlasting

Mercy [1911]
street,

What am
salt

I,

Life?

thing of watery
cells,

And he who gives a child a treat Makes joy-bells ring in Heaven's And he who gives a child a home
Braids palaces in

Held

in cohesion

by unresting

Which work

they

know not why, which

Kingdom come.
Ib.

never halt,

Christ,

the

plow,

Myself unwitting where their Master dwells? Sonnets, 14


Bitter
it
is,

Christ,

the
indeed, in

laughter

human Fate
temptation

Of holy white birds flying after.


TTic

Ib.

When

Life's

supreme

days that
wise.

make

us happy

make

comes too late.


us

Biography

The Woman Speaks

grinquireme of Nineveh from distant


Ophir, Rowing home to haven in sunny Palestine,

When

custom presses on

the

souls

Who

apart,

seek a

God

not worshiped by the

With a cargo of ivory, And apes and peacocks, 1


Saadalwood, cedarwood, white wine. Cargoes,

herd, Forth, to the wilderness, the chosen


start

and

sweet
st. i

Content with

ruin,

having but the

Word.
Lines on the Tercentenary of Harvard College [1936]

Krty British coaster with a salt-caked

smokestack,
Butting

through the Channel mad March days, Wife a cargo of Tyne coal,
*SeeJ Kings io:*a, p. iga.

in the

nation's

But he has gone, memory and veneration,


the radiant, ever venturing on, n 350, p. *66b.

Among
947

Shakespeare, Hamlet V,

MASEFIELD
Somewhere, with morning, as such
its will.
1

SANDBURG

spir-

Two

years, ten years, and passengers ask the conductor:

On the Finish of the Sailing Ship


Race
Lisbon
to

Manhattan

What place is this? Where are we now?


I

tfuly 1964]

PAUL REYNAUD
We
shall

Let

am the grass. me work.


you the past
a
is

Grass [191 8]
a

I tell

bucket of

ashes.

win because we are the

Prairie

2
stronger.

The republic is
Radio Speech [September 20,

dream.

Nothing happens unless first a dream. Washington Monument by Nigfil

When Abraham

CARL SANDBURG
1878-1967
I

Lincoln was shoveled

into the tombs,

he

am

Do

the the mob people the mass. crowd you know that all the great work of the world is done through me? the People, the Mob I

the

perheads and the assassin ... the dust, in the cool tombs.

forgot the copin

CooZ Tom&s

[1918]

Take any
hero

streetful

clothes

and
tin

Am

of people buying groceries, cheering a


confetti
. . .

or

[1916]

blowing

throwing horns

and

butcher for the world, Tool maker, stacker of wheat, Player with railroads and the nation's

Hog

the lovers are losers if any get more than the lovers ... in the dust ... in the cool tombs. 16.

me if ... tell me
tell

freight handler;

Stormy, husky, brawling, City of the big shoulders. Chicago [1916]

Lay

Beat
Let Let

me on an anvil, O God. me and hammer me into


bar.

a crow-

The
on

fog comes
cat feet.

me pry loose old walls. me lift and loosen old

foundations,

little

It sits

looking

Prayers of Steel [1920]

over the harbor and city

Drum on
Fog [1916]
and

on silent haunches and then moves on.


Waterloo. Shovel them under and
I

Pile the bodies high at Austerlitz


let

Go

your drums, batter on your on the long cool winding saxophones. to it, O jazzmen.
banjos, sob

Jazz Fantasia [1920]

me work

am

the grass;

cover

all.

When

Look out how you use proud


you
let

words.
it is

proud words go,

not

easy to call

them back.
boots, hard boots. Primer Lesson

And pile them


Aiyl-pile

them high

high at Gettysburg at Ypres and Ver-

They wear long

dun. Shovel them under and

let

me

work.

Man is a long time coming. Man will yet win.


Brother may yet line up with brother: This old anvil laughs at many broken

*The reference is to the death of John F. Kennedy [November ss, 196$]. See James Russell Lowell, p. 6943. 'Nous vaincTons parce que nous sorames les
plus forts. The phrase became a war slogan.

hammers. There are men who can't be bought The People Will Live On [1936]

948

SANDBURG
Time
is

GABELL
ties

a great teacher.

to

ho can Sve without hope? the darkness with a great bundle of grief the people march. The People Will Live On

places the last stone and steps across to the terra firma of accom-

who

new understanding. The one

LOUIS
I

EDWIN THAYER
1878I

plished discovery gets all the credit. Only the initiated know and honor those whose patient integrity and devotion to exact observation have made the
1 last step possible.

As I Remember
rest

Him
20

fancy

when

go to

someone

will

bring to light Some kindly word or goodly act long buried out of sight; to you, just give But, if it's all the same

[1940],

eft.

ETHEL BARRYMORE
1879-1959
That's
all

me, instead, The bouquets while I'm living and the 1 knodcing when I'm dead.
to

there

is,

there isn't any

more.

Of Post'Mortem

Praises, $t.

EDWARD THOMAS
1878-1917
ers,

Added, with the permission of author THOMAS RACEWARD, as the curtain line of his play

Sunday
liv-

[1906],

starring

Miss

Banymore
life

As poetry is a criticism of life by so the epigram is a criticism of

SIR

by those

who have not

lived.

WILLIAM HENRY BEVERIDGE

Oxford [1903],

p.

195

JOHN BROADUS

WATSON

1879-1963 2 Simple effluxion of time. Social Insurance [1942]

1878-1958 Give me a dozen healthy infants, well-formed, and my own specified world to bring them up in and Til guarantee to take any one at random and tain him to become any type of spedoctor, lawyer, might select merchant chief and, yes, even beggarman and thief, regardless of his
daKst
artist,

and

mon man.

government in peace not the glory of rulers or of races, but the happiness of the comin

The

object of
is

war

IZ>.

JAMES BRANCH CABELL


1879-1958
I shall leisure. 3

marry
is

in haste,

penchants, tendencies, abilities, vocations, and race of his ancestors.


talents,

and repeat at Jurgen [1919], eft. 38

Behaviorism [1925], p. 104

There

no

faith stronger

of a bad-tempered
infallibility.

woman

HANS ZINSSER
1878-1940 The scientist takes off from the manifold observations of predecessors, and shows his intelligence, if any, by his ability to discriminate between the important and the negligible, by selecting
here

than that in her own 16. 39

The

optimist proclaims that

we

live

in the best of all possible worlds; the pessimist fears this is true.

and

The

Silver Stallion [1926], eft.

26

and there the significant steppinglead across the difficuland


Hazlitt, p.

*See Sir Francis Darwin, p. 8ib, and Sir Alexander Fleming, p. 9633. The Oxford English Dictionary traces the phrase "effluxion of time" to JOHN MOLUB, The
Living Library [1621]. See Shakespeare, p.
p. 3910.

stones that will


1

aiga,

and

Congreve,

See Martial, p. igga,

949

CABELL

EINSTEIN

No lady is ever a gentleman.


Something About Eve [1927]

Some

recent

work by E. Fermi and

LEE WILSON DODD


1879-1933

L. Szilard, which has been communicated to me in manuscript, leads me to expect that the element uranium

Much Much Much Much

that I sought, I could not find; that I found, I ooold not bind; that I bound, I could not free; that I freed returned to me.

may be turned into a new and important source of energy in the immediate fuCertain aspects of the situation
call for watchif

ture.

which has arisen seem to


fulness and,

necessary, quick action

Ronde Macabre

on the part of the Administration.


Letter to President Franklin D. Roosevelt [August 2, 1939] (ffte
letter "which resulted in

ALBERT EINSTEIN
1879-1955
Statement of the mass-energy
equivalence relationship
1

ment of government funds for development of the atom bomb)


This
gy]

assign-

new phenomena

[atomic ener-

The most
is

beautiful thing

we can
It
is

ex-

perience source of all true art and science. "What I Believe" in

the mysterious.

the

would also lead to the construction of bombs. ... A single bomb of this type, carried by boat and exploded in a
port,

might very well destroy the whole


together with
territory.

Forum

port,

some of the
However,

sur-

[October 1930]

rounding

such

not enougji that you should understand about applied science in order that your work may increase man's blessings. Concern for man himself and his fate must always form the chief inIt is

bombs

migjht very well prove to be too Ib. heavy for transportation by air.

As long as there are sovereign nations possessing great power, war is inevitable.

terest of

aH technical endeavors, con-

Einstein on the Atomic


[Atlantic

Bomb

cern for fee great unsolved problems of the organization of labor and the distribution of goods in order that the creations of our mind shall be a blessing and not a curse to mankind. Never forget this in the midst of your diagrams

Monthly, November

and equations.
Address, California Institute of

Technology [1931]
is nothing more than a refinement of everyday thinking.

I do not believe that civilization will be wiped out in a war fought with the atomic bomb. Perhaps two thirds of the people of the earth might be kitted, but enough men capable of thinking, and enough books, would be left to start again, and civilization could be re-

The whole

of science

stored.

16.

Physics and Reality [1936]


Physical concepts are free creations of the human mind, and are not, however it may seem, uniquely determined by the external world.
1

do not foresee that atomic is be a great boon for a long to energy time, I have to say that for the present it is a menace. Perhaps it is well that it
Since
I

should be.

It

Evolution of Physics [1938] Energy equals mass times the speed of light
original

race into bringing order into its international affairs, which, without the

man

may
it

intimidate the hu-

pressure of fear,

would not

do.

16.

squared.

statement is: If a body gives off the energy L in the form of radiation, its mass diminishes by L/C?." 1st die Tragheit
ernes Korpers

The

I shall never believe that dice with the world. 1

God

plays

From PHILIPP FRANK,


1

Einstein,

von seinem Energieghalt abhangig?

His Life and Times


See Anatole France, p. 8o2a.

[1947]

950

EINSTEIN

FORSTER

Lord
sons he
is

God

is

subtle,

but mali,

W.
It ain't

C.
fit

FIELDS

not 1

1879-1946
a
beast.

Inscription

in Fine Hall, Prince-

ton University

The
be
all

night out for man or Fatal Glass of Beer

who is called beEvery intellectual committees ought to the of one fore

Anyone who
can't

hates children

bad.

and dogs Attributed

he must be preafase to testify, i.e., for the sacrifice of his per... pgjed welfare in the interest of the culJaeal

On

the whole, I'd rather be in Phila-

delphia.

His own epitaph

This of his country. tejal welfare violates the spirit of Ifed of inquisition
.

EDWARD MORGAN
FORSTER
1879-1970
life is opening, our readings are secret. The Longest Journey [1907]

^Constitution. are ready to take If enough people to grave step they will be successful. If intellectuals of this counnot, then the deserve nothing better than the fey which is intended for them.
slavery

When

the book of

Letter to

William Frauenglass

Nonsense and beauty have close connections.


Ib.

[May
TTie

16, 1953]

unleashed power of the atom his changed everything save our modes rf thinking, and we thus drift toward
unparalleled catastrophes.

Railway termini
to

...
and

are our gates

the

glorious

Through them we ture and sunshine, to them,

the unknown. into advenout pass


alas!

we

From RALPH E. LAPP, The


stein Letter

Ein-

[New

Yorfe

That Started It All Times Magazine,

return. In Paddington all Cornwall is latent and the remoter west; down the inclines of Liverpool Street lie fenlands
illimitable Broads; Scotland is through the plyons of Euston; Wessex behind the poised chaos of Waterloo.

August 2, 1964]
Our defense is not in armaments, nor science, nor in going underground.
is

and the

in

Howards End [19*0],

ch. 2

Oar defense

in

law and

order.3

Ib.

Something deeply hidden had to be


behind things. Ib.

It will be generally admitted that Beethoven's Fifth Symphony is the most sublime noise that has ever pene16, 5 trated into the ear of man.

[autobiographical handwritten note]

Only connect! That was the whole of her sermon. Only connect the prose and the passion, and both will be exat alted, and human love will be seen

JOHN ERSKINE
1879-1951
The Moral Obligation to Be
gent.
*Jtaffimert
at er oicht.
ist

Intelli-

no longer. height. Live in fragments and the beast the and Only connect, monk, robbed of the isolation that is 16- 22 life to either, will die.
its

Title of

book [1915]

der Herr Gott, aber Boshaft


7o8a,

able

was published in the New Times [June 12, 1953]. Mr. Frauenglass been subpoenaed to testify before the Senate tetarail Security Subcommittee.

Sic Dostoevski, p. Einstein's letter

in some indescriblife. way to undermine her hold on she chanced when moment at a Coming to be fatigued, it had managed to mur-

The echo began

T*

mur,
exist,

"Pathos,

but are

piety, identical,

courage

they
is filth.

and so

See Lincoln, p.

6363,

If

value." Everything exists, nothing has one had spoken vileness in that place,

95 1

FOKSTER
or quoted lofty poetry, the [echo's] com-

LINDSAY
Priests are

no more
Sensible

necessary to

itK-

ment would have been the same "Ou-boum."

gion than politicians to patriotism.

the

Man's View

A Passage
The
historian

cj

to India [1924]

Religion

must have some conare not histoit

The

universe

ception of how rians behave.

men who

friendly. It is

hostile, nor simply indifferent,


is

not

yet

is

Ib.

Abinger Harvest [1936]. Captain

Edward Gibbon

The

life

of

humanity

How rare, how precious is frivolity! How few writers can prostitute all their
"I powers! They are always implying, am capable of higher things." Notes on EngSsft Character. Firbank
I

planet may yet come to an end, and a very terrible end. But I would have yow notice that this end is threatened in cmr time not by anything that the universe

upon

this

may do to us, but only by what man JJ. may do to himself.

VACHEL LINDSAY

EDMUND
Over
hill,

L.

GRUBER
we have
hit the

1879-1941
over dale, 1
trail

1879-1931 Booth died blind and still by


trod,

faith he

Eyes

still

dusty And those caissons go rolling along. Countermarch! Right about! hear those wagon soldiers shout While those caissons go rolling along. Oh, it's hi-hi-yee! for the field artilleree, Shout out your numbers loud and
strong,

dazzled by the ways of God, General William Booth Enter*


into
.
.

Heaven

[1913]
.
. .

eagle forgotten Sleep softly under the stone, Time has its way with you there, and the clay has its own.

And

where'er

we

go, you

wiH always

brave-hearted, Sleep on, that kindled the flame

O wise man,
to

know
TTiat those caissons are rolling along. The Caisson Song 2 [1908]

To

live in live in

mankind
a name.

is

far

more than

The Eagle That


Factory windows
are

Is Forgotten

[1913],

st.

JOHN HAYNES HOLMES


1879-1964 were Christians, there would be no anti-Semitism. Jesus was a Jew. There is nothing that the ordinary Christian so dislikes to remember as this awkward historical feet. But it happens, none the less, to be true. The Sensible Man's View of
If Christians

always

broken.

Somebody's always throwing bricks, Somebody's always heaving cinders, Playing ugly Yahoo tricks. Factory Windows, $t.

Fat black bucks in a wine-barrel room,


Barrel-house kings; with feet unstable, on the Sagged and reeled and pounded
table,

Religion [1933]
i

Pounded on the

table,

Battalion of the 5th the *nd Battalion in the Philippines. Gruber, then a lieutenant in the 5th, was asked to write a song that would symbolize the spirit of the reunited regiment. There are many variant wordings.
Field
Artillery

See Shakespeare, p. In April 1908 the

relieved

of Illinois 1893-1897], widely criticized to prwho tad doning, in June 1893, the anarchists been serving life terms since the Htyauifert riot in Chicago, May 4* 1886. Altgeld, in pit"the jtidge condoning them, delared that * ducted the trial with malicious ferocity.
1

ijohn Peter Altgeld [1847-19*:

952

LINDSAY
Beat

RIESENBERG

an empty barrel with the handle


of a broom.

ST,

JOHN LUCAS
1879-1934

The Congo
Then
I

[1914], pt. I

the Congo, creeping through the black, Cutting through the forest with a golden track. 16.
Hi*

saw

curate thinks you have I know that he has none. 1

no

soul-

My Dog

careful

what you do,

GEORGE WASHINGTON LYON


1879Worry, the interest paid by those who borrow trouble. In Judge [March i,
1924]

Or Murnbo-Jumbo, And all of the other

God

of the Congo,

Gods of the Congo, Mumbo-Jumbo will hoo-doo you.


16.

A bronzed, lank man! His suit of ancient Hack, A famous high top-hat and plain worn
shawl

DIXON LANIER

MERRITT
187^-

Make him the quaint great

A wonderful bird
figure that

His

bill will

men

love,

The prairie-lawyer, master of us all. Abraham Lincoln Walks at Midnight [1914],


They spoke, They spoke,
I I
st.

He can take in his beak


can.

is the pelican, hold more than his belicaa.

Food enough for a week, But I'm damned if I see how the

heli-

The Pelican

think, of perils past. think, of peace at last.

[1910]

One thing I remember: Spring came on forever, Spring came on forever, Said the Chinese nightingale. The Chinese Nightingale [1917], end
Planting the trees that would march

HAROLD MONRO
1879-1932

What shall we do, You without me,


I

How lonely we shall be!


without you?

Midnight Lamentation,
are better than stars or water, Better than voices of winds that

st. i

and train
On, in his
lake

They

name

Birnam

Wood
2

to the great Pacific, to Dunsinane, 1

Johnny Appleseed swept on. In Praise of Johnny Appleseed

Better than any man's fair daughter, Your green glass beads on a silver ring. Overheard on a Sdtmarsh

sing,

The more probable chance for me come in some little row where strikers are being shot down. ... I
wffl

long, dim ecstasy holds her life; Her world is an infinite shapeless white,

Till her

would be with the fool strikers, right or


wrong.

dr

tongue has curled the last holy

Then

Letter to Eleanor Dougherty

she sinks back into the night. Milk for the Cat, st. 8

[October 12, 1918]


1

Sec

Shakespeare, p. s85 b.

FELIX RIESENBERG
The
1

John

Chapman

Remember Johnny Appleseed, AH ^e who love the apple; He served his kind by word and deed,
IB God's

[1774-1847].

sea has always

1879-1939 been a seducer, a


not feminine, as

careless lying fellow,

WILLIAM HENRY VENABLE [1836Johnny Appleseed, st. 35


,

grand greenwood chapel.

There are things that even the youngest curate cannot explain. LEONARD MERJUCK, One Man's View [1897]

953

RIESENBERG
writers imagine, but strongly masculine in its allurement. The king of the sea, with his whiskers of weed

STEVENS

many
and

JOSEPH STALIN [IOSIF VISSARIONOVICH DZHUGASHVILI]


1879-1953
the sharpest and the est weapon of our party.
Print
is

his trident

resents the

and dolphins, main and gives it

truly repcharacter.

sea, like a great sultan, supports thousands of ships, his lawful wives. TTiese he caresses and chastises as the case may be. This explains the feminine

The

strong-

Speech [April
Dizziness from success.

19, 1935]

gender of

all

proper vessels. Vignettes of the Sea

Speech [March

2, 1950]

WILL ROGERS
All
I

thing about socialist competition is that it creates a basic change in people's view of labor, since it changes the labor from a

The most remarkable

know
you

is

1879-1935 just what

read in the

papers.
I tell

Prefatory remark
folks, all politics is apple-

shameful and heavy burden into a matter of honor, matter of fame, matter of valor and heroism.

Speech [June 27, 1930]


Hitlerite blackguards have covered Europe with gallows and concen. . tration camps. They have turned 1 a into prison of nations, and Europe
.

sauce*

The

The

Illiterate
is

Digest [1924],
as long as
else.

/?.

30
is

Everything

funny

it

happening to somebody

16. p. 131

this

they call the new order in Europe. Address to the Moscow Soviet

More men have been

elected

between

sundown and sunup than ever were elected between sunup and sundown.
16. p.
I

[November

6, 1942]

You cannot make


silk gloves.

a revolution with
Soviet

152

never

met a man

From JOHN GUNTHER


The writer man soul. 2
is

I didn't like.

Russia Today

Address, Boston [June 1930]

comedian can only

last

till

he

an engineer of the
is

huIh.

either takes himself serious or his audi-

ence takes

him serious.
Syndicated newspaper
article

single death
is

a tragedy, a milEon

deaths

statistic.

[June 28, 1931]


I

Quoted

statement

[for

not only "don't choose to ran" 1 President] but I don't even want

to leave a loophole in case I am drafted, so I won't "choose." I will say "won't


will

wars between inevitability in force. remains countries capitalist Last public statement [1952]
of

The

run" no matter how bad the country need a comedian by that time.
16.
I

WALLACE STEVENS
1879-1955
heard them cry
the peacocks.

Politics

takes lots with.

has got so expensive that it of money to even get beat


16.

Was it a cry against the twilight


Or
against the leaves themselves Turning in the wind,
i.
. .

My
the
boat.2

forefathers didn't

Mayflower,

but

they

come over on met the Remark

The

of nations.

a prboa is saying that Russia V. I. LENIN, On the Question of

National Policy (and elsewhere)

The

expression originated

in

La

Russit tn

*See Calvin Coolidge, p. 91 ib. 1 Rogers was of Indian descent.

$9 by ADOIPHE DE CUSTINE [1790-1857].


See Gorki, p. 8940.

954

STEVENS
as the flames Turned in the fire, tails of the peacocks Turning as the Tornea in the loud fire, Load as the hemlocks of the peacocks? Full of the cry Or was it a cry against the hemlocks? Domination of Black [1923]

Taming

Damned

Was
I

universal cock, as if the sun blackamoor to bear your blazing tail. Bantams in Pine Woods
jar in

placed a

Tennessee,

And round it was, upon a hill. It made the slovenly wilderness


Surround that hill. Anecdote of the Jar [1923], st. i Frogs Eat Butterflies. Snakes Eat Frogs. Hogs Eat Snakes. Men Eat
Hogs.
I
1

Twenty
Are

men crossing a bridge,

Into a village,

twenty
bridges,

men

crossing

twenty

Title of

poem

[1923]

lato twenty villages, Or one man into a village. Crossing a single bridge a of Magnifico [1923] Metaphors

had

as lief

be embraced by the porter

at the hotel

As

to get

no more from the moonlight


moist hand.
Figures in

Than your

Poetry

is

the supreme

fiction,

madame.
[1923]
ice

Two
Just as

Dense Violet
Nigfit [1923]

A High-toned

Old Christian

Woman

Let be be the finale of seem. The only emperor is the emperor of

Make

On

cream.

my fingers on these keys music, so the self-same sounds my spirit make a music, too. Peter Quince at the Clavier
is

The Emperor of Ice Cream [1923] Only, here and there, an old sailor,
Dnink and asleep in his boots, Catches tigers In red weather.
Disillusionment of

Beauty

momentary
is

in the

mind

The fitful
But

tracing of a portal;

in the flesh it
dies;

immortal.
lives.

The body
[

the body's beauty

Ten O'clock
I

Ib.

9 2 3l

Susanna's
strings

music touched

the bawdy

Complacencies of the peignoir, and late Coffee and oranges in a sunny chair.

Sunday Morning [1923],

st. i

We

an old chaos of the sun, Or old dependency of day and night, Or island solitude, unsponsored, free, Of that wide water, inescapable. Deer walk upon our mountains, and the
live in

those white elders; but, escaping, Left only Death's ironic scraping. Now, in its immortality, it plays On the clear viol of her memory, And makes a constant sacrament of
praise.

Of

Ib.

quail

Whistle

about

us

their

spontaneous

cries;

Sweet berries ripen in the wilderness; And, in the isolation of the sky, At evening, casual flocks of

do not know which to prefer, The beauty of inflections Or the beauty of innuendoes, The blackbird whistling Or just after.
I

Thirteen

Ways

of Looking at a
st.

pigeons

Blackbird [1923],

make
Ambiguous undulations as they sink, Downward to darkness, on extended
wings.
Chieftain

The

gongs rang loudly as the windy

booms
Hoo-hooed
it

in

the darkened ocean-

J6.

st.

booms
Sea Surface Futt of Clouds
[1923], II
i

Iffucan of

Azcan

in

caftan

Of tan with henna hackles, halt! Bantams in Pine Woods [1923]

See Ambrose Bierce, p.

955

STEVENS

Then the sea And heaven roDed as one and from


two

One's tootings at the weddings of


the
soul

the

Occur
transfigurings

as they occur.

Came

fresh

of freshest

The Sense

of

the

blue.

Hand Man

Sleigfrt-ef.

Sea Surface Full of Clouds,

[1942],

st. j

The motive
from

for

metaphor, shrinking

She sang beyond the genius of the sea, The water never formed to mind or
voice,

The weight of primary noon, The ABC of being,

Like a body wholly body, fluttering


Its

empty sleeves; and motion


cry,

yet

its

mimic

The ruddy temper, the hammer Of red and blue, the hard sound
Steel

Made

constant cry, caused constantly a

against
flash,
vital,

intimation

the

sharp r

That was not ours although we understood, Inhuman, of the veritable ocean.

The

The Motive

arrogant, fatal, dominant X. for Metaphor, st. 4, j

The

Idea of Order

<tt

Key West
st. i

To
Without
Idea.

gestures

[1936],

get at the thing is to get at

it as

Oh! Blessed m6n,

Rarage for order, pale

The

So-and-So Reclining on Her Coucft [1947], it 6

maker's rage to order words of the


sea,

The

President ordains the bee to be

Words

of the fragrant portals, dimly

Immortal.

starred,

The

And
In

of ourselves and of our origins, keener demarcations, 16. st. 7 sounds.


ghostlier
is

President Ordains the Bee to Be [1947], si. i


idea of the sun.

The inconceivable

Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction


[1947].*

Poetry

The Man with

the subject of the poem. the Blue Guitar


[1937],

You must become an

ignorant

man

XXTJ

am a

And
The

think in

native in this world it as a native thinks.


16.

And
And
The

again see the sun again with an ignorant

eye
see
it

XXVIII
question,

clearly in the idea of

it.

ft.

prologues are over. It

is

now,

death of one god


all.
is

is

the death

of
lb.

Of

final belief.

Must be

in

Sor say that final belief a fiction. It is time to

There

choose. Asides on the

Must bear no name,

a project for the sun. The sun gold flourishes but


it is

Oboe

[1942],

st. i

be
In the difficulty of what
to be.
16.

Light
Is

the lion

that comes down to drink.


[2942],
st.

The Glass of Water


A.
B.

The monastic man


losopher

is

an

artist.

The phisay, to-

\iolent order

is
is

Two

great disorder tilings are one.

an

disorder; order.

and These
st. i

Appoints man's place in music,


day.

Connoisseur of Chaos [1942],

But the

priest desires. desires.

The

philosopher
of

One's

grand

flights,

one's

Sunday

And not

to have

is

the beginning

baths,

desire.

lb. II

95 6

STEVENS
\Vc keep

CH'EN TU-HSIU

coming back and coming back


to the hotel instead of the
it out of the wind. Ordinary Evening in

poet looks at the world as a

man

To

the real:

looks at a

That

hvnms rail upon

An

New
IX

All

woman. Opus Posthumous. Adagfa Ib. history is modern history.


is

Haven
The
Stevens's note to

[1950],

Poetry

the

sum of

its attributes.

essential gaudiness of poetry.

Ib.

The Emperor of Ice Cream

In the world of words, the imagination is one of the forces of nature.


Ib.

thing in form is to be whatever form is used. A free fonn does not assure freedom. As a fann, it is just one more form. So that
essential
free

in

God

is

in

me
is

or else

is

not at

all

(does not exist).

Ib.

The world
Poetry
ble.
is

it

comes to

lieve

suppose, that I bein freedom regardless of form.


this, I

a force, not a presence.


Ib.

A Note on Poetry

[1937]
fig-

What makes the poet the potent


ure that
that

a search for the inexplicaF Ib.

or was, or ought to be, is he creates the world to which we


is 7

he

SIMEON STRUNSKY
1879-1948
colonization sentation.

too incessantly and without knowing it and that he gives to life the supreme
fictions

No

without which
it.

we

without misrepreCity [1944],


are
cfc. i

are unable to

conceive of

No Mean
of

The Noble Rider and the Sound

Words

Famous remarks
quoted
correctly.

[1942]

very

seldom
16.

other men, each all other women, this year -resembles last year. The beginning of time will, no doubt, resemble the end of time. One world is said to resemble another. Three Academic Pieces [1947]
poetry, and one's objective as a poet is to achieve poetry precisely as one's objective in music is to achieve music. There are poets who would rePoetry
is

Each

man resembles all woman resembles

38

LEON TROTSKY
1879-1940

The

literary "fellow travelers" of

the

Revolution.
Literature

and Revolution
[1923], ch. 2

The
Party
is

dictatorship of the

Communist

maintained by recourse to every


Terrorism and

form of violence.

gjrd that as a scandal and who say that a poem which had no
tance

would
impor-

Communism
[1924], p. 71

importance as poetry bad no importance at all, and that a poet who had no objective except to achieve poetry was a fribble and something less than a man of reason.
except

its

CH'EN TU-HSIIJi
1879-1942
pulse of modern life is economic and the fundamental principle of eco-

The

On

Selecting Domination of Black as his best poem


is

nomic production
pendence.

is

individual

inde-

Sentimentality

a failure of feeling.

The New Youth [December


1916]
1

Opus Posthumous

[1957].

Adagia

From

Sources of Chinese Traditton f edited


[1960].

Apoem
ofKfe.

should be part of one's sense


16.

by William Theodore de Bary


Party.

Ch'en was

the founder [1921] of the Chinese

Communist

957

GH*EN TU-HSIU
All religions, laws, moral and political systems arc but necessary means to preserve social order. They are not the

KELLER

wrestle during the next few days, for rf

such stuff

is

diplomacy made.* Ten Years in Jafxm

ment
time.

individual's original purpose of enjoyin life and can be changed in ac-

20>

cordance with the circumstances of the

Man's happiness in life is the result of man's own effort and is neither the gift of God nor a spontaneous natural
product.

have a phrase in English "straight from the horse's mouth." Ib. [October 19, 1939], Add, America-Japan Society

We

>93 2 3
*

The New Youth [February


1918]
his
lifetime,

ROBERT BROWNING HAMILTON


1880I

During

an individual
hap-

walked a mile with Pleasure.

should devote his

efforts to create

piness and to enjoy it, and also to keep it in store in society so that individuals of the future may also enjoy it. Ib.

She chattered all the way, But left me none the wiser For all she had to say.
I

walked a mile with Sorrow,

GEORGE ASAF
[GEORGE
It

H,

POWELL]

And ne'er a word said she; But, oh, the things I learned from her

When Sorrow walked with me!

1880-1951

Along the Road

What's the use of worrying?


never was worthwhile,
So, pack

up your

troubles in your old

BRIAN HOOKER
1880-1946

And

kit-bag, smile, smile, smile.

Pack

Up Your

Troubles in Your Old Kit-Bag [1915]

O youth foregone, foregoing! O dream unseen, unsought!


God
give

What life* your death has bought.2


AJD.
2919,5*. j

you joy of knowing

ALEXANDER BLOK
1880-1921
they march with sovereign tread, With a starving dog behind, With a blood-red flag ahead In a storm where none can see, From the rifle bullets free. Gently walking in the snow, Where like pearls the snowflakes glow, Marches rose-crowned in the van Jesus Christ, the son of man.

On

HELEN KELLER
1880-1968

my Utopia. Here I ant not disfranchised. No barrier of the senses shuts me out from the sweet
Literature
is

gracious discourse of my book friends. They talk to me without embarrass-

ment
1

or awkwardness.

The
but
it
is

Story of
oil

My Life
may

[1902]
ore,

The Twelve
Yes
T

[1918]

In a diplomat's soul you


usually

find iron

we

are

Scythians,

yes,

we

are

Asians.

Scythians [1918]

and in a whale of i the diplomat you'll find the whole equipment blubber of charity, the whalebone of flexibility,
the oil of commodity. A great diplomat it * FRANCIS HACKETT, Rah* regular Moby Dick. of ROGER B. MERRIMAN, Suleiman the M&gni&cent,

JOSEPH CLARK GREW


1880-1965
This
[sartorial

New York Times On a tablet at Yale


men who

[January

4, 1945]

convention]
I

is

a real

ing the Yale

University commemoratdied in the First

problem with which

shall

have to

War.

958

MACARTHUR

MARSHALL
It is fatal to enter any war without the will to win it

DOUGLAS MacARTHUR
1880-1964
The unfailing formula
of

for production

morale

is patriotism, self-respect, dis-

Speech, Republican National Convention \July 7, 1952]

cipline,

and self-confidence within a


with
fair

military' unit, joined

treatment

and merited appreciation from without. or It cannot be produced by pampering

not necessarily or even destroyed by hardship, danger, it can survive and decalamity. Though
coddling
is

an army, and

GEORGE CATLETT MARSHALL


1880-1959

The

refusal of the British

that velop in adversity


escapable

comes

and Rus-

as

an
it

in-

incident

of

service,

will

quickly to believe

wither and die if soldiers come themselves the victims of indiference or injustice on the part of fteir government, or of ignorance, personal ambition, or ineptitude on the
part

sian peoples to accept what appeared to be inevitable defeat was the great factor
in the salvage of our civilization.
Staff,

Biennial Report of the Chief of United States Army [Sep-

tember

i,

1945]

of their military leaders.

Annual Report of the Chief of Staff, United States Army, for the Fiscal fear Ending June 30,
I

If man does find the solution for world peace it will be the most revolutionary reversal of his record we have

ever known.

Ib.

shall return.

Our policy

is

directed not against

any

On

leaving Corregidor for Australia [March 11, 1942]

I have returned. By the grace of Almighty God, our forces stand again on

country or doctrine but against hunger, poverty, desperation and chaos. Its purpose should be the revival of a working economy in the world so as to permit the emergence of political and social
conditions in which
free

Philippine soil.

institutions

Upon
I

landing on Leyte [October 20, 1944]

can

exist.

Address, Harvard University

the old flagpole still stands. Have your troops hoist the colors to its peak, and let no enemy ever haul them
see that

\June 5, 1947], embodying the European Recovery Plan

(Marshall Plan]

down.

In

To Colonel George M. Jones and 5037-^ Regimental Combat Team, who recaptured Corregidor [March 2, 1945] war there is no substitute for vicAddress,, Joint

You can have all of the materiel in the world, but without morale it is
largdy
ineffective.

Military

Review [October
1948]

tay.

Meeting

of

Con-

spirit

gress [April 19, 1951]

not enough to fight. It is the which we bring to the fight that decides the issue. It is morale that wins
It is

remember the refrain of one of most popular barracks ballads of ftat which proclaimed most dav, PRJodlv that old soldiers never die; they
I still

the victory.

Ib.

the

steadfastness

just

fade away. I

now

close
1

my

career
1

and

just fade

away.

military Ib.

the state of mind. It is and courage and hope. It is confidence and zeal and loyalty. It is lan, esprit de corps and determina-

Morale

is

See

Anonymous, p.

tion.

16-

959

MENCKEN

HENRY LOUIS MENCKEN


1880-1956

The
tite for

virulence of the national appe-

Atlantic Monthly, perhaps gently but never rough by Emerson, speak, out of Charles Lamb.

jocose

so to

A book of Prefaces
To
the

bogus revelation.

The American Language


Philadelphia
is

[1919]

[1917], ch.

with an ear for verbal the man who searches painfully for the perfect word, and puts the way of saying a thing above the there is in writing the thing said constant joy of sudden discovery, of Ib. 2 happy accident.
delicacies

man

the most peck$mffia n of American cities, and thus probably leads the world. jj
t

the dull man who is always sure, and the sure man who is always dull.
It is

Prejudices,

Second

Series

[2920], ch. j
ever

If,

after I depart this vale,

Poverty pedal upon branches of human activity, not except16-4 ing the spiritual.

is

remember
soft
all

me

you

please

my

and have thought to ghost, forgive some sinner


at

and wink your eye


Epitaph.

From Smart

some homely
cember

girl.

Formalism

is

the hallmark of the naIb.

Set [De1921]

tional culture.

There are no mute,


tons,
1

a great legalizer, even in the Ib. field of morals.


is

Time

save

in

the

inglorious Mil hallucinations of


test of a Miltoo

poets. is that

The one sound


he functions

as a Milton.

The prophesying business is like writing fugues; it is fatal to everyone save the man of absolute genius.
Prejudices, First Series [1919],
eft.

Prejudices, Third Series


[1922], ch.
j

The
ties; it

public

demands

ten, in the arts as in life, there is actually no truth to be discovered; there is only error to be ex-

Nine times out of

certain-

told definitely and a bit this that is true and that is raucously false. But there are no certainties.

must be

posed.
Injustice
is
is

Ib.

relatively easy to bear,


Ib.

what
the

stings

justice.

The

grow the more I distrust familiar doctrine that age brings


older I

All successful newspapers are ceaselessly

wisdom.
Faith

querulous and bellicose. They never defend anyone or anything if they can help it; if the job is forced upon

may be

illogical belief in

defined briefly as an the occurrence of the


Ib. 14

improbable.

them, they tackle it by denouncing someone or something else. Ib. 13

To be happy one must be


fed,

(a) well

The great artists of the world are never Puritans, and seldom even ordinarily Ib. 16 respectable.

sordid cares, at ease in Zion, (b) full of a comfortable feeling of superiority to the masses of one's fellow men, and (c) delicately and

unbounded by

To be
take

in love

is

merely to be in a
to mis-

state of perceptual anesthesia

an

ordinary

young man

for

unceasingly amused according to one's taste. It is my contention that, if this definition be accepted, there is no

Greek god or an ordinary young


for a goddess.

woman
16.

country in the world wherein a man


constituted as
I

am

man

of

my

pe-

AH the more pretentious American authors try to write chastely and elegantly; the typical literary product of the countrv is still a refined essav in the

culiar weakness, vanities, appetites, and as he can aversions can be so

be in the United
I

States.

happy Going

further,
it

lay

down the

doctrine that

is

See Gray, p. 44ob.

960

MENCKEN
dicer physical impossibility for such a jaaa to live in the United States and

RICE

The booboisk.

Passim

sofbchappy. On Being an American [1922]


m

ALFRED NOYES
1880-1958
Forty singing seamen,
for to
If

The
and a

man

difference between a moral man of honor is that the latter

who was

puzzled

a discreditable act, even when it regrets has worked and he has not been caught.
Prejudices, Fourth Series [1924], ch. 11

know

the grog they dreamed they swallowed made them dream of all that followed,

Nothing can come out of an that is not in the man.

artist

Forty Singing

Seamen

Go down
far

16. Fifth Series [1926], ch. 5


Christian
hard

endeavor is notoriously on female pulchritude.

And

to Kew in lilac time (it isn't from London! ) you shall wander hand in hand with love in summer's wonderland.

The
lows,

Aesthetic Recoil
fel-

Barrel Organ,

st.

The learned are seldom pretty


and in

cases their appearance tends to discourage a love of study

many

The wind was a torrent of darkness among the gusty trees, The moon was a ghostly galleon tossed
upon cloudy
seas,

in

the young.

'The

New Webster International


Dictionary [1934]

The

And

The Gaseous Vertebrata who own, operate and afflict the universe have
treated

road was a ribbon of moonlight over the purple moor, the highwayman came riding
riding
riding,

Riding

me

The highwayman came


the old inn-door.

with excessive politeness.


[1940], preface

up

to

Happy Days

The Highwayman

annoys or injures B on the pretense of saving or improving X, A is


a scoundrel.

When A

The

landlord's black-eyed daughter, Bess, the landlord's daughter, Plaiting a dark red love knot into her

Newspaper Days: 1899-1906


a rule never to drink by daylight ^nd never to refuse a drink afI've
it
ter

long black hair.


I'll

16.

made

come

to thee

by moonlight, though
16.

hell should bar the way.

dark.

From
Conscience
warns us
is

the

New

York Post

[September 18, 1945]


the inner voice that

Calling as he used to call, faint and far away, In Sherwood, in Sherwood, about the break of day. Sherwood

somebody may be looking. Mencken Chrestomathy [1949]

GRANTLAND RICE
1880-1954

"Here are some people who read too modi: the bibliobibuli. I know some who are constantly drunk on books, as
ricm.

When
He

the

One Great

Scorer comes to

are drunk on whiskey or reliThey wander through this most ffiverfing and stimulating of worlds in a haze, seeing nothing and hearing
other

men

write against your not that marks

name you won

or lost

but
1

how you

the game. 1 played Alumnus Football

nothing.

Minority Report: H. L. Mencken's Notebooks [1956]

But just this line ye grave for me: '"He played the game.'* ROBERT WILLIAM SERVICE [1874-1958], The Lost Master

961

RICE
All wars are planned by old In council rooms apart,

F.P.A.

men

FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS [F.P.A.]


Christmas
is

Who plan for greater armament


And map
1 the battle chart. Sides Two of

War,

$t. i

Business.

1881-1960 over and Business is For the Other 364 Days


.
.

I've noticed nearly all the

Were

dead hardly more than boys.


16. st.

Up, to the

office

A Ballade

of

and so to bed. Mr. Samuel


.

4
Ruthlessly pricking our gonfalon bub-

RICHARD HENRY

TAWNEY

1880-1962 Industrialized communities the very objects for which it

Making

ble, a

Words
neglect
is

Giant hit into a double, that are weighty with nothing

worth

while to acquire riches in their feverish the means by which preoccupation with
riches can

but trouble: "Tinker to Evers to Chance/' Baseballs Sad Lexicon

be acquired.
Acquisitive Society [1920]

The

The

rich man has his motor car, His country and his town estate.

MARGARET WIDDEMER
1880I

He smokes a fifty-cent cigar And jeers at Fate.


The Rich

Mm,

st. i

have shut

my

little sister in

from

life

The

best you get

is

an even

break. 1

light for a wreath (For a rose, for a ribbon, across hair) .

and

Ballade of Schopenhauer'* Philosophy


I

my

shot a

The
souls

poem

into the

air,

Factories [1915],
cry to me,
I! It

st. i

It

Round my path they


unborn

little

was reprinted everywhere From Bangor to the Rocky Range


always credited to

And
I! st.

Exchange.
Frequently

God

of Life! Creator! It was

was

16.

bards of
all

rhyme and meter

free,

THOMAS RUSSELL
YBARRA
1880-

My gratitude goes out to ye


For
your deathless lines
Let's see

ahem!

now

them?
end So Sancho Panza

What is one of To a Vers Ubrvt


there
is

A Christian is a man who feels


Repentance on a Sunday For what he did on Saturday And is going to do on Monday.

Of making many books


said,

no
I.

and

so say

The

Christian

Thou wert my
friend

guide, philosopher

and

ALBERT JAY COOK


fl.

When

1917
2

only one is shining in the sky. ^ Lines on and from Bdrfleff's Familiar Quotations

It's

Heaven, Hell or Hoboken before next Christmas Day. Heaven, Hell or Hoboken

Go, lovely Rose that lives its little hour! Go, little bookei and let who will be
clever!

Sec Herbert Hoover, p. 931 a. Port of embarkation and return for the American Expeditionary Forces during World

Roll on!
er
*

From yonder
84b.

ivy-mantled

tow-

War

I.

See Albee, p.

962

F.P.A.

GUEST
For a
little

The

moon and
forever.

could keep this up

house

house of niy

own Out of the wind's and the rain's way. An Old Woman of the Roads,
st.

Lines on and from Bartlttfs Familiar Quotations

MARY ANTIN
So at
last I

1881-1949 was going

JOHN FREEMAN
to America!

going, at last! The boundof heaven soared. aries bant The arch A million suns shone out for every star.
Reallv, really

Who
And
At

1881-1929 may regret what was, since


I

it

has

made
Himself himself? All that

was

The winds rushed in from outer space, "America! Amerroaring in my ears,


ica!"

am,

The Promised Land

me

the old childish joy

now

lives in

[1912]

sight of a green field or a green tree. All That I I

Was

Am

JOSEPH CAMPBELL
1881-1944
As a white candle
In a holy place, So is the beauty Of an aged face.

EDGAR ALBERT GUEST


1881-1959
it couldn't be done, But he with a chuckle replied That maybe it couldn't, but he would be one

Somebody

said that

The Old Woman,

st. i

SIR

ALEXANDER FLEMING
1881-1955

Who

wouldn't say so till he'd tried. It Couldn't Be Done

It takes a

heap

o' livin' in

a house

t*

first

the lone worker who males the advance in a subject: the details may be worked out by a team, but the prime idea is due to the enterprise,
It is

make it home,

A heap

o'

sun an' shadder, an* ye somet*

times have

roam

thought
ual.
1

and perception of an

individ-

Address, Edinburgh

University

Afore ye really 'predate the things ye fcf behind, An' hunger fer 'em somehow, with *em Home allus on yer mind.

['95 1 !

Let Let

me be a little kinder, me be a little blinder


the faults of those around me,

PADRAIC COLUM
1881-1972
Years hence, in rustic speech, a phrase,

To
Let

me

praise a little more.

Creed

I'd rather see a

sermon than hear one

As

in

wild earth a Grecian vase!

Poor Scholar of the Forties


as a swan. I Shall Not Die for

any day; Fd rather one should walk with


than merely
tell

me

woman shapely
And And
l

the way.

Sermons

We See
isn't it

Thee
In this bright
little

am praying God on high, I am praying Him night and


Darwin,
p. Sijb,

package,

now

odd?
day,

YouVe

dime's worth of something

'"

See Sir Francis

and Hans

known

only to God!

The Package

of Seeds

963

HAZARD

PICASSO
tion of

JOHN EDWARD HAZARD


Ain't It

Human
.
.

1881-1935 Awful, Mabel!


Title of

General
1948.

Assembly
.

Rights, approved in ihc of December 10,

Tftie

document

represents
of

book

an important step on the path towards


the the
juridical-political

organization

POPE JOHN XXIII [ANGELO GIUSEPPE RONCALLI]


1881-1963

world community. For in it, in most solemn form, the dignity of a person is acknowledged to all human
beings;

and

as a consequence there

fa

The
ly

social

progress,

and peace of each country


connected with the
order, security countries.

order, security are necessari-

social progress,

proclaimed, as a fundamental right, the free movement in search for right of truth and in the attainment of moral good and of justice, and also the right
to a dignified
life.

and peace

of

all

other

Pacem

in

Term

At the present day no political comintermunity is able to pursue its own ests and develop itself in isolation, because the degree of its prosperity and and a comdevelopment is a reflection of prosperity the of degree ponent part and development of all other political
communities.

The

representative

of

the highest
is

of the earth spiritual authority

glad,

indeed boasts, of being the son of a humble but robust and honest laborer. Remark to the Mayor of Fleurysur-Loire.

From Wit and

Wis-

of Good Pope Jo/in, collected by Henri Fesquet [1963]

dom

Pacem

in

Terns

[Encyclical letter, April 11, 1963]

PABLO PICASSO
1881For me, a painting is a dramatic action in the course of which reality finds itself split apart. For me, that dramatic
action takes precedence over all other considerations. The pure plastic act is

There exists an intrinsic connection between the common good on the one hand and the structure and function of The public authority on the other. moral order, which needs public authority in

order to promote the

common
also

good in human society, requires that the authority be effective in attaining that end. . . . Today the universal common good

only secondary as far as Fm concerned. counts is the drama of that plastic act, the moment at which the universe comes out of itself and meets its

What
own

destruction.

dimenposes problems of world-wide sions, which cannot be adequately tackled or solved except by the efforts of a widepublic authorities endowed with ness of power, structure and means of the same proportions: that is, of public authorities which are in a position

From FRAN^OISE GILOT AND CARLTON LAKE, Life With Picasso [1964], pt- I

When
to

was a

child,

my

mother

said

me, be a general. you'll end up


Picasso.

"If you

become a soldier youTI If you become a monk


I

as the Pope." Instead

operate in an effective manner on a world-wide basis. The moral order itself, therefore, demands that
to
es-

became a painter and wound up

as

such a form of public authority be


tablished.

it's

Painting isn't an aesthetic operation; a form of magic designed as a medi-

ator

between
us, a

this strange hostile world

An

act

of the highest importance

and

way

performed by the United Nations OrDeclaraganization was the universal

giving form to our


desires.

of seizing the power by terrors as well as our


16.

VI

964

PICASSO

BRALEY
plexity

Jus

am only a public entertainer who Remark understood his time.

and its centrality . the overthrow of equilibrium, detaching the mind, fulfilled at last, from its material
.

WILLIAM TEMPLE
1881-1944 structural organization no is There of society which can bring about the of God on coming of the Kingdom can be perearth, since all systems verted by the selfishness of man. The Malvern Manifesto *

matrix, so that

it

will

henceforth rest
.

with

all its

weight on God-Omega

point simultaneously or emergence and emersion, of maturation and


critical

evasion,

The Phenomenon

of

Man,

bk, TV,

ch. 3, sec. 3

We

have only to believe.

And

the

Human

status

ought not to depend

apon the changing nomic process.

demands of the

eco16.

more threatening and irreducible reality appears, the more firmly and desperately must we believe. Then, little by little,

we

PIERRE TEILHARD DE CHARDIN2


If

shall see the universal horror unbend, and then smile upon us, and then take us in its more than human arms. The Divine Milieu [1957],

pt

Ill, eft. 3, sec.

there

1881-1955 were no internal propensity

to unite,

even at a prodigiously rudiindeed in the molecule level mentary


ble for
us,
it would be physically impossilove to appear higher up, with

PELHAM GRENVILLE

WODEHOUSE
1881-

itself

in

"hominized" form.

Driven

spoke with a certain what-is-it in his voice, and I could see that, if not
actually disgruntled,

He

by the forces of love, the fragments of the world seek each other so that the world may come into being.

he was

for

from

being gruntled.

The Code of the Woosten

The Phenomenon
Love alone
is

[1955], bk. IV, ch. 2, sec. 2

of

Man

REGINALD ARKELL
Actual evidence

capable of uniting liva way as to complete ing beings in such and fulfill them, for it alone takes them
and joins
instant

But

them by what is deepest in Does not love every themselves.


. .

my
son

1882-1959 I have none, aunt's charwoman's

sister's

achieve all around us, in the couple or the team, the magic feat
.

Heard a policeman, on his beat, Say to a housemaid in Downing Street

of
if

"personalizing"
that
is

by

totalizing?

And

That he had
friend,

brother,

who had

what

a small scale 7

peat this

can achieve daily on it not reone day on world-wide diit

Who

why should

end.

knew when the war was going to All the Rumors [1916]

mensions?

Ifc.

The end of the world: the wholesale


internal introversion

BERTON BRALEY
1882-1966

upon itself of the which has aoosphere, simultaneously reached the uttermost limit of its com1

Drawn up by a Conference of the Province


1941; signed for the Conthen Archbishop of York Archbishop of Canterbury).
10,

of York, January ference by


(later

The grammar has a rule absurd Which I would call an outworn myth: "A preposition is a word You mustn't end a sentence with!" *

Temple,

No Rule to Be
i

Afraid Of, sL

'Translated by

BERNARD WALL.

See Churchill, p. 9253.

965

BRALEY

EDDINGTON
cal laboratory were closed and the p*. tient and resourceful energy displayed in them transferred to the lost ait of

And

so they sailed away, these three,

Mencken, Nathan

And God. 1
Three Minus One,
st, i

getting

mula

for

on together and finding the for* making both ends meet in tic

Back of the beating hammer By which the steel is wrought, Back of the workshop's clamor

scale of

human life. Much, of course, we should lose by this universal scienbut human happitific holiday
. .
.

The seeker may find the thought. The Thinker, st.


the dreamer Back of the job Who's making the dream come
true!

ness would not necessarily suffer. Sermon, to the British Association for the Advancement of

Science

[Leeds,

September

4,

1927]

It. st.

GEORGES BRAQUE
1882-1963
Art upsets, science reassures. Penstes sur
I*

JOHN DRINKWATER
1882-1937
This be

my pilgrimage and goal,

Art

Daily to march and find

Truth
invented.

exists,

be only falsehood has to


Ib-

The secret phrases of the soul, The evangels of the mind.


Vocation

And

not a

girl

goes walking

PERCY WILLIAMS

BRIDGMAN
1882-1961

Along the Cotswold lanes But knows men's eyes in April Are quicker than their brains. Cotswold Lovr
Grant us the will to fashion as we feel, Grant us the strength to labor as we know, Grant us the purpose, ribbed and edged
with
steel,

find the length of an object, we to have perform certain physical operaof length is theretions. The

To

concept

fore fixed

when

length

is

measured are

the operations by which fixed: that is, the

much as concept of length involves as and nothing more than the set of operations by which length is determined. The Lope
of

To

strike the blow.

Prayer,

st.

Modem

Physics

SIR

1*9*7]

ARTHUR STANLEY EDDINGTON


1882-1944

BURROUGHS, BISHOP OF RIPON


1882-1934 get on very happily if aviation, wireless, television and the like advanced no further than at presDare I even suggest, at the ent. risk of being lynched by some of my
After
all

EDWARD ARTHUR

we could

hearers, that the

sum

of

human

happi-

one thing for the human mind to extract from the phenomena of nature the laws which it has itself put into to them; it may be a far harder thing extract laws over which it has no control. It is even possible that laws which have not their origin in the mind maybe irrational, and we can never succeed in formulating them. Space, Time, and Gravitation
It is

ness would not necessarily be reduced if for ten years every physical and chemii

[1920]

We

have found that where

science

See Eugene Field, p.

8ob.

has progressed the farthest, the mind

966

EDDINGTON
has

HAGEDORN
I know of no title that I deem more honorable than that of Professor of the Harvard Law School.

bat

regained

from

nature

that

which the

mind put

into nature.

have found a strange footprint shores of the unknown. tie go have devised profound theories, one afaccount for its origin. At tei another, to in reconstructlast we have succeeded
ing

We

We

Of Law and

Life

and Other

Thing? [1965]

the creature that

made

the foot-

JEAN GIRAUDOUX
There
tion.

print.

And

our own. Space, Time, and Gravitation


lo! it is

are truths

1882-1944 which can

kill

a naElectra

FELIX

FRANKFURTER
1882-1965
nulli-

The [Fifteenth] Amendment


fies

Faithful women are all alike, they think only of their fidelity, never of their husbands.

sophisticated "

d modes

well as simpleof discrimination.


as

Amphitryon 38 [1929]

Lane

v.

Wilson, 307

US.

268,

SAMUEL GOLDWYN
1882Include

[*939l

The history of liberty has largely been the history of the observance of
piocedural safeguards. v. United States,

me out.

Saying

In two words: im-possible.

McNabb

318

U.S. 332, 347 [1943]

From ALVA JOHNSTON, The Great Goldwyn

A
paper
I

verbal
it's

One who belongs to the most


and persecuted

vilified

contract isn't worth written on.


it all

the
16.

minority in history is act Efcely to be insensible to the freedoms guaranteed by our Constitution. But as judges we are neither Jew nor Gentile, neither Catholic nor ag.

read part of

the

wav through.
16.

would be sticking

my

head in a
16.

nostic.

moose.
If

Flag Salute Cases, 319 17.S. 624, 646 [1943]


Courts ought not to enter this political

you can't give

honor, will you give

me me

your word of your promise?


ft.

thicket.

Colegrove

v.

Green, 328 U.S. 9^ 55 6

HERMANN HAGEDORN
The bomb
It

After

all,

this is

aid

mate judicial bureau.

the Nation's ultitribunal, not a super-legalv.

Uveges

Pennsylvania, 335 U.S. 437. 449


re-

1882-1964 fell on Hiroshima fell on America too. fell on no city, no munition plants, no docks.
that
lic

It erased

buildings, reduced

no church, vaporized no pubno man to

In a
fef

democratic societv like ours,

his atomic elements.

must come through an aroused

But

it fell, it fell.

poplar conscience that sears the conscience of the people's representatives. Baker v. Can, 369 US. 186, 270
[1962]

It burst. It

shook the land.

God have mercy on our children. God have mercy on America. The Bomb That Fell on America

967

HALSEY-

JOYCE
grave and constant in human sufferings and unites it with the human sufferer

WILLIAM FREDERICK
HALSEY, JR.
1882-1959
Attack
Attack. Repeat Dispatch to the South Pacific Force (October 26, 3942) before the Battle of Santa Cruz
Islands

A Portrait of the Artist <s


Young

Man

Welcome,

[1916],

eft.

life! I

go to encounter

for the millionth time tne reality of eiperience and to forge in the smithv of my soul the uncreated conscience of my
race.

Hit hard, hit

1 fast, hit often.

Old
-war

father,
Ib.

Formula

for

waging

now and

old artificer, stand ever in good stead.

me

Send them our


tude.

latitude

and

Concluding words of Stephen


[MoIK
[1922]

longi-

Retort to the enemy's guestion, "Where is the American Fleet?"

My

patience are exhausted


Ulysses
1

Bloom],

[October 1944]

Our
nese

ships have been salvaged

and are

A man of genius makes no mistake*. His errors are volitional and are the
portals of discovery.
jj a
I

retiring at high
fleet.

speed toward the Japa-

And

yes

said yes

will Yes.

Radio message [October 1944] after Japanese claims that most of the VS. Third Fleet had either been sunk or had retired

16. Last words

Can't hear with bawk of bats, afl thim liffeying waters of. Ho, talk save us! My foos won't moos. I feel as old as

yonder elm.

Shem?

JAMES JOYCE
He
1882-1941 was outcast from life's
Dubliners [1916],
feast.

hawks head halls.


stone. Tell

tale told of Shaun or All Livia's daughter-sons. Dark hear us. Night! Night! My ho
I

feel as

me

heavy

as yonder

A Painful Case
over Ireland. It

were

Shem

of John or Shaun? Who and Shaun the living sons

Snow was
was
falling

general

all

or daughters of? Night now! Tell me, tell me, tell me, elm! Night night! Tel-

on every part of the dark central plain, on the treeless hills, fall-

metale of stem or stone. Beside


waters
of.

the

rivering waters of, hitherandthithering

ing softly upon the Bog of Allen and, farther westward, softly falling into the dark mutinous Shannon waves. It was
faffing,

Night!

Finnegans

Wake

[1939],

pt

(end)
I bitter passing out. ending! Fll slip away before they're up. Theyll never see. Nor know. Nor miss me. And
it's old and old it's sad and old it's sad and weary I go back to you, my coH

too,

upon every

part
hill

of the

lonely churchyard

on the

am

where

Michael Furey lay buried. It lay thickly drifted on the crooked crosses and headstones, on the spears of the little gate, on the barren thorns. His soul swooned slowly as he heard the snow falling faintly through the universe and
fointly falling, like the descent of their
last

father,
1

my

cold

mad

father,

my

cold

In respect of the recurrent emergence of the theme of sex in the minds of his character!, it

end, upon dead.


Pity

all

the living and the


16.

The Dead

must always be remembered that his locate w Celtic and his season spring . whilst in Ban?
. .

mind
1

is the feeling which arrests the in the presence of whatsoever is

places the effect of Ulysses on the reader undoubtedly is somewhat emetic, nowhere does it tend to be an aphrodisiac. Ulysses may, therefore, be

admitted into the United

States.

M. WOOLSEY,

U. u.

JUDGE JOB*

One Book

Called

Sec Grant,

5 Federal Supplement 182, 184 [1933}

JOYCE
tea*}'

MILNE

the

mere
of

father, size of
it,

till

the near sight of

aioyles
l^asilt

him, the moyles and moananoaning, makes me

MARQUESS OF LOTHIAN*
1882-1940

PHILIP HENRY KERR,


A limitation of armaments
by

saltsick

I your arms,

and I rush, my only, into see them rising! Save me

ftom those therrble prongs! Two more. OaetwQ moremens more. So. Avelaval.

cal

appeasement.
Letter to

politi-

My leaves have drifted from me. All. But one clings still. Ill bear it on me.
To remind
morning,
fair!

The Times (London) [May 1934]

me

of.

Lff!

So

soft

this

ours.

taddv, like
If I

Carry me along, you done through the toy


Yes.

JACQUES MARITAIN
1882son
In the modern social order, the peris sacrificed to the individual. The

seen him bearing down on me now under whitespread wings like he'd come from Arkangels, I sink I'd die
over his feet, humbly dumbly, washup. Yes, tid. There's only where. First. pass through grass behush the bush to. Whish! gull. Gulls. Far calls. Coming, far! End here. Us

individual

down

is given universal suffrage, equality of rights, freedom of opinion;

to

while the person, isolated, naked, with


social armor to sustain and protect him, is left to the mercy of all the devouring forces which threaten the life of the soul, exposed to relentless actions

We

no

then.

Finn, again!

Take. Bussoftlhee,

mememormee!
a

The keys to. Given! A way a lone a last bved a long the Finnegans Wake, pt. IV

Till thousendsthee. Lps.

and and

reactions
appetites.

of conflicting interests ... It is a homicidal

civilization.

Three Reformers [1925]

ALAN ALEXANDER MILNE


1882-1956 Hush! Hush! Whisper who dares! Christopher Robin is saying his prayers.

FIORELLO H. LAGUARDIA
1882-1947
Ticker tape ain't spaghetti.

When We Were

Very Young

Speech, United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration

[1924]. Vespers

[March 29, 1946]

They're changing guard at Buckingham Palace Christopher Robin went down with 16. Buckingham Palace Alice.

WINIFRED MARY LETTS


1882I

saw the spires of Oxford

As I was passing by, The gray spires of Oxford

My

Against a pearl-gray sky. heart was with the Oxford

men
si. i

The King asked The Queen, and The Queen asked The Dairymaid: "Could we have some butter for The Royal slice of bread?" 16. The King's Breakfast
Nobody, my darling, Could call me

Who
That

went abroad to

die.

The
God once

Spires of Oxford,

A fussy man

We kam in Holy writ.

loved a garden
*

BUT
One

And seeing gardens in the spring I wcH can credit it.


Stephen's Green, sL
i

See Winston Churchill, p. gssa. of the most portentous slogans of the KONRAD HEIDEN, Der period was coined here.

Fuhrer

[1944]. P- 7*4

969

MILNE
I

ROOSEVELT

do

like

little

bit of butter to

my
I

SAM RAYBURN
1882-1961
like to

bread!

When We Were
What
shall
I

Very Young. The Kings Breakfast


call

On
J.

make running
Conversation.

water waft.

From VALTOS

my

dear

little

YOUNG, The

Speaker'$

dormouse? His eyes are small, but his tail is e-nor16. The Christening mouse.
Christopher Robin goes Hoppity, hoppity, Hoppity, hoppity, hop.

The

greatest domestic problem fao

ing our country is saving our soil and water. Our soil belongs also to unborn
generations.
[j^

Whenever

I tell

him

The one thing besides claim to know is land.

people that

Ik

Politely to stop it, he Says he can't possibly stop.


Ib.

Hoppity

FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT


1882-1945
There
is

James James Morrison Morrison

nothing

love as

much

as a

Weatherby George Dupree

good

fight.

Took great
Care of his Mother Though he was only three.
James James Said to his Mother, "Mother," he said, said he: "You must never go down to the end of the town, if you don't go down Ib. Disobedience with me."
I

Interview,

New Yorft Timn


call

\January 22, 1911]

These unhappy times


.

for

the

. that build from building of plans the bottom up and not from the top down, that put their faith once more in the forgotten man * at the bottom of the economic pyramid. Radio address [April 7, 1932]
.

am

a Bear of Very Little Brain, and

The
take

long words Bother me.

its

country needs and, unless I mistemper, the country demands

Winnie-the-Pooh [1926], ch. 4

bold, persistent experimentation. It is common sense to take a method and try


it.

Time

for a little something.

16.

If it fails,

admit

it
all,

frankly and

try

another. But above

Christopher Robin

Address,

Had wheezles And sneezles.

try something. Ogkthorpe University

[May 22,
[1927]. Sneezles
I

1932]

Now We Are Six


If I

new

were a bear,

pledge you, deal for the American people. Speech accepting the Demo-

pledge myself, to a

a big bear, too, shouldn't much care If it froze or snew.

And

nomination for the Presidency, Chicago [July 2, 1932]


cratic

16. Furry

Bear

There

is

no indispensable man. Campaign speech, New


[November

YorJt

FRANCES PERKINS
1882-1965
Call

3, 1932]

*See William Graham Sumner, p. 7854.


All honor to the one that in this hour Cries to the world as from a lighted tower Cries for the Man Forgotten.

me Madame.

On

ferred to

being asked how she prebe addressed -when she joined the Cabinet [1933]

EDWIN MARKHAM

[1852-1940],

Tht

Forgotten

Mn

97

ROOSEVELT

The only thing we have


1

to fear

is

fear

itself.

First Inaugural Address

ment, but they have maintained that economic slavery was nobody's business. Speech accepting renomination
[June 27, 2936] This generation of Americans has a rendezvous with destiny* 16.
I

[March

4, 1933]

The moneychangers have


tbeir
2

fled

from
16.

high seats in the temple of our

civilization.

have seen war.

...

hate war.

In the field of world policy I would dedicate this nation to the policy of the
3

Address, Chautauqua [August 14, 1936]


I have not sought, I do not seek, I repudiate the support of any advocate of Communism or of any other alien

good neighbor.
If I

Ib.

were asked to state the great ob-

jective

which Church and State are

demanding for the sake of every man and woman and child in this country, I would say that that great obis "a more abundant life." jective
both

"ism" which would by

fair

means or

foul change our American democracy. Address, Syracuse [Septem-

Address, Federal Council of Churches of Christ [December 6, 1933]


I

ber 29, 1936]


should like to have it said of my Administration that in it the forces of selfishness and of lust for power met their match. I should like to have it said of my second Administration that in it these forces met their master.
I
first

am

not for a return to that defini-

tion of liberty

under which

for

many

yeais

a free people were being gradually regimented into the service of the privileged few.
I

sure you broader definition of liberty prefer that under which we are moving forward to to greater security for greater freedom,
prefer
I

and

am

Speech, Madison Square Garden [October 31, 1936]

Men with

the average man than he has ever known before in the history of America. Fireside Chat [September 30,

a passion for anonymity. Report of President's Committee on Administrative Manage-

ment
self-interest

[January 12, 1937]

We have always known that heedless


now that it
is

1934]

We

was bad morals; bad economics.

we know

have earned the hatred of en-

Second Inaugural Address


[January 20, 1937]
I

trenched greed.

Message to Congress [January


TTie truth
free to
is

3,

1936]

ill-clad, ill-nourished.

see one-third of a nation ill-housed, 16.

found when men are

pursue it. Address, Temple University [February 22, 1936]


this

Out of
.
.

modern

The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much; it is whether we provide enough for those who have
too
little.

civilization eco-

16.

nomic royalists carved new dynasties. The royalists of the economic order have conceded that political freedom was the business of the Govern.

spreading. When an epidemic of physical disease starts to spread, the community approves and joins in a quarantine of the patients in order to protect the

The epidemic

of world kwlessness

is

*See Montaigne, p. i8gb, and note. See Matthew 11:12-13, p, 4gb. I am as desirous of being a good neighbor I am of being a bad subject. - THOKEAU, Cwff disobedience [1849]

health of the community against the spread of the disease. . . . The will for peace on the part of peace-loving na-

ROOSEVELT
tions

must express itself to the end that nations that may be tempted to violate their agreements and the rights of others will desist from such a course. There must be positive endeavors to
preserve peace.

great public

is

interested

more

in Gov-

ernment than

in politics.

Address, Jackson Day Dinner [January 8, 1940]

Speech, Chicago

[October $,

War is a

contagion.

Ib.

The Soviet Union, as everybody who has the courage to face the fact knows, is run by a dictatorship as absolute ai any other dictatorship in the world. Address, American Youth Congress [February io t

do History proves that dictatorships successful and of out not grow strong governments, but out of weak and helpless ones. If by democratic methods
people get a government strong enough
to protect
tion, their

On

this tenth

day of June 1940


1

the
it

hand that held the dagger has


into the back of
its

struck

them from
democracy

fear

and

starvaif

neighbor. Address, University of Virginia, Charlottesville [June 10, 1940]

succeeds; but

they do not, they grow impatient. Therefore, the only sure bulwark of continuing liberty is a government the interests strong enough to protect of the people, and a people strong and well enough informed to

nor

Eternal truths will be neither trot eternal unless they have fresh
for every new social situation, Address, University of Pennsylvania [September 20, 1940]

meaning

And
ers

while
I

am
I

talking to you mothgive you one more this before, but I

enough

and

fathers,
it

maintain

its

sovereign control over

its

assurance.
shall say

have said

government.
Fireside

again and again and again:

Chat

[April 14, 1938]

Your boys

of us,

Remember, remember always that all and you and I especially, are de2

are not going to be sent into any foreign wars. Campaign speech, Boston

scended from immigrants and revolutionists.

[October 30,
great historic trio Barton and Fish. 2
It is

That

Martin,
Ib.

Address, Daughters of the American Revolution [April 21, 1938]

an unfortunate
full

human

failing

A
that

program whose basic

thesis is

not

the system of free private enterthis generafor profit has failed in prise tion, but that it has not yet been tried. Message on Concentration of

pocketbook often groans more loudly than an empty stomach. Speech, Brooklyn [November i,
that
1940]

We

must be the
Fireside

great arsenal of de29,

Economic Power
1938]

[April

29,

mocracy,

Chat [December

The Democratic Party will live and continue to receive the support of the majority of Americans just so long as it remains a liberal party.
Addres$,'Denton f Maryland [September 5, 1938]

1940]

In the future days, which we seek to secure, we 'look forward to a world founded upon four essential human freedoms. The first is freedom

make

of speech
i Italian

and expression

everywhere

But the future


political
1

lies

leaders

who

realize that

with those wise the

Galena Foreign Minister Count Ciano had just notified the French Ambassador that Italy considered herself at war with France
beginning June 11. a and Hamilton Joseph Martin, Bruoe Barton,
Fish.

the aggressors" speech. *See Campaign Speech, Boston, p. 97sb-g74a.

The "Quarantine

97 2

ROOSEVELT
in

the world.
ry

The
to

second

is

freedom of
in his

worship person everywhere in the world.


is

God

own The
. .

strike,

you see a rattlesnake poised to you do not wait until he has struck before you crush him.
Fireside

When

freedom

from

want

Chat [September

11,

dom

in the world. The fourth is from fear . , . anywhere in


1

1941]
Yesterday, December 7, 1941 date which will live in infamy
a

ihe world.

Message to Congress [January o r


1941]

the

United States of America was suddenly

and

deliberately attacked

One

great difference

which has char-

air forces of the

by naval and of Empire Japan-

[between liberal and conservative parties] has been that no matter what its the liberal party was at the time name particular believed in the wisdom and efficacy of the will of the great majority of the as distinguished from the judgpeople, The ment of a small minority. difference between the two other
acterized this division
.
.

"War Message to Congress [December 8 7 1941]

Never before have we had so time in which to do so much. 1


Fireside

little

Chat [February 23, 1942]


that books burn

We all
we have

know
the

yet

great

which believes that, as new and problems arise beyond the power of men and women to meet as individuals, it becomes the duty of the Government itself to find new remedies with which to meet them. The liberal party insists that the Governa party conditions
fe

parties

has been this:

The

liberal party

knowledge mat books cannot be killed by fire. People die, but books never die. No man and no force can abolish memory. ... In this war, we know, books are weapons. Message, American Booksellers
greater

Association [April 23, 1942]


It is not a tax bill but a tax relief bill providing relief not for the needy but for the greedy.

ment has the definite duty to use


to meet new power and resources
insure to
his

all its

Tax

social

veto message [February 22, 1944]


bill

controls to problems with new social the average person the right to

own economic and

political

life,

liberty,

and the pursuit of happiness.


Public Papers and Addresses,

These Republican leaders have not been content with attacks on me, or my wife, or on my sons. No, not content
with that, they now include my little dog, Fala. Well, of course, I don't rebut Fala does resent sent attacks them. ... I think I have a right to resent, to object to libelous statements
.

1938 Volume [1941],


duction

intro-

to freedom, and beWe, too, Eeving in freedom, are willing to fight


to

bom

about

my dog.2
Speech,
1944]

maintain

freedom.

We, and

Teamsters'

all

Dinner,

others

who

believe as

wtrald rather die on our knees. 2

on our

deeply as we do, feet than live

Washington [September 23,


All of our people all over the country

On

receiving the degree of

Doc-

except

the

pure-blooded

Indians

tor of Civil

Law from Oxford

University [June 29, 1941]


l

Sec Atlantic Charter, p. 974a-b. See Zapata, p. 9433.

The phrase was a watchword with the Republican forces in the Spanish Civil War, 19369J0, and is especially identified with the celebrated woman leader La Pasionara.

*See Churchill, p. * It had been charged that the President* at a cost of several million dollars to the taxpayers, had sent a destroyer to the Aleutian Islands to fetch his Scottie, Fala, allegedly stranded there. When Fala heard these baseless stories of government extravagance on his account, "bis Scotch soul was furious. He has not been the same dog
since."

973

ROOSEVELT
immigrants or descendants of immigrants, including even those who came over here on the Mayflower. 1 Campaign speech, Boston
are

STEPHENS
freely expressed wishes of the peoples concerned. Atlantic Charter, drawn up

the

aboard UJSS. Augusta


[issued

in AT-

[November 4, 1944]
people are quite coma to judge political party that petent 16. works both sides of a street.

gentia Harbor, Newfoundland

The American

August 14, 2941]


<rf

Sixth, after the final destruction

Perfectionism, no less than isolationism or imperialism or power politics, may obstruct the paths to international
peaoe.

the Nazi tyranny, they hope to see established a peace which will afford to all nations the means of dwelling in safety within their own boundaries, and which will afford assurance that aD the men in all the lands may live out their
lives in

State of the

Union Message

freedom from fear and want. 1


Ib.

{January 6, 1945]

We have learned
is

that

alone, at peace; that our

we cannot live own well-being

Eighth, they believe that all of the nations of the world, for realistic as wefl
as spiritual reasons, must come to the abandonment of the use of force. Since no future peace can be maintained if land, sea or air armaments continue to be employed by nations which threaten,

dependent on the well-being of other have learned nations, far away. that we must live as men, and not as ostriches, nor as dogs in the manger. have learned to be citizens of the

We

We

world,
nity.

members

of the

human commu-

or

may

threaten, aggression outside of

their frontiers, they believe,

pending the

Fourth Inaugural Address


[January 20, 1945]
to war, we want an end to the beginnings of all wars. Address written for Jefferson Day

establishment of a wider and perman*mt system of general security, that the disarmament of such nations is essential.
Ib.

More than an end

[April 23, 1945] broadcast*

JAMES STEPHENS
1882-1950
hear a sudden cry of pain! There is a rabbit in a snare.
I

only limit to our realization of tomorrow will be our doubts of today. Let us move forward with strong and
active faith.
16.

The

The Snare
our trespasses, Little creatures, everywhere! Little Things,
Forgive us
all

st.

FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT AND WINSTON CHURCHILL


First,

In cloud and clod to sing Of everything and anything.

The
I

Pit of Bliss

heard a bird at dawn

their

countries

seek

no

ag-

grandizement, territorial or other. Second, they desire to see no territorial changes that do not accord with
See Address to D.A.R., p. 9723. President Roosevelt died April Springs, Georgia.
*
l

Singing sweetly on a tree, That the dew was on the lawn r And the wind was on the lea; But I didn't listen to him, For he didn't sing to me.

The Rivals, st.


is, at

i
6,

Warm

See Roosevelt, Message to

Congiw, Jenu*ry

*94*> P-

974

STEPHENS
They
fell

CIBRAN

out over

pigs, let

them

fall

Women
ries

have served

all

these centu-

m over

Women
thev '

are wiser than


less

men

because

possessing the magic and delicious power of reflecting the figure of man at twice its natural
as

looking-gksses

and understand more. know The Crock of Gold [1930] , eft. 2


is

size.
it

A Room
plot, or that

of One's

Own

Surely
a

superabundant in all The bad poet verse. of anthologies Trophy of Arms Preface to

new

was time someone invented the author came out

from the bushes. Between the Acts [1941]

[1936], by

RUTH FITTER

VIRGINIA WOOLFi
1882-1941
In people's eyes, in the swing, tramp, and trudge; in the bellow and uproar;
the carriages,
\ans,

SIR

ANDREW BROWNE CUNNINGHAM


to

We are so
one

motor

cars,

omnibuses,

sandwich shuffling brass bands; barrel organs; in swinging; the triumph and the jingle and the
high singing of some aeroplane was what she loved; life; Lon-

men

and

thing Before attacking the Italian

1883-1963 outnumbered there's only do. We must attack. 1


fleet,

Taranto [November 1940]

strange

overhead

MAX EASTMAN
1883-

don; this

moment

in June.
I

Mrs. DaUoway [1925]

padded lunatic are known, which asylums euphemisti2


Those comfortably
as the stately
cally,

know why it is we are in such a hurry to get up when we fall down. You might think we would lie there
don't

homes of England. The Common Reader [1925].

and

rest awhile.

The Enjoyment

Lady Dorothy Nevill


Trivial personalities

of Laughter [1936], pt. Ill, eft. 4

decomposing in
Essay
Ib.
is lit-

the eternity

of print.
16.

KAHLIL GIBRAN
1883-1931
Let there be spaces in your togetherness. 2

The Modern

no room for the of literature in an essay.


There
is

impurities

That complete statement which


erature.

The Prophet

[1923).

On Marriage

16.

How

It Strikes a

Contemporary

as if genius, words of into a sea thought plunged and cnme up dripping. 16. An Elizabethan Play

The

word-coining

You may give them your love but not your thoughts, For they have their own thoughts. You may house their bodies but not
house of tomorrow, which you cannot visit, not even in your dreams. You may strive to be like them, but seek not to make them like you, For life goes not backward nor tarries with yesterday.
1

their souls, For their souls dwell in the

edges*

The beauty of the world has two one of laughter, one of anguish,

cutting the heart asunder.

A Room of One's Own

[1929]

Tbe

certain

talent of this generation of survival. REBECCA

which is most WEST, Ending

Quoted

in

British

Commanders, published

Earnest

[1931]

by British Information Services [1945]-

'See Felicia D.

Hemans,

p.

573^

See Rilke, p. 9$8b.

975

GIBRAN

KEYNES

You are the bows from which your children as living arrows are sent forth.
The
Prophet.

HARRY KEMP
1883-1960
I

On

Children
give of give of

pitied

him
I

in his blindness;

You

give but little


It is

your possessions.
yourself that

when you when you


1

But can

boast, "I see"?

you

truly give. 16.

Perhaps there walks a spirit Close by, who pities me. Blind,

rf. 2

On Giving
And
if

Work

is

love

made

visible.

you cannot work with love but only with distaste, it is better that you should leave your work and sit at the gate of the temple and take alms of those who work with joy.
16.

JOHN MAYNARD KEYNES


1883-1946

He

[Clemenceau] had one France; and one disillusion

illusion

manof tht

kind, including

On Work

Frenchmen. Economic Consequences Peace

You pray in your distress and in your need; would that you might pray also in the fullness of your joy and in your days of abundance. 16. On Prayer

Watching the company, with seven senses not available to


men, judging
character,

six or

ordinaiy

motive, and

He who wears his morality but as his best garment were better naked.
16,
I

subconscious impulse, perceiving what each was thinking and even what each

On Religion

was going to say next, and compounding with telepathic instinct the
or appeal best suited to the vanior self-interest of his weakness, ty, immediate auditor. 1 ft.

ment

argu-

tive, toleration

have learned silence from the talkafrom the intolerant, and kindness from the unkind; yet strange,

am ungrateful to those teachers. Sand and Foam [1926]

shall never understand one another until we reduce the language to seven words. 2 16.

We

He [Woodrow Wilson] could write Notes from Sinai or Olympus; he could remain unapproachable in the White House or even in the Council of Ten and be safe. But if he once stepped
down to the intimate quality of the 16. Four, the game was evidently up.

To make

the defeated Central Em16.

JOHN CEREDIGION
JONES
1883-1947
All's

pires into

good neighbors.
rest.

We have been moved already beyond


endurance, and need
16.

well,

for

over there

among

his

Marxian Socialism must always

re-

A happy warrior sleeps.8


The Returning Man, st. 4
1

peers

main a portent
opinion

to

the historians of
illogical

how

a doctrine so

See Emerson, p.

607!);

James Russell Lowell,


shall

p. 6gxb, and "Whitman, p. 7000. If we go on explaining we

have exercised so powerful and enduring an influence over the minds of men, and, through them,
the events of history. The End of Laissez-Faire
[1925]* ch. 3

and

so dull can

cease

to

understand one another. TALLEYKAND [775^'$7*1 quoted by B. BERENSON, Aesthetics and History

These lines are inscribed over the archway of the Memorial Chamber in the Peace Tower,
Parliament Buildings, Ottawa. See Wordsworth, p.

Thrift may be the handmaid and nurse of Enterprise, But equally she
1

Lloyd George.

97 6

KEYNES
mav
not.
. .

ORTEGA Y GASSET

drives
profit.

For the engine which . Enterprise is not Thrift, but Treatise on Money [1930]

BENITO MUSSOLINI
1883-1945

The
bath

The
as

love of

money

as a possession

Italian proletariat needs a for its force to be renewed.

blood

gusting criminal, semi-pathological propensities

the love of distinguished from to the enjoyments money as a means will be recogand realities of life nized for what it is, a somewhat dismorbidity, one of those semi-

Editorial,

Popolo

fItalia

[1920]

alone brings up to its highest tension all human energy and puts the stamp of nobility upon the peoples who have the courage to face it.

War

which one hands over with a shudder to the specialists in mental disease. Essays in Persuasion [1931], pt.

Written for The Italian Encyclopedia.

From GEORGE SELDES,

Sawdust Caesar [1935]


Fortunately the Italian people is not yet accustomed to eating several times per day.

In the

United

States, it

is

almost in-

conceivable what rubbish a public man has to utter today if he is to keep respectable.

Speech [December 1930];

ib.

In the Atlantic Monthly [May 193*]


to be a little wild for of thoughts on the they are the assault unthinking.

We have buried
liberty.

the putrid corpse of

Words ought

Speech. From MAURICE PARMELEE, Bolshevism, Fascism and the Liberal-Democratic State

In the New Statesman and Nation [July 15, 1933]

The

Italian race

From

is a race of sheep. the Ciano Diaries [fan-

His [Newton's] peculiar gift was the power of holding continuously in his

),

1940]

mind a purely mental problem until he had seen through it. ... Anyone who has ever attempted a pure scientific or philosophical thought knows how one can hold a problem momentarily in one's mind and apply all one's power of concentration to piercing through it ?
and

a people great it is necessary to send them to battle even if you have to kick them in the

To make

pants.

Ib. [April

n,

1940]

JOSt ORTEGA Y GASSET


1883-1955
Rancor
is

how

it

will dissolve

and escape and

an outpouring of a feeling

you find that what you are surveying is a blank. Essays in Biography [1933]

of inferiority.

Meaitations on Quixote [1911]


I

am
if I

There
wrong

is

no harm

in being sometimes

especially if

one

is

promptly
16.

and me.

myself and what is around me, do not save it, it shall not save
16.

found out.
Practical
selves to

The
think

Mediterraneans,

who do

not
16.

men, who believe thembe quite exempt from any ininfluences,

clearly,
is

do see
not

clearly.

Culture
just the

tellectual
slaves
It is

are

usually
.

the
.

life in its entirety,

but

of

some defunct economist.


not vested
interests,

moment

and

ideas,

which
of
alive

clarity.

of security, strength, 16.

are

dangerous for

good or eviL
General
[1936]

Nations

The

Theory
Interest

are formed and are kept fact that they have a prothe by
for tomorrow.

Employment,

and

gram

Money

Invertebrate Spain [1922],

eft.

977

ORTEGA Y GASSET

WALTER
It is

A
ety.

society

without

an
is

aristocracy,

not the material of


life.

life

which

without an

elite minority,

not a

soci-

makes up Dostoevski's "realism/' but


rather the shape of

Invertebrate Spain, ch. 4

Notes on the Novel

Conversation is the socializing instrument par excellence, and in its style one can see reflected the capacities of a '& 7 race.

[1948]

The person
trait

portrayed and the porare two entirely different things. The Dehumanization of Art [1948]

was formed by his struggle with and it is only easy for him to discern things which are outside
exterior forces

Man

The
from

masses feel that

it is

easy to

flee

reality,

when

it is

the most

diffi-

cult thing in the world.

It.

of himself,

The Modern Theme

[1923],

ch. 2

The metaphor
fertile
I

is

probably the most


15.

power possessed by man.


a Spaniard, that
is

Rationalism, in order to save truth, H>- 3 renounces life.

am

to say, a

man

without imagination.
Esthetic Essays {1956]
Primitive

The
initial

choice of a point of view is the Ib. j act of a culture.


is

man

is

by

definition

tactile

To

define

to exclude

and negate.
Ib. appendix,

man.

16.

Order is not pressure which is imbut posed on society from without, an equilibrium which is set up from
within.

TAKAMURA KOTARCM
1883-1956
Cheekbones protruding,
Face
triangular, like a netsuke 2
lips thick, eyes

Mirabeau and

Politics [1927]

Europe is really a swarm: many on a single course. The Revolt of the Masses
[1930], prologue

bees

carved by Shuzan, great Expression vacant as though the were removed,

the

soul

Ignorant of himself, jumpy,


Cheap-lived, Show-off,

America, far from being the future, was in truth a remote past because it Ib. was primitivism.
Minorities are individuals or groups of individuals especially qualified. The masses are the collection of people not
specially qualified.

Small-minded,
Monkey-like,

self-satisfied,

fox-like,

squirrel-like,

gudgeon-like, minnow-like, potsherd-like, gargoyle-faced Japanese! The Land of Netsuke

Ib. ch. i

Physical space and time are the absoIb. 4 lute stupidity of the universe.

HOWARD ARNOLD WALTER


I

Our

life

is

anything else we can do.

and before the consciousness of what


at all times

Ib.

1883-1918 would be true, for there are those who trust me; would be pure, for there are those

revolution only lasts fifteen years, a period which coincides with the effectiveness of a generation.
Ib.

who
I

care;

would be
suffer;

strong, for there

is

much

to

10

War
tion.

iFrora
is

Modern Japanese
[1960].

Literature,

not an instinct but an invenIb. epilogue

by Donald Keene
8

carved button.

97 8

WALTER
\

DALADIER
It's

would be brave, for there


dare.

is

much

to

the anarchy of poverty

delights

me.

My

Creed
THESE

The Poor

[1938],

si. i

ANGELA MORGAN
d.

are the desolate, dark

weeks

1957
swing of
it,

when

nature in its barrenness 1 equals the stupidity of man.


year plunges into night

Work! Thank
it,

God

for the

For the clamoring,

hammering

ring of

The

and the heart plunges


lower than night.

hurled On the mighty anvils of the world. Work: A Song of Triumph


Passion of labor daily

These [2938],

$t. i,

ERNEST BEVIN

WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS


1883-1963

T-195 1

No
especially

wreaths please
flowers.
is

There has never been a war yet which, if the facts had been put calmly before the ordinary folk, could not have been prevented. The common man is
the greatest protection against war. Speech, House of Commons [November 1945]

no hothouse

Some
his

common memento

better,

something he prized and is known by: a few books perhaps. old clothes

Tract [1917]
Hefl take curtains!
rf to

fcDOUARD DALADIER
1884-1970 French and German blood is now to be spilled, as it was twenty-five years then each of the two peoples ago
If
.

Go
sit

with some show

inconvenience;

openly

the weather as to grief. Or do you think you can shut grief in?
12?.

will fight confident of its

own

victory.

so

much depends
wheel

But
will

surely Destruction

and Barbarism

be the

real victors.

upon
a red

barrow
glazed with rain water

Letter to Adolf Hitler [August 26, 1939]

beside the

white

chickens

The weakness of democracies is that once a general has been built up in public opinion it becomes impossible to remove him.

Spring and
Mothlike in

AH

[1923], no.
in

XXI
the

From PERTINAX

[ANDRE

G-

RAUD], Cravediggers of France

mists,

scintillant

minute
brilliance

of cloudless days, with broad


to the

bellying sails
they glide

wind

tossing green

water
from their sharp prows while over the crew crawls.

phrase has spread from civilians to and back again: "This is a 2 phony war." 16. [Speech to the Deputies, Desoldiers

them
i

cember 22, 1939]


See William Cullen Bryant, p. 5745.

The Yachts

[1935], **

*> 2

Une

drftle

de guerre.

979

FLECKER

MALINOWSKI
true way goes over a rope which not stretched at any great height bat just above the ground. It seerns more designed to make people stumble than to be walked upon.
is

JAMES ELROY FLECKER


1884-1915

The

West
I

of these out to seas colder than

the Hebrides

must go
is

the fleet of stars and the young Star captains glow.

Where

anchored

The Great Wall

of

Chim.

Reflections

The Dying

Patriot

We
And

with songs beguile your pilgrimage swear that Beauty lives though
lilies

who

Do not even listen, simply wait. Do not even wait, be quite still and solitary. The world will freely offer itself to
to be
roll

You do not need to leave your Remain sitting at your table 'and

roam.
listen!

yea
Jfc,

We

die,

Who sing to

Poets of the proud old lineage find your hearts, we know

has no choice, in ecstasy at your feet.

unmasked,

it

ft will

not why,

Only our concept of time males

it

The' Golden kand

Journey to Samar[191 3], prologue

When

even lovers find their peace at


is

possible for us to speak of the Day of Judgment by that name; in reality it is a summary court in perpetual session.
Letters.

Quoted
is

in

MAX

BROD,

last,

And Earth
shone.
I

but a

star,

that once

had
16.

Franz Kafka
All

human

error

impatience, a

have seen old ships


asleep.

sail like

swans

The Old Ships [1915] A ship, an isle, a sickle moon With few but with how splendid stars. 1

mature renunciation of method, a sive pinning down of a delusion.

predelu16.

Ship,

An

Isle,

A Sickle Moon

There are two cardinal sins from which all the others spring: impatience and laziness. 16.

TEXAS GUINAN
1884-1933
Hello, sucker!

BRONISLAW MALINOWSKI
1884-1942
Is

Greeting to night club patrons

A big butter-and-egg man.2


Describing a lavish spender or theatrical "angel"

war

a biological necessity? As

re-

gards the earliest cultures the answer is emphatically negative. The blow of the poisonous dart from behind a bush, to murder a woman or a child in their
sleep, is not pugnacity. Nor is headhunting, body-snatching, or killing for food instinctive or natural.

FRANZ KAFKA
1884-1924
'This village belongs to the Castle, and whoever lives here or passes the
night here does so in a manner of speaking in the Castle itself. Nobody may do that without the Count's permission." The Castle* [1926]
1

Address, Phi Beta Kappa, Harvard University [September 17, 1936]

The hero of who from the


peaceful

the next war, the man


air

destroys

wfapk

See Whitman, p. 7003. Title of play by George S. Kaufman [1925]. Translated by EDWIN and WIIXA Mum.

township in its sleep with poison gas, is not expressing any biological characteristics

of his organism,

or

showing any moral virtues.

Ik

980

O CASEY

TEASDALE

SEAN O'CASEY
1884-1964
The whole world
chassis.
is

ANNA ELEANOR ROOSEVELT*


state

in

of

No

the Paycock 1 [1924] Juno and One minute with him is all I ask; one minute alone with him, while you're
nmnin' for th' priest an' th' doctor. The Plow and the Stars [1926], act II

1884-1962 one can make you

feel inferior

without your consent. This Is

My Story

[1937]

gain strength, courage and confidence by every experience in which you really stop to look fear in the face. You are able to say to yourself, **I lived

You

A few hundhred
with a
afiin*

scrawls

o'

chaps

through
thing

this horror. I

can take the next


.
.

guns and Rosary beads, couple a hundhred thousand thrained


o'
.
. .

You along." must do the thing you think you canthat

comes

men with horse, fut an' artillery m' he wants us to fight fair!

not do.

You Learn by Living [1960]

16.

IV

sober black
tirely,

shawl hides her body en-

Life was meant to be lived, and curiosity must be kept alive. One must never,

for whatever reason, turn his


life.

back

Touch'd be

th*

sun an' th

on
salt

spray of

th'sea; r But deep in th darkness a slim hand, so lovely, Carries a rich bunch of red roses for

The Autobiography

of Eleanor Roosevelt [1961]

GEORGE SARTON
1884-1956
Scientific
activity
is

me!

Red Roses

for

Me

[1942], act

IV

the only one

which

is

obviously and

undoubtedly

CHARLES LEO O'DONNELL


1884-1934
I

cumulative and progressive. The History of Science and the


History of Civilization [1930]

have never been able to school


eyes

my

SARA TEASDALE
T-1933

Against

young

April's blue surprise.

When

am

dead and over

me

Wonder

bright

April

Shakes out her rain-drenched hair,

KEITH PRESTON
1884-1927

Though you should


broken-hearted,
I shall

lean

above

me
st. i

not

care.

Among our literary

scenes, Saddest this sight to me,

I Shall

Not

Care,

The graves of little magazines That died to make verse free.

The
I

Liberators
2

Strephon's kiss was lost in jest, Robin's lost in play, But the kiss in Colin's eyes

Haunts
l l

am the captain of
I

me night and day.


The Look,
st.

my

soul;

with stern joy; And yet I think I had more fun When I was a cabin boy.
rule it

more than a friend, I have lost an inspiration. She would rather light candles than curse the darkness and her glow has warmed
have
lost

An Awful

the world.
1962]

Responsibility

ADLAI E, STEVENSON [November

7,

See Aesop, p. 763. *See Sallust, p. n6a,

It is better to light

and note.

darkness.

one candle than curse the Motto of the Christopher Society

TEASDALE
Alone in the night

TRUMAN
labors at this conference
if

we

shall

On
With

a dark hill

suffering

humanity

is

to achieve a

pines around Spicy and still.


it

me
Stars [1921],
st. i

just

and

lasting peace.

Radio address to delegate* at the opening session oflthe


United
Nations

Let

be

forgotten,, as

a flower

is

forgot-

San Francisco

ten,

conference, [April 23,

Forgotten as a fire that once was singing gold, Let it be forgotten forever and ever, Time is a kind friend, he will make us
old.

We

better world nal dignity of

must build a new world, a fax one in which the eter-

man

is

respected.

Ib,
air-

Sixteen hours ago an American

Let It Be Forgotten [1922],

st. i

plane dropped shima. ... It


basic

one

bomb on

Hiro-

Oh

better than the minting

Of a gold-crowned king Is the safe-kept memory Of a lovely thing.


"The Coin [1921]

O beauty,
Why am

are you not enough? crying after love?

power from which the sun draws its power has been loosed against those who brought war to the Far East. First announcement of the atomic bomb [August 6,

is a harnessing of the of the universe. The force

Spring Night

The
tutes a

release of

new

HARRY
When

S.

TRUMAN
me
on

consider
ideas.

atomic energy constiforce too revolutionary to " in the framework of old


atomic

1884they told

had happened, I stars and all the planets had me.

yesterday what felt like the moon, the


fallen

Message to Congress on
energy [October

3, 1945]
un-

Means

of

destruction

hitherto

To reporters the day after his accession to the Presidency


[April 13, 1945]
responsibility of the great states to serve and not to dominate the world.
First

The

is

Message to Congress
[April 16, 1945]

known, against which there can be no adequate military defense, and in the employment of which no single nation can in fact have a monopoly. Declaration on Atomic Energy by President Truman and Prime Ministers Clement Attlee and W. L. Mackenzie King [November 15, 1945]
Effective, reciprocal,

Kansas and Colorado have a quarrel over the water in the Arkansas River they don't call out the National Guard in each state and go to war over it. They bring a suit in the Supreme Court of the United States and abide by the decision. There isn't a reason in the world why we cannot do that internationally.

When

and
all

enforceable
nations.
Jb,

safeguards acceptable to

We must embark on a bold new program

Speech, Kansas City [April 1945]


of the conference are to be the architects of the better world. In your hands rests our future. By your

making the benefits of our sciadvances and industrial progress available for the improvement and growth of underdeveloped areas. More than half the people of the world are
for
entific

You members

inadequate. victims of disease. Their economic


is

living in conditions approaching misery, Their food is They are the


life

primitive and stagnant. Their

poverty

TRUMAN
i$

handicap and a threat both to them

To

me, party platforms are contracts

and to more prosperous areas. Inaugural Address (Point Four Program) [January 20, 1949]
If

with the people.

Memoirs,
Trial

vol. II,

Years of
ch. 13

and Hope,
.

of the kitchen.

the heat, get out you can't stand l Saying


is

was a positive man . settled every issue before his


Polk
office expired.

and term of
.

There
pily

enough

in

the world for

16.

14

have plenty to live on hapeveryone to and to be at peace with his neigh0ors.

A man who is influenced by the


or
is

polls

afraid

to

make

decisions wnich
is

Memoirs
Being a

[1955], vol. I, Year of Decisions, preface

may make him unpopular

not a

man

to represent the welfare of the country. Ib.

A man has tiger.


swallowed.
2

President is like riding a to keep on riding or be

A
lar.

President cannot alwavs be popu* r 16.

Ib. II,

Years of Trial and Hope,


eft. i

Every great President in our history

had
ally

a policy of his

own, which eventu16.

President either is constantly on top of events or, if he hesitates, events will soon be on top of him. I never felt that I could let up for a single moment.
Ib.

won

the people's support.

Popularity and glamor are only part of the factors involved in winning presidential elections. One of the most im-

has not had the responcan really understand what it is sibility like to be President, not even his closest aides or members of his immediate famThere is no end to the chain of ily. responsibility that binds him, and he is never allowed to forget that he is President.

No one who

portant of all is luck. In my own case, luck was always with me, though there was never any intention on my part to make things work my way. If a man starts out to make himself President, he
hardly ever arrives.
16.

16.
a decision
it

A President needs political understanding to run the government, but he 16. may be elected without it.
The convention system has its faults, of course, but I do not know of a better method for choosing a presidential
nominee.
16.
. . .

Once

was made,

did not
Ib.

worry about

afterward.

Most of the problems a President has


to face

have their roots in the past.


16.

The Marshall Plan will go down in history as one of America's greatest


contributions to the peace of the world. Ib. 8
1

President

Truman

has

used

variations

of

Point Four program was and designed to operate on a continuing basis to point the way to better living for more and more of the world's people and thus the way to
created

The

the

aphorism ... for

more
All

many

"Some Thoughts on the Presidency," he states, "Some BKQ can make decisions and some cannot. Some wen fret and delay under criticism. I used to hire a saying that applies here, and I note that iwae people have picked it Letter to edup." itor from PHILIP D. LACERQUIST, Harry S. TruB Library, Independence, Missouri [February 11, 1966]

aid in his writings. For Mr. Citizen [1960] in the chapter entitled

years, both orally instance, in his book

lasting peace.
life
I

16.

16

my

prejudice and intolerance.


I

have fought against 16. 19

who The
first

have little patience with people take the Bill of Rights for granted. Bill of Rights, contained in the ten amendments to the Constituis

tion,

every American's guarantee of


16.

*See Churchill, p. gsoa,

and

note.

freedom.

983

TRUMAN
It [General Douglas MacArthur's statement on Korea, March 24, 1951]

0INESEN
between the manifold aspects
perience.
of our ex-

was in open defiance of my orders as President and as Commander in Chief. This was a challenge to the authority of the President under the Constitution. It also flouted the policy of the United Nations. ... I was deeply shocked. Memoirs, VOL. II, Years of Tried and Hope, ch. 19
If

Atomic Theory and

the Description of Nature


[1934]

ARTHUR WALLACE CALHOUN


1885Gentlemen of the old regime in ftc South would say, "A woman's name
should appear in print but twice when she marries and when she dies/' Social History of the American

there

is

one basic element


it is civilian

in our

Constitution,
military.

control of the
16.

Family
a right kind and wrong kind of victory, just as there are wars for the right thing and wars that are wrong

There

is

[1918], citing MYITA LOCKETT AVARY, Dixie Afar

the

War

[1906]

from every standpoint.


of
victory

The

kind

MacArthur had in mind victory by the bombing of Chinese cities, victory by expanding the conflict would have been the to all of China Ib. kind of victory. wrong

ZECHARIAH CHAFEE,
1885-1957

JR.

The
seeking
.
.

press

is

a sort of wild animal in


gigantic,
always

our midst
.

restless,

The buck

stops here.

Sign on Truman's desk as President. From ALFRED STEINBERG, The Man from Missouri [1962]

the most part acknowledges accountability to no one except its owners and publishers. The Press Under Pressure [Nze-

new ways to use its The sovereign press for

strength.

man

Reports, April 1948]

SOPHIE TUCKERi
1884-1966
to age eighteen, a girl needs good parents. From eighteen to thirty-five, she needs good looks. From thirty-five to fifty-five, she needs a good on, she personality. From fifty-five needs good cash. Said at sixty-nine

From

birth

something is not enough. It should also be freedom for something. Freedom is not safety but opportunity. Freedom ought to be a means to enable the press to serve the proper functions of communication in a
free society.
16,

Freedom

from

ISAK DINESEN [KAREN BLIXEN]


1885-1962

What

is

man, when you come

to

NIELS BOHR
1885-1962
In our description of nature the purpose is not to disclose the real essence of the phenomena but only to track down, so far as it is possible, relations
1 Known as "The Last of the Red-Hot Mamas'* from the title of a song by JACK YELLEN [1892] which she introduced in 1998.

think upon him, but a minutely set, ingenious machine for turning, with infinite artfulness, the red wine of Shiraz
into urine?

Seven Gothic Tales


I

[1934]
travel-

had seen a herd of elephant

ing through dense native forest ... pacing along as if they had an appointment at the end of the world.

Out of Africa

[1937], pt.

I, eft. i

984

DINESEN

LAWRENCE

The

giraffe,

vegetative a nerd of

in their queer, inimitable, gracefulness, as if it were not

ISHIKAWA TAKUBOKU*
1885-1912
Like a kite

animals but a family of rare, flowers kjng-stemmed, speckled gigantic advancing. stewly

Cut from the

string,

Out
If
I

of Africa, pt.

I,

ch. i
I

Lightly the soul of my youth Has taken flight.

know

song

of

Africa

Song of
Sickness is the only obtain peace of mind.

My

Yoirfft

thought can new

of the giraffe,

and the

Afri-

moon

lying

fields, plows of the coffee-pickers, does Africa know a song of me? Would the air over the with a color that I had had plain quiver on, or the children invent a game in

in the

on her back, of the and the sweaty faces

way we have

to

The Romaji Diary

RING LARDNJER
1885-1933

was, or the full moon which throw a shadow over the gravel of the drive that was like me, or would the

my name

eagles

of

Ngong look out for me?


16.4

young writers make the mistake of enclosing a stamped, selfaddressed envelope, big enough for the manuscript to come back in. This is too much of a temptation to the editor. How to Write Short Stories
[1924]

A good many

fte

have before seen other countries, in same manner, give themselves to

"Are
tenderly.

TOU

when you are about

to leave them.
Ib.

you "

lost,

daddy?"

arsked

V,

"Shut up," he explained.

The Young Immigrunts

WILL DURANT
1885-

DAVID HERBERT

LAWRENCE
1885-1930

statesman cannot afford to be a

moralist.

What Is

Civilization?

You
put

love

me

so

much, you want to

The
the
air.

finger that turns the dial rules Ib.


is

me

in your pocket.

And

should

die there smothered.

The health of nations


tant than

more imporIb.

Sons and Lovers [1913], ch. 15

the wealth of nations.

So now

it is

vain for the singer to burst

into clamor

With

SACHA GITITRY
The
little

the great black piano appassionato. TThe glamor


is

norance.

1885-1957 I know, I owe to my igToutes Reflexions Faites

Of

childish days hood is cast


like

upon me,

my

manI

Down

in the flood of

remembrance,

weep

a child for the past.

KAREN HORNEY
1885-1952
Fortunately [psycho] analysis is not the only way to resolve inner conflicts. Life itself still remains a very effective
therapist.

Piano [1910], st. 3 Not I, not I, but the wind that blows through me!
fine

tion of

wind is blowing the new direcTime. Song of a Man Who Has Corne Through [1920]

OUT Inner

Conflicts [1945]

1 From Modern Japanese Literature edited by Donald Keene [1960].

985

LAWRENCE
I

LEWIS
rapture that

never saw a wild thing


Self-Pity [1923]

Sorry for itself.

th'e flesh,

we should be and part of the

alive

and

in

A snake came to my water trough


On
To
a hot, hot day, the heat, drink there.

and

in pajamas for

Snake [1923]

me again like a king, Like a king in exile, uncrowned in the underworld,


For he seemed to

nate cosmos. I am part of the sun as mv eye is part of me. That I am part of the earth my feet know perfectly, and m? blood is part of the sea. soul knows that I am part of the human race, my soul is an organic part of the hu-

living, uacar,

My

man

great

race, as

my

spirit is part of

mv napart of

tion. In

Now due to be crowned again.

my own

very

self, I

am

16.

Necessary, forever necessary, to burn out false shames and smelt the heaviest ore of the body into purity. Lady Chatterley's Lover [1928]

my family. Oh build your


it!

ship of death.

Oh

build

How beastly the bourgeois is


especially

For you will need it. For the voyage of oblivion awaits wu The Ship of Death [1933]

How

the male of the species. Beastly the Bourgeois Is [1929]


nearer comes the

SINCLAIR LEWIS
1885-1951

Now
down
Reach
Let

in

November

sun
the abandoned heaven. November by the Sea [1929]
a torch! the blue,

name was George F. Babbitt, and ... he was nimble in the


His
of selling houses for could afford to pay.

more than

calling

people
eft. i

me a gentian, give me me guide myself with

Babbitt [1922],

sensational

event

forked torch of a flower the darker and darker stairs, where blue is darkened on blueness Down the way Persephone goes, just

from the brown

was changing

Down

suit to the gray the contents of his pockets. He was earnest about these objects. They were of eternal importance, like baseball or the Re-

now, in

first-frosted September. Bavarian Gentians [written 1929]

publican Party.

ft.
is

Every compulsion
to

put upon

writers

Beauty is a mystery. You can neither eat it nor make flannel out of it. Sex Versus Loveliness [1930]
Sex and beauty are inseparable, like and consciousness. And the intelligence which goes with sex and beauty, and arises out of sex and beauty, is inlife

polite, obedient, and sterile. In protest, I declined election to


safe,

become

the National Institute of Arts and


ters

Let-

years ago, and decline the Pulitzer Prize. 1

some

now

must

Letter declining the Pulitzer Prize for his novel Arrow-

tuition.

16.

smith [1926]

How

the horse dominated the

mind

To
in an

a true-blue professor of literature

of the early races,

Mediterranean!

You

especially of the were a lord if you


far

not

American university, literature is something that a plain human

had a horse. Far back,


horse, the horse!
action, in

back in our
.

dark soul the horse prances.

The

The symbol

potency and power

of surging of movement, of

man.

being, living today, painfully sits down to produce. No; it is something dead. The American Fear of Literature, address, Stockholm, on receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature

Apocalypse [1931]
1

For man, the vast marvel is to be alive. We ought to dance with


. .
.

[December
Lewis became a
Institute in 1935.

12, 1930] member of the

National

LEWIS
Our American professors like their and cold and pure and

POUND

know

is

how man

reacts.

literature clear

very dead.

The American Fear

of Literare-

ture, address,

Stockholm, on

change but man who uses item changes not at all. To win battles you do not beat weapons you beat the
soul of

Weapons

man

ceiving the Nobel Prize for Literature


It

of the enemy man. Letter to Cadet

Patton
Title of

IV

George
is

S.

tfune 6, 1944]

Can't

Happen Here.
book [1935]

Take
different

calculated risks.

That

quite
I&.

from being rash


vital

ANDR
The minds of

MAUROIS

The most
possess
plete
is

quality a soldier can


utter,

1885-1967
different generations are as impenetrable one by the other as
are

self-confidence,

com16.

and bumptious.
tell

Never
Tell
prise

people
to

the monads of Leibniz.

them what

how to do things. do and they will sur-

Ariel

[1924],

eft.

12

you with their ingenuity.

Modesty
arc

virtues

and unselfishness which men praise

these

War As
[*

Knew
/>

It

and
16.

947]>

357

pass by.

24
29

There are certain persons for


pore truth
is

whom
16.

In war nothing is impossible, provided you use audacity. 16. p. 358


pint of sweat will save a gallon of blood. 16. p. 405

a poison.

CHESTER WILLIAM NIMITZ


1885-1966
ship is always referred to as "she" because it costs so much to keep one in
paint

EZRA POUND
1885Your mind and you
Sea.
Portrait <Tune

are our Sargasso

and powder.
Speech, Society of Sponsors of the United States Navy [February 13, 1940]

Femme

[1916]

Haie! Haie!

Uncommon
tue.

valor

was a common

vir-

Of

the Marines at Iwo Jima [February May, 1945]

These were the swift to harry; These the keen-scented; These were the souls of blood. Slow on the leash,
pallid the leash-men!

The Return
Tree you
are,

[1916]

GEORGE SMITH PATTON2


1885-1945 Wars may be fought with weapons, bat they are won by men. It is the spirit of the men who follow and of the man
who leads that gains the victory. In the Cavalry Journal [September 1933] To be a successful soldier you must know history. What you must
. . .

Moss you

are,

You

are violets with


so high
all this is folly

wind above them.


you
are;

A child
And
The

to the world.

Girf

apparition of these faces in the

crowd;
Petals

on a wet black bough.


y

In a Station of the Metro [1916]

Translated

by EIXA Old Blood and Guts.

Winter is icumen in, Lhude sing Goddamm,

987

POUND
Raineth drop and staineth
slop,

There died a myriad,

And how the wind doth ramml 1 Ancient Music Sing: Goddamm. The leaves fall early this autumn, in
wind.

And

of the best, among them, For an old bitch gone in the teeth For a botched civilization.

The

paired butterflies are already yellow

with August

Charm, smiling at the good mouth, Quick eyes gone under earth's lid,
For two gross of broken statues, For a few thousand battered books.

Over the

They

hurt me.

grass in the West garden; I grow older.

The River Merchant's Wife:

Letter (After Rihaku)

Hugh Selwyn Mauberley. E. P. Ode pour I* flection de son sepulchre,

For three years, out of key with his


time, He strove to resuscitate the dead art Of poetry; to maintain "the sublime" In the old sense. Wrong from the
start
It gives

As for literature no man a sinecure. And no one knows, at sight, a


piece.

master-

but seeing he had been No, hardly, *


-

And give up

verse,

my boy,
it.

bom
Hugh
EJP.

There's nothing in

In a half savage country, out of date.

16. IX.

Mr. Nixon

Sehryn

Ode pour

Mauberley. Election de

Hang

it all,

Robert Browning,

there can but be the one "Sordello".

son sepulchre [1920], I His true Penelope was Flaubert, He fished by obstinate isles.

And
16.

The age demanded an image Of its accelerated grimace,


Something for the modern stage, Not, at any rateT an Attic grace.
16. II

And The

[1925-1959], II the betrayers of language n and the press gang those who had lied for hire; perverts, the perverters of language, the perverts, who have set

Cantos

Than
some some some some

Better mendacities the classics in paraphrase!

16.

Some

quick to arm, for adventure, from fear of weakness, from fear of censure, for love of slaughter, in imagina. . .

money-lust Before the pleasures of the senses; howling, as of a hen-yard in a printinghouse, the clatter of presses, the blowing of dry dust and stray paper, foetor, sweat, the stench of stale oranges.
16.

XIV

With Usura With usura hath no man


good stone

a house of

tion,

each block cut smooth and well

fitting*

learning later

16.

XLV

some in fear, learning love of slaughter; Died some, pro patria, non "dulce" non "et decor"
.
. .

No

picture
live

is

made

to endure nor to

with

walked eye-deep in hell


believing in old men's
lies,

the unbeliev16.

ing

came home, home

to a

lie.

IV
16.

but it is made to sell and sell quickly with usura, sin against nature, is thy bread ever more of stale rags 16. is thy bread dry as paper.
It

hysterias, trench confessions,

laughter out of dead bellies.


1

Usura slayeth the child in the womb stayeth the young man's courting It hath brought pakey to bed, ly
'

See Anonymous, p.

Arnold Bennett.

POUND
between the young bride and her bride-

WEBSTER
Literature
is

groom CONTRA NATURAM


Cantos,

ABC

news that stays news.


of Reading, ch. 2

XLV

What thou

the rest

lovest well remains, is dross


lov'st well shall

What thou

not be

reft

from thee What thou lov'st well

Genius ... is the capacity to see ten things where the ordinary man sees one, and where the man of talent sees two or three, plus the ability to register that multiple perception in the material of his art.
Jefferson

is

thy true herit-

and/or Mussolini [1935]

age Whose world, or mine or theirs or is it of none? First came the seen, then thus the palpable

America, my country, is almost a continent and hardly yet a nation.


Patria

Mia

Elysium, though
halls of hell.

it

were in the

CHARLES SEYMOUR
We
seek the truth,

What thou
age,

lovest well

is

thy true herit16.

LXXXI
dragon

1885-1963 and

will

endure

The
Pull

ant's

centaur

in

his

world.

down thy Made courage,


grace, Pull down

vanity, it is not man or made order, or made

the consequences. Statement made -while president of Yale University

[1937-1950]

LOUIS UNTERMEYER
1885for our love, Fling us a handful of stars! Caliban in the Coal Mines,

thy vanity,

say

pull

down.
Learn of the green world
In scaled
Pull

God,

if

You wish

what can be
artistry,

thy place invention or true

st.

down thy vanity, Paquin pull down!


ele-

The green casque has outdone your


gance.

16.

the day There's no more grass to cut away And, weary of labor, weary of play,
till

His are the triumphs

The history of an art is the historv of masterwork, not of failures, or mediocnty.

The
Poetry
prose.

Spirit of
as

Romance

He stretches out each conquering limb. And then the small grass covers him.
Long Feud,
st.

Having exhausted every whim,

[1910]

5,

must be

well written as

Letter to Harriet

Monroe

CARL VAN DOREN


1885-1950

[January 1915]
Objectivity

The
ogies.

first

writers are first

expression: straddled adjectives

and again objectivity, and no hindside-before-ness, no


(as "addled mosses

in the long run,

and the rest, nowhere but in antholAmerican Literature?

What

Is

dank"), no Tennysonianness of speech; nothing nothing that you couldn't, in some circumstance, in the stress of

some emotion, actually say.


Literature
is

16.

HAROLD TUCKER WEBSTER


1885-1952
Caspar
Soul.

language charged with

meaning.

ABC

of Reading [1934], ch. 2

The Timid Milquetoast: Character in series of cartoons

WEBSTER
TTie Thrill that Comes Once in a Title of series of cartoons Lifetime.
I

WYLIE
love the look, austere, immaculate. landscapes drawn in pearly monotones.

Of

HUMBERT WOLFE
1885-1940
Like a small gray coffeepot sits the squirrel.
I
I

Wild Peaches

[i

92 1 ],

$f .

was, being human, born alone; am, being woman, hard beset; I live by squeezing from a stone The little nourishment I get.
st. i

The Gray
Clean
as a lady,

Squirrel [1924],

cool as glass,
fresh without fragrance

The

In masks outrageous and austere years go by in single file;


smile.

the tulip was.

But none has merited my fear, And none has quite escaped my
Let
st.

Tulip [1924],
Listen! the

No

Charitable

Hope

wind is rising, and the air is wild with leaves, We have had our summer evenings, now for October eves!

[1923], t 2, 3*

My soul, be not disturbed


By planetary war; Remain securely orbed
In this contracted star. Address to Soul

Autumn

(Resignation) [1926], st. 2

My

[i

928],

st. i

ELINOR HOYT WYLIE


1885-1928

subtle spirit has my path attended, In likeness not a lion but a pard;

And when
hard,

the arrows flew

like hail, and

We shall walk in velvet shoes:


Wherever we go
Silence will
fall like

He

licked

my

wounds,

and

all

dews
st.

wounds were mended.

my
9

On white silence below.


Velvet Shoes [1921],

One
4

Person [1928]. Sonnet

My
If

late discovered earth

and

early sky.

Avoid the reeking herd,

Ib. Sonnet 17

Shun the polluted flock, Live like that stoic bird The eagle of the rock. The Eagle and the Mole [1921],
st.
i

It is

any have a stone to throw not I, ever or now. The PebUe

The worst and best are both inclined To snap like vixens at the truth;
But, O, beware the middle mind That purrs and never shows a tooth! Nonsense Rhyme, st.

If

you would keep your soul

sight or sound, Live like the velvet mole;

From spotted

Go burrow underground.

Ib. st.

Say not of Beauty she is good, Or aught but beautiful. Beauty [1921]
Enshrine her and she
dies,

Honeyed words
Gilded and

like bees,
little sting.

sticky, with a

Pretty

Wor&

who had
Ib.

The hard

heart of a child.

And

Hail, element of earth, receive thy own. cherish, at thy charitable breast,

Down

to the Puritan

marrow of

my

bones
There's something in this richness that
I

hate.

This man, this mongrel beast: He plows the sand, and, at his hardest need, He sows himself for seed. Hymn to Earth [1929], st. 6

990

AKINS

CORNFORD
It is my belief that there are "absolutes" in our Bill of Rights, and that they were put there on purpose by men

ZOE AKINS
1886-1958
The Greeks

Had

Word

For

It.

Title of play [1930]

who knew what words meant and


meant
lutes."
their prohibitions

to be "abso-

KARL EARTH
1886-1968
Conscience
of life.
is

the perfect interpreter


of God and the Word of Man [1957]

My

Interview Before the American Jewish Congress [April 14, 1962] view is T without deviation, with-

The Word

We
of
^var,

business competition

have before us the fiendishness and the world

and wrongdoing, antagbetween classes and moral dewithin them, economic tyranny pravity Ib. above and the slave spirit below.
passion
onism

out exception, without any ifs, buts, or whereases, that freedom of speech means that you shall not do something to people either for the views they have or the views they express or the words Ib they speak or write.
.

am

for the First

Amendment from
last.
I

the first word to the means what it says.

believe

it

Ib.

WILLIAM ROSE BENfT


1886-1950
Rjin, with a silver flail; Sun, with a golden ball;

An

unconditional right to say what

one pleases about public affairs is what I consider to be the minimum guarantee of the First

Amendment.
376

New
Whale,

York Times

Ocean, wherein the

whale Swims minnow-small.


st.
i

Sullivan,

Company v. VS. 254 [1964]

VAN WYCK BROOKS


1886-1963
His wife not only edited his works but edited him. The Ordeal of Mark Twain
[1920], ch. 5

And now there


All

is

merely

silence,

si-

lence, silence, saying

we did not know.

Sagacity

HUGO LAFAYETTE BLACK


1886-1971 more solemn responsibility, rests upon this Court than that of translating into living law and

No

higher duty, or

FRANCES CORNFORD
1886-1960
Magnificently unprepared For the long littleness of life.

maintaining

this

constitutional

shield
for

deliberately planned the benefit of every


to

and inscribed
of
v.

Rupert Brooke [1915]

human being subject


whatever
Florida,

our

Constitution

why do you walk through the


in gloves,

fields

race,

creed or persuasion.

Chambers
The
wall
ble.

309 U.S. 227 [1938]


First

Missing so much and so much? fat white woman whom nobody


loves,

Amendment

has erected a

Why

do you walk through the


is

fields in

waH between church and state. That

We could

must be kept high and impregnanot approve the slightest


Everson
v.

When
And

gloves

the grass of doves

as soft as the breast

breach.

Board of Education, 330 U.S. i [1947]

To

shivering-sweet to the touch? a Fat Lady Seen jrom the Train

991

JOLSON

TANIZAKI JUNICHIRO
Soldiers are dreamers;

AL JOLSON
1886-1950

when

the

You

ain't

Ad
first

heard nothin' yet, folks. lib remark introduced in the

begin They think of

firelit

homes, clean

and

beds,

wives.

Dreamer?

The

motion picture, talking Jazz Singer \Jidy 1927]

And when

JOYCE KILMER
1886-1918
I

the war is done and youth stone dead I'd toddle safely home and die in bed. Base Details
will

Who
The
is

remember, passing

tlircmgh

think that

I shall

never see
pressed

this gate,

A poem lovely as a tree. A tree whose hungry mouth

unheroic dead
fate

Who

the guns? shall absolve the foulness of their


unvictori-

who

fed

Against the earth's sweet flowing breast. Trees 1 [1913]

Those doomed, conscripted,


ous ones?

Poems are made by fools like me. But only God can make a tree.

On
16.

Passing the

New

Menin

DAVID MORTON
1886-1957

TANIZAKI JUNICHIRO
1886-

Who walks
fear;

with Beauty has no need of


stars

The Chinese
keep pace

The sun and moon and


with him;
Invisible

lump

love jade. That strange of stone with its faintly

muddy

light, like

hands

restore the ruined year,

And

time,

itself,

Who

grows beautifully dim. Walks with Beauty

the crystallized air of the centuries, melting dimly, dully back, are not we Oriendeeper and deeper tals the only ones who know its charm?

We cannot say ourselves what


we

it is

that

5HAEMAS O'SHEEL
1886-1954

find in this stone. It quite lacks the brightness of a ruby or an emerald or

They went

forth to battle, but they al2

ways fell; Their eyes were


shields;

fixed

above the sullen


bravely,

Nobly they fought and


well,'

but not
a subtle

And sank heart-wounded by


spell.

the glitter of a diamond. But this much we can say: when we see that shadowy surface, we think how Chinese it is, we seem to find in cloudiness the accumulated sediment of the long Chinese past, we think how appropriate it is that the Chinese should admire that surface and that shadow.

They Went Forth

to Battle,
St.
1

In Praise of Shadows [1934]

do not dislike everything that but we prefer a pensive shadow shines,


to a thin transparence.
16.

We

SIEGFRIED SASSOON
1886-1967
Soldiers
1

are

citizens

of

death's

gray

find beauty not Orientals . . but in the patin the itself thing only tern of shadows, the light and the dark.

We

land.
Sec

Dreamers
p.

Heywood Broun,

loooa,

and Ogden

ness, which that thing produces. A phosphorescent jewel gives off its glow
iFrora

Nash, p. 10516.

They came
fell.

forth to battle, but they always

Edward
Monthly

Seidensticker's

adaptation,
*1

JAMES MACPHERSON [1736-1796], Poems

Atlantic

Supplement.

Perspective

of Ossian, Cath-Loda,

Duan

Second

Japan [January

1955].

992

TANIZAKI JUNICHIRO
and color in the dark and the light of day beauty in
.

BROOKE

loses
. .

its

Curates, long dust, will

On

come and go

Our ancestors cut off the brightness 0a the land from above and created a
^orid of
of
it

lissom, clerical, printless toe.

The Old

Vicarage, Grant* Chester

shadows, and far in the depths they placed woman, making her
of beings.

the whitest

Where men
go;

England's the one land, I know, with Splendid Hearts may


all

In Praise of Shadows
would call back at least for literatme this world of shadows we are losI

And The

Cambridgeshire, of
shire for

Men who

England, Understand,
Ib.

would have the eaves deep and the vaDs dark, I would push back into the
shadows the things that
too clearly,
I

ing.

In the

mansion

called literature I

For Cambridge people rarely smile, Being urban, squat, and packed with
guile.

come forward

Ib.

would strip away the useless decoration. I do not ask that this be foot everywhere, but perhaps we may be allowed at least one mansion where we can turn off the electric lights and 16. $ee how it is without them.

Oh!
Stands
the
three?

yet

church

clock

at

ten

to
Ib.

And

is

there

honey

still

for tea?

Fish say, they have their stream

and

ED
to

WYNN

pond;

But

is

there anything beyond?

1886-1966
Every radish I ever pulled up seemed have a mortgage attached to it.

But
Is

somewhere, Time,

Heaven [1913] beyond Space and


Ib.

Explaining

Why He Sold His Farm

wetter water, slimier slime!


in that
shall

And

BRUCE BAIRNSFATHER
Well,
go to
it.

There
1

Heaven of all their wish, be no more land, say fish.


Ib.

if

1887-1959 you knows of a better

'ole,

But

there's

wisdom

in

women,

of

more

Fragments from France [1915]. Caption of cartoon

than they have known, And thoughts go blowing through them, are wiser than their own.
There's

Wisdom

in

Women

[1913]

RUPERT BROOKE*
1887-1915
Breathless,
hill,

These

have loved:
plates

White

and cups, clean-gleam-

we

flung us on the windy

ing.

The Great Lover [1914]


sheets, that

Then, the cool kindliness of


soon

Laughed in the sun, and kissed the The Hill [1910] lovely grass.

Smooth away
male kiss

trouble;

and the rough


live hair that

And then

you

suddenly

cried,

and
Ib.

turned away.

Of

blankets; grainy
is

wood;

Unkempt about those hedges blows An English unofficial rose.

Shining and free; blue-massing clouds; the keen

The Old
X

Vicarage, GrantChester [1912]

Unpassioned beauty of a great machine; The benison of hot water; furs to


touch; smell of old clothes,
16.

trench. See Frances Cornford, p. 99 ib.

The good 993

BROOKE
If I

JEFFERS

should
geld

die,

think only this of me:


foreign

Why Men
Vice Versa.

Behave Like
Title of

and

That That

there's

some comer of a

is

forever England.

The

Soldier [1914]
all

ROBINSON JEFFERS
1887-1962

And

think,

this

heart,

evil

shed

away, pulse in the eternal mind, no less Gives somewhere back the thoughts by

You make

England given.

Ib.

Now,

God be thanked, Who has matched us with His hour, And caught our youth, and wakened us Peace from sleeping.
The
Blow
worst friend and enemy Death.
out,
is

haste on decay: not blameworthy; life is good, be it stub, bornly long or suddenly mortal splendor; meteors are not needed less than mountains: shin* perishing republic. Shine, Perishing RtyuUk
[i9 2 4],

&

but
Ib.

Lend me the stone


and
I will

strength of the past


I

The wings
them.

lend you of the future, for


the

have

you bugles, over the rich

dead!
TTiere's

To

Rock That Will


Cornerstone

be a

none of these so lonely and


gifts

[1924]

poor of old, But, dying, has made us rarer


gold.

than

The deep
Pacific leans

dark-shining

The Dead

[1914], I

on the land,

Honor has come


earth,

back, as a king, to

To

Feeling his cold strength the outmost margins.

Night

[1925]

And paid his subjects with a royal wage; And Nobleness walks in our ways again; And we have come into our heritage.
Ib.

A creature progressively
Thirsty for
life will

be

Age

for death too. in Prospect [1926]

Happy people

ISAAC GOLDBERG
Diplomacy
is

dissolved in a

die whole, they are aU moment, they have

1887-1938 to do and say

No hard gifts; the unhappy


Linger a space, but pain
is

had what they wanted,

The

nastiest thing in the nicest way.

The

Reflex

is a thing that glad to be forgotten; but one who has given His heart to a cause or a country,

SIDNEY HILLMAN
1887-1946
Politics
is

His ghost

may spaniel consolate to watch


Post
is

it
it.

a while,

dis-

Mortem [1926]
[1928]
kill

the science of
Political

how who

The
Fd

gets what,

when and why.


Primer for All Americans [1944]

world's God of unreason.

treacherous and faH

Birth-Dues

sooner, except the penalties, man than a hawk.

EARNEST
Up

A.

HOOTON
A
book [1931]
.

Hurt Hawks
I

[1928]

1887-1954 from the Ape.


Title of

have grown to believe


is

stone

a better pillow than many

visions.

Clouds of Evening

[1950]

994

JEFFERS
The strong lean upon death as on a Gate in April [1930] rock.
Give Your Heart to the Hawks.
Title of
J

MONTGOMERY
The main object of the New Life Movement is to substitute a rational
l

life for

the irrational.

poem

[1933]

Speech, Nanchang

hate

my verses,
it

every line, every word. Love the Wild Swan

The

life

Does
.

matter whether you hate your


,

self?

At

least

Love vour eyes that can see, your mind that can Hear the music, the thunder of the Ib. wings. Love the wild swan.
Well: the day
is

vated if we come wealthy if we live productively; and we will be safe if we lead a military way of life. When we do this, we will

of our people will be elelive artistically; we will be-

have a achieve

rational

life.

[a rational life],

If we can we will have rev.


.

and

olutionized the daily Hfe of our people laid the foundation for the rehabilitation of our nation.

poem but

too

much

Ib.

Like one of Jeffers's, crusted with blood

and barbaric omens,


Painful to excess,
cry.

inhuman
Is

as a hawk's

[CHARLES tDOUARD

LE CORBUSIER

The Day

(September 19, 1939) [1942]


is

Poem

JEANNERET]
1887-1965

We

shall

have to perceive that battle

house is a machine for living in. 2 Vers une Architecture [1923]

a burning flower or like a

huge

music,

and

the

dive-bomber's

EMIHO MOLA
1887-1937
Fifth column. 3

screaming orgasm As beautiful as other passions; and that death and life are not serious alternatives.

Phrase, Spanish Civil

War

May-June, 1940, st. 2 millions must die, If England goes down and Germany up The stronger dog will still be on top.
If

[1936-1939]

millions are

bom

Ib.

st.

MONTGOMERY [VISCOUNT MONTGOMERY OF


ALAMEIN]
1887-

SIR

BERNARD

As
Be
a

for

me,

would rather
Original Sin [2948]

worm
man.

in a wild apple than a son of

blow

CHIANG KAI-SHEKi
1887The general psychology of our people today can be described as spiritless.

given the honor of striking a freedom which will live in history, and in the better days that lie ahead men will speak with pride of our

To

us

is

for

doings.

Message to his troops [June

5,

What
this:

lack

manifests itself in behavior is of discrimination between

1944] on tne eye f tne Affied invasion of Europe


Life Movement, whose beginning marked by this speech, was intended to "rally the ... people against the Communists," and further to "tighten discipline and build up morale in the Kuomintang and nation as a whole." a Une maison est une machine-a-habiter.
is

*The New

good and evil, between what is public and what is private, and between what
is

primary and

what

is

secondary.

Speech, Nanchang [September 1934}


From Sources of Chinese Tradition, edited by WiUiim Theodore de Bary [1960].
1

* Mola, one of Franco's generals, boasted that he had four columns of troops to lead against Madrid, and a fifth column of sympathizers inside Madrid.

995

MONTGOMERY
I

MOORE
The
deepest feeling always shows
in silence;
itself

am

tles. If I
I

not a bit anxious about my batam anxious I don't fight them.


I

wait until

am

From

vices publication

ready. British Information SerBritish Com-

not in silence, but restraint.

Nor was he

insincere in

my house your inn.


Inns are not residences.

" saying, "Make


Sifencu

manders [1945]

MARIANNE MOORE
1887-1972
I,

What is
what
is

our innocence, our guilt? All are naked, none is safe.

that too, dislike it: there are things are beyond all this fid-

What Are
I

Years?
I'm

important

am

troubled,

I'm

dissatisfied,

dle.

Poetry [1935], the poets

st. i

Irish.

nor

till

among

us can be

Spenser's Ireland [19415,


last tins

"literalists of

the imagination"
insolence

above
triviality

and

and can

Among
Humor

animals, one has a sense

of

humor.
saves a

present
for inspection, imaginary gardens with real toads in them,

few

steps,

it

saves years.
st.

The Pangolin
As contagion

[1941],

shaH we have
it.

Ib. st. 4, 5

There is a great amount of poetry in unconscious fastidiousness. Critics and Connoisseurs [1935]
Literature
a phase of life. If afraid of it, the situation
is

of sickness makes sickness, contagion of trust can make trust. In Distrust of Merits [1041]
they're fighting that
I

may
Self;
is

yet recover from the disease,

My

some have

it

lightly;

some

will die,

one

is

"Man
wolf to man"; yes.
ourselves.

irremediable;

if

We

devour
Ib,

one approaches it familiarly what one says of it is worthless. Picking and Choosing [1935]
I

small dust of the earth


that walks so arrogantly,
trust begets

think of

wonder what Adam and Eve it by this time.


Marriage [1935]

power and

faith is
Ib,

an affectionate thing.
Hate-hardened heart,
iron
is

But one would not be he who has noth1 ing but plenty.

heart of iron

iron

till it is

rust.

The

Jerboa [1935]

My father used to say,


"Superior people never
its,"

make long

vis-

There never was a war that was not inward; I must I have conquered in myself fight till what causes war, but I would not believe ft.
1

Have

to be shown Longfellow's grave or the glass flowers at Harvard. Silence [1935]


*I

inwardly did nothing.

Iscariotlike crime!

IRA GERSHWIN, Got Plenty o' Nuttin. Porgy and Bess [1935], title and refrain of song.

about by myself. I never had to be shown Ug" fellow's grave or the glass flowers at Harvard.' Bwkt's in Burke, Edmund Miss A. M. Romans.
Life, by Prior: said he. "Come

*The author's footnote for Silence: father used to say, 'Superior people never
long
visits.

"My
make
to

"Throw yourself into a coach," down and make my house jwt

When

am

visiting,

like

go

inn."

996

MOORE
Beauty
is

MORISON
I

And

dust

everlasting is for a time.


si.

can

In Distrust of Merits,

democracy, since no democratic government can last long without conciliation and compromise.

O to be a dragon
a

The Wisdom

of Benjamin

of symbol of the power silkworm size or immense; at times invisible.


Felicitous

of

Heaven

Franklin [1961]

An

his subject,

historian should yield himself to become immersed in the

phenomenon! To Be a Dragon [1959]


it.

place and period of his choice, standing apart from it now and then for a fresh view.
Vistas of History [1964]. The Experiences and Principles of an Historian
If the European discovery had been delayed for a century or two, it is possible that the Aztec in Mexico or the

To wear the
J

arctic fox

vou have to kill The Arctic

Ox (Or

Goat) [1959]

Camels are snobbish


jnd sheep, unintelligent; water buffaloes, neurasthenic even murderous.
Reindeer seem over-serious.
16.

Iroquois in North America would have established strong native states capable of adopting war tactics and

European

SAMUEL ELIOT MORISON


A
1887but nervous, tenacious but tough
race
restless

maintaining their independence to this day, as Japan kept her independence from China. The Oxford History of the

American People [1965], ch.

[the Yankees]; materially

ambitious, yet prone to introspection, and subject to waves of religious emotion,

...

race

whose

typical

memon

ber
for

is

eternally torn

between a passion
desire to get

in the

righteousness world.

and a

Maritime History of Massachusetts [1921], ch. 2

America was discovered accidentally by a great seaman who was looking for something else; when discovered it was not wanted; and most of the exploration for the next fifty years was done in the hope of getting through or around it. America was named after a man who discovered no part of the New World.
History
is

like that,

very chancy.

16.2

[Columbus] enjoyed long pure delight such as only a seaman may know, and moments of high, proud exultation that only a disstretches of

He

potism.

But sea power has never led to desThe nations that have enjoyed

coverer

can experience.

Admiral of the Ocean Sea [1942], ch. 49

A
ship

few hints as to

may be

useful to

literary craftsmanbudding histori-

sea power even for a brief period Athens, Scandinavia, the Netherlands, are Engknd, the United States those that have preserved freedom for themselves and have given it to others. Of the despotism to which unrestrained

military

ans. First

and foremost, get writing! History as a Literary Art. Old South Leaflets, ser. II, No. i
[1946]

power leads we have plenty of examples from Alexander to Mao.


16. 3

Fianklin may ... be considered one of the founding fathers of Ameri-

Make no mistake; the American Revolution was not fought to obtain freedom, but to preserve the liberties that Americans already had as colonials. In-

997

MORISON
dependence
was

SITWELL

no

conscious

goal,

FAIRFIELD OSBORN
to extenuate the miseries of the past nor to accept n incurable those of the present. The Limits of the Earth, eft. 10

in cellar or jungle by secretly nurtured bearded conspirators, but a reluctant last resort, to preserve "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness/' The Oxford History of the American People, ch. 12

We

1887do not live

The treedmen were not really free in descendants 1865, nor are most of their but one was in free Slavery 1965. really that aspect of a race and color problem is still far from solution here, or anywhere. In America particularly, the all grapes of wrath have not yet yielded
their bitter vintage.
Ib. 33

H.

I.

PHILLIPS
of

1887-1965 Horse-sense in an atmosphere Pomp and glory,

A Vermont Yankee in

Self-effacement in a generation Of self-salesmanship,

King Ballyhoo's Court!


Calvin Codify

These clipper ships of the early of wood in shipyards 1850'$ were built from Rockland in Maine to Baltimore. These architects, like poets who transnature's message into song, obeyed what wind and wave had taught them, to create the noblest of all sailing creavessels, and the most beautiful exno With America. in of man tions

JOHN REED
1887-1920

mute

Ten Days That Shook

the World. Tit le of firsthand account of the outbreak of the Bolshevik Revolution [1919]

traneous ornament except a figurehead, a bit of carving and a few lines of gold the leaf, their one purpose of speed over

DAME EDITH SITWELL


1887-1964

achieved by pergreat ocean routes was fect balance of spars and sails to the black hull; curving lines of the smooth and this harmony of mass, form and color was practiced to the music of dancing waves and of brave winds whisour tling in the rigging. These were

Remember
love

only this of our


till

hopeless

That never
Will the
the

Time

is

done
fire

fire

of the heart and the

of

mind be
the Rain

one.

Heart and Mind


Still falls

Gothic cathedrals, our Parthenon; but monuments carved from snow. For a few brief years they flashed their splendor around the world, then disappeared
with the
finality of

Dark
Blind

as the

world of man, black

as our

loss

the wild pigeon. 1


ft.

as

the

nineteen hundred and

36

forty nails

No

big modern war has been won

Upon

the Cross.
Still Falls.the

Rain

without preponderant sea power; and, conversely, very few rebellions of maritime provinces have succeeded without
acquiring sea power/
16.

My poems are hymns


glory of
life.

of praise to the
[1957]-

Collected

Poems

Somr
Poetry

40
is

Notes on

My

shorter version of this passage appeared in Maritime History of Massachusetts [1921], ch.

*A

"See Themistocles,

p.

78a;

Bacon,

p.

2090;

and Mahan,

p. 7855.

Rhythm one of the principal transbetween dream and reality. lators Rhythm might be described as, to the world of sound, what light is to the

99 8

SITWELL
ff

BROUN

of sight. It shapes

and

gives

new

SAM M. LEWIS
JOE

described by meaning. as melodv deprived of its Schopenhauer Taken Care Of [1965], ch. 14
pitch.

Rhythm was

AND YOUNG
1919

fl.

How You Gonna Keep

'Era

Down

WOOLLCOTT
1887-1943

ALEXANDER
oldest

on the Farm After TTiey've Seen Paree? Title and refrain of song

MAXWELL ANDERSON
in

The two
world

professions

the

1888-1959

ruined by amateurs.

What
Stage

The Knock
Streetwalker
Ladies, just a little

at the

Price Glory? Title of play [1924] with

LAW-

Door. The Actor and the

RENCE STALLINGS (1894-1968]

more

IRVING BERLIN
virginity,
if

mind. you don't

1888You've got to get up, you've got to get


up,

Capsule Criticism. Beerbohm Tree to the Extras


in this than meets the

You've got to get up


There
eye.
is less

this

Oh!
There's
Business.

How

momingl

Hate to Get
the

Up

in

Morning [1918]
Like

companion's comment at a Maeterlinck play (attributed to

No

Business

Show

TALLULAH BANKHEAD)
I must get out of these wet clothes and into a dry Martini. From Reader's Digest

Composition [1946]

HENRY BESTON
1888-

The neon glow


and
violence.

of the age of comfort


f

Babies in silk hats playing with dynamite.

Review

Of

diplomats.

From SAMUEL

of America, in

John

Burroughs s
[Feb-

The Freeman

HOPKINS ADAMS, A. Woollcott


['945]

ruary 11, 1952]

as

Germany was the cause of Hitler just much as Chicago is responsible for
Chicago Tribune.
Last words before the microphone [January 23, 1943], on People's Platform program

For a moment of night we have a glimpse of ourselves and of our world islanded in its stream of stars
pilgrims of mortality, voyaging between horizons across the eternal seas of space and time.

the

The Outermost House:


of Life

A Year on the Great Beach of


[1928]

Cape Cod

ROLAND YOUNG
1887-1953
And here's the happy bounding You cannot tell the he from she. Ike sexes look alike, you see; But she can tell, and so can he.
flea

HEYWOOD BROUN
1888-1939
In the march up to the heights of fame there comes a spot close to the
in which man reads "nothing but detective stories.*'

summit
Flea

The

G.K.C. [1922]

999

BKOUN
"Trees" (if I have the name right) is one of the most annoying pieces of verse within my knowledge. The other one is Kipling's "If," witn third place
reserved for Henley's "Invictus."

ELIOT
Putting on the spectacles of science in expectation of finding the answer to everything looked at signifies
inner

blindness.

The Voice

'Trees" maddens me, because it contains the most insincere line ever written by mortal man. Surely the Kilmer tongue must have been not far from the Kilmer cheek when he wrote, "Poems
are

of the Coyote,
introduction

JOHN FOSTER DULLES


1888-1959
Local defense will always be important But there is no local defense which alone will contain the might* land power of the Communist workf. Local defense must be reinforced by the further deterrent of massive
retaliatory

made by
It

fools like

me."
[1935]. "Trees," and "Invictus"

Seems to

Me

"If,"

Life is a copycat and can be bullied into following the master artist who bids it come to heel.
16,
I

Nature the Copycat

power.

Address to the Council on


eign

For12,

have known people to stop and buy an apple on the comer and then walk away as if they had solved the whole

Relations

[January

You have
just as
.

unemployment problem.
Ib.

to take chances for peace,


in war!

Chummy

Charlie
of

you must take chances


ability

The

New England.

swaggering

underemphasis

Heywood Broun:

Collected Edition [1941]

to get to the verge without getting into the war is the necessary art. If you try to run away from it, if you are scared to go to the brink,* you are lost.
. .

The

DALE CARNEGIE
1888-1955

From JAMES SHEPLEY, How Dulles Averted War, in Ufe [January 16 , 2956]

How
People.

to

Win

Friends and Influence


Title of

book

THOMAS STEARNS
ELIOT
1888-1965
Let us go then, you and I, When the evening is spread out against the sky Like a patient etherized upon a table.

[a

938]

RAYMOND CHANDLER
1888-1959

The

Big Sleep.

Title of novel [1939]

The Love Song

of

J. Alfred

J.

FRANK DOBIE

Prufrock [1917]
In the room the women come and go 16. Talking of Michelangelo. There will be time to murder and create.
Ib.

is nothing but a transference of bones from one

1888-1964 The average Ph.D. thesis

graveyard to another.

Texan

in

England [1945],
ch.
i

And indeed there will be time u To wonder, "Do I dare?" and, Do


dare?"
I

#
Jk

Conform and be dull. The Voice


*

of the Coyote

have measured out


1

my life with coffee

[1949], introduction

spoons. From the phrase

"to the brink" developed

synonym

for death.

"brinkmanship."

1OOO

EUOT
I

should have

been a pair of ragged


the floors of silent seas. of /. Alfred Prufrock

One
That

daws
Scuttling across

thinks of all the hands are raising dingy shades

In a thousand furnished rooms.

The Love Song

Preludes [1917], II

Twelve

o'clock.

Should I, after tea and cakes and ices, Havt the strength to force the moment
to
I

its crisis?

16.

Along the readies of the street Held in a lunar synthesis. Rhapsody on a Windy Nigfit
1*9*7]
I

have seen the


ness flicker,
I

moment

of

my

great-

am

And And
No!

have seen the eternal Footman

aware of the maids

damp

souls of house-

hold

my coat, and
was

in short, I
I

snicker, afraid.

16.

Sprouting despondently at area gates. Morning at the Window [1917]

am

not Prince Hamlet, nor was

The

readers

of the

Boston Evening

meant to be;
an attendant lord, one that will do To swell a progress, start a scene or

Am

Transcript Sway in the wind like a field of ripe

com.

two, Advise the prince;


tool,

The Boston Evening

no doubt, an easy

Transcript [*9*7]

Upon

the glazen shelves kept watch

be of use, Politic, cautious, and meticulous; Fufl of high sentence, but a bit obtuse;
Deferential, glad to

Matthew and Waldo, guardians of the


faith,

The army

of unalterable law. 1

At times, indeed, almost ridiculous 16. Almost, at times, the Fool.


I
I

Cousin Nancy [1917]


His laughter tinkled
cups.

among

the tea-

grow old
shall

grow old wear the bottoms of


I

...

...

Mr. Apottinax [1917]


like

my

trousers
16.

He kughed

an irresponsible foetus.
16.

rolled.

ShaH
I

part

my

hair behind?

Do

dare

Stand on the highest pavement of the


stair

shall

peach? wear white flannel trousers, and walk upon the beach. have heard the mermaids singing, 1
each to each.

to eat a

Lean on a garden urn Weave, weave the sunlight in your

hair.

La

Figlia

Che Piange

[1917]

Simple and faithless as a smile and shake of the hand. 16.


*

do not think that they will sing to me. 16.

TIB

human
drown.

voices

wake

us,

and we
16.

Here I am, an old man in a dry month, Being read to by a boy, waiting for rain. Gerontion [1920]
After

such

knowledge,

what

forgive-

have been, let us say, to hear the latest Pole Transmit the Preludes, through his hair

We

ness?

Think now

and

fingertips.

History has many cunning passages, contrived corridors And issues, deceives with whispering
ambitions,

Portrait of a

Lady

[1917], I

Guides us by
Paint

vanities.

16.

And

must borrow every changing


16. Ill

me

the bold anfractuous rocks


seas.
st.
i

shape

To find expression.
i

See

Faced by the snarled and yelping Sweeney Erect [1920],


1

Donne, p. 3045.

See Meredith, p. 7sob.

1001

ELIOT
This oval

cropped out with teeth.

Or your shadow
4
I

at

evening

Sweeney

Erect,

st.

The broad-backed hippopotamus


Rests on his belly in the mud; Although he seems so firm to us He is merely flesh and blood.

meet you; will show you dust

rising

fear in a handful of
I,

The Waste Land.


si. i

Tte

Burial of the Dead

The Hippopotamus

[2920],

Webster was much possessed by death

And saw

the skull beneath the skin.


[i 920] , St. 1

had not thought death had undone so 1 many. and infrequent, were exshort Sighs,
I

haled. 2
I

ft.

Whispers of Immortality

He knew
The ague

the anguish of the marrow

Where

think we are in rats' alley the dead men lost their bones.
16. II,

No

of the skeleton; contact possible to flesh


Ib.
st.

The Game of Chess

OOOO
It's

Allayed the fever of the bone.

that Shakespeherian Rag


ft.
its

so elegant

[of Donne]

So

intelligent.

Uncorseted, her friendly bust Gives promise of pneumatic bliss. I6.rt-5

Hurry up please

time.

Jfc.

But

at

Reorganized upon the floor

hear *

my

back from time to time

She yawns and draws a stocking up. Sweeney Among the Nightingales [1920], st. 4

The sound

of horns and motors, which

shall bring Sweeney to Mrs. Porter in the spring.

And
And

sang within the bloody wood


let their liquid sittings fall

When Agamemnon cried aloud,


To
stain the stiff dishonored shroud. Ib.st. 10
is

the moon shone bright on Mrs, And on her daughter

Porter

They wash

their feet in soda water.


16. Ill,

The Fire Sermon

April

the cruelest month, breeding

Lilacs out of the

dead land, mixing


rain.

At the violet hour, when the eyes and back Turn upward from the desk, when the

Memory and desire, stirring


Dull roots with spring

The Waste Land

[1922]. I, The Bund of the Dead

human engine waits Like a taxi throbbing waiting, 1 Tiresias, though blind, throbbing
tween two
lives. 4

beIb.
5

You know only

When

lovely

woman

stoops to

folly

A heap of broken images, where the sun


beats,

and
Paces about her room again, alone, She smooths her hair with automatic

And And

the dead tree gives no shelter, the


cricket

no

relief,

hand,

the dry stone no sound of water.


rock,
this red

And

puts a record on the gramophone.


Ib.

Only There is shadow under this red (Come in under the shadow of
rock),

Phlebas

the

Phoenician,

fortnight

dead,
1

And

win show you something different from either Your shadow at morning striding behind you
I

DANTE, Inferno, canto


p. 3603.

III,

II.

55-57-

a DA.NTE, Inferno, 3 See Marvell,


4

canto IV,
p.

II.

35-27.

See

Matthew Arnold,

5 See

Goldsmith, p. 448b.

1002

ELIOT
cry * Forgot sea swell

the

of gulls, and the deep


loss.

And the

profit

and

Because Because Because

I
I I

The Waste Land. IV, Death by Water


Here
is

do not hope to turn again do not hope do not hope to turn.

Ash-Wednesday [1930], I
Because these wings are no longer wings
to
fly

no water but only rock. 16. V, What the Thunder Said


the third

But merely vans

to beat the air

Who

is

who

walks always be16.


cis-

The

which _J J and
air

is

now

thoroughly small

you? And voices singing out of empty terns and exhausted wells.
I

side

dry

Smaller and dryer than the will Teach us to care and not to care

Ib.

Teach us

to

sit still.

16.

have heard the key Daptdhvam: Tom in the door once and turn once
only We think of the key, each in his prison Thinking of the key, each confirms a
prison.
16.

Lady, three white leopards sat under a


juniper tree.
16. II

Terminate torment

Of love unsatisfied The greater torment Of love satisfied.


Blown
Lilac
hair
is

16.

These fragments I have shored against

my ruins.

16.

sweet,
hair;

brown hair over

the mouth blown,

We are the hollow men We are the stuffed men


Leaning together Headpiece filled with straw. Alas! The Hollow Men [1925],
I

and brown

Distraction, music of the flute, stops and steps of the mind over the
third stair,

Fading, fading; strength beyond hope

Shape

without
force,

form,

shade

without

color,

and despair Climbing the third

stair.

16. Ill

Paralyzed
tion;

gesture without

mo-

Redeem The time. Redeem The unread vision in


While
gilded hearse.

Those who have crossed With direct eyes, to death's

jeweled unicorns

the higher dream draw by the


16.

other
lost

IV

Kingdom Remember us
Violent souls,

if

at all

not as

but only

As the hollow

men
16.

Against the Word the unstffled world still whirled About the center of the silent Word.

The

stuffed

men.

O my people, what have


thee.

done unto

Between the idea

And the

reality

Between the motion

Where
16.

shall the

And the act Falls the Shadow. 1


is the way the world ends Not with a bang but a whimper.

V
16.

will the

word be found, where word


is

Resound? Not here, there


silence.

not enough
16.

This

Wavering between the


loss

profit

and the

A cold coming we had


fast

of

it,

the worst time of the year. Journey of the Mtfgi


Dowson, p.

In this brief transit where the dreams


[i

927]

cross
CAVALCANTI, Perch' lo

See

Non

Spero.

1OO3

ELIOT

The

dreamcrossed
birth

twilight between and dying. Ash-Wednesday, V


fly

And And

his

his

brow so grim mouth so prim.


Five-Finger Exercise*, V

The white saik still


flying

seaward, seaward

All our

knowledge brings us

nearer to

Unbroken

wings.

our ignorance, All our ignorance brings us nearer


death, But nearness to

to

the lost heart stiffens and rejoices In the lost like and the lost sea voices And the weak spirit quickens to rebel For the bent goldenrod and the lost sea
smell.
Ib.

And

death no nearer

fo

God.

Where Where

is

the Life

we have

lost in

liv-

ing?
is the wisdom we have lost hi knowledge? Where is the knowledge we have lost fa

Even among these rocks, Our peace in His will. 1

Ib.

What

what shores what gray rocks and what islands


seas

The

information? cycles of Heaven in twenty cotunes

What water lapping the bow And scent of pine and the woodthrush
singing through the fog

Bring us farther from to the Dust.

God and

nearer

What images return O my daughter,


111 convert you! Into a stew. A nice little, white

The Rock [19341


[i 930]

Marina

Yet we have gone on living, Living and partly living.

Murder in the Cathedral


missionary Sweeney Agpnistes
little,

[1935],

#LI

stew!
Birth,

They know and do not know, what it is


to act or suffer.

and copulation, and death. That's all the facts when you come
brass tacks.

to
Ib.

They know and do not know,


ing
is

that

act-

suffering.

Ib.

Two live as
One live as

one two

Saint and Martyr rule from the tomb,


Ib.

Two live as three


Under the bam Under the boo Under the bamboo
tree.

The

last

temptation

is

the greatest

trea-

To
16.

son: do the right deed for the wrong


son.

rea-

ft.

Stone, bronze, stone, steel, stone, oakleaves, horses' heels

Human

kind cannot bear very much


1

re-

ality.

Ik

II

Over the paving. CorioSn

I.

Triumphal March

Time present and time past Are both perhaps present in time
tare,

fa-

hidden under the dove's wing, hid-

den in the turtle's breast, Under the palmtree at noon, under the
running water

And time

future contained in time

post.

Four Quartets. Burnt Norton


Footfalls echo in the

At the

stfll

O hidden.
With
1

point of the turning world.


16.

How unpleasant to
See Dante, p. i6ib. See Edward Lear, p.

meet Mr.

Eliot! 2

his features of clerical cut,

the passage which we did not take Towards the door we never opened 16. Into the rose garden.
1

Down

memory

672!),

Also in Four Quartets, Burnt Norton,

pt.

10O4

EUOT
Shall
first

we follow

The
Is
I

only wisdom
quire

we can hope

to acis

The deception of the thrush? Into our


world.

the wisdom of humility: humility


endless.

Four Quartets. Burnt Norton,


GirMc and sapphires in the mud Ctot the bedded axle-tree. The trilling wire in the blood
Sings

Four Quartets. East Coker,

11

The
The
16. II

houses are

all

gone under the


gone under the
all

sea.

Ib.

below inveterate scars

Aadreconciles forgotten wars.


still point ot the turning world. Ib. Neither flesh nor fleshless.

dancers are

all

hill.

16.

At the

dark dark dark. 1


dark,

They

go into the

The
the still point, Except for the point, There would be no dance, and there is Ib. only the dance.

vacant interstellar spaces, the vacant into the vacant. 16.

And we all
Nobody's
1

go with them, into the silent


is

funeral.

time Only through time

is

conquered.
Ib.

funeral, for there

no one to

Sudden in a shaft of sunlight Even while the dust moves liere rises the hidden laughter Of children in the foliage Quick now, here, now, always Ridiculous the waste sad time Stretching before and after.
In

still, and let the dark come upon you Which shall be the darkness of God.

bury. said to my sod, be

16.

To
Ib.

V
I

where you are, to get from where you are not, You must go by a way wherein there is
arrive

my beginning

is

my end.
Coker [1940],

no

ecstasy.

16. East

In order to arrive at what you do not

Keeping time, Keeping the rhythm in their dancing As in their living in the living seasons The time of the seasons and the constellations

know You must go by


way

the

way which

is

the
16.

of ignorance.

The whole earth is our hospital Endowed by the ruined millionaire.


16.

The time of milking and the time of


harvest

We call this Friday good.


And
Is a

16.

Hie time of the coupling of

man and
and
fall-

woman
And that of beasts. Feet
ing.

so each venture

new

beginning, a raid

on the

inar-

rising

ticulate

Eating

and drinking.
is

Dung and

death.
16.

With shabby equipment

always deteri-

orating In the general mess of imprecision of


feeling,

the late November doing With the disturbance of the spring.

What

Undisciplined squads of emotion.


16.

16. II

V
16.

periphrastic study poetical fashion,


still

in

worn-out

For

us, there is only the trying. rest is not our business.


is

The

Leaving one wrestle

with the intolerable

Home
i

where one

starts

from. As

we

With words and meanings. The poetry 16. does not matter.

grow older
Sec Milton, p. 3493.

1005

ELIOT

The world becomes


tern

stranger, the pat-

No

end to the withering of


flowers.

withered
'1

more complicated Of dead and living. Not the intense

Four Quartets.

he Dry
JJ

moment
burning in every moment the lifetime of one man only But of old stones that cannot be deciIsolated, with But a lifetime

Salvayx,

no before and

after,

And not

Only the hardly, barely prayabfc Prayer of the one Annunciation. ft, The backward look behind the assurance
recorded history, the backward look Over the shoulder, towards the
tive terror.

phered.

Four Quartets. East Coker,


Love
is

Of

haff.

When

most nearly itself here and now cease to matter.


*

prhni-

jj

Old men ought to be explorers Here and there does not matter We must be still and still moving
Into another intensity For a further union, a deeper communion

Not fare
But

well,
Ib. JJJ

fare forward, voyagers.

Music heard
That
it is

so deeply not heard at all, but


lasts.

you

ait

Through the dark cold and the empty


desolation,

the music While the music

IJ>.

The wave

cry,

the wind cry, the vast

Of
I

waters the petrel and the porpoise. In my Ib. end is my beginning. 2


I

content at the kst If our temporal reversion nourish (Not too far from the yew tree)
7

We

Only undefeated Because we have gone on

trying;

The life

do not know much about gods; but


think that the river
a strong

What

of significant soil. It, the dead Had no speech fa,


living,
tell

Is

brown god sullen, untamed and intractable. 16. The Dry Salvages [1941], I
is

when They can

you, being dead: the


fire

communication Of the dead is tongued with


the language of the
16. Little

beyond
I

The sea
ite

the land's edge


it reaches, tosses

also,

the gran-

living.

Gidding

[1942],

Into

which where it

the

beaches

Its hints

The

The

of earlier and other creation: the hermit crab, the starfish, whale's backbone; pools where it offers to our curiosity

Water and fire shall rot The marred foundations we Of sanctuary and choir.
This
is

forgot,

the death of water and

fire,

Ib. II

In the uncertain hour before the morn-

ing
delicate algae

The more
It tosses

and the sea

anemone.

Near the ending of interminable nigbt At the recurrent end of the unending
After the dark dove with the
flickering

The

up our losses, the torn seine, shattered lobsterpot, the broken

tongue

And

oar the gear of foreign dead men. sea has many voices.3
is

Had
Since

passed below the horizon of

his

The
Ib.

homing.
our

Ib.

concern

was speech, and


tribe.
1

There
*

no end of

it,

the voiceless wail-

To
1

speech impelled us of the purify 7 the dialect


sens plus

ing,
See Roethke, p. 1065!). *See Mary, Queen of Scots, p. igsb. * See Tennyson, p. 6460.

Ib.

Donner un

k pur aux mots de


[1843-1899],

STPHANE MAIXARM Tombeau d'Edgar Poe


tribu.

It

10O6

ELIOT

Who

then devised the torment? Love. the unfamiliar Name Love that wove Behind the hands of flame shirt intolerable Ibe cannot remove. Which human
is

and emotions know what it means to want to escape from these tilings.
'Iradition

and the Individual


Talent

power

We only live, only suspire


Consumed by
either
fire

The
in the

or

fire.

only way of expressing emotion form of art is by finding an "ob-

Four Quartets.

Little

Gidding,

IV

jective correlative"; in other set of objects, a situation, a

On

So, while the light fails a winter's afternoon, in a secluded

words, a chain of events which shall be the formula of that particular emotion. Hamlet and His Problems [1919]

chapel
History
is

now and England.

Ib.

Immature
poets
steal.

poets

imitate;

mature

We

shall

Aad the end of

not cease from exploration all our exploring

Philip Massingsr [1920]


in language Every development a development of feeling as well.
vital

Will be to arrive

where we started
for the
first

And know the place

time.
16.

is

A condition
(Costing

of complete simplicity less than everything) And all shall be well and .Ml manner of thing shall be well of flame are inWhen the

not

In the seventeenth century a dissociation of sensibility set in, from which we have never recovered; and this
dissociation,
as
is

natural,

was aggra-

tongues

folded
Into the

And the
By the

fire

crowned knot of fire and the rose are one.


Ib.
delicate,
invisible

vated by the influence of the two most Milton powerful poets of the century,

and Dryden.

The Metaphysical Poets [1921]


Poets in our civilization, as
it
.

web you

exists at
.

wove
The inexplicable mystery of sound. To Walter de la Mare [1948]

. The be difficult. present, must and more compoet must become more more indiprehensive, more allusive,

rect, in order to force,

to dislocate
its

if

What is
Hell
is

Hell is oneself, alone, the other figures in


hell?
1

it

necessary, language into

meaning.
Ib.
all

Merely projections. The Cocktail Party [1950]


It

Humility

is

the most difficult of

[tradition]
if

cannot be inherited,
it

virtues to achieve; nothing dies harder than the desire to think weH of oneself.

and

you want

you must obtain

it

by great labor.

Tradition and the Individual Talent [1919]

Shakespeare and the Stoicism of Seneca [1927]

The

oal self-sacrifice,

is a continprogress of an artist a continual extinction

The great poet, in writing himself, 1 Ib. writes his time.

We
ligion.

of personality.

I*

vinced of too

know too much, and are conlittle. Our literature is a


and so
is

expression an escape from personality. But, of course, only those who have personality l Scc si Virgil, p. uga; and Marlowe, p.
and note.

not a turning loose of emois tion, but an escape from emotion; it of personality, but not the
Poetry
is

substitute for religion,

our

re-

Dialogue on Dramatic Poetry [1928]

In a footnote, Eliot writes:


said

"Remy de Gour-

mont

much

the same thing, in speaking

of Flaubert."

ELIOT
. . . why I prefer the that of Shakespeare, of to Dante poetry I should have to say, because it seems to me to illustrate a saner attitude towards the mystery of life. The Sacred Wood, introduction

LAWRENCE
ten:

If I ask myself

he may have wasted his time aad messed up his life for nothing, The Use of Poetry and tht
Tradition by

\}& of Criticism. Conclusion


itself is

not

[1928]

The general point of view may be described as classicist in literature, royalist in politics, and Anglo-Catholic in
religion.

perpetually criticized and brought up to date under the supervision of what I call orthodoxy.

must

be

eaoogjh-

After Strange Gods

For Lancelot Andrews


preface

WILLIAM
[On the
!]

L.

LAURENCE

We
know
be

1888-

fight for lost causes because

we
first

that our defeat and dismay may the preface to our successors' victory,
itself will

though that victory


rary;

we

fight rather to

be tempokeep something

bomb expbgreat ball of fire about a nufc in diameter, changing colors as it


sion

atom

alive

than in the expectation that anything will triumph. Ib. Francis Herbert Bradley

shooting upward, from deep purpfc to orange, expanding, growing bigger, rising as it was expanding, an elemental
force freed

kept

from

its

bonds

after

The
that
it

great weakness of Pragmatism is ends by being of no use to any,

chained for billions of years. In the New York Times

being

[Sep-

tember 26,

1945]

body.

16.

Genuine poetry can communicate


before
it is

At first it was a giant column that soon took the shape of a supiamundane
mushroom.
ft.

understood,

Dante [1929]

More can be learned about how to write poetry from Dante than from any English poet. . . . The language of
each great English poet is his own language; the language of Dante is the perfection of a common language.
16.
I

T. E.

LAWRENCES

loved you, so

1888-1935 I drew these tides <rf men into my hands and wrote nay

To

passion; altitude and greatest depth.

of

Shakespeare gives the greatest width human Dante the greatest


16.

will across the sky in stars. earn you Freedom, the seven-pillared worthy house, that your eyes

When we came.

might be shining
Seven

for

me
Wisdom*

Pillars of

Sometimes, however, to be a "ruined

man" is itself a vocation. The Use of Poetry and


of
Criticism
[1933].

[1926], dedwwtfon

the Use

Words-

worth and Coleridge


things are, and as fundamentally they must always be, poetry is not a career, but a mug's game. No honest

success, but much from a sure defeat.

There could be no honor in a sore might be wrested


Revolt in the Desert
[1927],
eft.

As

19

poet can ever feel quite sure of the permanent value of what he has writ-

*At Alamogordo, New Mexico, July * Lawrence changed his name to T.


in 1927. a See Proverbs $:i, p. *$b.

16,

19*5,

E. Star

1008

O'NEILL

SEEGER

EUGENE O'NEILL
1888-1953
Dat ole
davil, sea.

And

in the

blowing.

wood the furious winter Winter Remembered

Anna
We's
all

Christie [1922], act I

pen and
that's all.

we

poor nuts and things hapyust get mixed in wrong,


16.

IV

Hands hold much of heat in little storage. They Hail the Sunrise The lazy geese, like a snow cloud Dripping their snow op the green grass, Tricking and stopping, sleepy and

For de little stealin' dey gits you in soon or late. For de big stealin' dey makes you emperor and puts you in de
kil

Who cried in goose, Alas.


Here
lies

proud,

de/s one thing I learns in ten years on de Pullman cars listenin' to de white qualo'
it's ity talk,

HaH

Fame when you

croaks. If

John Whiteside's Daughter lady of beauty and high de-

Bells for

dat same fact The Emperor Jones [1920], sc. i that most deadly and Poverty
of
all diseases.

Of

chills

and fever she died, of fever


chills,

and

The

prevalent

16.

And

Yank: Surel Lock

me

up! Put

me

delight of her husband, her aunts, an infant of three, of medicos on

in

her

ills.

a cage! Dat's de on'y answer yuh know. G'wan, lock me up!

marveling sweetly Here Lies a Lady


the sinner

God have mercy on

Policeman: Yank: Enough to

What

you been doin7

gimme

life for!

was born, see? Sure, dat's de charge. Write it in de blotter. I was born, get

No gravy and no grub, No pewter and no pub, No belly and no bowels,

Who must write with no dinner,

me!
Desire

The Hairy Ape


Under the Elms.

[1922]

Only consonants and vowels.


Survey of Literature
Captain Carpenter rose up in his prime Put on his pistols and went riding out.

Title of play [1924]

He
out

couldn't design a cathedral with-

it

looking like

the First Super[1926]

Captain Carpenter,

st.

natural

Bank!

The Great God Brown


Our
lives are

terludes in

merely strange dark inthe electrical display of God


Strange Interlude [1928]

ROBERT EMMONS ROGERS


1888-1941

the Father!

Marry the
Electra.

boss's daughter. Advice to the Class

Mourning Becomes

Title of dramatic trilogy [1931]

of 1929, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

A Long

Day's Journey into Night. Title of play [1956]


I

ALAN SEEGER
1888-1916 have a rendezvous with Death
rustling

JOHN CROWE RANSOM


1888monstrous either one apart, Possessed me, and were long and loath
evils,

When
And

At some disputed barricade, spring comes back with


shade
apple blossoms
I
fill

Two

the

air.

at going:

Have a Rendezvous
spring trips

wir/i

Death
this

cry

of Absence,

Absence,

in

the

When

north

again

heart,

year,

1009

SEECER

AIKEN

And
I

to

shall
I

pledged word am true, that rendezvous. Have a Rendezvous with Death

my

not

fail

who are fighting against that they are not fighting a starry-eyed liberal or mystic. If thev
people

The

me know

really

BARTOLOMEO
VANZETTI
1888-1927
found myself compelled to back from my eyes the tears,
I

worried. 1

thought that, they wouldn't

\*

Speech at testimonial
[January 29,
fight

dinner

and

CONRAD AIKEN
1889-

heart trobling to my throat to not weep before him. But Sacco's name will live in the hearts of the people when your name, your kws, institutions and your false god are but a dim rememoring of a cursed past in which man was wolf to the man. Last Speech to the Court l

quanch

my

Music

And

heard with you was more than music, bread I broke with you was more than bread.
I

Now

that
late;

am

without you,

all is deso-

All that

HENRY AGARD WALLACES


1888-1965
purchasing power Unemployed means unemployed labor and unemployed labor means human want in the midst of plenty. This is the most challenging paradox of modern times.

was once so beautiful is Bread and Music


dusk above the

dead.

Stars in the purple

roof-

tops Pale in a saffron mist and seem to die, And I myself on a swiftly tilting planet Stand before a glass and tie my tie.
Senlin.

Morning Song

Address [1934]
object of this war is to make sure that everybody in the world has the privilege or drinking a quart of milk
a day/*

One by one
Neighing

in the moonlight there,

far off

on the haunted
to the

air,

The

The

unicorns

come down

sea.

16. Evening Song

Rock meeting rock can know


ter

love bet-

Address,

The

Price

of Free
8,

World

Than

Victory [May

1942]

eyes that stare or lips that touch. All that we know in love is bitter,

The century on which we are entering can be and must be the century of the common man. Ib.
The hair goes with
the hide.

And

it is

not much.
Annihilation,
st.

When asked why he had not mentioned Franklin D. Rooserunning mate, Harry S.

All lovely things will have an ending, All lovely things will fade and die,

And

youth, that's
ing,

now so bravery

spend-

velt's

Truman, in his campaign speech in Madison Square Garden, New York [September 21, 1944]
Vanzetti and Nicolo Sacco, Italian anarchists, were executed August 23, 1927, by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts on charges, never conclusively proved, of murder and robbery.
1 See Clare Boothe Luce, p. i05sb. *This statement became twisted into the purported slogan "Milk for Hottentots."
1

Will beg a penny by and by. All Lovely Things Will Have

<m

Ending

The

hiss

was now becoming

a roar

the whole world was a vast moving screen of snow but even now it said
peace,
it

it

said remoteness,

it

said

coH

said sleep. Silent


1

Snow, Secret Snow

[4932]

See C. L. Becker, p. 9130.

1O10

AIKEN
swims. Altitude in the bloodstream And in the Human Heart
1

HITLER

PHILIP GUEDALLA
1889-1944
Biography, like big game hunting, is one of the recognized forms of sport, and it is as unfair as only sport ran be. Supers and Supermen [1920]

6 [1940). Sonnet
foe is

and

fire

the silent language of the peak; the silent language of the star.
Ib.

10

The work
will be death, For brief as water falling or a leaf, and brief as flower falling,
brief

of

seemed
j

divisible

Henry James has always by a simple dynastic

as

the taking, and the giving,

thus

breath; natural,
grief.

thus brief,

my

love, is Ib- 18

arrangement into three reigns: James I, 1 I&. James II, and the Old Pretender. Strange that pre-eminence in Germany has more than once been indicated by an eccentric pattern in the
hair

upon the upper lip, The Hundred Years [2936]

ROBERT CHARLES BENCHLEY


1889-1945 been abroad in so long that without an acI almost speak English The Old Sea Rover Speaks cent.
I

is

haven't

The true history of the United States the history of transportation ... in which the names of railroad presidents are more significant than those of PresiIb. dents of the United States.
There
of
is

more

with the

An Austrian scientist has come out announcement that there is no $ach thing as a hundred per cent male
a hundred per cent female. If this is a big step forward. Talk to Young Men: GradIb.

no plant in the whole world cautious growth than Anglo-

American negotiation. Mr. Churchill [1942] (apropos the wedding of Mr. Churchill's
parents]

or

true, it is really

uation Address,

The Decline

ADOLF HITLER
1889-1945
applied the one means that wins the easiest victory over reason: terror and force.

of

Sex
Tell

My adversaries

us your phobias and we


of.

will tell

yon
It

what you are afraid


took

Phobias

me

Mein Kampf

[1933],'-

voZ. J,

that I

had no

fifteen years to discover talent for writing, but I

ch. 2

couldn't give it

up because by that time Remark ! was too famous.

A
man.

majority can
.

never replace

the

hundred fools do not make one wise man, an heroic decision is not likely to come from a hun. .

Just as a

dred cowards.

Ib. 3

CHRISTOPHER DAWSON
1889are

Mankind has grown

strong in eternal

men decide that all means permitted to fight an evil, then their good becomes indistinguishable from the evil that they set out to destroy. The Judgment of the Nations
As soon as
[1942]
*

struggles and it will only perish through Ib. 4 eternal peace.

Strength
attack.

lies

not in defense but in


16-

propaganda has to be popular and has to adapt its spiritual level to


All
i

See Henry James, p. 79?b.

Sec Sir

Thomas Browne,

p.

My

Battle.

1011

HITLER
the perception of the least intelligent of those towards whom it intends to direct
itself.

LIPPMANN
than she
war.
If
is

herself at the

end of this Speech to the Reichtfeg


despair, they
get. If

Mein Kampf

vol. I, ch.

6
the

. . . great masses of the people will more easily fall victims to a big lie 16. 10 than to a small one.

The

German people
no
I

will deserve

better than they


will

they despair,

not be

them

if

God lets them down.

sorry for

an idea is right in itself, and if thus armed it embarks on the struggle in this world, it is invincible and every to its inner persecution wiH lead
If

at Munich on the twentieth anniversary of the Munich beer hall putsch [broadcast No-

Speech

vember
Is Paris

8,

1943]
*

strengthening.

Ib.

1-2

burning?
-while

Germany

will

be

either
all.

world

Asked

at

the

OberkomR*.

power or will not be at

mando
Ib. II,

der

Wehrmacht,

14

stenburg,

Germany

[August 25,

Never tolerate the establishment of two continental powers in Europe.


Ib.

GEORGE

S.

KAUFMAN
With You.2
Title of play [1936]

claim

The Sudetenland is the last territorial I have to make in Europe.


Address, at Sports Palast, Berlin [September 26, 1938]

1889-1961

You Can't Take


what

It

After fifteen years of work I have achieved, as a common German soldier and merely with my fanatical will power, the unity of the German nation, and have freed it from the death sentence of Versailles. 1

Satire

is

closes Saturday night.

STODDARD KING
1889-1933
There's a long, long trail a-winding Into the land of my dreams, Where the nightingales are singing

Proclamation to the troops on the taking over the leadership of

German armed
ber 21, 1941]

forces

[Decem-

And

a white

moon

beams.
Trail [1913]

The Long, Long

This war no longer bears the characformer inter-European conIt is one of those elemental flicts. conflicts which usher in a new millennium and which shake the world once in a thousand years. Speech to the Reichstag [April 26, 1942]
teristics of

WALTER LIPPMANN
1889Surely the task of statesmanship is more difficult today than ever before is . The distance between . history. what we know and what we need to know appears to be greater than ever. . . Nor can we keep to the problem
.
.

Whomsoever Engknd
x

allies

herself

with, she will see her allies stronger


Allied and Associated Governments afand Germany accepts the responsibility of Germany and her Allies for causing all the loss and damage to which the Allied and Associated Governments and their nationals have been subjected as a consequence of the war imposed upon them by the aggression of Germany and her Article 2)1 (the "war guilt clause"), Allies.
firm

The

within our borders. Whether we wish it or not we are involved in the world's of heaven problems, and all the winds blow through our land.

A Preface to

Politics [1913],

ch.4
1

Brennt *Lp, no

Paris?

man

taketh his goods with him.


B.C.]

Treaty of Versailles [June s8, 1919]

Song of the Harp-player [c *ioo

1012

LIPPMANN
TTic principles of liberalism

...

are

common

dder than all existing constitutions and than any formu*ie more deeply rooted be put into lation of them that can
words.
*

sense, without the grace of genius, can deal with successfully.

Roosevelt

Has Gone

[April 14, 1945]

The Hberal philosophy holds that enmust be accountaduring governments We to someone beside themselves; that
government responsible only own conscience is not for long tolexabfc. It holds that since any government is needed a methi$ Sable to fail, there od of changing the governors without
a

The
acorn.

world state

is

inherent in the
is

United Nations as an oak tree

in

an

One World

or

None

[1946]
is

to

its

regime, an

established order,

that unless wrecking the state. It holds there is a method, be it through elections or

erned can

otherwise, by which the govmake their views effective in

rarely overthrown by a revolutionary movement; usually a regime collapses of its own weakness and corruption and then a revolutionary movement enters among the ruins and takes over the powers that have become vacant. For Charles de Gixutte \Today

and Tomorrow, June


I

5,

1958]

some proportion to their weigjht, the nation is at the mercy of violence in the form of terrorism, assassination, conspiracy,

mass compulsion, and civil war. In Defense of Liberalism [Vanity


Fair,,

November 1934]
arbi-

The denial that men may be


trary er law.

in

human transactions is the high... By this higher law all


and
all political

don't care about the word isoktionism, and I don't care about the word appeasement. I'm interested in the rights and needs and responsibilities of the United States. are not the are not policeman of mankind. able to run the world, and we shouldn't pretend that we can. Let us tend to our own business, which is great enough as

We

We

formal laws
arc

behavior

it is. It's

very great.
affairs.

We have

neglected
is

judged in civilized societies. ... If tbe sovereign himself may not act willfaHy, arbitrarily, by personal prerogative, then no one may. His ministers may not. The legislature may not.
Majorities
not.

our own

Our education

in-

may

not.

Individuals

may

Crowds may not. The national state may not. This law which is the of law is the opposite of an acspirit cumulation of old precedents and new fiats. By this higher law, that men must
ally

not be arbitrary, the old tested and the new

kw is continukw reviewed.
eft.

adequate, our cities are badly built* our social arrangements are unsatisfactory. can't wait another generation. Unless we can surmount this crisis, and work and get going onto the path of a settlement in Asia, and a settlement in Europe, all of these pkns of the Great Society here at home, all the pkns for the rebuilding of backward countries in other continents will all be put on the shelf, because war interrupts every-

We

The Good

Society [1937],
all

15

thing like that. Conversations with Walter Lipp-

In foreign rektions, as in
relations,

other

a policy has been formed only when commitments and power have been brought into baknce, U. S. Foreign Policy [1943]
final test of a leader is that he behind him in other men the conviction and the will to carry on,
.

mann [1965]. Lippmann and Eric Sevareid, February 22, 1965

free press

is

The

leaves

... A great society is simply a big and 1 complicated urban society. Address, International Press Institute Assembly,

organic

necessity

not a privilege but an in a great society.

London [May

27,

The genius of a good

leader

is

to
1

1965]
See Lyndon Johnson, p. 10643.

leave

behind him a situation which

1013

LIPPMANN
Without
intelligent

AKHMATOVA

criticism

and
the

reliable

and

The

basic fact of

reporting,

government

cannot govern.
Address, International Press Institute

mendous pace of change in human Kfe Credo [reprinted in the New York
Times, September
7,

today

is

the

tre-

Assembly, London

Democracy and
to an end, not the

socialism are means

Responsible journalism is journalism responsible in the last analysis to the editor's own conviction of what, whether interesting or only important, is in Ib. the public interest.

end

itself.

jj,

forces of a capitalist society, if left unchecked, tend to make the rich richer and the poor poorer. jj
I want nothing to do with any ret gion concerned with keeping the masses satisfied to live in hunger, filth, and ignorance. I want nothing to do with any order, religious or otherwise, which does not teach people that they are capable of becoming happier and more civil-

The

As the
like

free press develops, the para-

mount point

is whether the journalist, the scientist or scholar, puts truth in the first place or in the second.

Ib.

ized,

true

KATHERINE MANSFIELD
1889-1923

tain of his soul. 1

on this earth, capable of becoming man, master of his fate and cap

From EDGAR SNOW,

Journey to the Beginning [1958]

Whenever

prepare for a journey

I
I

prepare as though for death. Should never return, all is in order. This

ANNA AKHMATOVA
1889-1966 Oh, how good the snapping and
crackle
the

is

what

life

has taught me.


Journal [1922]

I want, by understanding myself, to understand others. I want to be all that I am This capable of becoming. . all sounds very strenuous and serious. But now that I have wrestled with it,
.
.

the frost that daily grows more keen! Laden with its dazzling icy roses, The white-flaming bush is forced to
lean.

Of

no longer so. down. AZZ is weU.


it's

I feel

happy

deep

Oft,

How Good

[1940],
is

st. i

What
(end of her journal)

hangs in the balance

nowise

in

Ib.

We
Our

doubt; know the event and

we

brave what

we know;

JAWAHARLAL NEHRU
1889-1964
Revolution of a hundred fifty years ago gradually ushered in an age of political equality, but the times have changed, and that by itself is not enough today. The boundaries of democracy have to be widened now so as to include economic equality also. This is the great revolution through

clocks are all striking the hour of

courage.

Courage

[1942]

The French

It is

and

great language we love: you, Russian tongue, we must save, and we swear

We will give
You
shall live
ise

you unstained

to the sons

of our sons;

on our
never

lips,

and we prom-

you
free

prison shall

know

you, but you shaB


Ib.

be
Forever.
1

which we are

all

passing.
See Sallust, p. n6a, and note.

Glimpses of World History [1939]

1014

BUSH

DE GAULLE
either.
is;

VANNEVAR BUSH
1890Scicncc:

The French can

tell

you what

it

The

Endless Frontier.
Title of

book [1945]

or the Czechs, or the Greeks, or the Norwegians, or the Filipinos; it is subjection to an alien oppressor,

No

The scene changes but the aspirations of men of good will persist. Modern Arms and Free \len
foreword

World,
30,

ft

Necessary [in Satof


Literature,

urday

jRmew

March

democracy loses its touch, then no will be needed to overwhelm it If it keeps and enhances its strength, ao great war need come again. 16. Conclusion
If

scientists.
if

mat war

world or none, say the atomic Has it occurred to them that their one world turned out to be to-

One

talitarian
(

better have

and obscurantist, we might no world at all? 16.

Fear cannot be banished, but


he calm

it

can

The republic was not established by cowards, and cowards will not preserve
it.

be

and without panic; and it can mitigated by reason and evaluation.


16.

Phi Beta Kappa Oration,

Harvard [1953]

KAREL CAPEK
1890-1938
Rossum's Universal Robots. 1

With a gseat price our ancestors obtained this freedom, but we were bom
. But that freedom can be reonly by the eternal vigilance which has always been its price.

free

tained

R.UJI. [1920]

But

We

Were Born
[1954],

Free
eft. i

MARCUS COOK CONNELLY


Gangway
for

The
Don't

first

and great commandment


scare you.

is,

let

them

Ib.

1890de Lawd God Jehovah! The Green Pasturesr'ar

I believe it

but only

if

we

[the nation] will endure, 16. stand up for it.

God: 111
miracle.

jest

back an' pass a


16.

only so long as
brave.

This will remain the land of the free it is the home of the
Ib.

Gabriel:

How

about cleanin' up de

whole mess of 'em


ag'in

and

sta'tin' all

over

wid some new kind of animal? 16. God: An' admit I'm licked?

Even bein'

Gawd ain't a bed

of roses.
16.

What makes Western civilization worth saving is the freedom of the mind, now under heavy attack from the who have persisted primitives . have not the courage us. If we among to defend that faith, it won't matter much whether we are saved or not.
.
.

ELMER DAVIS
Atomic warfare
logical

16.6

1890-1958 is bad enough; biowarfare would be worse; but


something that
is

there is
1

worse than

CHARLES ANDR JOSEPH MARIE DE GAULLE


1890-1970

The term "robot" came into English through

&pek' play.
'Suggested by Roark Bradford's stories, Jtom Ad*m an* His Chillun.

The sword
and grandeur

is

the axis of the world,

Of

is

indivisible.

Le FU de ftipte [1934]

1015

DE GAULLE

HERBERT

The perfection preached in the Gospels never yet built up an empire. Every man of action has a strong dose of egotism, pride, hardness,
all

DWIGHT DAVID
EISENHOWER
1890-1969
ing was made this morning on tk coast of France by troops of the Allied Expeditionary Force. This landing is part of the concerted United Nations plan for the liberation of Europe, made in conjunction with our great Rustbn
allies.

those things will indeed, they will be regarded as high qualities, if he can make of them the means to achieve great ends.

and cunning. But be forgiven him,

People of Western Europe:

land-

Le

Fil

de

Nothing great will ever be achieved without great men, and men are great only if they are determined to be so.
16.

...

call

upon

all

who

teve

we

freedom to stand with us now. Together


shall achieve victory. Broadcast [June 6, 1944

France has lost a has not lost the war.

battle.

But France

Broadcast from London to the French people after the fall of France \June 18, 1940]
Since those whose duty it was to hold the sword of Fiance have let it fall, I

Humility must always be the portion of any man who receives acclaim earned in the blood of his followers and the sacrifices of his friends.
Address at Guildhdl, London
\July 12, 1945]

have picked up its broken point. Radio address \July 13, 1940]

Then, at the sight of those bewildered people and of those soldiers in


rout

Nothing is easy in war. Mistakes arc always paid for in casualties and troop are quick to sense any blunder made by
their

...

I felt myself

borne up by a

commanders.
Infantry School Quarterly
[April

too stupid! The war is beginning as badly as it could. Therefore it must go on. For that, the world is wide. If I live, I will fight, wherever I must, as long as I must, until the enemy is defeated and the national stain washed dean. All I have managed to do since was resolved upon that day.
limitless fury.

Ah!

It's

19$

This

conjunction

of

an

immense

military establishment and a large arms industry is new in the American ex. . . recognize the imperative need for this development Yet we must not fail to comprehend its

perience.

We

Le$ M&noires de Guerre,


[

vol. I
2

954]

At

this

moment, the worst

in her his-

tory [the fall of France], it was for to assume the burden or France* Ib.

me

grave implications. ... In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. Hie potential for the disastrous rise of mis-

But there
swoid.

is

no France without a
Ib.

placed power exists and will persist Farewell Radio and Television Address to the American Peopk
[January 17, 1961]

France cannot be France without


greatness.
I

16.
I

always thought

and Bonaparte.
oneself.

How

was Jeanne d'Arc little one knows

SIR

ALAN PATRICK HERBERT


1890I

Reply to speaker wfto compared him to Robespierre; from Figaro


IMteraire [1958]

Fm

not a jealous woman, but


see

cait

what he

sees in her,

10l6

HERBERT
J

MORLEY
are created by popular demand, sometimes out or the scantiest

can't sec

sec

what he sees in her, I can't what he sees in her! f Can't Think What He Sees
in

Heroes

Her

1 Holy Deadlock. Title of novel [1934] satirizing the paradoxes of British divorce law
'

such as the appk that William Tell never shot, the ride that Paul Revere never finished, the flag that Barbara Fritichie never waved. American Heroes and Hero. . .

materials

Worship, ch.
In
all

The

Common Law

of England has

the world

there

is

been laboriously built upon a mythical the figure of "The Reasonable feure

more timorous than a million


except ten million. times the rich arc
In

nothing
dollars,

revolutionary

Man."

Uncommon Law
The
critical

[1935], P-

who are most afraid.

always the people

period in matrimony
Ib. p.

is

American Freedom and the


Press [1958]

breakfast-time.

An Act
thing

of God was defined as which no reasonable man could


Ib. p.

98 some-

ROBERT LEY
1890-1945
Strength through joy. Instruction for the
1

have expected.

316

SAMUEL HOFFENSTEIN
1890-1947
Babies haven't

German Labor Fronf [December 2, 1933]

any hair;

CHRISTOPHER MORLEY
1890-1957

Old men's heads are just as bare; Between the cradle and the grave Lies a haircut and a shave. Songs of Faith in the Year after Next, VIII

And of all man's felicities The very subtlest one say


r

I,

Is

when

for the first

time he sees

His hearthfire smoke against the sky.

The heart's dead


Are never buried.

Hallowe'en

Memory

$t.

Summer Day

If

GERALD WHITE JOHNSON


1890has tried to play Mozart, and failed, through that vain effort comes into position better to understand the man who tried to paint the
Sistine

self of a thing,

you have to keep reminding yourperhaps it isn't so.

Thunder on the Left [1925], ch. 9


April prepares her green traffic light

A man who

and the world thinks Go.


John Mistletoe [1931], 8

Madonna, and

did.

Little

Night-Music [1937]

human being; an ingenious assembly of portable plumbing. Human Being [1932], ch, 11
The enemies of the Future are always the very nicest people. Kitty Foyle [1939], cfi. 5
Dancing
girls, it's
is

Nothing

changes

more constantly

than the past; for the past that influences our lives does not consist of what
actually
lieve

happened, but of what men behappened. American Heroes and Hero-

wonderful training for

the

first
is

way you

learn to guess
Ib.

Worship
1

[1943], ch. i
to
j

what a man
does
1

going to do before he

Monagony
i*rwo.

the state of being married BftooKs BECK [ 1963]

it.

Kraft durch Frcudc.

IrfORLEY

COCTEAU
Upswept its angel wings that cast

There was so much handwriting on the

A cruciform shadow.
st.

That even the wall fell down. Around the Clock [1943]
Chattering voltage like a broken wire The wild cicada cried, Six weeks to
frost!

Doctor Zhivago. The Poems of Yurii Zhivago, Winter Night


7

End

of August

GEORGE SELDES
1890Sawdust Caesar. 1
Title of book [1933]

do they put the Gideon Bibles only in the bedrooms, where it's usually too late, and not in the barroom down-

Why

stairs?

Contribution to a Contribution

FRED M. VINSON
1890-1953

ALLAN KEVINS
Too
little

Wars

are not "acts of God."

1890and too late.


Current History [1935]

are caused

They

by man, by man-made institutions, by the way in which man has organized his society. What man has
made,

man

BORIS PASTERNAK
1890-1960
rigorous conception, And I consent to play this part therein; But another play is running at this moI

can change. Speech, Arlington "National Cemetery [Memorial Dtfy,

cherish this,

Thy

ROWLEY
1915 Mademoiselle from Annenteers, Hasn't been kissed in forty years,
fl.

ment,
So, for the present, release
cast.

me from

the

Hinky dinky,

parley-voo.

Mademoiselle from Armenti&res*


has been

And

yet, the order of the acts

schemed and

Mademoiselle from St. Nazaire, She never heard of underwear.

Ifr.

And
I

plotted, nothing can avert the final curis

tain's fall.

AGATHA CHRISTIE
1891It is

stand alone. All else


Pharisaism. live life to the end
task.

swamped by

To

is

not a childish

completely unimportant. That

is

why

it is

Doctor
let,

Zhivago

Poems of
sL
It

[1958]. Yurii Zhivago, 1

The

so interesting. The Murder of Roger Ackroyd


[1926]

Ham-

3, 4 snowed and snowed, the whole world

JEAN COCTEAU
1891-1963
Mirrors should reflect a
little before

over,

A candle burned on the table; A candle burned.


Ib.

Snow swept

the world from end to end.

throwing back images.

Des
st.

Beaux-Art*

Winter Night,

A corner draft fluttered the flame


And
the white fever of temptation
by BERNARD GUILBERT GUERNEY.
1 Translated

Mussolini. Soldier song of

World War

I,

with innumer-

able versions. The tune and verse structure were based on a British Army song composed bj Alfred James Walden ["Harry Wincott," 18871947].

10l8

CULBERTSON

LOW
truth can

ELY CULBERTSON
1891-1955

we arouse in ourselves a sense of intellectual responsibility.


La Jeuncsse Nouvelle
[April

The

bizarre of

world of cards

...

P wer politics where rewild were meted out wards and punishments A deck of cards was built
P ure

1919]
people's philosophy of has not yet been brought race to face with science. At this moment we

The Chinese

immediately. of hierarchies, with every jjjce the purest those below it, a lackey card a master to those above it. And there were
to

life

painfully feel that science has not


sufficiently

been

which always long suits in the end, trithemselves asserted and aces. umphing over the kings Total Peace [1943], ch. i
"masses"

promoted, that scientific education has not been developed. Ib. Hu Shih wen ts'un

for

Power politics is the diplomatic name the law of the jungle. Must Fight Russia? [1946], ch. 2

We

At present the most unfounded and most harmful distortion is to ridicule Western civilization as materialistic and worship Eastern civilization as spiritual.
. .

Modem

civilization of the

West,

built

on the foundation of the

We

must conquer war, or war

will

search for

conquer us.

16politicians willing, the

God and the

United States can declare peace upon 16. 5 the world, and win it.

human happiness, not only has definitely increased material enjoyment to no small degree, but can also definitely satisfy the spiritual demands 16. of mankind.
The most outstanding characteristic of Eastern civilization is to know contentment, whereas that of Western civilization is not to know contentment. Contented Easterners are satisfied with their simple life and therefore do not seek to increase their material enjoyment.
.

KARL KEICHNER

DARROW
1891-

One
is

guishes ours

things which distinfrom all earlier generations this, that we have seen our atoms. The Renaissance of Physics [1936]
of

the

They

are

satisfied

with

their present lot therefore do not

and environment and want to conquer nature but merely be at home with nature Ib. and at peace with their lot.
under which people and controlled by a material environment from which they cannot escape, and under which they cannot utilize human thought and intellectual power to change environment and improve conditions, is the civilization of a lazy and nonprogressive peocivilization

HU SHIHi
1891-1962 We in China today have not reached the point where we can take concrete and steps to create a new literature, there is no need of talking theoretically
about the techniques of creation. Let us . first devote our efforts to the first .
.

The

are restricted

steps of

preparatory work. La feunesse Nouvelle [April 1918]

ple. It tion.

is

a truly materialistic civiliza16.

eternal,

Only when we realize that there is no unchanging truth or absolute


I

DAVID LOW
1891-1963
never met anybody who wasn't against war. Even Hitler and

*Fix>m Sources of Chinese Tradition, edited


ty William

have

Theodore de Bary

[1960].

1019

LOW
Mussolini
selves.

WARREN
norant, sloppy or biased reporting propaganda and deliberate falseli
processes,

were,

according

to

them-

In the

New

York Times

[February 10, 1946]

OSIP MANDELSTAM
1891

and you destroy his whole reasoning and make him something than a man. Address, New York State
lishers Association

-1938
street

lAuzust *

On
The

1948]

every

still

suburban

gatekeepers are shoveling snow.

On

Every

Still

Suburban
st. i

Freedom cannot be trifled with. You cannot surrender it for


in a state of war,
security untei

Street [1916],

guard
doing.

carefully

In teahouses and in home alike The samovars* red roses glow.


Ib. st 2

and then you mint the methods of so

Upon receiving the Columbia College award for distinguished


service

[1952]

ELLIOT PAUL
1891-1958

The
the day
ble,

last

time
is its

see Paris will


city

I die.

The
Last

be on was inexhaustiI

and so

memoiy.

There has been dropped upon utterance and thought a smoke screen of intimidation that dims essential thought and essential talk and begets a tog which we wander uncertainly. through

The

Time

Saw
fit.

Paris
II,

Nor

is

it

[1942],

23

me

the superzealots
in all this

who
it is

so

much

bother the bck


part
I&.

HAILIE SELASSIE
1891Outside the kingdom of the Lord there is no nation which is greater than

of plain old-fashioned guts on the of those who capitulate to them.

There

is

more

fear in this country

any other. God and history will remember your judgment. Speech, the League of Nations1*936}

than the facts warrant. Beset by doubt, the nation listens to those who'seem to offer a cure, even though the medicine be more harmful than the disease,

Once more we
field testing

are

met upon

battle-

whether

this nation or any


enIh.

nation similarly dedicated can long


dure. 1

ARTHUR HAYS
SULZBERGER
1891-1968
Obviously, a man's judgment cannot be better than the information on which he has based it. Give him the truth and he may still go wrong when he has the chance to be right, but give him no news or present him only with distorted and incomplete data, with ig1

measure of a newspaper is but its spirit that is its responsibility to report the news fully, accurately and fairly. On accepting an award to tht New York Times by T&npk Israel* Boston [May 9, 1956]
vital

The

not

its

size

EARL WARREN
1891separate [Negro children] from others of similar age and qualifications a solely because of their race generates
feeling of inferiority as to their status
1

The

last

time

saw

Paris, her

heart was

gay, I heard the laughter of her heart in every


street cafe.

warm and

To

OSCAR HAMMERSTEIN

II

The

Last

Time

[1895-1960], I Saw Paris

in

*He

sought

sanctions

against

Italy,

which

had invaded Ethiopia.

See Lincoln, p. 6393.

1O2O

WARREN
the

JACKSON
pose, bat queerer than we can suppose. ... I suspect that there arc more things in heaven and earth than are

hearts

community that may affect their and minds in a way unlikely ever
.

to
in

be undone.

We

conclude that
l

the field of public education the doc-

dreamed

trine

of "separate but equal"

has no

place.

ire inherently

educational facilities Separate unequal. Brown v. Board of Education of

any philosophy, That is why I have no philosophy myself, and must be my excuse for
of, in

the reason

dreaming.

Possible

World* [1927]

Topeka, 347

US. 483
V,

[1954]

ROBERT HOUGHWOUT JACKSON


1892-1954
If there is

HERBERT

WILEY
official,

1891-1954
Stand by to crash. Last command to the crew of the falling UJS. Navy dirigible

any

fixed star in

our con-

stitutional constellation, it is that

no

what

prescribe shall be orthodox in politics, na-

high

or petty, can

Akron [April

4, 1933]

tionalism, religion, or other matters of opinion or force citizens to confess by

STELLA BENSON
Call

word or act

their

aith therein*

Minersvifle
Gobitis,

School District
UJS.

v.

1892-1933 no man foe 7 but never love a To the Unborn, st. 3 stranger.

319

624,

642

[1940]
first trial in history for crimes against the peace of the world imposes a grave The wrongs

llie

PEARL
I

S.

BUCK
any other
faith

responsibility.

1892feel

no need
faith in

for

than

my
I

human

which we seek to condemn and punish have been so calculated, so malignant and so devastating that civilization cannot tolerate their because beir^g ignored it cannot survive their being repeated. Opening address before the
International Military Tribunal,

Confucius of old, I Ac wonder of earth


that

am

beings. Like so absorbed in

and the life upon it cannot think of heaven and the for this life. If angels. I have enough there is no other life, then this one has been enough to make it worth being bora, myself a human being.
I Believe [1939!

If it is interstate

Nuremberg [1945] commerce that

feels

the pinch, it does not matter how local the operation which applies the squeeze.

JOHN BURDON SANDERSON HALDANE


1892-1964

US. v. Women's Sportswear Manufacturers Association 336

US.
There
is

460, 464 [1949]

Now,
verse is
*A11

my

suspicion

is

that the uni-

not only queerer than

we

sup-

railway companies carrying passengers in their coaches in the state shall provide equal tat icparate accommodations for the white and colored races. Louisiana Acts of 1890, no. i/i. p. 153; quoted by Mr. Justice HENRY B.

danger that, if the Court does not temper its doctrinaire lope with a little practical wisdom, it will convert the constitutional Bill of Rights
into a suicide pact.

Terminiello

v.

Chicago,
i,

US.
It is

337 37 [1949]
falling
citi-

B*OWN in Pteuy v. Ferguson, 16} UJS. 537 [1896] 'In a later implementation of the same case US. the (ffl 194 [1955] ) Supreme Court asked ttat desegregation proceed "with all deliberate
speed."

not the function of our Govern-

ment
1

to keep the citizen


it is

from

into error;

the function of the

See Shakespeare, p. s6oa.

1O21

JACKSON
zen to keep the Government from
ing into error.
fall-

MATHERS

The world was


not take

always yours:

it.

American Communications Association v. Douds, 339 U.S. 382, 442 [1950]

Speech to a

The day
be

free for irreligion, free for religion.

that this country ceases to it will cease to be

And here face downward in the sun To feel how swift how secretly The shad'ow of the night comes on.
You, Andrew Marvetl
[1950?
the

Dissenting opinion, Clausor, 343 US.

Zorach
306,

v.

325

Christ but this earth goes over to squall of time! Hi but she heels to it rail down:

ribs

down: rolling Dakotas under her

hull!

And

the night
ferns by

HOWARD MUMFORD
JONES
1892-

climbing Sucking the green from the these Berkshire boulders!

The

Sunset Piece
fa-

They

say the forties are the dangerous The Forties [1937] ages.

We
We

were the

first

that found that

few unrepentant old sinners wonder


if

country: marched by a king's name: we crossed the sierras:

mous

Mane

Unknown

Also explains the unsocialized pairs in 16. 32 the parks.

We were
She
lie*

hardships
lords of

we

suffered

it all.

Conquistador [1932]. Bernd Diaz Preface


9

ARCHIBALD MacLEISH
1892Sometimes within the
ly house,
I hear, far off, at

on her

left side

her flank

gold-

Her
brain's old ghost-

some forgotten

door,

music and an
stir

eerie faint carouse,

And

of echoes

down

the creaking
st. i

floor.

Chambers
Beauty
is

is burned black with the strong sun: The scent of her hair is of rain in the dust on her shoulders: She has brown breasts and the mouth of no other country. Frescoes for Mr. Rockefeller's

en: hair

of Imagery,

City

[1933],

Landscape
.

<w a

Which
It is

that Medusa's head men go armed to seek

Nude
and
It

sever.

And dead

most deadly when most dead, will stare and sting forever.
Beauty

America was promises was Man who had been promised. America Was Promises [1939]
. .

A poem should not mean


But be.
Ars Poetica
[

EDWARD POWYS MATHERS


1892-

92 6]

There with vast wings


celed skies, There in the sudden

across the can-

A love-sick heart dies

when

the heart

is

Of

blackness the black pall nothnothing, nothing, nothing ing at all. The End of the World [1926]

whole, For all the heart's health is to be srcl with love. Ford. Translation from tfw Hindustani of MIYAN JAGNU
[eighteenth century]

1O22

MI1JLAY

EDNA
A1J
I

ST. VINCENT MILLAY


1892-1950
I

Come

could see from where


three long mountains

stood

and sec my shining palace built upon the sand! A Few Fi& from Thistles. Second Fig

Was

and a wood. Renascence [1912] I. z


either side

I had a littk Sorrow, Born of a little Sin.

The world stands out on

Ib.

The Penitent,
find

st. i

the heart is wide; is stretched the sky, world the Above 1 No higher than the soul is high. land sea and the can The heart push

So wider than

Whether

or not

we

what we are

seeking
Is idle, biologically

speaking.

Ib. I

Farther away on either hand; The soul can split the sky in two, And let the face of God shine through.

Shdl Forget You Presently, L 13

Death devours

all

lovely things;

But East and

West

will

pinch the heart

That cannot keep them pushed apart; the sky And he whose soul is flat
Will cave in on

Lesbia with her sparrow Shares the darkness presently

Every bed

is

narrow.
st. i

Passer

him by and by.


16. last lines

Mortuus Est [1922],

My
And

heart

is

warm

with the friends

world,

cannot hold thee close


st.
i

make,
better friends 111 not
isn't a train I

enough!

God's World [1917],

Yet there

be knowing; wouldn't take,


st.

No matter where it's going.


Travel [1921],
I

Lord, I do fear Thou'st made the world too beautiful


this year.

know

My

soul

is all

but out of

me
let

let fall

And

to your heart, not the full four seasons of the


I

am

but

summer

No burning
call.
1

leaf;

prithee,

bird Ib. st. 2

no

year.

Know

Am But Summer
[1923],
Z.

will

be the gladdest thing under the


touch a hundred flowers and not

sun!
I

will

drank at every vine. The last was Kke the

first.

pick one.

Afternoon on a HiU

came upon no wine So wonderful as thirst.


Feast [1923],
st. i

Ufe goes on forever like the gnawing of a mouse. Ashes of Life [1917], st. 3

My candle bums at both


It will

I only know that summer sang in me A Httle while, that in me sings no more. What Lips My Lips Have Kissed

ends;

[1923], I 13
Pity me that the heart is slow What the swift mind beholds
turn.

not last the night;

But, ah,
It

2 gives a lovely light.

my

foes, and, oh,

my friends

to learn
at every
Z.

A Few
the

Figs from Thistles.


[1920]. First Fig

Pity

Me Not

[1923],

13

Safe

upon

solid

rock

the

ugly

houses stand:
1

Has

Euclid alone looked on Beauty bare. 1 Fortunate

See Hartley Coleridge, p. 5860. * I burned my candle at both ends,

they

And now have neither foes nor friends. SAMUEL HOFFENSTEIN [ 1890-1947 ]>
Songs of Fairly Utter Despair, 8

Who,

though once only and then but


p. 9133.

far away,

iSee Russell,

1023

MUJLAY
Have heard her massive sandal
stone.
set

ROSS

on

Euclid Alone Has Looked on Beauty Bare [1923], I-

Goodness, armed with power, i$ cwrupted; and pure love without power is
destroyed.

Beyond Tragedy
capacity
possible,

[1918]

Man's
democracy

for

justice

makes
inclina-

If ever I said, in grief or pride, I tired of honest things, I lied.

but man's

The Goose
Music

Girl [1923],

I $

tion to injustice
essary.

makes democracy

nec-

my rampart,, and my only one. On Hearing a Symphony of


Beethoven [1928],
I.

The Children

of Light and Children of Darkness

tin

14

am

not resigned to the shutting away of loving hearts in the hard


ground.

Life has no meaning except in tenro of responsibility.

Faith and History

[19^9]

So

it is,

and so it will be, for so been, time out of mind:

it

has

Into the darkness they go, the wise and the lovely. Crowned

is completed ID our lifetime; therefore, we must be saved by hope. Nothing true or beauti-

Nothing worth doing

With
I

lilies

and with

laurel they go;

but

am not resigned.
st. i

Dtrge Without Music [1928],

good makes complete sense in immediate coiitext of therefore, we must be saved by Nothing we do, however virtuous, can be accomplished alone; therefore, we
ful or

any

Love

is

not aH:

it is

not meat nor drink


rain;

Nor slumber nor a roof against the Nor yet a floating spar to men
sink.

that

are saved by love. No virtuous act is quite as virtuous from the standpoint of our friend or foe as from our standpoint. Therefore,

we must be

saved by
forgive-

Love

Is

Not

All [1931], I i

the final form of love which


ness.

is

The Irony

of American History
[

REINHOLD NIEBUHR
1892-1971

952 1

God, give us serenity to accept what cannot be changed, courage to change what should be changed, and wisdom to distinguish the one from the
other.
1

BASIL O'CONNOR
1892-

The world cannot


war
like

Prayer [1934]
. .

continue to wage physical giants and to seek

This prayer was composed . when bubr preached occasionally in the small church
near his summer
After the service,

peace like intellectual pygmies. Address, National Conference of


Christians and Jews [1945]

home in Heath, Massachusetts. Howard Chandler Robbing, a

summer neighbor, asked for a copy. He is reported to have been handed the original, with words to the following effect: "Here, take the prayer. I have no further use for it." Other
people,
it is clear,

HAROLD WALLACE
ROSS
1892-1951

have

felt differently.

Robbins

published it as part of a pamphlet the following year. Since then it has been adopted as the motto of Alcoholics Anoymous; the U.S.O. distributed millions of copies to servicemen during World War II; the National Council of Churches has reprinted it; and even today it is used commercially on Christmas cards. JUNE BIN CHAM, Courage to Change: An Introduction to the Life

The New Yorker wiH not be


for the old lady

edited

from Dubuque. 1 Upon founding The New Yorfcr


old lady frea

Later this became "the

little

and Thought

of

Reinhold Nicbuhr [1961]

Dubuque."

1024

TOLKIEN

BRAD1EY

JOHN RONALD REUEL

TOLKIEN
1892-

DEAN ACHESON
I

Jn a hole in the ground there lived a wet hole, hobbtt. Not a nasty, dirty,
5fled

1893-1971 Whatever the outcome of the appeal, do not intend to turn my back on
Statement [Time, February 6, 1950]

Alger Hiss.

oozy

with the ends of worms and an smell, nor yet a dry, bare, sandy

hole with or to eat:

nothing in it to sit down on it was a hobbit-hole, and that


or There

MORRIS BISHOP
1893After the day is over And the passers-by are rare The lights burn low in the barber-shop And the shades are drawn with care To hide the haughty barbers Cutting each other's hair. The Talcs the Barbers Tell

comfort.

The Hobbit;

and Back
i

Again [1937], ch.

WENDELL LEWIS
WILLKIE
1892-1944 Freedom is an indivisible word. 1 If we want to enjoy it, and fight for it, we
be prepared to extend it to everyone, whether they are rich or poor, whether they agree with us or not, no matter what their race or the color of
roust
tbeir skin.

OMAR BRADLEY
1893-

We have
atom and Mount.
But
it

rejected the

grasped the mystery of the Sennon on the

One World,

0/1.13

Address [Armistice Day, 1948]


[Pearl Harbor], and the subwe learned, day by day, lessons sequent until September 1945, should have

The Constitution does not provide for first and second class citizens. An American Program [1944],
ch.2
I

believe in

America because in

it

we

are free
free to

choose our government, to speak oar minds, to observe our different religions. Because we are generous with our freedom, we share our rights with those who disagree with
us.

taught all military men that our miliin the game tary forces are one team to win of who carries the regardless ball. This is no time for "fancy dans"

who won't hit the line with all they have on every play, unless they can cafl the signals. Each player on this team whether he shines in the spotlight of the backfield or eats dirt in the line must be an All-American.
Testimony,

Because
Because

we hate no people and

Committee

on

covet

Armed

no people's lands.

we are blessed with a natural and varied abundance. Because we have great dreams and because we have the opportunity to make those dreams
come
true.

Services, House of Representatives [October 19, 1949]


is

In war there the runner-up.

no second

prize for

In the Military Review [February 1950]

Red China
tion

is

not the powerful na-

His creed, inscribed on a marker by his grave in Rushville, Indiana


l

Scc Litvinov, p. 9413.

seeking to dominate the world. Frankly, in the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, this strategy would involve us in the wrong war, at the wrong

1025

BRADLEY
place, at the

GOERING
There
assisting
is

wrong time, and with the


on Committee and Committee

wrong enemy.
Testimony,

only one proved method the advancement of


that of picking

of

purc

science
ius,

men

Armed

Services

backing them heavily, and

of genleaving

on Foreign Affairs, UJS. Senate [May 15, 1951]


Only one military organization can a hold and gain ground in war aviaground army supported by tactical tion with supply lines guarded by the
navy.

them

to direct themselves. Letter to the York Times

New

[August 13,

in which even the ablest of the scientists in every

The stumbling way


had to

gen-

fight through thickets of erroneous observations, mislead-

eration have

In the Military Review [September 1951]

ing generalizations, inadequate formulations,

and unconscious

prejudice

is

JAMES BRYANT CONANT


1893-

rarely appreciated by those their scientific knowledge

who

obtain
text-

from

books.

Science and

Common Sense
['95*1

He who

enters a university walks

on

hallowed ground.

Notes on the Harvard


Tercentenary [1936]
each walk of

JIMMY DURANTE
1893Goodnight, Mrs. Calabash, wherever Saying you are.

Each honest
life,

calling,

has

its

own
on

elite, its

own

aristoc-

racy based ance.

excellence of perform-

Dese are de conditions dat

prevail

Our Fighting

Faith. "In

Saying

This Country There Are

No
home.
16.

7'

Classes

at Liberty like charity must begin

HANS FALLADA [RUDOLF DITZEN]


1893-1947
Little

Our Unique

Heritage

Man, What Now?


Title of novel [2932]

primary concern of American education today is not the development of the appreciation of the "good life" in young gentlemen bora to the pur-

The

HERMANN GOERING
18931946
Shoot
first

ple.

. Our purpose the largest possible number of our fu.


.

is

to cultivate in

and inquire

afterwards,

and
you.

if

you make

mistakes, I will protect

ture citizens an appreciation of both and the benefits the


responsibilities

Instruction for the Prussian


police [1935]

which come to them because they are Americans and are free. Annual Report to the Board of Overseers, Harvard University*
[January 11,1943]
Baccalaureate sermon [June 16, 1940]. The taken from a statement in an address by JAMES A. GAMTELD [1831-1881], The Future of the Republic: Its Dangers and its Hopes [1873]. * Address, opening of the first wartime summer
1

Guns
will

make us us fat. 1 make only


will

powerful; butter
'Broadcast [1936]

When
I

hear anyone talk of

culture,

title is

reach for

my revolver.

Attributed

term, Harvard College [June 30, 194*]. * Describing his purpose, as president of Harvard University, in appointing a University Corn-

mittee on the Objectives of a General Education in a Free Society. The committee's report title Genenl Edupublished [1945] under the
cation in a Free Society. i See Goebbels, p. 10403.

1O26

LASKI

MAO

TSE-TUNG

HAROLD JOSEPH LASKI


1893-1950

There

is

a certain

the aged when the

warmth

phase in the life of of the heart

We
the

under a system by which are exploited by the few, and many


live
is

^ar

the ultimate sanction of that

exploitation.

Plan or Perish [1945]

We
It

roust plan our civilization or

we
Ib.

seems to increase in direct proportion with the years. This is a time of life when a solicitous family does well to watch affectionately over the vagaries of its unattached relatives, particularly of those who are comfortably off. The Late George Apley, ch. 23

must perish.

would be madness to
or the
set

poses
prise

methods

let the purof private enter-

MAO TSE-TUNG
1893contradiction between imperialism and the Chinese nation, and the contradiction

energy.

the habits of the age of atomic *&

The

ANITA LOOS
1893Gentlemen always seem to remember
blondes.

between feudalism and the great masses of the people, are the
contradictions
society.
.
.

principal

in

modern

Chinese
lutions

The

great revo-

Gentlemen

Prefer Blondes [1925], ch. i

of modern and contemporary China have emerged and developed on the basis of these fundamental contradictions.

She always believed in the old adage, "Leave them while you're looking
good."
Ib.

Selected

Works

III,

pp. 81-82

Armament

is

an important factor in
. .

A girl
does
yacht.

never really looks as well as she


Ib.

. war, but not the decisive factor. Man, not material, forms the decisive

on board a steamship, or even a

factor.

Lecture [1938]
cannot be divorced from polia single

War
tics for

moment.8

Ib.

make you feel Kissing your hand may but a diamond and very, very good,
forever. sapphire bracelet lasts
16. 4

The
army
is

people are like


like fish.

water and the

Aspects of China's Anti-Japanese Struggle [1948]


'let a

JOHN PHILLIPS

MARQUAND
1893-1960

"Let a hundred flowers blossom" and hundred schools of thought conSpeech, Peking [February 27,

tend."

It is

behind
est,

worthwhile for anyone to have him a few generations of hon-

hard-working ancestry.

The
ers

policy of letting a

hundred flow-

The Late George Apley


His father gulf of years

[1937],
c/z.3

watched him across the and pathos which always must divide a father from his son.
Ifc.io

progress

blossom and a hundred schools of thought contend is designed to promote the flourishing of the arts and the of science; it is designed to eniFrom
Sources of Chinese Trtdition, edited
.
. .

by William Theodore de Bary [1960]. * There is still one absolute -weapon.

Marriage

...

is

damnably

serious
16. ii

That weapon
*o, 1953]

is

man

himself.

MATTHEW

B.

RIDGWAY, Address, Cleveland, Ohio [November


See von Clausewitz, p. 544^*

business, particularly

around Boston.

1O27

MAO

TSE-TUNG

OWEN

able a socialist culture to thrive in our land. Different forms and styles in art

WILFRED OWEN
Above
all,

can develop
in

freely,

and

different schools
freely,

science

can

develop

and

this

1893-1918 book is not concerned


it is

different schools in science can contend

with Poetry,

think that it is harmful to the growth of art and science if administrative measures are used to impose one particular style of art or school of thought and to ban another.
freely.

We

The The

subject of of War.

War, and

the wtv

w
die

Poetry

is

in the pity.

All a poet can

warn. 1 Preface to the Poems {pubis

do

lished

Speech, Peking

1920]

When
and

What

passing bells for these

the majority of the people


criteria to

who

as cattle?

have clear-cut

self-criticism

can

go by, criticism be conducted

along proper lines, and these criteria can be applied to people's words and actions to determine whether they are fragrant flowers or poisonous weeds.
Ib.

Only the monstrous anger of the guns. Only the stuttering rifles' rapid rattle

Can

patter out their hasty orisons.

The Anthem

for

Doomed
$t.
i

Youth,

And

bugles calling for


shires.

them from

sad
jfo.

What

candles
all?

VLADIMIR MAYAKOVSKY
1893-1930
If
I

may be

held to speed
their

them

Not

you wish,
a

shall

Not

be irreproachably tender: man, but a cloud in pantsl

in the hands of boys, but in eyes Shall shine the holy glimmers of
byes.

goodIb.

Cloud in Pants [1914-1915]


Citizen!

And

each slow dusk a drawing-down


blinds.

of
ft.

Consider

my traveling expenses:

If anything

Poetryall
is

The kind

might rouse him now old sun will know.


Futility,
rf.
i

of it a trip into the unknown. Conversation with a Tax Collector

Oh what made
toil

fatuous sunbeams
all?

about Poetry [1926]

To
As

break earth's sleep at

16.

rf. 2

amortization, the worst of all: amortization of heart and soul. Ib.

Then

there

is

Red

lips are not so red the stained stones kissed

by the

Eng-

lish dead.

Kindness of wooed and wooer

Seems shame

to their love pure.

ALBERT SZENT-GYORGYI VON NAGYRAPOLT


1893-

Greater Lave

Courage was mine, and

Wisdom was mine, and To miss the march of


world

had had

mystery,

mastery;

this retreating

The

real

scientist

...

is

ready to

bear privation and, if need be, starvation rather than let anyone dictate to

Into vain citadels that are not walled.


Strange Meeting
L

him which
take.

direction

his

work must

The

last three lines serve as the

motto

ft*

Science

Needs Freedom [World


Digest, 1943]

Benjamin Britten's War Requiem (Op. fQ, which uses the Latin text of the Mass for tfce Dead and some of the poems of Wilfred Owes.

1028

PARKER

ALtEN
wholly to
''the

DOROTHY PARKER
1893-1967
Where's the
Like a satin

feet"*

cadence of consenting 5

man

could ease a heart

Phases of English Poetry [19*8]

gown?

The

The Satin Dress, st.

no-man's-years between the wars

[1919-1939].

Four be the things I am wiser to know: Idleness, sorrow, a friend, and a foe.
Inventory,
st.
i

Annals of Innocence and Experience [1940]

Four be the without:

things

Yd been

better

JOACHIM VON RIBBENTROP


1893-1945

Love, curiosity, freckles,

and doubt.
Ib.
st.

The Fuhrer is

Scratch a lover,

and

find a foe.

always right. Address, Kdnigsberg [August 24,

Ballade of a Great Weariness,


st.i

'9393

Men seldom make passes At girls who wear glasses.

ROBERT LEROY RIPLEY


1893-1949

News Item
Guns
aren't lawful;

Believe

It

or Not.

Title of syndicated

newspaper
feature

Nooses give; Gas smells awful; You might as well

live.

R6sum

HAROLD CLAYTON UREY


1893-

no one ever sent me yet One perfect limousine, do you suppose? Ah no, it's always just my luck to get Qae perfect rose.

Why

is it

We need
frightened.

first

of

all

to

be thoroughly

Speech on the atomic

bomb
1945]

One
He
lies

Perfect Rose,

st.

[December

3,

And

entertains

below, correct in cypress wood, the most exclusive

The most dangerous

situation that
history.
eft.

humanity has ever faced in aH

worms.

One World or None

[1946],

Epitaph for a Very Rich

Man

There was nothing more fun than a

MAE WEST
1893-

man!

The Little Old Lady


Lavender
Excuse
Silk, st.

in

Come up and
Beulah, peel

see

me

sometime.
[1932]

Diamond LU 2

my

dust.

me a grape.
I'm

Epitaph, suggested by herself

No

Angel [1933]

Wit

has truth in

it;

wisecracking

is

simply calisthenics with words. In Paris Review [Summer 1956]

FRED ALLEN
1894-1956
Hollywood an orange.
l

is

a great place if you're

SIR

HERBERT READ
1893-

Saying
is

The

quotation

from

FRANCIS

BARTON

Poefay can never again become a popular art until the poet gives himself

GUMMEXE, The Beginnings of Poetry

[1901].

The

play was later

made

into a movie, She

Done Him Wrong.

1029

ALUBN
a newspaperman a human being an item with the skin wrapped around it. Saying
is

OJMMINGS

To

how do you
Mister Death

like

your blueeyed boy


Portraits
[i

923] , 8

DON BLANDING
It's

1894-1957 more than just an easy word


casual goodbye; gayer than a greeting,

the Cambridge ladies who live in furnished souls are unbeautiful and have comfortable minds.
for

Sonnets
i

Realities

[1923],!

It's

and
Its

it's

sad-

der than a sigh.

Humanity when you're hard up you pawn


intelligence to

love you because

vour

Aloha Oe:
It's

Meaning

hundred different ways, in sadness and in joy, Aloha means "I love you/* So I say
said a

buy a drink. Humanity i love you

[2925]

spill

my

bright incalculable soul

"Aloha Oe."

Ib.

Sonnets [2925],
take
it

JJ

from

me kiddo
'tis

EDWARD ESTLIN
CUMMINGSi
1894-1962
All in green went love riding on a great horse of gold into the silver dawn.

believe

me
of

my country,

my

you, land of the Cluett Shirt Boston Garter and Spearmint Girl With The Wrigley Eyes (of you

knd

of the Arrow Ide

AC in green went my love riding


four lean

and Earl & Wilson


Collars) of
sing:

hounds crouched low and


Ib.

you
of

knd

Abraham

Lincoln and

my

smiling heart fell dead before.

knd

in Just-

Lydia E. Pinkham, above all of Just Add Hot Water And Serve

spring when the world luscious the little


whistles far

is

mud-

from every B.V.D.


let

lame balloonman and wee Chansons Innocentes [1923],

freedom ring

amen.

when the world


Buffalo Bill's

is

puddle-wonderful
Ib.

Poem, Or Beauty Hurt* Mr. Vinal [1926]

Turn Your
Drawers and
Isn't

Shirttails Into

defunct

If It Isn't

An

Eastman

It

who used to
ride a watersmooth-silver
stallion

A
16.

Kodak

and break onetwothreefourfive pigeonsjustlikethat

And
all

there're a

hun-dred-mil-lion-oth-ers, like

Jesus

he was a handsome
1

man
to

of you successfully if delicately gelded (or spaded)

and what i want


The

know is
Modern

gentlemen(and

ladies)

Ib.

terror of typesetters, an enigma to book reviewers, and the special target of all the world's
literary
philistines.

a tiny violetflavored nuisance

Ib.

Publisher's note,

Library edition of

The Enormous Room

next to of course god america

1030

CUMMZNGS
]0ve

you
forth

land of the pilgrims' and so

next to of course

god america

[1926]
thy sons

acckim your

glorious

name by
16.

long enough and just so long being pay the rent of seem and genius please the talcntgang and water most encourage flame as freedom is a breakfastfood
will

[1940]
by jingo

by gee by gosh by

gum

worms

are the words but joy's the voice


Ib.

for life's not a paragraph And death i think is no parenthesis.

since feeling
fady

is first

[1926]

anyone lived in a pretty how town (with up so floating many bells down)
spring

through whose profound and fragile lips

summer autumn winter


his didn't

he sang

the sweet small clumsy feet of April

he danced his did. anyone lived in a pretty how

came
into

town [1940]

the ragged

meadow

of

my

soul.

if i

have made,

my

my

father
love

lady,

moved through dooms of

intricate [1926]
i

through sames of
give,

am

through haves of

sing of Olaf glad


i

and big

whose wannest heart recoiled at war


sing of Olaf glad

and

big [1931]
16. 16.

singing each morning out of each night my father moved through depths of

height
"I will

not
is

kiss

your f.ing
s.

flag"

my father moved through dooms


of love [1940]

"there

some

I will

not eat"

unless statistics lie

he was
16.

though

more brave than


you.

meimore blond than

dull were all we taste as bright, bitter all utterly things sweet,

all
i

maggoty minus and dumb death we inherit, all bequeath

Ib.

somewhere

have never

travelled, gladly

beyond
any experience,
silence.

and nothing quite so


your eyes have their
I have never
i

least as truth

say though hate were

why men
all

somewhere
nobody, not even the small hands

travelled [1931]
rain, has such

breathe because my father lived his soul love is the whole and more than

Ib.

16.

a politician

is

an arse upon

King Christ, this world is all aleak; and lifepreservers there are none:
and waves

which everyone has sat except a man One Times One [1944], 10

Who

which only He may walk Himself a man. Jehovah buried, Satan dead [1935]
dares to call

Always the beautiful answer more beautiful question.

who

asks

mr u will not be missed who as an anthologist sold the many on the few not excluding mr u

16.

11

Collected
freedom

Poems

[1938], introduction

pity this busy monster, manunkind, not. Progress is a comfortable disease.

as

is

a breakfastfood
live

16.14
of made not a world of born

or truth
or

with right and wrong molehills are from mountains made

can

A world

is

16.

1031

CUMMINGS
doctors know listen: there's a a hopeless case if hell of a good universe next door; let's go

PEGLER

We

And know I may not


Save with

rival

him

my mind.
First Philosopher* Song

One Times One,

14

NIKITA SERGEYEVICH

what

of a which of a wind gives the truth to summer's lie.


if

much

KHRUSHCHEV

16.20

when

skies are

hanged and oceans


still

drowned,
the single secret will
all

1894-1971 Cult of personality. Special Report to Twentirih Party Congress [February


1956]

be

man

16.

know ignorance toboggans into and trudges up to ignorance again


J6.

39

ALDOUS LEONARD HUXLEY


1894-1963
There are not enough ban mots in existence to provide any industrious conversationalist with a new stock for every social occasion. Point Counter Point [1928], ch. j

About the capitalist states, it doesn't depend on you whether or not we exist. If you don't like us r don't accept emi invitations, and don't invite us to comt and see you. Whether you like it or not, history is on our side. We will bury
you.
1

Reported statement
for

at reception

Wladyslaw Comulka at the Polish Embassy, Moscow [November 18, 1956]


Life
is

short; live it up.

bad book is as much of a labor to write as a good one;.it comes as sin16. 13 cerely from the author's soul.

Quoted by the New York Time* Magazine [August 3, 1958]

WESTBROOK PEGLER
1894-

There is no substitute for talent. Industry and all the virtues are of no
avail.

16.

The Era

of

Wonderful Nonsense.2 Mr. Gump Himself

Parodies and caricatures are the most 16. 28 penetrating of criticisms.

am
I

and

would

a reactionary, that is what I am, like to see a political reifr

Blood of the world, time staunchless


flows;

tion get off to a

good

start in

our largest

The wound

is

mortal and

is

mine. Seasons
free
I

In the
'

New

York WorW-

Telegram [October 31,

Over her the swan shook slowly

am

member

of the rabble

in good

The

folded

glory

of his wings, of
soft

and

standing.

The Lynching Story

made

white-walled tent luminous shade.

and Leda

A poor degenerate from the ape,


Whose hands
limb,
I

are four,

whose
shape

tail's

<rf i Neither the original nor the translation the last two sentences appeared in either ftwrf* or the New York Times which carried the rot of the text. Another possible translation of 0* last sentence is "We shall be present at yew the funeral," i.e., we shall outlive you; but

above
*

is

the familiar version.


dur-

contemplate

my

flaccid

period of spending and speculation ing the "Coolidge prosperity."

The

1O32

ROY ALL

WIENER
Early to rise and early to bed makes a male healthy and wealthy and dead.

KENNETH CLAIBORNE ROYALL


A
"brass hat"

1894is an

Fables
officer

for

Our Time

of at least

The Shrike and the Chipmunks

[1940].

don't like

one rank higher than you whom you * and who doesn't like you. 1

Speech, Chamber of Commerce, Wilson, North Carolina [February 15, 2946]

You might as well fall flat on your face as lean over too far backward.
Ib.

The Bear
count

Who

Let

It

Alone
until

Don't

your

boobies

GENEVIEVE TAGGARD
1894-1948
Try tropic for your balm, Tiy storm, And after storm, calm. Try snow of heaven, heavy, soft, and
plow,
Brilliant
j

they're hatched. Ib. The Unicorn in the


It
is

Garden
of the

better to
all

know some
of the answers.

questions than

Saying

MARK VAN DOREN


1894-

and warm.

Wit

Nothing will help, and nothing do much harm. Of the Properties of Nature for

the only wall Between us and the dark.


is

Wif

st. i

He talked, and as he talked


Wallpaper came alive; Suddenly ghosts walked And four doors were five.

Healing an

Ittness, st. i

JAMES THURBER
1894-1961
Well, if I called the wrong number, why did you answer the 'phone? Caption for cartoon (The New
Yorker)
I

The Storyteller, rf.


Grass nibbling inward Like green fire.

Former Barn Lot,

st.

love the idea of there being

two
16.

NORBERT WIENER
1894-1964

seres,

don't you?

doesn't
It's

He knows all about art, but he kaow what he likes. Ib.

We
field

have decided to
control

call

the entire

a naive domestic Burgundy withany breeding, but I think you'll be amused by its presumption. Ifc.
out

and communication theory, whether in the machine or in the animal, by the name of Cybernetics, which we form from the Greek
of
[for]

steersman.

Cybernetics [1948]

The War Between

Men and Women.


Series of cartoons

This new development [automation] has unbounded possibilities for good

and

for evil.

16.

Is

Sex Necessary? Title of book [1929] written with E. B. WHITE

The independent scientist who is worth the slightest consideration as a


scientist

has

Let

Your Mind Alone.


Title of
big brass hat from tbe

comes

entirely

consecration which from within himself: a


a

book [1937]
War
Office.

vocation which demands the possibility of supreme self-sacrifice.

The Human Use

of

Human

JAMO HILTON, Goodbye,

Afr.

Chips [1934], ch. 14

Beings [1950]

1033

WINDSOR

HILLYER
Merciful as constant, constant
ous,
I

DUKE OF WINDSOR
[KING

EDWARD

VIII]
|

as van

1894-1972 I have found it impossible to carry the heavy burden of responsibility and
to discharge my duties as King as I would wish to do without the help and support of the woman I love.

So be mine, as

yours for ever,

Pygmalion to Galatea Hate is a fear, and fear is rot That cankers root and fruit alike:
Strike

Fight cleanly then, hate not, for with no madness when


strike.

not,

Farewell broadcast after abdication

yoo

Hate Not, Fear Not

[December

11, 1936]

"How is your trade, Aquarius, This frosty night?"


"Complaints
is

RICHARD BUCKMINSTER FULLER


We
nomics
thology.

And my
I

many and

various,

feet are cold/' says Aquarius

1895must think of our whole


in

eco-

terms
instead

pathology

of a preventive of a curative pa-

do not love the Sabbath, The soapsuds and the starch, The troops of solemn people Who to Salvation march.

Don't oppose

forces; use

them.

The Boy Out


"Blonde or dark,
sir?"

of Church

God
Not

is a verb, a noun.

Whether

says enough
or Dark?

of

women,

drink, or snuff.

No M ore Secondhand God


.
. .

Blonde

Nature has

some

Goodbye
sort of arith-

to All That.

metical-geometrical coordinate system, because nature has all kinds of models.

Title of autobiography [1929]

What we

experience of nature is in models, and all of nature's models are

well-chosen anthology is a complete dispensary of medicine for the

more common mental

so beautiful. It struck

me

that nature's

may be used
cure.

as

much

system must be a real beauty, because in chemistry we find that the associations are always in beautiful whole numbers

On

disorders, and for prevention as

English Poetry, 29

there are

no

fractions.

From In
file

the Outlaw Area; pro-

New

by CALVIN TOMKINS, The


Yorker [January 8 7 1966]

poem an invocation of the White Goddess, or Muse, the Mother of All


necessarily

reason why the hairs stand on end, the eyes water, the throat is constricted, the skin crawls and a shiver runs down the spine when one writes or reads a true poem is that a true is

The

All nature's structuring, associating,

and patterning must be based on triangles, because there is no structural


validity otherwise.

Living, the ancient


lust

power of
is

fright and

the female spider or the queen


death. 1
[1948], ch.
i

bee whose embrace

structure,

and

it is

This is nature's basic is modelable. Ib.

The White Goddess

Either war

obsolete or

men

are.

ROBERT HILLYER
1895-1961 Ah, could we know what vogue will be tomorrow, What plumes of Paradise our pens
could borrow! A Letter to Robert Frost
1

16.

ROBERT GRAVES
1895As you are woman, so be lovely: As you are lovely, so be various,

See Sophocles, p. 834.

10 34

HELLYER
Blest

WILSON
}

be thy name,

O Vogue, that canst

embalm
|

And
1

a potted palm; in immortal me Make thy exegesis Or failing that, at least a Doctor's

A minor poet with

For the greedy, the sinful and lewd. strong men rust, from the gold and the lust That sears the Northland soul.

The
Oh,

Ballad of
as

Yukon Jake
steak

[1921]

thesis.

Letter to Robert Frost

tough

was

Yukon
16.

BASIL

HENRY LIDDELL HART


1895-1972
if

Jake Hard-boiled as a picnic egg.

Keep strong,
keep
cool.

possible. In

any

case,

Have unlimited patience. Never comer an opponent, and always assist him to save his face. Put yourself
in

EDMUND WILSON
1895-

As
is

for the
is

his

shoes

so

as

to

see

things

ism, there

aims and ideals of Marxone feature of them that

through his eyes. Avoid self-righteousness like the devil nothing so selfblinding.

now

rightly suspect.

The

taking-over

by the state of the means of production and the dictatorship in the interests of
the proletariat can by themselves never guarantee the happiness of anybody but the dictators themselves. Marx and En-

Deterrent or Defense [1960]. Advice to Statesmen

GROUCHO MARX
1895never forget a face, but in your case HI make an exception. Saying,
I

coming out of authoritarian Germany, tended to imagine socialism in authoritarian terms; and Lenin and Trotsky after them, forced as they were
gles,

to make a beginning among a people who had known nothing but autocracy,
also

LEWIS MUMFORD
1895People have hesitated to
roan's
call

emphasized this side of socialism


peritself as

and founded a dictatorship which


petuated

Whitto
I

To

an autocracy. the Finland Station [1940].

poems

poetry;

it

is

useless

Summary
efit

as of

1940

deny that they belong to sacred literature.

The Golden Day

have derived a good deal more benof the civilizing as well as of the
[of traditionl

[1926], 5

Layer upon layer, past times preserve Aemselves in the city until life itself is threatened with suffocation; finally
then, in sheer defense, vents the museum.

inspirational kind

from

modern man

in-

the admirable American bathroom than I have from the cathedrals of Europe. ... I have had a good many more up-

The Culture

of Cities [1938]

PARAMORE,
1895Oh, the North Countree

EDWARD

E.

and expansive while soaking in comfortable baths or drying myself after bracing showers in well-equipped American bathrooms than I have ever had in any
lifting thoughts, creative

visions

JR.

cathedral.

A Piece of My Mind
I

[1956], ch. 4
I

is a hard countree That mothers a bloody brood; And its icy arms hold hidden charms

attribute such success as

have had

to the use of the periodic sentence.

An

Interview with

Edmund

Wilson [1962]

1035

DOS PASSOS
T"

FITZGERALD
If

JOHN RODERIGO
DOS PASSOS
1896December day

you can bounce high, bounce


too,

for hci

Till she cry "Lover, gold-hatted, high.


l
I

The

bouncing

lover,

chilly

two shivering bicycle mechanics from 2 Dayton, Ohio,


first felt

must have you!" The Great Gatsby [1925],

epigraph

their

homemade

contraption

gummed
cle

whittled out of hickory sticks, together with Arnstein's bicy-

cement,

Everyone suspects himself of at feast one of the cardinal virtues, and this is mine: I am one of the few honest peo^^ ple that I have ever known,
Ib. ch.
3

stretched with muslin they'd sewn their sister's sewingmachine


their

on
in

Her

voice

is full

own

backyard on Hawthorn

of money.

Jfc,

Street in Dayton, Ohio, soar into the air

Thirty

the promise of a decade

of

above the dunes and the wide beach


at Kitty

Hawk. The Big Money [1936]. The Campers at Kitty Hawk

loneliness, a thinning list of single men to know, a thinning briefcase of enthusiasm, thinning hair. jfc

They were
Daisy

careless people,

Tom

and

EDMUND BLUNDEN
I

they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into

am

for the

But are

1896woods against the world, the woods for me?

whatever
fiie

or their vast carelessness, or was that kept them together, and let other people clean up
their

money
it

mess they had made.

Ib. 9
cur-

The
is not Death at watch Within those secret waters? What wants he but to catch

Kiss

Then

rent,

So we beat on, boats against the borne back ceaselessly into

the

past.

Ib. last line

One

writes of scars healed, a loose

Earth's heedless sons and daughters? With but a crystal parapet

parallel to the pathology of the skin, but there is no such thing in the life of

Between, he has his engines set. The Midnight Skaters

Dance on this ball-floor thin and wan, Use him as though you love him; 3
Court him, elude him, reel and pass, And let him hate you through the glass.
Ib.

an individual. There are open wounds, shrunk sometimes to the size of a pinprick, but wounds still. The marks of
suffering are
eye.

more comparable

to the

loss of a finger, or of the sight of an

may not miss them, either, for one minute in a year, but if we should there is nothing to be done about it Tender Is the Night [1933},

We

FRANCIS SCOTT FITZGERALD


1896-1940

bk.m

ch.i$

test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in

The

The victor belongs to the spoils. The Beautiful and Damned [1922]
Then wear the move her;
1

the

mind at the same time, and retain the ability to function.

still

The Crack-up

[1936]
is

gold hat,

if

that will

December

In a real dark night of the soul it alwavs three o'clock in the morning. 1
1

17,

1903.

See Wilbur and Orville Wright, p. gioa. See Izaafc Walton, p. 56b.

Ib.

See Napoleon, p. 5o4b, and note.

1036

FITZGERALD
was about then
a line
act let
5till

AUSLANDEH
It's

[1920]

that

the worst
like
it.

dam

stuff I've ever seen. I

me

which certain peopk will a faded but forget: "She was

Tobacco* [1915]

lovely

woman

of twenty-seven." Early Success [1937]

JOE JACOBS
1896-1940

Ptoverb: The worst things: Egyptian To DC in bed and sleep not, To want for one who comes not.

We was robbed!
After the heavyweight
title fight

between
l

To

try to

please

and please
and

Max

not.

Schmeting and

Notebooks

Show me
a tragedy.

a hero

will write

you
lb.
I

[Jtme 21, 2932^ Jacobs, Schmeling's manager, shouted into the microphone this protest against the decision.
Jack Sharkey

Draw your

chair

of the precipice

up close to the edge and 111 tell you a story.


Ib.

should of stood in bed. After leaving a sickbed to attend the World?s Series in Detroit

[October 1935] an ^ betting on


the loser

ft is

in

friends.

the In the

thirties

forties

we want we know they


that
did.
I&.

won't save us

any more than love

ROBERT EMMET

SHERWOOD
1896-1955

TTie hangover became a part of the allowed-for as the Spanish day as well
siesta.

My Lost City
writing
is

AB good
water

swimming under
letter

me is, I belong to a vanishing race. I'm one of the intellecThe Petrified Forest [i 934] tuals.
The
trouble with
light.

and holding your breath. Undated

Poor, dear God. Playing Idiot's DeThe game that never means anything, and never ends.
Idiot's Delimit [1936]

HAROLD
Keep *em

N.

GILBERT

1896-1966
flying.

LUTHER W. YOUNGDAHL
World War II
1896-

Slogan of the Air Forces, poster


caption,

When

public excitement runs high


is

as to alien ideologies,

the time

when
imthe

GRAHAM LEE HEMMINGER


1896-1949
Tobacco
It
It

we must be

particularly alert not to in pair the ancient landmarks set up Bill of Rights.

United States
F.
it.

v.

Lattimore, 112

is

It satisfies

a dirty weed. I like it. no normal need. I like


it

Supp.

507,

518

[May

2,

makes you thin,


1

makes you

lean,

2 takes the hair right off your bean.

In
.

The Crack-up, edited by Edmund Wilson


Cigarette smoking may be hazard health. Warning on cigarette
-

JOSEPH AUSLANDER
So there
*

* Caution:

are

no more words and

all is

to

your

ended;
See Anonymous, p. 10855.

required by federal legislation [July

1037

AUSLANDER

DE VOTO
Pessimism
of
is

The

timbrel

is

stilled,

the clarion laid

only the

name

that

away;

weak nerves

men

give to wisdom.
of

And Love

with streaming hair goes unattended Back to the loneliness of yesterday.

Mark Twm'n: The Ink


souri

tory. Address, University of

So There Are

No More Words
[1924]

[December 2935]
terms
of

Art

is

the

an

armistice

signed with fate.

Mark Twain at Work

LOUISE BOGAN
1897I

burned

A passion wholly of the mind,

my

life

that I might find

The achieved West had given the United States something that no peopfe had ever had before, an internal, domestic empire.

Thought divorced from eye and bone, Ecstasy come to breath alone.

The Year of Decision


Between the amateur and the
sional
.

[1943]
profes-

The Alchemist
I

had found unmysterious

flesh
still

Not

the mind's avid substance Passionate beyond the will.

Ib.

. . there is a difference not only in degree but in kind. The skilful man is, within the function of his skifl, a different integration, a different neiw ous and muscular and

Women
They

have no wilderness in them,

organization.

...

A tennis

psychological player or a

are provident instead, Content in the tight hot cell of their

To

hearts eat dusty bread.

watchmaker or an airplane pilot is an automatism but he is also criticism and wisdom.


Across the

Women

Wide Missouri

[1947]

BERNARD DE VQTO
1897-1955
a finished place. Its that is of Florence or Venice, destiny not Milan, while the American empire careens onward toward its unpredicted end. ... It is the first American section to be finished, to achieve stability in the conditions of its life. It is the first old civilization, the first permanent civilization in America. New England: There She Stands.

You can no more keep a martiiu in the refrigerator than you can keep a Kss there. The proper union of gin and vermouth
is a great and sudden glory; it is one of the happiest marriages on earth and one of the shortest-lived.

New

England

is

The Hour
The water make us see
of
life

[1951]

was given to

us to

we arc more nearly men and women, more nearly kind and gentle and generous, pleasanter and stronger, than without its vision there is any evidence we arc.
for a while that
Ib.

In Harper's Magazine [March

begins where the average drops below twenty inches. When you reach the line which marks that drop for convenience, the one hundredth meridian you have reached the West.

The West

United States

annual

rainfall

of the facts which define the is that its national and its imperial boundaries are the same. Another is that it is a political unit which

One

occupies a remarkably coherent geographical unit of continental extent. The Course of Empire
[1952], preface

The Plundered
Harper's

Province.

In

Magazine

[August

History abhors determinism but not tolerate chance.

canIb.

1038

DE VOTO

FAULKNER

The dawn of knowledge


the

is

usually

how he
thing.
.

finds that
.

false dawn. The Course of Empire, ch, 2

he can bear anyThat's what's so terrible. Light in August, ch. 13

SIR

ANTHONY EDEN
1897-

My, my. A body docs get around. Here we aint been coming from Alabama but two months, and now ifs already Tennessee.
It's

16. a i

scientific discovery Every succeeding of old-time nonsense makes greater of sovereignty.

not when you realize that noth-

conceptions

Speech, House of

Commons

[November 22, 1945]

ing can help you religion, pride, it's when anything you realize that 16. you don't need any aid.

WILLIAM FAULKNER
Time
is

You cant underGettysburg. . . stand it. You would have to be born


.

there.

1897-1962 dead as long

Absdbm, Absalom!
as
it is

[1936], ch. 9

being

cficked off

wheels; only when the clock stops does time come to life. The Sound and the Fury

by

little

Why do you hate the South?


I

...

dont hate it. ... I dont hate it. I dont hate it he thought, panting

[1929], June Second 1910


first en de last. ... I de seed beginnin, en now I sees de 16. April Eighth 1928 endiru

IVe seed de

in the cold air, the iron England dark; I dont. I dont! I dont hate it! I 16. dont hate it!

New

He

[the writer]

that the basest of

must teach himself all things is to be

Because no battle
only reveals to

is

ever

They are not even fought.

man

his

won he said. The field own folly and


illusion

get

afraid; and, teaching himself that, forit forever, leaving no room in his workshop for anything but the old

and victory is an despir, and fools. philosophers

of
16.

verities

and truths of the heart, the old universal truths lacking -which any story
love and ephemeral and doomed honor and pity and pride and compassion and sacrifice. Speech upon receiving the Nobel
Prize
I

is

[the Negroes] will endureThey are better than we are. Stronger than we are. Their vices are vices aped

They

men or that white men and bondage have taught them: improvidence and intemperance and evasion not laziness: evasion: of what white men had set them to, not for their aggrandizement or even comfort but his
from white
own. . . durance
children
.

[December

10, 1950]

decline to accept the

end of man.
16.

believe that

man

will

not merely
16.

And
. .

their virtues.

En-

endure: he will prevail.


It
is

and forbearance
,
.

and pity and tolerance and fidelity and love of whether their own or

the writer's privilege to help


lifting his heart.

man

endure by

16.
CO.,

not or black or not.

JEFFERSON,
[1932],

YOKNAPATAWPHA

The Bear

pL IV

Poor man. Poor mankind.

2400 Square Miles. Population, Whites, 6298; Negroes, 9313. WILLIAM FAULKNER, Sole Owner
Mississippi. Area,

Light in August [1932], ch. 4

&

Proprietor.

Too much happens.


forms, engenders, so

Man

per1

Caption for

map drawn by
author

much more than

he can or should

have to bear. That's

Representing, in context, the South.

1039

FAULKNER

REMARQUE
March
is outside the door Flaming some old desire As man turns uneasily from his The Crows

The
his art.

writer's only responsibility is to will be completely ruthless if

He

he

is a good one. He has a dream. It anguishes him so much he must get rid of it. He has no peace until then. Everything goes by the board: honor,

fire.

By and by

pride, decency, security, happiness, to gel the book written. If a writer has

all,

God

caught his eye. Epitaphs: The

to rob his mother, he will not hesitate; the "Ode on a Grecian Urn" is worth

Still for

any number

of old ladies. From an interview with FAULK-

us where Cottons mather In the spring the Willas cather As of yore.

NER [New

Yorfe Cify, 1956]

by
at

And What's More: On


at a

JEAN STEIN.

From Writers
Review

New

Stopping

Hampshire Inn

Work: The
views [1959]

Paris

Inter-

The decent decent

cess.

Really the writer doesn't want suc... He knows he has a short


life,

doesn't doze; teaches standing on his toes. His student dassn't doze and does,

He

And

that's

what teaching

that the day will come when he must pass through the wall of oblivion, and he wants to leave a l scratch on that wall Kilroy was here that somebody a hundred, or a thou-

span of

What

is and Cheer

was.
[1945]

But man must light for man The fires no other can,

sand years

later will see.

Faulkner in the University


[1959], Session 8

And find in his own eye Where the strange crossroads lie. Communion [1950]
Life
alter,
is the garment we continually but which never seems to fit.

PAUL JOSEPH GOEBBELS


1897-1945
can do without butter, but, deour love of peace, not without all spite arms. One cannot shoot with butter but with guns. 2
Address, Berlin January 17, 1936]

Whereas
Your
as it
is

to

Mr. Franklin

[1956]

life will

be

We

rich for others only

rich for you.

On

the Frontiers of Understanding [1959]

DAVID McCORD
1897handful of sand the universe.

ERICH MARIA

REMARQUE
1897-1970 Monotonously the lorries
sway, mo-

is

an anthology of
[1929], introduction

Once and for AZZ


Call

the child, whose credulous hours Burn at the heart of living, and surprise The better reason with unbidden truth. A Bucket of Bees [1934]
first

home

monotonoosh notously falls the rain. It falls on our heads and on the heads of the dead up the line, on the body of the little recruit with the
calls,

come the

wound
hip;

that

is

so

much

too big

for his
it

it falls

on Kemmerich's

grave;

falls in our hearts.

All Quiet on the Western

See Anonymous, p. 11030. Probably the origin of the slogan "Guns or butter." See Goexing, p. 10260.

Front
1

[1929]

Im Westen

Nichts Neues.

1040

WILDER

BENET
i

THORNTON NIVEN
WILDER
1897Even memory is not necessary There is a land of the living and a Und of the dead and the bridge is love,
knt,

The best yuh


But
it

ever poured yuh,

eats the soles right offen yore

for

For

shoes, Hell's broke loose in Georgia.

The Mountain Whippoorwill,


St.
I

48

the only survival, the only meaning. The Bridge of San Luis Rey

have

fallen

in love

with American

names.

[1927], last lines

looks pretty small at a wedAll those good women George. ding, to shoulder, making standing shoulder sure that the knot's tied in a mighty

A man

The sharp names that never get fat, The snakeskin titles of mining claims, The plumed war bonnet of Medicine
Hat,

Tucson and Deadwood and Lost Mule


Flat American

public

way.
for

Our Town

[1938]

The dead don't


living

stay interested in us

very long. Gradually, people let go hold of the earth gradually, they . , and the ambitions they had .
. .

Bury

my

heart at

Names [1927], st. Wounded Knee.


Ib. st.

American Muse, whose strong and


verse heart

di-

and the pleasures they the things they suffered

and and the loved. They get weaned people they that's the way I put earth from away
. .

had
.

So many

But only made

it,

weaned away.

16.

That's what it was to be alive. To move about in a cloud of ignorance; to on the feelgo up and down trampling To about those of you. spend and ing waste time as though you had a million To be always at the mercy of one years.
self-centered passion, or another.

tried to understand smaller with their art, Because you are as various as your land. John Brown's Body [1928], invocation
it

men have

And Thames and


Ran

all

the rivers of the

kings into Mississippi

and were drowned.


Ib,

Now
16.

Broad-streeted

Richmond

The

trees in the streets are old trees

yoo

know

that's the

happy existence

you wanted to go
I

back

to.

Family

used to living with people, trees that remember

your

hold that we cannot be said to be aware of our minds save under responThe Ides of March [1948] sibility.

grandfather's

name.
16. bk.

IV
his
16.

Stonewall Jackson, wrapped beard and his silence.

in

STEPHEN VINCENT

BENT

A
No
The
But
I

great victor, in defeat as great,

more, no
both.

less,

always himself in
Ib.

1898-1943
I

died in

my

boots like a pioneer

With the whole wide sky above me. The Ballad of William Sycamore

ant finds kingdoms in a foot of Ib. ground.


all

of

them are sure they know


will.

He could

fiddle all the

bugs

off a

sweet

God's

potato vine.

am

the only
it.

man who

does not

know
16.

The Mountain Whippoorwill


],

St.

22

Oh,

Georgia booze,

booze

is

mighty

fine

Sherman's buzzin' along to de sea, Like Moses ridin' on a bumblebee.


16,

VIII

1041

BENET

YOKOMITSU

RIICHI

We
We
Our

thought we were done with these things but we were wrong. thought, because we had power, we had wisdom.
Litany for Dictatorships [1936]
fathers

ANTHONY CLEMENT
McAULIFFE
1898Nuts!

and

Reply [December 23, 1944]


the
loist

fo

ourselves

sowed
the
16.

German demand for surrender


Airborne

tf

of

Our

dragon's teeth. children know

Division

and

suffer

w/zfc/i

armed men.

seven days at Bastogne

had been trapped fa

If two New Hampshiremen aren't a match for the devil, we might as well

DONALD CULROSS
PEATTIE
1898-1964
to hear bird music is between four and six in the morning, Seven o'clock is not too late, but

give the country back to the Indians. The Devil and Daniel Webster

[1936]

The time

Even the damned may


quence of Mr. Webster.

salute the elo16.

h
a
a

They were

half of the

first

families in

eight the fine rapture is over, due, I suspect, to the contentment of the

Virginia.

Well, where do you start, when you start counting F.F.V.S?

inner man that comes with breakfast; poet should always be hungry or have
lost love.

Western Star

[1943], bk. I

An Almanac

for

Modern

[1935]. April 22

HORACE GREGORY
1898My boyhood saw Greek islands floating over Harvard
Square.
1

AMELIA EARHART

PUTNAM
1898-1937

Chorus

for Survival [1935], 14

the price that Courage granting peace.


is

life exacts for

The

soul that
release

knows

it

not, knows ao

CLIVE STAPLES LEWIS


1898-1963

From little things; Knows not the livid loneliness of fear, Nor mountain heights where bitter joy
can hear

The
one

is the gradual the gentle slope, soft underfoot,

safest

road to Hell

The sound

of wings.

Courage

without sudden turnings, without milestones, without signposts.

The Screwtape

DOROTHY
A goosegirl
And
ermined
is

E.

REID
still

Letters [1941], 12

a goosegirl

The

Future

is

something

which

everyone reaches at the rate of sixty

geese will gabble everywhere she Not in Andersen goes.

minutes an hour, whatever he does, whoever he is. 16. 2 5

YOKOMITSU
Pleasure
to
1

RIICHIi

The
4.A&.1V4U.I.V

long, dull,
OTO are

monotonous
I

years of
p

1898-1947
indeed there is nothing with the gaiety and transcompare From Modern Japanese Literature, edited by

a&^u prosperity LSI \jt}L/v^i.i L v or middle-aged \Ji mi\JL\i\f o.eLVVJ middle-aged


1/1i7*aiip OTf-fr

adversity

o ! excellent
<3v/*ttl

weather
1

[for

the Devil],

campaigning 16. 28
is

^vTVYNni^wii

The

speaker in the

poem

Emerson.

Donald Keene [1960]

1042

YOKOMITSU

RIICHI

CRANE
seal's

mrency of the pleasure The heart begins to choke from its exof pleasure, as if it were licking
fcemity of fruit. sosne luscious piece

before death.

The
It

paradise.

wide spindrift gaze toward Voyages, If

Jikan [Time] [1931]

The

was a kind and northern face That mingled in such exile guise
everlasting eyes of Pierrot

NOEL COWARD
1899-

And, of Gargantua, the laughter. Praise for an Urn: In Memoriam Ernest Nelson [1926]
in

Mad dogs and Englishmen go out


tbc

Damp

tonnage and alluvial inarch of


.
.

midday sun;
to,

The Japanese don't care


nese wouldn't dare to;

the Chifirmly

days
flow.

Tortured with history,

its

one

will

Hindus and Argentines sleep from twelve to one, But Englishmen detest a siesta.

The Bridge

[1930!. The River (Mississippi)

Mad Dogs

and Englishmen

The

Who
She

swift red flesh, a winter

king

Dance, dance, dance,


Life
is

little lady,

fleeting

squired the glacier woman down the sky? ran the neighing canyons all the

To

the

rhythm beating
mind. Dance, Dance, Dance, Little

spring

la your

She spouted arms; she


to die.

rose with maize


Ib.

The Dance
murrmirless

Lady [1928]
111

Bunched

in

mutual glee
glint

see

you again,
again.
sc.
i

The

Whenever spring breaks through


Bittersweet [1929], act I
Certain
regularly,

bearings

and shined
In oilrinsed circles of blind ecstasy! Ib. Power: Cape Hatteras

women

should

be

struck

like gongs.

Private Lives [1930], act III


I've

And why do
here,

often

meet your

visage

those weary Twentieth-Century Blues. Cavalcade [1931], pt. 3, sc. 2


got

on and eyes like agate lanterns on Below the toothpaste and the dandruff
Your

Don't Let's be Beastly to the GerTitle of song mans.

And
And

ads? did their riding eyes right through

your side,
did their eyes like
ters ride?

unwashed

plat1

HART CRANE
1899-1932 And yet this great wink of eternity, Of rimless floods, unfettered leewardings.

And

Death, aloft

gigantically

down

Probing through evermore!

you toward me,


Ib.

The Tunnel

Voyages [1926], II

Compass, quadrant and sextant contrive

Adagios of islands,

O my Prodigal.
16.

No
This

farther
shall

tides

High

in

the

azure steeps

Bind us in time, awe.

seasons clear,

and

Monody

fabulous
keeps.

not wake the mariner. shadow only the sea


Melville's

minstrel galleons of Carib fire, Bequeath us to no earthly shore until Is answered in the vortex of our grave

At
1

Tomb

[1933]

See Poe, p.

1043

HEMINGWAY

ERNEST HEMINGWAY
1899-1961

You and me,


peace.

we've

made

a separate

the hospital and walked back to hotel in the rain. Farewell to Arms, ch*

37

In Our Time [1924],

Grace under pressure.

Very

Definition of "guts" in The

Short Story
It

New

Yorker [November ;o

mates one

feel rather
.
.
.

ing not to be a bitch. what we have instead of God. The Sun Also Rises [1926], ch. 19

good decidIt's sort of

1929]
I know only that what is moral what you feel good after and what immoral is what you feel bad after. Death in the Afternoon
i$

is

"Oh, Jake," Brett


gether."
.
.

said,

"we could
to-

[1932],
eft,
i

have had such a damned good time


.

"Yes/' I think so?"

said.

'Isn't

it

pretty

to

Ib. last lines

I was trying to write then and I found the greatest difficulty, aside froo

I was always embarrassed by the words sacred, glorious, and sacrifice and had heard the expression in vain. them, sometimes standing in the rain almost out of earshot, so that only the now shouted words came through for a long time, and I had seen nothing sacred, and the things that were glorious had no glory and the sacrifices were

We

what you really felt, what you were supposed to feel, and had been taught to ted, was to put down what really happened in action; what the actual tilings woe which produced the emotion that yea
knowing
truly

rather than

experienced

the

real

thing,

the

sequence of motion and fact which made the emotion and which would be
as valid in a year or in ten years or, with

the stockyards at Chicago if nothing was done with the meat except to bury it ... Abstract words such as glory, honor, courage, or hallow were
like

luck and
always.
If

if

you stated

it

purely enough,
lb.

He

he wrote it he could get rid of it. had gotten rid of many things by

obscene. Farewell to

writing them.

Arms

[1929], ch.

27

Winner Take Nothing

[1033].
Sorts

courage to people bring so this world the world has to kill them to break them, so of course it kills them.
If

much

Fathers and

All good books are alike in that they


are truer than
if

The world breaks everyone and afterward many are strong at the broken
will not break it the very good and the very gentle and the very brave impartially. If you are none of these you can be sure that it will kill you too but there will be

they had

really hap-

places.

But those that

kills. It kills

pened and after you are finished reading one you will feel that all that happened to you and afterwards it all belongs to you: the good and the bad, the ecstasy, the remorse and sorrow, the people and the places and bow the
weather was. If you can get so that yon can give that to people, then you are a
writer.

no

special hurry.

IZ>.

34

That was what you did. You died. did not know what it was about. never had time to learn. They threw you in and told you the rules and

You You

Old Newsman Writes [Esquire, December 1934]


All modern American literature comes from one book by Mark Twain
called Huckleberry Finn. Green Hills of Africa [193
.

the

first

time they caught you


like

off

base

they killed you.


It

16. 41

saying goodbye to a statue. After a while I went out and left

was

1044

HEMINGWAY
The rich were dull and they drank much, ... He remembered poor l and his romantic awe of them Julian aod how he had started a story once
too

MORTON

A man
I

can be destroyed but not dc-

feated.

The Old Man and the Sea {1953]


any use to know it, I always on the principle of the iceberg. There is seven-eighths of it under water for every part that shows. Anything you know you can eliminate and
If it
is

'The very rich are different from you and me." And how some2 had said to one Julian, 'Tes, they have more money." The Snows of Kilimanjaro
that began,

try to write

['93*3
Kilimanjaro
tain
is a snow-covered moun19,710 feet high, and is said to be

the hignest mountain in western summit is called

Africa.

Its

it only strengthens your iceberg. It is the part that doesn't show. If a writer omits something because he does not know it then there is a hole in the

the Masai

story,

"Ngije Ngai," the House of God. Close to the western summit there is frozen carcass of a the dried and No one has explained what the kopard.

Interview, Paris

Review

[Spring 1958]

kopard was seeking at that altitude. 16. epigraph

[Pound] was right half the and when he was wrong, he was so wrong you were never in any doubt about it. Gertrude [Stein] was always
Ezra
time,

you are lucky enough to have lived young man, then wherever you go for the rest of your life, it stays with you, for Paris is a movable feast. A Movable Feast [1964], epigraph
in Paris as a

If

ROBERT MAYNARD HUTCHINS


1899^ Democracy ... is the only form of government that is founded on the dignity of man, not the dignity of some men, of rich men, of educated men or of white men, but of all men. Its sanction
is

right

To John Peale
his

Bishop; quoted in

Homage

to

Hemingway, New

Republic [November 11, 1936]

No matter no bloody f

how

a man alone ain't got ing chance.


[1937],
eft.

To Have and Have Not


If

not the sanction of force, but the


of human nature. Equality the two great distinguishing

23

sanction

win everywhere. The world is a fine place and worth the fighting for and I hate very much to leave it. For Whom the Bell Tolls
will

we win here we

and

justice,

characteristics of

evitably
all

democracy, follow infrom the conception of men,

men,

and spiritual beings. Democracy and Human Nature


as rational

[1940], ch. 43

Cowardice, distinguished from panic, is almost always simply a lack of


as
ability

The death of democracy is not likely to be an assassination from ambush, ft


will

be

a slow extinction

to

suspend the functioning of


[1942], introduction

indifference,

the

imagination. men at War


is

from apathy, and undernourishment. Great Books

Time

the least thing


Profile

we have of. From The New Yorker,


by LILLIAN Ross
13, 1950]
s

CHARLES W. MORTON
1899-1967 was around two decades ago, in the city room of the Boston Evening Transcript, that I first became aware
It

[May
F. Scott Fitzgerald.
*

Hemingway.

'Reprinted in book form, Portrait of Hcming**? [i6i].

of the elongated-yellow-fruit school of writing. The phrase turned up in a story

1045

MORTON
. . about some fugitive monkeys and the efforts of police to recapture them by using bananas as bait. The Elongated Yellow Fruit

BROGAN
Democracy is the recurrent st more than half of the people arc right more than half of the time The Wild Flag. In The Ne*
that

Yorker

[July 3tl <ft

VLADIMIR NABOKOV
1899life, fire of Lolita, light of soul. Lo-lee-ta. loins. sin, Lolita pt. I, ch.

my

my
i

My

my

[1955],

LELAND STOWE
1899An American will tinker with anything he can put his hands on. But how tinker rarely can he be persuaded to with an abstract idea.

Mrs. Frederick C. Little's second son was bom, everybody noticed that he was not much bigger than a mouse. The truth of the matter was, the baby looked very much like a mouse in every way. He was only two inches high; and he had a mouse's sharp nose a mouse's tail, a mouse's whiskers, and
the pleasant, shy manner of a mouse. Before he was many days old he wa* not only looking like a mouse but acting like one, too wearing a gray hat an! carrying a small cane. Stuart Little cfc. i
[1945],

When

They Shall Not Sleep

[i

944]

E. B.

WHITE*

Margate," said the bird, softly, in a musical voice. "I come from fields once tall with wheat, from
pas-

"My name

is

1899their

All poets who, when reading from own works, experience a choked feeling, are major. For that matter, all

deep in fern and thistle; I come from vales of meadowsweet, and I love
tures

to whistle."
It

Ib. 6

poets who read from their own works are major, whether they choke or not. How to Tell a Major Poet from a Minor Poet
"It's broccoli, dear."

was the best place to be, thought Wilbur, this warm delicious cellar,
with the garrulous geese, the changing seasons, the heat of the sun, the passage of swallows, the nearness of rats, the sameness of sheep, the love of
spi-

"I say

it's

spinach, and

say the hell

ders, the smell of

manure, and the

glory

with it"

Caption for cartoon by Carl Rose


in

of everything. Charlotte's

Web

[1952], ch, 22

The New Yorker

one who spends his life In riding to and from his wife; A man who shaves and takes a train And then rides back to shave again.

Commuter

LOUIS ARMSTRONG
1900-1971 have to ask what you never know.
If jazz
is,

youTl

Saying

Commuter
It is easier for a

man
is

to be loyal to

HUMPHREY BOGART
1900-1957
Tennis, anyone?

his club

than to his planet; the bylaws

are shorter,

and he

personally ac-

quainted with the other members.

His

sole line in his

first

play

One Man's Meat


The
future
. .
.

[1944!

seems to me no unified dream but a mince pie, long in


the baking, never quite done.
1

DENIS WILLIAM

BROGAN
1900is

Ib.

See Thoreau, Walden, footnote, p. 68sa. Sec James Thurber, p. 10333.

The Englishman

interested in conIt

temporary America.

evokes no

re-

1046

BROCAN

OSTENSO
tomary periodization of European history lias become an anachronism and

him that Boston is like an He has seen quite enough town. English and would rather hear English towns or Chicago, which are York New about not like English towns.
tell iponse to

an encumbrance.

The Origins of Modern Science

The English People


American
social fences

[1943]

have to be

continually repaired;
atone.

in

ELIZABETH, QUEEN MOTHER OF ENGLAND


1900-

are lite wild hedges; they

England they grow if left


I6
-

The
do.
I

country
"root,

that has licked a more people or formidable enemy than Germany America ... a North Japan, primitive whose national motto has been

children will not leave unless I shall not leave unless their father
will not leave the whatever. circumstances any Reported reply as to whether the

does, and the

King

country in

Princesses
after the

hog, or die."

The American Character

would leave England bombing of Buckingham

[1944]

Pdace [1940]

in New Any well-established village northern Middle West the or England could afford a town drunkard, a town
atheist,

JAMES HILTON
1900-1954

and a few Democrats.

16.

Anno domini
complaint of
all

that's

the most

fatal

in the end.
i

JOHN MASON BROWN


1900Brutus seemed no more than a
re-

Goodbye, Mr. Chips [1934], ch.

The
Its

austere serenity of Shangri-La. forsaken courts and pale pavilions


in repose

cords wrapped up sounding set of vocal Two on the Aisle [1938] in a toga.

shimmered

fret of existence

from which all the had ebbed away, leav-

To many people dramatic


soap bubbles.

criticism

dared ing a hush as if moments hardly Lost Horizon [1933], ch. $ to pass.

must seem like an attempt to tattoo

Broadway

in

Review [1940]

When the High Lama asked him whether Shangri-La was not unique in
his

experience,

and

if

the

Western

Part of the American handed people who are dead sheep at graduation time think that it wifi keep their minds alive forever.

myth is that the skin of a

world could offer anything in the least like it, he answered with a smile: to be quite frank it re"Well, yes minds me very slightly of Oxford/'

Remark

Ib-9

HERBERT BUTTERFIELD
i gooIt

Memory put a red star in the comer like pictures in a gallery that get sold.
Time and Time Again
If
[i 953]

[the

scientific

shines

everything

revolution] outsince the rise of

Christianity and reduces sance and Reformation to the rank of

the

Renais-

beyou forgive people enough you whether to and to them, you, they long either person likes it or not squatter's rights of

the heart.

Ib.

mere episodes, mere internal displacements, within the system of medieval Christendom. ... It looms so large as
the real origin of the modern world and of the modern mentalitv that our cus-

MARTHA OSTENSO
1900-1963
Pity the Unicorn, Pity the Hippogriff,

1047

OSTENSO
Souls that were never born Out of the land of If! The Unicorn and the Hippogriff,
st.i

STEVENSON
frenzied outbursts of emotion, but tbc tranquil and steady dedication of a life, time. There are words that are easy to utter, but this is a mighty

For

LEROY [SATCHEL] PAIGE


c.

assignment often easier to fight for princi1 ples than to live up to them.
it is

1900-

Don't look back. Something gaining on you.

may be

Speech, New York City [August 27, 19$!]

When

How

to

Keep Young [1953]

loves his country, that he loves the

an American says that he he means not only New England hilb,

ERNIE PYLE
1900-1945
write from the worm's-eye point of Here Is Your War [1943] view.
I

the prairies glistening in the sun, the wide and rising plains, the great mountains, and the sea. He means that be loves an inner air, an inner light in

which freedom lives and in whidi a man can draw the breath of self-respect
It.

If

even the

you go long enough without a bath Ib. fleas will let you alone.

A hungry man is not a free man.2

ANTOINE DE SAINT-EXUPtRY
1900-1944
Although

A
we

Speech, Kasson, Minnesota [September 6, 1952] wise man does not try to hurry
Speech, San Francisco [September 9, 1952]

history.

human
if

life is priceless,

always act as

something had an even


life.
.
.
.

greater price than is that something?

But what

VoldeNuit

The time to stop a revolution the beginning, not the end.


Your public

is at

Ib.

Freedom and constraint are two asto pects of the same necessity which is be what one is and no other. La CitadeUe

servants serve you right

Speech, Los Angeles [September 11, 1952]

ADLAI STEVENSON
1900-1965

This is the first time I have ever heard of a party going into battle under the slogan, "Throw the rascals in.** Speech, Phoenix, Arizona,
[September
12, 1952]

More important than winning


election, is governing the nation. is the test of a political party
acid, final test.

the
the

That

Those who corrupt the public mind are just as evil as those who steal from
the public purse. Speech, Albuquerque,

New Mex-

Speech accepting Democratic presidential nomination [July


26, 1952]
Let's talk sense to the

ico [September 12, 1952]

American peo-

that there ple. Let' s tell them the truth, Ifc. are no gains without pains.
patriotism in the context of our times? ... patriotism that puts country ahead of

Nature is neutral. Man has wrested from nature the power to make the world a desert or to mate the deserts bloom. There is no evil in the atom; 3 only in men's souls.
Speech, Hartford, Connecticut [September 18, 1952]
1

What do we mean by
a patriotism which

self;

is

not short,

See Thackeray, p. 66oa. See Cato, 1073, and note. See J. Robert Oppenheimer, p.

1048

STEVENSON
Government
[in

CAMPBELL

a democracy] can-

THOMAS WOLFE
A
1900-1938 an unfound door. Look Homeward, Angel! * [19*9],
stone, a leaf,

not be stronger or more tough-minded than its people. It cannot be more incommitted to the task than
flexibly

they. It
ple.

cannot be wiser than the peo-

foreword

Speech, Chicago [September 29, 1952]

As

citizens of this

democracy, you are

the rulers
the end.

and the

ruled, the lawgivers

Which of us has known his brother? Which of us has looked into his father's heart? Which of us has not remained forever prison-pent? Which of
us
is

and the law-abiding, the beginning and


lb.

not forever a stranger and alone?


16.

means Africa the Africans and not Africa as a limiting ground for alien ambitions.
Africa for the Africans
for

O
ghost,

lost,

and by the wind


again.

come back
in the

grieved, Ib.

Most
it's all

of the time

Speech, United Nations [February 18, 1961]


If

mind.

we think we're sick, lb. pL I, ch. i


safe for hypocrisy.

total

isolationism

is

interventionism is either. In fact, the clear, quick, definable, measurable answers are ruled out. In this twilight of power, there is no 1 quick path to a convenient light switch.
total

no answer, no answer,

Making the world

16.111,36

The young men

of this land are not,

as they are often called, a "lost" race they are a race that never yet has

Speech, Harvard University \juneij, 1965]

been discovered. And the whole secret, power, and knowledge of their own discovery
is

The art of government has grown from its seeds in the tiny city-states of Greece to become the political mode of half the world. So let us dream of a
world
small,

know
them

it,

feel

locked within them they it, have the whole thing in


it.

The Web and the Rock


If a

and they cannot utter

[1939], ch. 13

which all states, great and work together for the peaceful flowering of the republic of man.
in

Ib.

VIOLET ALLEYN STOREY


1900I

has a talent and cannot use he has a talent and uses only half of it, he has partly failed. If he has a talent and learns somehow to use the whole of it, he has gloriously succeeded, and won a satisfaction and a Ife. triumph few men ever know. 30
it,

man

he has

failed. If

You Can't Go Home

Again.

have a small-town soul.

Title of novel [1940]

makes me want to know Wee, unimportant thing?


It

About the folks that go Past on swift journeyings.

ROY CAMPBELL
Ironical

1901-1957

You

praise

the

firm

restraint

with

WILLIAM LINDSAY

WHITE
1900-

which they write I'm with you there, of course. They use the snaffle and the curb
right,

all

They Were Expendable.


Title of
*

book [1942]

But where's the bloody horse? On Some South African Novelists


i

See

John

F.

Kennedy,

p. 10733.

See Milton, p.

1049

CAMPBELL

HUGHES

The

sap

is

the music, the stem

is

the

flute,

THOMAS EDMUND DEWEY


1902-1971
That's

And

Who
Out

the leaves are the wings of the seraph I shape dances, who springs in a golden
escape, of the dust
plain,

why

it's

1 time for a change.

Campaign speech, San

Francisco

and the drought of the


the silver hosannas of

[September 2 1,

\^\

To

STELLA GIBBONS
1902-

sing with
rain.

The Palm

[1928]

The farm was crouched on


hillside,

a bleak

fangcd wift flints, dropped steeply to the village of Howling a mile away.

whence

its fields,

JAMES MICHAEL KIERAN, JR.


1901-1952

Cold Comfort Farm


Something nasty

[1972], en.
3

in the woodshed
Ifc.8

The brains trust.


In conversation with Franklin

WOLCOTT
the mind. 2

GIBBS
until reeled

D. Roosevelt [August 1932], reand ferring to the professors


other such advisers who served Roosevelt in his first campaign. The phrase later became "brain
trust:'

1902-1958
Backward ran sentences

More
.
.

in Sorrow [1958]. Time Fortune Life


.
.

Luce

Where

it

will all end,

knows God!
It.

LINUS CARL PAULING


1901it is Science is the search for truth not a game in which one tries to beat

theater

Generally speaking, the American is the aspirin of the middle


Ib. Shakespeare, Here's Your

classes. 3

his opponent, to do harm to others. need to have the spirit of science in

Hat

We

international affairs, to malce the conduct of international affairs the effort to find the right solution, the just solution

LANGSTON HUGHES
1902-1967
I

swear to the Lord


can't see

of international problems, not the effort by each nation to get the better of other nations, to do harm to them

I still

Why Democracy means


Everybody but jne.
I

when

it is

possible.

The Black Man Speaks


humble,
hungry,

No More War!

[2958]

am

the

people,

mean
Hungry

CORNELIA OTIS SKINNER


1901-

yet today despite the dream. O Pioneers! 4 Beaten yet today

am

the

man who

never got ahead,


in
the

Woman's
vention.

virtue

is

man's greatest

in-

Paris '90

iThe phrase was used extensively campaigns of 1944, 1948, and 1952. 2 See Winston Churchill, p. 9253. 3 See Marx, p. 686b. *See Whitman, p. 7010.

1050

HUGHES
Tin poorest worker bartered through
the years.

NASH
There arc two kinds of people who blow through life like a breeze, And one kind is gosripers, and the other
kind is gossipces. I'm a Stranger
[1938].
I

Let America Be America

Again [1938]

America be America again t The land that never has been yet And yet must be*

let

Have

Here Myself It on Good

16.

Authority

Negro blood
cause
just

is

one
*

besure powerful of black blood drop

Bankers Are Just Like Anybody Else, Except Richer.


Ib. Title of

makes a colored man. One drop you . Black is powerful. are a Negro! . Simple Takes a Wife [1953]

poem

Dogs display reluctance and wrath If you try to give them a bath.

CHARLES AUGUSTUS LINDBERGH^


1902(that's my ship and I) took off had a report latter suddenly. somewhere around 4 o'clock in the afternoon before that the weather would be fine, so we thought we would try

They bury bones

in hideaways

And

half the time they trot sideaways. Ib. An Introduction to Dogs,


st.

We

4 Barmaids Are Diviner Than Mermaids.


Ib. Title of

We

poem

There was

Whose

young belle of old. Natchez in garments were always


a

it.

Lindbergh's

Own

Story. In the

New
1927]
I

York

Times

[May
.
*

23,

When comment arose On the state of her clothes, She drawled, When Ah
scratchez!

patches.

itchez, Ah Ib. Requiem

saw a

fleet

of fishing boats.
if I

There

is

flew

down almost touching the

only one

craft

way

to achieve happi-

and yelled at them, asking the right road to Ireknd.

was on

And

ness on this terrestrial ball, that is to have either a clear conscience, or none at all. Ib. Inter-Office Memorandum

They just stared. Maybe they didn't hear me. Maybe I didn't hear them. Or
fool

maybe they thought I was just a crazy An hour later I saw land. 16.

Women

would rather be right than

rea-

sonable.

Good

OGDEN NASH
(1902-1972)

Intentions [1942]. Frailty,

Thy Name

Is

a Misnomer

Candy
Is dandy But liquor

money7 money, money, I'm not necessarily one of those who think
Bat
thee holyr often stop to wonder how thou canst go out so fast when thou comest in so slowly. Hymn to the Thing That Makes the Wolf Go [January 1934]
I

Is quicker.

Many Long
I

"Years

Ago

[1945]-

Reflections

on Ice-Breaking

think that I shall never see


tree.

A billboard lovely as a

and the sky. A young Minnesotan who seemed to have had nothing to do with his generation did a heroic thing, and for a moment
In the spring of '37, something bright
alien flashed across

Indeed, unless the billboards fall Til never see a tree at all. 1 Ib. Song of the Open

Road

their glasses in country clubs tod speakeasies and thought of their old best dreams. F. SCOTT FITZGERALD [of Lindbergh]
people set

down

One would be in less danger From the wiles of the stranger


1

See Joyce Kilmer, p. 105 ib.

1051

NASH
If one's

CALDWELL

own kin and kith Were more fun to be with. Many Long

door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of.

Years Ago. Family Court


decks
sex.

The

Private
is

Dining

The turtle lives 'twixt plated Which practically conceal its


I

Illiteracy

think it clever of the turtle In such a fix to be so fertile.


Ib.

GEORGE GAYLORD
The Turtle

SIMPSON
1902-

A bit of talcum
Is

always walcum.
Ib. Reflection

on Babies
old

The

old
dies.

men know when an


16.

man

Old

Men

There

is

A tingle remarkably pleasant; A yellow, a mellow Martini;

something about a Martini,

by unreasoning faith and too many conflicting faiths within these boundaries where such faith shoald have no place. The chaos is one that re-

present chaotic stage of humanity is not, as some wishfully maintain caused by a lack of faith but too

The

much

I wish that I had one at present. There is something about a Martini, Ere the dining and dancing begin,

sponsible to order.

human knowledge

only

can reduce
[1949]

The Meaning of Evolution

And
It is
I

to

tell

you the

truth,
it's

not the vermouth


Ib. A Drink with Something in It
is

THEODORE SPENCER
1902-1949
Eunuchs, abortive Platonists and
priests

think that perhaps

the gin.

Middle age

when

you've met

so

many

people that every new person you meet reminds you of someone else. Versus [1949]. Let's Not Climb the Washington

Speak always very wisely about love. An Act of Life [

JOHN ERNST STEINBECK


1902-1968

Monument Tonight
I

believe a

little
life,

incompatibility
particularly if
is

is

the

spice of

he has

income and she


Ib. I

My garden will Fm a horticultural ignoramus,


I

Do J Witt, I Have never make me famous,

pattable.

Man, unlike any other thing organic or inorganic in the universe, grows beyond his work, walks up the stairs of his concepts, emerges ahead of his accomplishments.

The Grapes of Wrath

[1939], ch. 14

can't

Or even

a stringbean from a soybean, a girl bean from a boy bean. Ib. He Digs, He Dug, He Has Dug
tell

When
I

remember bygone days

Okie use' ta mean you was from Oklahoma. Now it means you're scum. Don't mean nothing itself, it's the wav
they say
it.

how evening follows morn; So many I loved were not yet dead, So many I love were not yet born.
think
16.

Ib. 18

ERSKINE CALDWELL
1903Tobacco Road.
Title of novel
1

The Middle

He
And

tells

you when you've got on too


lipstick,

much

[1932]

helps you with your girdle when your hips stick. 16. The Perfect Husband

play [1933], adapted by JACK KKJUJ [1903-1969] had one of the longest runs American stage history.

The

to

CIANO

EBKRHART

COUNT GALEAZZO
CIANO
1903-1944
As alwavs, victory finds a hundred 1 thers but defeat is an orphan.
fa-

CLARE SOOTHE LUCE


Much
of what Mr. Wallace
calls

his global thinking is, no matter you slice it still Globaloney.

how

The Ciano

Diaries 1939-1943

Speech, House
tivcs

[1946], [September 9, 1942]

of Representa* \February 9, 1943]

CYRIL CONNOLLY [PALINURUS]


1903There
ing
for a
is

GEORGE ORWELL
[ERIC BLAIR]
1903-1950
animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others. Animal Farm [1945], cn 1O
-

no fury

like a

woman

AH

search-

new lover. The Unquiet Grave


is

[1945], pt. I

Big Brother

is

Obesity
brought

a mental state, a disease


disapID.

watching you. 198411948]

on by boredom and

pointment.

BENJAMIN SPOCK
1903people have studied different methods of bringing up children the more they have come to the conclusion that
instinctively

one

Imprisoned in every fat is wildly signaling to be

man

a thin

let out.

The more

16. II

COUNTEE CULLEN
1903-1946 One three centuries removed From the scenes his fathers loved, Spicy grove, cinnamon tree,

what good mothers and fathers feel like doing for their
the best after
all.

babies

is

The Common Sense Book


eft.
i

of

Baby and Child Care [1946],

What

is

Africa to

me?
Heritage [1925]

EVELYN

WAUGH

19031966

WI.LLIAM

CUMMINGS2
1903-1944

THOMAS

That's the public school system all over. They may kick you out, but they never let you down. Decline and Fall [1929]

There are no atheists in the foxholes. Field sermon, Bataan [1942].

PETER ARNO
1904-1968
consider your conduct unethical and lousy. Caption for cartoon
I

From CARLOS Saw the Fall


pines [1942]
1

P,

ROMULO,

of the Philip-

There's an old saying that victory has a hundred fathers and defeat is an orphan. JOHN F. KENNEDY, after the debacle at the Bey
of

RICHARD EBERHART
1904But the year had lost
its

Cuba, April azr 1961 Cununmgs, a chaplain, was aboard an amarked Japanese ship transporting prisoners from the Philippines to Japan which was sunk fry an American submarine [December 15, 1944].
JPijrs,

Father

meaning,

And
*

in intellectual chains

Vice-President

Heniy Wallace.

1053

EBERHART
I lost

KENNAN
a room from which Like a gone? marriage from which love has gone. j\jjj
faith has
.
.

Mured up

both love and loathing, in the wall of wisdom.


Collected

Have you seen

Poems 1930-1 [1960], The Groundhog

patience,
fog.

patience

The

I stood there in the -whirling summer, hand capped a withered heart, And thought of China and of Greece,

everywhere Potting Shed

like

[i 957 |

My

Of Alexander in his tent; Of Montaigne in his tower, Of Saint TTaeresa in her wild
It is

lament.
Ib.

Catholics and Communists hive committed great crimes, but at feast they have not stood aside, like an established society, and been indifferent, I would rather have blood on my hand$

than water like Pilate


is

...

if

what man does not know of God Composes the visible poem of the
world.
16-

abandoned one all faith. There


to the faith
faith

you have

faith,
lose.

do not abandon
alternativt

always an

we

On a Squirrel

Or

is it

the same

This fevers me, this sun on green, On green glowing, this young spring. 16. A "Bravery of Earth

under another name? The Comedians

[2966]

Not God hell

catch, in the mystery of

CHRISTOPHER WILLIAM BRADSHAW ISHERWOOD


1904its shutter open, quite passive, recording, not thinking. Recording the man shaving at the win-

He

space. flaunts his

own

outcast state

am

a camera with

As he throws
bound.

his imperfections outward

16.

On

Shooting Particles

dow

opposite and the

woman
Some

in the

Beyond

the

World

kimono washing her


this will

hair.

day,

all

have to be developed,

carefaBy

CLIFTON FADIMAN
1904-

printed, fixed.

When

you reread a

classic

you do

The Berlin Stories Goodbye to Berlin


Berlin

[1945],

[1939],

Diary

[Autumn

not see more in the book than you did before; you see more in you than there was before.

1930]

GEORGE

F.

KENNAN
vitally important

Any Number Can Play

[1957]

MARGARET FISHBACK
1904-

1904which is Something

but which, I think, is often lost sight of in the United States ... is the fact
life normally has in strong competitive elements. It did not take the challenge of Communism
it

The same old


Repeated

that international

charitable lie

as the years scoot Perpetually makes a hit

by

"You

really haven't

changed a bit!"

to produce this situation. Just as there

The Lie of the Land

no uncomplicated personal relationship between individuals, so, I think, there is no international relationship
is

GRAHAM GREENE
1904That whiskey priest, I wish we had never had him in the house. The Power and the Glory [1940]

between sovereign
out
its

states

which

is with-

elements

of

competitive aspects. of international present relationships life are only the eroded remnants of ones which, at one time, were relation-

antagonism, its Many of the

1054

KENNAN
ships fcvtnv

FULBRIGHT

uncompromising is in some government


for

of

hostility.

T can quite
known

extinguish, the physicists have

respects a

every other government, problem so long as and it will always be this way its supremely with state, the sovereign remains the rationale,
self-centered
basis

and this is a knowledge which thcj cannot lose. Physic* in the Contemporary World, lecture at Massachusin;

setts Institute of

of international

life.

Russia and the

West under
[1961],

Technology [November 25, 1947]


society,

Lenin and
eft.

Stalin

The open

the

unrestricted

25

If

we

are to regard ourselves as a

and anything else nation grown-up be mortally dangerous will henceforth then we must, as the Biblical phrase
childish things; and goes, put away the first to among these childish things in my opinion, should be selfgo, idealization and the search for absolutes
in

access to knowledge, the unplanned and uninhibited association of men for its what may furtherance are these

make
ever

vast,

complex, ever growing,


ever

changing,

more

specialized

and expert technological world, nevertheless a world of human community. Science and the Common
Understanding [1953]

world

affairs:

for absolute security,

absolute amity, absolute

harmony.
16.

JAMES WILLIAM

FULBRIGHT

CECIL DAY LEWIS


Tempt

There

is

1905an inevitable divergence,


it is

me

1904-1971 no more; for I

attributable to the imperfections of the

Have known the lightning's hour, The poet's inward pride, The certainty of power.

human mind, between the world as and the world as men perceive it.

Speech in the Senate [March 27, 1964]


i

Tempt Me No More, st.

We
current

are

And if our blood alone Will melt this iron earth, Take it. It is well spent
birth. Easing a savior's

policies based

handicapped by on old myths ratter than


16-

realities.

16.

st.

Rest from loving and be living. Fallen is fallen past retrieving.

The character of the cold war has been profoundly altered ... by the both sides of a implicit repudiation by
policy
of
total

victory.

The

ef-

Rest from Loving

Make us a wind to shake the world! The Magnetic Mountain


3*

been to commit us to a policy that can be accurately, though perhaps not prudently, defined as one of
fect has

"peaceful coexistence." There is much cant

lb,

in

American
16.

J. ROBERT OPPENHEIMER

moralism and not a


1

little

inconsistency.

1904-1967 some sort of crude sense which no no overstatement vulgarity, no humor,


In
l

For the passage quoted by Oppenheimer at

the explosion of the first


io,

New Mexico,

July

Gtta, p. io6b. Gita: I

He also am become death,

atom bomb [Alamogor1945]* see Bhagavad quoted Vishnu from the


16,

We are inclined to confuse freedom and democracy, which we regard as moral principles, with the way in which with these are practiced in America the twoand federalism capitalism, are not moral prinparty system, which
ciples,

the

destroyer

of

but simply the accepted practices


Ib.

worlds.

of the American people.

1055

FULBRIGHT

KUNITZ
holds good above about Life."
all

that the

a monolith, of governments which are composed not really governments at all, but organized conspiracies ... all equally resolute and implacable in their determination to destroy the free world. Speech in the Senate

The master myth of the Communist bloc is

cold war

is

for "the Trath

The
Is

Who

longest journey the journey inwards Of him who has chosen his destiny, has started upon his quest For the source of his being Is there a source? ) . ]J (
So!

We

must dare

ble" thoughts. plore all the options and possibilities that confront us in a complex and must learn rapidly changing world. to welcome and not to fear the voices must dare to think of dissent.

We

to think "unthinkamust leam to ex-

That

is

the way in which you

We

We

tempted to overcome your loneliness by making the ultimate escape from No! It may be that death is to life. be your ultimate gift to life: it must not be an act of treachery against it. Jfe.
In the last analysis, what docs
the

about

"unthinkable
things
stops

things"

because

when

thinking
mindless.

become unthinkable, and action becomes


Ib.

word word

"sacrifice"

mean? Or even
gift

fte

"gift"?

He who
The

give nothing.

has nothing can is God's to


Ib.

God.

GRETA GARBO
I

1905want to be alone. 1

Attributed

STANLEY KUNITZ
1905Awake!

DAG HAMMARSKJOLD
1905-1961
Smiling, sincere, incorruptible His body disciplined and limber.

My
Each
cell
all

whirling hands stay

at the

noon,
within

my

body holds
in

a heart
strike

And

my

hearts

unison

A man who had


thing Into one simple

become what he could, And was what he was Ready at any moment to gather everysacrifice.

twelve.

The Science

of the Nig&f

When

Markings [1964]

A music strained through mind


Turns everything to measure.
the eighth

the light falls, it falls on her In whose rose-gilded chamber

Never look down to test the ground before taking your next step: only he who keeps his eye fixed on the far horizon
will find his right road.

When the Light F<&


day of
the

Doomsday
week.

is

Ib.
yes-

We carry our nemesis within us:


What
and
gives life its value

Foreign Affan

terday's self-admiration is the legitimate 16. father of today's feeling of guilt.

lose.

But never

you can find possess. This

O Magus with the leathern hand, The wasted heart, the trailing star, Time is your madness, which I shaie,
Blowing next winter into mind
.

And

love herself not there, not

there.
st.

1 Garbo maintains that her most famous remark has always been misquoted. ... "I only said, 'I want to be let alonel'" JOHN BAINBRIDGE,

The
iSee Shelley, p. 571 a.

Man

Upstairs,

in Life [January 24, 19551

1056

KUNITZ

had

On the my luck,
me.

royal road to
I

Thebes
the
to

On
'

met a

lovely monster,

Perish, the tree

a Christian thing: unless the leaves is not renewed.

And the
ster

I story's this:

made

mon-

If all

The Approach

Thebes

our perishable stul

We

karn, as the thread plays out, that

we belong
Less to

Be nourished to its rot, we clean Our trunk of death, and in our tough And final growth are evergreen*
Deciduous Branch, st. 4, 5

what

flatters

us than to what
I

scars,

So,

freshly

turning, as the turn con-

Kissing

dones, For her I killed the propitiatory bird, her down, reace to her bitter bones,

wept for my youth, sweet passionate young thought, And cozy women dead that by iny side

Once

lay:

wept with

bitter longing,

not

Who taught me

the serpent's word, but word. yet the The Dark and the Fair

Remembering how in my youth I cried. I Dreamed That I Was Old, st. 3

The

thing that eats the heart


heart.

is

mostly

A
With
its

fine Italian

hand,

mimosa touch, has made me

The Thing That Eats the


Heart, last line
Cities shall suffer siege
fall,

feel

BEnd-skinned, indelicate, a fool Ameri-

and some

shall

cano
Touring a culture like a grand museum, and statues interchangeable People shows,
Perception
fails.

But man's not taken.

What

the deep

blunted

heart means, Its message of the big, round, childish


Its

as

one's

syntax

The Thief
I

hand, wonder,
you,

its

The

bloodied

simple lonely cry, envelope addressed

to

And

recognize the gods' capricious hand write this poem for money, rage,

Is history,

that wide

and mortal pang.


Nigfit Letter

and
I

love.
terrible threshold,

16.

stand
see

on the

and

When
I

young

scribbled, boasting,

on

The end and the beginning


other's arms.

in each

my wall. No Love, No
In
youth's

Property,

No
I

Wages.

good

time

somehow
maybe
a

Open
An

the Gates,

st.

bought them
3

all,

And

cheap, you'd think, for

agitation of the air, perturbation of the light

Now

hundred pages.
in

my

prime, disburdened of

my

AdflKmished me the unloved year Would turn on its hinge that night. End of Summer, st.
Already the iron door of the north Clangs open: birds, leaves, snows

gear,

My
i

trophies ransomed, broken, lost, carve again on the lintel of the year
sign: cost!

My
If I

Mobility

and damn the

The Summing-Up

Order their populations forth, And a cruel wind blows.

16.

st.

Though

must build a church, I do not really want one, Let it be in the wilderness

Now, while the antler of the eaves


Liquefies,

Out

of nothing but nail-holes.

drop by drop,

brood

Revolving Meditation

10 57

LIU

SHAOCHI

SNOW

LIU SHAO-CH'H
1905ethics are great precisely because they are the ethics of Communism and of the proletariat. Such ethics are not built upon the backward basis of safethe interests of individuals or a

JEAN PAUL SARTRE


1905Everything
is

Our

this city and myself. denly realize it, it makes

gratuitous, this garden,

When
to

you soi
feel acl

you

and

guarding

everything that's nausea.

begins

drift

La Nauste

of exploiters. They are on the contrary, upon the built, the progressive basis of ... saving world from destruction and of building a happy and beautiful Communist

small

number

[1938]

of what he bag but the totality of what he does not yet have, of what he might have.
is

Man

not the

sum

Situations

[1939],

world. 2

How To Be a Good Communist


Inside the Party we must cultivate 3 the practice of submitting to reason.

This freedom should not be seen as a metaphysical power of human "nature," nor as the right to do whatever one pleases. . do not do what
.
.

We

On Inner-Party Struggle

we want and what we are

yet we are responsible that is the fact.


ft.

for

PHYLLIS McGINLEY
1905Meek-eyed parents hasten down ramps
the

To

from greet their offspring, terrible


camps.

Ode to the End of Summer


Monday morning
the press

Always on

Because the Nazi venom wotted to way even into our thoughts, every accurate thought was a conquest; because an all-powerful police sought to force us into silence, every word became as precious as a declaration of principle; because we were persecuted, each of our gestures carried the weight of a Les Mouches [1942] commitment.
can will nothing unless he has understood that he must count on no one but himself; that he is akoc, abandoned on earth in the midst of his
first

God

reports as revealed to His vicars in various


guises

Man

Benevolent stormy, patient, or out of


sorts.

God knows which God


recognizes.

is

the

God God

infinite

responsibilities,

without

help,

The Day After Sunday

Time

warn you, under the rose, the thief you cannot banish.' These are my daughters, I suppose. But where in the world did the children vanish? Ballade of Lost Objects
Prince, I
is
1 From Sources of Chinese Tradition, edited by William Theodore de Bary [1960].

with no other aim than the one he srts himself, with no other destiny than the one he forges for himself on this earth.

Le
Hell
is

tre et le
*

Nfant

[1943]

other people! Huis-Clos

[1944]

CHARLES PERCY SNOW


1905at one pok Bethe other scientists. tween the two a gulf of mutual incom-

*Note from the text: How to Be a Good Communist is a basic text of indoctrination for

Literary
at

intellectuals

party members, delivered first as a series of lectures in July 1939 at the Institute of Marxism-

T. DE BARY *Note from the text: This essay, delivered by Liu Shao-ch'i in July 1941 as a series of lectures to a Party school is a kind of sequel to How To Be A Good Communist. W. T. DE BARY
Leninism in Yenan.

W.

prehension.

The Two
p.

Cultures and the


and Marlowe,

Srf-

entific Revolution [1959]

iSee Virgil, and note.

iiga;

p.

*ip

1058

SNOW
Scientists

AUDEN

taw
aspect,

have it within them to what a future-directed society


is

WYSTAN HUGH AUDEN


1907Let us honor
r

feels like,

for science itself, in just that.

its

human

if

we can

Science and Government [2960]


is
.

Fhe vertical man

No one
power.
.

fit

to

be trusted with
. .
.

Though we value none But the horizontal one.


Epigraph for Poem [1930]
If

No

one.

Any man
we
we

who has lived at all knows the follies and wickedness he's capable of. If he does not know it, he is not fit to govern
others.

really want to live, start at once to


try;

we'd better

And

if

he does know

it,

he

If

don't

it

doesn't matter, we'd bet-

knows also that neither he nor any man be allowed to decide a single ought to

ter start to die.


If

We Redly Want to Live


I

human

fate.

931
be

The Light and the Dark

[1961]

Sir,

no man's enemy,
will

Corridors of Power. Title of novel [1965]

But

his

forgiving all negative inversion,

prodigal. Sfr T

No Man's Enemy

[1930]

JOHN BETJEMAN
Hc
rose,

Harrow the house of the dead; look

1906and he put down The Yellow

New
The

shining at styles of architecture, a change of


heart,

Ib.

Book.

He staggered and, terrible-eyed, He brusned past the palms on the staircase

greater the love, the


its object,

more

false to

And was helped to a hansom outside. The Arrest of Oscar Wilde at the Cadogan Hotel [1937],
st.

Not to be born is the best for man; x After the kiss comes the impulse to
throttle,

Break the embraces, dance while you


can.

Gracious Lord,
Spare their Aiid if that
is

oh bomb the Germans.


for

O Who Can Ever Gaze His Pitt


[*937l

women

Thy

Sake,

not too easy We will pardon Thy Mistake. But gracious Lord, whatever shall be, Don't let anyone bomb me. In Westminster Abbey [1940]

The

stars are dead.

The

animals will

not look.

We are left alone with our day, and the


time short, and History to the defeated

The

sort of girl I like to see

May
About

say

Alas but

Smiles

me.

down from her great height at The Olympic Girl [1954]

pardon.

cannot help nor Spain [1937]

Oh! would I were her racket pressed With hard excitement to her breast.
16.

The

suffering they were never wrong, old masters.

Mus&e des Beaux Arts

[i

940]

O plunge your hands in water,


Plunge them in up to the
wrist;

Summoned by

Bells.

Title of

book [1960]

Stare, stare in the basin

And wonder what youVe

missed.

LEO DUROCHER
1906Nice guys finish
last.

The glacier knocks in the cupboard, The desert sighs in the bed,
1

Remark

See Sophocles, p. 832.

AUDEN

And

A lane to the land of the dead.

the crack in the tea cup opens

As I Walked Out One Evening


[1940],**. jo, 11

An artificial wilderness And a sky like lead. The Shield of Achilles


The mass and
all

[i 9J5 ],

You were
it all;

silly like

us: your gift survived

majesty of

this woilA

The

parish of rich women, physical decay, Yourself; mad Ireland hurt you into poetry.

In Memory of W. B. Yeats
[1940]

carries weight and aW$ weighs the same, Lay in the hands of others; they were small And could not hope for and

That

help,

no

help came;
their foes liked to do was done, their shame Was all the worst could wish: they lost their pride And died as men before their bodies

What

To us he is no more a

Now

person but a whole climate of opinion.

In Memory ofSigmund Freud


[1940]

One

rational

voice

is

dumb: over

died-

Ii.tf.6
arc

grave

Our

researchers into Public Opinion

The household

of Impulse mourns one loved. dearly Sad is Eros, builder of cities,

And weeping

anarchic Aphrodite.
Ib.

content That he held the proper opinions for the time of year; When there was peace, he was fe peace; when there was war, be went.

Lay your sleeping head, my love, Human on my faithless arm. Lay Your Sleeping Head, My Love [1940]

The Unknown

Citizen (To

7S/o 7 /M/3 7 8 This

Mabk

Monument
the State)

1$

Erected ty

At Dirty Dick's and Sloppy Joe's

We drank our liquor straight,

Was
Had

he

free?
is

Was he
absurd:

happy? The
should
It.

Some went upstairs with Margery, And some, alas, with Kate. The Sea and the Minor [1944].
Master and Boatswain

question
certainly

anything been wrong, we have heard.

A culture is no better than its woods.


Bucolics.

Woodf

And

children
tlers.

He

swarmed to him like setbecame a land. Edward Lear [1945]

When a just man dies,


Lamentation and praise, Sorrow and joy, are one.
Elegy for John F. Kennedy
[1965]

Sob, heavy world,

Sob as you spin,, Mantled in tnist, remote


happy.

from

the

The Age

of Anxiety [1947]

Some thirty inches from my nose The frontier of my Person goes, And all the untilled air between
Is private pagus or demesne. Stranger, unless with bedroom eyes
I beckon you to fraternize, Beware of rudely crossing it: I have no gun, but I can spit. About the House

She looked over his ^houlder For vines and olive trees,
Marble, well-governed cities And ships upon wine-dark seas; But there on the shining metal His hands had put instead

[1965]

1OOO

AUBEN
Some books arc undeservedly forgotnone are undeservedly remem-

LINDBERGH
receives in the end, after,
it

ten;

many

transmutations,

the dead husks

may

be,

bered.

The Dyer's Hand


little

[2962]. Pt.

I,

of that same life. For all at last returns to the sea the and the end.

beginning

Reading
It

The Sea Around Us [1951]


Over
United
increasingly large areas of the States, spring now comes un-

takes
lies

talent

to

see clearly

what
of
it

print

under one's nose, a good deal to know in which direction to Ib. Writing that organ.
lady,

heralded by the return of the birds,

The old
FoRter
think
till I

"How
see
for

quoted by E. M. can I know what I


I

and the early mornings are strangely silent where once they were filled with
the beauty of bird song.
Silent Spring

what

say?"

Ib.

[2962]

myself, the questions Speaking which interest me most when reading a two. The first is technical: poem are "Here is a verbal contraption. How iocs it work?" The second is, in the broadest sense, moral: "What kind of a
gay

As crude
club,

weapon

as the cave

man's

the chemical barrage has been hurled against the fabric of life. 16.

CHRISTOPHER FRY
1907travel light; as light, That is, as a man can travel
I

inhabits this

poem? What

is

his

of the good life or the good notion of the Evil One? His place? What does he conceal from the reader? Wlbat does he conceal even from himBOtion
self?"

who

will

Still

carry his

body around because

Of its sentimental value. The Lady's Not for Burning


[1950], act I

Ib. II,

Making, Knowing and


Judging
actual

Religion

Has made an honest woman of the


supernatural,

Whatever
overt

imaginative
dred

content and interest, every poem is rooted in awe. Poetry can do a hunits

And we
Where

won't have

it

kicking over the


16. II
I

traces again.

and one things, delight, sadden, it disturb, amuse, instruct may exof shade emotion, every possible press
and describe every conceivable kind of

in this small-talking world can

find

A longitude with
The moon
But
is

no platitude?
16. Ill

went, but there is only one thing that aS poetry must do; it must praise all it
can for

nothing

being and

for happening.
16.

a circumambulatory aphrodisiac

RACHEL LOUISE CARSON


1907-1964 The sea lies all around merce of all lands must
veiy

Divinely subsidized to world Into a rising birth rate.

provoke

the
16.

Try thinking of love or something.

have

winds that been cradled on

The comcross it. The move over the knds


us.
its

Amor vincit insomnia. 1

A Sleep of Prisoners [i 951

broad expanse
it.

aid seek ever to return to


nents

The

conti-

ANNE MORROW LINDBERGH


1907-

themselves dissolve and pass to the sea, in grain after grain of eroded land, ... In its mysterious past it encompasses all the dim origins of life and
*See Shakespeare,

The wave
and there
is

of the future
fighting
it.

is

coming
[1940]

no
p.

The Wave of the Future


*See Virgil,

Sonnet in, p. 2942.

nya.

lo6l

MACNEICE

GALBRAITH

LOUIS MacNEICE
1907-1963 Holidays should be like this, Free from overemphasis, Time for soul to stretch and spit Before the world comes back on it. Epilogue, for W. H. Auden
It's

among bumblebees must


markable resemblance to United States.
cept
of

bear a
life

rt

in

tfa

American Capitalism: The Co*


Countervailing

no go

my

honey

love, it's

no go

my

Historians and novelists always that tragedy wonderfully r the nature of man. But, while

known

made

they hive rich use of war, revolution, and

ur hands npet;

winds

will

The
But

glass is glass will fall forever,


if

from day to day, the blow the profit. falling hour by hour, the

you break the bloody glass you won't hold up the weather.
Bagpipe Music,
last

poverty, they have been singularly n. lectful of financial panics. And one cam relish the varied idiocy of human actior* during a panic to the full, for, while is a time of great tragedy, nothing i*

stanza

being lost but money. The Great Crash, 1929

[1955],
cfc.3

The

sunlight

on the garden
while.

We

Hardens and grows cold, cannot cage the minute


its

Perhaps it was worth being poor fe j long time to be so rich for just a Uttk

Within

When

net of gold,

We

told cannot beg for pardon. The Sunlight on the Garden,


all is
St.
1

The end had come,


yet in sight.

but

it

was

not

ft.j

PAUL ENGLE
Wisdom
is

1908knowing when you

The stock market is but a mirror which, perhaps as in this instance, some* what belatedly, provides an image of the underlying or fundamental economic situation. Cause and effect nm from the economy to the stock market
never the reverse. In 1929 the economv

can't

be

wise.

Poems in Praise

[i 959]

HOWELL
Praise
nition. 1

M.

FORGY
pass the

was headed for trouble. Eventually that trouble was violently reflected in Wall
Street
16.6

1908the Lord and

ammu-

Men

Said at Pearl Harbor

men on many

have been swindled by


occasions.

other

The

autumn
in

of 1929 was, perhaps, the

first occasion

[December

7,

1941]

when men succeeded on


swindling themselves.

a large scale

JOHN KENNETH GALBRAITH


1908It
is

It. 7

told

that such are the aero-

dynamics and wing-loading of the bumblebee that, in principle, it cannot ... If all this be true ... life fly.
Forgy was serving as chaplain on a cruiser at the time of the Japanese attack; the words were said to a chain of men handling ammunition. They were used as the title of a song by Frank
Loesser [September 1942].
1

At any given time there exists an inventory of undiscovered embezzlement the in or more precisely not in country's businesses and banks. His it should perhaps be called inventory the bezzle amounts at any moment
to

many

millions

of

dollars.

It

akc
fc

varies in size

with the business

cycle,

good times people are relaxed, trusting, and money is plentiful. But ev
though money
is

plentiful,

there are

al-

1062

GALBRAITH
way*

JOHNSON
flect vaguely of their

many people who need more.

on the curious unevenness


this,

covery

Under these circumstances the rate of embezzlement grows, the rate of disfalls off, and bezzle increases
In depression
all

blessings. Is

indeed, the

American genius?

The Affluent

Society, ch. 18

this

is

rapidly. versed.

re-

Money

is

watched with a nar-

row, suspicious eye. The man who handles it is assumed to be dishonest until

he proves himself otherwise. Audits are and meticulous. Commerpenetrating


cial

In a community where public servhave failed to keep abreast of private consumption things are very different. Here, in an atmosphere of 'private opulence and public squalor, the private
ices

morality

is

enormously improved.
ch. 8

goods have

full

sway.

16.
as

The bezzle

shrinks.

The Great Crash, 1929,


Illusion
rid*
is

Nothing so weakens government


persistent inflation.

16.

comprehensive

ill.

The
People are the common denominator of progress. So ... no improvement
is possible with unimproved people, and advance is certain when people are liberated and educated. It would be wrong to dismiss the importance of roads, railroads, power plants, mills, and the other familiar furniture of economic development. But we are that there is a coming to realize certain sterility in economic monuments
.
.

deludes himself into bemendicant a like may conserve having his fortune although he will not be very which conhappy. The affluent country ducts its affairs in accordance with rules of another and poorer age also foregoes Arid in misunderstanding opportunities. itself it will, in any time of difficulty, for itself the implacably prescribe wrong remedies.

man who

The Affluent Society


... the

[1958],
eft. i

that stand alone in a sea of illiteracy. Conquest of illiteracy comes first.

military power economic output. If peace and survival are to be achieved, the search must almost certainly go beis

myth

that

Economic Development
[1964], ch. 2

* function of

j-tmd

the effort to find a balance in 16. 12 ftennonuclear tenor.


TTie family

which takes

its

mauve
All

LYNDON BAINES JOHNSON


I

powersteered, and power-braked automobile oat for a tour passes through cities that are badly paved, made hideous by litter,

and

cerise,

air-conditioned,

have

1908would have given gladly

not to be standing here today. First address to Congress as


President

and posts wires that should long since have been put underground. They pass on into a countryside that has been
blighted buildings, billboards,
for

[November

27,

1963]

rendered largely invisible


it.

... They picnic packaged food from a portable icebox by a polluted stream and go on to which is a spend the night at a
park
menace to public health and morals, fust before dozing off on an air mattress, beneath a nylon tent, amid the stench of decaying refuse, they may re-

by commercial on exquisitely

have talked long enough in this have country about equal rights. talked for a hundred years or more. It is time now to write the next chapter and to write in the books of law.

We

We

16.

Unfortunately

many Americans
of

live

on the

some behope cause of their poverty, some because of their color, and all too many because
outskirts

063

JOHNSON
of both.

ROETHKE

Our task is to help replace their despair with opportunity. 1 First State of the Union Message
[January 8, 1964]

My secrets cry aloud.


I

have no need for tongue.

My heart keeps open house, My doors are widely flung,


Open House
The
our
veins within our hands betrayed
fear.

challenge of the next half century is whether we have the wisdom to use [our] wealth to enrich and elevate and to advance the our national life
for quality of American civilization in your time we have the opportunity

The

What we had hoped


to pass.

for

had not come Interlude


[19^1]

to

only toward the rich sothe and ciety powerful society but upward to the Great Society.2

move not

Speech, University of Michigan [May 22, 1964]

Thought does not crush to stone. The great sledge drops in vain. Truth never is undone; His shafts remain.

The Adamant [19^1]


This urge, wrestle, resurrection
sticks,

This nation, this generation, in this hour has man's first chance to build a Great Society, a place where the meaning of man's life matches the marvels of man's labor.
Address, accepting the Presidential nomination [August 1964]

of

<ty

Cut stems

What saint strained so much,


Rose on such lopped limbs
life?

struggling to put

down fat
to a new
[1948]

Cuttings

EDWARD ROSCOE

study the lives on a

leaf: the littk

MURROW
1908-1965

Sleepers, numb nudgers in cold dimensions, Beetles in caves, newts, stone-deaf

am

entirely

persuaded

that

the

fishes,

American public is more reasonable, restrained and mature than most of the
broadcast
industry's

Lice tethered to long limp subterranean weeds,

planners
is

believe.

Squirmers in bogs,

Their fear of controversy ranted by the evidence,

not war-

And bacterial creepers.


The Minimal [1948]
I

Speech, Radio and Television News Directors Convention, Chicago [October 15, 1958]
In order to progress, radio need only go backward, to the time when singing commercials were not allowed on news
reports,

Once upon a tree came across a time. Where Knock Is Open Wife

when

commercial radio was rather proud,

there was no middle on a news report, when


alert

At Woodlawn I heard the dead cry; I was lulled by the slamming of iron,

and

fast.

A slow drip over stones,

16.

Toads brooding

in wells.

THEODORE ROETHKE
1908-1963

All the leaves stuck out their tongues; I shook the softening chalk of my

bones,
Saying,
Bird, soft-sigh
Snail, snail, glister

When
1

For something is amiss or out of place mice with wings can wear a human face. The Bat [i 941 ]
See Michael Harrington, p. loftea. See Uppmann, p. loijb.

me forward, me home.
The Lost Son

Worm, be with me. This is my hard time.


[1951],*

K064

ROETHKE
I

feel

the slime of a wet nest.

knew

Beware Mother Mildew.


Nibble again, fish nerves.

When
2

woman, lovely in her bones. small birds sighed, she would sigh back at them;
a

The Lost Son,


A lively understandable
Once entertained you.
It will

spirit

Ah, when she moved, she moved more ways than one: The shapes a bright container can contain !
I

come

again.
ft- 5
still

Knew a Woman

959]

Be still. Wait.

long for the imperishable quiet at the heart of form.

And the new plants,


their soil,

awkward

in

The Longing
Old men should be I'll be an Indian.
Iroquois.

[1964]

The

lovely diminutives.

explorers?

A Field of Light [1951]


ft.

ft.

could watch! I could watch! saw the separateness of all things!

Now,
I

in this

waning of

light,

rock with the motion of morning; In the cradle of all that is,

My meat

eats

me.

Who

waits at the

I'm

lulled into half-sleep

gate? Mother of quartz, your words writhe into my ear. The Shape of the Fire [1951], 2

By the lapping of water,


Cries of the sandpiper. my win, and my way, And the spirit runs, intermittently, In and out of the small waves,

Water's

To follow the drops


oar,

sliding

from a

lifted

Runs with the

Head up, while the rower breathes, And the small boat drifts quietly
Shoreward;

How
All's

intrepid shorebirds graceful the small before danger!

To know that

light

falls

and

fills,

Often without our knowing.


I6.
I

A shining.
5

In the first of the moon, a scattering,

Meditation at Oyster River

remember the neckcurls, limp and

as tendrils, And her quick look a sidelong pickerel

damp

What I love is near at hand, Always, in earth and air. The Far Field [1964], III
All finite things reveal infinitude.
16.

smile.

Elegy for Jane [1951-1953]


I

IV

take this

cadence from a

man named

Yeats;
I

what could be more nice

take

it, and I give it back again. Four for Sir John Davies [19511953]. I, The Dance

Than her ways

with a

man?

Light Listened [1964]

Who

rise

from

flesh to spirit

know

the

She sang a final song; Light listened when she sang.


1

Ib.

fall:

am

The word outleaps the world, and light


is all.
I

most immoderately married:


has taken

The Lord God


I

my

heaviness

Ib.

wake to sleep, and take


slow.
feel

my

waking

away; have merged, like the bird, with the


bright
air,
flies

I I

my

learn

what I cannot fear. by going where I have to go.


fate in

And my
1

thought
S. Eliot, p.

to the

pkce by

the bo-tree.
See T.
ioo6a.

The Waking

[1953]

1065

KOETHKE
Being, not doing,
is

SAROYAN
Lord, hear

my first

joy.
[i 964],

The Abyss

me

out,

and hear me
long and
tcrrife
III

this day:

We end in joy.
The Moment
[1964], last line

From me
way.
Yea,
I
I

to Thee's a

The Marrow,
slain

In a dark time, the eye begins to see. In a Dark Time [1964], st>

have

my y

will,

and

still

live;

A A

steady storm of correspondences! night flowing with birds, a ragged

would be
bleed

near;

my
that

I shut my eyes to sec bones, their marrow to be-

moon,

stow

And

in

broad day the midnight come


Ib.
st.

Upon
The

God who knows

again!

would know.

what I Jb.A'

I too glib about eternal things, intimate of air and all its songs? Pure aimlessness pursued and yet pursued And all wild longings of the insatiate blood

Was

An

present falls, the present away; How pure the motion of the rising dav Tn^a. ...'U.^4.^. :j ]P . The white sea widening on a farther
*.
.

shore.

The

Brought me down to my knees. O who can be Both moth and flame? The weak moth

bird, the beating bird, extending wings Thus I endure this last pure stretch of

iy>

Whom
Of

blundering by.

The
I

dire

dimension of a

do we love?

thought

knew

The

final thing

the truth; grief I died,


death.
soul has

Tree, the Bird [1964]


if

but no one knew

my

Let others probe the mystery'


can.

they

The Sequel

[1964], I

The

many motions, body one. The Motion [1964],!


love.

Time-harried

prisoners

of

Shall

and

Will

The

right thing

Love begets
}oy.

This torment

is

my
The

happens to the happy

man.
bird
again;
flies

Ib. II
all

Rising or falling's

one

discipline!

out, the bird

flies

hack

The line of my horizon's growing thin! Which is the way? I cry to the dread
black,

The

hill becomes the valley, and is Let others delve that mystery if

stilt

they

The

shifting shade, the cinders at

my

can.

back.

The Right Thing

[1964],

st.

1,2

Which is the way? I ask, and turn to g> As a man turns to face on-coming The Decision [2964], II snow.
What's the worst portion
life?

Now

adore

my life

in this mortal

With the Bird, the abiding Leaf, With the Fish, the questing Snail And the Eye altering all; And I dance with William Blake
For
love, for Love's sake.

pensive mistress, and a yelping wife.

The Marrow
Brooding on God,
I

Once More, the Round [1964]

[1964], I
a

may become

man.
Pain wanders through
lost fire;

my

bones like a
desire,

WILLIAM SAROYAN
The Time
of

What

burns

me now?

Desire,

1908Your

Life.

desire.

Ib. II

Title of play [1939!

1066

SAROYAN
he cannot steal If you give to a thief from you, and he is then no longer a
thief/

BISHOP
omniscient, omnipotent ruined him and made

person

who
a

him

suffer

The Human Comedy

[1943], ch. 4

shame worse than death. No Longer

Human

My

unhappiness was the unhappiness


Ib.

RICHARD WRIGHT
1908-1960

of a person >vho could not say no.

Goddammit,
they
live

look!

there.

We live here and We black and they


things and

STEPHEN SPENDER
1909I

white.

They got

we

ain't.

and we can't. It's just They do things Native Son [1940] like living in jail.

think continually of those


truly great

who

were

The names

of those
life,

who

in their lives

Who

knows when some

slight shock,

disturbing the delicate balance between social order and thirsty aspiration, shall send the skyscrapers in our cities toppling?

Who

fought for

wore
I

at their hearts

the

fire's

cen-

ter.

Think Continually of Those

Ib.

Born of the sun they

JAMES AGEE
1909-1955

And

traveled a short while towards the sun, left the vivid air signed with their honor. Ib.

Now

is

the night one blue dew. Death in the Family [1957], Knoxville: Summer 1915

GEORGE CASPAR HOMANS


1910Liberty
is

Sleep, soft smiling,


her:

draws

me

unto

a beloved discipline.

and those receive me, who quietly treat me, as one familiar and well-beloved in that home: but will not, oh, will not, not now, not ever; but will not ever tell me who I am. 16.

The Human Group

[1950], ch. 12

DON
Science
. .

K.

PRICE
exist

1910.

cannot

on

the

DAZAI OSAMU
1909-1948
It
is

basis of a treaty of strict nonaggression with the rest of society; from either
side, there
is no defensible frontier. Science and Government [1954]

true,

suppose, that nobody

finds it

exactly pleasant to be criticized or shouted at, but I see in the face of


the

ELIZABETH BISHOP
1911-

human being
its

raging at
.
.

me

a wild

animal in
rible

true colors, one


.

than any lion. them reveal in a flash


all its

more horAnger makes


nature in
1

Think
like a

of the storm roaming the sky

uneasily

human

dog looking for a place to sleep


it

horror.

in,

No Longer Human [1958]

listen to

growling.

Little Exercise

My definition of a "respected" man was one who had succeeded almost


completely in hoodwinking people, but

This iceberg cuts its facets from within. Like jewelry from a grave
It saves itself perpetually

and adorns
Iceberg st. 3

who was
1

finally

seen through by some

Only

itself.

The Imaginary

Translated by

DONALD KEENE,

[1946],

067

BISHOP
Icebergs behoove the soul (Both being self-made from elements

CAMUS

To

least visible) see them so: fleshed, fair, erected, indivisible.

My joy, my jockey, my Gabriel Who bares his horns above my


Is

sleeping now.

sleep ^

First Cycle of

Love Poems

The Imaginary

Iceberg,

st.

WILLIAM GOLDING
1911-

ALBERT CAMUS
1913-1960 Mother died today, or
yesterday.

"Fancy thinking the Beast was something you could hunt and kill!" said the head. For a moment or two the forest and all the other dimly appreciated
ter.

maybe was UStranger [1942],


it

places echoed with the parody of laugh"You knew, didn't you? I'm part of
close, close!

time, the first, I laid mv heart open to the benign indifference of the universe. To feel it so like myself, indeed, so brotherly, made me
first

For the

you? Close,

Fm

resize
I

the reason

that I'd been happy, and that

was

why

it's

no go?

Why

things are
[1954],

what
eft.

happy

still.

j^ iy
is

they are?"

The
8
is

absurd

The Lord of the Flies

essentially a divorce.
It is

It

in neither

one nor the other

of the
their

compared elements.

born of

CLARK KERR
1911-

confrontation.

Le Mythe de Sisyphe
the
pres.

[1942]

The

university

multiversity

has become and the nature of the

The
and the
It

absurd
first

is

the essential concept


JJ.
is

truth.

idency has followed this change. . president of the multiversity is educator, wielder of power, leader,

The

not rebellion itself which is noble but the demands it makes


us.
I

upon

pump; he
inheritor,

LaPeste[i^}
shall
tell

is

also officeholder, caretaker,

consensus seeker, persuader, bottleneck. But he is mostly a mediator. The Uses of the University \The GodJdn lectures at Harvard university,

friend.

Do
It

you

great secret,
last

ray

not wait for the

judg-

ment.

takes place every day.

La Chute

[1956]

1963]

Can one be
exist?

a saint

if

God

does not

That

GEORGE BARKER
1913Fiend behind the fiend behind the fiend behind the Fiend. Mastodon with mastery, monster with an ache At the tooth of the ego, the dead drank judge: Wheresoever Thou art our agony will
find

lem

know

is the only concrete probof today. 16.


finally

In the midst of winter, I learned that there was in me an


cible

invin-

summer.
Actuelles [January
6, 1960]

Freedom

freedom from the gradual degradation

of the press is perhaps the that has suffered the most


of the

Thee
altar

idea of liberty. Resistance, Rebellion, and

Enthroned on the darkest


heartbreak
Perfect.

of our

Death*

[1960]

Beast, brute, bastard.

dog

free press can of course be good or bad, but, most certainly, without fret1

my

God!
Sacred Elegy

Translated by JUSTIN O'BRIEN from


1953, 1958].

selected

[1943], iv

essays in Actuelles [1950,

1068

CAMUS
aoni
it

PARKER AM) CHARLES

Freedom chance to be

never be anything but bad. is nothing else but a better, whereas enslaveof the worse. ment is a certainty Resistance, Rebellion, and Death
will

A A

caricature, a swollen

shadow,

stupid clown of the spirit's motive, Perplexes and affronts with his own darkness, The secret life of belly and bone.

The Heavy Bear

Who

Goes
st.

with Me,

NATHALIA CRANE
1913()h,

I'm in love with the janitor's boy, And the janitor's boy loves me;
for a desert isle

KARL SHAPIRO
1913-

He's going to hunt In our geography.

Haul up the

flag,

you mourners,
all

The Janitor's Boy


I

[1924],
roof,

st. i

Not The The

half-mast but
funeral
devil's
is

the wav;

done and disbanded;


final say.
st, i

had the

Knger

on
heart

the
is
is

flathouse
divine.
all

the
the
i

Elegy for

Two

Banjos,

and 14

moonlight
But

my

aflutter like

washing on the

line.

The Flathouse Roof, st.

JOHN HERSEY
1914There was no sound of
planes.

DONALD FRANCIS MASON


1913sank same. Sighted sub,

The

morning was

still;

the place was cool

Radio message to U. S. Navy Base [January 28, 1942]

pleasant. a tremendous flash of light cut across the sky. Mr. Tanimoto has a distinct recollection that it traveled from

and

Then

MURIEL RUKEYSER
1913Fly
I

from the city toward the seemed a sheet of sun. Both he and Mr. Matsuo reacted in terror. Under what seemed to be a local dust cloud, the day grew darker and Hiroshima [1946], eft. i darker.
east to west,
hills. It
.
.
.

down, Death: Call me:

have

become a

lost

name.
Song, refrain

Madbofs

moment

There, in the tin factory, in the first of the atomic age, a human I&. being was crushed by books.

DELMORE SCHWARTZ*
1913-1966 Time is the school in which we learn, Time is the fire in which we burn. For Rhoda [1938]
That inescapable animal walks with me, Has followed me since the black womb
held,

ROSS PARKER
1914-

AND

HUGHIE CHARLES
1907There'll always be an England While there's a busy street, Wherever there's a turning wheel,

Moves where
gesture,
*Sce Robert

move, distorting

my

A million marching feet.


There'll

Lowdl,

p. io7sb.

Always Be England [1939]

069

THOMAS

DYLAN THOMAS*
1914-1953

The

force that through the green fuse drives the flower Drives my green age; that blasts the
roots of trees
Is

Forgotten mornings when he walked with his mother Through the parables

And

Of sunlight the legend of the green chapdi

Poem

in October

[i^fij

my destroyer. And I am dumb

My

youth
fever.

is

to tell the crooked rose bent by the same wintry

The Force That Through


1*934]

the

Green Fuse Drives the Flower


Light breaks where no sun shines;

was young and easy under the apple boughs About the lilting house and happy a* the grass was green. Fern Hill, st. j lg^}
as
I
\

Now

the sabbath rang slowly In the pebbles of the holy streams


lb.
st.

And

Where no
heart

sea runs, the waters of the

In the sun that

Push in

their tides.

Time let me
Golden
in the

young once play and be


is

only,

Light Breaks Where No Sun Shines [1934]

mercy of

his means.
lb.

The hand
city;

that signed the paper felled a

And honored among


ants

foxes and pheas-

by the gay house


clouds and happy
over,

Five sovereign fingers taxed the breath, Doubled the globe of dead and halved a
country;

Under the new-made


as the heart
I

was long, In the sun bom over and


ran

These

five Icings

The

did a king to death. Hand That Signed the

my heedless ways.
lb.
sf.

Paper [1936]

When
The

all

my

five

and country senses


green thumbs
vegetable

Time held me green and dying Though I sang in my chains like the
sea.
lb.
st.

see,

fingers

will

forget

and mark

Do

not go gentle into that good

night,
close

How, through the halfmoon's


eye,

Old age should

bum

and

rave at

Husk

of young stars and handfull zofrost is

of day; Rage, rage against the dying of


light.

the

diac,

Love in the
by.

pared and wintered

Do Not Go

Gentle

into

TM
like

Good Night

[1952]

When

All

My Five and Country


Senses See [1939]

One

Christmas was so much

And

death shall have no dominion. 2


Title

and

refrain of

poem

[1943]

After the

first death there is no other. Refusal to Mourn the Death, by Fire, of a Child in London

[1946]
1

another, in those years around the seatown corner now and out of all soond voices except the distant speaking of the I sometimes hear a moment before that I can never remember sleep, whether it snowed for six days and sis or whether it nights when I was twelve snowed for twelve days and twelve
nights

The poetry

excerpts are from Collected


6:9, p. sob,

Poems

when

I was six. Quite Early One Morning

2 See

Romans

and Emily Bronte,

p. 68sb.

mas

[1954]. in

Child! s Christ-

Wales

1070

THOMAS
It
all
is

CONQUEST
Willy was a salesman. And for a no rock bottom to put a bolt to a nut, he don't tell you the law or give you medicine. He s a man way out there in the blue, riding on a smile and a shoeshine. And when they start not smiling back that's an earthquake. And then you get yourself a couple of spots on your hat, and you're finished. Nobody dast blame this man. A salesman is got to dream, boy. It comes with the terrisalesman, there is the life. He don't
f

spring, moonless night in the town, starless and bible-black.

Under Milk

Wood

[1954]
see

You can tear a poem apart to what makes it technically tick.

bun moved by

You're back with the mystery of having words. The best craftsmanship always leaves holes and gaps in
the works of the

thing that

is

crawl, flash,

poem so that somenot in the poem can creep, or thunder in.

The joy and function of poetry is, and was, the celebration of man, which is also the celebration of man. Dylan Thomas's Poetic Manifesto. In the Texas Quarterly
[Winter 1961]

tory.

Death of a Salesman, Requiem

RICHARD ROVERE
1915It is

now

of course

HAROLD ADAMSON
Comin'
in

conceded by most

on

Wing and

a Prayer. Title of song [1943]

fair-minded and objective authorities that there is an establishment in America, a more or less closed and selfsustaining institution that holds a preponderance of power in our more or less

JEROME SEYMOUR BRUNER


1915guess, the fertile hythe courageous leap to a these are the conclusion most valuable coin of the thinker at
pothesis, tentative

open

society.

The American Establishment


[1962]

The
for

Establishment

is

The shrewd

those people in

a general term finance, business

and the

professions, mostly

from the
principal
this

Northeast,

who

hold

the

But in most schools guessing is heavily penalized and is associated somehow with laziness.
work.

measure of power and influence in

country, regardless of what administration occupies the White House. 16.

The Process of Education

[1960]

ARTHUR MILLER
1915don't say he's a great man. Willy Loman never made a lot of money. His
I

The Establishment has very nearly unchallenged power in deciding what is and what is not respectable opinion in
this country.

Ib.

ROBERT CONQUEST
1917Pure joy of knowledge
art.

name was never in the paper. He's not the finest character that ever lived. But he s a human being, and a terrible thing is happening to him. So attention must be paid. He's not to be allowed to fall into his grave like an old dog. Attention, attention must be finally paid to
T

rides as high as

The whole
either.

heart cannot keep alive


of

on

Wills

as

Drake and Shakespear?

strike together;

Cultures turn rotten

when they

such a person.

True
I

frontiers

march with those

part. in the

Death of a Salesman [1949], act

mind's eye:

1071

CONQUEST

KENNEDY
state,

The white sound rising now to fury In efflux from the hot venturi As Earth's close down, give us the endless sky. 1

and local, must be as a city upon a hill, 1 constructed and inhabited to men aware of their grave trust and
great responsibilities.

their

For the 1956 Opposition of Mars


[1961]

Speech 9 Massachusetts State


Legislature [January 9, 19611 For of those to whom much is

JOHN FITZGERALD KENNEDY


It

much

is

required.

And when

given,

at some

1917-1963 was involuntary. They sank

my

boat.

future date the high court of history sits in judgment on each of us, recording whether in our brief span of service we fulfilled our responsibilities to the state, our success or failure, in whatever office

Remark -when asked how he became a hero. Quoted in ARTHUR

M. SCHLESTNGER, JR., A Thousand Days [1965], ch. 4

hold, will be measured by the answers to four questions: First, were we men of courage truly Second,
. . .

we

were
.

we

truly

men

For without belittling the courage with which men have died, we should
not forget those acts of courage with have lived. The cour. which men age of life is often a less dramatic spectacle than the courage of a final mo. .

Third, were
Finally, ication?
.

we

of judgment truly men of

were we truly men

integrity

of dedJi,

ment; but it is no less a magnificent mixture of triumph and tragedy. A man in spite of perdoes what he must
sonal consequences, in spite of obstacles and that is and dangers and pressures the basis of all human morality.
Profiles in
It is

observe today not a victory of party but a celebration of freedom, symbolizing an end as well as a beginning, signifying renewal as well as

We

change.
Inaugural address [January
20,

Let the word go forth from

this time

Courage [1956], ch.

and

place, to friend

and foe

alike, that

time for a

new

generation of

the torch has been passed to a new generation of Americans, born in this century, tempered by war, disciplined by a hard and bitter peace, proud of our an-

leadership, to cope with

new problems
is

and new opportunities. For there new world to be won.

Television address [July 4, 1960]

The New
is

Frontier of which
it is

speak

set of promises challenges. It sums up

not a

a set of

cient heritage, and unwilling to witness or permit the slow undoing of those human rights to which this nation has always been committed, and to which we are committed today at home and

not what I intend to offer the American people, but what I intend to ask of them.

around the world. Let every nation know, whether

it

Speech
15, 1960]

accepting

presidential

Democratic nomination [July

wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any
hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe to assure the survival and tie Ib, success of liberty.
If

truly

Today, the eyes of all people are upon us, and our governments, in
level,

free

society

every branch, at every


1

national,

many who are poor, few who are rich.

it

cannot help cannot save

fte the

Ik

were used in the Pacific Science Center at the Seattle World's Fair in 1962 to

These

lines

epitomize the interdependence of science and the humanities.

John Winthrop, p. 3i8a, whom Kennedy quoted in the preceding passage, and note.
8

See

Luke

11:48, p. 473.

1072

KENNEDY
Let us never negotiate out of fear, never fear to negotiate.
It is

our task in our time and in our

but krt us

Inaugural address

generation to hand down undiminished to those who come after us, as was

not be finished in the Nor will it be first one hundred days. one thousand first the in days, finished

AH

this will

handed down to us by those who went before, the natural wealth and beauty which is ours.
Address, dedication ceremonies of the National Wildlife Federation Building

nor in the life of this Administration, nor even perhaps in our lifetime on this
planet.

But

let

us begin.

It.

[March

3,

1962]

the trumpet summons us again not as a call to bear arms, though arms we need; not as a call to battle,

Now

development of this organization [the United Nations] rests the only true alternative to war, and war
appeals no longer as a rational alternative. Unconditional war can no longer lead to unconditional victory. It can no
longer serve to settle disputes. It can no longer be of concern to great powers alone. For a nuclear disaster, spread by winds and waters and fear, could well engulf the great and the small, the rich and the poor, the committed and the

For

in the

though embattled bear the burden


1

we
of

are;

but a
long

call to

twilight

year out, "rejoicstruggle, year in tribulation/' a ing in hope, patient


struggle against
'

in

and

the common enemies of man: tyranny, poverty, disease and war


itself.

Ib.

The energy, the faith, the devotion which we bring to this endeavor will our country and all who serve it, light and the glow from that fire can truly Ib. the world. light

uncommitted alike. Mankind must put an end to war or war will put an end to mankind. So let us resolve that Dag Hammarskjdld did not live, or die, in
vain. Let us call a truce to terror.

And
not
asl

so,

my

fellow Americans, ask

Address, United Nations

what your country can do for you; what vou can do for your country. 2
Ib.

[September 25, 1962]

However

close

that dark and final abyss, let


*See Stevenson, p. 10493. For, stripped of the temporary associations which gave rise to it, it is now the moment when by common consent we pause to become conscious
of oar national life and to rejoice in it, to read! what our country has done for each of us, and to ask ourselves what we can do for our

we sometimes seem no man

to

of

country in return.
J*.

OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES,

Address Before John Sedwick Post No. 4, Grwmf Army of the Republic [May 30, 1884] As has often been said, the youth who loves his Alma Mater will always ask, not "What can she do for me?" but "What can I do for her?"

peace and freedom despair. For he does not stand alone. If we all can persevere, if we can in every land and office look beyond our own shores and ambitions, then surely the age will dawn in which the strong are just and the weak secure Ib. and the peace preserved.

Those who make peaceful revolution


impossible will
inevitable.

make

violent revolution

Le BARON RUSSELL BRIGCS, Routine and Ideals


1

Address to

Latin

American

1904}.

we must have a concerned about what the government can do for it and more anxious about WARREN GAMAwhat it can do for the nation. LIEL HARDING, Republican National Convention,
citizenship less

College Life In the great fulfillment

diplomats, the

White House

No

[March 22, 1962] one can doubt that the wave

of the future

Ckictfo [June 7, 1916] This thought had lain in Kennedy's mind fear a long time. As far back as 1945 he had
noted

is not the conquest of the world by a single dogmatic creed but

down in a looseleaf notebook a quotation from Rousseau: "As soon as any man says of
the affairs of the state,

me? the state may be given up as lost." ARTHUR M. SCHLESINGER, JR. A Thousand Days
[1965}, prola&te, footnote

What

does

it

matter to

1073

KENNEDY
the liberation of the diverse energies of free nations and free men.
Address, University of California, Berkeley \March 23, 1962]
I

think this

is

collection of talent, of

the most extraordinary human knowl-

toedge, that has ever been gathered

gether at the

of possible exception alone. dined Jefferson

White House, with the when Thomas

Yesterday, a shaft of light cut into the darkness. . For the first time, an agreement has been reached on bring, ing the forces of nuclear destruction under international control. ... It offers to all the world a welcome sign of . But the achievement of this hope. goal is not a victory for one side; it is a
. .
. .

victory for

mankind.

Address,

White House dinner and reception honoring Nobel

Television address, Washington \July 26, 1963)1

When
itations.

Prize winners [April 1962]

power

leads

man
him

toward

ar-

rogance, poetry reminds

Let us not be blind to our differences but let us also direct attention to our common interests and the means by which those differences can be resolved. And if we cannot end now our differences, at least we can help make the world safe for diversity.
Address,

When power

of his limnarrows the areas

of man's concern, poetry reminds him of the richness and diversity of his existence. power corrupts, pot'trv cleanses, for art establishes the bask human truths which must serve as the

When

Washington,
1963]

American D.C.

University, \June 10,

touchstone of our judgment. Address, Amherst College [October 26, 1963]


I look forward to a great future for America, a future in which our country

Every American ought to have the to right to be treated as he would wish be treated, as one would wish his children to be treated. This is not the case. Television address on civil rights, after the registration of two

will

match

its

moral

restraint, its

military strength with our wealth with our wis-

Negroes at

the

Alabama [June

University 12, 1963]

of

We
moral

issue. It is as old as

are confronted primarily with a the Scriptures

dom, its power with our purpose. I look forward to an America which will not be afraid of grace and beauty, which will protect the beauty of our natural environment ... an America which will reward achievement in the arts as we reward achievement in business or statecraft. ... I look forward to an
America

and

is

as clear as the

American ConstiIb.

which

commands

respect

tution.

No one has been barred on account of his race from fighting or dying for America there are no "white" or "colored" signs on the foxholes or graveyards of battle. Message to Congress on proposed
1963]
All free
civil rights bill

throughout the world not only for its strength but for its civilization as weB. And I look forward to a world which will be safe not only for democracy and diversity but also for personal distinction.
It-

[June 19,

efficiency
live,

men, wherever they may

Washington is a city of southern and northern charm. Remark quoted in ARTHUR M. SCHLESINGER, JR., A Thou&md
Days [1965],
ch.

are citizens of Berlin. And therefore, as a free man, I take pride in the words "Ich bin ein Berliner." Address at City Hall, West

25

Berlin [June 26, 1963]

*In Moscow on July 25 Averell HarriiMB, Lord Hailsham, and Chairman Khrushchev ini tialed the nuclear test ban treaty. * See Lord Acton, p. 7508.

1074

LOWELL

ROBERT TRAILL SPENCE LOWELL


1917I

Our Lady
I

of Babylon, go by, go by, was once the apple of your eye; Flies, flies are on the plane tree, on the
streets.

will

catch

Christ

with

greased

worm.

As a Plane Tree by the Water


[1946], st
j
j

The Drunken Fisherman


[1946],
st.

sa

I saw the spiders marching through air, Swimming from tree to tree that mildewed day In latter August w hen the hay
T

Not

thc sky descending, black and white, blue, on Boston.

Where

the

Rainbow Ends
[1946],
st.
i

Came

creaking to the barn. Mr. Edwards and the Spider


[1946],
st. i

Now

Paris,

our black

classic,

breaking

up
like killer kings

on an Etruscan cup. Beyond the Alps [1959]

On Windsor Marsh,
die

saw the spider

Your Good Soldier


1 the best French novel in the language. Ford MadoK Ford [i 959]

When thrown
fire:

into the bowels of fierce


struggle, no desire feet and fly
last re-

There's

To
It

get stretches
dies.
treat;

no long up on its

O divorced, divorced
from the whale-fat of postwar London!

And
Yes,

out its feet This is the sinner's

Boomed,
cut,

plucked and booted! In Provence,

New York
when
on
a

and no strength exerted on the


heat
will,

Then sinews the abolished


sick

marrying, blowing . . nearly dying at Boulder, when the altitude 16. pressed the world on your heart.
.

And

full

of burning,

it

will whistle

brick.

16. st.

your

lies

Fiction! I'm selling short that made the great

your
in

This

is

the Black

Widow,

death.
16. st.

you
5

equals. Ford, were a kind man

and you died

want.

16.

walks on the black water. In Black Mud Darts the kingfisher. On Corpus Christi,
Christ
heart,

There is no God and Mary is His Mother. For George Santayana [1959]

You said:

Over the drum-beat of St. Stephen's


choir
I

"We

poets in our youth begin in sad-

hear him,

Stupor Mundi, and the


his

ness; thereof in the

mud
Flies

from beak

hunching wings and

end come despondency and madness." 2 To Delmore Schwartz (Cambridge 2946) [1959]

my heart,

The blue kingfisher dives on vou in fire. Colloquy in Black Rock


[1946],
st.

Who
must

asks for me, the Shelley of


lay his heart out for

my

age,

my

bed and
[1959]

Jonathan Edwards [1703-1758], the Calvinfrt

board.

of scientific observations on the spider. kii most famous sermons was

theologian, wrote at the age of twelve a series One of

Words for Hart Crane


1

"Sinners in the

Hands of an Angry God."

See Ford Madox Ford, p. 9153. See Wordsworth, pp. 5110-5123.

1CT7C*

UOWELL
I doodle handlebar moustaches on the last Russian Czar.

Grandparents [1959]

Gored by the climacteric of his wast he stalls above me like an elephant "To Speak of Woe Yferf j, *
Marriage"

We are old-timers,
each of us holds a locked razor. Waking in the Blue [1959]

My mind's not right. A car radio bleats,


"Love,

keep no rank nor station. Cured, I am frizzled, stale and small. Home After Three Months
I

careless Love.

..."

he^
cell,

my
as if
I

ill-spirit

my * myself am hell;

sob in each blood hand were at its throat.

Awczy [1959]

nobody's here.

Only teaching on Tuesdays, bookworming


in

Skunk Hour

[1959], st

5,

My

old flame,

my

wife!

pajamas fresh from the washer each morning, hog a whole house on Boston's
Street."
*

Remember our lists of birds? The Old Flame [1964],


Father, forgive

it. 2

me

"hardly passionate Marlborough

my injuries,
and
as I forgive

Memories

of

West

Street

those

Lepke [1959]
These are the tranquillized Fifties, and I am forty. Ought I to regret
seedtime?
I

have injured!

my

You never climbed Mount Sion, yet left


dinosaur
death-steps

was a fire-breathing Catholic C.O., and made my manic statement, telling off the state and president, and then
sat waiting sentence in the bull pen beside a Negro boy with curlicues

where

on the crust, must walk. Middle Age [1964],

st.

3,

We are like a lot of wild


spiders crying together,

of marijuana in his hair.

16.

but without

tears.

Fall 1961
I

[1964],
tired

st.

Flabby, bald, lobotomized, he drifted in a sheepish calm, where no agonizing reappraisal jarred his concentration on the electric
chair

am

tired.

Everyone's

of

my
*f.

turmoil.

Eye and Tooth

[1964],

Two months
an
oasis in his air

after

marching

through

hanging

like

of lost connections.

16.
lie on Mother's and Wife [1959]

Tamed by MiZfown, we
bed.

Man

Boston, half the regiment was dead; at the dedication, William James could almost hear Ac

bronze Negroes 2 breathe.


Virgil, p.

Oh my Petite,
clearest of all
air

uga; and Marlowe,

p.

tip,

God's

creatures,

still all

and note.
3 On the Saint-Gaudens monument to Cokod Robert Gould Shaw and the 54* Massachmeto

and nerve.

16.

your old-fashioned tirade


loving, rapid, merciless breaks like the Atlantic

Regiment.

Ocean on
Ib.

head.
l

There on foot go the dark outcasts, so trot nature that one can almost hear them breathWILLIAM JAMES, Omtto* ing as they march. at Dedication of the Monument [May }i x9tf]
to
t

See Charles

W.

Eliot,

p. 75*a, and Moody,

The

quotation

is

from Henry James.

p.

8993.

1076

LOWELL
Their monument sticks like a fishbone in the city's throat. JU Colonel is as lean
as a

UBALL

EDWIN O'CONNOR
1918-1968

compass needle.

The

Last Hurrah.
Title of novel [1956]

He has an angry wrenlike vigilance,


a greyhound's gentle tautness; he seems to wince at pleasure, and suffocate for privacy.

STEWART LEE UDALL


1920st.

For the Union Dead


[1964],

7-9

The most common

trait

of

all

primilife-

on

Boylston

Street,

commercial
Ib. $t.

tive peoples is a reverence for

the

photograph
shows Hiroshima boiling.

24

When

crouch to
rise like
is

my television set,
Negro school
chil-

giving earth, and the native American shared this elemental ethic: the land was alive to his loving touch, and he, its son, was brother to all creatures. His
feelings were made visible in medicine bundles and dance rhythms for rain, and all of his religious rites and land attitudes savored the inseparable world of nature and God, the master of Life. During the long Indian tenure the land remained undemed save for scars no deeper than the scratches of cornfield clearings or the farming canals of the Hohokams on the Arizona desert.

the drained faces of

dren

balloons. Ib.

st.

15

The Aquarium

gone. Everywhere,

giant finned a savage servility


slides

cars nose forward like fish;


Ib. st.

by on grease.
Central Park. In the

37

We beg delinquents for our life.


New York Review [October 1965]

The Quiet

Crisis 1

ARTHUR MEIER SCHLESINGER, JR.


1917Above all he [John F. Kennedy] gave the world for an imperishable moment the vision of a leader who greatly understood the terror and the hope, the diversity and the possibility, of life on this planet and who made people look beyond nation and race to the future of
fiumanity.

[1963], ch.

land ethic for tomorrow should be

as honest as Thoreau's

Walden, and

as

comprehensive as the sensitive science of ecology. It should stress the oneness of our resources and the live^nd-helplive logic of the great chain of life. If, in our haste to "progress," the economics of ecology are disregarded

by

citi-

zens and policy makers alike, the result Ib. 14 will be an ugly America.
Remembering Edmund Burke's on the turbulence of called this speech "Reflections on the

Thousand Days 1

[1965], ch. 37
famous
his time,
I

gate University.

HARLAN CLEVELAND
191$-

commentary

The Revolution
tions,

of Rising Expecta-

Title of speech, Colgate

University [1949]
1

$ee

John

F.

Kennedy,

p.

io7ja-b,

and

Revolution of Rising Expectations/' The phrase has since been attributed to nearly every literate American of our time, but I think this was the first time that phrase saw the light of day. HARLAN CLEVELAND, The Evolution of Rising Responsibility, address before the C/JV, [December 13, 1064] 1 The race between education and erosion, between wisdom and waste has not run its course. . . . The nation's battle to preserve the common
estate
is

for Paul

Almost fifteen years ago, when I was working Hoffman in the Marshall Plan, I had to mbttitute for him in making a speech at Cd-

far

from won.
it

The
JOHN
Crisis

crisis

quiet,

but

is

urgent.

F.

may be KENNEDY,

introduction to

The Quiet

1077

SALINGER

WILBUR

JEROME DAVID
SALINGER
1919I

The
By
a

beautiful

changes as a

forest

changed
chameleon's tuning his skin to
it

keep picturing
big
field

all

these

little

kids in
they're
I

The
dreamt
the
past

Beautiful
[

this

of

rye.

...

If

947]>

running and they don't look where they're going I have to come out from somewhere and catch them. That's all I'd do all day. Yd just be the catcher in the rye and all. I know it's crazy. The Catcher in the Rye [1951]

was

never

patf

redeeming: But whether this was


I

false or honest

dreaming beg death's pardon now. And mourn


the dead.

anyone emywhere that isn't Seymour's Fat Lady. Don't you know that? Don't you know that godisn't

There

The Pardon

[1950], last,
as

We
We

milk the cow of the world, and

dam

And don't you know don't you know me, now w/io that Fat Lady really is? ... Aft,
secret yet?
listen to

we do
whisper in her ear, "You are not true." Epistemology [1950], JJ

buddy. It's Christ Himself. Christ Himself, buddy. Franny and Zooey [1961]

I never knew the road From which the whole

earth didn't

call

away,

With

MAY SWENSON
1919-

wild birds rounding the bill crowns, Haling out of the heart an old dismay.

The

Body my house my horse my hound


what
will I

Sirens [1950],

st.'i

He
Question [1963]

rocked his only world, and


one's.

every-

do

when you

are fallen

Forgive the hero, you who would have died Gladly with all you knew; he rode that

Where
all

can I go without my mount

To

tide Ararat:

all

men

are Noah's sons.


[1950], last stanza

How will I know


in thicket ahead
is

eager and quick

Still,

Citizen Sparrow

danger or treasure
is

when Body my good


bright dog

dead

16.

SLOAN WILSON
1920

I am for wit and wakefiibcss, love this feigning lady by Bazffie. What's lightly hid is deepest understood, And when with social smile and formal

Ho-hum.

And

dress

She teaches
Gray Flannel
Suit.
I

The Man

leaves to curtsy and quatigers


in

in the

drille,

Title of novel [1955]

think there are most

the
st.

wood.

Ceremony

[1950],

RICHARD PURDY WILBUR


1921

The eyes open to a cry of pulleys, And spirited from sleep, the astounded
soul

We respect
Some
scholars' stutters.

Hangs
Grace [1947],
st.

for a

moment

bodiless and sim-

ple, as false dawn.

1078

WILBUR
Outside the open window air is all awash with

To

The morning
angels.

leafy streams in air,

where cherries tremble

Love Calls Us to the Thing? of


This World [1956]

Sleek as the laughing flesh of girls; and there In that haven of souls let it be that,

The soul

shrinks

From all that it is about to remember, From the punctual rape of every blessed day And cries, "Oh, let there be nothing on earth
T

Your

leaning above divine waters,


these donkeys,

shall

resemble

sweet poverty will appear Clear in the clearness of your eternal


love.

Whose humble and

but laundry, Nothing but rosy hands in the rising steam And clear dances done in the sight of heaven. Ib.
Neither pale nor bright, The turkey-cock parades Through radiant squalors, darkly auspicious as

Francis Jammes: to Paradise with

A Prayer

to

Go

the Donkeys

The

On

werewolf's painful change. Turning his head away the sweaty bolster, he tries to re-

member The mood of manhood,


But
lies at last, as
it

The ace of spades,


Himself his

always,
fierce fur soft

own

cortege
of death, strangled

Letting

happen, the

And puffed with the pomp Rehearsing over and over with
rle
His latest breath.

to his face,

Hearing with sharper

ears.
st.

Beasts [1956],

3,

A
Mind

Black November Turkey [1956], st. 3, 4

our praise or pride But to imagine excellence, and try to


is

What

make

it?
it

in its purest play is like

some bat

What

does

say

over

the door of

That beats about in caverns all alone, Contriving by a kind of senseless wit Not to conclude against a wall of stone.

Heaven

But homo fecit? For the New Railway Station in

Rome
no need to falter or explore; Darkly it knows what obstacles are
It

[1956], last stanza

has

When

And

there, so may

weave and

flitter,

dip and

soar
In perfect courses
air.

you come, as you soon must, to the streets of our city, Mad-eyed from stating the obvious, Not proclaiming our fall but begging
us In God's

through the blackest

name
all

to have self-pity,

And has this simile a like perfection? The mind is like a bat. Precisely. Save

A graceful

That in the very happiest intellection error may correct the cave.

Mind

word of the weapons, their and range, The long numbers that rocket the mind; Our slow, unreckoning hearts will be
Spare us
force
left

[1956]

behind,
is

Dear God, let it be with these donkeys that I come,

Unable

to fear what

too strange.

And

let

it

be that angels lead us

in

Nor

shall

you scare us with talk of the

peace

death of the race.

1079

WILBUR
should we dream of this place without us? The sun mere fire, the leaves untroubled about us, stone look on the stone's face? Advice to a Prophet [1961], st. 3

DICKEY

How

WILLIAM
I feel like

H.

MAULDIN
oj

1921a fugitive from th' law


averages.

Up Front
Look
you can

[i

9 <ft].
for cartoon

Ask

us, prophet,

how we
when

shall call

Our

natures

forth

that

live

tell

tongue

is all

at an infantryman's eyes ami how much war he has scca.


Ib.

Dispelled, that glass obscured or broken

He's
In which
love

we have

said the rose of our

right, Joe,

when we
sojers.

in*

we

ain't fight-

should ack like

and the clean


locust

ft

Horse of our courage, in which beheld

The

singing
shelled,
all

of

the soul

un-

JACK KEROUAC
1922-1969

And

we mean

or wish to

mean.

Ib. st. 7, 8

The beat generation.

Remark

Duke, keep your

coin. All

men

are born

distraught, And will not for the world be satisfied. Whether we live in fact, or but in

We

thought,
die of thirst, here at the fountainside.

people who interest me, because the only people for me are the mad ones, the ones who are mad to live, mad to
talk,

But then they danced dowa the street like dingledodies, and I shambled after as Fve been doing all my life after

mad

to be saved, desirous of

every-

Ballade for the


l&tns
1

Duke

of

Or-

[1961], who offered a at Blois [c. 1457] for the prize best ballade employing the line

thing at the same time, the ones *ho never yawn or say a commonphoe thing, but bum, burn, burn like fabulous

yellow

roman

candles exploding

"Je meurs de soif aupr&s de la

fontaine"
All bitter things

and in the middle you see the blue centerlight pop and everybody goes "Awww!"

like spiders across the stars

conduce to sweet,

On the Road [29 57]

As this example shows; Without the little spirochete We'd have no chocolate to eat, Nor would tobacco's fragrance greet

PHILIP LARKIN
1922one ship is seeking Only
us, a black-

The European

nose.

Comic Pangloss's Song: Opera Lyric [1961]

Sailed unfamiliar, towing at her back huge and birdless silence. In her \wk

No waters breed or break.


Next, Please
[1955]

What can I do but move


From folly to defeat, And call that sorrow sweet
That teaches us
to see

JAMES DICKEY
1923All families lie together, though some are burned alive.
to

The final face of love In what we cannot be?


Someone Talking
a

Himself

[1961], last stanza


See Charles d' Orleans, p.

The

others try to feel


said.

For them. Some can, it is often The Firebombing

[1965]

1080

DICKEY
There,
In the other

SNODCRASS

MISHIMA YUKIO
1925-1970
off

wood,

The uncornered animal's, running


Lift

My

solitude

grew more and more

Upon instinct. him alive over

Sails spread, fox


gullies,

wings

obese, like a pig. Temple of the

Golden Pavilion
I

>

Hair tips all over

him

959]

lightly

The
silver,
life

first

real

problem

faced in m;

Touched with the moon's red Back-hearing around

was that of beauty.

The stream of his body the tongue of hounds Feather him. In his own animal sun

What made her ugly was hope. Incurable hoj>e, like an obstinate case of scabies, which lodges, damp and reda dish, in the infected skin, producing constant itching, and refusing to yield * to any outer force. Ib.

Made
He
flies

of

human

moonlight,

like a bolt

running home. Fox Blood [1965]

ALLEN GINSBERG
I

JAMES BALDWIN
1924[The Negro past] of rope,
ture, castration,
fire,

saw the

1926minds of ray generation destroyed by madness, starving


best

tor-

infanticide, rape; death

and humiliation; fear


fear as

by day and night, deep as the marrow of the bone; doubt that he was worthy of life, since everyone around him denied it; sorrow
for Kis

hysterical naked, dragging themselves through the negro streets at dawn looking for an angry fix angelheaded hipsters burning for the ancient heavenly connection to the starry dynamo in the machinery of

women,

for his kinfolk, for his

children,

and

who needed his protection, whom he could not protect; rage,

night.

Howl

[1956]

and murder, hatred for white men so deep that it often turned against him and his own, and made all
hatred
lave, all trust, all

WILLIAM
It

D.

SNODGRASS
night,

1926-

joy impossible.
J

The Fire Next Time

[1963]

No moon outlives its leaving No sun its day. And I went on


Rich in the
loss of all I sing

was the nature of the thing:

TRUMAN CAPOTE
1924Other Voices, Other Rooms.
Title of book [1948]

To the threshold of waking light, To larksong and the live, gray dawn.
So night by night,

my

life

has gone.

Orpheus [1959]
Pale soul, consumed by fear of the living world you haunt, have you learned what habits lead you
to

want to harm the man. I he was a very nice gentleman. Soft-spoken. I thought so right up to
I

didn't

thought
the

hunt what you do not want;

moment

cut his throat.

learned who does not need you; learned you are no one here?

Originally

In CoZd Stood [1966] published in The New Yorker as

Home Town
and

[1959]
turn

Lttter

from a Region of

My Mind

Though
i

trees turn bare

girls

[November

wives,
Translated by IVAN MORRIS,

19*]
See

Anonymous,

Spiritual, p,

noia.

1081

SNODGRASS

KING
I still lost? forgotten. I was beautiful. I am mi.

We

shall afford

our costly seasons;

Am

There is a gentleness survives That will outspeak and has its reasons. There is a loveliness exists,
Preserves us, not for specialists. April Inventory [1959]

Once

Now

self,

counting this row and that row moccasins waiting on the silent shdt

of

You, Doctor Martin,

last tianz*

MICHAEL HARRINGTON
1928are poor in the United States tend to become increastakes an effort ingly invisible. ... It of the intellect and will even to see

MARTIN LUTHER
KING, JR.
1929-1968
Injustice
is

The

millions

who

anywhere

a threat

to

jus-

tice everywhere.

them.

The Other America:

Poverty in
eft.

Letter from the Birmingham jail. In the Atlantic MontWv

the United States [1962],

[August 1963]

The

poverty,

other America, the America of is hidden today in a way that it


Its

Unearned suffering is redemptive.


Nonviolence
cial political
is

Ib.

never was before.

millions are so-

the answer to the

cru-

rest of us. cially invisible to the

...

ciety

very development of American sois creating a new kind of blindness about poverty/ The poor are increas-

The

ingly slipping out of the very experience Ib. and consciousness of the nation.

That the poor are invisible is one of the most important things about them.

They

are not simply neglected they are not seen.

and moral questions of oor time; the need for man to overcome oppression and violence without resorting to oppression and violence. Man must evolve for all human conflict a method which rejects revenge, aggression and retaliation. The foundation of such a method is love. 1 Speech accepting Nobel Peace Prize [December 11, 1964]

Ib.

For the urban poor the police are who arrest you. In almost any slum there is a vast conspiracy against 16. the forces of law and order.
those

The tortuous road which has fed from Montgomery to Oslo is a nd over which millions of Negroes are
traveling to find a
It will, I

new

sense of

am

convinced, be widened

dignity, into
Ib.

a superhighway of justice.
I

ANNE SEXTON
1928You, Doctor Martin, walk from breakfast to madness. Late August,
speed through the antiseptic tunnel where the moving dead still talk of pushing their bones against the
I

accept this award with an abiding faith in America and an audacious faith
in the future of mankind. I refuse accept the idea that the "isness"
to

of

thrust of cure. And I am queen of this summer hotel or the laughing bee on a stalk

man's present nature makes him morfor tk ally incapable of reaching up confronts forever that "oughtness" Io. him.
accept the cynical notion nation after nation must spiral down a militaristic stairway into the hell of nuclear destruction. I believe that unarmed truth and unconditional love will have the final word in reality. ll
I refuse to

that

of death.

You, Doctor Martin [1960],

st. i

And we are magic talking to itself, noisy and alone. I am queen of all my
sins

Gandhi,

p. 8973.

1082

KING

ANONYMOUS
on the snows of the year 1941 I am hunger
I

Nonviolent action, the Negro saw, way to supplement, not replace, the process of change. It was the way to divest himself of passivity without arming himself in vindictive force. Can't Wait [ 1 964] Why
\us the

Am

Goya

[1960],

&t.

2,

We

The

Negro

was

urge to kill, like the urge to beget, blind and sinister. Its craving is set Today on the flesh of a hare: tomorrow
Is
it

The

willing

to

risk
stir

to move and martyrdom in order

Howl

the social conscience of his community and the nation ... he would force his

can the same way for the flesh of a

man.
Hunting a Hare* [1964],
st.

oppressor
openly,
ing

brutality with the rest of the world look*


.

to

commit

his

Nonviolent resistance parthe power strucconfused and alyzed tures against which it was directed.
on
.

have a soul within it? If so, fling open all your little doors, And all your souk shall flutter like the
cell

Does each

linnet

16.

In the cages of

my

YEVGENY ALEXANDROVICH YEVTUSHENKO


^SBThere is no Jewish blood in my veins, But I am hated with a scabby hatred By all the anti-Semites,
like a Jew.

Dead
I

pores. Still* [1965], st.

am

myself

Among

the avalanches, like the


absolutely elusive.

Abomi-

nable

Snowman,

Who

Are

We?*

[1959],

st.

Along a parabola life like a rocket flies, Mainly in darkness, now and then on a
rainbow.
Parabolic Ballad* [1960]

And

therefore
I

am

a true Russian*

Babi Tor [1961]

Worms come
men on
1
.

through holes and bold


Ib.

ANDREI VOZNESENSKY
I

parabolas.

am Goya
by the enemy's beak
gouged

of the bare field,


till
I

A good example of his use of assonance: Ya Goya nagoye ya gore y* gotos goda . ya golod ym gorlo . . BLAKE and M. HAYWARD, eds., P. goloi. Antiworlds: Poetry by Andrei Vozncsensky
.
,

the craters of
grief

my

[I&66]

eyes gape

am
am

the tongue

of war, the

embers of

cities

Translated by STANLEY KUNITT. Translated by W. H. AUDEN. * Translated by RICHARD WILBUR. * Translated by STANLEY Moss. Translated by W. H. AUWEN.
*

ANONYMOUS
ANONYMOUS
Surner
is

1250-1700 icumen in,

Ich

am

of Irlonde

Lhude sing cuccu! Groweth sed, and bloweth med,


springth the wude nu 2 Cuckoo Song Sing cuccu!
3

Ant of the holy lande

And

Of Irlonde. Code sire, pray


1250]
p,

ich the,

[c.

See also p.

149.

For of saynte charite, Come ant dance wyth


In Irlonde.

me

*See

Vogelweide,

p.

1563,

and Pound,

Ich

Am

of Irlonde

1083

ANONYMOUS

When Adam

Who

delved and Eve span was then a gentleman?

Love
Is

the burden of

me little, love me long, my song. 1


Love

Text used by JOHN BALL for his speech at Blackheath to the men
in
I

Me

Little

[1569-1570]

Wat Tyler's
maiden
makeless;

Rebellion [1381]

sing of a
is

That King of

Multiplication is vexation, Division is as bad; The rule of three doth puzzle

And
Maiden [i$th
century]

To

kings her son she dies.


Carol. I Sing of a

all

practice drives

me

me,
[1570]

mad.

Elizabethan

MS

For in
I

my

love but

mind, of all mankind you alone.


[i$th
century], refrain

Greensleeves was all my joy, Greensleeves was my delight; Greensleeves was my heart of

And who but Lady Greensleeves.

gold,

The Nut-Brown Maid


For I must to the greenwood go, Alone, a banished man.

Alas,

To cast me off discourteously: And I have loved you so long,


Delighting in your company.

my Love!

ye do

me

wrong

16.

From

Handful

of Pkaumt
i

No burial this
Of any man
Till

pretty pair
receives,

Delights [1584], refrain and gt.


Shall I bid her go? What, and if Shall I bid her go, and spare not?
I

Robin Redbreast piously Did cover them with leaves.

do?

The Children

in the

Wood,
st.

O no, no, no, I dare not.2

16

Corydorfs Farewell

to

Phtttit,
it.

fool's paradise.

Paston Letters [1462], no. 457 Everyman, I will go with thee, and be
thy guide, In thy most need to go by thy
side.

Where griping griefs the heart would wound And doleful dumps the mind oppress,
There music with her silver sound With speed is wont to send redress.8 A Song to the Lute in Mustek,
rt.i

Everyman

[before 1500], act I,


Z.

522

O Western

wind,

That the small

rain

when wilt thou blow, down can rain?

The blinded boy that shoots From heaven down did hie.

so trim,4

Christ, that my love were in And I in my bed again!

my arms
[c.

King Cophetua and the


It

Beggar
si. 2

1530]

Maid,

Why
Of

fearest

When

thou thy outward foe, thou thyself thy harm dost

was a

friar

of orders gray

feed? grief, or hurt, of pain, or woe, Within each thing is sown the seed.

Walked forth to tell his beads. The Friar of Orders Gray,6


x

st.

From TOTTEI/S MISCELLANY,


Songs and Sonnets [1557] Crabbed age and youth cannot live together.

14, p.
*

See Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet 224b and Herrick, p. 3203.

II,

ft,

Paraphrased by Shakespeare in Twelfth* Night [1598-1600], act II, :. in. s Another version is used by Shakespeare ia
Juliet [1594-1595], act IV, x* *. See Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet II, i, /;, p. aasb. 5 See Shakespeare, The Taming of the Shnrn
4

Romeo and

Youth

is full

of pleasance, age

is

full

of

care.

IV
Passionate Pilgrim
1

i,

The
1

148, p. 219-b.

[1599]

Often attributed to Shakespeare.

thfc [1728-1811] composed ballad from various fragments of andett ballads found in Shakespeare's plays. It appeared

THOMAS PERCY

1084

ANONYMOUS
Our
joys as

wing&d dreams do

fly;

Why then should sorrow last? Since grief but aggravates thy loss, Grieve not for what is past. The Friar of Orders Gray, st. 13
a worthy peer, King Stephen was Hisbreeches cost him but a crown.

These things seem wondrous, yet more wondrous I,

Whose

heart with fear doth freeze, with love doth fry.

From THOMAS WEELKES, Madriffds of Six

Parts [1600]
to thee?

Jerusalem,

Take Thy Old Cloak About Thee* st. 7


It's pride that puts this country down; Man, take thine old cloak about thee.

When When
Thy

my happy home,
come

shall I
shall

my sorrows have an

end?

joys

when shall I see? The Song of Mary [1601]


eyes for stars!

What

Jfc.

poor astronomers are they

Take women's

A fool and

his

money are soon parted.


century

From

JOHN

DOWLAND,

The

Saying current since the i6th

Third and Last Book of Songs

April

is

in

my mistress*

face,

or Airs [1603] what a plague is love!

How

shall I

And

July in her eyes

hath place,

bear

it?

Within her bosom is September, But in her heart a cold December. From THOMAS MORLEY, Madrigals to Four Voices . . . the
First

She

will inconstant prove, I greatly fear


it.

PhSJida Flouts

Me,

st. i

And

let all

women

strive to

be

Book [1594]

As constant

as Penelope.

Lo here a new Aurora!

From THOMAS MORLEY, The


First

Book
bliss kiss

of

Canzonets

Constant Penelope, st. 28 Fain would I change that note To which fond Love hath charmed me.

From TOBIAS HUME, Musical Humors [1605]


Turn
again Whittmgton, Lord Mayor of London. 1

Kill

then,
first

and

Bat

come
First

me, me.
of Ballets [1595]

From THOMAS MORLEY, The


Book
Swot, false Love, I care not. Spend thy shafts and spare not.
I

Refrain of

Bow

Bells heard
[c.

by

Dick Whittington

1605}

O
16.

metaphysical tobacco,
far as

Fetched as

from Morocco,

was more true to Love than Love to

Thy

me.

From JOHN DOWLAND, The First Book of Songs or Airs


[*597]
Thute, the period of cosmography,

O metaphysical tobacco.2
Frcwn
[1606]

searching fume Exhales the rheum,

MICHAEL EAST, The


Set
of

Second

Madrigals

From

the hag and hungry goblin


rags

Doth vaunt of Hecla, whose sulphureous


fire

That into

would rend

ye,

And

the

spirit that stands

by the naked
ye!

Doth melt the frozen clime and thaw


the sky; Trinacrian Aetna's flames ascend not
higher.
1

man
In the book of

Moons defend
Bedlam [ijth
son
of

Tom
Richard

o'

century],
St.
1

Whittington,

London

fc

ha Reliques
1

of

Ancient

English

Poetry

17<W
Quoted in Shakespeare, Othello
II, iiif

mercer, rose to be mayor of before his death in 14x3.

London three times

*See Byron, p. 5633, and note.

1085

ANONYMOUS
With an
Whereof
host of furious fancies
I

No

am commander,

With

a burning spear, and a horse of

dimpled cheeks hath she to gaze upon. She cannot see her springtime dama$l
grace,

air,

To

the wilderness I wander. a By knight of ghosts and shadows I summoned am to tourney Ten leagues beyond the wide world's end.

Nor dare she look upon her winter face.


First Set of Madrigals
tets,

From ORLANDO GIBBONS, The


and Mo.

XIII

Stay,

sweet,

Methinks

it is

no

Tom
There
is

journey.
o*

The
st.

light that shines


eyes;

and do not rise! comes from


not:
it is

thine

Bedlam,

a lady sweet and kind, Was never face so pleased my mind; I did but see her passing by, And yet I love her till I die.

The day breaks

my

heart,
part.

Because that you and

must

Stay, or else my joys will die, And perish in their infancy.2

From THOMAS FORD, Music


Sundry Kinds [1607],

of

JOHN DOWLAND,
If there is a paradise

Pi/grim's

st. i

Solace

[1612]

on the

face of the

Cupid is wingfed and doth range, Her country so my love doth change; But change she earth, or change she sky, Ib. st. 6 Yet win I love her till I die.
Four arms, two necks, one wreathing; Two pairs of lips, one breathing;

earth,
It is this,

oh!

it is this,

Mogul

oh! it is this.* Inscription in the JR#f

Fort at Delhi

[1640]

And when with

Two

hearts that multiply Sighs interchangeably.

envy Time, transported, Shall think to rob us of our joys, You'll in your girls again be courted, And I'll go wooing in my boys.
Winifreda,
si.

From THOMAS WEELKES,


or Fantastic Spirits [1608]

Airs

But

in vain she did conjure

him
to
allure

Love not
For

me

for

comely

To
grace,

depart her presence so;

my
for

pleasing eye or face,

Having a thousand tongues

Nor

No, nor

any outward part, for a constant heart.


of Madrigals [1608]

And

From JOHN WILBYE, Second Set


The
silver

him, but one to bid him go. Dultina*

si. 2

Over the mountains and over the waves, Under the fountains and under the
graves;

When

swan, who living had no note, death approached unlocked her

silent throat;

Leaning her breast against the reedy


shore,

Under floods that are deepest, which Neptune obey, Over rocks that are steepest, Love wiB
find out the way.

Thus sung her no more:


mine
eyes;

first

and

last,

and sung
close

Love Will Find Out the Way,


Begone, from me!
dull Care!
the
I

st. i

Farewell, all joys;

death,

come
live,

prithee begone
Plato,

More

geese than swans

now

more

fools

than wise.

1 Imitated from Greek Anthology. 2

Greek of

Tbt

From ORLANDO GIBBONS, The First Set of Madrigals and Motets [1612], I

See Prior, p. gSSa, Attributed also to John Donne, and iodufed in a variant in the seventh edition of hi* poeaas
[1669].
3 The translation is from Persian in Munif'i Guide to India. *This song is mentioned by IZAAK WALTON

To

now old, that erst attempting lass, goddess Venus consecrates her glass; For she herself hath now no use of one,
Lais

in The Compleat Angler [1653]. It has be ascribed to Raleigh, on very doubtful authority.

1086

ANONYMOUS
dull Care! Begone, never agree.

Thou and

shall

To Noroway, to Noroway, To Noroway o'er the faem;


The
king's daughter o' Noroway, Tis thou must bring her hazne.

From JOHN PIAYFORD, Musical


Companion
Though
If

[1687]

little,

I'll

work

as hard as a

Turk,

To plow and sow, and And be a fanner's boy.

youll give

me

employ,
reap and

The first word that Sir Patrick read So loud, loud laughed he; The neist word that Sir Patrick read The tear blinded
I

mow,

his e'e.

Ib. *f . 4, 5

The Farmer's Boy

[before 1089], st. 2

saw the new moon


the auld
if

late yestreen
in

Wi'

moon

her arm;
st.

Carriages without horses shall go, And accidents fill the world with woe, Prophecy attributed to Mother

And

I fear

we gang to sea, master, Ib. well come to harm,


their cork-hed'd shoon;

10

laith,

Shipton

kith were our gude Scots lords

[ijth century]
shall fly 16.

To wet

Around the world thoughts In the twinkling of an eye.

But lang or a' the play was playM They wat their hats aboon.
Ib. st. 15

Under water

men

shall walk,

Shall ride, shall sleep, and talk; shall be seen In the air

men

Half owre, half owre to Aberdour, Tis fifty fathoms deep;


16.

In white, in black,

and in

And
Wi'

green.

there lies gude Sir Patrick Spens, the Scots lords at his feet!
Ib. st.

Iron in the water shall float As easy as a wooden boat.

19

16.

"And what

A swarm
Is

will ye leave to

your ain

A
Is

A
Is

of bees in May worth a load of hay; swarm of bees in June worth a silver spoon; swarm of bees in July not worth a fly.

mither dear,

Edward, Edward?" Edward, Edward,

st.

"The

curse of hell ftae

me

sail

ye bear,
16.

Sic counsels ye give to

me, O!"

When
loves flies

Old English saying poverty comes in at the door,


out the window. Saying current since the ijth
century

Fight on,

For why,

my merry men all; my life is at an end. 1


Chevy Chase

fairer lady there

Than

Please to

remember the

fifth

of

No-

vember,

Gunpowder treason and

plot.
tradi-

Guy

Fawkes's Rhyme,

never was seen the blind beggar's daughter of Bethnal Green. The Beggar's Daughter of Bethnal Green* st. 33
courageous, captains death could not daunt,

tional in

England since the

When
1

whom
all,

ijth century

BALLADS
The king
sits

Says Johnnie, "Fight on,

my
I

merry men

I'm a

in

Dunfermline town
st.

Drinking the blude-red wine. Sir Patrick Spens,


1

not slain; I will lay me down for to bleed a while. Then I'll rise and figfat with you again." Johnnie Armstrongs Last Goodnight, DRYDBN'S Miscellanies st. iS; from
little

wounded, but

am

Most of the prophecies attributed to Mother a witch and prophetess, according to Shipton
tradition,

[170*]

"This very house was

bnilt

by the blind

times
tury

Yorkshire in Tudor are fabrications of the seventeenth cenlived


in
later.

who

of beggar of Bednall Green, so much talked and sung in ballads. - SAMUEL PEPYS, Diary

and

[June *6, 1665]

1087

ANONYMOUS
Did march
to the siege of the city of
soldiers

And

Gaunt, They mustered their

Come
by two and

by

three,

And
Then

the foremost in battle was

Mary
1 st. i

Ambree.
let

Mary Ambree,
king.

Jane Shore with sorrow sing,

Thomas the Rhymer, st. "A bed, a bed/' Clerk Saunders saii "A bed for you and me!" "Fye na, fye na," said may Margaret "Till anes we married bei"
Clerk Sounders,
it.

there he saw a lady bright riding down by the Sildon Tret,


i

That was beloved of a

Jane Shore,
"I'll

st. i

There were twa


Binnorie,

sisters sat in a

rest,"

said he,

"but thou shalt

O Binnorie!

bour

walk";

So doth

this

wandering Jew

There came a knight to be By the bonnie milldams

their wooer, o' Binnorie!


j

From

place to place, but cannot rest For seeing countries new.

Binnorie, *t

The Wandering

Jew,

st.

There were three ravens sat on a tree, They were as black as they might be.

For thirty pence our Savior was sold 2 Among the false Jews, as I have been

And
For

The one of them said to his make, 'Where shall we our breakfast take?" The Three Ravens, st. i, 2

twenty-nine is the worth of thee, think thou art one penny worser than he. King John and the Abbot of Canterbury, st. 21

Down
As

there

came

a fallow doe
as she

great with

young

might

go. Ib. st. 6

By

Glasgerion swore a full great oath, 3 oak, and ash and thorn.
Glasgerion,
st.

She buried him before the prime, She was dead herself ere evensong tune,

God
19

send every gentleman Such hounds, such hawks, and


leman.
16.

such a
st.

In Scarlet town, where I was born, There was a fair maid dwelling Made every youth cry Well-a-wayl Her name was Barbara Allen.
All in the merry

9,10

Mony a one for him males mane, But nane sail ken where he is gane:
O'er his white banes,
bare,

when

they are

month

of

When green buds


lay,

May,
his

The wind

sail

bkw

for evermair.

they were swellin',

The Twa

Young Jemmy Grove on


For love of Barbara Allen.
Barbara Allen
9

deathbed

Corbies,

st.

s Cruelty, st. i, 2

And slowly And when

rase she up, she came nigh him, she drew the curtain by I think man, 'Toung you're dyin'."
16.
st.

So slowly, slowly

ye Lawlands, been? They hae skin the Earl of Murray, And hae laid him on the green,

Ye Highlands and

O where hae ye

The Bonny Earl of Murray, st.

O waly,
4

waly,

up the bank,

True Thomas

A ferlie he

lay

on Huntlie Bank;
e'e;

And waly, waly, doun the brae, And waly, waly, yon burnside, Where I and my Love wont to gae! Wdy, Wdy, st.

spied wi' his

*BEN JONSON calls any virago Mary Ambree, and JOHN FLETCHER alludes to Mary Ambree in The Scornful Lady [1616].
*

A little time while it is new!


But when
'tis

waly, waly, gin love

be bonnie,

auld

it

waxeth cauH,

See George Herbert, p. See Kipling, p. 876b.

$b.

And

fades awa' like

morning dew.
16.
st.

1088

ANONYMOUS
But had
I

wist, before I kist,

And
So

cruel death

is
is

always near,

That love had been sae ill to win, heart in a case o' gowd, I had tock'd niy And pinn'd it wf a siller pin. Wdy, Wdy, st. 5

frail

a thing

man.

Now
I

"What

gat ye to your dinner, Lord

Randal,

What
**I

son? to dinner, your gat ye

my

1 lay me down to sleep, the Lord to soul pray my keep; If I should die before I wake, I pray the Lord my soul to take. I

my

hand-

some young man?"


boil'd in broo'; mother, gat eels

make

ANONYMOUS
i8th century

my bed
wakl
lie

soon,

fat I'm weary wi' hunting,

down."

and fain Lord Randal

Sabina has a thousand charms

To captivate my heart;
Her

A ship I have

got in the North Country And she goes by the name of the "Golden Vanity," I fear she will be taken by a Spanish
Gal-la-lee,

And

lovely eyes are Cupid's arms, every look a dart:

But when the beauteous idiot speaks, She cures me of my pain;

Her tongue the

servile fetters breaks

And
st.

frees her slave again.

As she

sails

by the Lowlands low. The Golden Vanity,

From Amphion Anglicus


i

[1700]

Who will change old


The Arabian
Version,
c.

lamps for new?

THE NEW ENGLAND PRIMER*


In

'Nights [European

1700],

The

History

of Aladdin

Adam's
sinned

fall
all.

We

Open

sesame!
Ib.

The History

of Alt

Baba

My Book and Heart Must never part.


Young Obadias,
David, Josias
All

Drive a coach and six through an Act of Parliament. Credited to Sir Stephen Rice
[1637-1715], Chief Baron of the Exchequer, by MACAULAY in History of England [1849-1861], ch. 12

were pious.

Peter denied

His Lord,

and

cried.

The Campbells

are comin',

Young Timothy
Learnt sin to
fly.

oho oho. Song [c. 1715]


r

Xerxes did die, And so must I.

For without money, George, A man is but a beast: But bringing money, thou shalt be
Always

my welcome guest.
George Barnwell*
II, st.

Zaccheus he

25

Did climb the tree

Our Lord to

see.

Our days begin with trouble here, Our life is but a span, 2
As early as 1691, Benjamin Harris of Boston advertised the forthcoming second impression of
the
1

found in *The first record of this prayer the Enchiridion Lconit [AJ>. ii6o> The early editions of the Primer give the first line of the prayer as: "Now I lay me down to take my sleep/' The familiar Tersion of the line appeared in the edition of 1784. In the edition of
1814 the second line reads, "I pray thee, Lord,
soul to keep." LonInspired by GEORGE LJLLO'S play, The don Merchant; or, The History of George B&rnwell, first acted in 1731,

my
*

New England
i

copy extant

Primer. dated 1737.

The

oldest

known

'See Bacon, p. *ogb-*ioa.

ANONYMOUS
The
The
free

Girl

Left Behind

Me.
song [1759
in

Title of

united voice of
loyal

all

His Majesty'

And damned are those who dare Or touch the Lord's Anointed. And this is law, I will maintain,
Unto my dying day, sir, That whatsoever king shall
I will

resist

and

subjects

America

liberty

and property, and no stamps Motto of various American co


lonidL

newspapers [1765-1766'

be the Vicar or Bray, The Vicar of


rf.
i

reign,
sir!

Bray

and

Yankee Doodle came to town

He stuck a feather in his hat And called it macaroni.


Yankee Doodle, keep it up, Yankee Doodle dandy, Mind the music and the step,

Upon

a little pony,

Don't tread on me.

Motto

of the first official icon fag; first raised by

ant John Paul Jones in Commodore Esek Hopkins's faphib Alfred [December 3, 1775]
Rebellion to tyrants
is

And with
It's all

the

girls

be handy.
st. i,

obedience

to

Yankee Doodle, 1

chorus

God. 1

Motto on Thomas
Lost

in the day's work. Current since the i8th century


is

Jefferson*!
[c.

sed

1776]

Man may work from sun


But woman's work
is

to sun, never done.

The
saying

Old
Count
ing sun

our old simplicity of times, world abounds with laws, and teems with crimes. On the Proceedings
Affthitf.
tf,
j

that day lost whose low descend-

America*

Views from thy hand no worthy action done. 2 Old saying


In good king Charles's golden days, When loyalty no harm meant; A furious High-Churchman I was, And so I gain'd preferment.

Our

cargoes of meat, drink, and

clothes

beat the Dutch.


Siege of Boston [1775]

There

is

nothing new except what

is

forgotten.

Unto my
1

flock I daily preached,

Attributed to Mademoisdk Bertinf milliner to Marie Antoinette


[c.

Kings are by
ica

God appointed,

1785]

This version was sufficiently popular in Amerin 1767 to be used in the ballad opera The

Paddy

Disappointment; or, The Force of Credulity by ANDREW BARTON. Father and I went up to camp, Along with Captain Goodwin; And there we saw the men and boys,

dear, an' did ye hear the news that's goin' round?

The shamrock

No
For

As thick as hasty pudding. Yankee doodle do.


Version used by
in

is by law forbid to grow on Irish ground! more St. Patrick's Day well keep, his color can't be seen,

there's a cruel
o'

ROYALL TYLER,
Contrast [1790]

law agin the

wearin*

The

the Green!

The origin of Yankee Doodle remains as mysterious as ever, unless it be deemed a positive result to have eliminated definitely every OSCAR GEORGE theory thus far advanced.
THEODORE SONNECK, Report on ike Star-Spangled Banner, Hail Columbia, America, Yankee

The Wearing o' the Green; or, The Shan-von-Vogfit


x

The motto

cides of Charles

of one, I believe, of the regiI. Letter from Jefferson to

Edward

Doodle [1909]
*

An

Everett [February 24, 1823] Jefferson's reference probably is to John Bwfr

earlier version (signed


8,

by JAMES BOBART,

I>ecember "Count."

shaw [1602-1659],

1697) begins "Think" rather than

Mn

the Pennsylvania

Gazette

[February

8,

1775],

"from a

late

London Magazine."

1O9O

ANONYMOUS
For they're hangin' men an' women there for wearin' o' the Green.

The Wearing o' the Green; or, The Shan-von-Voght

When the constitution is openly invaded, when the first original right of the people, from which all laws derive
their authority,
ferior
is directly attacked, ingrievances naturally lose their force, and are suffered to pass by without punishment or observation. The Letters of Junius. 30, to the Printer of the Public Adver-

JUNIUS*
One precedent
loon accumulate
trine.

creates another.

They

and constitute law. What yesterday was fact, today is doc-

tiser

[October 27, 1769]


a

The
lish

Letters of Junius [17691771]. Dedication to the Eng-

Nation
is

The

liberty of the press


all

the palla-

dium of

the

civil, political,

and

moment of difficulty and danger at which flattery and falsehood can no longer deceive, and simplicity itself can no longer be misled. 16. 35, 1 to the Printer of the
There
is

reli-

of an Englishman. gious rights

Public Advertiser [December 19,

16.

1769]

These are the gloomy companions of a disturbed imagination; the melanof poetry, without the choly madness
inspiration.

They [the Americans] equally detest the pageantry of a king, and the super3 16. cilious hypocrisy of a bishop.
There
tics as
is

16. 7, to Sir

William Draper

a holy mistaken zeal in poli-

[March
character
clearly

3,

1769]

well as in religion.

By persuading
16.

There are some hereditary strokes of

others,

we convince

ourselves.

by which a family may be as distinguished as by the blackest features of the human face. J6. 12, to the Duke of Grafton

The

least considerable

man among

us

has an interest equal to the proudest nobleman, in the laws and constitution

[May
I

30, 1769]

upon

of his country, and is equally called to make a generous contribution

believe there

is

yet a spirit of resist-

ance

in this country, which will not sure submit to be oppressed; but I

am

there

a fund of good sense in this country, which cannot be deceived. 16. 16, to the Printer of the
is

whether it be the in support of them heart to conceive, the understanding to 8 direct, or the hand to execute. Printer the to 16, 37, of the
Public
Advertiser

[March

19,

1770]

Public

Advertiser

(H.

S.

Woodfall) [July 19, 1769] We owe it to our ancestors to preserve entire those rights, which they
have delivered to our care:

We lament the mistakes of a good man, and do not begin to detest him until he affects to renounce his principles.

we owe

it

to

16. 41, to

our posterity, not to suffer their dearest inheritance to be destroyed.

Lord Mansfield [November 14, 1770]


to

The

16. 20, to the Printer of the

injustice

done

sometimes

of

service

to

Public Advertiser [August 1769]


1

an individual is the public.

8,

in the

Pseudonym of the author of a series of letters London Public Advertiser 1769-1771 publubed in book form in 177*. They have been

iThis letter is of great significance in the history of freedom of the press. The publisher was prosecuted for seditious libel, and the jury
brought in a verdict of "guilty of printing and publishing only.'* After a second trial. Woodfall was freed on payment of costs. *See Rufus Choate, p, See Gibbon, p. 4$6a.

attributed to,

among

Lord Shelbume, Lord Temple.

Lord

others, Sir Philip Francis, George Sackville, and

1OQ1

ANONYMOUS
Facts are apt to alarm us more than the most dangerous principles.

Three blind mice, see how they

They
Did

all

The

Letters of Junius, 42, to Lord Mansfield

She cut

off their tails

ran after the fanner's wife with a carvin*

knife,

honest man, like the true religion, appeals to the understanding, or modestly confides in the internal evidence of
his conscience.

An

ou ever see such a

sight in

As three blind mice?


Three Blind Mice

impostor employs force instead of argument, imposes silence where he cannot convince, and propagates his character by the sword.
16.

The

A frog he would a-wooing go,


Sing heigh-ho says Rowley.

A Frog He Would A-Wooing Go


a

With
If individuals

have no
to us.

virtues, their

rowley powley

gammon

and

vices

may be of use
16.

spinach,

cp, to the Printer

of the

Heigh-ho says Anthony Rowley.


Ib, cfeona

Public Advertiser
1771]

[October 5,

Old King Cole

Was
of

a merry old soul,

The temple

passage to riches

fame is the shortest and preferment.


16.

And a merry old soul was he, He called for his pipe, And he called for his bowl, And he called for his fiddlers

three.

NURSERY RHYMES*
A man of words and not of deeds
Is like

Old King

a garden

full

of weeds.
of

A Man

of

Words and Not

Deeds
It's like

The King of France went up the hill With forty thousand men; The King of France came down the hill And ne'er went up again.
The King
Jack Sprat could eat no fat, His wife could eat no lean; And so betwixt them both, They licked the platter clean.
Jack Sprd
of France

a lion at the door;

the door begins to crack, a stick across your back; And when your back begins to smart, It's like a penknife in your heart;
It's like

And when

And when
deed.

your heart begins to bleed, You're dead, and dead, and dead, in16.

Come again another day.


in, jR/rin

Rain, rain, go away,

Cock a doodle doo!

My dame has lost her shoe; My master's lost his fiddle stick,
And knows not what to
do.

Bake
Pat

Pat-a-cake, pat-a-cake, baker's man, me a cake as fast as you can;


it

Cock a Doodle Doo


1 The rhymes of Mother Goose originated with Mother Goose Tales as Contes de ma mere fOye [1697] by CHARLES PERRA.ULT [1628-1703]. The Tales were first translated in 1729, the

and prick
in the

it,

and mark

it

with

B,

Put

it

oven for baby and me.


Pat-a-Cdke

rhymes as Mother Goose's Melody in 1781 by ROBERT SAMBER, and published in London by

John Newbery [1713-1767], who originated the publication of children's books. There are many other collections and versions of the rhymes, like Gammer Gurton's Garland [1784], which
also included older

The lion and the unicorn Were fighting for the crown; The lion beat the unicorn
All round about the town.

rhymes of English origin.

Some gave them white bread, And some gave them brown;

1092

ANONYMOUS
Some gave them plum cake, And sent them out of town. The Lion and the Unicorn

Uttk Jack Horner

sat in the corner,

With silver bells, and cockleshells, And pretty maids all in a row.
Afory, Mary, Quite Contrary Oranges and lemons, Say the bells of St. Cferaenfs. When will you pay me? Say the bells of Bailey. When I grow rich, Say the bells of Shoreditch. Oranges and Lemons

How does your garden grow?

Maiy, Mary, quite contrary,

Eating a Christmas pie.

He put
And

in his

thumb, and pulled out

plum,
said,

"What
is

a good boy am I!" Little Jack Homer

OM

London Bridge

broken down,

My fair lady.
Ten
tale tit,

London Bridge

Your tongue shall be slit, And all the dogs in our town Shall have a bit.
Tell Tale Tit
I was going to St. Ives, met a man with seven wives, Each wife had seven sacks, Each sack had seven cats, Each cat had seven kits: Kits, cats, sacks, and wives, How many were there going to

Here comes a candle to


bed,

light

you to
off

Here comes a chopper to chop


head.

your
'

16.

As
I

"Who killed Cock Robin?"


"I," said the sparrow,

"With my bow and arrow, I killed Cock Robin." 1

Who KUed Cock Robin?


"Who saw him die?"
St. Ives?

As
The man
sea.

Was Going to St.


in

"I," said the

fly,

Ives

in the wilderness asked of

me
the

"With my little I saw him die."

eye,

16.

How many
I

strawberries grew

answered him as I thought good, "As many as red herrings grow in the

wood."

This little pig went to market; This little pig stayed home; This little pig had roast beef; This little pig had none;

And
in the Wilderness
fly

The Man
Ladybug, ladybug,

Your house

is

on

fire,

away home, and your children

this little pig cried, Wee, wee, wee! All the way home. This Little Pig

Little

will burn.

boy blue, come blow your horn,

Ladybug, Ladybug

The

Hickory dickory dock,

sheep's in the in the corn;

meadow, the cow's

The mouse ran up the dock, The clock struck one, The mouse ran down;
Hickory dickory dock.

is the boy who looks after the sheep? He's under the haystack fast asleep.

But where

Hickory Dickory Dock


Baa, baa, black sheep,

Will you wake him? No, not I, For if I do, hell be sure to cry.
Little

Boy Blue

Have you any wool?


Yes,
sir,

Simple Simon met a pieman

Three

yes, sir, bags full:

One for my master, And one for my dame, And one for the little boy

Going to the fair: Says Simple Simon to the pieman, "Let me taste your ware/*
Simple Simon

Who lives down the lane.


Baa, Baa, Black Sheep

Ding dong bell,

The
1

cat

is

in the well.

See Byron, p.

1093

ANONYMOUS

Who put her in?


Little

All
Plato's

on a summer's day;
of Hearts
tarts,

Johnny Green.

The Knave
Song

He stole the
And

Little

Tom
shall

Tucker

took them clean away.

he eat? White bread and butter. How will he cut it

What

Sings for his supper;

The Queen
Bye baby bunting, Daddy's gone a-hunting,

of Heart*

Gone

to get a rabbit skin

Without

e'er a knife?

To wrap the baby bunting in.


Bye Baby Bunting

How

will

he be married
e'er a wife?

Without

Little

Tom

Tucker

Come,

let's

to bed,

Crosspatch, draw the latch, Set by the fire and spin: Take a cup and drink it up,

Says Sleepyhead; Tarry awhile, says Slow; Put on the pot,


Says Greedy-gut,

Then

call

your neighbors

in.

We'll sup before we go.


Let's to Bed

Cross Patch

High diddle diddle The cat and the fiddle, The cow jumped over the moon;

Four and twenty


snail,

tailors

went

to

kill

The

best

man among them

durst not

The little dog laughed

To see such craft And the dish ran away


Three wise

with the spoon.

touch her tail. She put out her horns like a cow,

little

Kyloc
all

High Diddle Diddle


of Gotham Went to sea in a bowl: And if the bowl had been stronger,

Run,

tailors, run, or

shell

kill

you

men

e'en

now.

Four and Twenty


Goosey goosey gander, Whither shall I wander?
Upstairs and downstairs,

Tmlort

My song had been longer.


Three Wise

Men

of

Gotham

To

Jack and Jill went up the hill fetch a pail of water; Jack fell down and broke his crown,

And

in

my lady's
I

chamber;
old

There

met an

man who

wouldn't

And

Jill

came tumbling

after.

Jack

and

say his prayers; I took him by the left leg And threw him down the

stairs.

Jill

Goosey Goosey Gander

Seesaw, Margery Daw, Jacky shall have a new master; Jacky must have but a penny a day, Because he can work no faster.

A pocket full of rye,

Sing a song of sixpence,

Seesaw, Margery
Taffy was a
thief;

Daw
a

Welshman, Taffy was

Four and twenty blackbirds, Baked in a pie; When the pie was opened,

The birds began


Wasn't

to sing;

Taffy came to my house and stole a piece of beef. I went to Taffy's house, Taffy wasn't in;
Taffy

To

that a dainty dish set before a king?

came

to

my

house and stole a

The

king was

in

his

countinghcmsc

marrowbone.
Taffy

Was a Welshman

The Queen of Hearts She made some tarts,

Counting out his money; The queen was in the parlor Eating bread and honey; The maid was in the garden

Hanging out the

clothes,

1094

ANONYMOUS
Along

came a blackbird, And snipped off her nose. Sing a Song


shoe,

Nor yet
But
sit

feed the swine,

of Sixpence a

on a cushion And sew a fine seam,

There was an old


Sht had so
k

woman who lived in

And
I

feed upon strawberries,

Sugar and cream.


children she didn't

Cvrlylocks

many

had

a little nut tree,

nothing would

it

She

know what to do; some broth without any gave them


bread,

bear

But a

The
And

silver nutmeg and a golden pear; king of Spain's daughter came to

She whipped

them

all

soundly and put

visit
all

me,
for the sake of
I

them

to bed.

There

Was an Old Woman

tree,

Had

my

little

nut

a LitUe

Nut Tree

Ride a cockhorse to Banbury Cross,

To

see a fine lady


toes,

Rings

upon a white horse; on her fingers and bells on her

Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall, Humpty Dumpty had a great fall;


All the king's horses

And

She shall have music wherever she goes. Ride a Cockhorse

Couldn't

men put Humptv Dumpty together again. tiumpty Dumpty


all

the king's

Tom, Tom, the piper's son, He learned to play when he was young. But all the tune that he could play Was "Over the hills and far away." 1 Tom, Tom, the Piper's Son

Little

And cannot

lost her sheep, where to find them; Leave them alone, and they'll come home, And bring their tails behind them.

Bo-peep has
tell

Tom, Tom, the piper's son, Stole a pig, and away he run; The pig was eat, and Tom was beat, And Tom went howling down the
street.

Little
Little Polly Flinders Sat among the cinders,

Bo-peep

Wanning her

I&-

Her mother came and caught

pretty little toes. her,

"Where

are

you going

to,

my

pretty

And whipped

maid?"
"I'm going a-milking T
sir/'

her little daughter For spoiling her nice new clothes.


Little Polly Flinders

she said.

Where Are You Going To,


Pretty

My
Ib.

There was an old


blanket,

woman

tossed in a

Maid?

"My

face

is

my

fortune, sir," she said.

"Nobody asked you,

sir,"

she said.
16.

Seventeen times as high as the moon; But where she was going no mortal could tell, For under her arm she carried a broom.

Old woman,
said
I,

old

woman,

old

woman,

One a penny, two a penny, hot


buns;
If

cross

Whither, ah whither, ah whither so


high?

you have no daughters, give them to


your sons.

Hot Cross Buns

Pease-porridge hot, pease*porridge cold,

To sweep the cobwebs from the sky, And Fll be with you by and by.
There

Was an Old Woman

Pease-porridge in the pot, nine days old.

Pease-Porridge
Curlylocks, Curlylocks,

Hot

Thou
1

Wilt thou be mine? shalt not wash dishes


See D'Urfey, p. 3842,

The north wind doth blow, And we shall have snow, And what will poor robin do
Poor thing?

then,

Hell
p, 4oib.

sit

in a

bam,

and Gay,

To
1095

keep himself warm,

ANONYMOUS

And

hide his head under his wing,


Iroor tninf?l

What are little boys made of?


Snips and snails, and puppy dogs' That's what little boys are made

The North Wind Doth Blow


Old mother Hubbard

What Are Little Boys Made

of

Off

Went to the cupboard, To fetch her poor dog a bone;


But when she came there The cupboard was bare, And so the poor dog had none. Old Mother Hubbard
Pussy cat, pussy cat, where have you been? I've been to London to look at the
queen. Pussy cat, pussy
I

What are little girls made of?


Sugar and spice, and everything nice; That's what little girls are made of,
'ft.

Hickety pickety, my black hen, She lays eggs for gentlemen. Gentlemen come every day To see what my black hen doth
Hickety
Little

lay.

cat,

what did you

Miss Muffet

there? frightened a
chair.

little

mouse under the Pussy Cat

Sat on a tuffet, Eating some curds and whey. Along came a spider, And sat down beside her,

Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers; peck of pickled peppers Peter Piper picked. If Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled
peppers,

And

frightened Miss Muffet away.


Little

Miss Muffet

Peter, Peter Pumpkin-Eater,

Where's the peck of pickled peppers


Peter Piper picked?

Had a wife and couldn't keep He put her in a pumpkin shell, And there he kept her very well.
Jack,
Jack,

her.

Peter, Peter Pumpkin-Eater

Peter Piper

Monday's child
Tuesday's child

is fair

is full

of face, of grace,

be nimble, be quick,

Jack,

jump over the

candlestick.

of woe, Wednesday's Thursday's child has far to go,


is full

child

Jack Be Nimbi*

Friday's child is loving and giving, Saturday's child has to work for its liv-

There was a crooked man, and he went


a crooked mile,

He

found a crooked sixpence


crooked
stile;

against a

But

ing, a child that's

born on the Sabbath


gay. Is Fair of race

He

day
Is fair

Monday s Child

and wise and good and 9

bought a crooked cat, which a crooked mouse,

caught

And

Solomon Grundy, Born on a Monday, Christened on Tuesday, Married on Wednesday, Took ill on Thursday, Worse on Friday, Died on Saturday,
Buried on Sunday: This is the end

they all lived together in a little crooked house. There Was a Crooked Man

Diddle diddle dumpling, my son John, He went to bed with his stockings <ra; One shoe off, one shoe on; Diddle diddle dumpling, my son John. Diddle Diddle DumpKn
Rub-a-dub-dub,

Of Solomon Grundy.
Solomon Grundy

Three men in a tub, And who do you think they be?

The butcher,

the baker,

1096

ANONYMOUS
The candlestick-maker; Turn 'em out, knaves all three! Ruixi-Dub-Dub
I

There was a
little

little

man, and he had a

gun,

And

his bullets
lead;

were made of lead, lead,

saw three ships come sailing by,


sailing by,

come sailing Dy, I saw three ships come sailing by, On New Year's Day in the morning. I Saw Three Ships

Come

He went
And

to the brook,
it

and saw a

little

duck, shot

through the head, head,

head.

There

Was

a Uttie

Man

In In In

fir

tar

is, is.

oak none

Lavender's blue, dilly

dilly,

lavender's

mud

eel

is,

In clay none is. Coats eat ivy.

When
In Fir Tar Is

green; &***'* sn I an am king, dilly dilly,

you

shall

be queen. i.

Lavender's Blue

Mares eat oats.

A dillar, a dollar,
A ten o'clock scholar,
What
makes you come so soon?

Lucy Locket lost her pocket,

found it; There was not a penny in But a ribbon round it.
Kitty Fisher

it,

Lucy Locket

You used to come at ten o'clock, And now you come at noon.

Da/or, a Dollar

There were three jolly huntsmen, As I have heard them say,

And they would go a-hunting Upon St. David's Day. There Were Three

I had a little pony. His name was Dapple Gray;

I lent

him

to a lady

To
Jolly

ride a mile away.

Huntsmen
All

day they hunted,


find,

And nothing did they

She whipped him, she slashed him, She rode him through the mire; I would not lend my pony now For aH the lady's hire.
I

But a ship a-sailing, A-sailing with the wind.

Had

a Little

Pony

16.

do you know the muffin man, The muffin man, the muffin man, do you know the muffin man, That lives in Drury Lane?

Polly, put the kettle on, Polly, put the kettle on, Polly, put the kettle on,

Well

all

have

tea.

The Muffin Man


To market,
to market, to

Home

buy a

fat pig,

again,

home To

again, jiggety-jig.

Sukey, take it off again, Sukey, take it off again, Sukey, take it off again, They've all gone away.

Market,

To Market
Little

PoBy, Put the Kettle

On

Doctor Foster went to Gloucester In a shower of rain; He stepped in a puddle, up to his mid-

Tommy Tittlemouse
little

Lived in a

house;

He caught fishes
In other men's ditches.
Little

And never went

there again.

Tommy

Tittlemouse

Doctor Foster
There was an old woman Lived under a hill;

The

And

if

she's

not gone,
still.

fanner in the dell, the farmer in the dell, Heigho! the derry oh, the fanner in the The Farmer in the Dell dell.

She lives there

Hark! Hark!

There

Was

an Old

Woman

The dogs do
are

bark,

The beggars

coming to town;

1097

ANONYMOUS
Some
in iag&

some in

tags,

And some

in velvet

gowns.

Hark! Hark!

There were two blackbirds, Sitting on a hill, TTae one named Jack,

Ten little Indians standing in a line One went home, and then there were Ten Little Indians nine.

The

other namedjill; Fly away, Jack! Fly away,

Jill!
Jffl!

Come
This
is

again, Jack!

Come again, TwoBl

When
He He To

good King Arthur ruled

this

the farmer sowing the com,

land, was a goodly Jang, bought three pecks of barley meal, make a bag pudding.

That kept the cock that crowed in the morn, That waked the priest all shaven at*d
shorn,

Good King Arthur

That married the man


torn, That kissed the

all tattered

and

One misty,

When
I

moisty morning, cloudy was the weather,

chanced to meet an old Clothed all in leather;

man

maiden all forlorn. That milked the cow with the crumpled
horn,

He begpn
And

to compliment, I began to grin

"How do
do?"

you do?" and

"How do you

And "How do you do?" again! One Misty, Moisty Morning


Bobby
He'll

That tossed the dog That worried the cat That killed the rat That ate the malt That lay in the house that Jack bnflt. The House That Jack Bid*

Shaftoe's

gone to

sea,

Silver buckles

on

his knee;

ANONYMOUS
1800Christmas
is

come back and many me, Pretty Bobby Shaftoe.

coming, the geese

are get-

Bobby Shaftoe's fat and fair, Combing down his yellow hair;
He's

ting fat, Please to put a


hat;
If

penny

in the old man's

my love forevermore,
Bobby
Shaftoe.

Pretty

you haven't got a penny, a ha'penny


will do,

Bobby Shaftoe
Fe
I
fi

If

you haven't got a ha'penny, God


bless you!

fo fum!

Beggar's rhyme

smell the blood of an Englishman; Be he alive or be he dead, bread. I'll grind his bones to make my Fe Fi Fo Fum
Sing, sing!

From

And

ghoulies and ghosties and longleggety beasties things that go bump in the night,

Good

What

Lord, deliver us!


Scottish prayer

shall I sing?

The

cat's

run away with (he puddingSing! What Shall I

Rest and be thankful.


in the Inscription on stone seat Scottish Highlands, and titk of

bag

string.

Sing,

Sing?

Shoe the horse, shoe the mare, But let the little colt go bare. Shoe the Horse
There was a man in our town, And he was wondrous wise; He jumped into a bramble bush

one of Wordsworth's poems

The wisdom
one.

of many and the wit of l Definition of a proverb

And

scratched out both his eyes.

1 of a prowb Probably based on the definition which Lord John Russell gave one morning it breakfast at Mardock's: "One man's wit, and 18 Memoirs of Sir Jamc* men's wisdom."

There

Was a Man in Our Town

intosh [1765-183*], vol.

I,

p. 473

1098

ANONYMOUS
Sister

Anne, do you see any one comcry of Fatima, one wives of Bluebeard the of

The anxious

The rising of the sun And the running of the deer, The playing of the merry organ.
Sweet singing in the choir. Carol The Holly
st. i

The woods are full of them. Quoted by ALEXANDER WILSON, American Ornithology [1808],
preface

md the Iv>%
and
refrain

With drums and


drums

guns, and guns

and

The cunning seldom gpin their ends; The wise are never without friends. The Fox and the Hen, moral. From JOHN PIERPONT, Young Reader [1843]
Oh, yell tak' the
the low road,
An' 111 be in Scotland before ye; meet But I and my true love will never
again,

The enemy nearly

slew ye.

My

darling dear,
I

you look so queer,

Oft, Johnny,

hardly

knew ye. Irish folk song, $t,

Where

are the legs with

which you run,

high road an* 111 tak'

When you went to cany a gun?


Indeed your dancing days are done Oh, Johnny, I hardly knew ye.
Ib, st, 3

On

the bonnie, bonnie banks o'

Loch

The

press lives

by

disclosures.

The London Times

Lomond.

[1851]

Went out
how,
I

to

Loch Lomond, re/ram milk and I didn't know

Women and children first.


The Birkenhead
Drill

[February 26, 1852]

milked the goat instead of the cow; sittin' on a pile of straw A

Up and down the City

Road,

monkey

A-winkn/athis mother-in-law. in the hay, Turkey in the stiaw, turkey Roll 'em up and twist 'em up a high tuckahaw, And hit 'em up a tune called Turkey in
the Straw.
1 Turkey in the Straw,

In and out the Eagle/ That's the way the money goes Pop goes the weasel!

Pop Goes the Weasel*


raise

[c.

1853]

It is

a newspaper's duty to print the

news and
st.

neH.
[1861]

and
Free mont.*

The Chicago Times


soil, free

refrain

Sugar in the gourd

and honey

in the

men,

free speech, Fr6-

horn,
I

never

was so happy since the hour


H>- $f

Republican party rallying cry


Dirty work at the crossroads. Attributed 4 to WALTER MELVILLE'S melodrama The Girl Took the Wrong Turning;

was bom.

God

you merry, gentlemen, Let nothing vou dismay;

rest

Remember 6hrist our Savior, Was born on Christmas Day.

Carol

Who
or,

No Wedding

Bells for

Him

The holly and the ivy, When they are both full grown, Of all the trees that are in the wood, The holly bears the crown:
*

Tbc

classical

American rural tune

steps

around like an apple-faced farmhand ... a American as Andrew Jackson, Johnny Appteseed CAUL SANDBURG, The rod Corn on the Cob,
<iv*ric*n

*The women and children were the first to be removed from the sinking skip Birtenhemd. *Thc weasel was a hatter'* tool, and "pop" was a term meaning to pawn or "hock." The in the City Road. The Eagle was a music hall song is attributed to W. R. MANDAL*. was the Jonn Charles Frtmont [1815-1890]
for President. party's candidate

Songbag [19*7]

*In Notes and Qu*rt

(London),

1099

ANONYMOUS
The
All
ity,

goose hangs high.

Ill

hang

Common
a
little

saying
seevil-

tree,

my harp 1

on a weeping

And may

want of you

is

the world go well with tbet There Is a Tavern in tfo

and that of the commonest goddamnedest kind.2 The New Bedford Classic, as reported in ZEPHANIAH W. PEASE, The History of New Bedford [1918]. Supposed to be said by the mate of a whaler to his ill-

Town,
belong to that highly respectable tribe Which is known as the GenI

Shabby

teel

Too proud to beg, too honest to steal The Shabby Genteel; *ung fo
SoZ Smith Russell [iS^Tooi] in Poor Relation

humored captain
You-all
a race or section, Family, party, tribe, or clan;

means

The

You-aD means the whole connection Of the individual man. You-All; from The Richmond
Times-Dispatch

And
But

sons of the prophet are bravt men and bold, quite unaccustomed to fear, the bravest by far in the ranks of the Shah

Was Abdullah Bulbul Amir.


Abdullah Bulbul Arm,
iL
i

Some

talk of Alexander,

and some of and such

Of
But

Hercules; Hector, and

Now

the heroes were plenty and wdl

Lysander,

great names as these; of all the world's brave heroes, there's none that can compare

known

to

fame

With

a tow, row, row, row, row, row

for the British Grenadier.

In the troops that were led by the Ciar, And the bravest of these was a man by the name Ib. if. Of Ivan Petrofski Skevar. 3

The
From

British Grenadiers

To

We

the halls of Montezuma, the shores of Tripoli, fight our country's battles On the land as on the sea. UJS. Marines' Song,
a tavern in the town, there my true love sits him
is

Mr. Reilly, can anyone teB? Mr. Reilly that owns the hold? Well, if that's Mr. Reilly, they speak of
Is
Is

that that

so highly,

Upon me
st.

soul, quite well. Is That

Reilly,

you're

doin'

Mr.

Reilly?*

[1882],

There

chow

And And

down,

drinks his wine with laughter and

with glee,

And never, never thinks

of me. There Is a Tavern in the Town,


St. i

Sow a thought, and you reap an act; Sow an act, and you reap a habit; Sow a habit, and you reap a character, Sow a character, and you reap a destiny.

Quoted by SAMUEL SMBMS


[1812-1904], Life and I* bor [1887]

Adieu, adieu, kind friends, adieu, adieu,


adieu,
I

can no longer stay with you.


1
it cries

Now
come

is

the time for

all

good men

to

Originally, perhaps, "the goose honks high" and flies high. Wild geese fly higher when the weather is fine or promises to he fine.

to the aid of the party. Practice sentence used in tfl* 3


writing

Hence* the prospects are bright; everything is favorable. Century Dictionary * Another traditional version, repudiated by New Bedford authority, is that the skipper said: "All I want out of you is silence, and damn
little

Psalm itf, p. sab. Assumed to be the origin Riley," meaning an easy time.
1

See

of

"the

life

of that."

this expression in

Charles Weller, a court reporter, original* ... 1867 to test the Lfitk*7

11OO

ANONYMOUS
The quick brown
lazy dog.

fox jumps over the

Practice sentence used in typewriting


1 As Maine goes, so goes the nation. American political maxim

Among the fields above the sea, Among the winds at play. Out in the Fields 1
Out in
the
fields

with God!

16,

Remember

the Maine! 2

[c.

1888]

Slogan, Spanish-American

War

[1898]
Slide, Kelly, Slide.

Title of song

by

J.

W. KELLY
[1889]

Oh, Shenandoah, I long to hear you. Away, you rolling river, C* Shenandoah, I long to hear you. Away, I'm bound away
'Cross the

Fiankie and Johnny were lovers, my gwd, how they could love, Swore to be true to each other, true as the stars above; He was her man, but he done her

wrong.
Frankie and Johnny*
rf.

wide

Missouri. 2

Chantey

Swing low, sweet chariot,

Comin' for to cany me home; I looked over Jordan, an' what did I
see?

The halls of fame are open wide And they are always full; Some go in by the door called "push," And some by the door called "pull"
Quoted by
House
of

A band of angels coming after me, ConuV for to carry me home.


Negro
spiritual

Stanley Baldwin [1867-1947] in a speech in the

Commons
eggs,

God gave Noah the rainbow sign. No more water, the fire next time! s Negro spiritual
Ladling the butter from adjacent tubs, Stubbs butters Freeman, Freeman butters

The codfish lays ten thousand The homely hen lays one. The codfish never cackles

Stubbs.

To tell you what she's done. And so we scorn the codfish, While the humble hen we prize, Which only goes to show you
That
it

Variously

quoted [c. 1890], alluding to the mutual praise of

pays to advertise.
It

Pays to Advertise

two Oxford
Lizzie

historians

Borden took an ax And gave her mother forty whacks; When she saw what she had done
She gave her father forty-one! Rhyme popular after the murder
trial

One white

foot

try

him,

Two white feet

buy him,

of

Lizzie

Borden f
me,

Fall

look well about Three white feet him; 4 Four white feet go without him. Rhyme for a horse-buyer
i

River, Massachusetts [June 1893]

Published

in

the

Boston

Sunday

Globe

The

little

cares that fretted

I lost

them

yesterday,
which his friend
Life

April 50, 1899, credited to St. PcuTs Magazine but not discovered there. Erroneously attributed . B. Browning and Imogen Guiney, to *On February 15, 1898, the American battleship

of the first practical typewriter

Maine was blown up


ballad;

in

Havana harbor,
innumeraible

Christopher
(April
l

Sholes

had

constructed.

Cuba.
* Traditional

n,

1955]

there are

As Maine goes, so goes Vermont.

JAMES

versions

and

verses.

FARLEY, statement to press [November 4, 1936] that Roosevelt would carry /ter predicting 46 tUtes in the presidential election.
Sec Robert Frost, p. 9*90. See James Baldwin, p. toSia.

See Shakespeare, p. **ot>, and note. * Three white feet and a white nose, Rip off his skin and throw him to the crows. New Hampshire version of
last

two

lines

11O1

ANONYMOUS

An
away.

apple a day keeps the doctor

There

ain't

no such

animal.

Current since the iqth century

Comment of a New Jersey fttrmtf looking at a dromedary $


fl

Time

circus:
is

of the essence.

Saying

three most beautiful things in the world: a full-rigged ship, a woman with child, and a full moon. Saying

The

cartoon in Life, Novem. her 7, 1907, credited to Evmbody's Magazine

How old is Ann?


Popular saying in the
early aotfc

queer save me and thee; and sometimes I think thee is a


All the world
is

cmtury*

little

The Pyramids
were
laid;

first,

which

in

queer.

Egypt

Attributed to a Quaker, speaking to his wife

Next Babylon's made;

Garden,

for

Amybs

Everyone has at him.

least

one sermon in Saying

Then Mausolos' Tomb


Fourth, the
built;

of affection and

Man
when he
is

is is

the only animal that eats not hungry, drinks when he

Temple

of

Dian

in Ephens
in brass,

not

thirsty,

and makes love


tell

at all sea-

The The

sons.

Remark
can always
tell

Colossus of Rhodes, cast to the Sun;

You

a Harvard

man,

Sixth, Jupiter's Statue,


told,

by

Phidias done;
last,

but you can't

him much.
[1866-1936]

Pharos of Egypt comes


of

ra

are

Attributed to JAMES BARNES

Or the Palace

Cyrus,

cemented
Ancient

seen

my duty and I done it. Current since the iqth century


Popular saying

with gold. Seven Wonders of the

WorM
Use it up, wear

Keeping up with the Joneses.


Paying through the nose. Popular phrase for excessive
1

Make it do,

out; or do without.

it

New England maxam


Earned a precarious living by in one another's washing.
old,
taking

payment
2 Doesn't amount to Hannah Cook.

Saying

Saying

common

Hit's a lot worse to than to be body-hungry.

Maine and on Cape Cod be soul-hungry


in

something new, Something Something borrowed, something blue, And a lucky sixpence in her shoe.*

Wedding

rhyme

Kentucky mountain

woman

God

looks after fools, drunkard^ and


Epigram

asking for her granddaughter to be admitted to Berea College high school [c. 1900]. Quoted by CARL R. WOODWARD in The

the United States.

Oh, why don't you work


Like other men do? How the hell can I work

Wonderful World of Books,


edited by Alfred Stefferud [1953]
1

When there's no work to do?


Hallelujah, I'm a
1

Bum

[c.

1907]

Grimm

says that

Odin had a

poll tax which

was called in Sweden a nose tax; it was a penny Deutsche Rechts Alterth&mer per nose, or poll. Variously explained as a character who once lived on Campobello Island; a corruption of a phrase in Indian dialect; and a comparison with the worthlessness (for navigation) of a cook on board ship.

This question became well known when Tte New York Press, October 16, 1903, printed Ae
is twfot * problem: "Mary is 34 years old. She old as Ann was when Mary was as old as Am fe ttet is now. How old is Ann?" The answer

Ann
*

is 18.

There are variants


such as

line,

"And

for the less familiar kit a silver sixpence in each ibae."

11O2

ANONYMOUS

OM soldiers never die;


fade away! They only
l

See the happy moron,

He
I

War song, British Army


[2914-1918]

wish

doesn't give a damn. I were a moron

My God, perhaps I am!


Rhyme

She was poor but she was honest, And her parents was the same, Till she met a city feller,

And she lost her honest name. War song [1914-1918]


It's

Work and pray, live on hay, You'll get pie in the sky when you die. The Preacher and the Slave *
The
difficult

It's
It's

the same the whole world over, the poor wot gets the blame, the rich wot gets the pleasure,
it

we do immediately. The

Ain't

all

a bloomin' shame?
Ife.

impossible tales a little longer. Slogan of United States Army Service Forces
2 Kilroy was here.

chorus

Fifty

million

Frenchmen

can't

be

wrong!'

Army
ng popular ^ith American soldiers during World War I
[1917-1918]

saying,
wait.

World War

II

Hurry up and

Ib.

SNAFU
short.3

(Situation

Normal

All
Ib.

Don't

sell

America

Fouled Up).
G.I. Joe.

Popular American saying [1925-1929] hour this Lord, through Be Thou our Guide,
So by

World War II term for


infantryman
*

Thy power
foot shall slide.

No

Westminster Chimes
Climb high Climb far Your goal the sky Your aim the star.
Inscription
rial

And when he goes To Saint Peter he

to heaven
will tell:

Another Marine reporting, sir; I've served my time in hell!


Epitaph on grave of Pfc. Cameron of the Marine Corps, Gua-

on Hopkins Memo-

dalcanal [1942]

Steps, Williams College, Williamstown, Massachusetts

Mother,
Yes,

may I go out to swim? my darling daughter:

Stay with me, God. The night is dark, The night is cold: my little spark Of courage dies. The night is long; Be with me, God, and make me strong.

Hang your clothes on a hickory limb And don't go near the water.

Soldier

His Prayer*

$t.

Attributed to Joe Hill in the 1917 edition

Rhyme
*See Douglas MacArthur, p. 959*. 1 Sometimes "forty" or "thirty" is heard instead of "fifty." When Texas Guinan and her
she

of

I.W.W. Songs.
See Faulkner, p. 10403.

*This name, chosen


tenant

for the soldier in Lieu-

Army

tnwpc were refused entry into France in 1931, was quoted as saying: "It goes to show that Frenchmen can he wrong/' She fifty million prasiptly renamed her show Too Hot for Paris, m* toured the United States with it. * The phrase may have stemmed from "Never be a hear on the United States/' attributed variously to JUNIUS S. MORGAN [1815-1890] and
J.

strip for Yank, the appeared in the issue of June 17, 194*. Writing in Time [February 26, 1945], Lieutenant Breger said: "I decided on *G.I. Joe/ the 'G.I.* [Government Issue] because of its prevalence in Army talk, and the 'Joe' for the

DAVE BREGER'S comic


first

weekly,

alliterative effect."

slit

P.

MORGAN

[1837-1913].

This poem, found on a scrap of paper in a trench in Tunisia during the battle of El Agheila, was printed in Poems from the Desert, by members of the British Eighth Army [1944].
*

1103

ANONYMOUS

We sure liberated the hefi out of this


place.

problem in
the

statecraft
spirit.

human

and the wan

of

American a French

soldier in the ruins of


villagp,

by MAX MILLER, Shore [1945]

1944; quoted

The

Far

Report on the International Control of Atomic Energy'* [March 161 1946]


can do so
Relief from the terrible fear *r much to engender the
"jjj;

Spartan simplicity must be observed. Nothing will be done merely because it


contributes beauty, convenience, comfort, or prestige. From the Office of the Chief Signal Officer, UJS. Army

thing feared.

to

Education is what you have left ovti after you have forgotten everything JOB have learned.
Till Hell freezes over.

Sapn^
Saying

[May 29, 1945]


Soldiers

who wish

to be a hero

Are practically zero, But those who wish to be


Jesus, they

club is a place where twenty men pay for the pleasure of one.

civilians,

run into the millions.

One man, one

vote.

Army latrine inscription. Quoted


by NORMAN
ROSTEN, The Big

Civil rights dogtn

Road

[1945]

We shall overcome, we shall We shall overcome some day


Oh, deep
in

overcome,

the peoples of the United Nations, determined to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war, which twice in our lifetime has brought untold sorrow to mankind, and to re-

We,

We shall overcome some day.

my

heart

do beEevc

Civil rights song [2960]*

EPITAPHS
A zealous locksmith died of late,
And did arrive at heaven gate, He stood without and would not knock,
Because he meant to pick the lock. Epitaph upon a Puritan&d Locksmith; from WILLIAM CAM-

affirm
rights,

fundamental human in the dignity and worth of the


faith

in

human person, in the equal right of men and women and of nations large
and small
.

And for these ends to practice tolerance and live together in peace with one another as good neighbors
.

DEN Remains Concerning


ain [1637]

Brii-

Have
efforts to

resolved

to

combine

these

accomplish our aims. Charter of the United Nations


\June 1945], preamble
*

All the brothers were valiant, and

aB

the

sisters virtuous.

From
tomb

the inscription on

fte

men,

Since wars begin in the minds of it is in the minds of men that the defenses of peace must be constructed. Constitution of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization [1946]
are not dealing simply with a military or scientific problem but with a

of the Duchess of castle in Westminster Abbe?

N*

Prepared for the U.S. Department of Stitt by a board of consultants: Chester I. Barnard, Charles A. Th*, J. Robert Oppenheimer, Harry A. Winne, and David E. UlktfW,
chairman.
originated on slave plantation* days. It became a formal Bapfet S hymn around 1900, called "I'll Overoowe It kDay** by the adapter, C. Albert Tindtey. came a protest theme when used by "**** workers in 1946 on picket lines in
*

The song

fe

We

pre-Civil

War

*The preamble is based on a draft by JAN CHRISTIAN SMUTS [1870-1950].

ton, S.C.

1104

ANONYMOUS
A house she hath,
fashion,
'tis

nude

of such good

His right was

clear, his will

But
shall

he's just as

dead as

The tenant ne'er


tion,

pay for repara-

wrong,

was strong, he'd been 2Oth century


if

Nor will the landlord ever raise her rent Or turn her out of doors for nonpayment; From chimney tax this cell is free, To such a house who would not tenant
be?

FRENCH
nos moutons [Let us return to our sheep i.e., subject]. Maltre Patnetin (i$th century
farce]
II

Revenons

For Rebecca Bogess, Folkestone


[August 22, 1688]
It is
I

ne faut pas

tre plus royaliste

que

le roi

so soon that I am done for, wonder what I was begun for. For a child aged three

[One must not be more

royalist

than the king].


-weeks,

Saying from the time of Louis XVI

Cheltenham Churchyard
Here lie I, Martin Elginbrodde: Ha'e mercy o' my soul, Lord God, As I wad do, were I Lord God

Ca

ira,

ga tiendra [That will be, that

will last],

Revolutionary song, based on a phrase of Benjamin Franklin's

And ye were Martin Elginbrodde. Aberdeen Churchyard. From GEORGE MACDONAU>, David
Elginbrod [1862], ch. 13 Immaturus obi: sed tu
felicior

Liberal Egalit& Fraternftf! [Liberty!


Equality! Fraternity!]

French

Phrase dating from before the Revolution, officially

annos

adopted in 1793

Vive meos, Bona Republica! Vive tuos Good Redied young; but thou, [I

Tout

passe,

tout

casse,

tout lasse

public, Live out

be more fortunate,
years! Live your own.]

my

[Everything passes, everything perishes, Proverb everything palls].

Inscription furnished by Nathaniel Cross, classics professor at the University of Nashville t on the

tomb of
This
is

explorer

Menwether

bons vieux temps oil nous [Oh, the good old times when we were so unhappy!] Saying
Ah,
les

6tions

si

malheureux!

Lewis [1774-1809]

L'amour,

Tamour
it's

fait

tourner

le

Who

the grave of Mike O'Day died maintaining his right of way.

monde

[It's love,

love that

makes

the world go round].

Song

1105

Index of Authors

INDEX OF AUTHORS
ABELARD, PETER (1079-1142) AIRANTES, ANDOCHE JUNOT,
.

154

AESCHYLUS (525-456
note

.......
B.C.)

B.C.)

DUCD' (1771-1813)
note

AESOP
96

(fl.

c.

550

AGASSIZ, JEAX Louis

LAURE JUNOT,
DUCHESSE
note
D'

(1807-1873)

.... .....
RODOLPHE
B.C.)
.
,

78 76 75

620
92 1067 92 87

(1784-1838)

AGATHON
132

(c.

448-400

ABU

MOHAMMED KASIM BEN ALT

HARIRI (1054-1122) 154 Accius, Lucius (770-86 B.C.) 109 1025 ACHESON, DEAN (1893-1971) ACTON, JOHN EMERICH EDWARD
.
.

...

AGEE, JAMES (1909-1955) ACESILAUS (444-400 B.C.) AGIS (Fifth century)


ATofc,

....
)
.
.

...

CHARLES HAMILTON (1826-

1906)

........
.

DALBERG~ACTON LORD
?

AIKEN, CONRAD (1889-

726 1010

(1834-1902) ADAUS, CHARLES FRANCIS (18071886) ADAMS, FRANKLIN PIERCE . (F.P.A.) (1881-1960) note
.

749

AKHMATOVA, ANNA (ANNA ANDREYEVNA GORENKO ) ( 1 8891966) AKINS, ZOE (1886-1958)

........
.

619 962 829

...
IN. .

1014 991
89?
155

ALAIN (MILE CHARTIER) (1868-

ADAMS,

HENRY BROOKS

(1838.

ALAIN DE LILLE (ALANUS DE


SULIS) (d. 1202)
.

W) ........

1918)

ADAMS, JOHN (1735-1826) note


ADAMS, JOHN
1848)

776 462 446, 546


.

ALBEE, EDWARD FRANCIS (1857-

ALCAEUS

QUINCY (1767502
.

(c.

625-

c.

575

B.C.)

ALCOTT, AMOS BRONSON (1799590

note
ADAMS, ADAMS,

SAMUEL (1722-1803) SARAH FLOWER (1805-

400 444
615 1071

ALCOTT, LOUISA

MAY

(1832-

1848)

ALCUIN (735-804)

.....
.
.

ADAMSON, HAROLD ADDAMS, JANE (1860-1935) . ADDISON, JOSEPH (1672-1719) note


ADE, ADY, A.E.
.
.

GEORGE (1866-1944) THOMAS (fl. 1655) (GEORGE WILLIAM RUS.

857 392 183 886


357
893

ALDRICH, HENRY (1647-1710) ALDRICH, THOMAS BAILEY (1836-

742 152 382

ALDUS MANUTIUS (1450-1515) ALEXANDER THE GREAT (356323


B.C.)

SELL)

(1867-1935)

...

ALEXANDER, CECIL FRANCES


(1818-1895)

....... ......

102

684

1109

INDEX OF AUTHORS
ALFONSO

(ALFONSO THE WISE)


.

(1221-1284) ALFORD, HENRY (1810-1872) ALGAROTTI, FRANCESCO (27121764)


note

.....
.

ANTIGONUS
157 655
ANTIN,

(c.

.......
.

APELLES (fl. 325 B.C.) APPLETON, EVERARD JACK (1872APPLETON, THOMAS GOLD
(1812-1884) note

(1881-1949) ANTIPHANES (c. 388-c. 31! B c j


'.

MARY

382-301

B.C.)

. "

^
o&

...

^
102

ALI IBN-ABU-TALIB (c. 602-661) ALIGHIERI. See DANTE ALLEN, ELIZABETH AKERS (1832-

594 148

910

ALLEN, ETHAN (1738-1789) ALLEN, FRED (1894-1956) ALLEN, WILLIAM (1803-1879) ALLINGHAM, WILLIAM (1828.

7 4 1029

AQUINAS, SAINT

....... THOMAS
. "

(1227-

600
729 107
811

ARATUS (c. 315-240 B.C.) ARBUTHNOT, JOHN (1667-1735)


note
.

1889) note

ALTGELD, JOHN PETER (1847*9 02 )

ARCHILOCHUS (c. 680 B.C.) ARCHIMEDES (c. 287-212 B.C.) ARCHPOET (Twelfth century) ARIOSTO, LUDOVICO (1474-1535)
\
.

10:

AMBROSE, SAINT

(c.

340-397)
.

144

ARISTOPHANES
note

(c.

450-385

B.C.)

AMENEMOPE (Tenth century B.C.)


AMES, FISHER (1758-1808) AMIEL, HENRI FR^D^RIC (1821.

90

4
491

1881)

706
-

AMMIANUS MARCELLINUS
(c.

B.C.) ~y n te .81, 130,155 ARKELL, REGINALD (1882-1959) 9^5 ARKWRIGHT, PELEG (DAVID
.
.
.

ARISTOTLE (384-322

330-W)
(n. c.

ANACHARSIS

600

M4
B.C.)
.

LAW PROUDFIT)
1860)

(1842-1897)

797
1046

69

ANACREON (c. 570-0. 480 B.C.) ANAXAGORAS (c. 500-428 B.C.) ANCIENT EGYPT ANDERSON, MAXWELL (18881959)

. .

ARMSTRONG, Louis (1900-1971) ARNDT, ERNST MORITZ (1769ARNO, PETER (1904-1068) ARNOLD, SIR EDWIN (1832-

m
105;
742

999

ANDERSON, SHERWOOD (1876-

W)

ANGELL, SIR
19*7)

NORMAN

939
(1874-

ARNOLD, GEORGE (1834-1865) ARNOLD, MATTHEW (1822-1


note ARRIANUS, FLAVIUS
(c.

750

917
364 149, 1083 1087 149 1104 1105 1091
.

ANGELUS SILESIUS (JOHANN SCHEFFLER) (1624-1677)

....... 100-170) note .......


. .

is
ioS

ANONYMOUS
Ballads Early Miscellaneous
.

Epitaphs

French
Junius Latin

New England Primer Nursery Rhymes 1250-1700 i8th century

.... ....

1009 1002
1083 1089 1098 *54

....... (1552-1630) ...... AUBREY, JOHN (1626-1697) note ..... AUDEN, WYSTAN HUGH (1907note .......
note

GEORGE (GEORGE H. POWELL) (1880-1951) ASBURY, HERBERT (1891-1963)


ASAF,

958

678

AUBIGN, THEODORE AGRIPPA


.

D'

198

361

302,310
) 1059

585

AUE. See HARTMANN VON AUE


AUGUSTINE, SAINT (354-430)
note
(63 B.C.-

1800ANSELM, SAINT (c. 1033-1109) ANSPACHER, Louis KAUFMAN


(1878-1947)

943

...... AUGUSTUS, CAESAR .......


A.D. 14)

146

96, 144

U4

111O

INDEX OF AUTHORS
R, JOSEPH (1897-1965) 1037 533 AUSTEN, JANE (1775-1817) 754 AUSTIN, ALFRED (1835-1913). note 196
.
.

BARING, MAURICE

BARING-GOULD,

(i 874-1945) SABINE /iS^.

917
750 1068

AvwROfis (1126-1198)

....

155

AVONMORE, BARRY YELVERTON, LORD (1736-1805)


note

BARKER, GEORGE ^1913- ) BARLOW, JOEL (1754-1813) BARNARD. LADY ANNE (1750.

483

'825;

........
)

479
733

547

ATFOUN,

WILLIAM EDMOND-

STOTTNE (1813-1865)

...

674

BARNARD, CHARLOTTE ALINGTON ("CLARIBEL" (1830-1869) BARNFIELD, RICHARD (1574.

1627)

BACON,

LADY ANN (1528-1610)


.

BARNUM', PHINEAS TAYLOR (18101891)

note 170 206 BACON, FRANCIS (1561-1626) note. .96,104,113,125,


.
.

........ ........
MATTHEW

309

655

BARRIE, JAMES
note
c.

(1860-

BADEN, GROSS HERZOG FRIED. RICH VON (1826-1907) BACEHOT, WALTER (1826-1877) BAILEY, PHILIP JAMES (1816.

13^,242,344
726 726 679
651

.......
.......
.
.

839

BARRINGTON, GEORGE (17551840} note

1902) note

BAIRNSFATHER,
1959) BAKER, KARLE

BRUCE (1887-

BARRYMORE, ETHEL (1879-1959) BARTAS. See DU BARTAS EARTH, KARL (1886-1968) BARTH&LEMY, AUGUSTE \!ARSEILLE (1796-1867) note
(1870^-1965)

398 949

991

(1878- ) .1081 BALDWIN, JAMES (1924- ) BALDWIN, STANLEY (1867-1947) 889


.

WILSON

993 943

BARUCH, BERNARD MANNES

....... ......
.
.

548

900
380 319
8 49

BALFOUR, ARTHUR JAMES (1848-

BASHO, MATSUO (1644-1694)


BASSE,

193)
Bdlads (Anonymous)

HONOR BANCROFT, GEORGE


BALZAC,

1087 DE (1799-1850) 590


(1800-1891)
59 1

....

8l 3

WILLIAM

(died

c.

1653)

BATES, KATHERINE
i9 2 9) BATH, SIR

(1859........
.

LEE

WILLIAM PULTENEY,
399

note
BANGS,

EARL OF (1684-1764) . BAUDELAIRE, CHARLES (18211867) note


1919)

JOHN

KENDRICX (1862'

*9 22 )

862

BANVILLE,
1891)

THEODORE DE (1823-

........ ....... BAUM, LYMAN FRANK (1856........


BAXTER, RICHARD (1615-1691) BAYLE, PIERRE (1647-1706)
.
.

706

79
832

BARBAULD,
1825)

ANNA

LETITIA (1743.

357 609
587
611

BARBOUR, JOHN (c. 1316-1395) BARCA THE CARTHAGINIAN

47 163
106

note
1839)
RAELI,

BAYLY, THOMAS HAYNES (1797BEACONSFIELD,


note

(MAHARBAL)

(ft.

210
(c.

....... ........
2

B.C.)

BARCLAY, ALEXANDER note

1475123,

BARERE DE VIEUZAC, BERTRAND

...... (1755-1841) ...... note .......

484 436
554

BARHAM, RICHARD HARRIS (1788-

...... 4 4>475 BEARD, CHARLES AUSTIN (1874........ RITTER (1876MARY BEARD, ........ i95 BEAUMARCHAIS, PIERRE DE (1732........ 460
1948)
8)

BENJAMIN DISEARL OF (1804-1881)

1799)

1111

INDEX OF AUTHORS
BEAUMONT, FRANCIS (1584-1616) BEAUMONT AND FLETCHER
.

316 316

BENTLEY,

EDMUND CLERIHEW
^

(1875-1956)

note

114, 125, 179, 194, 203, 223, 241, 620


-

BENTLEY, RICHARD (1662-1742) BENTON, THOMAS HART (1782'

BECKER, CARL LOTUS (1873/ BECKETT, SAMUEL (1906note

1858)
-

1945)

9*3
309

BERGERAC. See CYRANO DE

....... BEDDOES, THOMAS LOVELL (1803-1849) ......


)

BERGERAC
BERGSON, HENRI (1859-1941) BERKELEY, BISHOP GEORGE
(1685-1753) BERLIN, IRVING (1888note
)
.

gig

600
152 132

BEDE (VENERABLE BEDE)


(c.

....... ELLIOTT (1823BERNARD BEE, ........ BEECHER, HENRY WARD ........ MAX (1872BEERBOHM, ........ BEERS, ETHEL LYNN (1827-1879) note ....... BEETHOVEN, LUDWIG VAN (1770........ BEETON, ISABELLA MARY (1836........ BELL, ALEXANDER GRAHAM (1847-1922) ......
note
1861)

672-735)

.....

...
.

^
990

BERNARD, SAINT (1091-1153)

gu
.

154

719

(1813-

1887)

674
9 10

BERNARD, CLAUDE (1813-1878) BERNARD, TRISTAN (1866-1947) BERTAUT, JEAN (1552-1611)


note

6^4 880

SIR

1956)

BESTON, HENRY (1888- ) BETHELL, RICHARD, LORD WEST-

...

7g

999
597

728
506

1827)

BURY (1800-1873) BETHMANN-HOLLWEG, THEOBALD VON (1856-1921) BETJEMAN, JOHN (1906- )


note

8ja

1059
783

1865)

765
811

BELLAMY, EDWARD

(1850-1898) BELLAMY, FRANCIS (1856-1931) BELLAY, JOACHIM DU (15221560) BELLOC, HILAIRE (1870-1953)

819 832
187 901
1011

........
.

BEVERIDGE, ALBERT JEREMIAH (1862-1927) BEVERIDGE, SIR WILLIAM HENRY (1879-1963) BEVIN, ERNEST (1884-1951) BEYERLINCK, LAURENTIO
. .
. .

861

949

979
143

note

BENCHLEY, ROBERT CHARLES


(1889-1945)

......
. .

BEYLE, HENRI (STENDHAL)


(1783-1842)

BENEDICT, SAINT (480-543)

148

Bhagavad Gita
BIAS (Sixth century note Bible
B.C.)

BENT, STEPHEN VINCENT


(1898-1943)

...... BENT, WILLIAM ROSE (1886395) ........ BENJAMIN, JUDAH (1811-1884) note .......
P.

...

550 106

68

1041

68, 81
5

99 1
611

Old Testament

Amos
I Chronicles

35

14
JJ 10

BENNARD, GEORGE (1873- ) BENNETT, ENOCH ARNOLD (1867.


.

913

Daniel

Deuteronomy
note
Ecclesiastes

290

BENNETT, HENRY HOLCOMB

(1863-1924) BENSERADE, ISAAC DE (1612-1691)

......
......
.
. .

27
14

866
351

Esther

Exodus
note Ezekiel Genesis

o
409
J4
5

BENSON, ARTHUR CHRISTOPHER


(1862-1925)

BENSON, STELLA (1892-1933)


note

862 1021

BENTHAM, JEREMY (1748-1832)

.......

Habakkuk
416
note

f
283

1112

INDEX OF AUTHORS
Bible

(continued]

Bible (continued)

Howa
Isaiah

35

Matthew
*

39

30
52 33 39
I Peter

note
Jeremiah note

ob
oel

........

note
II Peter

ondh
oshua
Judges
I

14 35 35 10
ii

Philemon.
PhSippians
Revelation note

10,^5,232, 282, 653, 763 56 504 57 55 54 57

690
50 54
55

Kings note

13

Rommt*
I
I

458
13

Thessalomans

King* note Lamentations


Leviticus

II

Timothy
note

Mdachi
\ticah

558 34 9 56
35 35

108

II

Timothy

Titus

Apocrypha
Jesus

.*.....
(Wisdom of the Son of Sirach)

55 55

30
37

Ecclestasticus

Nahum
Nehemiah Numbers
note Proverbs note Psalms note

14 9 547
23
1

note I Esdras II Esdras


History of Susanna

246

...

5>

43
16
58
ii
1 1

Judith

Ruth I Samuel
note
II

Maccabees Song of the Three Holy


II

36 36 39 36 39
39

.......
....

Children Tobit

625
12

Wisdom

Samuel
note

of

Solomon

...
.

36

36
517

458
29 36 39

Song of Solomon
Zechariah

New Testament
Acts

note
Colossians
I Corinthians
II

49 687
54
51

BICHAT, MARIE FRANCOIS XAVIER (1771-1802) . . BlCKERSTAFFE, ISAAC fc. 1735c. 1812) BIEL, GABRIEL fc. 1425-1495)
note.

464
.

......

171

BIERCE, AMBROSE (1842-0. 1914) BILLINGS, JOSH (HENRY WHEELER

156 791

Corinthians

53

Ephesians

54
53 55

Gdatians Hebrews
James John . note
I

SHAW) (1818-1885) BINYON, LAURENCE (1869-1943) BION ( fl. 280 B.C.) BIRRELL, AUGUSTINE (1850*933) BISHOP, ELIZABETH (1911BISHOP, MORRIS (1893- ) BISHOP, THOMAS BRIGHAM
)
.
.

...

685 896
104
8l 9 1067 1025

56

47
322
. .

John
.

Jude

57 57
59=

Luke

note

Mark

45 354 45
59

(1835-1905) BISMARCK, OTTO VON (18151898)

755

677
991

BLACK,

HUGO LAFAYETTE

not e

(1886-1971)

INDEX OF AUTHORS
BLACKER, VALENTINE (1778r>

BOND, CARRIE JACOBS (1862539

BLACKSTONE, SIR WILLIAM (1723-1780) BLAIR, ERIC (GEORGE ORWELL)


BLAIR,

1053 (1903-1950) ROBERT (1099-1740) note. 330,371,385


. .
.

..... .....

BONE, JAMES (1872-1962)

444

Booft of

Common

g^
CQ

Prayer

Boofe of

BLAKE, CHARLES DUPEE (1846-

BOOTH, BARTON (1681-175?)


note

Common Prayer, Engish

'

61
..,

BLAKE, JAMES W. (1862-1935) BLAKE, WILLIAM (1757-1827) BLANC, Loins (1811-1882)

1903)

........
.
.

810 862

BOOTH, JOHN WILKES (1838BORNE, LUDWIG (1786-1837) BORROW, GEORGE (1803-1881)


BOSQUET, PIERRE (1810-1861) BOSSIDY, JOHN COLLINS (1860*9 28 ) BOSSUET, JACQUES BNIGNE (1627-1704)
note
.

486

r^
foi
651;

note 687 828 BLAND, JAMES A. (1854-1911) BLANDING, DON (1894-1957) 1030 BLASCO-!BA^EZ, VICENTE (18671928) 889 BLISS, DANIEL (1740-1806) 460 BLISS, PHILIP PAUL (1838-1876) 777 BLIXEN, KAREN (!SAK DINESEN) 984 (1885-1962) BLOK, ALEXANDER (1880-1921) 958 886 BLOSSOM, HENRY (1866-1919) BLOUNT, SIR THOMAS POPE
.
.

.......

8158

........
. .

?6 5

JQ*
.

BOSWELL, JAMES (1740-1795)


note.
1940) BOXTLTON,
.

468

.....
.

BOTTOMLEY, GORDON (1874-

86,87,97,426,427
QJJ

HAROLD EDWIN

(1649-1697)

.....
....
.
.
.
.

(1859-1935)

849 826

383

BOURDILLON, FRANCIS WILLIAM


(1852-1921)

BLUCHER, GEBHARD LEBERECHT

VON (1742-1819) BLUM, Lix>N (1872-1950)

BLUNDEN, EDMUND (1896- ) BLUNT, WILFRID SCAWEN (18401922) BOETHIUS, ANICIUS MANLIUS

469 910 1036


781

BOWEN, EDWARD ERNEST

(1836-

BOWLES, WILLIAM LISLE (1762499

.......
(c.
. .

BOWRING, JOHN (1792-1872) BRADFORD, GAMALIEL (18631932)

567

SEVERINUS
note

470-525) ......
.
.

BOGAN, LOUISE (1897- ) BOGART, HUMPHREY (1900*9S7)

148 85,122 1038


.

866
.

BRADFORD, JOHN (1510-1555) BRADFORD, WILLIAM (15901657)

186

........
.

318
.
.

10 4 6

BOGART, JOHN B. (1845-1921) BOHN, HENRY GEORGE (1706note

808

BRADLEY, OMAR (1893- ) BRADSTREET, ANNE (c. 46121672)

1025

351
.

BRADY, NICHOLAS (1659-1726)

383

BOHR, NIELS (1885-1962) BOILEAU-DESPR!AUX, NICOLAS


.

215 984

note

327

BRAGG, EDWARD STUYVESANT (1827-1912)

(1636-1711)

BOKER, GEORGE HENRY (1823-

HARRY (fl. 1896) BRALEY, BERTON (1882-1966) BRANCH, ANNA HEMPSTEAD


BRAISTED,
.

728 868

96;

7*9
BOLINGBROKE, HENRY ST. JOHN, VISCOUNT (1678-1751) BoLfVAR, SlM6N (1783-1830)
.
.
.

(1874-1937) BRANDEIS, Louis DEMBITZ

9>7

397 548

(1856-194!) note

8ji
5?
8

1114

INDEX OF AUTHORS
WILLIAM COWPER

^1855-1898) SEBASTIAN (1457-1521) GEORGES (1882-1963) BR&NNAN, GERALD (fl. 1899) BRERETON, JANE (1685-1740) BRETON, NICHOLAS (c. 1545.

.....
.

BROWNE, MATTHEW (WILLIAM


831 17

BRICHTY RAXDS) (18231882)

719

96 830 400

BROWNE, SIR THOMAS (16051682) 329 note 123, 132, 138, 176, 195 209, 315, 325, 374, 805

1626)

BROWNE, WILLIAM (1591-1643)


202 800
note

note
BRIDGES,

319 210

BRIDGMAN, PERCY (1882-1961)


BRIGGS,

ROBERT (1844-1930) WILLIAMS

BROWNING, ELIZABETH BARRETT


(1806-1861)

.....
.

617
f 181

966

note

LE BARON RUSSELL
1073

BROWNING, ROBERT
note

2-1 889)

137 66 1

(1855-1934) note
BRIGHT,

88, 181, 182, 237, 240,

JOHN (1811-1889)
note

658 844

278,388,402, ^76,631 BRUEGEL, PIETER (c. 1525-1569) 188


BRITNER, JEROME
)

SEYMOUR
1071
381

BRILLAT-SAVARIN,
BRINE,

ANTHELME
(fl.

MARY Dow

(19*5BRUYERE, JEAN DE LA (16451696)

1878)

BROGAN, DENIS WILLIAM (1900- ) BROMLEY, ISAAC HILL (1833-

.......

BRYAN, WILLIAM JENNINGS


1046
748
(1860-1925)
note

858 858
57,
.

BRYANT, WILLIAM CULLEN


(1794-1878)

BRONTE,

CHARLOTTE (1816-

1855) BRONTE, EMILY (1818-1848) BROOKE, FULKE GREVILLE, LORD


.

........

679 68;
202
170

(1554-1628) note
BROOKE,

HENRY

....... 1703-1783) note .......


(c.
. .

.....

BROOKE, RUPERT (1887-1915) BROOKS, PHILLIPS (1835-1893) BROOKS, THOMAS (1608-1680) note

433 993 755


722 991

BRYCE JAMES (1838-1922) 77! BUCHAN, JOHN, LORD TWEEDSMUIR (1875-1940) 934 BUCHANAN, ROBERT (1841-1901) 780 BUCHNER, GEORG (1813-1837) 675 1021 BUCK, PEARL S. (1892- ) BUCKINGHAM AND NORMANBY, JOHN SHEFFIELD, DUKE OF
T
.
.

.
.

(1648-1721)
note

382 350
DE,

.......
.....
.

BUEIL,

HONORAT

MARQUIS
.

BROOKS, VAN WYCK (1886-1963) BROUGHAM, HENRY PETER, LORD BROUGHAM AND VAUX

(1778-1868) BROUN, HEYWOOD (1888-1939) note

......

BROWN, ALICE (1857-1948) BROWN, JOHN (1800-1859) BROWN, JOHN MASON (1900- ) BROWN, THOMAS (TOM) (1663. . .

540 999 819 842 594 1047


3

DE RACAN (1589-1650) BUFFON, GEORGES Louis LECLERC DE (1707-1788) . BULLER, ARTHUR HENRY REGINALD (1874-1944) BULOW, BERNHARD VON (1849.

318

423

...

917
8l 5

i9 2 9)

BULWER-LYTTON, EDWARD GEORGE EARLE LYTTON, BARON LYTTON (1803-1873)


note

601

624

86

BROWN, THOMAS EDWARD (1830^1897) BROWNE, CHARLES FARRAR (AR-

.....

734
750

BULWER-LYTTON, EDWARD ROBERT, EARL OF LYTTON (OWEN MEREDITH) (18311891) note

74i

TEMUS WARD) (1834-1867)

400

1115

INDEX OF AUTHORS
BUNN, ALFRED (1796-1860) BUNNER, HENRY CUYLER (1855.

586
831

BUTLER, WILLIAM (1535-1628)

1896)

BUTLER, WILLIAM ALLEN (1825i9 02 )

326,803

BUNYAN, JOHN (1628-1688)


note

365 165, 224 BURCHARD, SAMUEL DICKINSON 668 (1812-1891) BURDETTE, ROBERT JONES (1844801
. .

........
.

BUTTERFIELD, HERBERT (1900- ) BYRD, WILLIAM (c. 1540-1623)


note

7*4
1047

.......
...

1?3
A

BYROM, JOHN (1692-1763)

14

1914)

BURGER, GOTTFRIED AUGUST (1747-1794)


BURGESS,

BYRON, GEORGE NOEL GORDON,

GELETT (1866-1951)
note

476 886
910

LORD (1788-1824)
note

554

102,122,165,310,314, 358,370,442,521,920

BURGON, JOHN WILLIAM (18131860)

BURKE,

EDMUND
note

675 451 (1729-1797) 425, 996


.

CABELL, JAMES BRANCH (18791958)

CAECILIUS STATTOS (220168 B.C.)

........ M .......
670)

BURNEY, FANNY (1752-1840)


note

CAEDMON
670
810
A.D.

(fl.

.....

107

CAESAR, AUGUSTUS (63 B.C.14)

i^
124
i

BURNHAM, DANIEL HUDSON


(1846-1912) BURNS, JOHN (1858-1943) 846 . BURNS, ROBERT (1759-1796) 492 note 182, 258, 312, 316, 464 BURR, AMELIA. JOSEPHINE
. .

....... ....... CAESAR, JULIUS (100-44 B c note .......


CAESAR, GAIUS (CALIGULA)
(12-41)
*

?1

-)

"2
367

CALDER6N DE LA BARCA, PEDRO


(l6oO-l68l)

(1878-

943
.

.....
)

328
1052

BURROUGHS, BISHOP EDWARD ARTHUR (1882-1934) BURROUGHS, JOHN (1837-1921) BURTON, HENRY (1840-1930) BURTON, SIR RICHARD FRANCIS
(1821-1890) note

CALDWELL, ERSKINE (1903.

966 770 782


707 407 310

CALHOITN, ARTHUR WALLACE . ('885- ) CAI.HOUN, JOHN CALDWELL (1782-1850) CALIGULA ( GAIUS CAESAR)

.....

...
.

984

545

131

BURTON, ROBERT (1577-1640)

CALLIMACHUS (c. 305-240 B.C.) CALVERLEY, CHARLES STUART


(1831-1884) note CAMBRONNE, PIERRE JACQUES ETIENNE, COUNT (17701842)

104

note 108, 119, 132, 133, 136, 137, 169, 179, 181, 182, 183, 184, 185, 205, 215

.......

.....

740

733

BUSCH, (1832-1908) BUSH, VANNEVAR (1890- ) BUSSY-RABUTIN, ROGER DE (1618-1693)


.

WlLHELM

742 1015

........
.

o8

....

CAMDEN, WILLIAM
CAMPBELL, JOSEPH (1881-1944 CAMPBELL, ~~ JRoY (1901-1957) r-i& CAMPBELL, THOMAS (1777-1844) / /
'

2P
963
1049

note

BUTLER, ELLIS PARKER (1869896

note

BUTLER, NICHOLAS MURRAY (1862-1947) BUTLER, SAMUEL (1612-1680)


note
.

CAMPBELL, TIMOTHY
862
.

J.

(1840300 1068

1904)

351

75, 103, 127, 146, 171, 200, 218, 422


.

CAMPION, THOMAS (1567-1620) CAMUS, ALBERT (1913-1960) CANBY, HENRY SEIDEL (187819* 1 )

BUTLER, SAMUEL (1835-1902)

755

944

1116

INDEX OF AUTHORS
506 CANNING, GEORGE (1770-1827) .1015 CAPEK, KAREL (1890-1938) 1081 CAPOTE, TRUMAN (1924- ) CARDOZO, BENJAMIN NATHAN 902 (1870-1938)
.

CERVANTES (continued)
127, 136, 137, 140, 146,

.....
1595.

156,165, 167, 169, 170, 171, 181, 267, 314, 388

CAREW, THOMAS
c.

1639)

.......
(c.

CEZANNE, PAI'L fl3j9-l Q06) CHAFEE, ZFCHARIAH, JR. (1885.

780 984
911

326

CAREY, HENRY (c. 1687-1743) CARLETON, WILLIAM McKEN-

19J7)

........
.....

400
808

CHALMERS, PATRICK REGINALD

DREE (1845-1912)
note

123 (1795-1881) 575 note 141,157,182, 576,656 CAIMAN, WILLIAM BLISS (1861-

.......

....
.

d 872-1 942)

CHAMBERLAIN, JOSEPH (1836-

CARLYLE,

THOMAS

CHAMBERLAIN, NEVILLE (18691940)

........
. .

896

859 1929) CARNEGIE, ANDREW (1835-1919) 757 1000 CARNEGIE, DALE (1888-1955) A. FLETCHER CARNEY, JULIA 719 (1823-1908) CARPENTER, JOSEPH EDWARDS
.

........

CHAMFORT, S^BASTIEN ROCH


NICOLAS (1741-1794) CHAMISSO, ADELBERT VON (17811838)

469
545

(1813-1885) CAFROLL, LEWIS (CHARLES LurWIDGE DODGSON) (18321898)

..... .....

CHANDLER, RAYMOND (18881959)


.

........ ........
.
.

1000
141

675

CARRUTH,

W.

note

........ H. (1859-1924) .......

CHANG HENC (78-1 39) CHANG YEN-YUAN (fl. c. 850) CHANNING, WILLIAM ELLERY
(1780-1842)

153
543

743

CHANNING, WILLIAM ELLERY

667 792

CARRYL, CHARLES EDWARD

(1842-1920) CARRYL, GUY WETMORE (1873-

.....
f

..... ..... (1818-1001) CHANNINC, WILLIAM HENRY ..... (1810-1884)


1634) note

685

1904) 914 CARSON, RACHEL LOUISE (19071061 1964) CARTWRIGHT, WILLIAM (1611.
.

........ ......
.

CHAPMAN, ARTHUR (1873-1935) CHAPMAN, GEORGE (c. 1559-

655 914
205

........
....
.

176, 178, 182,


183, 184, 212

GARY, ALICE (1820-1871) CARY, PHOEBE (1824-1871) CASEMENT, SIR ROGER (1864.
.

704 722
868
148

1916) CASSIODORUS,

........ MAGNUS AURELIUS (0.487-583) ...... GATHER, WILLA SIBERT (1876........


*947) CATO, MARCUS PORCIUS, THE

CHAPMAN, JOHN JAY (1862-1933) CHARLES II (1030-1685) CHARLES V (1500-1558) CHARLES V (OF FRANCE) (1337.
.
. .

863 366 186


163 178 197 1 70

1380)

........
.
. . . .

939
107 137

CHARLES CHARLES CHARLES CHARLES

VIII (1470-1498) IX (1550-1574) D'ORL^ANS (i 394-1 465)

OF PRUSSIA, PRINCE
note
.

ELDER (234-149
note

.......
.

446
1069

CATULLUS, GAIUS VALERIUS (87c. 54 B.C.) CENTLIVRE, SUSANNAH (c. 1667J 2 7 3) CERVANTES, MIGUEL DE (15471616) note

....... ...... ........ ........

B.C.)

CHARLES, HUGHIE (1907- ) CHARRON, PIERRE (1541-1603)


note

114
39*

.......
.

Charter of the United Nations

408 1104
893

CHARTIER,

MILE (ALAIN)

193

97, 109, 116, 125, 126,

(1868-1951) CHASE, SALMON PORTLAND (1808-1873)

..... .....

627

1117

INDEX OF AUTHORS
CHATEAUBRIAND, FRANCOIS REN DE (1768-1848)

.... CHATHAM, WILLIAM PITT, EARL OF (1708-1778) ....


CHATTERTON, THOMAS (1752CHAUCER, GEOFFREY
1400) note

503

CICERO, MARCUS TULLIUS (10643 B.C.)


note

....... ...

no

425
4 82

Cfd,

Poem

64, 104, 108,422


.

of the (Twelfth

century)

CLAPIERS,

1343........
(c.

Luc DE, MARQUIS DE VAUVENARGUES (1715-1747)


.
.

4^
^.

163

55, 64, 88, 93, 105, 128,

136,155,182,258 CHEKHOV, ANTON PAVLOVICH


858 (1860-1904) CH'EN TU-HSIU (1879-1942) .957 CHENEY, JOHN VANCE (1848813 1922) CHERRY, ANDREW (1762-1812) 499 CHESTERFIELD, PHILIP DORMER
.

CLARE, JOHN (1793-1864) CLARENDON, EDWARD HYDE, EARL OF (1609-1674)


note

.....

466

........
.

CLARKE, JOSEPH IGNATIUS CONSTANTINE (1846-1925) CLARKE, MCDONALD (17981842) note

8lO

01
894

STANHOPE, EARL OF (1694^773) note

........ 4*5 ...... 449>7 9


1

CLAUDEL, PAUL (1868-1955) CLAUSEWITZ, KARL VON (1780CLAY, HENRY (1777-1852)


note
.
.

CHESTERTON, GILBERT KEITH


(1874-1936) CHIANG KAI-SHEK (1887)

.....
-

....... $
^^o
107
.

CHIKAMATSU MONZAEMON

(1653-1725) CHILD, LYDIA MARIA (18021880) Chilon (Sixth century B.C.). See SEVEN SAGES
.
.

...
. .
.

918 995
384
598

CLEANTHES (c. 330-232 B.C.) CLEGHORN, SARAH NORCLIFFE


(1876-1959)

.....

CLEMENCEAU, GEORGES (1841CLEMENS, SAMUEL LANGHORNE (MARK TWAIN) (1835-1910)


note

94
786

........
.
.

.......
B.C.).

758 8)2

CHING HAO (/?. 925) 153 CHOATE, RUFUS (1799-18^9) 591 1018 CHRISTIE, AGATHA (1891- ) CHRISTY, DAVID (1802-0. 1868) 598 CHRYSOSTOM, SAINT JOHN (327407)

CLEOBULUS (Sixth century See SEVEN SAGES CLERK, JOHN (d. 1541)
note

.......
.....
.

587

........
B.C.)

CLEVELAND, GROVER
(1837-1908)

44

771

CHUANG Tzu (369-286


(1839-1906)

101

CHURCH, FRANCIS PHARCELLUS


CHURCHILL, CHARLES (1731-

.....
. .

CLEVELAND, HARLAN (1918- ) CLIFFORD, WILLIAM KINGDON

1077

780

45 6 i? 64) CHURCHILL, LORD RANDOLPH SPENCER (1849-1895) 815 CHURCHILL, SIR WINSTON SPENCER (1874-1965) .919,974 \ 785, 921 note CHURCHYARD, THOMAS (c. 1520-

........
.....

(1845-1879) CLIVE, ROBERT, LORD (1725-

.....

809

445

CLOUGH, ARTHUR HUGH (18191861) note

299 CIANO, COUNT GALEAZZO (19031053 1944) GIBBER, COLLEY (1671-1757) . 392 note 331, 392

1604) note

....
......

.......

CLOVIS (465-511) COBB, IRVIN S. (1876-1944) COCKBURN, ALISON (1713-1794) COCTEAU, JEAN (1891-1963)
.
. .

147

940

436
1018

COHAN, GEORGE MICHAEL (18781942)

COKE, SIR EDWARD (1552-1634) COLBY, FRANK MOORE (1865-

.us

INDEX OF AUTHORS
COIERIDGE, DAVID f i "96-1 849) note
(ijqS-iStf)*

HARTLEY

.......
note

.....
....

COPELAND, CHARLES TOWNSEND


586 5 10
(1860-1952) COPERNICUS, NICHOLAS (1473-

.....

859

CWERIDCE, HENRY NELSON

508

COPPARD, ALFRED EDGAR (18781957*

COUUUDCE, SAMUEL TAYLOR


5*3 _ (1773-1834) note 134,228, 516,534, 538 COLETTE (SIDONIE GABRIELLE
.

........
(i

944

CORBET, BISHOP RICHARD

582-

GOUDEKET) (1873-1954) COLLINS, JOHN CHURTON (1848.

914
813

1908) COILINS, MORTIMER (1827-

1876) COLLINS, WILLIAM (1721-1759)


f1

........ ........
....... ........
.

CORBUSIER, LE (CHARLES CDOUARD JEANNERET) (188^-1965) CORNEILLE, PIERRE (1606-1684)


note
1

995
331

36, 563

7^8 443 499 140


545

CORNFORD, FRANCES (i 886-1960) CORNUEL, MADAME (1614-1694)


note

qqi

COLMAN, GEORGE, THE YOUNGER


762-1 836)
note

.....

99

CORNWALL, BARRY (BRYAN

WALLER PROCTER) (17871874)

COLTON, CHARLES CALEB (17801832)

554

CORY, WILLIAM JOHNSON (18231892)

COLUM, PADRAIC (1881-1972) COLUMBUS, CHRISTOPHER (14511506)

963
17^

719
(c.

........
)
.

CORYAT, THOMAS
note

1577-1617)
532

COMTE, AUGUSTE (1798-1857) CONANT, JAMES BRYANT (1893CONFUCIUS (551-479 B.C.) CONCREVE, WILLIAM (1670note ......

589

COTTON, NATHANIEL (1705421 8 (1857-1926) COUSIN, VICTOR (1792-1867) 507 COWARD, NOEL (1899- ) 1043 COWLEY, ABRAHAM (1618-1667) 357
1788)

1026
71

Cou, EMILE

028, 650

CONKLING,

GRACE HAZARD
.

note
.

122,131;

. (1878-1958) ROSCOE CONKLING, (1829-1888) CONNELLY, MARCUS COOK

944 733
1015

COWPER, WILLIAM (1731-1800)


Cox, KENYON (1856-1919) CRABBE, GEORGE (1754-1832)
,
.

456
833

note. 1^6,369,387,407,456
.

(1890-

.......
.
.

CONNOLLY, CYRIL (1903- ) CONQUEST, ROBERT (1917- ). CONRAD, JOSEPH (1857-1924)

.1053 .1071
843
517

note

^83 312,050
727
.

CONSTABLE, HENRY (1562-1613) note

.......
'

CONSTANTINE

288-337) Constitution of the United Sides COOK, ALBERT JAY (ft. 1917) COOK, ELIZA (1818-1889) COOKE, EDMUND VANCE (1866(c.
.

44 474 962 686


88 7 911

CRAIK, DINAH MARIA MULOCK (1826-1887) CRANE, HART (1899-1932) , CRANE, NATHALIA (1913- ) CRANE, STEPHEN (1871-1900) CRANFIELD, LIONEL, EARL OF
.

1069 904

MIDDLESEX (1575-1645)
note

352

*93 2 ) COOLIDGE, CALVIN (1872-1933) COOPER, ANTHONY ASHLEY, LORD


.

........
......

CRAPSEY, ADELAIDE (1878-1914) CRASHAW, RICHARD (c. 16131649) note

944
354 200
108

SHAFTESBURY (1671-1713) note 416,483 COOPER, GEORGE (1838-1927) 778 COOPER, JAMES FENIMORE
.

CRASSUS,
(ft,

MARCUS LICINIUS
B.C.)

70

CRAWFORD, FRANCIS MARION


(1854-1909) note

(1789-1851)

.....

564

1119

INDEX OF AUTHORS
CRAWFORD, JULIA (1800-2885) GEORGE WASHINGTON
(1864-1943)
note
.

594

D'ARCY,

HUGH ANTOINE

(1843-

CRILE,

.......
.......
.

DARROW, CLARENCE SEWARD


924
(1857-1938)
.
.

CRITTENDEN, JOHN JORDAN (1787-1863)


note

DARROW, KARL KEICHNER


456
553 3 27

DARWIN, CHARLES ROBERT


(1809-1882) fo DARWIN, ERASMUS (1731-1802) A& DARWIN, SIR FRANCIS (1848'9*5) 8u DAUGHERTY, HARRY MICAJAH (1860-1941)
g.

CROCKETT, DAVID (1786-1836) CROMWELL, OLIVER (i 599-1 658) CROSS, MARIAN EVANS (GEORGE
ELIOT) (1819-1880)

...
)
.

CROWELL, GRACE NOLL (1877CULBERTSON, ELY (1891-1955) CULLEN, COUNTEE (1903-1946) CUMBERLAND, BISHOP RICHARD
(1631-1718)

689 942 lOig 1OJ3


367
1030
1053

DAVENANT, SIR WILLIAM


(1606-1668) DAVIDSON, JOHN (1857-1909) DAVIES, SIR JOHN (1569-1626)
noie
J?J
.

..... CUMMINGS, EDWARD ESTLIN ..... (1894-1 962) CUMMINGS, WILLIAM THOMAS ..... (2903-1944)
CUNNINGHAM, ALLAN (1784CUNNINGHAM, SIR ANDREW

844
301

DAVIES, JOHN, OF HEREFORD


(c.

191, 193

1565-1618)

....
. . .

DAVIES,

WILLIAM HENRY

299

(1871-1940)
.
.

BROWNE

(1883-1963)

975
826

CUNNINGHAME-GRAHAM, ROBERT BONTINE (1852-1936)


.
.

DAVIS, DAVID (1815-1886) DAVIS, ELMER (1890-1958) DAVIS, JAMES (OWEN HALL) DAVIS,

^
678
1015
.

CURRAN, JOHN PHILPOT (17501817) CURTIS, GEORGE

........
WILLIAM

THOMAS OSBORNE

479
722
199 144

(1814-1845)

.....
)
. .

(2824-1892) CURTIUS, QUINTUS


note

.....
.

676

.......
(d.

(First century)

DAWSON, CHRISTOPHER (1889DAY, CLARENCE (2874-2935)

ion

CYPRIAN, SAINT

258)

DAZAI OSAMU (2909-1948) DEBS, EUGENE VICTOR (18551926)

2!
1067

CYRANO DE BERGERAC, SAVINIEN


(2619-1655)
note

.......
.

DECATUR, STEPHEN (1779-1820)


361

........ note .......


......
.

456

DACRE, HARRY (fl. 1892) DALADIER, DOUARD (1884-1970) DALY, THOMAS AUGUSTINE
.

885 979

DEFFAND, MARIE DE VICHYCHAMROND, MARQUISE DU


(1697-1780)

41 S

(2871-1948)

.....
.

905

DEFOE, DANIEL (c. 1661-1731) DE GAULLE, CHARLES ANDR


JOSEPH MARIE (1890-

ft

DAMPIER-WHETHAM, WILLIAM

........ DANIEL, SAMUEL (1562-1619) ....... DANTE ALIGHIERI (1265-1321) .......


1882)
.

CECIL (1867-1952) DANA, RICHARD HENRY (1815.

T DEKKER, THOMAS (1572-1632)


note

1970)

note

678 210 112


159 113

....... EUGNE DELACROIX, (27991863) ........


DE LA MARE,

301 111

59i

WALTER

(1873-

note

9M
DELILLE, JACQUES (1738-1823) DEMOCRITUS (c. 460-0. 400 B.C.)
.

DANTON, GEORGES JACQUES


(2759-1794)

.....

496

112O

INDEX OF AUTHORS
DEMOSTHENES
c.
(c.

38499 479 357 410


540 384
55*

DISRAELI, BENJAMIN,

EARL or
(i

332

B.C.)

note

BEACONSFIELD *

804-2 ...... 4*4*475


.

882 )

61

DENHAM, SIR JOHN (1625-1669)


note

D'ISRAELI, ISAAC (1766-2848)

501
ioat6

DENMAN, THOMAS, LORD (2779'8S4) ', i \ DENNIS, JOHN (1657-1734)


'

DITZEN, RUDOLF (HANS FALLADA) (1893-2947) . .

'

'

'
.

DOANE, WILLIAM CROSWELL


(2832-2923)
note

DK QUINCEY, THOMAS (17851859) DERZHAVIN, GAVRIIL (17432816) DESCARTES,


c.

DOBIE,

1964)
.

..... 743 ...... 626-627 JAMES FRANK (2888........ 1000

REN

(i

DESCHAMPS, EUSTACHE
1406)

596-1650) (c. 1345-

470 327
169

DOBROLIUBOV, NIKOLAI (18361861) note

DESTOUCHES, PHILIPPE (PHILIPPE N&UCAULT) (16801754)

DOBSON, HENRY AUSTIN (28401921) note

....... ........
. .

672
782

.122,

207, 430

398

DE VOTO, BERNARD (1897-1955) 1038 DEWEY, ADMIRAL GEORGE


1 (i 837-1 9 7) DEWEY, THOMAS EDMUND

77 1
1050
.

DODD, LEE WILSON (2879-2933) DODDRIDGE, PHILIP (2702-2752) DODGE, MARY ABIGAIL (GAIL HAMILTON) (2833-2896) DODGE, MARY MAPES (28321905)

950 420
748

(1902-1971)
DiAZ, FORFIRIO (1830-1915) DIBDIN, CHARLES (1745-1814)
.

........
. .

DIBDIN,

(1771-1841) DICKENS, CHARLES (1812-1870) note . .311,313,361, 521, 523, 6*3 1080 DICKEY, JAMES (1923- ). DICKINSON, EMILY (1830-1886) 734 note 355
.

THOMAS

734 475 517 668

DODGE, SAMUEL (fl. 2868) DODCSON, CHARLES LUTWIDGE (LEWIS CARROLL) (1832-

74 655

^9)

........

745 813
809 304 920

DOLBEN, DlCBY MACKWORTH


(1848-1867)

DOLE, CHARLES FLETCHER

DICKINSON,

GOLDSWORTHY LOWES (1562-1932)


FRANKLIN
J.

..... ..... (1845-1927) DONNE, JOHN (2572-2631) note .......


.

DICKINSON, JOHN (1732-2808)

863 460
591

DONNELLY, IGNATIUS (18322902)

DICKMAN,

note

*e DOOLEY, MR. (FlNLET PETER

.......
.

454
890

DTOEROT, DENIS (1713-1784) DIGBY, SIR KENELM (1603-

437

Dos
328
374

DUNNE) (2867-1936) PASSOS, JOHN RODERIGO

2665) DILLON, WENTWORTH, EARL OF

(1633-1685) . (KAREN BLIXEN) (1885-2962) Dio CHRYSOSTOM (c. 40-0. 220) DIOGENES THE CYNIC (c. 400DlNBSEN, ISAK

ROSCOMMON

984
134

1036 (1896- ) DOSTOEVSKI, FDOR MIKHAILOVICH (1821-1882) . . . 707 DOUDNEY, SARAH (1843-2926) 797 DOUGLAS, LORD ALFRED (1870.

......

c. 200) 68, (ft. 143 note . 87,92,126,325,537 DIONYSIUS OF HALICARNASSUS


(c.

325 B.C.) DIOGENES LAERTIUS

c.

96

DOUGLAS,

Dow,

920-921 (2868-2952) 894 LORENZO (1777-1834) . 539

note

......

NORMAN

DOWLJNG, BARTHOLOMEW
(1823-1863)

54-0. 7 B.C.)

....

.....
.

127

DOWSON, ERNEST (2867-2900)

719 889

1121

INDEX OF AUTHORS
DOYLE, SIR ARTHUR CONAN
(1859-1930)

note DOYLE, SIR FRANCIS HASTINGS

.......
.....

.....

849 666

DURANTE, JIMMY (1893- ) D'URFEY, THOMAS (1653-1723) DUROCHER, LEO (1906- ) D WIGHT, JOHN SULLIVAN (1813.
m

j 02

-g
J0.J

(1810-1888)
1820)

656
578
211

DRAKE, JOSEPH RODMAN (1795-

DRAYTON,

1631) DREISER, THEODORE (1871-1945) DRENNAN, WILLIAM (17541820) DRINKWATER, JOHN (1882-1937) DRIVER, WILLIAM (1803-1886) DRUMMOND, THOMAS (17971840) note

........ MICHAEL (1563........

DWYFOR, DAVID LLOYD GEORGE, EARL OF (1863-1945) DYER, SIR EDWARD (c. 1540.

g^
|Q-

l6O7)

905 483 960 60 1

DYER, JOHN

(c.

1700-1758)
.

Jfg

........
.

EASTMAN, MAX (1883- ) EBERHART, RICHARD (1904- ) ECKHART, MEISTER (c. 1260.

g^r
10-3 *

*3 2 7)

KG

.......
.
.

012

DRYDEN, JOHN (1631-1700)

367 note 86, 128,130,156,193, 202,214,312,313, 476, 692, 1087 DU BARTAS, GUILLAUME DE SALLUSTE, SEIGNEUR (15441590) note

EDDINGTON, SIR ARTHUR STANLEY (1882-1944) EDDY, MARY BAKER (1821-1910) EDEN, SIR ANTHONY (1897- )

....

966
700 IO?Q

EDGEWORTH, MARIA (1767-1849)


note

EDISON,

THOMAS ALVA
III

670

(1847-

........
.

1931)

193

EDWARD

(1312-1377)

...
.

8n
165

126, 132, 133, 168,

Du

181,195,344
Bois,

WILLIAM EDWARD
.

BURGHARDT (1868-1963) DUFFIELD, GEORGE (1818-1888) DULLES, JOHN FOSTER (1888DUMAS, ALEXANDRE, THE ELDER
(1802-1870) note

EDWARDS, JONATHAN (1703-1758) EDWARDS, OLIVER (1711-1791) EDWARDS, RICHARD (c. 15231566) note

420

^
108
5

894 686
10OO
598 531

EGYPT, ANCIENT EIKE VON REPKOW

(fZ.

c.

1220)

157

EINSTEIN, ALBERT (1879-1955)

950

EISENHOWER, DWIGHT DAVID


1016 (1890- ) ELIOT, CHARLES WILLIAM (1834-1926) 751 ELIOT, GEORGE (MARIAN EVANS 689 CROSS) (1819-1880) ELIOT, THOMAS STEARNS (18881000 1965) note 106,146,201,879 ELIZABETH, QUEEN MOTHER OF

DUMAS, ALEXANDRE, THE YOUNGER (1824-1895) DU MAURIER, GEORGE Louis PALMELLA BUSSON (1834.

723

...

751 440, 608, 669 DUNBAR, PAUL LAURENCE (18721906) 911 DUNBAR, WILLIAM (c. 14651 6 7
1896) note

....

DUNCOMBE, LEWIS (1711-1730)


note

.......
. .

507

ENGLAND (1900- ) ELIZABETH, QUEEN OF BELGIUM (1874-1965)


. .

1047

DUNNE, FINLEY PETER (MR. DOOLEY) (1867-1936) DUNSANY, EDWARD JOHN MORETON DRAX PLUNKETT, LORD
(1878-1957) DURANT, WILL (1885-

note

924

890

ELIZABETH

I,

QUEEN OF ENGLAND
.

(1533-1603)

.....
.
.

188

.....
)
.

ELLERTON, JOHN (1826-1893)

727

944 985

ELLIOT, JANE (1727-1805) ELLIOTT, EBENEZER (1781-1849)

#B
545

1122

INDEX OF AUTHORS

....... WALDO (1803RALPH EMEISON, ........


note
1882) note
. .

Ei MS,

HAVELOCK (2859-1939)

850 858
601

FARRAGUT, DAVID (1801-1870;


FAUI.KNFR,
2

GLASGOW
597

WILLIAM (18971039
.

9w/

189,408,^30,444
513, 595,601,612,

615,659,679,874

EMMETT, DANIEL DECATUR


(1815-1904)

.....
.
.
.

FAWCETT, EDCAR (1847-1904) FENDERSON, MARK (1873-1944). FNELON, FIANQOIS DE SAJLIGNAC DE LA MOTHE (1651-1715)
note

811

915
383

678
83

416
.

EMPEDOCLES (c. 490-0. 430 B.C.) ENCELS, FRIEDRICH (1820-1895)


note

.......

FERDINAND I d 503-1 564) FERN, FANNY (SARA TAYSON


FIELD,

686

.1062 ENGLE, PAUL (1908- ) ENGLISH, THOMAS DUNN (1819690 1902) 106 ENNIUS, QUINTUS (239-169 B.C.)

........
......
B.C.)
. . .
.

PARTON) (1811-1872) 658 EUGENE (1850-1895) 820 . note. 516,633,673 FIELD, RACHEL (1894-1942)
.

note
.

535
,

EPICTETUS (c. 50-120) note EPICURUS (341-270

138 99, 127 103


.
.

FIELDING, HENRY (1707-1754) 424 note . 87, 223, 392, 420 FIELDS, JAMES THOMAS (1816.

Epitaphs (Anonymous)

.1104

EEASMUS, DESIDERIUS (1465note


.

1881) FIELDS, WILLIAM

679

CLAUDE

(1879-1946)
68, 102, 123, 130, 144
.

.....
)
.

951

FlLICAJA,

VlNCENZO DA (2642557 1054

EISKINE, JOHN (1879-1951) ESTIENNE, HENRI (1531-1598)

EUCLID

300 B.C.) EURIPIDES (c. 485-406


(ft.

....
B.C.)
.

951 188
103

1707) note

FISHBACK,
FISHER,

note
EVARTS,

......
)
.

83

MARGARET (1904HERBERT ALBERT


.

76, 321
.

EUWER, ANTHONY (1877-

LAURENS (1865-1940)
FISKE, JOHN (1842-1902) note

870
655

942
686
507 575

WILLIAM MAXWELL

(1818-1901) EVERETT, DAVID (1770-1813) EVERETT, EDWARD (1794-1865) EVTUSHENKO, EVGENI. See

.....
.

FlTZGEFFREY, CHARLES
1638) note

(c.

1575398

YEVTUSHENKO, YEVGENY
FABER, FREDERICK

FITZGERALD, EDWARD (18091883) note

WILLIAM
275-

629 643

(1814-1863)
FABIUS

.....
....

FITZGERALD, FRANCIS SCOTT

KEY
1036
1051

676

(1896-1940)
note

MAXIMUS

203 B.C.) 105 . FADIMAN, CLIFTON (1904- ) 1054 FALLADA, HANS (RUDOLF Drr1026 ZEN) (1893-1947) FALLERSLEBEN. See HOFFMANN

.......
(c.

FITZSIMMONS, ROBERT (18621917) note

87

FLAUBERT, GUSTAVE (18211880)

709
980

VON FALLERSLEBEN FANSHAWE, CATHERINE MARIA


(1765-1834) FARLEY, TAMES ALOYSIUS
(1888- ) note

FLECKER, JAMES ELROY (1884501

.....

FLEMING, SIR ALEXANDER (1881-

963
1101

.......

FLETCHER, ANDREW (OF SAL, TOUN) (1655-1716)


.

FARQUHAR,

GEORGE (1678-1707)

397

note

384 312

1123

INDEX OF AUTHORS
FLETCHER, JOHN (see dso BEAUMONT AND FLETCHER)
(1579-1625)
note note
.

3 12
.

FRANCE, ANATOLE (JACQUES ANATOLE FRANSOIS THIBAULT) (1844-1924)


.

Bos

134,271,314,315
411
.

note

FLETCHER, PHINEAS (1582-1650)


FLORIO, JOHN (c, 1553-1625) FLORUS, Lucius ANNAEUS
(ft-

FRANCIS OF
(c.

ASSISI,

SAINT

76

1181-1226)
I

....
180

201

FRANCIS

OF FRANCE (1494-

A.D. 125)

100

note

nl
(c.

FOCH, FERDINAND (1851-1929) FONTAINE, JEAN DE LA (16211695) note


.

826
359

FRANCK, RICHARD
note

1624-1708)
'3?

FRANKFURTER, FELIX (1882FRANKLIN, BENJAMIN (1706-

75^94
.

967

FONTENELLE, BERNARD LE BOVIER DE (1657-1757) FOOTE, SAMUEL (1720-1777) FORD, FORD MADOX (HUEFFER)
(1873-1939) FORD, HENRY (if (1863-1947)
note
.
.

385 442

179)
note FRAZER, SIR JAMES

421 105, 872

GEORGE
829

7M
.
.

FORD, JOHN (1586-1639) 317 FORD, LENA GUILBERT (d. 1915) 917 1062 FORGY, HOWELL M. (1908- ) FORREST, NATHAN BEDFORD 709 (1821-1872) FORSTER, EDWARD MORGAN 951 (1879-1970) FORTESCUE, JOHN (c. 1395-1476) 171 FORTUNATUS, VENANTIUS

..... .....

(1854-1941) FREDERICK I (BARBAROSSA) (1122-1190) FREDERICK THE GREAT (17121786) FREEMAN, JOHN (1881-1929) FREIDANK (ft. c. 1250) . FREILIGRATH, FERDINAND
. .

15 j

435
.

963 158
656

(1810-1876)
.

French Anonymous FRENEAU, PHILIP (1752-1832) FRERE, JOHN HOOKHAM (17591846) note

....
.

no;
482

HONORIUS CLEMENTIANUS

Foss,

....... FOSDICK, HARRY EMERSON ....... (1878SAM WALTER (1858-1911) note .......
(c.
)

530-0. 610) note

361
.

158

94; 840 826 727 500


$98

FREUD, SIGMUND (1856-1939) FREYTAG, GUSTAV (1816-1895) FRIEDRICH WILHELM IV (17951861) FRITH, JOHN (1503-1533) note

833

^79

586

FOSTER, STEPHEN COLLINS (1826-1864) FOUCH, JOSEPH (1763-1820) note

185

.....
. .

FROHMAN, CHARLES (1860-1915)


note FROST, ROBERT (1874-1963)
1894) note
700
.
.

.......

925

FOWLER, H. W. (1859-1933) AND F. G. FOWLER (18711918) Fox, CHARLES JAMES (17491806) note

FROUDE, JAMES ANTHONY (1818-

........ ........ .......


.

851

476 547
364
185

Fox, GEORGE (1624-1691) FOXE, JOHN (1516-1587)


note
F. P. A. See

.....

ADAMS, FRANKLIN

PIERCE

FRY, CHRISTOPHER (1907- ) FUJIWARA NO TEIKA (11621241) FUKUZAWA YUKICHI (1834-1901) FULBRIGHT, JAMES WILLIAM (1905- ) FULDA, LUDWIG (1862-1939) FULLER, MARGARET (1810-1850) note
.
.

1001

75'

196

1124

INDEX OF AUTHORS
Firu.ER
f'nir.R,

RICHARD BUCKMINSTER
)

(1899-

1034
.

GERHARDT, PAW, (1607-1676) GERSHWIN, IRA (1896- )


note
.

333

THOMAS ( 1608-1661)
note
.
.

333

FYIEMAN, ROSE
GAf,r,

d 877-1 957)
(d.

104, 107, 143, 181, 190, 208, 324


.

GIBBON, EDWARD (1737-1794)


note

......
.

996 465 91,424


.

942

GIBBONS, JAMES SLOAN (18101892) GIBBONS, STELLA ^1902- ) GIBBS, WOLCQTT (1902-1958) GIBRAN, KAHLIL (1883-1931) GIBSON, WILFRED WILSON
.

THOMAS
note

1656)

522

CAKSAR (CALIGULA)
(12-41

GALBRAITH, JOHN (1908- ) GALILEO GALILEI

....... KENNETH .......


(i

656 1050 1050 975


945 897

131

1062
211

564-1642)

(1878-1962) GIDE, ANDR& ^1869-1951) . GIFFORD, RICHARD (1725-1807)


.

GAISWORTHY, JOHN (1867-1933)


GAXDER, JOSEPH
note

892
209

note

.......
.

GILBERT, FRED (1850-1903) GILBERT, HAROLD N. (18961966)

.437 .821
1O 37

GANDHI,

MOHANDAS KARAMCHAND
897
.
.

(MAHATMA) (1869-1948) GARBO, GRETA (1905- )


GARFIEI.D,

GILBERT, SIR

HUMPHREY
192

JAMES ABRAM (1831-

.1056
741 1026

1881) note
GARIBALDI,

1882)

........ ....... GIUSEPPE (1807........


.

(c. 2539-1583) GILBERT, WILLIAM (1540-1603) GILBERT, WILLIAM SCHWENCK (1836-1911)

765
165

note

620
859 757 439 310

GILDER, RICHARD

WATSON (1844802

GARLAND, HAMLIN (1860-1940) GARNETT, RICHARD (1835-1906) GARRICK, DAVID (1716-1779) note
GARRISON,

1909) GILLILAN, STRICKLAND (1869-

....... WILLIAM LLOYD (1805-1879) ......


SAMUEL (1661-1719) GEORGE (c. 1525I

615
385

GILLRAY, JAMES (1757-1815) GILMAN, CHARLOTTE PERKINS STETSON (1860-1935)


.

897 491

GARTH, SIR GASCOICNE,

GILMAN, SAMUEL (1791-1858)


GINSBERG, ALLEN (1926- ) GIRAUDOUX, JEAN (1882-1944)

566 1081

...... GASKELL, ELIZABETH CLEGHORN ..... (1810-1865)


GASSET. See

577) note

967
631

109, 254

GIADSTONE, WILLIAM
(1809-1898)

.....
.
.

EWART

656

ORTEGA Y GASSET CHARLES ANDR JOSEPH MARIE DE (1890197)


(b.

GLASGOW, ELLEN (1874-1945) GLOUCESTER, WILLIAM HENRY,

930 470
1040

GAULTIER, JULES DE note


GAUSS,

1855) GAUTIER, THEOPHILE (1811-1872) GAY, JOHN (1688-1732) note 393,

........ ....... CARL FRIEDRICH (1777........


1858)
.

101 5

. DUKE OF (1743-1805) GOEBBELS, PAUL JOSEPH (1897-

615

.....

...
.

539 658
401

924 GOERING, HERMANN (1893-1946) 1026 GOETHE, JOHANN WOLFGANG VON


(1749-1832)
note
.
.

'945) note

........ .......
.

.477
. . .

464
438
871

GELLERT, CHRISTIAN

FURCHTEGOTT (1715-1769)
GEORGE
GEORGE,

(1865-1936)

...
.

HENRY (1839-1897)

99,021,650,660 GOGARTY, OLIVER ST. JOHN 945 (1878-1957) GOGOL, NIKOLAI (1809-1852) 632 GOLDBERG, ISAAC (1887-1938) 994 1068 GOLDING, WILLIAM (1911-)

.....

1125

INDEX OF AUTHORS
GOLDSMITH, OLIVER (1728*774) note

GREEN,

MATTHEW
note
. .

(1696-1737)
.

418
593

447
.

103, 140, 165, 208, 376, 382, 386

GOLDWATER, BARRY MORRIS


(1909- ) note

GREEN, WILLIAM (1873-1952) GREENE, GRAHAM (1904- ) GREENE, ROBERT (1560-1592)


note

9*5

GOLDWYN, SAMUEL (1882- ) GOMPERS, SAMUEL (1850-1924) GONCHAROV, IVAN (1812-1891) G6NGORA ARGOTE, Luis DE
(1561-1627)
note

467 967
821

GREGORY I (540-604) GREGORY XIII (1502-1585) GREGORY, HORACE (1898- )


.

182, jij
.

118

186

672

&TIENNE DE (1772GRELLET, f / j n
*

104:

1855)

GRENVILLE, GEORGE (1712128


821

GOODWIN, JOHN CHEEVER (18501912)

GREVILLE, FULKE, LORD BROOKE (1554-1628)


note

415

GOOGE, BARNABE (1540-1594)


note

170

GREW, JOSEPH

....... CLARK
(1880.
.

.....
170

GORDON, ADAM LINDSAY (18331870)

748

GORDON, GEORGE NOEL. See

BYRON GORENKO, ANNA ANDREYEVNA


(ANNA AKHMATOVA) (18901966)

GREY, EDWARD, VISCOUNT GREY OF FALLODON (1862-1933) GREY, ZANE (1875-1939) GRIBOYEDOV, ALEXANDER SERGEEVICH (1795-1829)
.
. .

958

fa,

935

1014
(ALEKSEI

GRIFFIN,
(fi.

BARTHOLOMEW

57?

GORKI,

MAXIM

MAKSIMOVICH PESHKOV)
(1868-1936) GOSSE, EDMUND (i 849-1 92 8) note
GOTJDY, FREDERIC
. .

1596) note

.......

210

894 815 197


871

GRUBER, EDMUND L. (187995*

GUALTIER, PHILIPPE
note
234

WILLIAM

GOURMONT, REMY DE (1858GOWER, JOHN


note
(c.

(1865-1947)

GUEDALLA, PHILIP (1889-1944) GUEST, EDGAR ALBERT (1881GUINAN, TEXAS (1884-1933) GUINEY, LOUISE IMOGEN (1861.

ion

1325-1408)
(d.

980
860

GRAFTON, RICHARD

1572)
.

GRAHAM, HARRY (1874-1936) GRAHAM, JAMES, FIRST MARQUESS OF MONTROSE (1612-1650) GRAHAME, KENNETH (1859GRANT, ULYSSES
S.

187 930
353

1920)

........
.

GUITERMAN, ARTHUR (187190?

note

741,,918
.

(1822-1885)
.

GRATIAN (Twelfth century) GRAVES, JOHN WOODCOCK (1795.

852 717 *55


578

GUITRY, SACHA (1885-1957)


note

085
65;

GUIZOT, FRANQOIS (1787-1874) GUYON, JEANNE (1648-1717)


note

554

1886)

359

GRAVES, ROBERT (1895- ) GRAY, THOMAS (1716-1771)


note

1034 439
658

HACKETT, FRANCIS (1883-1962)


note
958

254, 342
,

GREELEY, HORACE (1811-1872) GREEN, JOHN RICHARD (18371883) note

HADRIAN (PUBLIUS AELIUS


HADRIANUS) (76-138) HAECKEL, ERNST HEDSRICH (1834-1919)
.

141

414

....

75*

1126

INDEX OF AUTHORS
HAUEBORN,

HERMANN

(1882-

HAGCMAN, SAMUEL MILLER


.

96?

HAMMOND, PERCY (i 873-1 956} HAN WIT-TI f 1 57-87 B!C.)


.

no
911

(1848-1905) 1O2O HAILE SELASSIE (1891- ) HAKEWILL, GEORGE (i 578-1649) note 206 HAI DANE, JOHN BURDON 1021 SANDERSON (i 892-1 964) HAIE, EDWARD EVERETT (1822.
.

.....

HAND, LFARKED (2872-1961)

EDMOND
I

8*5

.......
.

HAIDENBERG, FRIEDRICH VON


(NOVALISJ fjl772-l8oi) note .
,'

.....
.....
.

37}

HARDING,

WARREN GAMALIEL
note
. ,

(1865-1923)

HAI

E,

LHCRETIA PEABODY (2820-

19)

HALE, SIR 1676) HALE, NATHAN (1755-1776) HALE, SARAH JOSEPHA (1788-

........ MATTHEW (1609........


. .

74
35*

HARDY, THOMAS (1840-1928)


note

484
563

HALIBURTON, THOMAS CHANDLER (SAM SLICK) (1796-1865)


note

.......
SAVILE,
.

587 422 376


309

HALIFAX, GEORGE

MARQUESS OF (2633-1695)
HALL, BISHOP JOSEPH (25741656) HALL, OWEN (JAMES DAVIS) (d. 2907) HALL, ROBERT (2764-2832)
1867) JOSEF

...... ....... HARINCTON, JOHN (25612612) ........ HARLAN, JOHN MARSHALL ..... (1833-2922) HARPER, ROBERT GOODLOE ..... (1765-2825)
3947)
.

HARDY, E. J. (ft. 2910) HARDY, GODFREY HAROLD

866

(a

8^7942 782
339

SIR

210

748
501

HARRICAN,
2912)

........ ....... ........

EDWARD (2845-

........
)

HARRINGTON, MICHAEL (2928-

809 1082
8l 3

846 500
565

HALLECK, FITZ-GREENE (2790-

HARRIS, JOEL CHANDLER (28482908) HARRIS, LEE O. note

..... ...

HALM, FRIEDRICH (ELIGIUS FRANZ

HARRISON,

WILLIAM (2534-2593)
l87
531

VON MUNCH-

note

....... .......
.....
.

531

BELLINGHAUSEN) (2806-

2872) HALSEY, WILLIAM FREDERICK,


JR.

........
....

HARRISON,

WILLIAM HENRY

619

(1773-2842)

(2882-2959)

968
455

HARTE, BRET (FRANCIS BRETT HARTE) (2836-2902)


.

769
*57 312 938 610

HAMANN, JOHANN GEORG (2730HAMILTON, ALEXANDER (27552804) note

HARTMANN VON AUE

(c.

2270-

484
123

HARVEY, WILLIAM (2578-2657) HASEGAWA NYOZEKAN (2875- )

HAWKER, ROBERT STEPHEN


(1803-2875)

HAMILTON, GAIL (MARY ABIGAIL DODGE) (28332896)

.....

HAWKINS, ANTHONY HOPE

748 958
1056

(1863-2933)
note

HAMILTON, ROBERT BROWNING (2880-)


2962)

....... HAMMARSKJOLD, DAG (2905........


HAMMERSTEIN, OSCAR (28952960) note

.......
.
.

765

HAWTHORNE, ALICE (SEPTIMUS WINNER) (1827-2902) HAWTHORNE, NATHANIEL (28042864)

728
6:3
5?8

.....

HAY, JOHN MILTON (2838-2905)


note

921, 1020

........ .......

1127

INDEX OF AUTHORS
HAYDEN, JOSEPH
(-ft.

1896)

868

HERODOTUS

(c.

HAYES, RUTHERFORD BIRCHARD (1822-1893) HAZARD, JOHN EDWARD (1881

485-0. 425

B.C.)

&g

note

718

HERRICK, ROBERT (1591-1674)

LI
*

9 64 *935) HAZLITT, WILLIAM (1778-1830) 539 note. . 105,356,390


.
.

HERSCHEL, JOHN FREDERICK

WILLIAM (1792-1871)
HERSEY, JOHN (1914)

-^
io6o

HEBER, REGINALD (1783-1826)


note

549

HERWEGH, GEORG (1817-1875)


HESIOD
(c.

680
]

458
.
.

700

B.C.)

HEGEL, GEORG WILHELM FRIEDRICH (1770-1831) HEINE, HEINRICH (1797-1856)


note

note

".

^ ?
^

507 588 92

HEYWOOD, JOHN
(c.

i497-c. 1580) i 82 note. 81,97,109,125,126,


*37>
X

....
M^i

HELMHOLTZ, HERMANN LUDWIG FERDINAND VON (i 82 1-1 894) HLOISE (c. noi-c. 1164) HELV&TIUS, CLAUDE ADRIEN
.
.

44>

^65,167,

709 154

168,169,176,212,280 HEYWOOD, THOMAS (c. 15702 OJ 1641) note

(1715-1771) HEMANS, FELICIA DOROTHEA (1793-1835) note

438
573 566

HIGGINSON,

THOMAS

176,248
.

WENTWORTH (1823-1911) HIGLEY, BREWSTER (/Z. 1873) HILL, AARON (1685-1750)


.

^
808 400
??4

HEMINGWAY, ERNEST (18991961)

note

1044

HEMMINGER, GRAHAM LEE


(1896-1949)

1037

HENLEY, WILLIAM ERNEST


(1849-1903)

HENRI IV (1553-1610)

HENRY II (1133-1189) HENRY VI (1421-1471)


HENRY,

MATHEW
note

155 171 (1662-1714) 386 299, 313

.... ....
...
.

815 202

HILL, BENJAMIN HARVEY (18321882) 747 HILL, ROWLAND (1744-1833) 475 HILLMAN, SIDNEY (1887-1946) 994 HILLYER, ROBERT (1895-1961) 1034 HILTON, JAMES (1900-1954) . 1047 note 10

HIPPOCRATES (c. 460-400 B.C.) HIPPONAX (c. 570-520 B.C.) . HIRATA ATSUTANE (1776-1843)
HITLER, ADOLF (1889-1945) . HOBBES, THOMAS (1588-1679)

70
537 1011

HENRY, O. (WILLIAM SYDNEY PORTER) (1862-1910) HENRY, PATRICK (1736-1799) HERACLITUS (c. 540-0. 480 B.C.) HERBERT, SIR ALAN PATRICK
.

3*7

863

HOCH, EDWARD WALLIS (1849note

464
77

1016 (1890-) HERBERT, GEORGE (1593-1633) 322


note

HODGSON, RALPH (1871-1962) HOFFENSTEIN, SAMUEL (l&JO1947) note

905

iw?
loaj

...

75, 76, 102, 105,

HOFFMANN VON
i874)

FALLERSLEBEN,
589
.

130,136,137,179, 184, 185, 199, 690 HERBERT VON FRITZLAR


(fL c.

AUGUST HEINRICH (1798HOGG, JAMES (1770-1835) . HOLLAND, JOSIAH GILBERT (18191881) note HOLLAND, SIR RICHARD note
507

1210)

157

HERDER, JOHANN GOTTFRIED VON


(1744-1803)

690
693
(/L

HERFORD, OLIVER (1863-1935)


note

475 866 886

1450)
712

1128

INDEX. OF AUTHORS
HOLMES, JOHN HAYNES (1879HOLMES,"

HOWE, JUUA WARD (181995 2 633 872


1910)

OLIVER WENDELL
.

........
,
.

(1809-1894) note

10, 624, 659,


JR.

HOLMES, OLIVER WENDELL, (1841-19??)


note

WOLFE (1864-1960) ... Ho WELL, JAMES (c. 1594-1666)


.

HOWE, MARK ANTONY DE

690 868

note. 312,326,588 HOWELLS, WILLIAM DEAN

9?9> 1073

HOMANS, GEORGE CASPAR (1910- ) HOME, JOHN (1724-1808) HOMER (c. 700 B.C.)
note

(1837-1920) note

..... .......
.

771

...
. .

1067
441;

62

HOWITT, MARY (1799-1888) HOYLE, ESMOND (1672-1769) HOYT, DANIEL WEBSTER (1845.
.

430
593 396

HOOD,

THOMAS (1799-1845)
note

234
591
310, 469
. .

HOOKE, ROBERT (1635-1703) HOOKER, BRIAN (1880-1946) HOOKER, RICHARD (1554-1600) note HOOPER, ELLEN STURGIS (1816.

376 958 202 184

1936) 809 HSIEH Ho (fl. 500) 148 Hu SHIH (1891-1962) 1019 HUAI-NAN Tzir (Second century

........
.....
.

....

B.C.)

........
..... .....

no
835

^841)

680

HUBBARD, ELBERT (1856-1915) HUBBARD, FRANK McKiNNEY "Kw" (ABE MARTTO)


(1868-1930)

HOOTON, EARNEST ALBERT


(1887-1954) HOOVER, HERBERT CLARK

895

HUDSON, WILLIAM HENRY


994
(1841-1922)

789

(1874-1964) HOPE, LAURENCE (ADELA FLOR-

930

HUGHES, CHARLES EVANS (18621948) 864 HUGHES, LANCSTON (1902-1967) 1050 HUGHES, THOMAS (1822-1896) 718 HUGO, VICTOR (1802-1885) 598 note 598 HUME, DAVID (1711-1776)
. .

ENCE
HOPKINS,

CORY NICOLSON)
871

(1865-1904)

GERARD MANLEY
802

(1844-1889)
HOPKINS, JANE ELLICE (18361904)

77
508

note

HOPKINSON, JOSEPH (1770-1842)

HUNGERFORD, MARGARET

HORACE (QUINTUS HORATIUS


120 FLACCUS) (65-8 B.C.) . note 86, 87, 111, 123, 146,
. .

WOLFE

HUNT, G. W. (fl. 1878) .. HUNT, LEIGH (1784-1859)


HURDIS, JAMES (1763-1801)
note

(1855-1897)

831

727
551

BORNE, RICHARD
GIST

HENRY HEN-

202

(1803-1884) HORNBY, KAREN (1885-1952)

....
.

610 985

Huss, JOHN (1373-1415) HUTCHESON, FRANCIS (1694-

..

169

HOUGHTON, RICHARD MONCKTON MILNES, BARON (18091885)

HUTCHINS, ROBERT MAYNARD

634

......
.

HOVSMAN, ALFRED (1859-1936)


note

EDWARD
852
103
.

HUTTON, JAMES (1726-1797) HUXLEY, ALDOUS LEONARD


(1894-1963)
note

1Q45 446

HOVEY, RICHARD (1864-1900)

868
422

HOWARD,

ROWLAND
note

f/L

1876)

....... HUXLEY, THOMAS HENRY (1825^95) ........


HUYSMANS,
JORIS

.....

1032 448
7 24

HOWE, EDGAR
^937)

WATSON

(1853-

BCARL

(1848-

828

814

1129

INDEX OF AUTHORS
HYDE, EDWARD, EARL OF CLARENDON (1609-1674)
note
.

JAMES,

WILLIAM
"
A

(1842-1910)
73i, 797,
f
.

.......
.

te

466

JARRY,

JEAN DE
See BLASCO-!BANEZ
(c.

ALFRED (1873-1907)

MEUN
note

(Thirteenth

century)
.

IBSEN,

HENRIK (1828-1906)
580
B.C.)

IBYCUS
ICKES,

.....

HAROLD L. (1874-1952) IGNATIUS LOYOLA, SAINT (1491.

729 70 931

CHARLES EDOUARD JEANNERET, /T CORBUSIER) (1887JEANS, SIR JAMES

171

1556) IGNATIUS THEOPHORUS, SAINT


(ft.

........
.

180

HOPWOOD

995

(1877-1946)
JEFFERIES,

c.

100) note

.......
.

RICHARD (1848flu

32

IHARA SAIKAKU (1642-1693) IKHNATON (c. 1385-1358 B.C.) INGALLS, JOHN JAMES (1833INGE,

37
3

748

WILLIAM RALPH (1860.

1954)

... ...

INGELOW, JEAN (1820-1897)

859 704
749

INGERSOLL, ROBERT GREEN (1833-1899) INGOLDSBY, THOMAS. See BARHAM, RICHARD HARRIS

...

JEFFERSON, THOMAS (1743is 2 6) / :" , note. 421, 462,484, 1090 JEFFREY, FRANCIS (1773-1850) note nj SAINT JEROME, (c. 342-420) 14note i
. . .
.

JEFFERS, ROBINSON (1887-1962)

fa JEROME, JEROME KLAPKA (1859-

5^2

JERROLD DOUGLAS (1803-1857)


note

INGRAM, JOHN KELLS (1823-

1907) IPHICRATES (419-348 B.C.) IRON, RALPH (OLIVE SCHREI.

......
.

720 96
832
79 1 775'
549
?2 6

....... JEWETT, SARAH ORNE (18491909) ........


JOHN XXIII (ANGELO GIUSEPPE
RONCALLI) (1881-1963)
. .

610
211;

816

NER) (1855-1920) IRONQUILL (EUGENE FITCH WARE) (1841-1911)


.

....
. .

964

JOHN CHRYSOSTOM, SAINT


JOHN OF DAMASCUS, SAINT

(327-

note
IRVING,

.......
.

WASHINGTON (1783note

.......

ISHERWOOD, CHRISTOPHER WILLIAM BRADSHAW (1904- ) 1054 ISHIKAWA TAKUBOKU (188598 5

(c. joo-c. 760) 152 ^ 27 JOHNSON, ANDREW (1808-1875) JOHNSON, GEORGE WASHINGTON (1838-1917) 779 JOHNSON, GERALD WHITE ion (1890- )

note

846

JACKSON, ANDREW (1767-1845) JACKSON, HELEN HUNT (1831^885) JACKSON, ROBERT HOUGHWOUT

53
74 1
1O21

........
.....
.
.
.

JOHNSON, HEWLETT (1874-1966) JOHNSON, JAMES WELDON (1871-1938) JOHNSON, LIONEL (1867-1902) JOHNSON, LYNDON BAINES

931

906
895

(1892-1954) JACKSON, THOMAS JONATHAN (STONEWALL) (1824-1863) JACOBS, JOE (1896-1940) JAMES, GEORGE PAYNE RAINS-

723 1037

(1908- ) JOHNSON, PHILANDER (18661939) JOHNSON, ROSSITER (1840-1931) JOHNSON, SAMUEL (1709-1784)
note

106?

887

784

426
226,

FORD (1799-1860)
note

.......
.

126, 132, 181, 206,

JAMES,

HENRY (1843-1916)

481 797 11 3

310, 311, 324,389,

397,402,451,562

INDEX OF AUTHORS
{OLSON,
E*,

AL (1886-1950) HOWARD MUMFORD


.

992
1022

KENNEDY, CHARLES RANN (1871-

907
KENNEDY. JOHN FITZGERALD
(1917-1963)
note
. .

(1892s,

CEREDIGION (1883JOHN _\
JOHN PATTL (1747-1792} 476
47 6
198 302
1

.....

1072

919, 1053, 1077

F s,

KENYON, JAMES BENJAMIN


(1858-1924) note KEROT? AC, JACK 1922-1969) KERR, CLARK (IQIJ- } KERR, PHILIP HENRY, MAR',

SIR WILLIAM (1746JONES, 1794' note

........ .......
1

.......
. .
. .

116

10%
1068

BEN (1572-1657)
note
23,
1

28,

34,

76,

182,
,

DOROTHEA (1762-1816)
.

JOSEPH (1754-1824) JOYCE, [AMES (1882-1941) ALEXANDER (1842JOYCE, JOHN


T,
.

247 500 483 968

QUESS or LOTHIAN (1882-

969
KETTERINC, CHARLES FRANKLIN (i 8-6-1 o?8) KEY, FRANCIS SCOTT (1779-

.....

940

THE APOSTATE (332-363)


(d.

1555)

.....
B.C.)
.

jrnrs CAESAR (100-44


note
G,

.......
(c.

144 186 112


367 935

note

.......
. .

600

KEYNES, JOHN MAYNARD (1883-

KHRUSHCHEV, NIKITA SERCEEVICH (1894-1971)


note

CARL GUSTAV (1875-1061)


,

1032

Letters of (1769-1771)

903
Jit.

JUNOT. See
JTTVENAL,
c.

ABR ANTES DECIMUS JITNIUS

KIERAN, JAMES MICHAEL,

130) note

50....... .......
.

1050
KIERKEGAARD, SOREN (18131855)

........
.

KAFKA,

FRANZ (1884-1924)

KAMO MABTTCHI (1697-1769) KAMO NO CHOMEI (1253-1216) KANT, IMMANUEL (1724-1804)


note
KARR,

980 419
156 445 445 627 1O12
579

KlKAKU (l66l-170-7) KILMER, JOYCE (1886-1918)


note

....
.

KING,

.......
.

....... BENAJAMIN FRANKLIN, ..... (1857-1894)


JR.

676 386 992 756


845
321

ALPHONSE (1808-1890)
S.

KING, KING,

HENRY (1592-1669) MARTIN LUTHER, JR.

KAUFMAN, GEORGE

1961) KEATS, JOHN (1795-1821) note

(1889........ .......
.
.
.

(1929-1968) KING, STODDARD (1889-1933) note


KING,
ZIE (1874-1950) KINGIAKE, ALEXANDER (1809-1891)

.....
.

.......

1082 1012

893
931

927
567

WILLIAM LYON MACKEN-

KEBLE, JOHN (1792-1866) KEITH, GEORGE, FIFTH EARL

....

WILLIAM
701;

MARISCHAL (1553-1623)
KELLER,
KELVIN,

202

HELEN (1880-1968) WILLIAM THOMSON,


.
.

958 723
491

note

KINGSLEY, CHARLES (1819-1875)


.

LORD (1824-1907) KEMBLE, JOHN PHILIP (17571823)


.

........
. .

note KIPLING, RUDYARD (1865-1936) 871 note. 437,450,677,


.
.
.

....... 690 ...... 822-823


705,827,932

KEMP, HARRY (1883-1960) KEN, BISHOP THOMAS (1637KF.NNAN,

976
377 809

KlRCHOFF, GtfSTAV ROBERT


(1824-1887) KIRK, RICHARD R. (1877-

.....
)
.
.

GEORGE (1845-1924) KENNAN, GEORGE FROST

723 942

KlTTREDGE,

WALTER (1834-

1054

1131

INDEX OF AUTHORS
KLINGER, FRIEDRICH MAXIMILIAN VON (1752-1831) KLOPSTOCK, FRIEDRICH GOTTLIEB (1724-1803) KNOWLES, FREDRIC LAWRENCE
(1869-1905)
)

LA MEURTHE, ANTOINE BOULAY


.

482 445

DE (1761-1840)
(1859-1917)

....

IN,

....

LAMPTON, WILLIAM JAMES


g

.....
573

LANDON, LETITIA ELIZABETH


(1802-1838)

KNOX, EDMUND GEORGE VALPY


(1881note

LANDOR,

WALTER SAVAGE
note

^
934
720
-

KNOX, HENRY (1750-1806)


note
.

....... .......
.

LANE, GEORGE MARTIN (18221897)

460
186 564 148
641

KNOX, JOHN (1505-1572) KNOX, WILLIAM (1789-1825) Koran, The (c. 610-632)
.

LANG,

ANDREW
note

(1844-1912)
(c.

note

.......

LANGLAND, WILLIAM
c.

1330-

KOTZEBUE, AUGUST FRIEDRICH FERDINAND VON (1761-

1400) note
(Sixth century B.C.)
.

1819) ........ KRONECXER, LEOPOLD (1823........


1891)

LANIER, SIDNEY (1842-1881)

499
720

LAO Tzu

KROPOTKIN, PRINCE PETR ALEKSEEVICH (1842-1921) KRYLOV, IVAN (1769-1844) Ku K*AI-CHIH (c. 344-406)
. .

KUNITZ, STANLEY (1905-

KYD,

THOMAS
note

(1558-1594) ......

796 505 146 1056 204 137, 230


.
.

LAPLACE, PIERRE SIMON DE (1749-1827) LARDNER, RING (1005-1933) LARKIN, PHILIP (1922- )
.

1080

LA ROCHEFOUCAULD,

FRANCOIS,
. .

Due

DE (1613-1680)
note

191,

LA ROGHEFOUCAULD-LlANCOURT, FRANCOIS ALEXANDRE FRDRIC,

m
476

jj4

Due DE

(1747-1827)

LABERIUS, DECIMUS (105-43


note

LA BRUY^RE, JEAN DE (16451696)

....... ........
c.
.

B.C.)

LASKI,

126
381

HAROLD JOSEPH (1893195) LATHAM, PETER MERE (17891875)

1027

LACYDES

241 B.C.) LA FONTAINE, JEAN DE (1621(ft.


.

104
359

LATHBURY,
LATIMER,
Latin

MARY

564

ARTEMISIA
.

1695) note

........ ...... 75
........
J.

(1841-1913)

789
180

HUGH

(1485-1555)

94
969

note

nj
149

LAGUAKDIA, FlORELLO H. (1882-

LAMARCK, JEAN BAPTISTE (17441829)

475
565 903 552 534

Anonymous LAUDER, SIR HARRY (1870-1950) LAURENCE, WILLIAM L. (1888- } LAURENS, JACQUES DU (15831650)

90* 1008

LAMARTINE, ALPHONSE DE
(1790-1869)

.....
. .

316

LAMB ARTHUR
r

(1870-1928)

LAVATER, JOHANN KASPAR (1741-1801)


LAVOISIER, ANTOINE LAURENT

469

LAMB, LADY CAROLINE (17851828)

LAMB, CHARLES (1775-1834)


note

........ .......
.

(1743-1794) (1885-1930) note

.....
.

474
98$

LAWRENCE, DAVID HERBERT


94
545

LAMB, MARY (1765-1847) LAMB, WILLIAM, VISCOUNT

258
501

MELBOURNE (1779-1848) LA METTRIE, JULIEN OFFRAY DE


,

541

LAWRENCE, JAMES (1781-1813) LAWRENCE, THOMAS EDWARD


(1888-1935) LAZARUS, EMMA (1849-1887)

(1709-1751)

.....

....

1008
817

434

1132

INDEX OF AUTHORS
LIACOCK, STEPHEN (1869-1944)
LFAK,

BUTLER

.....
.

LEVIS,

GASTON PIERUE MARC,


.
.

EDWARD d 812-2888)

672
811

LEARNED,

WALTER

(1847-1915)
.
.

LCKY, WILLIAM EDWARD HARTPOLE (1838-1903) LE CORBUSIER (CHARLES EDOUARD JEANNERET)


(1887-1965) LEE, CHARLES (1731-1782)
LKK,

DE (1764-1830) LEWIS, CECIL DAY 1 904- 1 97 1 ) LEWIS, CI.IVE STAPLES (18981

DUC

501

1055

1963)

779

.....
. .
.

LEWIS, SAM M. (ft, 1919) LEWIS, SINCLAIR (1885-1951) LEY, ROBERT (1890-1945)
.

1042 999

986
780

.1017
.

995 460

LEYBOURNE, GEORGE fd. 1884) LlCHTENBERG, GEORC CHRISTOPH

HENRY ( LIGHT-HORSE HARRY) (1756-1818). LEE, NATHANIEL (1655-1692) LtE, RICHARD HENRY (17321794)
LEE,

486
384

ROBERT EDWARD (1807-

1870)

........ ........
-

460
62O
809

(1742-1799) 47 LIDDELL HART, BASIL HENRY (1895- ) 1035 LIGNE, CHARLES JOSEPH, PRINCE DE (1735-1814) 464 LILLE, ALAIN DE (ALANUS DE

....
.
.

INSULIS) (d. 1202)

LEE-HAMILTON, EUGENE (1845LE GALLIENNE, RICHARD (1866J

155

LINCOLN, ABRAHAM (1809-1865) LINDBERGH, ANNE MORROW


(1907- ) LINDBERGH, CHARLES AUGUSTUS (1902- ) LINDSAY, VACHEL (1879-1931) LINLEY, GEORGE (i 798-1 86c) LINNAEUS (CARL VON LiNNfe)
(1707-1778)

634
1061 1051

947)

.....

LEIBNITZ,

BARON GOTTFRIED
3 82

(1646-1716) LEIGHTON, ROBERT (1611-1684) note


LELAND, CHARLES

WlLHELM VON

952
589

.......
GODFREY

432

(1824-1903) L'ENCLOS, NINON DE (1620-

.....
359

LIPPMANN,
LITVINOV,

(1889- ) LISLE. See ROUGET DE LISLE

WALTER

425 1012

MAXIM MAXIMOVICH
)
. .

LENIN, NIKOLAI (VLADIMIR ILICH ULYANOV) (1870-

note LEO XIII (GIOACCHINO PECCI)

.......
.....
(ft.

903 954

(1876-1951) Liu SHAO-CH'I (1905LIVY (TITUS LIVIUS)


(59 B.C.-A.D. 27)

940 1058
125

LLOYD, DAVID (1635-1692)

(1810-1903) LEONIDAS OF TARENTUM


B.C.)

656
105

note

376
, .

........
REN
(1668-

274

LLOYD GEORGE, DAVID, EARL OF

LBRMONTOV, MIKHAIL (1814677


39 1

LE SAGE, ALAIN
'747) note
LESPINASSE,
,

'776)

........ ....... JULIE DE (1732........


.......
)

3*3

LESSING,

GOTTHOLD EPHRAIM

460

DWYFOR (1863-1945) LOCKE, DAVID Ross (PETROLEUM V. NASBY) (1833-1888) , LOCKE, JOHN (1632-1704) . LOCKE, JOHN (1847-1889) LOCKER-LAMPSON, FREDERICK (1821-1895) LODGE, HENRY CABOT (1850,

866
749 372
811

710
821

'

(1729-1781) note
T

.....
357

1924)

LODGE, THOMAS
note

(c.

2558-1625)

L EsTRANGE, SIR ROGER (1616LETTS,

204 137

LOGAN, MINGO CHIEF (1725-

WINIFRED MARY (1882LEVERIDCE, RICHARD (1670-

969
392

LOGAN, JOHN (1748-1788) LOGAU, FRIEDRICH VON (1604.

445 476
3*9

INDEX OF AUTHORS
LOMBROSO, CESARE (1836-1909)
note

770
131

LYTTELTON, GEORGE, LORD


(1709-1773)

LOMONOSOV, MIKHAIL (17111765)

LONG, JOHN LUTHER

fz 861-2 92 7)

434 860
620

LYTTON, EDWARD GEORGE EARLE BULWER-LYTTON, BARON


(1803-1873)

.....
.....
fa

LONGFELLOW, HENRY

WADSWORTH
note
.

(1807-1882)

86, 192, 197, 200, 203, 219, 372, 605


.

LYTTON, EDWARD ROBERT BULWER-LYTTON, EARL OF (OWEN MEREDITH) (1831note


741

LONGINUS (C. 210-273) LONGUS (Third century) Loos, ANITA (1893- ) LOTHAJR I (795-855)
,

....
.

144 147 1027


152

MABIE, HAMILTON WRIGHT


(1845-1916)

Ix>THiAN, PHILIP

HENRY KERR,
969
. .
.

MARQUESS OF (1882-1940)
.

MACARTHUR, DOUGLAS (1880MACAULAY, THOMAS BABINGTON, LORD (1800-1 6159)


note
.

Louis XIV (1638-1715) Louis XVIII (1755-1824) LOVELACE, RICHARD (1618-1658)

959

....

591

LOVEMAN, ROBERT (1864-1923) 869 LOVER, SAMUEL (1797-1868) 589 Low, DAVID (1891-1963) 1019 LOWELL, AMY (1874-1 92 c) 93 1 RUSSELL LOWELL, JAMES (1819. . . .
.

MACDONALD, GEORGE (1824*95) MACDOWELL, EDWARD (18611908)

176, 400, 429, 577, 625


725 860

........ ........
.
.

1891) note

691
.

MACH, ERNST (1838-1916)


note

jjq

76, 264, 391, 402, 604,

MACHIAVELLI, NiccoL6 (1469-

609,610, 618

LOWELL, ROBERT TRAILL SPENCE


(1816-1891) note

.......
.

156

626
10 75

MACKAY, CHARLES (1814-1889) MACKINTOSH, SIR JAMES (17051832)

677
501

LOWELL, ROBERT TRAILL SPENCE

(W7-

MACKLIN, CHARLES

note

97
180 134

LOYOLA, SAINT IGNATIUS (14911556) LUCAN (39-65) LUCAS, EDWARD

........ 1697*797) ........ note .......


(c.

4J4
365

MACLEISH, ARCHIBALD (1892MACLEOD, FIONA (WILLIAM

). 1022

VERRALL (18688 95
.

1938) LUCAS, ST. JOHN (1879-1934)

SHARP) (1855-1905) MACMAHON, MAURICE DE (18081893)

...

832

LUCE, CLARE BOOTHE (1903-

953 1053
112

........
.

LUCRETIUS (Tiius LUCRETIUS CARUS) (99-55 B.C.)


.

MACNEICE, Louis (1907-1963) MACPHERSON, JAMES (17361796) note

627 1062

note

LUDLOW, FlTZHUGH (1836-1870) LUTHER, MARTIN (1483-1546) LYCURGUS (ft. 820 B.C.)
note

65 770

.......
.

992

MADDEN, SAMUEL (1686-1765)


MADISON, JAMES (1751-1836) MAETERLINCK, MAURICE (18621949) Magnet Carta (1215)
. -

400

179

480

LYLY, JOHN

(c.
.

1554-1606)

86 202

........
*

m
106

note

96, 105, 108, 113, 181,

MAHAN, ALFRED THAYER

(1840-

183,184,185,199
LYON, GEORGE WASHINGTON
953

MAHARBAL (BARCA THE


CARTHAGINIAN)
(fl.

210

B.C.)

" 34

INDEX OF AUTHORS
MAJMONIPES

MOSES BEN MAIMON) (1135-1204)


(

MARRYAT, FREDERICK (1792.

82 1 ) MJUSTRE, JOSEPH DE (i 753-1 DE FRANCOIS (1555MALHERBE,


1628)

1848)

482
204

MARSHALL, GEORGE CATLETT

.-.

....... ..... (1880-1959)


.

567

MAUNOWSKI, BRONISLAW (1884980


fe,

MARSHALL, JOHN (175 5-1 83 5) MARSHALL, THOMAS RILEY


(1854-1925)
-

959 485
82 9

STPHANE

(1842791

MARSTON, JOHN

1898) note

309 1575-0. 1634) note. . 12), 176, 182,18; MARSTON, PHILIP BOURSE (1850(c.

MALLOCH, DOUGLAS (1877-1938) MALLORY, GEORGE LEIGH (18861924) note

942

1887) MART!, Josi (1853-1895)

........
(c.

...
.

821

828
134 165

MARTIAL (MARCUS VALERIUS


876
MARTIALIS)
note

MALONE, WALTER (1866-1915) MALORY, SIR THOMAS (ft. 1470) MALTHUS, THOMAS ROBERT
(1766-1834) note MANDELSTAM, OSIP (1891MANILIUS,
(fl.

887

.......

40-0. 104)

MARTIN, ABE (FRANK McKiNNEY "Km" HUBBARD) (1868-

502

193)
MARTIN, EDWARD SANDFORD

628
1020

MARVELL, ANDREW (1621-1678)

MARCUS
century A.D.)
. . .

MARX GROUCHO
T

first

131

MANN, HORACE (1796-1859) MANN, THOMAS (1875-1955) MANNERS, JOHN JAMES ROBERT, DUKE OF RUTLAND (1818.

586

937

359 1O 3? (1895- ) 686 MARX, KARL (1818-1883) MARY STUART, QUEEN OF SCOTS 192 (1542-1587)
-

...
.

.....

MARY TUDOR, QUEEN or


ENGLAND (1516-1558) MASEFIELD, JOHN (1878-1967)
note
.

187

1906)

686
1014

MANSFIELD, KATHERINE (18891923)

.......
...

946 749
720
91 ;

MASON, CAROLINE ATHERTON


BRIGGS (1823-1890)

MANTUANUS, JOHANNES BAPTISTA


(1448-1516) note
.

MASON, DANIEL GREGORY (1873o? 2

171 MANUTIUS, ALDUS (i 450-1 515) MAO TSE-TUNG (1893- ) 1027 MAP (MAPES), WALTER (c. 1140. -

MASON, DONALD FRANCIS


)

........ ....... (19^31953)


. .
.

lo69

MASON, GEORGE (1725-1792)

1210)

55

MARCUS AURELIUS ANTONINUS


(121-180)
141

MARCY, WILLIAM LEARNED


(1786-1857) MARITAIN, JACQUES (1882- ) MARIVAUX, PIERRE CARLET DE CHAMBLAIN DE (1688-1763)
.

445 MASSINGER, PHILIP (1583-1640) 315 note 131, 198,230, 315 MASSON, THOMAS LANSING (186688 7 1934)
MASTERS, EDGAR LEE (18691950)

553

969
402 826

........ ........

MARKHAM, EDWIN (1852-1940)


note
1593)

MATHER, COTTON (1663-1728) MATHERS, EDWARD POWYS


(1892- ) MATISSE, HENRI (1869-1954)

898 387
1022

32

497
212

.......
-

MARLOWE, CHRISTOPHER (1564MARQUAND, JOHN PHILLIPS


(1893-1960) MARQUIS, DONALD ROBERT PERRY (1878-1937)

MATSUO BASHO (1644-1694) MAUGHAM, WILLIAM SOMERSET


.
.

898 380
93 1

1027

(1874-1965)
(1921)

.....

MAULDIN, WILLIAM HENRY

...

945

.......

1080

1135

INDEX OF AUTHORS
MAURIER, GEORGE Louis PALMEIXA BUSSON DU
(1834-1896)
note

MERRITT, DIXON LANIER


.

....

METTRIE, JULIEN OFFRAY DE LA


(1709-1751)

953

440, 608, 669


.

MAUROIS, ANDR
note

(1885-1967)

987 9?
74 1
1028
328

MAXWELL, JAMES CLERK (18311879)

MEURIER, GABRIEL (1530-1661) MEURTHE, ANTOINE BOULAY DE LA (1761-1840) MEYNELL, ALICE (1847-1922)
. . .

xft

8n
1? j

MAYAKOVSKY, VLADIMIR (18931930)

MICHELANGELO (BUONARROTI)
(1474-1564)

MAZARTN, JULES CARDINAL (16021661)

MlCHELET, JULES (1798-1874) MICHELSON, ALBERT ABRAHAM


(1852-1931)

593

MCAULIFFE, ANTHONY CLEMENT


(i8g8)

1042

MICKLE, WILLIAM JULIUS (17351788)

8*7

MCCARTHY, DENIS A. (18701931) note


,

686

MIDDLESEX, LIONEL CRANFIELD EARL OF (1575-1645)


note

464
T

GEORGE BRINTON
72,8
-

(1826-1885)
. .

MIDDLETON, THOMAS (15801627) note


.
.

352

10 4 McCoRD, DAVID (1897- ) 912 McCRAE, JOHN (1872-1918) MCCREERY, JOHN LUCKEY (1835-

^3
156,217,249,263 812 (1847-1921)
.

McCirrcHEON, GEORGE BARR


866-1 028) McGiNLEY, PHYLLIS (1905MCNALLY, LEONARD (1752(i
)
.

1906)

758
887 1058
4 82
.

MIFFLIN, LLOYD MILES, WILLIAM PORCHER (1822-1899) MILL, JOHN STUART (1806-1873) MILLAY, EDNA ST. VINCENT (1892-1950)
note

718 619

1820)

1023 360, 618

MEARNS, HUGHES (1875-1965) MELBOURNE, WILLIAM LAMB, VISCOUNT (1779-1848) MELEAGER (ft. 95 B.C.)
.

938

MILLER, ALICE DUER (1874-

...

no
97
695 576

541

note

MILLER, ARTHUR (1915- ) MILLER, JOAQUIN (CINCINNATI HINER or HEINE) (c. 1841.

1071

MELVILLE, HERMAN (18191891) note

1913)

789
.

MILLER, THOMAS (1808-1874) MILLER, WILLIAM (1810-1872)

627 657

MENANDER

(c.

342-292

B.C.)

102
123

MILMAN, HENRY HART (17911868)


566

note

MENCIUS (372-289 B.C.) MENCKEN, HENRY Louis (18801956)

...

99

MILNE, ALAN ALEXANDER (18821956)


9^9

960
ISAACS (1835-

MILNES, RICHARD MONCKTON,

MENKEN, ADAH
1868)

BARON HOUGHTON (18091885)


6?4
.

758

MERCIER, Louis S&BASTIEN (1740-1814) MEREDITH, GEORGE (1828-1909)

...

MILTON, JOHN (1608-1674)


469 730
note.
.

333

MlMNERMUS

(C.

650-0. 590

97> 104>?4f 68 B.C.)


.

MEREDITH, OWEN (EDWARD BULWER-LYTTON) (1831*8 9 i) note

MINER, CHARLES (1780-1865) MIRABEAU, HONOR GABRIEL DE


RlQUETTI, COMTE DE (1749-1791) note
.

$tf

74 1 400
953

479
4*1
1081

MERRICK, LEONARD (1864-1939)


note

MISHIMA YUKIO (1925-1970)

1136

INDEX OF AUTHORS
,

The

.......
.

59

MIZSER, WILSON (1876-1933) Mom. DAVID MACBETH (17981851)

MOORE, GEORGE EDWARD ^1873'958)

941

........
. .
. .

MOORE, JOHN TROTWOOD (1858590


*9 2 9)

...... ........
.

915
846 812

Mot A, EMILIO (1887-1937)

99S

MOJ I*KE f JEAN BAPTISTE POQUELIN) (1622-1673) 3 6o note. 193,194,563, 599 MCH.INA, TlRSO DE (1584-1648) 316
. .

MOORE, IITMA A. (1847-1920) MOORE, MARIANNE (1887-1972) MOORE, THOMAS 77^1 8^2)
r'l

996
.

541

77,181,624,714 MORIUTTNT, THOMAS OSBERT


.
.

note.

MOLIE, JOHN
note

.......
ffl.

1621)

(i7^r>-i8oo)

.....
.

455
47:;

94Q
597 953
491

MOT TKF,

HELMUTH VON

(i

800.

MORE, HANNAH (1745-1833) MOKE, Sm THOMAS ( 14-8-1 535)


note

178 192

MONRO, HAROLD (1879-1932) MONROE, JAMES (1758-1831) MONSELL, JOHN SAMUEL BEWLEY
.

MOREHEAD, JOHN MOTLEY


-96-1 866) note MOREI.L, THOMAS (1703-1784)
(i

('1811-1875)

MORELLY ^.1773)
354
note

824 420 687 979

MONTAGU, LADY

MARY WORTLEY

(1689-1762)
(1867-1928)

MONTAGUE, CHARLES EDWARD


MONTAIGNE, MICHEL

..... .....
EYQUEM DE
.

414
893

MORGAN, ANGELA (d. 1957) MORISON, SAMUEL ELIOT


note

997 446

MORLEY, CHRISTOPHER (18901017

MONTENAEKEN, LEON
note

189 1 note 30, 1 36, 1 37, 1 80, 296 MONTALVO, JUAN (1832-1889) 747
(b.

MORLEY, JOHN, VISCOUNT MORLEY OF BLACKBURN (1838-

1859)

751

M ORRIS, GEORGE POPE (18021864) note

779
600
189 753

MONTESQUIEU, CHARLES DE SECONDAT, BARON DE (16891755)

........ .......
.

4M
)

MORRIS, WILLIAM (1834-1896)

MONTGOMERY. SIR BERNARD (VISCOUNT OF ALAMEIN)


(1887-

MORROW, DWIGHT WHITNEY


(1873-1931)

.....
(2899. .

995

MORTON, CHARLES
1967)

MONTGOMERY, JAMES (1771'%4) MONTGOMERY, ROBERT (18071855) note

........

W.

915
10 45

MORTON, DAVID (1886-1957) MORTON, THOMAS (1764-1838) MOTHERWELL, WlLHAM


557
1835)

992
501

589

MONTROSE, JAMES GRAHAM, FIRST MARQUESS OF (16121650)

MOTOORI NORINAGA (1730455


353

MOULTON, LOUISE CHANDLER


(1835-1908) MOWAT, R. B.
note

MOODY, WILLIAM VAUGHN


(1869-1910)

MOORE,

CLEMENT CLARK

(1779.

..... .......
...
)
.

758 870 804

1863)

MULLIGAN, JAMES HILARY (1844435


831
.

MOORE, EDWARD (1712-1757) MOORE, FRANK FRANKFORT


(1855-1931) MOORE, GEORGE (1852-1933)

1916)

........

MULOCK
827

(CRAIK), DINAH MARIA (1826-1887)

MUMFORD, LEWIS (1895-

727 1035

"37

INDEX OF AUTHORS
MtjNCH-BELLINGHAUSEN, ElJGIUS

FRANZ JOSEF VON (FRIEDRICH

NIEBUHR, (1892-1971) NIETZSCHE, FRIEDRICH WIL619

REINHOLD

HALM) (1806-1871) MUNRO, HECTOR HUGH (SAKI)


.
.

HELM

(1870-1916)

.....
.....

(1844-1900) . note 498, 685, 689,


.

903
502 153

MUNSTER, ERNST F. (1766-1839) MURASAKI SHIKIBU (c. 978-1031) MURROW, EDWARD ROSCOE
(1908-1965)

NIMITZ, CHESTER WILLIAM (1885-1966) NOBLES, MILTON (1847-1924)


.

1064

MUSSET, ALFRED DE (1810-

*57)

........
.
.

MUSSOLINI, BENITO (1883-1945)

657 977

NOCK, ALBERT JAY (1873-1945) NOEL, THOMAS (1799-1888) NORRIS, JOHN (1657-1711)
NORRIS,

WILLIAM EDWARD
.

MYERS, FREDERIC WILLIAM

(1847-1925)
1601)

HENRY (1843-1901)

800
1046

NORTH, SIR THOMAS

(c.

NABOKOV, VLADIMIR (1899- ) NAIRNE, CAROLINA OLIPHANT, BARONESS NAIRNE (1766.


.

289

NORTHBROOKE, JOHN

(fl.

1570)

NORTON, CAROLINE SHERIDAN


.

NAKAE To ju (1608-1648) NAPOLEON I (NAPOLEON BONAPARTE) (1769-1821)


note

351

(1808-1877)

.....
,

NORTON, CHARLES ELIOT (1827504

6a?

......

125, 357
.

NASBY, PETROLEUM V. (DAVID Ross LOCKE) (1833-1888)

NOYES, ALFRED (1880-1958) NOVALIS (FRIEDRICH VON HAR-

728
961

NASH, OGDEN (1902-1971)


note

.......
.

NASHE, THOMAS (1567-1601) NAYLOR, JAMES BALL (1860-

749 1051 846 300


8 59

DENBURG) (1772-1801)
note Nursery Rhymes
1002

NEALE, JOHN MASON (18181866)

O' CASEY, SEAN (1884-1964) OCHS, ADOLPH SIMON (1858.

1935)

........
.
.

846

687

NEHRU, JAWAHARLAL (18891964)

1014 NEKRASOV, NIKOLAI (1821-1877) 710 NELSON, HORATIO (1758-1805) 492 NERO (37-68) 134 NESBIT, WILBUR DICK (1871*9 2 7) .1018 NEVINS, ALLAN (1890- ) New England Primer 1089 NEWBOLT, SIR HENRY (1862'938) 865 NEWMAN, JOHN HENRY CARDI-

........
.

O'CONNOR, BASIL (1892- ) O'CONNOR, EDWIN (1918-1968) O'DONNELL, CHARLES LEO


(1884-1934)

1004
1077
981

.....
.

...... ........
....
.

O'HARA, THEODORE (1820-1867) O'KEEFE, PATRICK F. (1872^934)

74 9"
476
443

........
. .

97

........
.

O'KEEFFE, JOHN (1747-1833) O'KELLY, DENNIS (1720-1787) OLDYS, WILLIAM (1696-1761) OLIPHANT, CAROLINA, BARONESS

418

NAL (1801-1890) NEWTON, BYRON RUFUS (18611938)

597

NAIRNE (1766-1845) O'MALLEY, FRANK WARD (1875. .

502

........
.

938

860
379

OMAR

NEWTON, SIR ISAAC (1642-1727) NEWTON, JOHN (1725-1807) NICOLSON, ADELA FLORENCE CORY (LAURENCE HOPE)
(1865-1904)

IBN AL-HALIF note

.......
.....
.

123
131

446

.....

ONASANDER (fl. 49) O'NEILL, EUGENE (1888-1953) ONO NO KOMACHI (Ninth


century)

1009

871

.......

15*

1138

INDEX OF AUTHORS
J.

ROBERT (1904'
-

10 55

.Y,

; JOHN BOYLE (1844-

2890)
iu

806
(1887)

HUGH ROBERT
note

PARKER, PARKER, PARKER, PARKER, PARKER,

DOROTHY (1893-1967). 1029


JOHN (1729-177?)
.
.

455
32

MARTIN (1600-1056)

558
Josfe

OITEGA Y GASSET,

(1883-

977 1955) ; GIWELL, GEORGE (ERIC BLAIR) 10 53 (1903-195) OSBORN, FAIRFIELD (1887- ) 998
<
.

Ross (1914- ) 1069 THEODORE (1810-1860) 6 S7 PARKMAN, FRANCIS (1827-1893) 720 PARNELL, THOMAS (1679-171? 8). 398 PARR, SAMUEL (1747-1825) 476
PARSONS,

THOMAS WILLIAM

O'SHAUGHNESSY, ARTHUR WILLIAM EDGAR (18441881) O*SHEEL, SHAEMAS (1886-1954) OSIER, SIR WILLIAM (1849-

(1819-1892) PARTON, JAMES (1822-1891) note

.....
...
.

698
503

.......
......
.

807 992

PARTON, SARA PAYSON (FANNY FERN) (1811-1872) PASCAL, BLAISE (1623-1662)


note
1

658
363 206 1018

26,
.

817 633 OSTENSO, MARTHA (1900-1963) 1047 O'SuLLivAN, JOHN Louis (1813676 1895) 446 OTIS, JAMES (1725-1783) OTWAY, THOMAS (1651-1685) 383 OVERBURY, SIR THOMAS (1581315 1613) OVID (PuBLius OVIDIUS NASO)
19*9) note

PASTERNAK, BORIS (1890-1960) PASTEUR, Louis (1822-1895) PATER, WALTER (1839-1894)


,

718
781 123

note

.......
.

...
.

PATERSON, ANDREW BARTON (BANJO) (1864-1941) PATMORE, COVENTRY (18231896) PATRI, ANGELO (1877-1965)

869
721 943

........
.

(43 B.C.-A.D.

C.
.

l8)
.

128

66 7 113, 118, 165,213,242 1028 OWEN, WILFRED (1893-1918) OXENSTIERN, AXEL (1583-1654) note 317
note
. .
.

PATTEN, GEORGE WASHINGTON (1808-1882) PATTON, GEORGE SMITH (1885-

.....
.

627

PACE,

WALTER HINES

(1855831

1918) PAGE, WILLIAM

TYLER (18688 95

J942 )
PAIGE,
(c.

987 1945) 1020 PAUL, ELLIOT (1891-1958) PAULING, LINUS CARL (1901- ) 1050 PAVLOV, IVAN PETROVXCH (1849818 1936) . PAYN, JAMES (1830-1898) 553 PAYNE, JOHN HOWARD (1792. 567 1852)
.
.

........
.
.

........
.....
(c.

LEROY (SATCHEL)
1900)

PEACHAM, HENRY
c.

1048
86
.

1643)

PAINE,
PAINE,

ALBERT BIGELOW (1861.

PEACOCK, THOMAS LOVE (17851866) PEARSON, KARL (1857-1936) PEARY, ROBERT EDWIN (1856.

....
1576-

309
552

1937)

........

THOMAS (1737-1809) PALEY, WILLIAM (1743-1805)


PALLADAS (ft. A.D. 400) note

466 474
311

84;
8 35

PEATTIE,

DONALD CULROSS

PARACELSUS, PHILIPPUS AUREOLUS (c. 1493-1541) . note


.
.

180
193

(1898-1964) PEELE, GEORGE (c. 1558c. 1597)

.....
*

1042
20 4
1O 3 2

.......
.

PAKAMORE, (1895-

EDWARD
)

E., JR.
.

1035 187 PARETO, VILFREDO (1848-1923) 814

PAR, AMBROISE (1517-1590)

PEGLER, WESTBROOK (1894- ) PicuY, CHARLES (1873-1914) PENN, WILLIAM (1644-1710)

916 380

"39

INDEX OF AUTHORS
PEPYS,

SAMUEL (1633-1703)
note
.

PERIANDER (d. 585 B.C. ) PERICLES (c. 495-429 B.C.)


note

374 112,1087 68 80
. .

PITT, PITT, PITT,

WILLIAM WILLIAM

. (1759-1806) (d. 1840) WILLIAM, EARL or CHAT.


. .

517

PERKINS, FRANCES (1882-1965) PERRY, OLIVER HAZARD (17851819) PEBSIUS (AULIJS PERSIUS FLACCUS) (34-62)

252 970
553

....

HAM (1708-1778) PlTTACUS (C. 6jO-C. 570 B.C.) Pius XII (EuGENio PACELLI) (1876-1958) PLANCH, JAMES ROBINSON l88 o) (l79
. .

^
3

133

PLANCK,

^7 MAX

o o*

..... ^ *
;
.

(1858-1947)
B.C.)
.

PESHKOV, ALEKSEI MAKSIMOVICH (MAXIM GORKI) (18681936}

PLATO
894

845
.

(c.

428-348
.

96,123,139,408 PLAUTUS, TITUS MACCIUS (254-

note.

^
10 ,j
131

PTAIN, HENRI PHILIPPE (1856195*)

184 B.C.) PLINY THE ELDER (23-79)


163 129 133 129

PETRARCH (FRANCESCO PETRARCA) (1304-1374)


note

....... note ......

PETRONIUS, GAIUS (PETRONTUS . ARBITER) (d. c. 66)


.

PLINY THE YOUNGER (61-105) PLUNKETT, EDWARD JOHN MORETON DRAX, LORD DUNSANY
(1878-1957)

109, 293
140

.....

PHAEDRUS

(ft.

c. 8)

PLUTARCH (46-120)
note
.

....

9^
136

note PHEIDIPPIDES (d. 490 B.C.) . PHILIP VI (PHILIP OF VALOIS)


.

76 70
162

102, 104, 125, 126, 127, 132, 168, 221,289,311,634


641

(129^-1350) . PHILIPS, JOHN (1676-1709) PHILLIPS, H. I. (1887-1065) PHILLIPS, STEPHEN (1864-1915)


.

...

POE, EDGAR ALLAN (1800-1849) Poem of the Cid (Twelfth


century)

note
PHILLIPS,

WENDELL
note

(181 1-1884)

PHILLPOTTS, EDEN (1862-1960) PHILOSTRATUS (c. 181-250)


note

397 gg8 86g 905 658 751 865


303

POINCAR, JULES HENRI (18541912)

....... ........

155

829
722
590

POLLOCK, EDWARD (1823-1858) POLLOK, ROBERT (1798-1827)


note

.......
B.C.)
.

558
107

POLYBIUS

(C.

2O8-C. 126

POMFRET, JOHN (1667-1702)


note
.

......

j&8

369, j&j

PHOCION (c. 402-317 B.C.) PIAVE, FRANCESCO MARIA


note
PICASSO,

96
116

POMPADOUR, JEANNE POISSON, MARQUISE DE (1721-1764)

44?
112

PABLO (1881.

...
.
.
.

POMPEY (CNEIUS POMPEIUS)

964

PICKETT, GEORGE EDWARD

7^5 (1825-1875) PIERCE, BENJAMIN (1854-1914) 829 PINDAR (c. 518-0. 438 B.C.) 79 PINDAR, PETER (JOHN WOLCOT) 468 (1738-1819) note 303, 407
.
.
.

(106-48 B.C.) PONTING, HERBERT GEORGE (1871-1935) POPE, ALEXANDER (1688-1744)


note
.

.... .....
.

97
402
201,

105, 135, 193, 200,

PINERO, SIR

ARTHUR WING
831

(1855-1934) PINZ6N, MARTfN ALONSO (c, 1440-1493) note


PlTAVALS,

790

FRANOIS GOYOT DE

}W POPE, WALTER (c. 1630-1714) 772 PORTER, HORACE (1837-1921) PORTER, WILLIAM SYDNEY 863 (O. HENRY) (1862-1910) 460 PORTEUS, BEILBY (1731-1808) note 189,441
.

......

(1673-1743)

POTTER, BEATRIX (1866-1943) 396 11

887

40

INDEX OF AUTHORS
POTTER, BISHOP

HENRY CODMAN
.

PUTNAM, AMELIA EARHART


7? 8 680
(1898-1937) PYLE, ERNIE (1900-1945) PYRRHUS (c. 318-273 B.C.) PYTHEAS (ft. 330 B.C.)
.
.

(2835-1908) POTHER, EUGENE (1816-1887) POUND, EZRA (1885- ) POUND, ROSCOE (1870^1964) POWELL, GEORGE H. (GEORGE ASAF) (1880-1951) POWELL, SIR JOHN (1645-171 3)
note
PIAED,

.....
.

....
.

987 903
958
198

1042 1048 103


101
321

...

QITARLES, FRANCIS (1592-1644) note

.......
.

WINTHROP MACKWORTH
600
196, 322

QUESNAY, FRANCOIS (1694-1774) QUILLER-COUCH, SlR ARTHUR

179 416

(i 802-1 839)

THOMAS (1863-1944)

866

note
PRESCOTT,
2795) PRESCOTT,

WILLIAM (172644 6

WILLIAM HICKLING
-

PUINCY, JOSIAH (1744-1775) QUINCY, JOSIAH, JR. (1772-1864) QUINTILIAN (MARCUS FABIUS QUINTILIANUS) (42-118)
note

475
530
135 542

(1796-1859)

PtESTON, KEITH (1884-1927) PRICE, DON K. (1910- )


.

587 981 1067

.......
(c.

RABELAIS, FRANCOIS
note

1494-

PRIESTLEY, JOSEPH

(1733-1804)
-

Primary Chronicle (1377) PRIMROSE, ARCHIBALD PHILIP,

462 *7

66, 68, 69, 96, IOA, 107,

EARL OF ROSEBERY (18471929)


PRIOR,

812
.

387 (1664-1721) note 304,325 PROCLUS (c. 411-485) note 137 PROCTER, ADELAIDE ANNE 725 (1825-1864) PROCTER, BRYAN WALLER (BARRY CORNWALL) (1787554 i874)
PROPERTIUS,

MATTHEW

125,136,313 RACAN, HONORAT DE BXJEIL, 318 MARQUIS DE (1589-1650) RACINE, JEAN (1639-1699) 378 108 note
.

.......

RADCUFFE, ANN (1764-1823) RAIMUND, FERDINAND (17901836)

501
5 66

........ ........ WALTER (1861........


.

RAINBOROUGH, THOMAS (d. 1648) RALEGH, SIR WALTER (c. 15521618)

317 198

SEXTUS AUREHUS

RALEIGH, SIR
1922)

(54 B.C.-A.D. 2)

....
.

860

PROTAGORAS

(c. 485-0. 410 B.C.) PROUDFIT, DAVID LAW (PELEG

127 87

RAMSAY, ALLAN (1686-1758) RANDALL, JAMES RYDER (18391908)

400
781 772
531

ARKWRIGHT) (1842-1897)

797

........
. .

PROUDHON, PIERRE JOSEPH (1809-1865) PROUST, MARCEL (1871-1922) . PUBLILIUS SYRUS (ft. first century
B.C.)

644 907

RANDOLPH, INNES (1837-1887) RANDOLPH, JOHN (1773-1833) RANDS, WILLIAM BRIGHTY

(MATTHEW BROWNE)
(1823-1882)
1886)

note.

12? 86,108,116,

RANKE, LEOPOLD VON (1795-

121,125,146
PULTENEY, SIR WILLIAM, EARL OF BATH (1684-1764) Punch note
.

...... ........
.
.

719
586 384 1009

399 810 668


593

. RANSETSU (1653-1708) RANSOM, JOHN CROWE (1888RASPE, RUDOLF ERICH (1737-

PUSHKIN,

ALEXANDER (1799434

1837) note

........ ....... RAVENSCROFT, THOMAS 1592........


1794) note
(c,

46 7
139

1635)

3"

1141

INDEX OF AUTHORS
RAY, JAMES
(ft.

1745:)
.
.

RILEY, JAMES
.

WHITCOMB

(2849'

note

RAY, JOHN (1628-1705)


.

103 366

note

8i?

note. 127,154,388 RAYBURN, SAM (1882-1961) 970


.

RILKE, RAINER

MARIA (1875.

RAYMOND, ROSSITER WORTHINGTON (1840-1918) 785 READ, SIR HERBERT (1893- ) 1029

....
.

RIMBAUD, ARTHUR (1854-1891)


te

RIPLEY,

....... ROBERT LEROY


(1893'-

note

802

READ, THOMAS BUCHANAN (1822-1872) RECHBERG,. JOHANN BERNHARD, GRAF VON (1806-1899) REED, JOHN (1887-1920) REESE LIZETTE WOODWORTH
.

718
.

RlQUETTI, HONORfe GABRIEL DE, COMTE DE MlRABEAU (1749'79*) note


.

1029

619 998
835 1042
1040

w
42,
.jfo

RIVAROL, ANTOINE DE (27531801)

(1856-1935)
REID,

DOROTHY E

REMARQUE, ERICH MARIA


(1897-1970)

ROBINSON, EDWIN ARLINGTON (1869-1935) ROBINSON, JAMES HARVEY (18631

899

93?)

866
812

RENAN, JOSEPH ERNEST (18231892)

ROCHE, TAMES JEFFREY (1847.

RENARD, JULES (1864-1910) RENOIR, PIERRE AUGUSTS (1841.

722 869
79

1908)

ROCHEFOUCAULD, FRANQOIS, Due DE LA (16131680)


-

3^4

1919) REPKOW. See EIRE

note

VON REPKOW
.
.

191,714

REVERE, PAUL (1735-1818) REXFORD, EBEN EUGENE (18481916)

464
Sit;

ROGHEFOUCAULD-LlANCOITRT, FRANgois ALEXANDRE FRfeD^RIC, DUG DE LA (27471827)


476
.
.

REYNAUD, PAUL (1878- } RHODES, CECIL JOHN (1853.

948
828
530 1029 530 961 868

1902)

ROCHESTER, JOHN WILMOT, EARL OF (1647-1680) ROCKEFELLER, JOHN DAVISON,


(1874-1960)

382

JR.

RHODES, WILLIAM BARNES (1772-1826) RIBBENTROP, JOACHIM VON (1893-1945) RICARDO, DAVID (1772-1823) RICE, GRANTLAND (1880-1954)
.

932

Roo6, Jos

ENRIQUE (1872-

ROETHKE, THEODORE (1908ROGERS, ROBERT CAMERON 865 (1862-1912) ROGERS, ROBERT EMMONS (1888-

note

.....

RICHARD, PAUL (1874- ) RICHARDS, LAURA ELIZABETH


(1850-1943) RICHARDSON, ROBERT (18501901) RICHTER, JOHANN PAUL FRIEDRICH (JEAN PAUL) (1763-1825) note

93 2
821

ROGERS, SAMUEL (1763-1855)


note
.
.

500

130, 208,333,675
.

822

ROGERS, WILL (1879-1935) ROJAS, FERNANDO DE (c. 1465c.

954
i?6

500 050

RIDGWAY,

MATTHEW BUNKER
J

(X895-

1027 RlESENBERG, FELIX (1879-1939) 953

note

....... MANON (27541793) ........ & Roland, Song (Eleventh ....... RONSARD, PIERRE DE 524-1 note ....... M
1538)

ROLAND, JEANNE
of

century)

*54
1 87
1

(i

585)

1142

INDEX OF AUTHORS
FLT,

ANNA ELEANOR

(1884-1962) ROOSEVELT, FRANKLIN [1882-1945;


.

.....
DELANO
.
-

RUSSELL, SIR
981

WILLIAM HOWARD
1280)
.

(1820-1907)

RUTEBEUF

fd.

...

704 158 908

.970,97^ ....... 910 ROOSKVELT, THEODORE (2858..... 47


note
19*9) ROOT, GEORGE FREDERICK (2820-

RiniiERtORT), ERNEST tiSji193-) Run AND. JOHN (AMFS ROBERT

MANNERS, DUKE OF (18181906)

686
.

ROSCOMMON,

Dm ON,
1685)
fj

WENT WORTH
EARL OF
374
8ll

(2633........

SABATIM, RAFAFI, (1875-1950) SAIMI-BEUVE, CHARLES AUGUSTIN { 1804-1 869) SAIXT-KXUP&RY, ANTOINE DE
.

938
61 5

ROSE, At

EXANDER MACGREGOR

846-2 898) ROSEBERY, ARCHIBALD PHILIP PRIMROSE, EARL OF (28472929)

.....
.....
GEORCINA
S.

(1900-1944)
ST. JOHN,

1048
.

HENRY, VISCOUNT BOIINGBROKE (2678-2752)

397

........
WOLF

SAINTSBURY,

GEORGE ^2845809

812
941

1933'

ROSENBACH, ABRAHAM (18^6-2952)


Ross,

HAROLD WALLACE (2892-

SAINT-SIMON, CLAUDE HENRI DE ROUVROY ( 2 760-1 82 5)


note

2952)

........

122

1024
739
731
891;

ROSSETTI, CHRISTINA
ROSSETTI,

..... (1830-2894) DANTE GABRIEL ..... 1^828-2882)


(i

SAKI (HECTOR HUGH MUNRO) (2870-1926) SALINGER, JEROME DAVID

903
1078

ROSTAND, EDMOND ( 2868-291 8) ROUGET DE LISLE, CLAUDE JOSEPH

(2929SALLUST (GAIUS
)

SALI/USTITTS
B.C.)
. .

CRISPXIS)

C86-34

115

760-2 836) ROUSSEAU, JEAN JACQUES (2722ROITTH,

.....

note

90
. .

499

MARTIN JOSEPH (2755)


.

2854) ROVERE, RICHARD (2925-

........
.

SALVANDY, NARCISSE ACHILLE, COMTE DE (2795-2856) SANDBURG, CARL (2878-2967)


note,
.

575

486
1071

948 .435,904,1099
.

ROWE, NICHOLAS (2673-2728) ROWLAND, HENRY AUGUSTUS ( 1 848-2 902) ROWLEY, "RED" (ft. 2925)
.

396
815

SANDYS, SIR EDWIN (2561-1629) note

189

.....
.

SANCSTER, MARGARET ELIZABETH

(1838-2922)

.1018
1033

....... fr894ROYDON, MATTHEW 1580........


)

ROYALL,

KENNETH CLAIBORNE
(c.

SANTA YANA, GEORGE (i 863-2 952) SAPPHO (c. 612 B.C.) SARGENT, EPES (2813-2880)
.

....
.
.

780 866
69 676 1066

314 MURIEL (2923- ). 1069 RVMBOLD, RICHARD (2622-2685) 362 RUSKIN, JOHN (1829-1900) 698 note. 70,338,754
.

2622) RVKEYSER,

RUSSELL,
RUSSELL,

BERTRAND (1872-1970)

912
893 828

GEORGE WILLIAM
. .

SAROYAN, WILLIAM (2908- ) SARTON, GEORGE (2884-1956) 981 SARTRE, JEAN PAUL (1905- ) 1058 SASSOON, SIEGFRIED (2886-2967) 992 SAVAGE, MINOT JUDSON (184219*8) 79 SAVAGE, RICHARD (1698-1743) 419
. . .
.

(A.E.) (2867-1935) RESELL, IRWIN (2853-2879) RUSSELL, LORD JOHN (1792-

SAVILE, GEORGE, MARQUESS OF HALIFAX (1633-1695)


.

376

1878) note

........
,

SAXE, JOHN

GODFREY (1816J.

567 426, 897, 1098

1887) SAYERS, HENRY

(d.

1932)

680 886

"43

INDEX OF AUTHORS
SCARRON, PAUL (1610-1660)
note
103
. .

SEDGWICK, ELLERY (1872-1960)


note

.......
(c.

SCHEFFLER, JOHANN (ANGELUS SlLESIUS) (1624-1677) SCHELLING, FRIEDRICH VON

SEDLEY, SIR CHARLES

1639.
.

364

SEEGER, ALAN (1888-1916)


SEI
-

378 ioon
155

(1775-1854) note SCHIDONI (i 560-161 6) note SCHILLER, TOHANN CHRISTOPH FRIEDRICH VON fiyW^Soy) SCHLEGEL, FRIEDRICH VON (1772-

....... .......

470
15

SHONAGON (b. 966) SEIBERT, T. LAURENCE (ft. 1900) SELASSIE. See HAILE SELASSIE
SELDEN, JOHN (1584-1654)
note

904
317

497
53

SELDES,

1829)

........
ARTHUR MEIER,
)

GEORGE (1890- ) SENECA, Lucius ANNAEUS


(8 B.C.-A.D. 65)

207 1018
12n

.....
..
.

SCHLEGEL, JOHANN ELIAS (17191749) SCHLESINGER,

note.
SERVICE,

44 2
JR.

....... 10 77 (1917....... 1073 SCHLIEMANN, HEINRICH (l822i8qo) ........ 718 SCHNECKENBURGER, MAX (18191849) ..... / SCHOPENHAXJER, ARTHUR (1788563 lS6o) ........
note
'

..... ..... SEUME, JOHANN GOTTFRIED ..... (1763-1810)


(1874-1958)
note

ROBERT WILLIAM

88,181,607,732
9?2
961

500

SEVEN SAGES: BIAS, CHILON, CLEOBULUS, PERIANDER, PITTACUS, SOLON, THALES SVIGN, MARIE DE RABUTINCHANTAL, MARQUISE DE
(1626-1696)

68

SCHREINER, OLIVE (RALPH IRON) (1855-1920) SCHURZ, CARL (1829-1900) SCHWARTZ, DELMORE (1913-

.....
.

.....

365

832 733
1069 881

SEWARD, THOMAS (1708-1790)


note

....... .......
)
.

301

........ ....... SCHWEITZER, ALBERT (1875........


1966) note
.

SEWARD, WILLIAM HENRY


(1801-1872)
note
659 1082

196?) SCOTT, CHARLES PRESTWICK (1846-1932) SCOTT, CLEMENT WILLIAM (1841-1904) SCOTT, JOHN (1730-1783) SCOTT, ROBERT FALCON (1868-1912) SCOTT, SIR WALTER (1771-1832)
note

939
811

SEXTON, ANNE (1928-

..... .....
.

SEYMOUR, CHARLES (1885-1963) SHADWELL, THOMAS (c. 16421692)

989

........
WILLIAM

380

790 455
896 518

SHAFTESBURY, ANTHONY ASHLEY

COOPER, LORD (1671-1713)


note

.....

SHAKESPEARE,
(1616)
All's

127, 196, 203, 248, 278,


T

SCOTT, WILLIAM, LORD STOWELL (1745-1836) SCOTT, WINFIELD (1786-1866)


.

..... .....
.

475
553

SEARS,

EDMUND HAMILTON

(1810-1876) SfeBASTIANI, FRANgOIS HORACE BASTIEN (1772-1851) SECONDAT, CHARLES DE, BARON DE MONTESQUIEU (1689-

657
531

...... (1564....... Well That Ends Well. note ...... Antony and ..... M7 As You Like note ....... The Comedy note ....... Coriolanus ..... .289 note ....... ^
416,483
2*4

269

213,2;

Cleopatra. It

of Errors,

127 218

ify

Cymbeline Hamlet

4M
11 44

note

INDEX OF AUTHORS
SHAKESPEARE (continued) Caesar Julius IV, Part Henry King
note
note
.

SHAKESPEARE {continued)
253 I 237 181, 183, 246
.

Titus Andronicus note

218

TroUus and Cressida


note

King Henry IV, Part II

241

169,185 . 267 560


251

King Henry
note

V
I
.

185, 215

King Henry VI, Part


note

King Henry VI, Part II


note

243 166, 209 214 184 214 199, 215


.
.

Twelfth-Night note
.

Two Gentlemen
The
note

193,234,246,297
of Verona,

220
,
. .

Venus and Adonis Winter's Tde, The


note

...
.

King Henry VI, Part


note

III

..215
202
168

King Henry VIII


note

185, .... 297

SHAPIRO, KARL (1913- ) SHARP, WILLIAM (FIONA

184 219 295 181,182 1069


.
. .

MACLEOD) (1855-1905)
SHARPE, R. L.
(fl.

King John
note

236

1890)

...
f

832 808

King Lear
note

......
....
. .

193

SHAW, GEORGE BERNARD (2856-

King Richard II
note

276 185, 220 226


.

195)
note

SHAW, HENRY WHEELER

836 154,659
JOSH
.
.

165 216 King Richard III note 184, 185, 193, 200 Love's Labour's Lost 221 note 145 280 Macbeth note 281;
,
.
.

BILLINGS) (1818-2885) SHEFFIELD, JOHN, DUKE OF

685

BUCKINGHAM AND

NORMANBY (1648-1721)
note

382
3 50

Measure for Measure


note

270 240

SHELLEY, MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT (1797-1851) SHELLEY, PERCY BYSSHE (2792.

589

Merchant of Venice, The


note
.
.

Merry Wives

231 86, 93, 156, 169, 182 of Windsor,


.

1822) note

....

567
278, 528, 595

SHENSTONE, WILLIAM (27141763) note SHERIDAN, PHILIP

The
note.
.

266

432

168,182,197,212 Midsummer-Night's Dream, A 228


245 272 93> X 95 Pericles 290 note 252 Phoenix and the Turtle, The 267 . 220 Rape of Lucrece, The
Othello note

HENRY (2832742

1888) SHERIDAN, RICHARD BRINSLEY

Much Ado About Nothing

(1751-1816) note 133, 224, 251, 281, . SHERMAN, JOHN (1823-1900) SHERMAN, SIDNEY (1805-1873)
.
.

480 424 722 616


705

SHERMAN, WILLIAM TECUMSEH


(1820-1892)

note Sonnets

223 194, 218 291 Taming of the Shrew, The 219 note 181, 182, 185 Tempest, The 296 note 194 Timon of Athens 290

Romeo and Juliet

....
.

SHERWOOD, ROBERT
.

EMMET
.

....

..*....
....

. 1037 (1896-1955) SHIRLEY, JAMES (1596-1600) 327 SIDNEY, ALGERNON (2622-2683) 362 note. 76, 136,290,331 SIDNEY, SIR PHILIP (1554-2586) 203 note 123
.
.
.

SIENKIEWICZ,
1916)

HENRYK (2846811

1145

INDEX OF AUTHORS
EMMANUEL
JOSEPH

(1748-1836) SlGISMUND (1361-1437) note

...

476
3 6l ~3

SNOW, CHARLES PERCY (1905SNOWDEN, ETHEL ANNAKIN


note

\Q
,v

SIGOURNEY, LYDIA (1791-1865)


SILIUS ITALICUS note
SILL,

HUNTLEY
25-99)

....
325
.

(c.

SOCRATES (469-399 B.C.) SOLON (c. 638-0. 559 B.C.) SOMERVILLE, WlLLIAM (1675*742 ) Song of Roland (Eleventh
.

i
397

EDWARD ROWLAND (18411887)

century)

SlLVERMAN, SlME (1873-1933) SlMONIDES (C. 556-468 B.C.) SIMPSON, GEORGE GAYLORD (1002- ) SIMS, GEORGE ROBERT (1847.

790 916

SONNECK, OSCAR GEORGE

,^

THEODORE (1873-1928)
note

SOPHOCLES
1052

(c.

495-405

B.C.)

81

note

76

1922)

SITWELL,

DAME EDITH

(1887.

1964)

SKELTON, JOHN

(c. 1460-1529) SKINNER, CORNELIA OTIS (IQOI- )

998 i 76
1050

SOULE, JOHN BABSONE LANE (1815-1891) SOUTH, ROBERT (1634-1716) SOUTHERNS, THOMAS (16601746) note
note

678
.

376

SOUTHEY, ROBERT (1774-1843)

20 3*3M
,

531

SLICK,

SAM (THOMAS CHANDLER


.

165,
(c.

^8
210

HALIBURTON) (1796-1865)
note

SOUTHWELL, ROBERT
422
1595) note
note

156180, 182, 192

SMART, CHRISTOPHER (17221771)

........
. . .

....

444
687 674 445 74 107

SPENCER, HERBERT (1820-1903)


628

SMEDLEY, FRANCIS EDWARD


(1818-1864) SMILES, SAMUEL (1812-1904) SMITH, ADAM (1723-1790) SMITH, ALEXANDER (1830-1867) note

SPENCER, THEODORE (19021949)


1052

SPENCER, WILLIAM ROBERT (1770-1834)


note
270
. .

SMITH, ALFRED EMANUEL (1873-1944) SMITH, EDGAR (1857-1938) SMITH, EDMUND (1672-1710)
. .

916 845 4
5

SPENDER, STEPHEN (1909- ) SPENSER, EDMUND (1552-1599)


note
.

1067

113,156,183
939

note

SMITH, HORACE (HORATIO) (1779-1849) SMITH, JOHN (1500-1031)


note

543 522
.

SPINGARN, JOEL ELIAS (18751939) SPINOZA, BENEDICT (BARUCH) (1632-1677)

....

373 127

note

SMITH, LANGDON (1858-1908) SMITH, LOGAN PEARSALL (1865-1946)


note

848 877
33 2

SMITH, SAMUEL FRANCIS (1808-1895) SMITH, SYDNEY (1771-1845)


note

627
. .

5 22 3 6l

SPOCK, BENJAMIN (1903- ) SPOFFORD, HARRIET PRESCOTT (1835-1921) SPOONER, WILLIAM ARCHIBALD (1844-1930) ^ SPRAGUE, CHARLES (1791-1875) STAEL, MADAME DE (GERMAINE, BARONNE DE STAEL.

1053

....
.
. .

758

807
S 66

SMOLLETT, TOBIAS (1721-1771) SNODGRASS, WILLIAM D.

443
1081

HOLSTEIN) (1766-1817) STAHL, FRIEDRICH JULIUS (18021861)

502

600

11 46

INDEX OF AUTHORS
STALIN, JOSEPH (losiF VISSARIO-

STEVENSON, WILLIAM

(c.

1530188

NOVICH DZHUCASHVILl) (1879-1953)


note
STALLINGS,

.......
.....

.....

954 903
999

STICKNEY,

TRUMBUIX (1874933
893 753

LAWRENCE

STIMSON, HENRY LEWIS (1867-

(1894-2068) STANHOPE, PHILIP DORMER,

..... 415 ...... 449r7*9 HENRY MORTON ..... 791 (1841-1904) STANTON, CHARLES E. (1859........ 856 STANTON, EDWIN MCMASTERS ..... 677 (1814-1869) STANTON, FRANK LEBBY (1857........ 84?
(1694-1773)
note STANLEY, SIR
193?) i92 7) STARK, JOHN (1728-1822) STATIUS, CAECILIUS (220-168
B.C.)

EARL OF CHESTERFIELD

STOCKTON, FRANK (1834-1902) STOREY, VIOLET ALLEYN (1900- ) STORY, JOSEPH (1779-1849) STORY, WILLIAM WETMORE
.

.......
.

1049 543

STOUGHTON, WILLIAM (1631-

17*)

........
.....
.

37*

STOWE, HARRIET BEECHER


(1811-1896)

...

STOWE, LELAND (1899- ) STOWELL, WILLIAM SCOTT,

659 1046

451
107

LORD (1745-1836)
STRAFFORD,

...

47;

........
.....

THOMAS WENT-

STEDMAN, EDMUND CLARENCE (1833-1908) STEELE, SIR RICHARD (1672'7*9) note

WORTH, EARL OF (15931641) note

749

STRUNK, WILLIAM,
1935)

395 196, 312 STEFFENS, LINCOLN (1866-1936) 887 STEIN, GERTRUDE (1874-1046) 933 STEINBECK, JOHN JRNST (19021052 1968)
.

........ ......

...... (1869........
JR.
.

234

9o
957
192

STRUNSKY, SIMEON (1879-1948) STUART, MARY (MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS) (1542-1587) STUBBS, CHARLES WILLIAM
.

........
..... .....

(1845-1912)
note

.......
.

.....

STENDHAL (HENRI BEYLE) (1783-1842) STEPHEN, JAMES KENNETH (1859-1892)


note

550

SHARES, ANDR (1868-1948) SUCKLING, SIR JOHN (1609-1642)


note

810 664 896


350 205
141

.......

....... STEPHEN, LESLIE (1832-1904) note .......


STEPHENS, JAMES (1882-1950) STERLING, GEORGE (1869-1926)
STERN, GLADYS BRONWYN
.

856 516

SUETONIUS (GAHJS SUETONIUS TRANQUILLUS) (c. 70-0. 140) SULLIVAN, Louis HENRI (18561924)

424 974 900


671
,

........
.

838
206
1O2O

SULLY, MAXIMILIEN DE BETHUNE, Due DE (1559-1641)

(1890STERNE,

LAURENCE (1713-1768)
(c,

..... note ...... 181


)

note

437 197
69

SULZBERGER, ARTHUR HAYS (1891-1968) SUMNER, CHARLES (1811-1874)

.....
.

659

SUMNER, WILLIAM GRAHAM


(1840-1910)

STESICHORUS
STEVENS,

630-0. 555

B.C.)

.....
.
.

WALLACE
note

STEVENSON, ADLAI note

....... (1900-1965) .......


.....
. .

(1879-1955)

954
529 1048 981

SUN YAT-SEN (1866-1925) SURTEES, ROBERT SMITH (18031864)


Suttapitaka

785 888
611 80

........
(c.

500-^. 250

B.C.)
.

STEVENSON,

ROBERT Loins

SWENSON,

(1850-1894) note

822 822 810, 165, 380,

MAY (1919- ). . SWIFT, JONATHAN (1667-1745)


note
.

1078 388 130, 181, 356, 386


.

"47

INDEX OF AUTHORS
SWINBURNE, ALGERNON CHARLES
(1837-1009)
1689)

.....
.....
.

772
364 785 878

TEMPLE, WILLIAM (1881-1944) TENNYSON, ALFRED, LORD

Q6t

SYDENHAM, THOMAS (1624SYMONDS, JOHN ADDINGTON


(1840-1893)

.......
.....
)
-

SYMONS, ARTHUR. (1865-1945) SYNGE, JOHN MILLINGTON

(1809-1892) 6 note. 84, 167, 206, 213, r?i TENNYSON, HALLAM (i8c21928) note 6

(1871-1909) SYRUS, PUBLIUUS. See PUBLILIUS

908

TERENCE (PuBLius TERENTIUS AFER) (c. 190-159 B.C.) TERHUNE, ALBERT PAYSON
(1872-1942)

4>6

108

SYRUS SZENT-GYORGYI VON NAGYRAPOLT, ALBERT (18931O2 ^

....

TERTULLIAN (QUINTUS SEPTIMUS TERTULLIANUS)


(c.

9*3

TABS, JOHN BANISTER (18451909) TABRAR, JOSEPH (flL 1892) TACITUS, CAITJS CORNELIUS

........
. .

155-225) note
,

....
.

810
832
140

THACKERAY, WILLIAM MAKEPEACE (1811-1863)


note.
. .

102,130
650

...

(c.55-e.n 7)
note
.
.

.....
96,
1

THALES

194,436,542
68, 201

(c.

640-546

B.C.)

30, 502, 671

note

TAGGARD, GENEVIEVE (189410 33 i94 8 ) TAGORE, RABINDRANATH (1861860 1941)

........ ........
.......
.

THAXTER, CELIA LAIGHTON


(183^-1894)

THAYER, ERNEST LAWRENCE


(1863-1940)

75 g

868
)

TAKAMURA KOTARO (1883-1956)


TALLEYRAND-PRIGORD, CHARLES MAURICE DE (1754-1838)
.

978
483 976 992

THAYER, Loins EDWIN (1878THEMISTOCLES (c. 528c.

949

462 B.C)
note

note

THEOBALD, LEWIS (1688-1744)


THEOCRITUS (c. 310-0. 250 B.C.) THEOGNIS (/Z. c. 545 B.C.) THEOPHORUS, SAINT IGNATIUS
. .

77

TANIZAKI JUNICHIRO (1886- ) TARKINGTON, BOOTH (18691946)


.

m
104
.

........ TATE, NAHUM (1652-1715) .......


note

900
383

77

327

(/Z.

c.

100)
324
(d.

TAWNEY, RICHARD HENRY

(1880-1962) TAYLOR, ANN (1782-1866) AND JANE (1783-1824) TAYLOR, BAYARD (1825-1878) TAYLOR, BERT LESTON (18661921) TAYLOR, EDWARD (c. 1644-1729) TAYLOR, BISHOP JEREMY (1613-

.....
....
.

note

962
546 726

THEOPHRASTUS

278

B.C.)

104

........

THIBAULT, JACQUES ANATOLE FRANCOIS (ANATOLE FRANCE) (1844-1924) THOMAS A REMPIS (1380-1471)
.

801

887
381

note

5
(1227.

THOMAS AQUINAS, SAINT

35 6

TAYLOR, JOHN (1580-1653)


note

TAYLOR, TOM (1817-1880) TAYLOR, ZACHARY (1784-1850) TEASDALE, SARA (1884-1933) TEILHARD DE CHARDIN, PIERRE
.

...... 102,183
.

THOMAS, DYLAN (1914-1953) THOMAS, EDITH MATILDA (1854THOMAS, EDWARD (1878-1917) THOMPSON, FRANCIS (1859-

1070

680
552 981

949 8;6

(1881-1955)
1699)

.....

TEMPLE, SIR WILLIAM (1628-

965
366

THOMSON, JAMES (1700-1748)


note

419
3 ?

THOMSON, JAMES (1834-1882)

753

1148

INDEX OF AUTHORS
THOMSON, JOSEPH JOHN (1856TREVELYAN, GEORGE MACAULAY
(1876-1962)

THOMSON, WILLIAM, LORD KELVIN (i 824-1 907) T&OREAU, HENRY DAVID (2827-

941

...

TROLLOPE, ANTHCWY (1815-

723

1862) note.

........
.

2882) note

678
671

680

TRONCHm, THEODORE (17091781)

504,943,971
825
291

........
(
. .
.

THORPE, ROSE HARTWICK (1850-1939) THORPE, THOMAS (c. 2570c. 1635), note

..... .....
. .

THRALE (Piozzi) T HESTER

LYNCH (1739-1 821) 468 THUCYDIDES (c. 460-400 B.C.) 89 THURBER, JAMES (1894-1961) .1033 TIBULLUS, ALBIUS (c. 54128 c. 29 B.C.) TICHBORNE, CHIDIOCK (c. 2558.
.

1879-1940) TRUMAN, HARRY S. (1884- ) TRUMBULL, JOHN f 1750-1 831) TSUBOUCHI SHOYO (2859-2935) TSUNG PlNC (375-443) TUCKER, JOSIAH (2722-1790) TUCKER, SOPHIE (1884-1966) TUDOR, MARY, QUEEN OF

TROTSKY, LEON

434 957 982 480


855 147 436

...
.
.
.

984
187
109

1586) TterELL, THOMAS (1686-1740) TJLLOTSON, JOHN (1630-1694) TIRSO DE MOLINA (GABRIEL

...... ........
.
.
.

ENGLAND (2526-1558)

TUNG CHUNG-SHU
c.

(c.

179-

204

B.C.)

204 400 366


316 135 611

TUPPER, MARTIN FARQUHAR


(1810-1889)

658
687

TURCENEV, IVAN SERGEEVICH


(2818-1883)

T&LLEZ) (1584-1648 TYrus VESPASIANUS (c. 41-81)


. ,

TURGOT, ANNE ROBERT JACQOTS, BARON DE L'ATJLNE ^17271781) note

TIUTCHEV, FEDOR (1803-1873) TOBIN, JOHN (1770-1804) 508 TOCQUEVILLE, ALEXIS DE (18056l6 1859) TOLKIEN, JOHN RONALD REUEL 1025 (1892- )
. .

446 421
(c.

........ .......
.......
.....

TUSSER,

THOMAS

2524-

188 1580) note 126, 182, 183, 184, 185

TOLSTOI, ALEXEI

KONSTANTINO-

VICH (1817-1875)
TOLSTOI,

...

TWAIN, MARK (SAMUEL LANGHORNE CLEMENS) (2835i9 10 ) note

684
31 731 3 61

LEO NIKOLAEVICH
note

7?8 812

(1828-1910)

TWEED, WILLIAM MARCY


(1823-1878)

722

TOMLINSON, HENRY MAJOR (1873-1958) TOMMASO DI CELANO (c. 1105c.

1255)

TOPLADY, AUGUSTUS
(1740^-1778)

TORRENCE, RlDGELY (2875-

1950). TOWNE, CHARLES HANSON


(1877-1949) TRAHERNE, THOMAS
1674)
(c.

.... .... ....

.....

916
157

TWEEDSMUIR, JOHN BXICHAN, LORD (2875-1940) TYLER, ROYALL (2757-2826)


note

...
.
.

934
491 1090 705

MONTAGUE
469

TYNDALL, JOHN (1820-2893)


UDALL, NICHOLAS (1505-2556)

939
943
377

note

TRENCH, FREDERIC HERBERT (1865-1923) TRENCK, FREDERICK VON DER


(1726-1794) note

... .....
1637-

.....

UDALL, STEWART LEE (1920- ) 1077 UFFORD, EDWARD SMITH (1852826 2929)

UHLAND, JOHANN LUDWIG


(1787-1862)
.
.

554

879

ULYANOV, VLADIMIR ILICH (NIKOLAI LENIN) (2870-

.......

93
421
note

954

1149

INDEX OF AUTHORS
UNAMUNO, MIGUEL DE (18641936)

VILLON, FRANCOIS (1431.

UNTERMEYER, Louis (i88cUpanishads (800-500


B.C.;
.

869 989
61

<*

1465)

VINCENT OF LERINS, SAINT


(d. c. 450) VINCI, LEONARDO DA (1452-

171

....

UREY, HAROLD CLAYTON


(1893)

M7
174

1029
VINSON, FREDERICK

MOORE
I0lg

VAL&RY, PAUL (1871-1945) VANBRUGH, SIR JOHN (16641726)

909

(1890-1953)

VIRCHOW, RUDOLF (1821-1902)


VIRGIL (PuBLius VIRGILIUS MARO) (70-19 B.C.)
note.

710
iifi

VAN BUREN, MARTIN


1862) note

(1782-

VANDERBILT, WILLIAM HENRY


(1821-1885) VANDIVER, WILLARD DUNCAN (1854-1932)

710

133,234,847 VOLNEY, CONSTANTIN DE (l7C71820) note

...

...
"

9,.

VAN DOREN, CARL VAN DOREN, MARK VAN DYKE, HENRY

830 (1885-1950) 989 1033 (1894- ) (1852-1933) 827 VANZETTI, BARTOLOMEO (18881010 1927)
.

VOLTAIRE, (FRANgois MARIE AROUET) (1694-1778)


note.
.

VARRO, MARCUS TERENTIUS


(116-2 7 note
B.C.)

no
.

VYAZEMSKY, PETER (1792-1878)

108,357,389,438 Voss, TOHANN HEINRICH (17511826) .482 VOZNESENSKY, ANDREI (1933- ) lo^ Vulgate note. 18,34,36,49
.
.

573

VAUGHAN, HENRY (1622-1695) VAUVENARGUES, Luc DE CLAPIERS, MARQUIS DE


(1715-1747)

209 362

WADE, JOSEPH AUGUSTINE


(1796-1845)
$87

WAGNER, RICHARD
438 187
845 211 146

(1813-1883)

676
424

WALAEUS, JAN
note

VAUX, SIR THOMAS (1^10-1556) VEBLEN, THORSTEIN (18571929)

WALKER, JAMES JOHN (18811946) note


796
364

VEGA, LOPE DE (1562-1632) VEGETIUS (FLAVIUS VEGETIUS RENATUS) (ft. c. 375) VENABLE, WILLIAM HENRY
.

WALKER, WILLIAM (1623-1684) WALLACE, HENRY AGARD (18881965)

1010

(1836-1918) note

WALLACE, LEW (LEWIS) (1827953


(c.

VENNING, RALPH
note

1621-1674)
102, 299
.

WALLACE, WILLIAM Ross


(1819-1881)
699
332

VERLAINE, PAUL (1844-1896)

807

VICHY-CHAMROND, MARIE DE, MARQUISE DU DEFFAND


(1697-1780) VICTORIA, QUEEN (1819-1901) VIGNY, ALFRED DE (1797-1863) VILLARS, CLAUDE Louis HECTOR, Due DE (1653-1734) note VlLLIERS DE L'lSLE-ADAM, PHILIPPE AUGUSTE (18381889)
.

WALLER, EDMUND (1606-1687)


note

77
442

418 699
589

WALPOLE, HORACE (1717-1797) WALPOLE, SIR ROBERT (1676*745) note

397

3?"
387

507

WALSH, WILLIAM (1663-1708) WALTER, HOWARD ARNOLD


(1883-1918)

97 8

WALTHER VON DER VOGEL780

WEIDE

(c.

1160-1230)

156

1150

INDEX OF AUTHORS
WAtTON, IZAAK
note
WARBITRTON,, BISHOP
301, 306

WEBSTER, JOHN (1580-1625)


note
. .

314

123, 169, 185, 191

WILLIAM
4*9

(1698-1779)

WEDGWOOD, JOSIAH (1730-1795) WEEMS, MASON LOCKE (1759U7 WELLINGTON, ARTHUR WELLESLEY, DUKE OF
(1769-2852)
l8 '5>

456
499

WARD, ARTEMUS (CHARLES FARRAR BROWNE) (18341867)

750
.

WARD, THOMAS (1577-1639) WARE, EUGENE FITCH (IRONQUILL) (2841-1912) note

312
791

506

...
. .

WELLS, HERBERT GEORGE


(2866-1946)

888

WARMAN, CY (2855-1924) WARNER, CHARLES DUDLEY


(1829-2900) WARREN, EARL (1891- ).

775 832
733 1020

WENTWORTH, THOMAS, EARL OF


STRAFFORD (1593-2641)
note

WASHBVRN, HENRY STEVENSON


(1813-1903)

676

WASHINGTON, BOOKER TALIAFERRO (1856-1915) WASHINGTON, GEORGE (17321799) note

WESLEY, CHARLES (1707-1788) WESLEY, IOHN (1703-2792) WEST, MAE (1893- ) WEST, REBECCA (1892- )
.

234 425 420 1029

...

note

975
.

838

460 197

WESTBURY, RICHARD BETHELL, LORD (2800-2873) WESTCOTT, EDWARD NOYES


.

597
811

(2846-2898)

WATERHOUSE, BENJAMIN (27541846)

484
949
724
(c.

WATSON, JOHN BROADUS (1878*95 8 )

WHARTON, EDITH (2862-2937) WHEWELL, WILLIAM (17942866) note

865
57?

206

WATSON, JOHN WHITTAKER


(1824-1890)

WHISTLER, JAMES McNEiLL


(2834-2903)

WATSON, WILLIAM
1603) note

1559330

WHITE, ELWYN BROOKS (1899note

754 1046 682

WHITE, JAMES TERRY (18451920) note

WATSON, SIR WILLIAM (1858-

700
896
10 49

WATTERSON, HENRY (18402922)

WHITE, WILLIAM ALLEN


.
.

WATTS, ISAAC (1674-1748)


note

785 396 322

(1868-2944)

WHITE, WILLIAM LINDSAY

(19-)
WHITEFIELD, GEORGE (17142770) note

WAUGH, EVELYN (1903-1966) .1053 WEATHERLY, FREDERIC EDWARD


(1848-1929)

815
753

WEBB, CHARLES HENRY (1834-

WHITEHEAD, ALFRED NORTH


(2862-2947)

425
861

i95)
WEBB, SIDNEY (LORD PASSFIELD) (2859-1947) AND BEATRICE
(2858-2943)

WHITEHEAD, WILLIAM (1715*7 8 5)

WHITING,
857 546 547

WEBSTER, DANIEL (1782-1852)


note

WHITMAN, WALT (2829-1892)


note

Wiu IAM (1825-2 878)


.

439 726 699 931


625

WHITTIER, JOHN GREENLEAF


(1807-2892) note.
(c.
.

WEBSTER, HAROLD TUCKER


(1885-1952)

989
724

624,625,650,826

WEBSTER, HENRY DE LAFAYETTE


(1824-2896)

WHITTINTON, ROBERT
1480-0. 1530)

....

179

INDEX OF AUTHORS
WHYTE-MELVILLE, GEORGE JOHN
(1821-1878)

.....
)

WIDDEMER, MARGARET (1880WIELAND, CHRISTOPH MARTIN


(1733-1813)

710 962
462 1033
6l 7

WILSON, WOODROW (i 856-1 924) WINDSOR, DUKE OF (KING

.....
.

WIENER, NORBERT (1894-1964) WlLBERFORCE, SAMUEL (iSoj1873) note


)

EDWARD VIII) (1894-1972) WINNER, SEPTIMUS (ALICE HAWTHORNE) (1827-1902) WINSLOW, EDWARD (1595-1655)
note

ic ?4

7'B

........ ....... WILBUR, RICHARD PURDY ....... (1921WILCOX, ELLA WHEELER


(1850-1919)
note

.......
.

725
1078

WINTHROP, JOHN (1588-1649) WINTHROP, ROBERT CHARLES


WISTER,
.

..... ......

(1809-1894) OWEN (1860-1938) WITHER, GEORGE (1588-1667)

.....
.
.

6851

825

610, 872

WILDE, OSCAR FINGAL O'FLAHERTIE WlLLS (1854-

........ ....... WILDER THORNTON NIVEN ....... (i8g7WILEY, HERBERT V. (1891........


1900) note
T

WODEHOUSE, PELHAM GRENVILLE (1881- ) .065 WOLCOT, JOHN (PETER PINDAR)


.
.

838 76
1041
1021
589

(1738-1819)
.

WILHELM
WILLARD,

1954)

(1797-1888)

...
.

WOLFE, HUMBERT (1885-1940) WOLFE, THOMAS (1900-1938) WOODBERRY, GEORGE EDWARD


(1855-1930)
note

n te 303, 407 WOLFE, CHARLES (1791-1823) 566


990
1049
8ji
.

4fig

WILKES, JOHN (1727-1797)


note

.......
(1787-1870)
. . .

EMMA
I

447 416
554
191 383

WOODFALL, HENRY (1739-1805)

815
.
.

WILLIAM

(WILLIAM THE
PRINCE OF ORANGE

SILENT) (1533-1584)

WOODRUFF, JULIA LOUISE MATILDA (1833-1909) WOODWARD, WILLIAM E. (18741950) note

749

WILLIAM

III,

(1650-1702)
1348)

.....

741

WILLIAM OF OCKHAM (1300-

........

WOODWORTH, SAMUEL
162
l6 3
1842)

(1785555
.

WILLIAM OF WYKEHAM (1324WILLIAMS, HARRY (1874-1924) WILLIAMS, ROGER (c. 1603934


329

WOOLF, VIRGINIA (1882-1941) WOOLLCOTT, ALEXANDER (1887*943)

975

999

WOOLLCOTT, WILLIAM
(1877-1949) note

W.
943 910

WILLIAMS, WILLIAM CARLOS


(1883-1963) WILLIS, NATHANIEL PARKER

..... ..... (1806-1867) WILLKIE, WENDELL LEWIS ..... (1892-1944)


WILMOT, JOHN, EARL OF
.

979
619
1025
382 1035

WOOLMAN, JOHN
note

(1720-1772)

443

WOOLSEY, JOHN M.
968
785

WORDSWORTH, ELIZABETH
(1840-1932)

ROCHESTER (1647-1680) WILSON, EDMUND (1895-1972) WILSON, HARRY LEON (18671939)

WORDSWORTH, WILLIAM
1850) note.
.

(1770508

.....
...
.

165,180,335,358

WILSON, JOHN (d. 1889) WlLSON, McLANDBURGH


flLzoi5).

....
)
.

893 786

WORK, HENRY CLAY


1884)

(1832747

WOTTON,
943 1078

SIR

HENRY

(1568300
19*

WILSON, SLOAN (1920-

1639) note

1152

INDEX OF AUTHORS
WREN, SIR CHRISTOPHER
^1632-1723)
1959)
.

.-.
.

374

WWGHT, FRANK LLOYD (1809WRIGHT, RICHARD (1908-1960)


Wiicirr.

9 1067

YEVTUSHENKO, YEVGENY Al.EKSANDROVICH (1933- ) YOKOMITSIT RlICHI (1898-1947) YONCE, NICHOLAS (d. 1619)
nof e

1083 1042
1

26

(1867-1912) AND ORVILLE (1871-1948) WYATT, SIR THOMAS (e. 1503.

WILBUR

910
186
315

1542) note

WYCHERLEY, WILLIAM
fc.

1640-1716)
note

WYCLIFFE, JOHN (c. 1320-1384) WYLIE, ELINOR HOYT (18851928)

133 163

WYNN, ED (1886-1966)

990 993
70 92
36?

598 398 note. 265,312,313,329, 372, 376, 306 886 YOUNG, GEORGE W. (ft. 1900) YOUNG, JOE (ft. 1919) 999 YOUNG, SIR JOHN note 302 YOUNG, ROLAND (1887-2953) 999
. . . .

YOSHIDA SHOW d 830-1 859) YOUNG, BRIGHAM ( 1801-1877) YOUNG, EDWARD (1683-2765)
.

YOSANO AKIKO fi 878-1 942) YOSHIDA KENKO (1283-1350)

943
162

740

YOUNCDAHL, LUTHER

W.

XENOPHANES (c, 570-0. 475 B.C.) XENOPHON (c. 430-355 B.C.)


.

(1896-

1037
.

YAMACA SOKO (1622-1685)


YBARRA,

THOMAS RUSSELL
962
879 879

ZAMOYSKI, JAN (1541-1605) ZANGWILL, ISRAEL (1864-1926) ZAPATA, EMILIANO (c. 18774

192 870

(1880-)
YEATS
T

WILLIAM BUTLER

1919) ZENO (335-263

..

B.C.)

(1865-1939) note

ZEUXIS (ft. 400 B.C.) ZlNCGREF, JULIUS WlLHELM


(1591-1635) ZINSSER, HANS (1878-1940)

..... .... ....


. . . .

943
103 92
321

YELVERTON, BARRY, LORD AVONMORE (1736-1805)


note

547

ZOLA,

MILE (1840-1902)

949 786

"53

Index

INDEX
as

Entries are arranged alphabetically, with hyphenated words indexed one word. Spelling is in general in accordance with Webster, with

dialect spellings indexed in The order for possessives

both dialect and standard forms.

and

plurals of identical spelling

is:

author's,

authors, authors'.

The
text

letter a after the

page number indicates the

left

column

of the

xvi-xviii)

page referred to; the letter b indicates the right column. For fuller discussion of the index, see the section on the index (pages in the Guide to the Use of FAMILIAR QUOTATIONS in the

front of the book.


Abhorred
26$b
A, art with capital A, 8isb white E, Sjoa black first write a crowned A, i66a
shears,

in

my

imagination,

3$8b

Abjure my so much loved variety, 3o7a Able and willing to pull weight,
at least as far as a., Ssjja a. for thine enemy,

improve X, g6ia on gown letter A, 6130 A-angTing, be quiet and go a., 36b Aaron's, like A. serpent, 4oga
injures
to

that senseless tribe, $goa Abhors, nature a. a vacuum, 373* Abide, fates impose that men a., 2i6a nowhere did a., 5$5b

be

26gb

Ablest navigators, 466a

Ablution 58ia

round

earth's

shores,
fifth

rod,

4oga

others

Ab

love principium, OYO, i$4a urbe condita, i4gb


all

n6b
a.

Abandon,

hope

who

enter

question, 7iob something in him we cannot a., 3*7* under the shadow of the Almighty, sob
shall a. in thy tabernacle,

a.

our

Abner smote him under the


rib,

i2b Aboard at a ship's helm, 7oib Abode, brightly as from rich


68 4 a destined hour, 62gb

a.,

here, i5gb basely a. noble struggle, 4&5a do not a. all faith, i05b do not fear to a. faults, ?ia

who

i7a

dread

a.,

4413
a. of the gods,

government 47*a

which kept

free,

learning nation never a. fate, 75oa to cries and lamentations, i$sa Abandoned and passed by, gi7b down the a. heaven, g86a God a. these defended, 854b

and no sorrow,

%a

with me, 567a Abides, in mystery soul a., 711 a there a. peace of thine, 7113 Abideth, earth a. forever, 7a faith hope charity, 5sb in presence of lord, 4b Abiding faith in America, io8sb leaf, io66b shepherds a. in field, 46a
Abiezer, vintage of A., Abiit ad plures, iggb
Abilities,
i

Olympus

65b

la
i

on earth, i05b Abandonment of force, g74b Abased, whoso exalt himself be


a.

man

excessit evasit erupit,


a.,

lob

untented Kosmos my a., 824a without suspecting our a., 7$8b Abodes, aiming at blessed a., 4o8a august a., 536a peaceful a. of the gods, 65b sprung from blessed a., 4o6a Abolish, English never a., 86aa right to alter or a. it, 47ob vice destroy virtue, 3joa Abolished will, io75a Abominable, like A. Snowman,

43b Abashed the Devil stood, 346a Abasheth, as much a. me, 7$6a Abatement and low price, 2513 Abbot of Aberbrotbok, 532b Abbots purple as their wines,
4i4a

common opinions common a., 726b


to a.,

un6&7a g4ga

from each according

newspapers the most a., 48 ib Abominably, imitated humanity


so a., aGga Abomination, Mass an
a., i7gb of desolation, 44a Abora, singing of Mount A., $24a Aborigines, fell on knees then on a., 686a-b

specialist regardless of a.,

utterly corrupt, 53 ib Ability alone insufficient, 3793 capacity to act wisely, 86 ib distressed by want of a., 72b

ABC, learn

ABC

of science, 8i8b

of being, gs6b

Abdullah Bulbul Amir, iioob Abednego, Shadrach Meshach and A., 35a A-begging, truth goes a. f i7gb Abel was keeper of sheep, 6a Aberbrothok, Abbot of A., 5$ab Aberdour, half owre to A., io87b Abhor and detest Sabbath, 76 ib makers and laws approve, 37ob

obligeth no man to more a., i4ga laughter a. and sighing, 7373 lean and low a., 2533 retain a. to function, i036b

God

than

A-borrowing, goeth a., i88a Abortive Platonists, io52b Abou Ben Adhem, 5518

Abound,
2140

joys a. as seasons fleet,

they never perform, 268b to get to verge, looob to register multiple perception,

Abounded, grace more a., where sin a., gob About about in reel and
5*5*
it

5ob
rout,

Abject are usually ambitious, 374* submission, 461 a

and

a.

but evermore, Csoa

"57

Above
Above, at once a. beneath around, 444* economic tyranny a., 99 la every good gift is from a., 563 from a. and below, 53ib insolence and triviality, gg6a no stander a. or apart, yoob world stretched the sky, 10233

INDEX
Absentes, in a. felicior aestus amantes, 128 a Absent! nemo non nocuisse velit, ia8a

Absurd,
rule
a.,

question

is

a.,

1060!

96sb

Absentminded beggar, 875b Absents, presents endear a., 5353 Absit omen, i4gb Absolute and in herself complete,
347**

the a. not the improbable, 6765 to be believed because a., 143! Absurdities of next age, 8173 Absurdity, dull without a singl<
a.,

man

448a only subject


a.,

to

a.,

317!

Abra ready ere I called, 3883 Abraham, God of A. not of philosophers, 3643
of scientific

privilege of

3175

atoms preserved by
1133

a.

solidity,

men,

705!}

be A., ?a thy we are coming Father A., 656b Abraham's, beggar in A. bosom, 47* liest in A. bosom, 5123 sleep in A. bosom, 2175 Abram dwelled in Canaan, 6b-7a Abreast, into midnight galloped a., 66$a of truth, 6923 one but goes a., 268b Abreuve nos sillons, 4993 Abridging freedom of speech, 474b
shall

name

be a. for death, 2713 built a. trust, 28ib dictatorship a. as any

other,

what to do with this a., 8833 Abundance, add more to a., 971! full sharers in a., 82 la if thou hast a., 36b in a. Isck, 88b
10252 42! possesses virtue in a., 74b of a 6 in a., 97 days pray result of brain and brawn, 8211 will not suffer him to sleep, 28:
a.

foreknowledge a., 3443 freedom of navigation, 842b how a. the knave is, 2655 idea of knowledge, 953 Johannes fac totum, 2o6a mark you his a. shall, 28gb natures or kinds, 953 notion of a. beauty, 933 power corrupts absolutely, 7503
security, 10553

natural out of

and varied

a.,

mouth speaketh,

Abundant, blueness a., 668a good communicated more


34 6a

a.

more

a. life,

9713

Abridgment man, 45 la

of

all

pleasant

in

truth forever a., 6593 Absolutely, corrupts a., 7503


line a. straight, 5753

of freedom, 48ob

Abroad for good of my country, 39&1


haven't been iciia
a.

in

so

long,
a.,

Absolutes in Bill of Rights, 99 ib in world affairs, 10553 meant prohibitions to be a., 99 1D

shower of curates, 67Qb wretched and a. Russia, 7103 Abundsntly, have life more 48b Abuse, bore without a. name

3.

o,

gentleman, 6513 cry out loudest its a., 374b drug it's fashion to a., 7692

know own
lie

country before goes

438a a. for commonwealth, goia obsequious a., 5503 purchase great alliance, 2i6a schoolmaster is a., 54ob what should not be published a., 8Sa when he next doth ride a., 457b Absalom my son my son, isb Absence, conspicuous by a., s6yb courage not a. of fear, 7623 cry of a. in heart, looga cure of love, 1953 darkness death, 3063 diminishes mediocre passions,
356a dote on his very a., 2323 doth breed continual remembrance, i7ob like a winter my a., 3933 love cannot admit a., 3o6a love renewed by a., 4283 makes heart fonder, 1283, 5883 of mind we have borne, sjsb of occupation not rest, 457a of romance in my history, 8ga opens springs of love, 6793 peace not a. of war, 3733 re-begot of a., 3o6a seemed my flame to qualify,
Ulysses' a., a8gb Absent face that fixed you, 6i8a

Absolutism tempered by assassination, 5023 Absolve, compensate bad In man 3. him so, 667b foulness of their fate, gg2b pray God 3. us all, 1716 Absolved from allegiance, 46ob judge condemned when criminal a., 1263 Absorb as parallax a flame, 7383 Absorbing, reflects images with out a., 7773 Absorbs, country a. him affectionately, eggb tinged by what a. it, 795a Abstain from fleshly lusts, 56b from ignorance, 6753 from intentional wrongdoing, 88a Abstains from words, 6903 Abstemiously, partake as bee a.,
737 a Abstinence easy to me, 42gb lean and sallow a., 337b lend easiness to next a., 264b sows sand all over, 488b Abstinete, a fabis a., 3iob Abstract concepts, 474b ideas conditioned by time, 86 ib liberty not found, 4533 love of beauty in a., 5853 man in the a., 7$2b science knowledge of reasons,

how long
tience,

Catiline

3.

our pa

nob

of greatness, 2543

wicked dreams a., 2833 Abused, better to be much a. 274b or disabused, 4093 Abuses, evils exist only in 3., 503! conceal a. excites hatred to
538b Abusing, busing, abstain from a. bodies 88a of God's patience, 2673 power without a. it, 5g6b stop a. my verses or publish
35 a

Abydos,

Sestos

and

A.

of

he

3073 Abysm of time, 2963 Abysmsl dark of center, s86b Abyss, dark and final a., 1073! man is rope over 3., 8osa nameless a., 7223 of new Dark Age, 9213 Abysses, dread a. unknown tides
Rasselas Prince of A. 4283 maid, Abyssinian 524a Acsdeme, groves of A., 1243 olive grove of A., 348b Academes, they are the books th< a., 222a A cade mi, inter silvas A., 124. Academic, dull a. half-dozen, 937! life, sogb
Abyssinia,

breasts,

567*

words such
Abstracted,

as glory, 10443

friends a. speak,

from
if

Him

37a

take
-

high

a.

man

to

roam, 5i8a be a. were to be away,


I spirit,
ill

alone, 6973 Abstracts, and

brief

chronicles,

359 a
in body present in in the spring, ZQ$&
let

26ib
523
a

Absurd
io68b
is

essentially

divorce,

Academy, Frenchman in A., 430! Accelerated grimace, g88a Acceleration proportional to ap plied force, 37gb
Accent,

no

one

speak

of

1283

essential concept, lick 3. pomp, 2633

io68b

one from another, 7b or dead friend dear, 5903 room of a. child, 2s6b thee from felicity, 266b

logic of heart

a.,

46ob

man

never changes, 548b


creatures
a. all

poets

most

a.,

4isb

proving

written,

almost Englisl speak without a., loiia Greek a. slanting wrong, 684: Accents, aged a. untimely words 2iob caught his dear a., 662b yet unknown, 2553

nc;8

INDEX
Accept, bow decline to a. fall in with

Acquired
Achievement, bring
immortality an
it

and

a.

end,

gs6a

end of man, loggb what asked to a.,

if

a. him, 65 ib nominated not a., 705a

learn

to

a.

in

silence,

8i7b

never a. thing as true, 32?b not a beggar would a., 7383

found, 868b 6s6b what cannot be changed, i024a will for deed a., 18 ib Acceptable, be a. in thy sight, i7b more a. upright man, $a offices a. here, 47 ib
place

not God I don't a., 7o8a our thanksgiving a., 77 ib

providence
a.,

6o6a

tamely

universe,

every man a. to his work, igb Account, closing your a. and mine, 6goa of her life to clod, 245b sent to my a., a6oa whatever you lose no a., i25b Accountability to no one, g84b Accountable, a., governments
to

Accomplishments, emerges ahead of a., io52b give luster, 41 sb Accord, someone whom we a. with, 477b Accordance, activity in a. with excellence, g8a According as man is must you humor him, iogb

to a.,

84b
9352

consciousness painful a., death of endeavor, 79 ib


a.,

sum

quality of man of a., 5&4b of human a., 8i7b talent in every branch of a.
1

8g8b

-,

8gb
today's a. tomorrow's confusion,

77ib wealth opportunity for a., 8gb Achievements of intellect everlasting,

n6a
naught
n' a., i6sa
n*

Achieveth,

assaieth

naught

safeguards

a.

to

all

nations,

g82b
Acceptance,
ethical
a.

Accounting, i5ia

death

the

final

a.,

Achieving nothing then die, 7i5b still a. still pursuing, 6sob Achilles exists only through Homer, 503b not even A. will bring all to
fulfillment, 64b see the great A., 646b

of world,
a.,

939*
Acceptation,
3 86b

news worthy of

i5ob Accumulate, horrors a,, 2753 sage does not a., 75b

no

a. for tastes,

now is a. time, sab that which a. false, gogb Accepting, charms by a., 4o7a not by a. favors, goa Access and passage to remorse, 2 8ib Accessible, all beautiful and a.,
Accepted,
!73 a Accident,
i?7 b

by

a.

got

its

liberty,

Accumulated experience, g$5a wrong, 868b Accumulates, where wealth a., 449 a Accumulation, law of a., 757b Accuracy tried by severe tests, 8ga Accurate in his judgment, 462 b no woman a. about age, 8403 thought a conquest, ios8b Accurately, report news a., io2ob Accursed bucketshop 877b
craving for gold,
fear

what name A. assumed, 331 a wrath of A., 62a Achilles', stood upon A. tomb,
56ia
Achilles' wrath, 4osa

Aching, bring

my

a.

heart to
7 37 a

rest,

noa

ease one life the hours, 8g3a

a.,

goga spare my a. sight, 44 2 a have a. left void, they Achitophel, false A. was
3 68a

one tooth and

it a.,

456b
first,

much, 776b found out by a., 5363


counts for
a.,

most

a.

i8b of base passions,


i

happy

gi4a, g6oa of sentiment, 754b our race may be a., gz5b

Acid final test, io48a Acknowledge and bewail our


6ia

sins,

progress

not

a.

but

necessity,

75b
shot of
a.,

a.,

Accidentally,

275b America discovered


I

invented war, 2i2a night she bore me, 843 are opinions a., 88ab what blessed prove a., 667a Accuse, j'a., 786a
first

he that

and confess our

sins,

5gb

I a. the Furies, gosb restraint of reverence, 8gb

997b

only a. Accidents,
fill

am

chapter world, 10873

French, of a.,

4i4b
41 6a

in best-regulated families, 67 ib miracles propitious a., 867 b

enough to a., 448b not Nature, 347 a not servant to his master, a6b Accuser, no a. so terrible, io8a Accuses, excuses himself a. himself, i88b
justice

Acknowledged, governments whose independence a., 49 2 a Acknowledgment, transcribed without a., i32a
A-clickin' like tickin'

of a clock,

8igb
58ib poor Tom's a., 278b Acorn, inherent as oak
a.,

A-cold, owl

by flood, 27 2b Q46a shackles a., a88b which started to happen to somebody else, Q46a Acclaim earned in blood, ioi6b your glorious name, 1031 a

moving

a.

runs into

a.,

Accusing Spirit, 4383 Accustomed, not a. to eating, 9775 to deliberate when drunk, 86b
to everything,

in
a,,

a.,

77b

Aces, Christian with four

a., 764b triumphing over kings and a.,

oak from small Acorns, hogs eat a., 352a


lofty

507a

Accommodating vice, 36 la Accommodation, tolerable

loiga Achaeans, brought upon myriad woes, 6aa


well-greaved A., 6ga Achates, faithful A., uga
fidus A.,

the A.

a.

of

interests, giga Accommodations, equal but sepa-

uga
air,
a.

1021 a Accompany old age, a86a Accomplice, art a. of love, 846b


rate
a.,

Ache, age

a. penury, 27 ib at tooth of the ego, io68a

charm
Ached,

a.

Accomplish little, 4g8b you must a. as you may, 2i8b Accomplished, desire a. is sweet, ?4a her warfare is a., 32b nothing a. alone, 10240 nothing great a. without passion, 5o7b plan of Zeus was being a,, 6aa Accomplishes Zeus a., 79$ Accomplishes without any action, 74b Accomplishing, armorers a. the knights, 244a their appointed courses, 87a

with never

247a with

heart,

Acheron, fear of A. be sent packing,

Aches,

nsb my heart a.,

oaks from little a., i5ia, 5073 Acquaintance, creditable a., 388b in which no new a., 434a promoter of mutual a., 752a should auld a., 494b slight a. with numbers, 50 a a sneered and slanged, goib visiting a., 48ob Acquaintances, make new a., 4goa Acquainted, she and I long a., 854b with grief, 353 with the night, g28a Acquainting ourselves with best,

582a

7i6a
Acquaints, misery a. with strange bedfellows, 2g7a

sense a. at thee, 2?sb when the head a., igsb Achieve and cherish peace, 64ob cannot as you would a., 2i8b
just

and
a.

lasting

peace,

g8gb
8033

some
the

a. greatness,

252b
mastery,

of

the

Achieved by others' death, 2373 matchless deed's a., 444b the a. West, io38b

Acquent, when we were first a., 494b Acquire and beget a temperance, 262b a. him, Acquired, fortune has io4b knowledge a. under compulsion, 94b

1159

Acquiring
Acquiring and possessing property, 446a Acquisition, desire increases with a., 4375 Acquisitions or losses by nature, 475* Acre, God's a., 62 ib in Middlesex, 595b of barren ground, 2963 Acres, a few paternal a. bound,
4023.

INDEX
Action,

brave

in

a.

patient

in

Actions, thousand

a.

one

labors, 7522

843*

crowded with glorious a., 5223 faithful honor dear, 4o7a feeling for single good a., 4783 fruit of a. not be motive, io6a give a. its character, 923 great end of life a., 7253 group a. in group problems,
horse symbol of a., g86a imitate a. of the tiger, 2435 imitation of a. that is serious,
impartial in thought and a., 841 a in a. how like an angel, 261 a in a. soar as high, 68ob in bondage to history, 7323

most exceller when our a. do not, 285 work good of agent, 373 Active, deeply and intei
a.

what

experimentation

a. scien

broad 733*

a.

patent

of

nobility,
a.,

happy man works

ancestral

g8b

120b over whose a. blessed feet, sgyb Acrobat, governor of New York not 3., gi6b Act against Constitution, 4463 against natural equity, 4463 as if God did exist, 86gb as if there were God, 7953 beauty and valor and a., 8033 between motion and a., 10033 both a. and know, $5gb bring to light goodly a., 9493 but not rely on own ability, 7$b
capacity to a. wisely, 861 b condemn fault and not a., 27ob every a. as though thy last,

free a. individuals, 7132 through form and figu to the vigilant a. brai walked with step so a., Activest, his a.-part, 354b" Activity in accordance wit lence, 983 property product at, a scientific a. cmnulati

progressive, 981 b Actor, better be a.

thai

lose the name of a., 2623 lust in a., 2943 made to follow path of a.,

knowledge must come through a., 82b life a. and passion, 7&6b
7ib

dreamer
Actors,

is a.,

well-graced

a. leaves, 22:

like a.

in ancien

8303
these our a. were spin Acts before he speaks, 713
feels noblest a. best, 679; four a. already past, 400 his a. being seven
let

frankly

listen

to

stars,

has

no

ethical

quality

unless

chosen, 7gsb heaven helps not men who will not a., 76b in doubt to a. or rest, 4o8b in living present, 6zob in the noon, 4$7b initial a. of culture, 9783 last a. crowns play, 3223
lover's

a. fine, 3243 is origin of his a., g8a of a., ioi6a of a. forced to thought, 893* mindless a., 10563 moment not of a. or inaction, io6a no worthy a. done, iogoa nor utterance nor speech, of masses of men, 68ia

makes the

man man man

age

or Roman's part, 4o6a


of kindness ever wasted,

no

a.

75 not criminal unless intent criminal, 1503 not judge by one a., 8473 of fear, 2583 of God defined, 10173 of life, 8ooa old age play's last a., lisa only on that maxim, 445b our Antipodes, 331 a

painting dramatic a. pious a. sugar o'er, 26 ib pious fraud as with bad a,, 467 b Puritans gave world a., 6593 science guide of a., 8oga sense of honor in a., 903 sentiments weigh less than a., 6953 spectator of a. he describes,

schemed and plotted, 10 to keep good a. refre new, 2o7b with such a. fill a pe Actual, dig deep into a
solid earth a. world, 680

a play have five < nameless unremember 5092 our angels are, 3133 our lives in a. exemplai

true

account of 68ib

a.
is

is

Actuality of thought

Actus non facit reum, 1502 Acute inquisitive dexteroi


Acutely,

7213
suit a. to the word, Tao takes no a., 743
test
lies

companion so
a.,

f<

6sb

tude

gogb
*

AJX,

thought thought

poem
power

5173 prologues to swelling a. f 281 a promptly, 8353 reap an a., noob sins they love to a., ggob sleep an a. or two, aggb think himself a. of God, 6793 two witnesses to overt a., 4743 virtue and prudent a., 4533 vote and a. to bring good, 794b way of sage is to a., 75b what it is to a. or suffer, 10045 Acta est fabula, 1503 Actaeon ego dominum cognoscite, is8b I am A., i28b Acted, lofty scene be a. o'er, 2553 Acting is suffering, ioo4b of dreadful thing, 5543 only when off he was a., 4513 surrender explaining not a.,

of a. of mind, 52gb to live and a.,

to every truth in vice by a. dignified, 224b Actions, decisive a. unconsidered,

in a., 793 child of a., 61 la too much for a., 7803 a. equal reaction, 37gb a., 61 2a

8970 emanate from personality, 8493 exceeds in his a., 72b extreme a. ascribed to vanity, 8o4b
less

Adam and Eve and


944b

astra per aspera, 1503 infinitum, so proceed maiorem Dei gloriam, 18 unguem factus homo, 12 Adage, poor cat i" the 2 Adagios of islands, 10433

Ad

the war what elsewhere, 7$ob

pin

conscious

a.
a.,

mold
4363 993

lives,

755b
morality of his

must be his spirit, mutual a. of two bodies,

379!)

gi6a
Action, accomplishes without any

74b advantage of taking no


a.,

a.,

74b

a. are my ministers', g66b not always a. show man, 4o6a not always true sons, asab of the just, 327b predestined from eternity, 7323 rectitude and sincerity of a., 9223 society exists for noble a., g8b speaks according to his a., 713 speech is image of a., 68b submit thoughts and a. to laws, igia think beforehand that a. be resolute, looa

my

his wife, 6453 believe in A. and Evi brought death into worl called his wife's name deep sleep upon A., sb had 'em, 8g7b in A. all die, 533 offending A., 2433 old A., 6ib

and

rage and hate from A.

son of A. and Eve, g87b the goodliest man, 3453 was a gardener, 2153, 87*; wss but human, 7623 when A. delved, 10843 wonder what A. and Ev<

6g6b

996a

Adamant

young A. Cupid, 22$b


for drift, 9203
3.,

frame of

4273

Adamantine

chains, 34ib

Il6o

INDEX
Adam's dream, 5845
fall,

Adventures
a.

Admirably, those which most


flourish, 2933

88ia

hold up A. profession, 365!) in A. ear left voice, j4?a in A. fall sinned, io8ga sons conceived in sin, giia-b Adamses vote for Douglas, 8583 Adam-zad, no truce with A.,

Admiral cheered them holding out hope, 1722 Dewey was the A., 79 la kill a. from time to time, 4171 last of all an a. came, 5323 Admirals have died of gout, 3645
Admiralty, blood price of a., 8753 Admiration, as great in a. as herself, sggb from fastidious, 5953 jumps from a. to love, 5333 of the poet, 5293 only of weak minds, 348b season your a., 2583 Admirations, culture lives by a.,

Adorn, Greece Italy and England did a., 37ob manners must a. knowledge,
{
j

8752 i r Adaptation, struggle for a., 9353 Adapted, means plainly a. to end, 4850 to my kind of fooling, 9290 Adazzle dim, 8o$a Add hue to rainbow, ag6b more to abundance, 97 ib one cubit to stature, 4ia power to a. or detract, 6sga to these retired leisure, 33sb to those with too much, 97 ib what we can to life, Siyb Added, these things a. unto thee,
Adder, like the deaf
stingeth like
a.,

j
>

modest 'looks cottage a., 45ob nothing he did not a., 4323 old England to a., SySb moral or a. tale, 427a point Adorned, holy city a. for husband, 58b

humble grave
in
subject, 41 6a

a.,

4o6a
a.,

naked beauty more


a.

3455

most, 4igb Adornin*, bride in rich a., 81 ib

when unadorned

Adornment, some women handsome without a., Adorns and cheers our way, 4473

ma

Admire,

fools a., 4o$b and see, 8?4b most men a. virtue, 348b that riches grow in hell, 3438

for to a.

only itself, io67b Adulation, bursts with windy 776a Adult, world of a. life, gs6a
Adulterers,
a.,

a.,

to a.

we should not understand,


,

drunkards

liars

and

an

a.,

igb 26a

39i*>
a.,

2773
a.

tread

upon the

lion

and

Addicted,

Adding

really a. artist, insult to 'injury,

2ob 7ggb

too simple to a. it, 5953 we like those who a. us, 3563 where none a., 434a Admired, celerity never more a.,

Adulteries of art, soab Adultery, committed heart, 4oa


call a.,

in

his

Addison, volumes of A., 428b Addled mosses dank, g8ga Addressed, envelope a. to you,

s88a
die honored and a., 92 2a few a. by own domestics, igob that she might a. be, 22 la Admires, coral lip a., 32^ meanly a. mean things, 66oa

gods 56oa psychology of a., 9133 thou shalt not commit a., ga Advance, not to go back to a.,
of
science

Addressing

io57b her winged words, 6ab audiences, popular


to the eye,

quality

of

an evolution, 8sgb American civiliza-

98b Adds precious seeing

222a Adelante adelante, ygoa Adequate, no a. military defense,


strength not a. to resist, ggb Adeste fideles, 1503 Adhere, time nor place did then

Admiring bog, 735a in gloomy shade, 33b Senate a. its members,


Admission,
charge
a.

tion, io64a

776b
lake

to

Admit I'm

front, 89 ib licked, loisa

impediments, 2943 never a. them in sight, no kind of traffic, ag6b

5j3b
a.,

retrograde if not a., 4663 Advanced, death's pale flag not a., 225b guard of working class, gojb other world by which faith a., i73b outdistance a. countries, gogb
true friends, 71 ib

28ab Adherence to Monroe Doctrine, 848a Adieu, bid you welcome a., 75ob chers tableaux, 3*8b fair day a., *36a forevermore my dear, 4943 kind friends, i looa live in peace a., 4iga my native shore, sssa she cries and waved, 401 a without American Adjectives, qualifying a., 8aib straddled a., g8ga Adjoining, lain in a. room, 7363 Adjunct, learning an a. to ourself, 2S2a Adjusted in the tomb, 7s6a Adjustment of colonial claims,
a.,

some

faults

men

readily

i38b Admitted, good pun may be a., 46ga Admonished me the unloved year,
io57a Adolescence's doubt, 697 b Adonais, soul of A. like star, weep for A., 57 la Adonis, my A. hath a sweet tooth,
.

work they who fought Advancement of pure


Advances, Chief a., 5*oa
in

a.,

6sga

science,

who
of

in triumph

direction

dreams,

scientific a. available,

g8b

2033 this A. in loveliness, 55 la Adoo, welcome a., 75ob

Advancing, flowers slowly a., 9853 Advantage in the past judged, gga mixed up for mutual a., 92 ib nailed for our a., 237 b nature to a. dressed, 4o$a

no way of taking

a.,

8oa

Adopt character of octopus, 77a Adopting European war tactics,


997

of taking no action, 74b ocean gain a. on shore, over cleverer boys, gigb
that take a. get Advantages, in hope of

zgxb
68ga
a.,

Adoption, their a. tried, 258b Adoration, breathless with a.,

them

a.,

fair

233a

Adjusts tumbled head, ygSb Administered, whate'er best


best,
a.,

a.

down in a. falling, 1583 for a. all the ranks, 4442. Adorations, Desires and A., 57 ib
Adore,

little a.

every day, 423b

4ogb

Administration, conduct affairs of

64oa during my a. no blood shed, 473* economical a., 77 la life of this a., icma proper a. of wealth, 757a said of first a., 97 ib said of second a., 97 ib Administrative measures to impose one style, ioa8a Admirable, express and a., 26ia

252b I a. thee implore thee, ig2b infidels and kiss a., 404a Jews my gifts instead of me, 323b now I a. my life, io66b Adored first wife, 83gb I have still a., 526a in every clime a., 4i2b
526a 542a a. and burns, seraph Adores, rapt
still

command where

I a.,

life, gsjob and a., go7b Adventure art peace, 86 ib death beautiful a., yooa fair a. of tomorrow, 237a most unto itself, 7j7a politics greatest a., gg4b

tries

to keep a. of

various qualities

'

some

for a.,

g88a
to
a., a.,

through

railway

vitality of

thought in

95 ib 86 ib

spirit of Liberty,

be

a.,

4o8b

what
77ob

he

cannot

understand,

image

dreams

wrought,

8goa

Adventurer, no lover and no a., 843* well-wishing a., 29 ib Adventures come into harbor, 8i6a embellish a., 468a

Adventures
Adventures of Tom Sawyer, 76ia Adventuring, by a. both, 23 ib Adverbs only qualifications I respect, 8ooa
Adversaries,

INDEX
Aequam memento
duis, 12 ib

rebus

in

ar-

Affections,

old

offenses

do as

a.

do

in law,
a.,

Aeschylus, thundering A., josb Aesculapius of our age, $26a Aeson, herbs that did renew A.,

new, 2g4a run to waste, 557a

which attend human


Affirm

sensible a. of flesh, 3joa


lif

Adversary, sallies out and sees


that

*35* Aesop's fly, 5755


fox,

Affects to nod, 371 a to renounce principles,


life,

mine a. had written a book, i6a your a. the devil, 573 Adverse to rights of other citizens, 4803 Adversity as incident of service,
959*
best discover virtue, 2o8a

3iob
life,

9393
a., 643

Aesthetic conception of

B$6b

high

a.

band, 766b
for a.

what seems

uprising unveiling
to

be

trut

intellectual wants,

moral

soil

794b growth, gi8a


a.

Affirmation of of life, gsga

individual

painting

not

operation,

of world and ethics, 9393 Affirmative, minds naturj

blessing

of

New

Testament,

ao8a bread of a., 323 contending with a., 3112 dark hour of a., 55oa enemy not hidden in a., $8a faint in the day of a., 26a good things which belong to a., 2o8a if not taste of a., 351 b
in
a.

recognition of pattern, 86 ib Aetna's flames, 10853 Afar and asunder, 7653 from a. to view flight, 3873 Afeard, a soldier and a., 2863 A-feelin' blue, 8453
Affability,
a.,

77ob
speak the
Afflict,
a., 61 oa

coward conscience

the best, 43gb


Afflicted,

commend
6oa

thos

man

of lowliness

and

are

a.,

1793 Affable, hardly

more

a.

than

cameo, gioa
Affair, world is a strange a., 3<x>b Affairs, absolutes in world a.,

Affliction alters, bread of a., i consoling in depths of a

day of

a.,

383
parts

enamored of thy
forgetfulness

difficult

to

find friend,
12 ib

99 a
in a. keep even mind, in day of a. consider, *8a

10553 of human a., 485*) debate of commonwealth


crisis

a.,

middle-aged a., 1042 a more supportable, 75$b


not without comforts, ao8a of sharpe a. worste kynde, 1653 remorse wakes up in a., 4j6b sometimes hard, 577b studies a refuge in a., nob sweet are uses of a., test of strong men, tries friends, 1273 Adversity's sweet milk philosophy, 2253 Adverting to dignity of high callAdvertise,

243* Nature better understands her a., igib office and a. of love, 245b
political a., 63 ib tide in a. of men,

a., 383 furnace of a., 35 ib one day smile again, 221 1 pay in a. or defect, giob saveth in time of a., 373 water of a., 130, 323
I

256a
a.,

wealth the sinews of Affame", ventre a., 35gb Affect, learned pedants

io4b
a.,

Affluence, rising from a. erty, 76 ib Affluent society, 10633 Afford, cannot a. indig

much
a.,

our costly seasons, 10823


purest treasure mortal ti 2263 selling houses for mor< people could a., g86b statesman cannot 3. to b
3list,

35** study what you most Affectation of a., 424a spruce a., 222b

2iga

don't

tell

they'd

a.,

it pays to a., noib Advertisements, tell ideals by a., 894* Advertising, devotion to a., gi5b Advice, few profit by a., i25b given so profusely as a.,

735*

Affected, zealously a. in Affecting charity and loia natural simple a., 451 a to seem unaffected, 3923 Affection and guilt, no2b
attraction and a., 9133 beaming in one eye, 67oa

9853

Affright air at Agincourt the bad 3., 43gb Affrighted, rend the a. skie Affront, fear is a., 4003
sensible

man

Affronts with
Afire,

his

not a. me own da
a.

seldom welcome, 4isb old like to give good a., smallest current coin, 7910
is

tea and comfortable a., 58sb to persons about to marry, 8ioa to persons about to write history, 75oa unwise to be heedless while ing a., i2Qb we may give a., ss6b Advices, lengthened sage

giv-

a.,

bear a. without pride, 8i8a cannot hold bent, 2523 hath unknown bottom, 25ob let falling out be renewing of a., io8a neither heat a. limb, 271 a never wasted, 622a not break bonds of a., 637 b on things above, 54b slave to animosity or a., 46ib strong a. stirs spirit, 5323 thy intention stabs, 2953 two qualities inspire a., g8a
Affectionate,
faith

io6gb Ucalegon's 1183


east

next
neve]

A-fishing,

wind

goes a., 325b 3255 time is stream I go a. ii Aflo3t, golden lilies 3., 6193 Aflutter like washing or

when he
a.,

gone

io6ga
A-flying,

Old

Time

is

si

an

a.

Advise, Death whom none could a., i 99 b the pnnce, looia Advisedly, entered into a., 6ia Advisement, take wyf without a.,

thing,

gg6b
Affectionately,

32ob Afoot and lighthearted, 701 game is 3., 8503 2443 game's a.,
swiftest

6ggb Affectioned, be kindly


a.,

him

country

absorbs
a.,

traveler

goes

a.

51 a
a.

Affection's,

to

me-wards your
it

iC8b Advocate, good have no need of a., g6b is Christ thy a., 38 ib Aegean, booming surge of A., gsb heard it on A., 7145 Aegritudinem, diem adimere a. hominibus, io8b Aeneas, mother of A. and his
race,

strong, 32oa Affections, bless

for

kind

a.,

dark as Erebus, 235b great primary human a., 7123 great strain on a., 6goa hath not a Jew a., 2
holiness of heart's
a.,

nab

of

life history a. mild,

of

a.,

5503

gSgb

thousand actions once a Afraid, be not a. neith< mayed, lob be not a. of greatness be not a. of life, 7943 be not a. of sudden fea be not a. to give that litt because we tremble, 7943 contempt for governor i a., 8ib death is a. of him, i4gb dying to be a. of thee for the terror by nigh

Il62

INDEX
Afraid,
a. f
if

Age
than
all

happiness 5923
is a.

makes

heart

Afterthoughts,
3.,

stronger

$4b
leave

one

situation irremedia-

After-times,
>

something

to

ble, 9963 in short I was a.,


it is I

looia

be not

a.,

42b

man not a. of sea, goga neither let it be a., 493 not a. to die for friends, not a. to go, 46ib not so much a. as ashamed of

mb

339 Afterwards day, 7343 Afton, flow gently sweet A., 4953 Again, off a. on a,, 89 7 b Against, every sword a. his fellow,
i2a

he not with me a. me, 42b hope believed in hope, ijob


kick a. the pricks, 78b not a. with, 9303 who can be a. us, 513 Agamemnon, brave men
A., 122b cried aloud, iocs a

Age, golden golden a. before us, i2tb golden a. in imagination, 5g6b good God what an a., 3753 green old a.. 3675 grow virtuous in old a., 4133 habits of a. of atomic energy, 10273 hardly feel pressure of a., g$b he hath not forgotten my a., 53 lb
a.,

u6b

Death, 32gb
of fear, 5063 of God and Mrs.
of the light, 729b of whom a., 7363 shall I of

how
ii4b
if

tasteless

and

ill-bred,
a.

Grundy, 7103

youth but knew and old


could, i88b

before
ill

whom

public a. of
rich

itself,

be 5395

a.,

i8a

layer-up

of

beauty,

2543

small men a. of writings, 46ob so I was a., 6au sore a., 463

people most

a.,

ioi7b

dead, 88 jb gazed on face of A., yiSb Agape, who are you cried one
Agate, eyes like a. lanterns, no bigger than a. stone,

in a good old a., 73 in a. I bud again, 3235 in old a. intent upon our intera.,

ests,

iogb

stranger and a., 8543 teach himself to be


tell

2233

a.,

lojgb

you what a. of, loiia to do if last hour, 4?ob to go home in dark, 864b
to look to

Age, abyss of new Dark

A., 92 la

accompany old

a.,

2863

upon make decisions, gSgb


4833

God, 8a

ache penury, 27 1 Aesculapius of our a., 3263 and body of the time, 262^2633

in the flower of their a., in which strong just, io73b in wintry a. no chill, 4593 in year of his a., 1503 infirmity of his a., 2773 is grown so picked, 26$b

nb

to stand ridicule, to strike, 411 a whistling to keep

from being
a.,

a.,

37* a wife and children stand

3303

yet not a. to blame, 404a Afresh, kiss a., 32ob Africa, all A. and her prodigies,

your blood, heyday 2643 atomic a., 9013, io6gb Augustan a., 4423 bests off louring old a., 1766 belongs only to own a., 5763 best in four things, ao7b born empty into modern a.,
a.

at

in

opportunity, 6245 in any land or a., 7023 labor of an a., 3343 of certain a., 56 ib lady leaves friends and wine, 5433 lee shore of a., 8i6b like distance lends charm, 6333

is

known

make

a. to

come my own, 3576

3*9b
always something new out of A., 1333 Asia and A. expelled freedom,

378b cannot wither her, 2&7b


carefulness bringeth a., gSb cast me not off in the time of old a., igb centuries roll back to a. of

of this a., 2553 message for the a., 8783 middle 3. when you've met so many, 10523 middle a. time of improving,
spirits

master

35^
mind
torpid
in

old

a.,

4$2b

466b does A. know song of me, 9853 ex A. semper aliquid novi, i33a
for Africans, 10492

my

a. lusty winter,

2483

gold, 122b

no falsehood
833

lingers to old a.,


a.,

childhood manhood and decrepit a., 3223

no woman accurate about

in A., highest Kilimanjaro 1045* song of A., 9853 what A. to me, 10533 African, Americans of A. descent,

come

to

thy grave in
to

full

a.,

i4b comfort
6873 crabbed

my

a.,

247b
to
a.,

8403 nor sword nor a. destroy, 1293 not by a. is wisdom acquired,


io5b not numbered by years, iggb not of an a. but for all time, 3Q 3 b not one continued faithful until old a., 963 not only a night an a., 9283 not profited so much as lost, 68 2 b not so well qualified as youth,

contribution
3.

according

75

new moon

lying on back, 9853

Africans, Africa for A., 10493 Afric's burning shore, 53ob sunny fountains, 5490 After, blackbird whistling or just
it

and youth, 10843 dance attention' on old a., 8853 decrepit 3. tied to me, 8833 demanded an image, 9883 disease or sorrows strike, 688b distrust that a. brings wisdom, 96ob

follow

it,

old

man
a.

looks before and


his

a.,

iaa heart, that out of all whooping, 24gb this therefore because of this,

man

62^633

own

my green a., 10703 each a. a dream dying, 8o7b each a. a lens, 7373 education best provision for old
drives
a., 973 employed in edging steel, 4823 enchantments of the Middle A., 7i 3 b every 3. has its pleasures, 3773 fsce to occupy age, 666b father of all in every a., 4iab first moment of atomic a., loSgb folly in all of every a., 3773

682b not to
1213

be

tuneless

in

old

a.,

1510 After-dinner

talk,

645a
love,

Aftermark

After-dinner's sleep, 271 a of too much

9270 Aftermath of war, 931 a Aftermaths of soft September, 854b Afternoon, all in golden a., 7433 ceremony known as a. tea, 7983 rude multitude call a., 222b summer a. most beautiful words, 8oob
winter's
a.

not weary them, SgSb of chivalry past, 69 ib of comfort and violence, gggb of discord and strife, 2i4b of ease, 4493 of gold, i22b, 3343 of iron, 4i6b of miracles, 5773
of revolution 3nd reform3tion,

472b
old 3. 3 regret, 6123 old a. and experience, gSab old a. come after you, 7oia-b old a. coming bolt door, 1495 old a. crown of life, 1123 old a. in universal man, so6b old a. is woman's hell, 3593 old a. island,

41 ib foreign nations and the next


fool in every' a
-

a.,

2ogb
fortify thy

name

against old

a.,

2113
full of care, 10843

in

chapel,

10073

Afternoons, winter a., 735a After-sunset light, 878b

gods have neither

a.

nor death,

1163

Age

Age, old a. lacking neither honor nor lyre, i2ia old a. not yet arrived, 688a old a. only disease, 6073 old a. play's last act, uza old a. serene and bright, 5152 old a. should burn, 10700 old a. time of spending, 35 ib olives of endless a., *g$b or grief or sickness, 32 la outworn buried a., sgsb pays us with a. and dust, iggb perform promises of youth, 4s8a philosophies of one a., 8i7a physician of Iron A., 7iia
prayers which are a. his alms,
preferable to youth, 3955 regret in chilled a., Sooa returns the Golden A., n6b scarce expect one of my a., 5073 shakes rooted folly of a., $77b
shall

_
be dearer than noonday,
:

INDEX
Aged, youth becomes as a., 2712 Agent, actions work good of a., S73b free a. thou wast before, i42b imagination a. of perception,
thus the poor a. despised, trust no a., 2463 Agents, public officers a., Age's, poison for a. tooth, Ages, all a. believed in gods, and a. hence, g26b before history, 45gb cycle of the a. renewed, emptiness of a. in face,

Agonizing,

most
a.

a.

Agony, charm
leave off
a.,

reappraisal, io76a

with wo]
i

8iab

strong swimmer in will find Thee, io68a

Agree, agreed

we

can't

8o8b
7713 2363
all

935b

things differ all birds in little nests s free thought for those
,

n6b
826b
10223.

famous to
forties the

all a.,

in a. past, $g6b gone a. long ago, 5823 heir of all a., 647 b

God our help

g4oa dangerous

a.,

music and poetry a., 305 people have good sense us, 356a
the

how a. kettle and let mankind a., sysa

78 9 a

more we

didn't

two of a trade never a


verbs and nouns more partners can't a whether they a. or not with her would not a Agreeable, do not want

how many a. hence, 2553 now he belongs to the a., pass vividly down a., gioa
prior
a.

6773
of,

when

haven't

thought

478b
Shelley of my a., sign of old a., 523b smack of a. in you, 241 b

soon comes a., sooa soul of the a., $o$b spirit of a., 4i8a tested to extreme old
the the
a.
is

a.,

7iob
io4b
right,
fool,
a.,

rock of A., 46ga seven a., 24ga thousand a. in Thy sight, three poets in three a., through a. one purpose, value from esteem of a., ye unborn a., 442a

a.,

533b most
a., 828;

greatest not

3g6b 37ob 647b 366b

haint one

a. feetur,

in conversation, 394b

6gsa

person agrees with m< to escape mental exertio what is more a. than

dull

and mean, 6263


all
a.,
it
ills,

harbor

of

therefore summon think at your a.

666a
is

thinks

better

of

gilded

Agglomeration called Holy Roman Empire, 4iya or a. tonsorial Agglutinative, type, 902b a. territorial no Aggrandizement, or other, 9743
Aggravate, I will a. my voice, 2*ga Aggravation of self, 77 6b Aggravations, accept minor a.,

ma

Agreeably, affect you


ing,

a. i

46gb

Agreed, except they be


to differ, 53 2 b together we can't agrw Agreement, living in a. TV
ture,

30ib them hast 2713


'tis

nor youth nor

io3b
a.,

love

is

ana

well an old a. is out, 372a to age succeeds, 644b to cheated age, Sj6b too late or cold climate, 347b toys of a., 4oga tragedy of the a., 8g4b
'twixt boy and youth, 5193 vastness and a., 6423 veracity with old a.,

on nuclear

who

control, 10741 does not forget old


;

very staff of my a., view a. of poverty, 2j

Aggregate efforts of busy multitude, 72ob interests of community, 4&oa Aggression of Germany, ioi2a threaten a., 974b Aggressions, when a. require war, 472b Aggressors, quarantine the a.,
Agin, off a. on a., 8gyb Agincourt, affright air at A., 2433

with hell, 6i5b with hell are we at Agreements, nations temp violate a., 9723 Agrees, agreeable person a large style a. not with
Agricultural

men

the

war dearth a. agues, _ weak evils a. and hunger, 248b when a. in wit out, 246b when old a. crept over, $59b when Thule no more ultimate,
131*

Aging people in contraction of life, 935b


person
give attention
to
self,

Agriculture, 465 b navigation commerce a. Ague of skeleton, ioo2a

all taxes fall

with stealing steps, iSya without a name, 4550 wives companions for middle a., 2o8a world's great a. begins, 57ob worst of woes wait on a., 555b young whom a. doth chill, 351 a youth and a. equally a burden,

Agitation of the air, A-gley, gang aft a., 4 Aglow, all a. is the work, ii7b Agnes, world dear A. is strange,

36ob
Agnes', St. A. Eve, 58 ib

Agnosco

n8b

veteris vestigia

flammae,

Ague's privilege, 227a Agues, praise doth nour 24oa war dearth age a., 3o7b Ah Sin was his name, 7&gb Ahab, all evil to crazy A. he ran before A., 135 when A. went to Askelor Ahead, man who never j
of the world, 75a sure you're right go a. Swat, 673b gon A-hunting, daddy's

Agnostic, compliment to be called

youth passed a. not arrived, 688a Aged and gray Maggie, 77ga and poor and slow, 8133 beauty of a. face, 9633 certain age means a., 56 ib later times more a. than earlier,

a.,

844b
a.,

judges neither Catholic nor

Ahkoond of
i094b

967* Agnosticism, that's

all

a.

means,

844b

daren't go

a.,

Agnus

Dei, 593
tide, 67 ib errors a. and fears,

upon

St.

7293 David's Day,

A-going out with

man

matched with
thrush
frail

paltry thing, 88ab a. wife, 6463

gaunt,

Agonies, exultations a., 51 2b small talk dies in a., 5703 Agonizing, fierce a. meek,

7583

will go, 4243 Aid, alliteration's artful a.

we

and comfort, 474a come to a. of


9073
expletives

party,
a.

feeble

join

1164

INDEX
Aid, foreign a. of ornament,

Alarm
Air, speche in subs La u nee ys but
a.,
a.,

lend us thine

4190 5492 me for to win her, 909* mutual a. law of animal life, 7962 realize you don't need a., 10390 saints a. if men call, 5243 small a. is wealth, 8$a super legal a. bureau, g&ja.
a.,

Air chartered libertine, 2432 common sun a. skies, 441 a crows that wing midway

1630-1643

speed

through

a.

thirty-one,

2/9*
crystallized a. of centuries,

pioa

9925

spiders

marching

through

a.,

dance upon the diviner a., 5i6b

a.,

8413

drew in New England's a., 6922 drinks water her keel plows a.,
aosb
earth or
a., 2571 eating a. on promise of supply,

10753 sweet as English a., &4&a take into a. my breath,


that thin
to
kills,
a.,

58ab

85ja
a.,

thine a.

supply strength bestow,


of future, 893 lends a., ?6b

1580
to interpretation

297 b Germans the

500*

tremble even at
trifles light as a.,

a.

pump, 46xa

to

worker

God

vanity give no hollow a., 557a Wisdom's a., 443^ wit hope flock to a., 6osb Ail, what can a. mastiff bitch,

24ib emptier 2283


enjoys

2745

ever

dancing

in

a.,

troubled

a.,

34b

5*4*

what can

a. thee,

581 a

gods, 773b Ailed, what a. us Ailes de g&mt I'empechent, 7073 Ailest here and here, 7iia

Ailments,
388b

our

a.

are

the

same,

so8b fairer than evening a., 2i$b false as a. as water, 2&8b fields of a., 45gb fight with strength in a., 9213 finger rules the a., 9853 flies through a. with ease, 78oa fog and filthy a., 281 a fowls of the a. sow not, 41 a
fowls of the a. shall glory and blue a., 6i8b
tell,

a. it breathes,

selfish clod of a., 8s6b Aim at the infinite, 7893

153

being's end and fixed as an a.

a.,

4ogb
S4sa

or butt,
a. at,

happy good-night a., 7&3b he says with solemn a., 492b


highest

forgotten
hit only

a.,

867a

what

68ab

honor

is a.,

honors 240 b

a.

give,

6965

underneath him steady a., 8oga unfilled a. between, io6ob vans to beat a., loojb walking in a. of glory, 3625 wanton in the a., 3585 waste sweetness on desert a., 44ob water light a., 748b way of eagle in a., 26b whether in earth or a. 2573 which way hot a. blows, 864b wild, Sosb wild with leaves, 9903 word honor is a., 24ob world-mothering a., 8osb wound with mercy as if a., Sogb
(

malice never was his a., ggoa man sets himself, ios8b mind thine own a., 6o*b prince have no a. but war, i?7a rivalry of a., 7773 thought to a. at some good,

horse of a., io86a hurtles in darkened


I

a.,

4423

9?b two things

a.

at

in life,

87&a

great deeds must sufio8a the star, 11033 your Aime, je ne vous a. pas Hylas,

who

a. at

fer,

in the common a., 373 I eat the a., 2633 I lived on a., g2?b if lungs receive our a., 457b image of spirituality, 8$4b in a. men seen, 10873 in new countries, 9403 inebriate of a., 7352

drew

Air-conditioned power-steered automobile, 10633 Air-drawn dagger, 28a Airly, git up a. to take in God,

693*

Airmen, soldiers
a.,

sailors

a.,

924b

Airplane, strange high singing of

975a
a.

Airs,

all

make one
a.,

country,

a.

386b
qui m'a. Aimest, all

me

suive, iGab the ends thou

inner a. inner light, io48b intimate of a., io66a is delicate, 2822 leave little lives in a., 4053
let

don't give yourself

a.

at,

2992

Aiming at blessed abodes, 4o8a a. far, 84a slight what's near by Aimless rhetoric, 725b Aimlessness pursued, io66a Aims, above man's a. his nature, 74*a and ideals of Marxism, io35b death a. with fouler spite, 32 ib
Ain't

out to warm a., gSgb melted into a., 297b merged with bright a., meteor of ocean a., 6$3a
leaves

melting a., 4s8b naiad a., 64ib soft Lydian a., 335a sounds and sweet a., 2 97 a Airy distance with majestic motion,

io6*5b

557a

ever so

might wash
773

cover

me,

a. tread, 65*b gold to a. thinness beat, 3o6a

in

a.

rings

skim heath,

most excellent canopy a., 261 a neighing in haunted a., loiob nimbly and sweetly recommends
itself,

navies, 6471

nothing, 2gob
objects in reveries so
servitors,

an
a.,

a.

height,

2823
a.,

4583

nothing yet, 992a we'd drop 'er but she a., 876b Air, affright a. at Agincourt, 243a
agitation of a., 1057 a all a. and nerve, io76a

heard

allaying both with

its

sweet

a.,

2g6b
always in earth and a., io65b an a. and peculiar grace, 3973 anybody as a. heavy or clear,

933b

autumn in a. alas, 87$b awash with angels, io7ga


babbling gossip of the a., 25 ib bites shrewdly, 2593 blackest a., io79a breathe his native a., 4oaa breathe the a. again, 74b brightness falls from the a.,

3oob
brisk's the

532b now a. is hushed, 44gb now in happier a., 7145 now thoroughly small, loojb of Auld Lang Syne, 626a of delightful studies, ssgb of Seven Dials, ?67b on a. bird stamped, 735b other passions fleet to a., 233b over the plain quiver, 9853 prison a., &4ia retrace steps to upper a., n8b round ocean and living a., $ogb saw the a. with hand, aGab sea and a. common to all, i88b shakes fires in burdened a., 487b sightless couriers of a., 28ab signed with their honor, io67b smiles and languished a., 486a
so fragrant, i72a soar into a. above dunes, 10363
soft

no

stir

in

3$9b

$agb tongues that syllable, 3365 unseen within thy a. shell, Aisle, long-drawn a., 4403
Aisles, from 7 8 3b
a.

subtleties in religion,

window

smiles,

monastic

a.,

6o2a

of Christian

Rome, 6o2a
i

Ajalon, valley of A.,

la

Ajangle and

ajar,

888a

Akond of

Swat, 673b

Alabama, come from A., 72?b coming from A., io^gb Alabaster box of ointment, 443
cities gleam, 8493 grandsire cut in a., 2313 smooth as monumental a., 2763 Alacrity, kind of a. in sinking,

2673
Aladdin's lamp, 5623, 69 4a Alamo, remember the A., Alarm, give moderate a., ride and spread a., 6243

London

a.,

Cervantes' serious change of a., 9373

a.,

g47b 4i3a

6i6a
61 5b

summer

a.,

728a 44oa

charm ache with

a.,

247a

solemn

stillness holds,

1165

Alarming
Alarming, serious and a. consequences, 46 1 a Alarms, confused a. of struggle, 7 1 5a look of love a., 4&8b sighs his a., 2053 used to war's a., 59 ib world's a. to Paris, 884a Alarum bells, 6443 Alarums, wars and a. unto nations, 2Oob Alas alas for England, giSb cried in goose A., ioogb how love can trifle, 22 la I loved you best, 3833 my love, io84b our young affections, 5573 poor Yorick, s65b

INDEX
Alexander, examples from A. to
if

All

Mao, ggyb I were not

A., 102 a

all

in his tent, 10542

of course A. the Great was hero,

63a
i xooa noble dust of A., a66a Alexandrine, needless A. ends song, 4osa

all of a piece througho 37 on hill, sleeping 8g8a and a. that tribe, i2oa are but ministers of love, 53 be as before love* 6635

some
trace

talk of A.,

bedtime Hal and a. well, 24 best of dark and bright, 55


blind and ignorant in

bound

a., jc

as

befitting

each, 70
88

Algae, delicate a. ne, ioo6a

and

sea

anemo-

changed changed utterly, charity for a., 64ob


Christ
is

strike by Algebra, dock doth

a.,

come out
7o8b
contains

a. and in a., 5 of Gogol's Overco a.

Algiers, dying in A., Ali cibus aliis venenum, 114* Alice, can't explain myself said A., 743t>

nothing
a.

lackii

7oia
creator

of

and
17 la

giver,

Postumus
i2ib

fleeting years slip by,

Christopher
A.,

Robin went with

cry

and no wool,
a.,

say A. but cannot help, icsgb Albatross, shot the a., 524b

g6gb grave A., 623b


replied A. offended, 744a what use of book thought A.,

death closes

646b

thought he saw
593 b
Alcestis,

a.,

747a

deliberate speed, losia did you say a., 28sb died to save us a., 684b

Albion, perfidious A,, 505a Albion's, spleen to A. nation,


like

A. from the grave,


sociologists a., Syoa and free of space,

743a Alien ambitions, io4ga corn, 5833 excitement as to a. ideologies,


ism, g7ib

do

a.

bravely, 6s6a
a.,

down come baby and


driven
into

81
12

same

fold,

34ib
Alchemists,

Alchemized 58ob

nothing

human

is a.,

io8b
a.,

oppressor, loisb

shine full a., sSob Alchemy, courtesy true a., 7joa happy a. of mind, 4i8b hide her a., 6o2b love wrought new a., so6a of the word, 8303
richest
a.,

something bright and there is none, 86ob

1051 a

eggs in one basket, 1953 else confusion, 64ga end crowns a., s6gb enough for a., g46a except sun is set, 56ob fear death, Sob
fish that cometh flesh is grass, gab for love, 20oa

to net,

18

Alieni appetens sui profusus, nsb Alienum, humani nil a me a.

puto, io8b Alike, all places

distant

from

shrewd

a.,

2543 76$a

Alcides, none equal himself, 131 a Alcohol, narcotics a.


tianity,

A.

except

heaven a., sub by nature all a., 31 ib by nature men nearly


darkness and light
a.

a.,

72b

for one, 5g8b for our rightfu' king, 4942 gas and gaiters, 66gb Gaul divided into three pa ii2a

to thee,

give

and Chris-

2sa
destiny waits a., 7ga equals and unequals a., g4b glory and danger a., 8gb looks on a., 2Q5b sexes look a., ggga to suffer all a., a88a earth, 57 ia Alive and so bold tail in mud, loib and

8osb
learning I loved,

6o3a for us a., i8$b God's above a., 73b

a. to love,

God

Alcoran, rather believe fables in


A., 2o8b

harm

to

one harm
gift

to a.,

71

have not

of

martyrdc

Alcuin my name

Aldebaran and Betelgueux, 78 Alderman, agate on forefinger of


223a Aldiborontiphoscophornio, 4oob Ale, belly God send thee good a., i88b cakes and a., 25 ib Christmas broached mightiest
a.,

37oa having nothing yet hath Soob hell broke loose, 346a
Hellas

a.,

5igb
for pot of
a.,

fame

S44a

fed purely

upon
is

a.,

37b
a.,

wagging attitude in which most a., 7gsb better dead than a., 7O4a bricks a. to testify, 2isb Clive no longer a., g34b ib curiosity must be kept a., 98 deeply and intensely a., 7g2b hardly a man now a., 623b I am a. foreverraore, 5?b
in Christ all made in that dawn to
a.,

monument

of Euripic

gob
his faults observed, 2563

honorable men, &55b

hope abandon who enter


*59b
I
I

h<

and you and a. of us, 21 could see from where I sto


dare do a., 2&2b have and all I am, have is thine, 47a know you a., 2s8a write poets a., 736a
all,

London

a.

right

g4?b

53a

I
I

man

the stuff, 853b news older than a., 45oa nut-brown a., sssa of myghty a. a large quart,
ale's

keep

a.

be a., 5ioa rather than triumph,

I
I I

i67b pint of English a., giga shoulder sky and drink sleep upon a., sg7b

a.,

8$3b

ioo8a marvel is to be a., g86a more come through a., 64a officiously to keep a., 68ga rapture that we should be

in
a.,

in in

all

2583, 6s4b to one another,

g86b
since

take size of pots of a., 3523 songs we sung, 753b Alea, iacta a. est, nsb Aleak, world is all a., 10313 Alehouse, an honest a., 3a6a Aleksevna, what will Maria A. say, 57ga Aleppo, in A. once, 276b Alert not to impair landmarks,

none returned

a. I

answer,

we drank

i6ob
a., io8ob while thy book live, 3O3b awake to be a., 683a wallpaper came a., lossb was dead and is a., 47a what it was to be a., io4ia All a green willow, i82a aglow is the work, ii7b all alone, 5255 all are gone, 534*

some burned
be

still

to

blue unclouded weatl 6450 in day's work, logoa in green went my love, 10 in the Downs, 401 a in valley of death, 652a is best though we doubt, 3 is but toys, 284a is done that men can do, 4
is
is

is
is

radio was rather a., ioo4a Ale's the stuff to drink, 853!)

is

ephemeral, 142 a flux, 77a for the best, 4i?a love yet law, 66sa mended, 2313

Il66

INDEX
AH
is
is

Almshouse
Alliteration,

i$

not lost, 3423 not well, 2581 result of what 8oa


vanity, aya well, 1014^
a.
all

we

thought,

All, this above a., 2593 this and heaven too, j86b this folly to world, gByb this the world well knows,
a. to each, 7oaa tremble at the rod, Sob unkindest cut of a., 25j>b warts and a,, 32 8a was light, 4126 was lost, 347b we are sinners a., 2i5a we have and are, &77b

sentiment

and

a.,

2945

Alliteration's artful aid, 456* All-night vigil in soft face of girl,

i$

to

is

know

learned

except myself, drunk, 4585

17 ib

8aa Allons enfants de la patrie, 4gga Allotment, corner of God's a.,

liberty justice for a., 8326 lord of a. yet prey to a., lose thy love lose a., 4osb
lost

4oga

783* Allow not nature more than needs, 27?b that you do not know it, 7ia
Allowance,

save honor, i8ob


lover,

no

a.

for

mankind love

6o6b

we have known and


Q2ia

ignorance,

cared for,

men created equal, 47ob, 6393 men have need of gods, 6sa men my compatriots, 191 a
moderation in
a.

things,

io8a

my days are trances, 64aa my pretty ones, 2850


news
fit

we we we we we

know for truth, 881 a know in love bitter, loiob know of love, 7jga
will not pass, 556a

hope

in heaven, 641 a

to print,

846b

need of hell, 7jga well that ends well, i8gb

noblest Roman of them a., 256b not a. capable of everything,

which

724b Allowed, have merit handsomely a., 453^ on every hand a. be, 4931 Alloy, base a. of hypocrisy, 6353 so strange an a., 7ggb All -pervasiveness, iminfallible peccable a., 7g6a
All-powerful must all -good follow, 562b should fear everything, 331 b
to

who
will

love freedom, ioi6b

n6b
ocean the source of a., 64a of a piece throughout, 3723 on our meat and on us a., 32 la once so beautiful is dead, loiob one for a. a. for one, 22oa one law for a., 454a
or nothing, 7293 our yesterdays
fools,

be well for all, 7513 with one voice, soa


with thee
all
a.,

be impotent, gzoa

word over
ye

with thee, 622b 7oib

All's a scattering, io6ftb

world queer, no2a


earth, $&$b ye that pass by, 346 All -American, each player be A., 10255

know on

must

blue, 668a love yet law, 665a right with world, 66ib well for happy warrior sleeps,

9/6a
All-shaking,

have

lighted

286b our youth our joys our a., iggb passes, 782b passion spent, $5oa perform tragic play, 884b persons share in government, g8b quiet along Potomac, 728a quiet on Western front, io4ob readiness is a., a66b ripeness is a., 28oa root and a., 654b round the town, logsb safely gathered in, Sssb sees Me in a., io6b shall be well, shall die, 242a sharing government who assist
6 3 sa should cry Beware, 524a
it,

Allay, glowing axle doth a., 336b Allayed fever of bone, ioo2a

well that ends well, 2?oa a. thou thunder,

278a
All-softening overpowering knell,

Allaying,

no

a.

Thames,

358b

fury and

my

passion, 2g6b

not a drop of a. Tiber, 28gb All-cloudless glory, 56 ib Allegiance, not bound to swear a.,
a. to flag, Sjab science demands a., 8iga to British, 46ob to the South, 38b Allegorical, great literature

56ib Allure, thousand tongues


io86b
Allured,
Allures,

to

a.,

hope of gain

a.,

76sb
a.,

i2$a pledge

to brighter worlds,

war

where

44gb wealth

37ob
Alluring, sea shows false a. smile,

"3b
a.,

Allusive,

poet become more

a.,

gi8a
Allegory, life continual a., on banks of Nile, 48ob Allegra, laughing A., 62 sb

s8sb

Alluvial

Alma
che-

days, mater, youth who loves a.

march

of

Allemand, je parle val, i6sb

a.

mon

io73a

silence

and

all

glisten,

Souls
take that that that that that that that

College

limited
in

6933 under2583

Allen, humble A., 41 2a name was Barbara A., snow on Bog of A., g68a
a.

Almanac, look in a. moonshine, 2303 Almighty dollar, ssob

find

out

io88a

graduates, gigb him for a.


I

a.,

sorrow, ig7b Alleviates, legacy Alley, give away a. without blushin',

was I am, 96^ is and shall be, 8sa


live

89 1 b
a.

gave dog, 52 ib gold, sosa has own purposes, 64ob shadow of the A., aob that the A. would answer me,
i6a Almighty's, arrow from A. bow,

must

die, 257a

bowling lives in our


rats' a.,

in

bowled sun, 381 a

love me, 6340 makes a man, 65421


641 a

most maddens, 6g6b we see or dream, that's a. there is, g4gb


that's beautiful drifts, 88 la

a., 4oob looab Sally in our a., 4oob titanic of cypress, 643b

4goa

form

glasses itself,

God A.
Almond,
762a

557b gentlemen, g68b

the the the the the the the

brothers too, 2520 brothers valiant, iio4b perfumes of Arabia, 286a

Alleys, lowest and vilest a., 84gb All-form only form, 7gsa All-good, must a. too follow, s62b Alliance, unless abroad purchase a., 2i6a

orders to perform, $Q$ZL

peach

once

bitter

a.,

tree shall flourish, 2ga

Almoner, best
i45t>

a.

keeps nothing,

Alliances, entangling

a.,

472a

way home, iog$b


winds of doctrine, 34ob world and his wife, 391 a world's a stage, 248b

permanent a., 46 ib Allied Expeditionary Force, ioi6b great wits to madness a., 368a

Almost thou persuadest me, sob Alms, beg a. of palsied eld, 27ia for a. a pilgrim's wallet, 38ob
for oblivion, 268b give a. accordingly, $6b of those who work with 97 6a when thou doest a., 4ob
joy,

remembrance

and
see
a.

reflection

things are as they were, i43a things are momentary, i43a beautiful, things bright and 68 4b things come of thee, i42a things come to who wait, 6osb things to all men, 52 a

how
Allies,

a.,

368a
stronger,

England

loisa great Russian a., ioi6b thou hast great a., 5i2b

things

work

together, 5ia

Kentucky boys Alligator-horses, A., 553a All-in-all, intellectual A., 5113

who gives self with a., 6gb Alms-basket of words, 222b Almshouse, sun reflected from a.,

1167

Aloft
Aloft, Death a. f 10435 invisible in night, 8433 now he's gone a., 475b

INDEX
Alone through dreary tract, 6423 through seas of thought a.,
5ioa travels fastest a., 8723 trodden the winepress virtue not left to stand we exist a., go8a
Always, poor 3. with you, 44a suspect everybody, 6703 the beautiful answer, 10313 three o'clock, io36b Alyoshs, not God 1 don't ao A., 7083

Aloha means I love you, 10302 Oe, 10303 Alone a banished man, 10843 alone all all a., 5255 and merry at forty, 66ob

a.,
a.,

33b 7ib
8435

Am,
I

all
a.

that

was
I

a.,

c
~<

and

palely loitering, 5813

we we

live as we shall die a,,

dream
36sb

a.,

not

what

was,

art should stand a., 7546 as sparrow a. upon housetop, 2ia be a. on earth, 555b

weep and you weep a., 825b when man strong until a., 662a
with conscience, 8ioa withouten compaignye, i6*7b you a. are you, 2933 Along came a spider, iog6b Aloof in order to gain reputation, 95 with hermit eye, 526b Aloud, all a. wind doth blow, 2232 not winced nor cried a., 8i6a secrets cry a., 10645 think a., 6o6b to fight a. very brave, 734b vaunting a., 3423 Alpes, au dela des A. 1 'Italic, 1253 in conspectu A. alterum latus
Italiae,

I a. that I a., 8a I a. what I a., 533 I think therefore

being

human born

a.,

99ob

better to live a., Sob beweep my outcast state, 29 ib

born unto himself


Britain fight

a.,

$22a

perhaps I a., n not I a fly, 4893 sames of a., logib tell them I a., 444a what I a. so shall thou be, Amantium irae amoris integi
i

my God

a.,

on

a.,

g3b

est,

io8a

cannot live a. at peace, 974* clouded you will be a., iaga don't live in world a., 9393 go it a., 68oa grief mine a., 5633 grief weeps a., 8982 heaven a. given away, 6923 hell is a., 1007 a here at gate a., 6523

Amaranth, no

fields

of.

3.,

"

Amaryllis, anger of thing, n6b sport with A., 3383

A.

Amateur, between 3. 3nd prc sional, logSb whine of a. for three, j Amateurs, nation of a., 8i2b ruined by a., 9993

how said I am a., how women pass time


I I
a.
sit
it,

1253

a.,

lingering

here,

did

29oa

I lie down a., I sleep a., 690 I stand a., 10183 I want to be a., 10563

river, 523b A. and Omega, 5&b Alpha, Alphabet, cunning a., 6g8a of flowers, 3073 Alpine mountains cold, 3413 Alps, beyond A. lies Italy, 1253 on Alps arise, 4033
I

Alph the sacred

Amaze the unlearned, 4033 Amazed and curious, 4963


gazing rustics, 4503 I am 3. methinks, 2373
silent

am

and

3.,

7010
:

wise 3. temperate furious,

Ambassador from
is

Britain's crc

in bee-loud glade, 8795 in the midst of the earth, gob in the night, 9823 inscrutable colossal a., 8iaa

Alraschid,

Jacob was
leaving

left a.,

never a., 784* Lesbia's sparrow all a., let her a. she will court you, 303*
let let

me

yb

me

a.,

i5a

good Haroun A., 644b Already with thee, s82b Altar, family a., 7i?b learning's a. vanish, 686a let its a. reach skies, 5083 of freedom, 64ob of our heartbreak, io68a she before the a. stands, 20 ib what green a., 5833 with this inscription, 503
Altsrs, priests 3. victims, strike for 3. and fires, their a. their hearths, n6a
Altar-stairs, great world's a.,

6563 an honest man, 301 a

Ambassadors

in every qua 6603 Amber, bee preserved in a., flies preserved in 3., 1353

pretty in 3. to observe, scent of odorous perfume, waves of grain, 8493

us

a.,

645b

long way I tread a., love but you a., 10843 love is left a., 6463 love lives not a. in brain, 2223 loved him for himself a., 481 a man a. at moment of birth,

Amber-dropping hsir, 3j7b Ambiguities, smile vehicle foi 6983 Ambiguous undulations, 9553 Ambition 3 species of mad:
374a
all

Alter

life

man a. no chance, 10453 man a. start today, 68*b man is a., 683^ 10585 man not sufficiently a.,
ynpti

132*

nature, 8593 garment we a., io4ob make and a. constitutions, 46 ib right to a. or abolish it, 47 ob when hills do, 736b

human

the pride cruelty and i99b bookish 3., 3ogb C3es3r without 3., 747b

choked with
2i4a
distraction

3.

of

meaner
\

Alteration, alters

when

it a.

finds,

2943

909 b
1

thinking or working

is a.,

68 3 b man with God strive, 5573 never a. accompanied with noble thoughts, 2033 never less a. than when a., 5oob never less a. than wholly a.,

Altereth, law of the Medes Persians which a. not, Alteri seculo, io7b

and
353

Altering, Eye a. all, io66b Alternative, United Nations a. to war, io73b war not rational a., io73b
Alternatives, death serious a., 9953
Alters, affliction a., love a. not, 2943

and
sgsb

life

not

nib
not a. God is within, i38a not good that man be a., 5b not live by bread a., loa nothing accomplished a., 10245

drove men to become f ii5b first sprung, 4063 fling 3W3y a., 2993 forego even 3., 6613 heart's supreme a., 4343 ignor3nce a. or ineptitude, let not a. mock, 4403 low 3. 3nd pride of kings,

uglification,

low
2943
heart,

3.

made
of

3nd thirst of praise, of sterner stuff, 2555


like

when

it

alteration

finds,

living
life

Thoreau,
a.,

Altitude pressed world

on

public

worthiest

on wide wide sea, 52 5b one minute a. with him, 981 a


paces about room a., looab right to be let a., 8333

sometimes be a., 3226 soon find himself a., 4303 stranger and a., io4gb strongest stands a., 72gb though in wilderness never
1383

what leopard seeking at 3., 10453 Altitude in bloodstream, loiia Alwsy, I would not live a., 153 Alw3ys, believed 3. everywhere by
i47b weather, 868b with you a., 453 in earth and air, io65b
all,

fair

a.,

am

288a thick-sighted, 5803 to be fair, 4343 to grasp continent, 7203 to reign is worth a., 3423 vain the 3. of kings, 3153 vaulting 3., 28zb W3rs th3t mske 3. virtue, when not with 3. joined, who doth 3. shun, 2483
soldier's virtue,

1168

INDEX
Ambition's, young a. ladder, 2543 Ambitions, alien a., 10493 let go hold of a., 10413

Amiss
American, one hundred percent A., 943 a pass to A. strand, 3243 Philistine livelier, 7i6b point of view, 6ggb pretentious A. authors, 9602
professors like literature dead,

look beyond own a., l weakens their a., 735 which climb on miseries, 8443 whispering a., looib
a. f

America, let A. be A. again, 10513 melting pot, 87ob middle class in A. the nation, 7i6b my country hardly a nation, gSgb my country Paris home town, 933D

Ambitious, abject usually as a. I slew him, 2553

3743

named

my new-found
after

land, 3073

987*
public
raise

man, 997 b

*97b man have no


finger,

satisfaction, 3093

never forget nobler things, goob nothing less than whole A.,
of dreams at an end, yaSb of poverty, io8sa only idealistic nation, 84%b political democracy in A., 7033 rejoice that A. resisted, 4263 remote from wrangling world,

more reasonable, 10643 hand against A. lady, 89*3

Revolution not to obtain free-

materially

a.,

picturesque liar, we live in a.


Ambitiously,
ing, 48oa Ambles, who

9973 76 ib

dom, 9975
right A. stuff, 7723 right to be treated

poverty, 1593 leaders a. contend-

as

wish,

10743

Time

rugged individualism, gjob


says he loves country, io48b science thing of future, 8153 sense to A. people, 10483 so I an A., gggb

a.

withal,

Ambree, foremost in battle Mary


A., io88a Ambrosia, streams flow with 853
a.,

4673
rock underlies A., 6593 so happy as A., 4673 spend blood and might, 8423 such is state of A., 4523 the other A., 10823 true original native of A., 4233 typical literary product of A.,

3m

social fences,

10473

Xme, quelle
8303

a.

est

sans dtfauts,

Amebas

at

start

not

subtleties of A. joke, 7593 theater aspirin, io$ob tinker with 3ny thing, 10463

complex,

Amelette Ronsardelette, 141 a Amemus, vivamus atque a., ii4b Amen, sound of great A., 7263
stuck in
will

whst
ugly A., io7?b

turn of language, 8983 two-ness 3n A. a Negro, 8g4b diss3tisfies in A. civiliz3tion,

no man

my

throat, aSgb say a., 2283

Amend your
a.,

ways, 34a

Amended, little said soon a., 1953 Amending, constitutional right of


6373
First A. has erected

war in which A. engaged, 4673 was primitivism, 9783 was promises, loasb what is left of A., 5g8b you cannot conquer A., 4265 you have it better, 4793 youth of A. tradition, 8403
American, advance A. civilization, 10643 bathrooms, 10355 bills of rights, 4463 born live and die an A., 548b bred, 9325 cast of thought, 8983 children's books, 8655 complex fate being A., 7983 concern of A. education, io26a continent not colonization, 49 ib cradle of A. liberty, 548b empire careens onward, 10383 experiment of A. people, 46ib flag floats from hill, 45ib genius, io63b
great patriot

7i6b
qualifying
adjectives,

without 82ib

write well of A. things, written in A. way, 8983

7983

Americano, fool A., 10573 American's gusrantee of freedom,


9 8 3b

Amendment,

Americans,

brave

A.

all,

46ob

wall, 99 la

Fourteenth A. not enact Spencer,

disdain to be instruments, 4853

787b

guarantee of First A., 99 ib I am for First A., 99 ib repeal of Eighteenth A., 9$ob Amends, by beauty made a., 8933 America America, 8493 at last I was going to A., 9633

educated A. go to Europe, 6o8a freemen or slaves, 4613 good A. die go to Paris, &$gb good at long shot, sssb have taken umbrage, 8103 hope of world, 4465

bad Americans die go


84oa

to

A.,

bomb on Hiroshima on

A. too,

hyphenated A., 8485 I love the A., 4263 in A. spark of ideslism, 8333 knew how to worship woman,
77ib
us 3ll be A., 82 ib love of wealth in all
let

breach with A. calamity, 8293 business of A. business, Qua cannot be ostrich, 84 ib chosen home of newspapers,

A. do,

man and

6173
of A, io72b of African descent, 7523 prefer Continent, 895b refuse to learn languages, 8g5b bec3use A., responsibilities 10263 of A., strength 6173 this generation of A., 97 ib Amethyst, steeples swam in 3.,

A., 82 ib

7i5b
destiny

of

republics

of

A.,

695*
discovered accidentally, ggyb don't sell A. short, i io3a

Englishman

interested

in

A.,

10465 establishment in A., 107 ib faith in A., io8sb for me, 8s7b furnished Washington, 5483

gre3test A. friend, g24b has no sense of privacy, 8383 A. government, 681 a hundred percent A. idiot, 8383 I also am an A., 5483 I am A. bred, ggab I am an A., 933b if I were A., 4263 imitate Europe not A. litera-

new generation

must look outW3rd, 7853

how behave toward

ture,
is this

6563 A. genius, loGjb

God have mercy on

getting on in A., 9133 glorious morning for A., 444a A., 967 b God's crucible, 87ob

gone to degeneration, 786a great future for A., io74b greatest question debated in A., 46 3 a half brother of world, 6793 huntsmen are up in A., 331 a I believe in A., io25a
hear A. singing, 6ggb love you, 10300-10313 ourselves, 7i5b land of wonders, 6i6b
I
I
is just

into train, 867 b leader's soul, 66 la life powerful solvent, 867b literature from one book, io44b literature in proper sense, 8983

jumps

love

mankind except

A.,

43sb
5033
cities,

moral ism, 10555 most A. of Americsns, most pecksniffian of A. 9 6ob Muse, io4ib myth, 10473 names, loiib

new

deal for A. people, 97ob not Virginian but A., 4&4b

Amfaluls tree, 82ob Amiable, good 3. or sweet, 3483 good nsture more 3. th3n beauty, 394b how a. are thy tabernacles, 2oa lovely death, 236b weakness, 42 4b words, 653b Amicable, candor and 3. relations, 4923 Amicably if they csn, 53ob Amice gray, 3493 Amid diern perdidi, 1355 A-milking sir she said, 10953 Amis, le choix rait les a., 4683 Amiss, nothing comes 3. so money comes, 2iga

1169

Amiss
Amiss or out of place, 10643 thou shalt never do a.,
37 b prae-

INDEX
Analogies, linked
a.,

6973

Ancient,

make one more

Europe of

a.

at

home, 8343

para r

8303
fear thee a. mariner, 5253 feed fat the a. grudge, feel spark of that a. flame, feet in a. time, 4gob

Amittuntur, non a. sed mittuntur, 1303 Amity, absolute a., 10553 'Arnmer along 'ard 'igh road, 8ioa Ammiral, mast of some great a., 3423 Ammunition, pass a., 10623 Amo amas, 4763 odi et a., 1153 Amoebas at start not complex, 9<>5 D Among them but not of them,

prove nothing, 8343 Analogy least misleading

thing, 7 5 6b Analysis, last point reached by a.,

submit data to
culture

a.,

4793
itself,

86 ib Analyze, Anarch, thy hand great A., 4143 Anarchic, weeping a. Aphrodite,
a.

gentlemen, s>6$b good uncouth, 6923 heavenly connection, io8ib heavens fresh and

io6oa

how

hills a. as sun, 5743 left the a. love,


Bill
a.

strong,

4&6b
of
plays,

Anarchy, digest of freedom cure of

a.,

a.,

4543 4533

landmark, x$b landmarks in


like

Amor, and
i66a
batallas

after A. vincit
a.

omnia,

a. loosed on world, 8823 of poverty, 97gb show me greater evil, 8sa wild a. of drink, 3043

mere

actors

in

de

campo de pluma,
il

i28b l'a. die

muove

sole e 1'altre

stelle, 1 62a

omnia

vincit a., iiya

Anathema Maranatha, 533 Anatomizing of motives, 6o8b Anatomy, learn a. from dissections, 3isb Pinch a mere a., 2i8b
Ancestor
I feel

mariner, 524^ 5253 Mariner called Old Sailor, marry a. people, 333b models perpetuated, 1483 most 3. profession, 8723
of a. race by birth, 368b of days, 353, 7433 order swerves, 8323 power of fright, ios4b praise of a. authors, 3183 raven, 6433 recognize signals of a. fla i6ib remove not the a. landm

vincit insomnia, io6ib

shame

in recalling,

Amorous descant sung, 345b


excite

my
a.

a. propensities,

from

causes

springs,

42gb 4043

nightingale a., 772b not too a. of far, 9153 of their strokes, 2&7b sweet reluctant a. delay, 3453 tangled in a. nets, 348b

7*5 b Ancestors created world of shadows, 9933 cut off brightness, 9933

democracy makes
6173

man

forget
a.,

a.,

glory belongs to our in Rome, 5O5b

1373

*5b
sscrifice, 8750sanity in a.

Amorphous,

all

noa

was vague and

a.,

Amortization of heart and soul, 10283 Amount to Hannah Cook, 1102 a Amour, doux comme l*a., 4843 fait l'a. tourner le monde,

nosb
1'histoire de la femmes, 5O2b on ne badine pas avec un peu d'a., 75 ib
I'a.

vie
l'a.,

des

look backward to 3., 4543 no need of 3., 4173 of honorable gentleman, 61 ib owe it to a., 10913 psrt of self, 793b true picture of a., 596b turned savage wilderness, 45 3 b very good kind of folks, 4ob wisdom of our a., 4523 Ancestral, amidst tall a. trees,

literature,

simplicity is gone, 3793 sing a. ways, 87gb suit of a. black, 9533 these times are a. times,
trusty drouthy crony, 49515 walked among a. trees, with the a. is wisdom, writers say, 88sb Ancients, speak of a. without atry, 41 $b

6573 3853

^ 573b man works happy

a. acres,

i2ob

we

are a.

Amphibious
Amphitrite,

ill-born

mob,

in a. Jove Troy's sons rejoice,

wisdom of the

of the earth, a., 4523

Amphitryon,
37>a

sweet A., 6g^b I am the true A.,

ngb on my a.
sits

tree,

on

3. tree,

6333 8663
war,

Andalusia, weather like April A., 1723

Anderson, John A.
5243
of
a.,

my

jo Jc

true A. gives dinners, 36 ib

voices

prophesying
heirs
to

Ample, cabined a. spirit, 7i2b knowledge her a. page, 44ob room and verge enough, 44ib Ampler ether, 5i6b
Amplification vice of oratory, b 47? Amplified, hand prosperity down a., 8483 Amuck, too discreet to run a., 41 ib Amurath, not A. an A. succeeds,

Ancestry,

polish

Andrew with brindled

72ia honest hand-working a., pride of a., 4543 Anchor, all sail no a., 5973 heaves ship free, 6oob
hoist instantly
a.,

10273

Andrey, Prince A. 7323 Ane, I've lost but 3., 4963 Anecdotage, fell into a., 6i2b Anemone, delicate algae and
a., 10063 Anesthesia bastard

hair, 8 went to to

7O2b

Amuse

his riper stage, 4093


stories,

Amused

you with

452b
to
taste,

according

96ob by its presumption, 10333 delicately and unceasingly g6ob

holding a. lost, 2i6b it is time raise 3., 7073 of love is death, 8073 that 3. holds, 6543 Anchorage, long 3. we leave, 7033 Anchored, fleet of stars a., 9803 Anchoring, yond tall a. bark, 279b Anchorite, saintship of an a., 5553 Anchors, moor bark with two 3.,
1253 sons a. of mother's life, 833 weigh thine a., 1053 Ancient, according to a. custom,

substit

86ib

Anew, ruined love when


think a. act a., 6$8b Anfractuous rocks, looib

perceptual

a.,

9603
built

a.,

we

Ange, pur comme un a., Angel and archangel join, ape or a., 6i2b appear to each lover, 3983 as you are insect in you,
beautiful ineffectual a., consideration like a. came, curse his better a., 2763
devil an a. too, 86gb drew one a., 66sb ended and in Adam's ear, races smile, 5975 golden hours on 3. wings, good and bad a., siob

are not

a.,

6993

Amusement, let early education be a., 94b Amusements, great friend to pub43 la Amusing with numerous errors, 448a Amyntas, what if A. is dark, n6b Amytis, for A. made, i io2b of Anachronism, periodization history a., io47b
lic a.,

39'b account 2o6b

a.

ordine

retrograde,

and fish-like smell, 2973 and honorable, 313 and natural strength, 444b
a. places, 8573 around a. track, 73ob dose her from a. walls, 4913

angels keep

half

a.

he

is a.

half bird, 6673 of light, 6843

1170

INDEX
Angel,

Animal
Anger
one
of

hold

the

fleet

a.

fast,

how like a. came I down, 3783 I who fashioned myself a., 83ob
in action
Israfel,

4213.

Angels, forget-me-nots of a., 6a*a four a. on corners of earth, 58a four a. to my bed, 3573 give his a. charge over thee,

sinews

of

soul,

how

like

an

a.,

2613

sob
go with me like good a., 2983 guardian a. sung this strain, 42oa hark the herald a. sing, 4255 hear a. sing, 6s7b holy a. guard thy bed, 3965
if a, fell,

64ib

glorious fault of

a.,

4o6a

like an a. sings, 235b like patriarch's a., 625b

provoke not children to a., 540 take care you strike in a., 8373 these you but a., 4123 tread them in mine a., 330 words of pain tones of a., i5$b Angle, brother of the A., 325b
in every a. greet, 3603 Angler, honest a., 325!}

look

lost a.

A., 3393 of ruined paradise, 5713 loud uplifted a. trumpets, 33gb man neither a. nor beast, 363b ministering a. thou, $igb of backward look, 626b
of
of

homeward

no man born an

a.,

3*5b
a.,

now with God, 3263


Anglers, too good for any but

4o8a

death abroad, 6583 death spread wings,

5593

of the
of

Lord came upon them,

463 the Lord came down, 3843 on the outward side, 27 ib or earthly paragon, 2913 pure as an a., 483 Recording A., 4383 send an a. before thee, 93 shall my sister be, 2663 she drew an 3. down, 37 ib shined in my 3. infancy, 362b A. King, 4903 sigh sword of soon as I went an a. came, 4883
strength like fallen a., 5803 that presided o'er tirth, 49ob time is man's a., 4983 to radiant a. linked, 25gb visits few and far between,

in forms of kings, 472a in heaven above, 6442 invite God and his a., go8b keep ancient places, 8573 lead us in peace, io7ga love as a. may, 6i8a made him a little lower than the a., i7a

326b
Angles, th3t they were
Angli,
called A.,

made
make

a., 523 a. name Lenore, 6433 the a. weep, 27 la xnaketh his a. spirits, 55b men tu-rrned into a., Sgib

spectacle to

maiden

i48b non A. sed Angeli, i48b Angling, be quiet and go a., 3?6b for a. rod a sturdy oak, frequent practicer of a., 3263 like mathematics, $25b like virtue of humility, 3263 never fully learned, 325^ of a. as of strawberries, 3263

men would be
Michael and
a.

a.,

4o8a

a.

ne'er like

till

fought, 583 passion dies,

produce gentleness, 36a reward to itself, 32 56 Anglo-American negotiation, loiib


Anglo-Catholic in religion, ioo8a Angry, be ye a., 543 bellows full of a. wind, 882b feel a. because we strike, 7943 feigned an a. look, 3833 God, 10753 I was a. with my foe, I was a. with my friend, 48gb hi hands of a. God, 10753 like an a. ape, 271 a looking for a. fix, 108 ib
opposition to idea, 9373 passions rise, 396b
prayers, 9063

3023

on

side of

a.,

6120
a.

only God 2073


pass in

and

lookers-on,

our acts our

white as a. English child,

whose

heartstrings

lute,

64 ib

wings cast shadow, ioi8b woman yet think man 3., 66oa a. acts beast, 36sb wrestled as a. with Jacob, gasb writing in book, 55 ib wrote like an a., 4393 Angelheaded hipsters, 108 ib Angelic host proclaim, 425b

would act

songs swelling, 676b


sprite,

go7b
for

to

love
:l's,

sake

of
a.

loving,

3133 a. say, 6033 preventing a. met it, 37ob progeny of light, 34&b sad as a., 4383 send his a. with trumpet, sing thee to thy rest, sons of men and a. say, sorrow for a., 662b swearing I was right, 6413 tears such as a. weep, they have the faces of a., tongues of a., 523 trumpet-tongued, 282b
twice descending, 734a walking like a. white, 801 a

a. are,

28ssb

266b 4253

proud and
34sb

uSb

dropped from

wing,

517* her a. face, 2ooa


philosophy clip a. wings, 58 ib quill from a. wing, 5i7a tear, 5793 wit and singular learning, 1793 Angels, air awash with a., 10793 all glorious, 7823 all pallid and wan, 642b alone that soar above, 3593 and ministers of grace, 2593 are bright still, 28sb are painted fair, 33b as far as a. ken, 34 ib

we

where where

shall hear a., 8585 a. fear to tread,


a.

4043

a. it thunders, 7403 very 3. swear, 7623 wrenlike vigilance, 10773 Anguish, divinest a., 6850 edges of laughter 3nd 3., 9753

when when when when

a. dust, Ssgb tears gone, 88 ib a. count four, 7623 a. count ten, 474a

tremble, 44* *>

with a. and archangels, 6ia with cashboxes for hearts, 59 ia women are a. wooing, 267b would be gods, 4o8a wrote of a. and God, 4870 ye like a. appear, 7i5b yield eternal thanks, 4443 bread of Angels' bread made

in a. uplift new song, 844b lessened by another's a., 2233 manliness bleeds with a., 6g6b

man, 1583

man
visits

did eat
short

a. food,

i58b

and
at

bright,

3853

ascending and descending,

73,

483
aspiring to be a., 4o8a beggar carried by a., 47a

Angelus, Anger, a
at

once

God

the A., 7823 slow to a., 143

must an a. pay, 7343 not often in dissolution, 565* of bereavement, 6403 of the marrow, 10023 psin 3nd 3. wring brow, pale A. keeps gate, 8413 what my a. to thee, 733b whatever a. of spirit, 465* Anguishes, dream a. writer, 10403 Angularity of facts, 6osb
Anima,

dum

a. est spes est, a.


life,

ma
7963

bending near earth, 6yjb better a. of our nature, 637 b blieve in God and a., blow your trumpets a., by that sin fell the a., coming after me, noia death nor life nor a., 5ia desire of power caused a. to fall, 2o8b
entertained
a.

of his body, 333!) contempt and a. of lip, forget a. before sleep, 5523 furious a., 383 he that is slow to a., is a short madness, 1233

dog

Animae dimidium meae, i2ob

25b
24b

Animal, aid law of

bang now the a., 9153 cow a good a. in field, 43 la dead and dumb and done, 9153
erotic instinct a., gs6b fastened to dying a., 8833 human being a wild a. t 10673

is

a weed, 1473

makes
10673

them
a.

reveal

horror,

monstrous

unawares,

5a

fear to tread, 404a food too fine for a., 38 ib

io28b more in sorrow than a., 2583 ii6b of Amaryllis, of Lord kindled, 4583 of lovers renews love, io8a
of

guns,

inescapable a. walks with me, 10693 man a diseased a., 86gb

m3n a man a man 3

noble

a.,

3313
3.,

pliable

a.,

political

7O7b 983

1171

Animal
Animal, man a poor bare forked a. 278b TnaTi a reasoning a., igoa man a social a., 5743 man a successful a., 8465 man a tool-using a., 5763 man only a. eats when not hunt

INDEX
Announced by trumpets of
6o2a
sky,

Answered, 275b

jealous

souls

Announcer, victor or a. of victor, 78a Annoyance of good example, 76sb Annoy, only does it to a., 74jb

man
no

gry,

noaa
a.

Annoying pieces of
to

verse,

xoooa

a. Job out of the wind, i6a prayer a. who rises a man, 7303 slowly a. Arthur, 6543

Lord

be
iaga

honest

to

only 47ia
a.

devours

own

no purpose,
a.,

three questions, 7435

kind,

Answering,

whereto

a.

tJ

more

Annoys, buzz witty and fair


invincible

7oib
Answers, better to

than

woman, gib no such a., noxb poor bare forked a., press a wild a., 9840
a mean public red a. war, 9046
is
a.,

41 la scent the fair a., 457a Annuities, enrage those

know
47oa

than paying
she

qi

a.,

10335
a.,

clear quick a. ruled out

5$gb

rope between 8o5a


sta'tin'

a.

and Superman,
a.,

wid new kind of


culture

10153 sun, io8ia


too
too

much
much

your a., 4i8a Annuity, buy a. cheap, 67oa Annunciation, prayer of one A., ioo6b Anointed, I am your a. Queen, i8ga Lord's A., logob Lord's a. temple, 2843 sovereign of sighs, 22 ib

who

Ant

and

ne'er the

for ant doth long, 1043 go to the a., 23b man mere insect an a ye can step on, 8923

grasshoppt

Antagonism between
99*a
in

classe
relati

international

makes

sick

a.,

wash balm from an


Anointest

a.

king,

of a. disfigures, 9365

Animality, endued with a., 45gb Animal's, uncornered a., io8ia Animals, all a. equal, loggb
ig a.,
:

my head with oil, i8a Anomalies hobbies and humors,


Anonymity, passion for a., g7ib Another, absent one from a., 7b and better world, 4gga called a. Abra came, g88a I, ioga
a., 4ga, 5ib one good turn deserves a., iggb such victory and we are undone, io$b Another's, burns out a. burning,

Antagonist is our helper Antediluvian tone, 747a Antelope, deer and a. pla Anthem, pealing a. swell Anthems, hollaing and sin
a.,

gg6b

241 b

riment on a., 6a8b themselves, 2343 medicine distinguishes


placid
from, a., 8i7a and self-contained,
a.,

service

Anthologies, bad poet in

high and

a.

clea
z

man
7oob 7oob

nowhere but
Anthologist,

love one

who

in a., g8gb

as

an

a.,

and live with warm-blooded a., 4sgb


turn
will not look, losgb

Anthology dispensary of m<


of universe, well-chosen

Animate

and encourage each 46ob onion atoms a. whole, szga Animated bust, 44oa forces by which nature a., 4793 only by faith and hope, 4a8b Animosity, inflamed with mutual a., 48oa slave to a. or affection, 46 ib
other,

Animula vagula blandula, 1413 Animus, dux et imperator a. est,

n6a

can I see a. woe, semblance in a. case, 45gb Answer a fool according to his folly, 26a always the beautiful a., 103 la came there none, 5203, 746a Daisy give me a., 88sb dat's on'y a. yuh know, looga don't take no for a., gaoa dusty a., 7gob
echoes, 648b
gratified to a. promptly, 76ob I will give Roosevelt, g*sa

a., io34b Anthropology, familiar Saga Anthropophagi, 272b

fact

Antic, dance the a. hay, 213 disposition, 26oa old father a. the law Antichrist that denieth t
ther,

573

Anticipate, what curs, 61 ib

we

a. seld

Antidote, she is a. to desir sweet oblivious a., 286b


Anti-everythings, savage a Antipodes, act our A., 331 a conquests even to A., 209 Antiquas, stare super vias

spiritus,

&34b

Anise, tithe of mint and a., 43b Ankle, down-gyved to his a., a6ob Ankles, shins a. calves knees, go2a Ann, how old is A., i io2b

me

in

one word, 24gb


a.,

Anna whom

marry A., 8s6b


three realms obey,

not every question deserves i26b Pilate would not stay for
silver a. rang,

Antiquates,
a.,

time

which

tiquities, 331 a

Antique learning, 72ob


6i8a
alive I
a.,

Annabel, I and my A. Lee, 644a Annals of the poor, 44oa war's a. cloud into night, 7&4b writ your a. true, sgoa Anne mother of Mary, ?8ia Sister A. do you see, logga yes by Saint A., 2523 Anne's, tell 'em Queen A. dead, 499 Annette, good night A., 82*a Annie, witch tales A. tells, 8iga Annie Laurie, all sang A., 7a6a Annihilate but space and time,
Annihilating all that's made, jSoa Annihilation, beings doomed to a., 6aga Anniversaries, secret a. of heart, 6253 Anno aetatis suae, i5oa domini fatal complaint, io47b Annos vive meos, 11053

since

none returned

mask and a. pageantry more a. Roman than


266b

i6ob
soft a.

turneth away wrath, 24b that the Almighty would a. me,


i6a the words of truth, 25b to everything, icoob

pen would have

expressei

to Hi or loud cry, 746b to punish they a. prayers, trickled through head, 7460

Persians taught, 5625 traveler from a. land, 566 ye a. towers, 4393. Antiquitas saeculi juventu:
di,

2o6b

76b

Antiquities, even living


a.,

me

33ob

what

is

the a. what the ques-

what

tion, gsjb shall I a. thee,


a.

i6b
10333 ques-

why did you


without

phone,

time which antiquates a Antiquity, a little skill in 2 beautiful women of a. blasted with a., 24ib
country with no a., 6i4b from beginning history brings tidings
farther

knowing

what

tion, gisb woods a. and Echo ring, 20 ib Answered as I thought good,

nob

logsa calumnies
I

a.

best with silence,


a.,

fond of i is Anti-Semites, hated by a., Anti-Semitism, there would


a.,

one who

came no one

gi4b

1172

INDEX
Antiseptic tunnel, 10822 Antithesis, himself one

Apple
of

Apennine,
vile
a.,

A., folding mists the A., 7345 Apes, ivory a. and peacocks, iga,

Appear, fishermen
vices

a.

like

mice,

Antler of the eaves, 10573 Antonio, Stradivari violins without A., 68ga

94?a
lead
a. in hell,

Antony brought drunken *8oa catch another A., s8gb

forth,

happy horse to bear

A.,

3873

much A.

of

Hamlet most, 8i5b


87a

my my
Ant's

A.

is

away,

oblivion is a very A., s87a

who

that revels long o' nights, 254b lost A. the world, 38$b centaur in dragon world,

like a., gg4b Aphorisms, interline a., 4&gb Aphrodisiac, circumambulatory a., io6ib emetic but nowhere a., g68b Aphrodite on your rich-wrought throne, 6gb sleep with golden A., 66a spoke and loosened girdle, 643

why men behave

2iga

do a., 27gb things not what a. to be, ijSa to be and appear not to be, g$b
while these visions did a., 231 a ye like angels a., 7155 Appearance, in a. at friendship,

37^
judge not according to a., lookcth on the outward a., never attain reality, 48b never wears mean a., 6053 takes on a. of nearby rock, Appearances, judging people
359 b keep up a., 67oa
a.,

48b
iaa

weeping anarchic

989 a Ants preserved in amber, Anulus in digito tenuatur,

what delight without work of soft A., 6gb


Apish, tardy
a.,

A., io6oa A.,

77a by

68b

1353

a.

nation, 226b

uga

Aplomb, before
7osa

presidents

with

Anvil, beats them on his a., $5ib laughs at hammers, g48b

lay me on a., 948b sword out of stone and a., 1752 what the a., 48ga when an a. hold still, $*4b when you are a. bear, s*4b Anvils, mighty a. of world, g7ga Anxiety about livelihood, 9323 banquet partaken in a., 76a born with a. about weather,

A-plyin' up and down, 87sa Apollo, bards in fealty to A., 57gb harsh after songs of A., 3a
I swear by A. Physician, 88a imbecile, 6o4a nor does A. always stretch bow, isib

often are deceiving, 75b to mind are four kinds, i38a Appeared, there a. a chariot of
fire, i3b Appears, thine in mine a., 3045 Appeasement, don't care about word a., ioi3b political a., g6gb Appeaseth strife, S4b

Apollo's,

burned bough, 2i3b first, 326b

Appendix,
Appetite
5<>9a

idleness

an

a.

to
love,

is

A.

laurel

nobility,

3iob
feeling

and a

77ob man a., $6$b tabooed by a., 76yb Anxious, not a. about 996a pleasing a. being, 4413
state of

battles,

musical as A. lute, 282a, 3373 Apollos watered, saa Apollyon, foul fiend A., 3655 Apologists, northern a. tremble,

Anybody anywhere any


can
else
is

time,

gna

make history, 84ob I knew as well, 68aa


land
is,

as their
a.,

93jb

more space where nobody than


933b no one's a., 7693
there said Traveler, gi4b Anyone lived in pretty how town,
tennis
a.,

Apology ain't gwine make h'ar come, 8i4a for Devil, 7s6b too prompt, 347b Apostle, by the a. Paul, 2i8a golden- tongued a., 9052 of Philistines Macaulay, 7i4a rank as an a., 766b Apostles, I am least of a., 52b
true
a.

an universal wolf, s68a breakfast with a., ag8a cloy hungry edge of a., 226a comes with eating, i8ob for bogus revelation, g6oa good digestion wait on a.,

humble pie with

a., 67 ib increase of a., 257b loss of a. for mediocrities,

makes eating a

man may

delight,

given to

a.,

255

sicken, 251 a

not meat but a., 35ob quench a. keep reason under


control, i43a sharpen with doyless sauce his a., a87b will into a., *68a with keen a. he sits down, 2g2b

of equality, 7i6a

io46b
life,

would have done as they, 56oa Apostolic blows and knocks, 35sa
Apothecary, expires in arms of 522a never out of spirits, 481 a
a.,

who
in

hates children,

Anythin* for quiet


a.,

66ga

Anything, courage not to believe

688a
a.,

everything and

974b

for a quiet life, 3140, 6693 for good of country, 3g8a


is

27gb thy drugs quick, 2255 Appall, common sense a., S$gb Appalled, property was thus a.,

ounce of
true
a.

civet

good

a.,

not

there a. beyond, gg$b a. to show more fair, 5iaa

nothing done mained, i34a


to

while

a.

re-

be wide a., 72b Apart, get man's love a thing a., s6oa mood a., gaga no stander above or a., yoob souls a., 947b standing a. from it, gg7b through hatred borne a., 8gb
Apathetic end, 6463 Apathy, extinction from
a.,

26yb Appalling ocean surrounds land, 697a Apparel, every true man's a., 2?za fashion wears out more a., 246b oft proclaims the man, 258b Appareled in celestial light, 5133 like the spring, sgob Apparent queen unveiled her
light,

Appetites, cloy a. they feed, 2&7b interests and a., conflicting 9 6gb man of my a., g6ob not their a., 274b subdue a. my dears, 66gb Appius, that which A* says, n6a

Applaud hollow
world forever
Applause,
serve,

ghost, 7153 old people a. it, igsb thee to the very echo,
a.,

s86b
de-

638b

deference

and

a.

468a
"of

delight wonder

our stage,

345b

no

a.

into

movement

io45b without

emotion, 9365 Ape, Devil is ever God's a., i7gb for his grandfather, 725b

Apparition, lovely a. sent, 5143 of these faces, g87b wall confronting a., 7o8b who enjoys not life an a., ssoa Apparitions seen and gone,

from none but self a., ignominy of popular a., joy pleasance revel and a., not least in honor or a.,
of
sit

33

707b 8a6b
274a 2oia
4333
41 la

3^

Appassionato, great piano


best
suited
to

a.,

g85b

single human being, attentive to own a.,

how

like

like to us, 107 a an angry a., 27 la or angel, 61 2b poor degenerate from sedulous a., 8243 up from the a., 9943
a.

a.,

logaa

Aped, vices

from white men,

Appeal 976b books of universal a., 9153 hark to exiled son's a., 78ib I a. to any white man, 445*> I a. unto Caesar, 5ob to arms and God of hosts, 4653 Appeals to religious prejudice, 725b

auditor,

Apple a day, no2a as an a. reddens, 6gb


blossoms
fill air,

loogb

buy
cleft

a.

on

corner, loooa
core,

through

4g8b

easy under the a. boughs, icy/ob for apple's sake, 76sa my a. trees never eat cones,

926a

1173

Apple
Apple of
his eye, lob
j
<

INDEX
good, Apprehension of serve long Apprenticehood,
2263
Appris,
rien
like
3.

the

2263
3.,

of the eye, 173 of your eye, io?5b it by, 6gb pickers passed
pie and cheese, 82oa rotten at the heart, 2323 round as a. was his face, 164 shade of old a. tree, 9343 to eat with a. tart, 823b tree among the trees, 293

ni

rien

oublie,

4843

Ararat, rode tide to A., io78b Arbiter is taste, 6445 of everyone's fortune, 1163 of taste, 1403 Arbitrarily, government not act
a.,

Approach
near
see
a,
3.

rugged bear, 2853

10133

3 bed

may show, 3513


Edward's,

Arbitrary, deliberative forces over


3.,

proud

4963

Sgab

undigested a. dumpling, 6963 where a. reddens, 66sb \Villiam Tell never shot, ioi7b worm in wild a., 9953

Approbation, esteem and a., 47 2b from Sir Hubert Stanley, 5013 learn with view to 3., 726
Appropriate,
all

snuff 3. of tyranny, 4533 sweet a. of even or morn, 3440 cold a., 426b

denial that Arbitrator, old

men be common

a.,

loija

3.

Time,

Arbores, serit a. quae alteri seatlo, io7b

ye who love Apple-besring

3.,

9533 Hesperisn

means which are


7ggb worth a hun-

Arcsdes ambo, 5613 Arcadia, et in A. ego, isob


I

coast,

a.,

485b
is

too have

lived

in

A,,

isob

to criticize

to a.,
a.

Apple-faced farmhand, 10993 for a. S3ke, 7623 Apple's, apple

Approval,

own

through Apples, comfort

cleft

golden a. of gold in pictures of silver, 263 on Desd Sea's shore, 5563 on Newton's he3d, 9303 silver a. of moon, 88oa
since

4g8b me with of sun, 88oa


core,

dred, 762b makers and laws Approve, abhor

Arc3dy, broken flutes of A., Sggb hied me off to A., 7583 broken a. of London Arch,
Bridge, 595b experience a. to

build

3.,

293

upon,

loved mansionry, by gods 3. the depth, 5i6b men of sense 3., 4O3b not a. slightest breach,
his'

2823

776b
3., 646b experience night's black 3., 495^ of ranged empire all, 2873

is

an

9913

Eve ate

3.,

5623
3.,

smsll choice in rotten


stolen be your a., 55ib

2193

sweeter than

a.,

82gb
is

a., 9543 Applesauce, politics Appleseed, Johnny A., 9533 rea. Appliance, by desperate

264b Appliances, with


lieved,

845b 8ggb the hated a., 9383 Approximate, Apres nous le deluge, 443b to bloom, 8243 C3me April eighteenth of A., 623b he smells A. and May, 2673 ho3rfrost spread, 525b how it is with A. day, 9283

Approved

as beautiful,

iniquity,

sunlit 3., 9283 Archangel 3 little damsged, 534b angel and 3. join, 4123 ruined, 342b Archangels, with angels and a., 6ia Arched flood, 6033 heaven gates not so a., 3153

all

a.

to

boot,

2423 in 3, on it, 6713 Applicstion, l3ys Applied, acceleration proportional


to 3. force,

37gb

in mistress* f3ce, 10853 the crudest month, ioo2a is l3ugh thy girlish laughter, 8493 love resembleth A. day, 22ob her prime, 29 ib lovely A. of

science increase blessings, 9503 science not exist, 7i8b

men

Apply its polished lips, 5363 our hesrts unto wisdom, 2ob
thine heart
to

comprehension,

4b
thine hesrt unto
2 5b

my

knowledge,

A. when they woo, 25ob men's eyes in A., g66b of A. May of June, 3igb prepares green light, ioi7b proud-pied A., 293b shakes out her hair, 98 ib showers May flowers, 1883 so sweet that A. morn, 801 a
sweet sm3ll
thirty days
feet

Archer, fe3t of Tell the a., 4985 Isughs 3t 3., 7073 mark 3. little me3nt, 52ob Arches, fled Him down a. of ye3rs, 8 5 6b Archetypes of unconsdous, 935b 3nd 3. starry

ArchipeUgoes, islands, 8303

Architect, every m3n a. fortune, 1163 f3te of a., 4783 man his own 3., 667 b

of

his

of

Universe

raathematidan,
himself
a.,

Applying thought one finds, 6ogb their 3. Appointed, sccomplishing


courses, 873 for my second race, 362b house 3. for 3ll living, i5b limits keep, 7263 the moon for seasons,
at

of A.,

10313

venture to

call

52ob

hath A., 1873

those that A. wesrs, 27 ib uncertsin glory of A. day, 22ob weather like A. in Andalusi3,

Architects like poets, 9983 of the better world, 9823 Architecture beginning of

arts,

1723

Appointeth 2ib

Appointment

end
3.,

of

world,

never yields by
Appoints,

ssob

man

3.

God dippoints
left,

wet by kind, 2iob with his shoures soote, i6sb April's blue surprise, 9813 breeze unfurled, 6033 if you were A. l3dy, 774b now th3t A. there, 6633 and lesves Aprons, sewed fig

8513 dancing and 3., 8513 frolic 3. of snow, 6o2b frozen music, 4783
to study give children right
a.,

4633
love's a.

man
new

is his own, 354b that has taste of a., 394b music in space, 4783

3. home till Appreciate, not 8643 things left behind, g63b

msn's pl3ce in music, 956b

m3de

3.,

5b

styles

of

a.,

losgb

Apt

4563 words h3ve power, 3493


alliteration's aid,

to criticize is to 3.,

79gb
only slowly,

Appreciated, art

3.

others compreAppreciates what hend, i77b Appreciation, merited 3., 9593 of good life, 10263

9150

for patience Aptitude, genius 3. 423 to Aptitudes, produce according a., 6873 Aquarium is gone, 10773 trade A. Aquarius, how is your 10340 A-quaireling, set them a., 434b

sculpture psinting, 7063 sons study n3val a., 4633 test of civiliz3tion, 5873 wondrous 3. of world, 2123

Archives of memory, go2b

Archw3ys

86ib Apprehend, quickness to 3., some joy, 23ob we 3. good dearly, 84b 3S doseApprehended, next world
ly 3., 33ob most in 3. Apprehension, death 2713 a like how in a. god, 2613

Arab

in desert, 4sob

3nd p3vements dang, 6743 a cockroach, 945b Archy Arcs, on earth broken a., 665b Arctic, to wear a. fox, 9973 Arcturus, guide A. with his sons,
163

Arabi3, 311 the perfumes of A. 2863 Arabian, 3s fsst 3S A. trees, 276! Arabs, fold tents like A., 6223 Aram, Eugene A. walked between

Arden, Ardent,

now 3m
love of

in

A.,

2483
a.,

glory

most
.

5923 Ararat, 3lw3ys been 3n A., 9293

Ardeur dans mes vanes 37 8b

395 msrigolds, 579*

cscnee,

1174

INDEX,
Ardor divine, 7i$b
gives the charge, 264a Are and are not, 950
I

Arms
Arm,
ii6a

will

tell

you what you


a.,

a.,

4840 judge you as you

.A-ripening, greatness is a., Aris, pro a. atque focis, Arise, ah for man to a., arise from death, 3076 avenger of wrongs, n8b

under

a.

carried

broom,

2700

we know what we
what you
6o9b
Area, he
a.

a., a6sa stands over you,

awake a., 34*3 from dreams of

logsb wreath of hair which crowns my a., 3o6b Anna, cedant a. togae, nib
i i7b great A. come, 8655 Armageddon, place called A., 8b Armament important in war,

virumque cano,
till

how

thee, 570*
a,,

Armadas,

who

controls a. controls
a.

religion, isoa Arena, only beast in 88 9b

dead I will a. and go, 8795 my lady sweet a., sgob Phoebus 'gins a., agob
shall

the

jjoa

the crowd,

Areopagus to watch over education, 54ga Arethusa grant me this labor,

n6b
Argentines,

Hindus and A.

sleep,

prisoners of starvation, 68oa shine for thy light is come, $3b soldiers of Christ a., 4255 take up thy bed, 4$a thoughts that a. in me, 648a wretched of earth, 68oa Arises, democracy a. out of no-

1043*

don, g8b
Ariseth a
little cloud like a man's hand, i$b sun a. they gather themselves, gib sun also a., *7a

moriens reminiscitur A., iigb of his A., ugb dreams dying Argosies of magic sails, 64?a Argue, good man does not a., 75a hard to a. with belly, ioya liberty to a. freely, 34ob Heaven's hand, not against 34ia with him, 6g6a point though vanquished a. still, 45oa Argued each case with wife, 74$b the more we a. question, 8o8b Argues, heart a. not mind, 7i2b not to know me a. yourselves unknown, 346a who a. is not a good man, 7sa Arguing, in a. parson owned skill, 45oa
Argos,

dulces

Aristocracy always cruel, 6sga clover any time a., 7$8b each has own a., ios6a

government by
natural
a.

a.,

848b
47 3 a
a.,

not decisive factor, io27b plan for greater a., $6sa defense not in a., 95 ia limitation of a., g6gb Armchair, old a., 686a Armed at points exactly, 2583 goeth on to meet the a. men, z6b goodness a. with power, ios4b neutrality, 842a peace, S2 9 a rhinoceros, 2853 so strong in honesty, 2563 suffer the a. men, io42a thrice a. that hath quarrel just, 2153 thy want as an a. man, 2$b

Armaments,

among men,
without

9783 of moneybag, 577a untitled a., 6s4b Aristocratic, beast of prey in a.


society
races, 8osb Aristotle and worthy cabal, 56$a books of A. and his philosois

not

to seek and sever, io22a without innocent within, 41 2a Armentieres, mademoiselle from A., ioi8b

much
a.

a.

much

phic, i66b it A. Pliny


live

Buffon,

4$6a

writing,

g4oa

Aristotle's,

and die in A.

with Johnson, 45 ib no not a. I am telling, 754b with inevitable, 6g4a Arguit, stylus virum a., jioa

works, aiga Arithmetic, branches of

wealth 448a
97 6b
ratio,

a.

a., 744b cannot number, gi6a

Arithmetical,

subsistence

in

a.

Argument and
best

Armes, aux a. citoyens, 4gga Annies, anarchy scatters a., 8sa disbanding hired a., 576a embattled a. dad in iron, $4ga ignorant a. dash by night, *ji$a. mechanized a., g2$a swore in Flanders, 4$8a when a. are mobilized, 75a Arming me from fear, 68sb Armistice signed with fate, io38b Armor, dad in a. by stars benign,
is

intellects too,

5O2a
A. desert,

suited to auditor, blood is their a., 244b


a.

Arizona,

Hohokams on
a.,

man
Ark, into Noah's
lay

his honest thought, in a. slave, 667b


a.

so

conduct right wrong, 451 a finer than staple of his a., ssaa for a week, agSb force instead of a., logaa

457a
a.,

no
4s8a

hand upon the make thee an a., 6b


of of

good symbol best a., 6ogb heard great a., 6$oa


height
I

bulrushes, 8a is taken, iaa straight out of a., 522b

God

against fate, J27b not boast who puts a. on, of light, 5ib of righteous cause, 85&b

of

this
a.,

great

a.,

34ob

have found

43$b

Uzzah put hand to a., 4s8a Arkangels, whitespread wings like


A., gega

in a. with men, $4gb in fire and brimstone, 75gb knockdown a., 37ob, 746b

Arks, these are the

a.,

sna
24ob
i7sa 7a6a

person with no social a., g6gb put your a. on, 4255 whole a. of God, 54a Armorers accomplishing knights, 244

Arms

Arm and

against a

sea

of

troubles,

knowest not what a., 6osa maintain his a., 244a makes thee beat wings, i i$b meter-making a., 6o7a necessity a. of tyrants, 4g6b needs no reason, 7oa nice knockdown a., 746b not stir without great a., a64b
brings i6sa sheathed swords for lack of 244a with east wind, 6g4a-b Arguments, end-all of deep 899* her a. directly tend, gSgb no time for catch a., 638a
grief,

burgonet of men, a87b brutal a. appear, 88sa


can honor
set to a.,

26ib

clothed in white samite, doth bind restless wave, faithless a., io6oa
I bit
is it

and God of hosts, 46sa and the man I sing, 1170, 371 a blow trumpet to a., 466b bring to our ears dash of a.,
465*

overrefines

a.

self

to

it

my a., $s5a very long, 87a in rags, 2790 is the cannon's


flesh his
a.,

by

come
roar,

little a. plied, 743a to a., 745a

my

5563

maketh
a.,

34a

a.,

feel, 521 a bended a. for pillow, 7ib on bended a. doglike, 7&b on lover's a. she leant, 647b reared a. crested world, 288b

mortal a. and nerve

my

sure experiments strated a., ig2b

and demon-

a., goa upon short a, to reach heaven, 8s7a slumbering on own right a.,

seal

thine

Argus, dark death seized A., 66b Ariel, deal of A., 8i5b Ariosto of north, 557a

58oa to a., g88a soon shall thy a., 45gb the obdured breast, 344a

Cupid's a., io8gb defy Omnipotent to a., end and beginning in other's a., 1057 a everlasting arms, lob exdtes us to a., 3703 fall into a. not hands, field his a., 2osa foes will provide with a., four a. two necks, io86a France mother of a., i87b fury provides a., ii7b
glorious in

34 ib

each

7923
ii8a

some quick

haughty

a., 221 b nation proud

in

a.,

1175

Arms
Anns, he

INDEX
laid

down his a., 5Qib 8843 hold hidden charms, io$5a hug it in my a., 2713 I never would lay down a., 426a-b another s a., imparadised in one
Helen's
a.,

Army
2gb

supported

by

3viation,

10263
terrible 3s

an

a.

with banners,

Wellington's a., 4s6b would be base rabble, 453 D Arnica, better for bruise than

a.,

345
industry, ioi6b Infinite Goodness has

666b
Arnstein's
bicycle

cement,

10303

wide

a.,

i6ia

law stands mute in midst of

a.,

nob
laws

and

a.

foundations

of

states, 1773 let a. yield to toga,

lord of folded

a.,

ib 22 ib
1 1

made

a. ridiculous,

$4ga
to

Aroint thee witch, 2813 Aromatic as a. plants bestow, 2083 die of rose in a. pain, 4o8a dry a. odor, 940* Arose a mother in Israel, na from out azure main, 4 2oa one man, nb people a. 3s 8a up a new king over Egypt, a.. Around, at once above beneath

man

in

a.

wish

be,

5153

members in a. and idleness, 46 5 b mewling in nurse's a., *4ga might do what this has done,

how
ice

they

was

all a.,

do get 524^

a.

us,

gib
feel

Arouse, happier in passion

we

Arrow, thine old a., 7373 Arrows, as a. in the hand, b bow he bar and a. bright, 1675 children living a., 9763 envy slays self by own a., i4gb flew like hail, ggob loosed several ways, 2433 love's keen a., 2503 of desire, 4900 of outrageous fortune, 26 ib thine a. stick fast in me, i8b which speak to the wise, 793 Arrowy Rhone, 556b shower, 4423 Ars est celare artem, 7543 Arse, politician is an a., logib Arsenal of democracy, g?2b Arsked, are you lost la., g85b Art accomplice of love, 846b adulteries of a., go2b adventure a. peace, 86ib all a. quite useless, 8sga
all

4gb

than a., 3563 Aroused popular conscience, 9673

my

calling

and

all

my

a.,

mightier than they in a., 346b more than human a., g65b more towns with words than a.,

55gb A-roving, Arrant jade on a journey, 448b knave, 2603


a.,

go no more
2623
1993
a.,

igoa all the gloss of a., 4503 alone enduring stays, 78?b alone eternal, 6583

jiia muscles of brawny a., 62 la nurse of a., 44?b of chambermaid, 43*b of seeming a. short essay, sfsa

knaves

all,

and science in
appreciated
aspires
to

particulars, 491 a

thankless

a.,

Array, battle's stern

5563

only slowly, gi$b condition of music,

summon
trim
a.,

my

silks

and

fine a., 4863 his a., 5963


a. like

people in a,, 58gb rush my only into your seek it in My a., 8s6b spouted a., io4jb
straggler

5isb

7813 begins with resistance, 8g7b charm creation with their


these,

a.,

a.,

9693

Arrayed, not

one of

into

loving

a.,

50ib

sure enwinding a., 7o2a take your last embrace, 225b takes vigor from a., 45gb that my love were in my a.,

Arrears, pay glad life's a., Arrest, Death makes his a., g47b death strict in his a., 266b

666b

55 a comes from a. not chance, 4035 comes proposing frankly, 78 ib


cookery

become an
of poetry, g88a

a.,

3iob

criticism easy a. difficult, 3g8b

I'm under God's


police those
stiffness

a.,

s8ib
you, io82a

dead

a.

who

a.

1084*
need, 10733 three corners of world in

though

a.

we

gi8b Arrests, pity 3. the mind, 9683 not do know, Arrive 3t what you
gods
a.,

3nd

soul's 3.,

desiring this man's and discrimination

a.,

292*

selection,

799b
dust them a., 6a each a. to please, 4iob each exercise a. he knows, gia emotions foreign to a., 754b establishes human truths, io74b expressing emotion in a., ioo7b finish which is almost a., 8443 first and second best a., 79b flies in face of presumptions,
79 8b
for art's sake, 5673 gives quality to moments, 78ib

a.,

6033
a.,

thrice

thrown

a.

about

her

in his good time


to a.

661 a

neck, ii8b
to a. citizens, 499 a to war and a. I
tries
fly,
a.,

where you

are,

loosb
a.,

travel

better than to
started, 10073

822b
a.,

35b
1093

where we

everything before
a.

Arriv*, le jour de

gloire

est

outstretched, 26ga 88ab young in one another's a., the a. again, 874b to back Army, Chief of the A., 55a composed of scum, 5o6a and conduct of a., 4^ ia

with his

Arrived

at

island

called

Guan-

ahani, 1723
evils which never a., 6o4b hour of departure has a., 933 in good harbor, 3i8b

courage

discipline soul of a., 46ob each a. hath a hand, 236b enemies in front of human a.,
feel a. in

openly

a. at,

842b

glib and oily a., 277a great is a. of beginning, 6253 has reason for being, 6oga

Arrives the snow, 6023 too swift a. as tardy, 224b


Arriving, serenely
a.,

7023
leads
to
a.

my
a.

fist,

Arrogance,

power

hath an enemy Ignorance, 3023 he tried each a., 44gb his science and only a., 8673 history of an a., g8ga

gives

hum of either
is like fish,

you

and navy, 453b


a.,

human

a. built cities, 2ogb

244a

leaden

a.

io27b that conquers world


92 ib

Arrogancy of the proud, 3ib Arrogant fatal X, gs6b

imagination master imitates Nature, i33b

of

a.,

844*

8713

London devour entire a., marches on stomach, 50

made a. by consideration, goa Arrogantly, walks so a., gg6b Arrow, barb in a. of childhood
8323
in flames, 7893 feathered with eagle's
falls

imitation of nature, 1303 impose one style of a.,

10283

in in

a. a.

8ooa economy is beauty, know what I like, giob


in
a.

noble a. of Martyrs, 6oa not halted by eloquence, 677 b not reliance against tyranny 6 S 6a of cranks, 831 a
of pointed firs, 81 6b of six hundred syllogisms, i7& of unalterable law, 7$ob, looib ours is invading a., 68 la pampering or coddling a., 9593 Prussian a.,

independent of claptrap, 754b

plumes

76b
for heart like voice, 5623

industry industry

without

necessity, 754* a. brutality,

6993
is
is I

from Almighty's bow, 4903 land of the A. Ide, losob my bow and a., loggb
often recoils upon sender, i45b shot a. into air, 622a sped a. comes not back, i23b
that flieth by day, 2ob

armistice with fate, science is we, 675*


life
a.,

ios8b

jealous mistress, 6o8a

keep pure both knows all about

and

a.,

88a

10333 last and greatest a., 4123 art, in 754 a lies concealing

1176

INDEX
earnest a. gay, 4g8a Art, life 88b life is short a. long,
literature
live

Ascend
Artist, greatest a. greatest ideas,

Art
to
a.,

to blot, 41 sb

find

mind's

construction,

half
a.,

trade

half

28ib
to make dust of all things, 331 a to please, 4iob too precise in every part, transmission of hif

8590 without

7410

6g8a has masters in eye, 6153 imitate that within, 5*gb keep work to himself, 4?8b

long life short, 4770 long time fleeting, 6aob loved a. in seemly way, 8isb made poetry mechanic a., 4560

knows how
939 D master
a.

difficult

truth

is,

makes life, 8oob mayerr, 37a

moral sense of work of more matter with less most cherishes, 663b

a., a.,

7993 a6ob

732b unpremeditated a., 57ob upsets, g66a useless, 8393 vaunted works of a., 6o4a

who

bids

come

to

heel, ioooa

masterpiece joy to a., monastic man a., 956b

754a-b

war only

war's glorious

a. necessary, i?7a a., 3g8b

individualism, intense most 84ob of society, 786a my a. negation is source of a. and

mysterious
science,

what a. wash guilt away, 448b where love of man love of a., 88b which is almost a. which is a..
Whistler's ideas about
a.,

no home save Paris, 8o6b no man born an a., s*5b nothing come out of a. not in man, 96 la
a. self-sacrifice, of progress ioo;a search for subject, 5910 speaks to our capacity, 84sa that queer monster the a., 8ooa

gsoa

nature is but a. unknown, 4o8b nature is the a. of God, jsgb nature not dull a., 597b
nature's above a., 27gb Nature's handmaid A., g67a never try to be popular, 84ob

838b

who comprehends
works of works
of
a.

a.,

5o6b

work of a. resembles artist, 84ga work that aspires to a., 8432


products of danger,
a.

next to nature a., 536b not learned much by a., 3isb not thou man, 48ga a nothing without form, 79
of of of of of of

turned

to

wall,

iter's

responsibility

to

a.,

io4oa
Arteries,

to be a., 94ga with me, i34a 888b work of art resembles a., 84ga writes own autobiography, 8job Artistic growth refining of truthfulness, 939b moral personality, 73a not separate a. from social,

train

anyone

what an

a. dies

who

theorizes,

angling, 3&6a being wise, 7ggb dancing source of arts, 851 a

man

as old as his

a.,

democratic government, 9i6b

3 64b Artery, makes each petty a., *sgb Artful, alliteration's a. aid, 456a

nothing
public

a.

make
in

from mere art, giSa itself a., 84ob


if

Artistically, elevated

we

live a.,

ending, 625a getting on together, g66b of government, io4ga


of

knowing what

to overlook,

793
of necessities strange, 2y8a of Racine's verse, Qogb of teaching is awakening, 8o2a

with a. care, sgaa Dodger, 66ga Arthur, good King A., iog8a knightly endured pain, 1752. most renowned Christian king,
careless

995
Artistries
a.,

circumstance,

Artistry, scaled invention

?83b or true
as
a.,

g8ga
as

Artists

many worlds

go8b
Article against Russophiles, 707 b snuffed out by a., s6aa Articles, Christians agree in a.,

slowly answered A., 654a Arthur's bosom, 243b

of
of

telling you nothing, war simple, 7i?a

j6ia

great a. never puritans, gooa what a. call posterity, go7b Artless and free with all they possess,

1733

only clean thing, 8i4b only through a. get


selves,

outside

43ob
Articulate,
bleats a. monotony, 5i6a sweet sounds together, 88ob Artifice of eternity, SSsa of strength, 737b Artificer, great a. made my mate,

full of a. jealousy, Art's, art for a. sake,

*6&
567a
a.,

9o8b
of

long hazard, gooa


Arts,

a., giob past is work 86ib pattern on experience, personality of a., 675a never popular a., 10293 poetry science but a., 677b politics not of a., go7b posterity of work practice and thought forge a.,

Athens mother of

3480

babblative

and

scribblative,

824b
lean unwashed a., s$7a old father old a., g68b Artificial, all things are kill in a. manner, 577a natural and a., 52ga

la dancing source of a., 85 b degrade first the a., 49 fashion's brightest a., 4&oa
flourishing

production of a. in soul, 86ia ib professor of a. of puffing, 48 ranged with careful a., 72 ib


in register multiple perception
a.,

pretty but is it

a,.

a.,

32gb

of the a., io27b France mother of a., i87b a., universal 867a impersonal in the a. style, 88sb in which wise excel, s8*b
inglorious
a. a.

g8gb
41 ib

speech

objects especially tools, 84gb refined or a. type, go2b lacking in a. graces,


hi-hi-yee

of

peace,

35gb

ma
a.,

liberal a. study humanizes, i2ga

mother of

and eloquence,
a.,

respect for a., 788b rides as high as a., 107 ib

wilderness, io6ob
Artillery,

for

field

music highest of fine

schoolman's subtle
selfish

a.,

shield

and perverse, 5o6b from existence, SgSb


with
their
a., a.,

should simplify, g4oa


smaller

10410

to thine a. left a friend, 737 a Artilleryman, red-haired a., 732a struggle with a., 73ib Artisan, destruction fault of a.,

no no
of

a.

no

letters

no

society,
a.,

7063 3i8a
3g4*>

relish

of

those

nurse of

a. plenties,

2453
in
a.,

war and peace,


10740

75b

reward
stomach

achievement

stylization

makes

3843

subordinates a. to nature, 5293 take away a. of writing, 5O3b take love away no a., 846b tell thee what thou a., ig6b tender strokes of a., 404b thanks to a. see world multiply,

icib Artist, allow

a.

freedom of choice,

be more of an a., s86a create do not talk, 479 critic helper of a., 7g8b critic when cannot be

a.,

7ogb

teacher of a., 1330 that caused to rise, 4iob that lie outside person, 8513 they are the books the a., 222a three a. with all things, well fitted in a., 22 ib
if,

go8b theme of
then must

do something beyond
754
find

surface,

As

7953

a.

and

song,

884b

A-sailing

a. retire,

4g8b "

more

than

a.

expressed,

Ascend
if

with above

the

wind,

restrictions,
a.,

7570

through a. perfection, 'tis all thou a., 4o6a

base degrees by which


I
a.

grant

a. his subject,

7g8b

up

into

heaven,

1177

Ascend
Ascend into the
183
hill of the

INDEX
Lord,
Aside, in life

many
a.,

things

draw

Asleep,

drunk and

a.

in boots,

muse of

fire

a..,

242b

us a., 1383 not idly stand

goa
593a

Ascendancy, capital in a. system of plunder, 6873 Ascended, bright pomp a. jubilant, 3473 into heaven, 6oa Ascending, angels a. and descend-

to step a. is human, 4g$b Asides, heart's a. in tears,

half a. as they stalk, 7843 in lap of legends, 58 ib is in world of his own,

Asinorum, pons
Ask,
all I a.
is

a.,

logb

all I a. is tall

merry yarn, 9473 ship, g46b

keep it quiet 3 66b


lips

till

it

falls

1*7* a
to

of

those
a.,

that

are

a.

gg6b my Ascends to mountain tops, 5563 Ascent, no a. too steep for mortals, i2ob
Ascetic
in

ing, 73, 483 voice a. high,

and it shall be given, 41 a and ye shall receive, 4ga cease to a. what morrow

speak, agb

my
will

Mary's

4953

bring, isia don't a. me to take none, 67ob dost thou a. proof, 7Mb

not see ticket unless a., 8g5b on furrow sound a., 5842

unnecessary

points,

793*
systematically a., ygga Asclepius, I swear by A., 88a owe a cock to A., 88a Ash, oak a. and thorn, SyGb,

drink divine, 3033 for anything except time, 5043 for me tomorrow, 2253
for no meaner pelf, 68ob for the old paths, 34a

how he
I
if

is

io88a

do not
there
is

a.

Ashamed, epitaph of which not


a.,

he tells you, 888a you much, 237b some mistake, g27b

8253
a.

little I a.,

more
naked
never

more respectable, 8$6b and were not a., sb


to
to
a.

a.

own wrong, 4133


be
so
a.

me blessing, 2803 me no more, 64ga me no more where

634a

Jove be-

no reason
nor ever 742b not a. to

of ape, 725b

we be named,

me no

stows, 326b

questions, 4sob

fail,

4273

never a. of money spent, g28b never a. refuse resign office,

of death, gsgb of divine idea, 6o6a of having been in

not a dinner to
love,

a.

man

to,

3553

43 ia

shame

is a.

to sit,

2253

not
not

a.

for

what you wish you


but
a.,

g8oa 2893 moving seems a., 6553 under haystack a., 10935 very houses seem a., 5123 where winds all 3., yiob A-sorrowing, goeth a., i88a Aspect, lend the eye terrible a., 243b meet in her a. and eyes, 558b sweet a. of princes, 2980 Aspects, relations between a. of experience, g84b Aspen, as a. leef gan to quake, i64b light quivering a., 5igb Aspens quiver, 645b Aspics' tongues, 2753 Aspiration, cannot prove an a., 779^ social order and thirsty a., 10673
a.,

sail like

swans

sucks the nurse


tide

a.,

to be seen with him, 3763 to defend a friend, 383 to die, 586b to look upon one another, 3263

had

not, igob offer to people

with noble shame, 69 ib workman that needeth not to be a., ssb Ashbuds, more black than a.,
6463 Ashen, skies
Ashes, all
a.

and

sober,

64b

a. to taste,

am

5563

and

dust, 1526
a.,

nothing more of me sweet, nothing want nothing, 1563 of him will they a. more, 473 of thee forgiveness, 2803 only a. for information, 67 ib only what they can give, 886b
the beasts, 153 the young, 43b us prophet, io8oa

10723 not what country can do for you, 10733 not whom sleep beside, 8$2b

Aspirations of men of good will, 10153 Aspire, by due steps 3., 3363
light

and

will 3., 2203

mind a. to higher things, 2O3b on what wings dare he a., 4893 smile we would a. to, 2g8b Aspired to be and W3S not, 666a
Aspires, art a. to condition of

music, 7813 each of us 3. to worth, ig8a

Aspirin of middle
Aspiring,
3ll

3^b cinders a. dust, 58 ib e'en in our a. live, 441 a


fell

beauty for

to

have

clssses, losob a. minds,

2123 to be gods, 4083


th3t youth dome, 3313
Ass,

in fire burned to a., ggob his a. made, 65oa handful of gray a. at rest, 7igb heaven and earth in a., i57b in a. olde is fyr yreke, i67b in a. rather than enslaved, 92 ib into a. all my lust, j6oa new-create another heir, 2ggb of his fathers, 5963 of Napoleon Bonaparte, 5o6a out of a. life again, Sioa past a bucket of a., g48b put on sackcloth with a., 143

we

a.

and

a.,

from

wealth

I a. not,

7iob 8243

fired

Ephesian
a.,

what you can do for country,


10733

where

a. is

have, 4443

thy neighbor's egregiously an a., 273b enamored of an a., 2303


idle
to

covet

ga

I have no statue, 1073 wilt thou go a. the mole, 486b Asked a lithe lady, 4883 for it Georges Dandin, 36 ib

why

how

pearls did grow, 3203

jawbone of an a., nb knoweth bis master's crib, 303 Isw 3., 66gb opened the mouth of the a.,
103 recover 3nd prove 3n a., 2313 riding upon an a., 363 sinned 3g3inst my brother the
3.,

play lyre for

a.,

1453

no other thing, 7363 not come even if a., 9293


Oliver 3. for more, 6693 one another the reason, 25ob
thief
to
steal

speak to your silent a., nsb splendid in a., 3313 to ashes, 6ib turn to a. on lips, 54gb turns a. or prospers, 6agb urn becomes well-wrought
greatest a., 3053

me

peach, 4883

i57b
3.

where no storms, 8o2b Askelon, publish it not in the


to be
streets of A., iaa

thinks he

wild

m3y kick him, 47 6b stamps o'er head, 6agb


a.,

when Ahab went


Asking,

only

God
of

A., 945b had for a.,

to

will carry load, 1973 write me down an

2473

Assail, ills schol3r's life a., 4273

yesterday embryo tomorrow

a.,

6923
too much, 5073

1423 Ashore, put their ship


till

Asssiled se3sons, 8ggb Assails, 311 he reads a., 4043

a.,

&76b

Asks

little

us here, 9293
flower
3.

Assassin,
a.,

forgot copperheads

and
than
tem-

778b Asia and Africa expelled freedom, 466b settlement in A., ioi$b seven churches in A., 57b vast multitudes of A., gs2b Asians, yes we are A., gsSa

last galoot's a.,

gives
if this

passion

back,

g48b

944b

be

joy,

4503

of us certain height, 9293 Asleep, athwart noses as they lie


a.,

Assassinated, rather be a. surrender, 6373 absolutism Asa3ssin3tion,

2233
is a.,

devil

pered by 3., 5023 extreme censorship, 8s7b trammel up consequence, 2823

1178

INDEX
1

Atreus
Athens, fix eyes on greatness of A., goa maid of A., 5553 nigh to Euboea, gzb nurse of men, 83* the eye of Greece, to A. sent ships, 5 weeds of A. he doth wear, t*gb ye men of A., tjoa Athis, loved you once long age* A.,

Assault and battery of wind, 882b of thoughts on unthinking,

Astolat, lily maid of A., 6533 Astonish, gratify some a.

rest,

9773
Assaults,

defend in

a.

of our ene-

things that would

a.

you, 7

mies, 6oa Assay so hard, 1643 A^saved, thrice he a., 34*b

Astonished at
tion,

my own

modera-

445b

Aisayeth,

naught

n' a.

naught

n'

Astonishment, thou shalt become an a., lob


Astra, ad a, per aspera, 1503 sic itur ad a., ngb

acheveth, 1653 As*a>5 of bias, s6oa

Assemble, peaceably to a., 474b Assemblies, nails fastened by masters of a., 2ga Assembling, slow in a., 8ga Assembly, club a. of good fellows,

Astray,
if

all likely to

go
a.,

black sheep gone

a., 8aa 873b

&gb
Athlete,
a.,

anny man but thrained

world go

a., 16 ib
a.,

8gsa

light that led

4933

4276
free speech press a., 864^8653 of portable plumbing, ioi7b free a., 8326 suppression of Assent and you are sane, 735b

one that had been led a., sssb we like sheep have gone a., 333 Astride, give both a. a grave,
309
Astrologers, sociologists
a.,

crowned in sweat of brow, 1453 Athletes stronger than backers, 1463 Athwart men's noses as asleep,
2233
A-tiptoe,

8703

stand

a.

when

day

Astronomer, undevout
399 b

a. is

mad,

named, 245*
Atlanta to the sea, 7483 Atlantic, dawn on other side of A., 4423 drag A. for whales, 7603 frontier from A. to Pacific,

with

civil leer,

4iia

Assert eternal Providence, 34 ib Asserted, plurality not a. without


necessity, 1620 convince Assertions,

hearers

of

own
Asses,

a.,

g3b

bridge of a., io3b made to bear and you, 2iga mankind a. that pull, 5626 truth not a. by Assimilated, crowd, 7o6b Assimilating educating selecting,

Astronomers, confounding a., go6a poor old a., 8ggb what poor a., io85b Astronomy compels soul to look upwards, 940 Astrophil, who knew not A., $i4b Asunder, afar and a., 7653 half a life a., 744b let no man put a., 6ib let not man put a., 433

g2ob Ocean on my head, 10763


steep A. stream, 3s6b surge, 4igb Atlantic Monthly, refined essay in

Thule and A.

put this
39 a
villain

man and woman

a.,

gi2b
Assisian, brother of loved A,, 9053 Assist him to save face, 10353

and he many miles


a.

a.,

Assistance,
a.,

gives

persecution

no

2253 whirl

and dismember me,

unremoved, 3463 Atmosphere, dear brown twilight a., 6143 of Gallup Poll, 9233

A., g6oa-b Atlas, Teneriff or A.

Assisting

46ib advancement of

Atom changed
in

science,

Asylum among mob, 6g5b


Jesus Christ in a., 85 ib lunatic a. in Jerusalem, optimism in lunatic a., 8513

i26b
Associate, the good must 3., 4523 Associated, cannot be a. with gov-

everything save thinking, 9513 matter duplicate in mind,

6973
intense a. glows, 57 ib movements of lightest a., 4793 mystery of the a., loasb no evil in a., io48b secret powers of a., 888b

ernment, 681 a Association, quotations touch 8sib uninhibited unplanned

prepare
a.,

a. for
a.,

their last

mankind, 466b 4443


a.,

Asylums, comfortably padded


a.,

io55b Ass's, white curd of a. milk, 4113 Assuage anguish of bereavement,


Assuaged, half a. for Itylus, Assume a virtue, 264b honorable style of Christian,
spirits either sex a., 3423 what I a. you a., 7ooa Assumes, no vice but a. some vir-

Ataualpa,

who

strangled A.,

Atomic age, 901 a

Atavistic, cap

and gown a., Ate and drank precious words, 7 3 8b


bread with tears, 4773 cheeses out of vats, 66ab
elephant a. all night, 82 ia the malt, iog8b when we were not hungry, 38gb with runcible spoon, 673a Athanasian Creed splendid lyric, 6133

bombs burst in hands, 888a cannot control a. energy, go8b energy a menace, gsob energy lead to bombs, 9505 first moment of a. age, io6gb
habits of age of a. energy, 10273 reduced no man to a. elements,

tue,

233b

reduced to a. mechanics, 752b release of a. energy, g82b

the god affects to nod, 37 la Assuming, start a. that men are bad, i77b Assumptions, most necessary of a., 8673 not admit a. of superiority, looa Assurance given by looks, |ji4b

Atheism 867b
little

like

that

of

Spinoza,
a.,

philosophy inclineth to 2o8b owlet A., 5263

war fought with a. bomb, gsob warfare bad enough, 10153 Atomies, crumbled out again to
his
a.,

307 b

make

double sure, 285b most dear, 72ob of a man, 264a


a.

religion and not a., 4533 Atheist half believes God, 3993 superstitious a., 6653 town a., 10473 Atheist-laugh's a poor exchange,
Atheists,

pantheism

a. in disguise,

86gb

team of little a., 2233 Atoms and compounds of atoms,


1133

of recorded history, ioo6b Assure survival of liberty, io72b crown themselves a., Assured,

no

a.

in foxholes, 10533

S93b
ignorant of what he's most
a.,

Athena, gray-eyed A., 653 Athenians commanded by myself,

77b
crushed
gold-bearing

27ob
Assyrian Bull, 6523 came down like wolf, 5s8b Assyrians, smote in camp of A.,

Medes,

7ob
quality of A. lucidity, 7i6b war between Peloponnesians and A., 8ga Athens, bringing owls to A., gia divine city, 790

5580
Asterisk of death, 6z4b Astern, look a. row ahead, i3?b

in reality 3, and space, 88a onion a. lurk in bowl, 5233 or systems, 4083 reduction to motions of 3., 7793 we have seen our a., 10193 Aton, O living A., 3b shinest 3s A. by day, 43 Atone, pictures for page 3., 4i3 b Atoned, microcosm and macrocosm a., 7243 not a. too dearly by death, 497b Atones for later disregard, g28b Atreus, son of A., 6$a

cannot be swamped H3 a

by

force,

1179

Atrocious
Atrocious crime of being young

INDEX
Attlee modest

man

with reason,

man,
Atrophied, sexually a., 867a Attach golden chain from heaven,

9*5*
Attorney, Hocus an old cunning a., 4i4b for Attorney's, go to a. office pay it, 078b a. to firm, office boy 766a Attract silver churn, 767a
Attracted, those far off are Attraction and affection,
a., ?2a 9132 a. sweet Attractive, grace, 3140, a 345 Attracts envy of world, 452b Attribute, no a. of superior man

630 a sa Attachment a
Attache*,

proie
la

a.,

3
7

Plato,

to government, 453^-b Attack all the more boldly,


first to a.
is

Aurore, Belle A., 667b Auspicious as ace of spades, 10709 one a. eye, 2573 Austere beauty of mathematics, 9*3 a look a. of landscapes, 9906 masks outrageous and a., ggob Austerlitz, pile bodies at A., giSa
Austria, Don John of A., outlive eagle of A., 466a

u8b

gi8b
is

neighbors, 3<x>b the reaction, 43 ib

Authentic,

when

a.

watch

lawless a. upon liberty, 444a prompt in a., 4533

repeat a., g68a so outnumbered we a., g75b strength in a., loiib Attacked, rather a. than unnoticed, 432b United States
a.,

greater,
to

Attributes, God eternal, 3733

ggb awe and majesty, 234b and a. of God

shown, 35oa Author acquainted with authors 726b and finisher of our faith, 56a
choose
a. as

$73b

poetry

sum of
dank

a.,

957b
of
A.,

Attacking and getting hammered, 8 37 a situation excellent I am a., 8s6a Attacks on me my wife my sons,
try to answer a., 64ia Attain, old experience do

Auber,

tarn

6435

dreamer a. of dream, g$6a he was the a., i2gb Holy A. of that religion, 3873 leaves of any a., 32gb
not bein*

choose friend, g74b

Auburn, sweet

A., 44ga

a.,

Attainable,

truth

a.

in
a.

poetry,

Attainment, Zeus grant


delight,

of sweet

7gb

Attains upmost round, 2543 Attempt and not the deed, 283b
fearing to
a.,

27oa

1'a., Audace, de 1'a. 4g6b Audacia certe laus erit, i2?b Audacibus annue coeptis, iiya Audacity, nothing impossible provided you use a., g&yb Audentes fortuna iuvat, iigb Audi partem alteram, 1473 as a. ill-bred Audible, laughter, 449b Audience, Boston a. critics, 7593 dreamer a. of dream, 936a for sake of crowded a., 88b

encore

de

a. gr-reat critic, 8gsa of peace, 6oa ourselves a. and finisher, 6353 out from bushes, g75b

read by five hundred, 777a


relationship of a. to works, 8432 revised and corrected by A.,

42 ib

same steps
select

as five
a.

a., 5853.

hundred

readers,

777*
sent

literary a. unfortunate, 434b no limit to what novelist a.,

good play

a. pleased,
a. sits,

9172

7g8b
perception and the end, 32ob
a.,

888b

gogb Attempted, not done is not a., 6i6b something a. done, 6s ib Attend men and not women, 95b shooting stars a. thee, gsob to history of Rasselas, 4*8a Attendance, dance a., sggb
Attendant,

wind

rising a. to live,

536b never fail to laugh, gib of beery wenches, Soyb takes him serious, 9543 Audiences, addressing popular 98b great poets great a., 703b
Auditor, appeal best suited to

how long

with autograph, 5363 by shrimp of an a., 442a steal from one a. plagiarism, 9 4ia thou art my master and a.,

^gb
time the a. of authors, *o6b
unsuccessful a. turns
a.,

critic,

5283

what good a. whispers, 8783 what I like in good a., 8y8a


whatever
a.

a.,

when man
where any
ty,

a.

puts in book, 748a of rank an a., 4355 teaches such beau-

am

an

a.

lord,
a.,

10013

Audits penetrating, 10633 Aught that I could ever read, 228b Augur misgovernment, 4533

222a

bark

a. sail,
is

4ioa

Augurs mock

their

own

presage,

on his way Attended, Attending, captive good


tain
softest
ill,

5igb
cap-

a.

a. ears, 2243 Attendre, j'ai failli a., 3783 Attention, dance a. on old age, 88 5 a

2g2b music to

293b Augury, defy a., s66b his powers of a., 62b


single best a. is to fight,

speaks of own books, 6133 worst thing do to a., 4$2b Authoritarian Germany, 1035!) socialism in a. terms, 10355 Authorities, destruction shows activity of a., 6323 nihilist not bow to a., 688a

who

63b

like

deep harmony, S26b must be paid, 1071 a


socks compelled
a.,

904
a.,

August, day in latter A., 10753 winter recommence in A., 5623 yellow with A., g88a Augustan, next A. age will dawn, 442a Augustine, Saint A. well said,

world-wide public a., g64a Authority, adduces a. uses not


tellect,

in-

tongues of dying enforce

226b
Attentive eyes, 429^1 sit a. to own applause, 41 ia Attic, beauty crieth in a., 755b
bird, 348b

not an A. grace, 9883 seasoned with A. salt, 362a


Atticus,

623a why St. A. thanked God, 9363 Auld, air of A. Lang Syne, 626a lang syne, 494b, 495 a moon in her arm, io87b should a. acquaintance, 4g4b when a. waxeth cauld, io88b

i74a age in virtuous carries a., jgjb and place try tempers of men, i36b and show of truth, 246b base a. from others' books, 22 la by whose a. do you act, 468a challenge to a. of President,
98421

common good and


g64a compass of national
every
fit

public

a.,

shape, 583b if A. were he, Attire comely not costly, in halls in gay a., 5i8b

41 ia

202b

Aunt kept regard for truth, 9023 Aunt's charwoman's sister's son, 965b Aunts, delight of husband a. infant, ioogb
sisters

shadow of

a.,

a., 48$b 45sb

for public a., 82a highest spiritual a., g64b little brief a., 2?ob

man's

a.,

383
creeps

cousins

and

rich a. Attitude,

rustling, 5823 a. of democracy mind, 934^ fair a., 58sb in which most alive, 7gab towards mystery of life, ioo8a Attitudenize, don't a., 433b

Auream
Aurora,

quisquis

766a mediocritatem
a.,

diliget,

isib

miracle mystery a., 7o8a nation cannot control, 7508 not majority, 6oob obedient to whomsoever in

a.,

A., 10853 Aurora Borealis, bounded north by A., 6553

new

Sob

on

of

Church moved me, i47a

Aurora Leighs, no more A. thank God, 6313

precepts backed by a., 8s4b tongue-tied by a., 2g2b truth basis of moral a., 7o6b

1180

INDEX
ib Authority without wisdom, 35 Author's life a vacuum, 7*6b a. soul, 10323 sincerely from
skill

Awoke
who
has
dis-

Avarice, melancholy

missed

a.,

46gb

A-waluing Matilda, 86ga Awards, friendships won by


real,

a.

not

to give,

866b
a.,

pride envy prudery a kind of


rich

a. three sparks, i6oa

1773
a.

without a. knowing it, 8$5b Authors, acquainted with best

a., 55ob beyond dreams of a., 4333,

Aware, mind
of

of

own

rectitude,

n8a damp

souls, looib

among good

a.

accounted Pla$88b

giare, $4ob books like men their a.,

seems not so much a vice, 3743 spur of industry, 434b take up with a., 3143

of minds under responsibility,


10413 valet not a. of this, ggb Awareness, give each moment a., 937 b quickens mental demand, 8oob last A-watering year's crops, 6893 Away and mock the time, 2833

Ave atque
Caesar

vale,

usb
te

a. they never read, 4563 established it as rule, 394a old a. to read, soyb ancient a., 3183 praise of

damn

morituri
a.,

salutamus,

1413 Avelaval, so

Avenge

9691

Lord thy slaughtered

proof against mutability, 5503 from great a., 86oa quotations


steal

saints, 341 a

from many

a.

research,

wish of some is to a., 893 Avenged of Philistines, i ib


1440 times a day, 7923
satisfaction of

bound a., noia from men and towns, 5733

94ia time the author of a., 2o6b write chastely, 9603 try to when a. talk of sublime, 4&7b who flourished allotted time,
55<>a

knowing
still

a.,

6785

7783 Avenger, mightest

South

is a.,

the

and

enemy

look a., 678a soul, 70* b over hills and 4oib, 10953

far

a.,

3843,

a.,

173

Authors', judge of a. names,

of these wrongs, n8b time the a., 5573 Avenues of ill, 6035

pass not a., 73 round the world

a.,

6913

Autobiographies

begin

Chapter

Average man, 9713


all the virtues, 77oa person right to life, 9733 Ph.D. thesis, loooa type hear Tao, 74a Averages, fugitive from law of io8ob

you rolling river, noia you scullion, 2423 Awe, attribute to a. and majesty,
234
devised
to

Two, 9133
Autobiography, a., 85ob
artist writes

of

own

keep strong in

a.,

2i8a
ever-increasing
a.,

Autocracy, dictatorship perpetuated as a., io35b Autocratic government, 93 ib Autograph, foolish a. at beginning, 536a

wonder and
1061 a
a.,

a.,

445* imaginative
lifted

a.,

Averni,

acilis

descensus A.,

n8b

hand

in

God, 7903 Automatic hand, loosb Automation has unbounded possibilities, io33b mechanized a., 5683 Automatism but also criticism, 10385 Automne, violons de 1'a., 8o7b Automobile, mauve a., io6$a Autres, pour encourager les a., 4i7 a
of

Autumn,
J

besides

a.

poets

sing,

Averse alike to flatter or offend, 4o4a what cat's a. to fish, 43gb in matrimony begin Aversion, with a., 48ob Aversions, man of my a., g6ob Avert curtain's fall, ioi8a mind is an a., 963 Aviary, Aviation, if a. no further advanced, o66a supported by tactical a., 10263 Avid, mind's a. substance, 10383 Avocation, my a. and my vocation, gsSb

man from
246a

sgSb
of

career

humor,

of such thing as myself, romantic a. of rich, 10453 strike a. into beholders, 3893 tradition inspires a., 8053 Aweary of the sun, 286b she said I am a., 644b

A-wearyin', jest

a. fer you, 8453 firmness, ooa A-weeping, dsrkies 3., 727b Awful, ain't it a. Mabel, 9643

Awed by

descends a. evening, 7153


dull dark day in fell like a. fruit,
a.,

Avoid

citations

from

poets,

88b

6443

fall into Scylla to a.

Charybdis,

30^

happy
I

a. fields, 648b saw old A., 59*3 in air alas, 8785 in misty morn, 5923
it's

a.

in

the

country,

ggsb

leaves fall early this a., 9883 long dark a. evenings, 663b no season such delight as a.,

by united forces, 374a ready for war to a. it, 3833 reeking herd, ggoa. self-righteousness, 10353 what is to come, 2642. Avon, swan of A., 303b Avowed erect and manly foe, so6b Await occasions, 6561
perils

319

nodding o'er yellow plain, 4igb


of 1929, io6sb poets sing, 734b rose more exquisite, 1983 that grew by reaping, 2893 violins of a., 8o7b

Autumnal, deep face, 3073


Autumn's, 5690
breath

a.

tone,

5703

thick as a. leaves, 34sa

of

a.

being,
a.,

Availeth, struggle

naught

688b
a.,

Avalanches, myself

among

the

Avarice a species of madness, 3743 and happiness, 42 ib disease of old men, 3143

wanderer a. it too, 71 *a Awaits alike inevitable hour, 44oa Awake, all shall a. again, 33 ib and sing, 323 arise, 3423 England a., 49 la for morning, 6293 keep drowsy emperor a., 883a lying a. with headache, 767b my lute a., i86b my soul, 4203 my St. John, 407b my whirling hands, ios6b O north wind, sgb the heavens look bright, 542a thy Nightingales a., 7igb to be a. to be alive, 6833 wide a. moon and I, 768b

anything a. makes me laugh, 534 b beneath a. Hand we hold, 8753 face some a. moment, 5153 felt how a. goodness is, 346*3 magnificent and a. cause, 4583 pause prophetic of end, 3993 phantom of hungry poor, 758b rainbow once, 8ib reg'lar, 75gb shadow of unseen Power, 5683 still and a. red, 5256 stirrings speak of soul, 6973 warmth about heart, 5853 within a. volume lies, 5213 A-whining, born naked and falls
a.,

i32a

A-winding into land of dreams,


A-winkin'
10993
at

his

mother-in-law,

Awkward, Allen with a. shame,. 4i*a always made a. bow, 586*3 hand in a row, 778b historical fact, 9523 in their soil, 10653 Awkwardness hss no forgiveness,
6o8b

Awoke and behold


3663

it

was dream,

good old-gentlemanly
3i4a
lust

vice,

Awaken, friends for when we


328b A-walking
Devil
is

a.,

and rum, 86ob

gone,

5333

and found it truth, 584b and found myself famous, 5583 one night from dream, 55 ib

A-woofng
logsb A-wooing, frog a. go, Awry, currents turn a., 2623 leaning all a., 6job Awww, everybody goes A. io8ob Ax, cord or a. or flame, 6562 fitter to bruise, jsib laid unto the root, ggb
f

INDEX
Babies in silk hats, ggga playing with dynamite, ggga toast works down to b., 7603 Thames at B., Bablock-hithe, 7123 Baboon who saved comrade, 6s8b Babs knows what and babs knows
Back, what we b. ourselves to be 793 Backbone, whale's b., ioo6a Backed like a weasel, zSgb with God and seas, 2161 Backfield, spotlight of the b
Back-friend
thing,

Lizzie

Borden took

a.,

noia
45&b

neither

hammer nor

a.,

5453 Axes, sharp-edged a., 70 ib talking of a., 74$b Axiom hatred of bourgeois, yogb old as hills, gi6a Axioms, derives a. from particulars, 2o7a
flies

to grind,

why, g45b Baby, a little b. and me, iogsb


blessing

shoulder-clapper,

723b

and bother, 7sgb


b.

bunting, iog4b

down come
first b. first

and

all,

8iob

figure of giant mass, 2683

laughed, 8583 inestinwble blessing and bother,

from

particulars

to

a.,

soya
of mathematics, 7&6b

759 looke like mouse, io46b looked

mother laid her

B.,

684b

proved upon our pulses, 5853 Axis of earth sticks out, 6543 soft underbelly of A., g*4a sword a. of world, 10156 Axle, glowing a. doth allay, 3365 Axletree, clot bedded a., 10053 Axminster, it's not my A., 9043 Ax's edge did try, 35gb Aye, have profferer construe A., 2 sob Aylmer, Rose A. whom these eyes,

my

b. at

my
b.,

breast, a8ga

rockabye Tar-b. ain't sayin' nuthin', 8143

8iob

Background, if people keep me in b., 634b slumbers in b. of the times 497b Back-hearing around, 10813 Backing men of genius, iot6b plague upon such b., jtoa Backs, birthrights proudly on b. 2363 making beast with two b., 27*5 not sit on others' b., 8053 Backward, angel of b. look, 6s6b dark b. and abysm of time,
2963
goes who toils most, 1613 half-look over shoulder, ioo6b
I

where come from


is fallen,

b. dear,

723b

8i6a Babylon, I was king in B.,


310,

5&b

king of B. stood 3t the parting,


of B., youth in B. loved maid,

by b. steps move, gSsb

lean
life

Our Lady

53&1
Azcan, Chieftain 955 a
Iffucan of A.,
Azores, behind lay gray A., 7903 Flores in the A., 654b

Aztec

would
997b

have

had

strong

states,

Azure, arose from out a.

main,

4soa
far in a. deeps, 62 ib pellucid in a. depths, 7035 riding o'er a. realm, 441 b ringed with a. world, 6513
steeps, io4$b Azure-lidded sleep, 5823 Azures, devouring green

a.,

82gb

B
mark it with B, Baa baa baa, 87 gb
B,

Babylonish dialect, 3523 Babylon's gardens, iioab B3cchus ever fair and ever young, 37 ia that first, 3$6b with pink eyne, 2883 B3chelor, die a b., 2463 got acquainted with a b., 534b see b. of threescore, 245b Back, African moon lying on b., g85a all roads new going b., 8i6b and side go bare, i88b at b. from time to time hear, 1002b at last to you, 8733 at my b. I always hear, 36oa begins to smart, 109 2 a borne me on his b., 265b care not who sees your b., 23ga
carries sky on b., 68ib cast-iron b. with hinge, dagger into b. of neighbor,

over too f3r b., losjb goes not b., g75b life understood b., 6763 look b. to ancestors, 4543 look b. to with pride, 9263 look behind assurance, ioob memory that only works b.,
radio need only

7463 go b., 10642 ran sentences, 10500 revolutions never go b., 6593 turn b. O time, 7420 Bacon, celebrities such as B., 74$b not written Hamlet, 5?8a secretary of Nature and learning, 32 6b

taking b. was stealing, 75gb think how B. shined, 4ogb Bacterial creepers, io64b Bad Americans die go to America,

8403

and dreary

lives,

858b

as for b. all theirs dies, 8sb makes bad ending,

logzb

733b g72b
b.,

baa black sheep, iog3a Baalim, Peor and B., 3343 Babbitt, his name was B., g86b
Babblative,
tive,

die

with 286b

harness

on our

arts b.

and

scribbla-

eyes and b. turn upward, ioo2b far b. in soul horse prances,

better b. epitaph, 26ib better for being a little b., 2722 bold b. man, sooa, 2983 book as much labor, 10323

breeding, gia

5333

g86a

by

b.

women been

deceived,

Babbled of green fields, Babbling drunkenness, 2533

243b

follow
I

and not

see

its

b.,

743

gossip of the air, 25 ib Babe, becomes a b. in eternity,

got over Devil's b., 3i3b turn my b. to the east, 4863 look forwsrd not b., 7183

4goa
birth-strangled b., 2853 clinging to frail b., 76gb it's for b. going, 7o8b let mighty b. alone, 354b love b. that milks me, sSab

Fm

pity like newborn b., 282b pretty B. all burning bright,

mermaid on dolphin's b., 22ga never C3me b. to me, 673b never turn b. on life, g8ib not turn my b. on Hiss, io25b nowhere to come but b., 8453 on b. burden of world, 826b on bat's b. I do fly, 2g7b
showed his
28ga
so b.

349 a cause supported by b3d mesns, 4673 charm to make b. good, 2723 come to b. end, gioa
extract yourself from b. ways,

Sob
free

press
b.

good or

b.,

io68b
friend-

from

beginning great ships, ioga


so

fustian's

sublimely

b.,

4ob

above element,

aiob whose birth embraves morn,


Babel,
stir

name

of

it

called B.,

6b

of the great B., 458b Babes around thee ding, 5Hb out of the mouth of b., 173 Babies, bit b. in cradles, 66ab feel like doing for b., io53b haven't hair, 10173

much upon his b., 3oga speed todsy put b. tomorrow, 2013 those before cried B., 5g6a to army again, 874!) to loneliness of yesterday, 10383
to you cold fsther, g68b unto ladder turns his b., 2543 wallet at his b., 268b

good good good good good

and and

b. angel, 3iob b. of every land, 679* b. indifferent, 374a, 4383 die early b. late, 38sb

or b. for humankind, 5152 great cases make b. law, 7873 grow into likeness of b. men,
_.lf their rhymes b., 9183 h3tes children C3n't be all

b.,

1182

INDEX
Bad, he

Banish
Ballad,
,

writing b. stuff, 851 66b herdsmen ruin flocks, himself thought nothing good,
is

Bag,

moon in silver b M 884b seslcd b. of ducats, 2333 to make b. pudding, iog8a

have b. dresms, 2613 feel immoral what you


I

b. after,

your old kit b,, ysHa Bagdad-on-the-Subway, 8643 Baggage, bag and b., 24gb, 6sib
Bags, three b. full, 10933 two sealed b. of ducats,

met with b. I can't say where, 74ob 10 mistress' eyebrow, *49 a Balladmongers, meter b., 2390 Ballads, better than all b., 62 sb permitted to make all b., 384b songs and snatches, 7682
Ballast

10440 Keep no b. company, 4503 laws bring about worse,

'

2333
bag,

leaves aside good and b., mad b. and dangerous,

4363 455 5sab


8aa

Bagworm
Bah
to

separated

from

stuck about wall, 36a is old wine, 553*

Madame B. Luck, 588b man who brings b. news,

you ha ha to you, 7673 Bahamas, arrived at island of B.,


1723

more sail than b., 3813 no better b. than business, 6953 Ball-floor thin and wan, 10363
Balloon of the mind, 88aa
philosopher

man's refuge, 74b means and b. men, 4673 meaning good or b.. 3693 men as b. and as good, 64oa men live that they may eat, 87b
moral character, 4233 neighbor is misfortune, 67b
never b.

Bahrain that great huater, 6*gb Bail, no b. no demurrer, 4813


Bailey,
bells

man
little

in

b., b.,

74*t>

Balloonman,

lame

10303

of

Old

B.,

unfortunate Miss B., 499 Bait, as a swallowed b.,

Bslloons, faces rise like b., 10773 Ballot, paper you drop in b. box,

ag4b

6823
stronger than bullet, 6353
Balls,
elliptical

hook well, 2463 hook without b., 6o8b


mcl3ncholy b., 23 ib your b. of falsehood, a6os
Bsited like eagles, *4oa with dragon's tail, 3323 Baiting mousetrap with

billiard

b.,

768b

man good

never good to 288a never good war or

service, 453 bring b. news,

b.

peace,

cheese,

Ballyhoo's, King B. Court, ggSb Balm in Gilead, 343 not the b. the scepter, 244b of hurt minds, a83b 2iob sleep b. of bruised heart,

no benefit
843

in gifts of b.

man,

no man who laughed b., 5763 no to everything b., 794b or b., a6ia nothing either good obstinacy in b. cause, sagb, 437b or obnoxious laws, 7173
persecution
ligion,

904b Baits, good news b., 3503 Bake, cannot b. or boil whole, goib
Bsked,
a cake, logab funeral b. meats, 2583 3 in pie, iog4b me too brown, 744b Baker, butcher b. candlestick-

the hydroptic earth hath drunk, 3o6a tropic for your b., 10333 wash b. from anointed king,

me

2273

Balmy

sleep,

3g8b

b. warmth, spring brings back

b.

W3y

to ptent re-

3agb ss with b. sction, pious fraud


audience, 9173 play not ple3se poet in snthologies, 9753 to a b. man, comes prosperity

773 provide b. exsmples, 355b rhyming a disease, 4i2b sad and mad and b., 666a sad b. brother's name, 7763 so much b. in best of us, 78gb stsrt assuming that men are b.,
streak of b. luck, 76gb the b. affright, 439

maker, io96b- 10973 Street 84gb Baker irregulars, Baker's man, logab Baking, long b. never done, 10463 Balance between nourishment and excretion, 6753 between order and aspiration,

between wh3t acquire 3nd use, 5 64b


civilization in b.,

10673

Baloney, it's still b., 91 6b Balsam, no b. for mistakes, 7913 Barn, under the b., 10043 Bsmboo, sin's sharp ez b. brier, 8143 under the b. tree, ioo4a Bsn, hurl cynic's b., 8463 in every voice every b., 48gb b., spreading ruin scsttering

6193

8423

commitments

and

power

b.,

they are good they had things ill got

are b., 8463


b.
success,

10133 in thermonuclear terror, 10633 not weigh faith in b., 8i8b of power, 397b, 84ib or reconciliation of opposite,

'Ban 'Ban Ca-Caliban, 2973 Bsnanss as b3it, 10463 Banbury Cross, 10953 Band, he3ven-born b., 5083 high aesthetic b., 766b no soldier in gallant b., 7693
of angels, iioia of brothers, 245a

5293
of the Old, sm3ll dust of the b., sab uncertain b. of proud
redress
b.

truth told with b, intent, 4903 two nations good b., 3603

5073
time,

war never

when when
work

Sab slays b. man, b. she was horrid, 6253 b. men combine, 4523

ao6a

wiser being good thsn b., 666b


toilers ye,

what hangs in b., ioi4b Balanced and Miltonic style, 8043


film with film, 7393 Balsnces, weighed in the b., 353 Bslbec, editions of B. 3nd Palmyra,

pilgrim b., 75ob 868a playing somewhere, Bandersnatch, frumious B., 7453 Bsndits, kingdoms destroyed by b-, 379* Bsnds, brass b. 3nd b3rrel organs,

6g3b

world is grown so b., 2173 true b., Badge, mercy nobility's i8b
of all our tribe, 2323 red b. of courage, 9053 on ne b. pss Badine, I'smour, 6573

442b

3vec

Bsld, old b. Chester Time, 302b wish b. eagle not chosen, 42 3 a Bsldheaded, go into it b., 6933 Bsldness abundsnt, 668a
Baldric, milky b. of skies, 578b Bale, bliss and b., 79gb Bales, down with costly b., 6473 B3ll, balm scepter and b., 244b earthly b. a peopled garden,

975 a dissolve politic3l b., 47<>b drew them with b. of love, 350 end of life cancels b., 24oa her hands as b., 282 iron b., 621 a loose the b. of Orion, i6a

Badly,

when things going b., 4173 Badness you can get easily, 6?b of b. Bad-tempered, infallibility
Baffled get

pursue culture in b., 865b Bandusian, O fount B., 1223 Bane of all genius, 5683 precious b., 343 a suspicion b. of good society,

woman, g4gb up begin


b.

imagination

again, 6643 by facts, 92 2b

477
great b. of
fire,

to fight better, 668b lib Baffling, beat down b. foes, 7

ioo8b
carries b., loasb
b.,

466b Baneful spirit of party, 46 ib Banes, o'er his white b., io88b Bang, not with b. but whimper,
is dead, 9153 the world, 23gb to b., 5883 grief too great b. p3in, 3973 pleasures 1" r" plump Jack,

one

fish b.,

Bag and baggage, 2490, 63 ib bagworm separated from


3 8oa

regardless
b.,

who

7aob
9913

now animal
3ll

sun with golden

Banish

empty

b. cannot stsnd, given us b. to hold, 49 ib

4223

terrestrial b., 105 ib Ballad, I love a b. in print, 2950 in street, 6o5b

Banish
Banish, thief you cannot b., 10583 think not king did b. thee, 2263
Bar,

INDEX
to b. as very young man, 7075 Barabbas a publisher, 56$b stock of B., 235a was a robber, 4gb Baib in arrow of childhood, 8323 Barbara, name was B. Allen,

Bsres,
his

foeman

b. steel tarantara '

understanding from his mind, 863 wisdom, 10 ib with night we b. sorrow, 30 ib Banished, alone a b. man, 10843 fear cannot be b., 10153 find moral in narrative b., 7<x>b for my willful crime b., 348b yet true-born Englishmsn, 226b Banishing for hours, 4573 Banishment, bitter bread of b.,
8273

io88a Barbarian Scythian bond nor free, 54b weeping above dead, 7493 Barbarians, if superior man dwelt

among

b.,

723

horns above sleep, io68b Bargain catch cold and starve 2gob in the way of b., 2sgb necessity never good b,, 4515 never better b. driven, ob Barge, Arthur from the b., 6543 drag the slow b., 45gb like burnished throne, 287b Bark and bite, 3g6a attendant sail, 4103

Banjo on

knee, Banjos, batter on Bank, and shoal breathes upon

my

727b your
of
b.

b.,

g48b
2823

time,

of

violets,

Philistines populace, 7isb Barbaric omens, 9953 pearl and gold, 3433 yawp, 7013 Barbarism and despotism,

band of
bitter

exiles

moored

b.,

b.
b.,

57b

cynic
f3tal

burning dove, 6o2b


b.,

gb
3386

2513 broke b. at Monte Carlo, 82 la contemplate entangled b., 6283 First Supernatural B., looga grass b. beyond, 7293 moonlight sleeps upon this b.,

destruction and b. victors, fanaticism to b. one step, fastnesses of ancient b., from b. to degeneration, my native land prey to b., theater flourish in b,, 8ooa

473b g7gb 4373 72ob 786b


1453

3nd perfidious hark dogs do b,, iog7b


if is

my

b. sinks,

6863

let

on the sea, 5595 no dog b., 23ib moor b. with two anchors,
1253 shot

W3ly up the b., io88b whereon wild thyme 22gb

blows,

Bsnker, Burglsr B, F3ther, 7343 Bankers just like anybody, 105 ib schoolmates clergymen, 88 la

Barbarous dissonance, 3373 in beauty stocks arise, 8033 multitude, 2333 triumph o'er her b. foes, 426b woman more b. than man, 8053 Barber, imprudently married b.,
kept on shaving, 6*7gb hide the haughty

the specter b., 5252 puts from native bay, 2$2b see they b. at me, 2793 star to every wandering b., 2943
off

Bankrupt of
Banks,

life,

3683

allegory
o'

on

b.

of

Nile,

Barbers,

b.,

48ob and braes


o'

bonny Doon, 4g4a

Brignall b., 52ob

Loch Lomond, 1099 a


b.,

of Wabash far aw3y, goj. Tiber trembled underneath 253* vast surplus in b., 5450

Barbershop, lights burn low in b., io25b Bard, hear voice of the b., 488b here dwelt, 4soa is envious of bard, 67b old or modern b., 336b

watchdog's honest b., 5603 worse than bite, 325b yond tall anchoring b., 2?gb Barking, crowing of cocks and b. of dogs, 753 Barkis is willin', 6713 Barks, Hylax b. in doorway, ii6b Nicean b. of yore, 64ib sail upstream, 43 Barley, land of wheat and b., loa
Barleycorn,
B.,

inspiring

bold John

whom none
black

to praise,

5iob
b.,

Banner, blood-red b. 54gb over me W3S love, 2g3


royal

stre3ms,

Bards,

and unknown

go6b
2753

b. and all quality, song for our b., 6ooa that b. in sky, 6333 torn but flying, 5573 with strange device, 62 ib

eighth b., 5273 h3ve a share of honor, in fealty to Apollo, 57gb

commandment not

for

66a

name me among

John B. got up again, 49jb Barmaids diviner than mermaids, 105 ib Barn, hay creaking to b., 10753 sit in a b., iog5b stack or the b. door, 3340 Barnaby, like B. Rudge, 6ggb Barns, neither reap nor gather
into b., 413 B3rometer, high 3nd low sweeping around, 7603 Baron, Sir Leoline the 5*4*
b.,

lyric b.,

i2ob

5573 Bsnners, all thy b. wave, 5383 confusion on thy b. wait, 44 ib flout the sky, 2813 h3ng b. on outwsrd walls, 286b terrible as an army with b., 2gb unfurled o'er world, 6553 Bsnquet, behsve in life 3s 3t b.,
yet
b.,

freedom yet thy

of old enjoyed in of passion, 5835 of rhyme free, g62b

you,

486b

7603
rich,

b.

Olympian

b.,

saints heroes,

6o2b 7iob

sublime, 6223 Bare, back and side go b., i88b Ben Bulben's head, 8853

Bsrracks, single men in b., 8733 B3rrage, chemical b. 3g3inst life,

hall deserted,

542b

bodkin, 2623 cupboard was b., iog6a gift without giver b., 6g2b
the b. field, ioB$a. imagination of feast, 2263

io6ib Bsrred on sccount of race, 10743 recognize good but be b., 7gb
B3rrel,

beat

an empty

b.,

9533

do with
of meal

partaken in anxiety, 76a sated with b. of life, ii3b

Goy3

of

b. of gold, 8i2b wasted not, 133

Bsnqueting upon borrowing, 383 Banshee, memory comes like b.,


Baptism enslaved me, 8303 spirit streaming from b., 8573 head in a Baptist's, John B. charger, 420
Baptizing in

name of
in solo

Father, 453

go b., 1098 a looked on Be3uty b., i023b old men's heads b., 10173 on b. e3rth he lies, 37 ib poor b. forked animal, 2786 ruined choirs, 2g2b to the buff, 824b trees turn b., io8ib
let little colt

organs, g75a save them by b. load, 856b Barrel-house kings, 95*b Barren, acre of b. ground, 2963 after summer b. winter, 2i4b among b. crags, 6463 bosom starves birth, 4jgb
bride, 4o6b buds of b. flowers, 7753 im3ghi3tion cold 3nd b., 452b lesve this b. spot, 5383 live a b. sister 3ll your life,

Bar against tyranny resolute men,


back of
b.

Bare-bosomed night, 7003


Barefaced
poverty

drove

me

to

game, 9333

verses, 1243

birth's invidious b.,

crossed the b., 6553 foul storm out, 8832

gold b. of heaven, 731 a

harbor

b. moaning, 6oob no moaning of b., 6553 politics

Barefoot boy, 6a6a dance b. on wedding day, siga dervishes, 6o3b him that makes shoes go b., i84b Barere's, not read B. Memoirs,

228b

mske

b.

our

lives,

77gb

sm3ll model of b. earth, 227b superfluity of words, $&>

we

b.,

768a

sword sung on b. neath, 4883 'tis all b., 438b weep b. tears, s68b

Il

INDEX
Barrenest of mortals sentimental-

Bawds
Battle,

i.

575*>

Barrenness, nature in its b., 9795 Barricade, disputed b., loogb Barricades, Cnrists that die upon
b.,

Basket, eggs in one b., 1953, 7623 watch that b., 7623 Basks at the fire, 5351 Bass, notes viola fiddles b., 5053 Bassarid, blatant B. of Boston,

be is in b. supreme, Soa he that is in b. slain, 1033 is burning flower, 9952 is to strong, 8o4b life a b. and sojourning, )4ib
of b. good, 8653 marriage field of b., 8223 nameless b. overseas, 8993 necessary to make people great,

88b

776a

life

shall blare,

day, 55 D escaped b. of your teeth, 6sa of senses, 95b Barriers against tyranny of politiBarrier
cal,

gi8a between day

and

Bassoon, flute violin b., 65*5 heard the loud b., 5245 Bastard, anesthesia b. substitute.

86ib
beast brute
b.,

1068 a

6i6b

Barroom floor, 7g?b Gideon Bibles in b., ioi8a Barrow, crowbar hoe and b., 5533
Bars, contentions are like b. of a

soft b. Latin, 5&gb truth comes like b., jggb Bat, black b. night, 6523 Casey at the b., S68a

news of b. ringing, 6743 no b. ever won, 10393 not to the strong, s8b, 4653 nothing except b. lost, 5063
of Britain, 931 a of first rank, 5gga of Waterloo won on fields, one b. or by degrees, or business, 68oa puts armor off b. done, rages loud and long, 537 b see b. from castle, 113* see front o' b. lower,

253 nor iron b. a cage, 35&b


castle,

ere b. hath flown, 284b mind is like b., 10793 that beats in caverns,

10793

5063 4673

twinkle

little b.,

7443

Barter,
b.,

government founded on

4533 that horn, 88ab Bartered through years, 10513 Baxtlett, quotations B. man got,
Bartlett's

Familiar

Quotations,

Barton, Martin B. and Fish, g72b Barty, where ish dat b. now, 7sjb
Base,

gaoa

army would be
from

b.

rabble,

weak-eyed b., 44jb wool of b. tongue of dog, 2853 Bataillons, formez vos b., 4993. Bate, nor b. one jot of heart, 3413 Bated breath and whispering humbleness, 2$2b Bath, Dlood b., 9775 long enough without b., 10483 sore labor's b., *&$b try to give dog b., 1051 b Bathe in fiery floods, 27 ib Bathed in poem of sea, 82gb
like eagles lately b., 24oa

624b

4g6a

send to b. even

if

kick,

g^b

authority

others'

books,

22ia
beetles o'er his b., 25gb contagious clouds, 2383 fall to the b. earth, 2273 first time caught off b.,
fly

Bathing,

caught Whigs

b.,

6123
b.,

Bathroom, more benefit from


10443

large b. machine, 7670-7683

sent English language into b., 9 J 9b set Uriah in forefront of b., lab shout, 6333 sing tongue the glorious b., 15 s* sir not to the strong, 4653 smelleth the b. afar off, i6b so melancholy as b. won, 5063 they went forth to b., ggaa

from firm

b.,

52oa

keep down b. in man, 65b laws of servitude began, 3673 like the b. Indian, 2765 limps after in b. imitation,

2*6b

io35b Bathrooms, well-equipped American b., 10356 Baths, grand flights Sunday b., 956* of all western stars, 646b uplifting thoughts in b., io35b Baton, French soldier carries mar-

through 7oib

b.

through

defeat,

b., n8a Troy was on once more, yi8b

walls

famed in

who
with

prepare himself to my peers, 646b

b.,

52b

witness I have fought b., 3663 Battled, dream of b. fields, 5oa


Battlefield

and

patriot

grave,
b.,

men being
of
b.

in love, 27jb passions fear most

ac-

cursed, 2i4b sale of chapmen's tongues, 22 ib scorning the b. degrees, 2543 made b. men small things

do fly, 2g7b Bats, bawk of b., g68b cast idols to moles and b., 303 do b. eat cats, 7433
I

shal's b., Bat's, on b.

5053 back

happy warrior of
gi6b
heart of
is

political

man, 7083 holy ground, s6ib


entrance
b.,
it

in the belfry, 86sb


Battalions,

proud, 2isa
to what b. uses return, 2663 uttered nothing b., 65 ib Baseball, chalk mark b. score,

797
eternal importance like b., g86b
b., 8953 Baseless fabric of this vision, 297 b

knowin'

all

about

Basely,

spend that shortness

b.,

24ob
Baseness to write fair, 2663 we will smite, 8gga Baser, fellows of b. sort, soa Basest, our b. beggars, 277b Bashful, maiden of b. fifteen,

God for big b., 3573 God with strongest b., 4353 sorrows come in b., 2653 Battening our flocks, 3383 Batter my heart, 3083 on your banjos, g48b Battered caravanserai, 6sgb cottage b. and decayed, 3333 few thousand b. books, g88b Battering sandal, So^b Battery, assault and b. of wind,
882b Battle and the breeze, 537b borne the b., 64ob
bravest b. ever fought, 7&gb Britain wins last b., 9243 call to b. and b. done, 8363

met on great b., 6gga once more on b., loaob


Battlements,
b.,

under
5013
sees,

my

28ib

fate sits

on dark
b.,

frowning
towers

6363
b.

and

334b

Battle's magnificently stern array,

556a

no war or

when
Battles,

b.

b. sound, 3343 lost and won,

281 a
b.,

fight

our

country's

iiooa

fought his b. o'er again, 57 ib

he

lives

not long

who

b.

im-

48ib
stream

mortals, 633 long ago, 5133

hath

seen

God,

3542

virgin's sidelong looks, 44ga

common
day
is

perils of b., 7523

not anxious about O God of b., 2453


sieges fortunes,

b.,

gg6a

young potato, 766b


Basic

cry of freedom, 7O4b


past, 7273
b.,

272b

element in Constitution, 984* hero of books labor, 8953

delight of

646b
2443

when someone

transacted by mechanism, 5773 b. hard, 6$b

each

b.

sees other's face,

nature's b. structure, 10343 power of universe, g8ab Basilisk is sure to kill, 4O2a
Basil-pot, steal

far-flung b. line, 8753 first blow half the b.,

45ob

my

B.,

58ob

Basin, stare in b., io5gb Basis of democratic state, structural established b.

g8b by

brush, i4&a

flags were furled, 647b foremost in b. Mary Arabree, io88a France has lost b., ioi6a from b. and murder, Sob harness like soldiers, gs4b

Bauble, pleased with b. still, 4093 shallow b. bosts, 267b Baudelaire foremost seer, 7o6b sedulous ape to B., 8243 Bawd, call b. a b., io2b now my old b. is dead, 8853 opportunity is great b., 42 ib Bawds, clocks the tongues of b.,

Bawdy
Bawdy strings of elders, g55b Bawk of bats, g68b
Bawn, bred en
Bay,
b. in brier patch,
b.,

INDEX
Beach, warm sea-scented b., 6633 Beaches, fight on b., 92 la where it tosses, ioo6a Beacon, Glee to heaven b. burns,

Bear false witness, ga find he can b.

bark puts from native

232b
brothers call from b., 7iob China 'crost the b., 873b

deep-mouthed welcome, 5603 in the B. of Biscay O, 4ggb like b. of Portugal, 25ob


nightcap

no

fetters

instead of b., in B. State,


b.

4473 625b

8523 of the wise, 2683 Beacons from where Eternal are, 572b of hope ye appear, 7isb of wise men, 7253 Beaded bubbles winking, 58 sb Beadle on Boxin* Day, 66ga
very b. to humorous sigh, 22 ib Bead roll, Fame's eternal b., 2Oob Beads and prayerbooks, 4093 couple o* guns and rosary b.,

anything, lotob flying chariot, 45gb for which we b. to live, 4oqb forever noise of these, eb B. before, 7273 fought his friend's infirmities, 2563 his mild yoke, 3413 his own burden, 54a if I were a b., g7oa infirmities of weak, sib it that the opposed beware
thee, 2586 like the Turk,

rather

be dog and

moon,

2563 reeking into Cadiz B., 6633 sings in boat on b., 6483

4iob melancholy as lugged b., 2375 more than he can b., loVoa

somebody bet on

727b spreading himself like a green


b.,

green glass

b.,

gssb

b. tree, i8b State dialect, 6g2a

pictures rosaries pixes, 35gb tell b. in drops of rain, 62ob tell his b., io84b

Bayed the whispering wind, 4493 Bayonets, by push of b., 4353 leave at point of b., 47gb throne of b., &5gb Bays burn deep and chafe, 7743 lingering b., 426b no b. to crown it, g23b Bazille, feigning lady by B., io78b Be, appear to b. and appear not to b., gsb better not to b., 644b
bold, soob business of life is to b., 77gb he is or was or has to b., 4183 land that yet must b., 10513 merciful to me a fool, 7gob

Beak, by enemy's b. gouged, 10833 from out my heart, 6433 hunching wings and b., 10753 in b. enough for week, g$$b Beaker, bring me b. of wine, gob O for a b., 5&2b Be-all and end-all, 2823 Beam, cast b. out of own eye, 41 a in eye of new-married, 535a in thine own eye, 413 midday b., 34ob on starboard b. Charybdis, 2343 Beamish boy, 7453 Beams, all his b. full dazzling,

my tavern the Big B., 82ob never be b. on United Statei, 11033 never could b. but did, 5885 not b. much reality, ioo4b not every soil can b. all, 1173 nothing he not fitted to b., i42b nothing would it b., iog5b of very little brain, g7oa one clings I'll b. it, g6ga pain to the b., 5g6b
pleasing punishment

women

b.

2183

punishment greater than


b.,

I can

6a

results

of

own

example,

isob

rugged Russian b., 2853 shade him till he can b., 4873
sing savageness out of
b.,

27sb

7oib

near

me when

light low, 6503

and

blazes

in
sea,

adversity,

5503

noble, 69 ib not the first, 4033

athwart the

6463

not to seem but b. best, not too bold, 2oob off depart, i lob off or I'll kick you, 74$b

7ga

5255 sultry main, best not to see b. of sun, 773 how far candle throws b., 2355 in sunny b. did glide, 4863 layeth the b. of his chambers,
2ia
learn to bear b. of love, 4873 of wit on other souls, 3693

bemocked

sorrow hard to b., 665b strengthen us to b., 7iib sweet as I could b., g27b sword of heaven will b., 27 ib that walks like man, 8753
can, 853b they shall b. thee up, 2ob those ills we have, 2623 to be no more, 5183 too tender heart, 4063 up and steer right onward, 3413 vapor like b. or lion, 288b virgin shall b. a son, 300-31 a

them we

poem should not mean but


10223

b.,

powers that
shalt
still

b.,

sib
art
I

b.

what thou

promGod,

ised,

28ib

and know that

am

iga
strong, 533

white moon b., ioi2b Bean, girl b. from boy b., 10523 home of b. and cod, 8583 nine b. rows have, &7gb not too French French b., 766b
takes hair right off b., 10373 Bean- fed horse beguile, 22ga Beans and brown bread, 831 a determined to know b., 683b eat no b., 3iob
full o' b., 611 a no b. in Almost

whatever you they b., 684b

stuff

men

with

when you

such things to
tell

b.,

65ob

what and where b., 652b the serpent under it, 2823

there ye may b. also, 4ga to b. or not to b., 26 ib


to b. what we are, 822b to her virtues very kind, 3873 W3nt to b. hsppy b., 684b what care I for she b.,

are anvil b., 324b whips and scorns of time, 2623 who would fardels b., 2623 with all the faults of man, 3003 wounded spirit who can b., 353

Besr-bsiting,
Perfect State,

yoke in his youth, 34b Puritan hated


built
nests

b.,

whom

what it is to be, 9565 what one is, 10483 what we are, 822b what we cannot b., 10803
with us yet, 87sb Beach, scross narrow b. 75 8b along briny b., 745b
at Kitty

945b Bear all cheerfully, 6563 all naked truths, 5845 and big b. too, 97oa and grin, 72 ab any burden, io72b
asses

Beard,
his b.
icicle

in

b.,

67*b

hath not offended king, 1793

was grizzled, 2583 husb3nd with b., 245b on Dutchman's b., 25b
long gray b., 524b of formal cut, 24ga old man with b., 67b
plucks dead lions by b., 2362 plucks off my b., 2610 white b. decreasing leg, 24ib

lion in his den, 5igb

made
tail,

to b.

and you, 2iga

beams of

we

flit,

Hawk, 10363
that

fishermen

glass abraded life like stroll

walk b., 2795 by b., 72 ib on b., 68ia only pebble on b., 868a rugged and without a b., g77b up and down the b. we flit, 758b walk upon the b., looia

4873 gssb blazing bonds that gall, 774b brunt pay arrears, 666b bush supposed a b., 2 gob cannot b. mother's tears, iigb care borne and yet must b., 5 68b caves of ocean b., 44ob charmed life, 2873 clumsy-fingered b., 5053
love,

wrapped

in

b.

and

silence,

cow
exit

and

b.

shall

feed,

pursued

by

b.,

gia 2g5a

Bearded conspirators, gg8a like the pard, 24ga Beards, tsrry until b. be grown, i2b where b. wag all, i88a
Bearing birthrights proudly, 2363

1186

INDEX
of government, Bearing burdens
Beastly, to the
Beast's,

Beautiful
is,

how

b. bourgeois

986*
b.,

6353 on excellence of character, 983

ssb precious seed, seen him b. down on me, 9693 Bearings glint, 1043** a lays in application, 671 Bears all its sons away, 3973 and lions growl, 3963
dancing dogs and
each
first

Germans, 10433 man's life cheap as


ape
vilest

Beaumont, bid B. ther, so3b


Beauteous
rare B., 3193 bright

lie

little fur-

creation,

1523

Beasts,

of

b.,

1073

ask the b., 153 coupling of b., 10053 fly to wilderness, 1003 four b. had six wings,

57b
b.,

b.,

9o6a
Hell,

b.

his

own

judgment
1193 1333

man

fled to b., 55b lived with birds 3nd

born are shapeless, greatest names, 3490 his blushing honors, 2g8b
in itself
it

loia nature

teaches

b.

to

know

causes of destruction,

friends, aSgb of all wild b. preserve

me from

the b. files, 3633 dear b. death, 3633 evening calm and free, 5123 eye of heaven to garnish, *37a idiot speaks, io8gb kindness not b. looks, sigb pearls in b. ladies' eyes, 2213 prove a b. flower, 2243 things for which we live, jigb Beauties, in small proportions b. see, 3043

commands

435 f out to edge of doom, 2943 sorrows with steadfast spirit, 67a

stamp
igob

of

human

tyrant, 3O2b of the forest creep forth, 2ib pair of very strange b., *5ob shall be at peace with thee,

meaner

b.

of

the night,

not his own, 4i$b unripened b. of north, Beautifier, rank great b.,
Beautiful
fairy's child, all b. and accessible, 1733 all b. drifts away, 88 la
all

condition,

6oia 5813

small and great b., sib

time b. away all things, n6b Beast, a very gentle b., *3ob

strongly it b. us,

56b

transform
Beasts',

ourselves

into
b.,

b.,

all b.

not

God's not

666a

once so b.

sentiments in world, 6953 is dead, loiob

blond

b.,

8050

brute bastard, 1068 a

Beat an empty barrel, 9533 Blake b. on wall, 8853


thy wings, earth with unfettered foot, io8ob generation, gold to 3iry thinness b., heart hear her 3nd b.,

all

mind, goib civilization scarcely b., gosb cocoa a vulgar b., giga cursed above every b., 6a deem himself god or b., 4o8b either a b. or god, 983
every b. of the forest is mine, 193 fist b. like a lion, 57b fit night for man or b., 95 ib fourth b. like a flying eagle,

call this b. to

down baffling downwsrd b.

always
ii3b isia

things bright and b., 684b the b. answer, 10313

foes, 71

ib

and ineffectual angel, 7173 and therefore to be wooed, 2i4b


as other passions, 9953 35 the sky, 7oib 35 words, 9i7b

him when he

3063 652b

sneezes,

7430

his breast, 524b in Belgrave Square,

me and hammer me, 948b my people to pieces, 303


on W3ll
till

767b

57b
in view, 3723 like wild b.
little

guards way, 48gb

so we b. on, io36b soul of enemy man,

Truth obeyed, 8853


b.
b.

better than b., 2323

making b. with two backs, 27 sb man and bird and b., 5263 man neither angel nor b., gGgb mark or name of the b., 58b

sound trumpet sound trumpets

gSyb drums, 42ob drums, 3713

maw-crammed
more
multitude
1233

b.,

666a
b.,

subtile than any b. of many

5b

heads,
pity,

no

b. so fierce

but knows

2i6b no more, s64b


of

swords into plowshares, 303 the bush, 1820, 3i8b the Dutch, 10900 the ground, 33&b they b. 3nd Voice b., 8565 to win not b. weapons, 97b Turk b. a Venetian, 276b upon whorled ear, 8o2b water they b., 287b waves of science b. in vain,

prey

in

aristocratic

races,

Sosb
only b. in

arena the crowd, 88gb only connect b. and monk, 95 ib


owest b. no hide, 278b Pellinore followed questing b., 175*

Beaten

people a many-headed b., 1233 people resemble wild b., i77b righteous man regardeth the life of his b., 243 second b. like a calf, 57b
serpent subtlest b., 347b

with fist instead of stick, $5ib you b. your pate, 4o7b at all points, gob genius disdains b. path, 6353 poop was b. gold, 287b till they know, 3520 with his own rod, 1823
yet today, io5ob

Beatific,

enjoyed

in

vision

b.,

343 a

Beating bird io66b

extending

wings,

be b. and be sad, 7073 beauty making b. old rhyme, 293b beauty not good or aught but b., 9903 changes as forest, io78b childish but divinely b., 497b dancing most b. art, 8513 death b. adventure, 7003 death of b. woman, dreamer, 7283 Evelyn Hope, 66 evermore, 6943 face candid brow, find b. human soul, 4753 for spacious skies, 8493 from perceived harmony, 5283 how b. they are, 5273 how b. they stand, 57sb how b. they stood, 57 5b innocent and b., SSgb joyous b. and free, 5693 life b. or reverse, Ssob most b. among gods, 6yb most b. lady, 9143 most b. most useless, 6g8b most b. mouth in world, 4i6a most b. thing is mysterious, 95oa nature's models b., 10343 nothing b. makes complete sense, io24b nothing in house not b., 753a nothing more b. than death,
7003 once I was b., io82b overmuch, 8853 palace B., 36sb passionate body, 773b
pea-green boat, 6733 poetry most b. mode, pussy you are, 6733 quarto page, 4813 question, 10313
sacrifices of friendship b.,

something
io68a

you

could

hunt,

strangest b. ever he saw, 1753 that wants discourse of reason,

*57b

disastrous b. of wings, gosb in void luminous wings, 7173 living thinking, 6g7b of my own heart, 6$4b Beatrice a light between truth

had a face as a man, 57b what rough b., 882a with many heads butts me,
third b.

Beats
all

s8 9 b

without

would act angel

money man
acts

intellect, 161 a about in caverns, 10793 lies you can invent, 4903 3t d3y-shuttered doors, 8573 back envious siege, 2273

and

b.,
b.,

io8gb j63b iog8b

Beastie, tim'rous b., 4g2b Beasties, long-leggety b.,

on throne, 6533 them on his anvil, 3510 upon high shore of world, 244b
light b.

9043

scorn looks b., 252b series of b. days, 4793


singing

with his blood, 64gb

Oh how

b.,

1187

Beautiful
Beautiful, so various so b. so

INDEX
Beauty fare thee well, 5883 fatal gift of b., 5573 first problem was b., io8ib fl3ttered upon b., 4isb for ashes, 335 for confiding youth, 5i6b fruits of life 3nd b., 488b gift of God, 973 common sense, 7303 gift to b. inward soul, g2b give b. in the more amiable than nature good b., 394b grows familisr to lover, sgsb h3bit between us 3nd b., 8633 half the b. I possess, 5O2b harmony grace melody, 747 b has not been fathomed, 7083
Helen's b.
in

new, 7sa soup, 744b Sredni Vashtar

the B., swindles b. and simple, that war must be lost,

9042 86jb 7oib

Beauty, orators dumb when b. pleadeth, 2203 our eyes never see, Sg$b own excuse for being, 6o2b perception of b. moral, 68 ib
pierce like psin, 9373 pledge of conformity, 8673

thing raises man, 1783 things adorn world, 86?b


this is b. country, 594b three most b. things, i losa

power of b. I remember, 372* power of Greek in b., 7155


principal b. in a building,

time of young love, 4g8a too b. to live, 66gb true words are not b.,

753

provoketh thieves, 247b rarest gift to b., 7303

uncut hair of graves, 7003 upon the mountains, 333 what is b. is moral, 7ogb what may be approved as
845

renown which
fer,

riches or b. con-

ii5b

sat B. in

my

lap, 8303

b.,

brow

of Egypt,

when

I was b., i$7b whole numbers, 10343 wise and b., 7iob woman with one eye, 4$4b

women

indisputably b. or ugly,

wonderful world, 7iga words are not true, 75a world too b. this year, 10233
faded, you Beautifully blue, 5321, 5613

are

b.

and

95 ib

time grows b. dim, ggsa


Beautify, to b. life give it object,

8283 Beauty adventure


all

her b. 3nd her chivalry, I died for b., 7363 ill layer-up of b., 2453 images of b., 933 in 3ll things, 586a in art economy is b., 8ooa in eye of beholder, 7293, in naked b. more adorned, in patterns of shadows, indescribable, 8673 invisible b., g44 is a mystery, g86a is everlasting, 9973
is is

555b

say not of B., ggoa sense of pity b. pain, sex and b. inseparable, she walks in b., ss8b skin deep, 2ggb

8433 g86a

83ib 345b ggab

sleep sleep b. bright, 4883 smother up his b., 2383 so ancient yet ever new, 1473 so long as b. shall be, i47b sold for old man's gold, 9033 source of b. is in itself, 1423 stone to b. grew, 6023

art,

86ib
b.,

that b. all that wealth, 44oa

there b. in Sodom, 7083 there in truth no b., 3233

sublimely pure, 9133 such b. as you master, 2935 such seems your b. still, zgjb sufficient end, 882a take winds of March with b.,
teaches such b. as woman's eye,

America not afraid of

10745

is

and high degree, loogb and length of days, 7732 and virtue rarely together, 1633 and wisdom rarely conjoined,
1330
are you not enough, gSsa as b. not great star, g4sa as much b. as could die, 3033
as
fc

truth, s83b is vsin, 273 isle of b., 5883

2223
terrible and awful, 7083 terrible b. is born, 8823

keep back

b.,

So^b

know
left b.

b. 3S b., 733 on shore, 6023

light
little

from her own


concerned with

b., b.,

lives

we

feel it,

8673

though lilies die, looked on B. bare, loasb

5703 7863 g8oa

that dost consecrate, 5683 that Medusa's head, 10223 that must die, 5843 thing of b. joy, 5803

thy b.
till

though injurious, 34gb is to me, 64ib


b.

barbarous

in b. stocks, 8033 beholding b. with eye of mind, 93* bereft of b., sigb best of all we know, 8oia body's b. lives gssb

loses b. in light of day, 9933 love b. truth we seek, s6gb love built on b., 3073

truth
b.

love

one,

8oib

lust not 3fter her b., 23b makes b. because outlet,

nor good t3lk, 876b to mind shameful to heart b., 7083


'tisn't

msking be3utiful

old

9453 rhyme,

too rich for use, 2233 took from who loved

them,

bought by judgment of 22lb brute b. and valor, 8033 by b. and by fear, sogb by b. made amends, 8933 calls, s84b
carves bow of b., 6o2b clad in b. of thousand

eye,

stars,

2i$b
cold and austere, 9133 come near your b. with nails,

2i4b convenience comfort, creation of b., 644b


crieth in attic, 755!)

crowds

me

till

I die, 7

daily b. in his life, 276 dead black chaos, 22oa definition of b., 5283 die for b., 6osb doth of itself persuade,

22oa

draws with

single

hair,

dreamed life b., 68oa ease and speed not give work
b.,

i68b

*93b mathematics supreme b., 9133 mercy hsve on me, 7s8b momentsry in mind, 95$b most poetic3l topic, 643b must be truth, tj84b mystery of b., 878b N3ture's coin, 337b nsture's system 3 resl b., 10343 ne'er enjoys, 4iib neither heat limb nor b., 2713 no excellent b., 2ogb no spring nor summer b., 3073 nonsense 3nd b. close connections, 95 ib not lip or eye b. call, 4033 notion of absolute b., 933 of 3ged face, 9633 of good old cause, 5123 of great machine, gg$b of holiness, i8a of inflections, g$$b of innuendoes, g$sb of minstrel's lyre, go6b of own b. mind diseased, 5573
of the lilies, 6 9 ob of true manliness, 7403 of world hss edges, 9753 one's b. 3nother's ugliness, 6073

troubled by this b., 7813 truly blent, 25 ib undiminished natural b., io73b unmask her b. to moon, 2583 use harms b., 8703

wh3t b. is cannot be said, 8673 where b. has no ebb, 8803 where perhaps some b. lies,
335 a

who walks with

B.,

9923

whole mystery of b., 878b whose b. past change, 8033 will come unannounced, 6073
wit high birth, 2693 with him b, slain, 2203

withdraws mind from love


b.,

of

elevation
exists in

and

b.,

7i6b
b.,

Beauty's,

713 without extr3vag3nce, 8gb without grace, 6o8b without vsnity, 554b witty b. 3 power, 7313 i8a worship in b. of holiness, wrought out from within, 7818 i88a will b. wither, your bl3zon of sweet b. best,

everything order and

7073

mind, 434b

extent of b.

and power, 5953

2930 bresdth 3nd length, 9063 but skin deep, 2ggb

1188

INDEX
Beauty's ensign yet
asisb
is

crimson,
j

none of B. daughters, 5592


orient deep, 3*7* in b. brow, agab parallels a Jose might never die, 291
|

Bed, goes to b. and does not pray, 3233 goes to b. by bell, 75gb gravity out of his b., has found out thy b.,

Beds, think of clean b., gg2b Bedtime, would it were b. Hal,

none are Beaux, where


Beaver,

b thy b. field, 291

heaped for heart for

beloved's

b.,

2393 4893 572b


board,

Bee, brisk as 3 b., <_ busy as a b., 202b~

my

b.

and

busy b. improve each hour, jg6b busy b. no time for sorrow,


clover

b.,

434* holy angels guard thy


b., b,,

on account of his b. hat, fotb vounz Harry with b. on, 2403


at eve,

horn brought
I

me

from

jg6b 578b

and one b., 7393 had stung it newly, $5ob

in

my

BecalmSd, ships b. him like leavBecame, nothing b. 1b ing, 28 a "b.," 8yoa Because, God not I do not hope, loosb

688b

I their

map

b. again, 10843 lie flat on this b.,

how doth
laughing
love in

the
b.

busy

b.,

3g6b

3083
in b. laugh in b. cry, 3513 in thy cold b., 3213 laid in b. majestical, 244b to b. let's ssys Sleepyhe3d,
lie
lie
lies

on stalk, 108 2 a my bosom like a b.,

it is there, 876b io6ob Beckon you to fraternize, Beckoning shadows dire, ss6b what b. ghost, 45b

down

on Mother's

Beckons,
Becks,

Longing

leans

and

b. f

in b. of sorrow, 35 ib b., 10763 in his b. walks with me,

6940 nods and b., 334b our minds to fellowship, s8ob Become, all that may b. a man, s8sb

had b. what he could, 10563 lost name, io6ga I have b. ignorant man again, 956b
let

2 3 6b lovers to b., 2313 made his own b. ere born, 354b made his pendent b., aSaa b. in hell, 233 make make my b. soon, 10893 his b., 684b for manger marriage not b. of roses, 8223

not good for swarm not good for b., i42b partake as b. abstemiously, 7373 pedigree not concern b., 738b preserved in amber, 1353 star that bringest home b., 5383 summer with flower and b., 574* where the b. sucks, 2g7b with honeyed thigh, 3363 Beech, sang beneath spreading b.,

my

Beechen green and shadows, 5823


spare the b. tree, 5383 Beeches drip in browns, 7846 Beef and captain's biscuits,

each b.
to

all

capable of, 5753

mourn upon thy


near

b.,

774b

6ob

man

behave toward govern-

approach

b.

may show,

ment, 68 ia not b. king's first minister, 9243 them with half so good grace,

27ob
vilest things b. themselves, a87b

what capable of, 8aab Becomes, blessed youth b. as aged, 2713 ib nothing b. him ill, 22 throned monarch better, 234b
Becoming, growing and a limit of b. mirth, 22 ib
in b., 7930 present gone
b.,

35 ia nicer to lie in b., 9033 delicious b., 592b b. of daffodil sky, 652b on his thorny green b., 552b on my grave as now my b.,

give library to b. trust, 89 ib great eater of b., 2513 meals of b. iron steel, 2443 pig had roast b., iog3b roast b. of old England, sgab stole piece of b., 10943

without mustard. Scab


Beef-f3ced boys, 66gb Beehive's hum soothe ear,

one and

all

died in

outcries call

me

b., 753b from naked b.,

5oob
B.

Bee-loud glade, &7gb Beelzebub, early morning


arose,

7i6a

Becoming- conscious, emotion


source of b., gs6b Bed, a b. Clerk Saunders
said,

io88b

and so to b., 3753, g62b angels came to my b., angels guard my b., sg6b back to b. again, g4?a

7823

bad luck sits by b., 588b be blest that I lie on, 3573 be in b. and sleep not, 10373 book took him out of b., 3ioa brimstone b., 5333 by night, 45oa by night on my b. I sought him, 2gb candle to light to b., iog$b
celestial b.,

paid twenty-two percent, 5223 put them to b., 10953 rode horses up to b., gi4b run into it as to lover's b., 288b sate itself in celestial b., 25gb seldom die in b., 8iob should of stood in b., sleep upon golden b., 8843 t3ke up thy b., 453 to b. go sober, 3i2b toddle home die in b., ggab warm westher in b., 388b welcome to your gory b., 4963 went to b. with stockings on,
iog6b

s&fb Been, it might have b., 6263 what has b. has b., g6gb who that hath ever b., 5183 Beer and skittles, 66ga, 7183 chronicle small b., ay^b come my lad and drink b., 4293 corrodes copper, 76ob felony to drink small b., 2153 parson much bemused in b.. 4103
questionable superfluity small b., 2153 root b. sold here, 764b show vilely to desire small b.,

what torment not a mamsge


b.,

2153
take you

3o8b
I

on

trust for b. t

8313
8i8a

when

jump

into

my

b.,

Basb

Zeus's b. of love, 853

teetot3ler, throw b.

8363
into

Channel,

Bedamned, bedecked bediamonded b., 866b Bedecked bediamonded bedamned, 866b so b. ornste 3nd gay, 349 b Bedevilment, msn's b. 3nd God's,
liquid odors, i2ob Bedfellows, strange b., 2973, 733b

25gb

creep into narrow b., 7153 desert sighs in b., lo^gb die in b., 8iob, gg2b died in b., 7ssb dread grave little as b., 377b dull stale tired b., 277a early to b. early to rise, 4*ib,

Beersheba, Dan to B., lib, 438b Beery wenches, 8o7b Bee's collected treasures, 4423 Bees black with gilt surcingles,
7 3 8b excel the
b.

for

government,
for bees,
b., b.,

8543

1933
for flies

Bedewed with

3nd hornets

10335
earth in earthy b., 652b every b. is narrow, loa^b every day got up and gone to
b.,

932a
birth, angels to

Bediamonded, bedecked amned, 866b Bedlam, mad as B., 67 ib Tom o' B., 2773 Bedroom eyes, io6ob
Bed's-feet, 3s to b. life
is

b.

bed-

helmet now hive for honeyed words like if b. are few, 7393 innumerable b., 64gb

2o4b ggob

for this

huge

354b
b.,

shrunk,

intellectual life like b., 8673 many b. on single course, 9783


stirring

four
get

my

3573

3063
Beds, bliss not b. of down, 3223 housewives in your b., 2733 make thee b. of roses, 21 2b

whole world out of b., 9473 go to b. by day, 8233 to b. with lamb, 2O2b go

swarm
swarm

birds on wing, 527b of b. and honey in the


in

carcass, lib of b.

May,

10873

1180

INDEX
Bees, rob the

Hybla

b..

2563

Beethoven's Fifth sublime noise,


Beetle

Beggar, set a 2i$b

b.

on horseback,

booms adown glooms, 8193 nor death-moth, 5843 poor b. we tread upon, 27 la shard-borne b., z8b wheels droning flight, 44oa winds sullen horn, 44gb Beetles, botany b. butterflies, 8i8a in caves, 10645
o'er his base, st^gb scarce so gross as b., sygb Beeves, ten thousand b., 7313 Befall, may opposite b. me, 88b whatever b, thee preordained,
!

that I am, 26ia th3t is dumb, 1993 train anyone to be b. man, 9493 true b. true king, 4553 twice stood a b., 7342 upon horseback, 8853

Beginning, h3tred of bourgeois b. of wisdom, 7ogb in ray b. is my end, 10053


in in

Beggared all description, 287b by strumpet wind, 23ja Beggarly Scotchman, 4303 weak 3nd b. elements, 53b when I was b. boy, 6943 Bethnal of Beggar's dsughter
Green, io87b Beggars are from Zeus, 6$b coming to town, log'jb might ride, 3663 mounted run horse to death,

Word, 475 long choosing and b. late, look with favor on bold b 1173 masterpieces not best at b
9070

the b. God created, 51 the b. was the

my end my

b.,

igab,

10o6a

tA

most important part, 943 never ending still b., 3715 no vestige of a b., 446b not even b. of end, gz4a of a feast, 24ob
of desire, 9565 of the end, 4843, 9243 of time resemble end, 9573 of wisdom desire of discipline

45 a

Befallen, that
3<5b

which hath

b. thee,

Befell, at forty-odd b., 59 ib

these that twice b., 7393 Befits proud birth, 8ia Befitting, bound as b. each, 7033 Before a joy proposed, 24b all be as b. love, 6635 dearest vision of what is b.,

2i5b our basest b., 277b should be no choosers, 1843 when b. die, 254b reckBeggary in love that can be
oned, 2873 poverty is sister of b., 923 Begged, living Homer b. bread, 3oib seed b. bread, Begging, nor his i8b truth goes a-b., i7gb us to have self-pity, io79b Begin and cease, 7i4b better never to b. than to stop,
1523

37*
of ye3rs, 77b past b. of b., 888a plessure the b. 3nd end, 103* rid of folly b. of wisdom, 1*33 stop revolution at b., 10485 take fill at b. of cask, 675 the b. and the end, s8b to faint in light, 65 2 b to flee vice b. of virtue, 1231 told you from the b., gab true b. of our end, 2300 whole has b. middle and end,

8gb from behind and b., 53 ib he is b. all things, 54b not lost but gone b., igoa old man looks b. and

after,
b.,

626-633 reaching forth unto things

99*

you are

b.

uniform nothin' much b., 8733 Beforehand, not think b. of his


words, looa Befriend, good b. themselves, 833 like sparks of fire b. thee, 3?ob Beg alms of palsied eld, 2713 cannot b. for pardon, 10623 cold comfort, 2$7b death's pardon now, io78b delinquents for our life, 10773 leave to subsist, 868b often our own harms, 28yb

come back b. over, g26b dare to be wise b., 1233


from Zeus
get
let

Beginnings 893*

and end, io4ga and endings untidy,

us

b.,

iosb

up

hsrd thing's

in in gladness, 51 ib in sadness, io7$b let it b. here, 4553


let

b. 3gain, 6643 to b., 6g2b creating hard to b.,

end to b. of wars, 9743 mighty things from small


69 2b

b,

us

b.,

10733

grow, 3673 out of small b., 3193 resist b., 1293 Begins, blossom by blossom spring b- 773* charity b. at home, io8b
elections

10263 liberty must b. at home, must b. with single step, 740 time to b. 3 new, 3723
to cease to be, 86gb winking M3ry-buds b., 29ob with certainties end in doubts, 2o6b with Jove I b., n6b Beginnin, seed de b., 10393

end

slavery

b.,

46sb

penny by and by, loiob sleep under bridges


steal,

family history b. with me, g6a in delight ends in wisdom, gsgb


in

b,

and

8o2a

they b. I give, 1923


too proud to b., noob virtue of vice pardon b., Began best can't end worst, I am that which b., 775b this universal frame b., twilight of things that b., Begat, fathers that b. us,
26<jb

dreams b. responsibility, 88ia 13W ends tyrsnny b., 372b


b.,

l3ws end tyranny


life b.

4263

6673
3703

life

perpetuslly, 888b closed life b., 7033


b.,

someone someone else b., Beget, acquire and b. temperance,


26sb
8173 urge to b., loSgb b. kindness, kindness Begets, 8ia love b. love, io56a
get
b.,

775b 8b 9293

their b., Beginning, always best in 3633 and end of political education,

when

one ends other p3ck when it


love
b.
b.,

642b
to rain,

b.

77b
256*

to

sicken,

77 6b

where West

9143
b.,

and

sgb Aton the b. of life, $b bad b. makes bsd ending, B$b before b. of years, 7733 better is the end thsn the b., 28a blessed l3tter end of Job more
than b., i6b e3ch venture new b., loosb end and b., 10573 end depends upon b., i3ib end of the b., 9243 fesr of the Lord b. of wisdom,

art of b., 6253 as it was in the b.,

world's great age

57ob

Begone dull Care,


Begot,
in

how

b.

how

io86b, 1087* nourished,

Begetter, onlie b. of insuing sonnets, 29 ib

Beggar, absent-minded b., 875b be not made a b., 383 csrried by angels, 473 crawl at his side, 6313 in purple of emperors, 8743 is envious of beggar, 67b King Cophetua loved b. maid,

2330 ventricle of memory, 2222 monster b. upon itself, 275!) of nothing but vain fantasy, 2233 to whom related by whom b., 4063 when they b. me, 4373 Begotten born and dies, 882b by despair, 3603 drops of dew, i6a flowers b., 7733 not made, 6oa
of his F3ther before
all worlds,

2ib from bsd b. great friendships,


1093

223b maid be queen, 6483 not a b. would accept, 7383 on foot, 8853

a good end, iB$b Great B. produced emptiness,

good

b.

603
Beguile,

noa
hard
b.

good ending, 1833

only b. Son, 483 bean-fed horse 2213 light of light b.,

b.,

2291

119O

INDEX
Beguile

Believe
eye
of
b.,
I

many be beguiled by 275b Satan that waiteth to b., the thing I am, a73b with songs b. pilgrimage, vou from grief, 64oa be b. by one, Beguiled, leisure of crew, y6sb b. me, 6a
serpent

one,

Beholder,

beauty

in

iG&a

72ga, 83 ib Beholders, strike

Belief, illogical b. in ble, gtk>b

improba-

awe

into b., 3$ga

g8oa

Beholding beauty \vith mind, gja desire and dream, 84 ga


myself rosy red, 8<j6a

eye

of
I

j
1

*75b

them that walk

therein,

not within prospect of b., 28ia ripened into faith, 5166 to believe in b., &57a Beliefs, bombs shook men out of b., 888a

of wound b. Beguiles, history b pain, 437 of Fortune b., Beguiling, smiling

Beholds, swift mind b., Behoove, icebergs b. the soul, 1068 a Behocnes, hardly b. any to talk,
7 8gb

dead ideas and b., 7*gb forsaken b., 7i;b keep as many old b. as we can,
795 a than chaff, 84$b more b, than can digest, 851 a Believe a lie, 491 a almost b. he could do it, ga5b also in me, 493 an expert, ngb as it is convenient let us b., i*8b attempted to b. Matilda, goaa because it is impossible, i4sb courage not to b., 688a deep in heart b., iio4b didn't b. in Adam and Eve, goib
less

4365 where you Begun, end just


45 2a kiss afresh as

b.,

Behove, requires for

when we

Behoving and un behoving, 6i8a


Be'ind, less than 'arf o' that
b.,

my

b.,

i$7a

first b.,

3ob
not yet b. to fight, 476a war has actually b., 46sa is half done, g8b what I was b. for, i iosa who has b. has half done,
well b.

8733 Being, a b. as the sun, jb a little flesh a little breath, i4ib

ABC
all

Behave as

we wish

friends to be-

have, g?a

how men not historians b., gsaa how they b. in quarrel, SjSa how well I b., 852b
in life as at banquet, ijSb mannerly at table, Saga why men b. like apes, go,4b Behavior of silk-sack clouds, Soja

applause of single human b., 433* art has reason for b., 6oga beauty own excuse for b., 6oab chain of b., 6oga
circle of potential b.,

of b., 956b things come from and happening, 1061 a

b.,

743

don't b.
easier
to

no
b.

sich person,

67ob

than
I

civilized

human
6i8b

b.,

7gsb gj6b

her
b., I

though 2940

deny, 77ob know she lies,

contending

against

some

7oib
ends of
b.,

put on good
of

b.,

s6ib

surfeit 277a Beheld, till I prince of love b., 486a Behemoth, behold now b., i6b

our

own

b.,

human
ioi7b
if

b.

portable

plumbing,

b. and take it, i8gb I b. I will, gooa I b. in America, 10252 I b. in God the Father, I b. in the Holy Ghost,
if

6oa 6oa

God were
$66b

not necessary B.,

you b. clap hands, 8s8a in freedom regardless of form,


957 a
for God, 86gb United States of America, 885b it or not, losgb know what he ought to b., is8b leads you to b. a lie, 491 a Lord I b., 45b man ready to b. what is told, i33b

Behind a dream, ag4b bit by him that comes

b.,

forgetting those things b., from b. and before, 53 ib get thee b. me, 4ja him lay gray Azores, 7goa leave not a rack b., 2975 less than 'arf o' that b., 87ga

sgoa 543

intellectual b., 34sb labor-house vast of


let

b.,

7i5b

there

always

lovely b. scarcely

never gets left b., 867b part my hair b., looia


those he leaves b., 7*aa true of most we leave b., 688b turn thee b. me, i^b
veil upon veil b., 74ab Behold a ladder, ja. be what they b,, 4o4b for to b. world so wide, 874b her judge for yourselves, K47a home return who him b., $54a

move and have not doing, io66a offered b. for it, 7s6a place in chain of b., 6oga pleasing anxious b., 441 a
receives

be b., 733 formed, s6aa our b., 5oa

in in

God yearn

who

reproach of b., 294* source of b., io56b of us b. what he is, gooa

me

Being's, my b. worth, yjga Beings are honey of this Self, 6aa distances between human b.,

938b
faith in

human

b.,

loaia

b. what they wish, naa more firmly as reality more

if all those endearing young charms, 542a me my country 'tis of you, 10300 me Saul, 9473

men
b. into machines, 687a b. living in den, gib

human human
noble

threatening, g65b

my own
ne'er
b.

stories,

55ob
please,

human
I I
I

beings in underground

millions of
sentient b.

am

den, 94b
vile,

human b., 888b happy human b., 6g8b

do what you

i6b

come quickly, 58b do not give lectures, 7oob


will

build

me

a nest, 7g6b

mad if they b. a cat, 2343. my head, jagb now another providence, now behemoth, i6b
power to say B., aa8b rainbow in the sky, 5iib the child, 4oga
the Lamb of God, 48a the man, 4gb
the upright, i8b
this

Beld,

siga

your brow is b. John, 494b Beldame, have a b. nigh, io4a Belfry, bats in b., 86$b clock in b. strikes one, 747b

woman now

doomed, 6aga three b. worthy respect, 7o7b which compose nature, 47ga
whitest of
b.,

4goa never b.

God
till

plays dice,
evil's

g5ob

ggsa

Belgium's capital gathered then,


Belgrave, hearts beat in B. Square, 767b Belial, sons of B., $4ab thus B. counseled, 34$b Belican, bill hold more than b.,

thou

dreamer cometh, 7b mayest in me b.,

agab

upon

night's starred face, 581 a

953
Belie all

you again in dying, 8a4b your God, sab


Beholden,

corners of world, agia

much

b. to Machiavel,

state fact b. another, 6o5b Belief, final b. in fiction,

g56a

help create

fact,

74a

$sga not b. in Santa Glaus, 78ob not know what safely b., 788a not your eyes, 684b oft repeating they b. *em, 387b only possibilities, 33oa own thought genius, 6osb rather b. fables in legends, aoSb Robert who has tried it, ngb sailors won't b. it, 52 ib that which they desire, s67b they half b. in it, 74a we have only to b., g6sb we what we wish, 3670 what they least understand, igib wisdom to b. heart, 867a with all my soul, Ggga woman or epitaph, 554b ye b. in God, 4ga

no

evil

done,

Believed
Believed, against
5<>b

INDEX
hope
b. in

hope,

Bellows like sea combated by winds, isgb


Bells

Beloved Pan, gsb


perfection in b., ssob physician, 54b so is my b. among the sons, soa ^* Son, 3gb
b.,

always everywhere by all, i47b because he b. in his God, 353 everything in papers, 886a
I

and

bonfires,

bells bells bells,

brazen

wept and

I b.,

50$b

juggling fiends no more b., 2873 not seen yet b., 4gb to be b. because absurd, i4$b truth never understood and not b., 488a what we least know, igoa
Believer,

b., 6442 building with tower 4833 cap and b., 6g2a

and

this is

my b., sgb thought himself b., 88sb am my


heaped for
b.,

Beloved's,
I

b. bed,
b.,

floating many b. down, for those who die, ioz8b harness b. shake,

wjb
5106

Below,

rves hear, 7023


in your parlors, 2733 knolled to church, 48b loud alarum b., 6443 merits of B. and Fudges, music nighest heaven, 5353 noisy b. be dumb, 8533 of Old Bailey, logsb

from above and b., 53 ib joy to pass to world b.,

down and away


remain

303

n8b
*<Ua

my
no

thoughts

b.,

above

all

a b. in culture,

safety here b., i7gb slave spirit b., ggia

Believers, half b. of casual creeds,

thy element's

b.,

7isa
take precautions against enemies, i4ga Believes, atheist half b. God, ggga each b. his own, 4O2b

b., go7b Belshazzar made a great feast, 352 Belted, prince can make b.

what we are here

277b

of Shored itch, iog$b of St. Clement's, logjb

he who b. nothing, 4713 what each wishes he b., gga Believeth, he that b. shall live, 48b liveth and b., 492 neither b. that it is sound of
the trumpet, i6b whosoever b. in him, 48a Believing, be not faithless but b., 49b in old men's lies, g88a to b. souls gives light, 2i4b where cannot prove, 64gb Bell book and candle, 2365 book b. and candle, i75b clear green b., 7043 curfew b. must ring tonight,

on her
ring ring ring ring ring
b.
b.

toes,

10953

for
b.,

new

century,

knight, 4g6a you and flayed you, 8733 Belua multorum es cap i turn, 1132 Bemocked, beams b. sultry main,

of heaven,

7023 out wild b., 6 out your b., 2o$b

55b
Bemused, parson much 4ioa
b. in beer,
rest,

Ben Adhem's name


Bolt, 6goa

led

55^

silver b. cockleshells,

sound on Bredon, 8533


b., losga sweet b. jangled, 262b temple b. they say, 87 3b Bells', to b. cheerful sound, 4&6b Belly, eye bigger than b., g25b fill his b. with east wind, 153 God send thee good ale, i88b

Battle soldier bold, 5gib

summoned by

Bulben's head, 8853

Jonson his best poetry, joab


rare B.

hard

to

argue with

b.,

1073

has no ears, 1073 he who does not

mind

his b.,

Bench, log hut with simple b., 74ia Bend, grass must b. when wind blows, 723 1 b. but do not break, jsga if I cannot b. Heaven, ngb low O dusky night, 7583
shall I b. low, 2323

Jonson, so*a

eats

ding dong b., and goes to bed by b., fancy from flower b., 6653.

43ob
well with your b., i2sb increasing b., 24 ib injured by hunger, icob Jonah was in the b. of the fish,
if it is

soften

rocks

or

b.

oak,

ggaa

foam

b.

for whom the b. tolls, joSb hear the surly sullen b., agzb heart sound as b., 2463 in cowslip's b. I lie, 2g7b invites me, 2833 merry as marriage b., 5563 middle b. trills out, 6325 sexton tolled b., 59 ib
silence that dreadful b., some cost passing b., 60 la strikes one, $gga swung to and fro, 8*$b

no consequence, 7i$b

35t>

justice in fair round b., like a heap of wheat, agb

24ga
1453 1753

Bended, on b. arm doglike, 78b Bendemeer's stream, 5433 Bending sickle's compass, 2943 to your wool, i87b Bends, blue sky b. over all, 5242
gallant mast, 5513
b. him, 6233 to the grave, 449* with remover to remove, 294* Beneath, at once above b. around,

men's only

God

their b.,
b.,

though she

no

b.

no bowels, icogb
in

noise

the

beast's

273b

rests on b. in mud, 1002 a secret life of b., io6gb

444*

the cat, 763, i6gb tocsin the dinner b., 56 ib tongue sounds as sullen b., 241 a

shoulder bum, 8853 spent under b., 3i3b upon thy b. shalt thou go, 6a wears his wit in his b., 268a

rung battle shout, 6333


Benedick the married man,
Benediction, face like a b., ig4a therefore and forever, 6i7b Benefaction, calling to mind previous b., 88b Benefactor, less to blame than b.,

whose

God

is

their

b.,

54b

and evening very word like b., 5833


twilight

b.,

6553

who

will b. cat, 76a, i6gb

Bellyful of fighting, 2gob Bellying, broad b. sails, g7ga Belong less to what flatters, 10573 secret things b. unto the Lord,

Belle Aurore, 667b dame sans merci, 581 a of old Natchez, io5ib
sois b. et sois triste,

lob
suffice for

77A
querulous

vain to be a
Bellicose,

b., 434a newspapers

and b., g6oa Bellies and drags


cold comfort to

in wind,
fill

882a
b.,

to to sacred literature, 10353 to vanishing race, io37b Belongs, now he b. to ages, 6773 Beloved, ah my b. fill cup, 6303 creature that is b., 2523

who b. to Company G, 7553

them, 7013

Beneficence of grass, 748b private b. inadequate, 857b


Beneficent,
belief

in

b.

power,

783*
zealous b. firm,
Benefit, find

7isb
to b. kingdom,

man

God made
government
4463
b.,

hungry

3*9*
fills

their b.,

73b

laughter out of dead b., g88a Bellies', for b. sake creep, sgSb Bellman, fatal b., 2833

escape me never b., 6643 from pole to pole, 525b he giveth his b. sleep, 22b let my b. come into his garden,
liberty

for b. of men, s66b common b., for


recognizes

he receives hope who


i48b

would cry crew reply, 746b Bellow, in b. and uproar, g75a


Bellows
full of

2gb a b. discipline, io67b never be b. by men, 4goa a of king, 1088 a


of

humsn if men
no
b.

3nd enjoyment, 453J stop work 3t sixty, 8i7b in gifts of bad man, 84a
b. b.

angry wind,

882b

Abraham Lincoln, 8g8b our own b. home,

of clergy, goga of ill, 2g4a


practical

in

failures,

725*

1192

INDEX
to b. Benefit, trees

Bethlehem
BM
Best, never lived is b., 88jb never to be born, $88b no b. in kind but degree, 62$a

another

Berlin, citizens of B., 10742

generation, io7b VVay is b. others, 75b written in water, i?ga in refusing b., Benefits, caution
disable b. of your country, 2$oa doubly b. who gives quickly,

io74a Bermoothes, still-vexed B., *g6a Bermudas, remote B. ride, 3603 Berries harsh and crude, jjSa I come to pluck your b., 3381 sweet b. ripen in wilderness,

Berliner,

ich

bin eui

no worse a husband than

b.,

955*
b. on one stem, 2$oa Berry, could have made better

two

not expected to 90 true, 429* not to be bom, 772, 10595 not to seem but be b., 7ga of all God's works, 34yb
of all patrons, i Mb of all ways, 54*a of me is diligence, 27?a of men that e'er wore earth,

a desire for b., 356a gratitude memory of b. fades, 8ia of scientific advances available,

b.,

326* Berth, death

happened

in

b.,

qSzb

sgib

responsibilities water b. all things,

and

b.,

ioz6a

Beseech, lighten our darkness


b.,

we

3oib
of possible worlds, 4171, g4gb of times wont of times, 6y2a old friends are b., 2o7b
past and to come seem b., 24*a pianist doing his b., &3gb
political

73b

Gob

Benevolence, beans and b M calls his trusting b., 448b do violence to fashion b.,
iooa
is

6na

man's mind, loob

not infused from without, loob for b., 3733 peace a disposition habitation of man,
tranquil

Beset, being woman hard b., ggob Besetting errors, 5653 Beside, leadeth me b. still waters,
i

thee for all sorts of men, 6oa Walrus did b., 745b ye in bowels of Christ, gisa you in bowels of Christ, 3283 you of your pardon, 274b

community, g8b

iooa

7b
thyself,

whether
Benevolent,

b.

does good, 726b heart b. and kind,

tbou art b.

whom no
Besiege,

sob
b.

other, 43

second b. to go back quickly, 8sa second thoughts are b., 84b seen the b. of our time, 277a seller a gilded tomb, 87&a should rule who rule b., g8a
so

xnsb
turn to b. rule, iooa people stormy patient, io58a b. 'eathen, 8733 Benighted, pore Benign indifference of universe, io68b

forty

winters

thy

much bad

in b. of us, 7&gb

brow, 2gib
Besieged,

sometimes forget, 27$b


stand and do the b., lo^a steed was the b., 5193 stolen sweets are b., sg2b

5103 stars b., 854b irresistible inexorable Benignant, D. g2ib information his hobby, Benison of hot water,
is

solitude,

by flatterers b., 41 la Besought with grievous supplication, 8goa Bespangling, dew b. herb and tree, g2ob Bess the landlord's daughter, 96 ib
Best, a little wise b. fools be, 3053
afflict
all

Sunday's
that
is

b.,

533a

in one,

8o5b

things confused with ill, s68b though the b. is bad, icja

the

b.

b., 43gb though we doubt, 3503

all is for

the

b.,

4173

to fall, 32ia

Benjamin's,

fell

upon

B. neck

always

and wept, 7b mess five times theirs, 7b Bennet called us Quakers, Mrs. B. stirring fire, 533a
Bent,
as

3&4a
b.,

beginning, sfya. and brightest come away, 5733 and worst of this is, 775b are but shadows, ajob beauty b. of all we know, 801 a

b.

in

thought his who says it b., 6ogb to forget, 668a water is b., yga way of doing everything, 6o8b way out is through, g26a when b. a little worse than man, sgaa where b. like worst, 873b
wisest discreetest b., 347* worst and b. inclined to snap,

affection

cannot hold
tree's

began
blazon

b. can't

end worst, 667a


beauty's
b.,

of

sweet

twig

b.

inclined,

4o6b bow cannot stand b., ig^b find out natural b., g4b
fool

butter, 744a

ggob you get

is

even

break,

g62b

common-looking people b., 6sgb country is at home, 447b


263b
it for the b., &56a discretion b. part of valor, 2413 do b. I can, 6413

Bestia, simia turpissima b., ioya Bestial semihuman and demonic,

me

to top of

my

did

936*

b.,

what remains

is b.,

273b

goldenrod, ioo4a idly b. on him that enters next,

228a

man who has


not our
b.,
is

b.

himself, ggb
b.,

do your worst we our b., 9233 done his b. for his time, 4g8a
each thing in place forward b. foot, 2373 found her first and he gives the b., 427a
b.,

Best-laid schemes, 4gsb Bestow, fee b. upon foul disease,

6ssb
8743

768a
343a
straight,

thoughts to be b.

downward
to
his

become

b.,

277* goods to poor, 52b Bestowed, favor well b., jgsb Bestowing, warmth of love's b.,

75ib
Bestows, where Jove b., 326b Best-regulated families, 67 ib Bestrid, his legs b. the ocean,

74*

Benumbs
care's

all

faculties,

canker

that

b.,

42gb 7&ga

Be'old, for to b.

world so wide,
too
alas,

8 74b Bepainted, bepuffed b.

he made the b. of this, 4g6b hope for the b., 52sb how much the b., 476b is enemy of good, 41 7b is good enough, 477b
yet to be, 666a known and said in world, 7i6a known and thought in world,
is

288b
Bestride the narrow world, 2530 Best's, second b. gay goodnight,

866b

Bequeath
us to

my soul to God, 2ogb myself to dirt, 701 a no shore, io4ga Bereaved, black as if b. of light,
486b
Bereavement, anguish of
Bereft,
b.,

7i3b
lack all conviction, 882a last b. hope of earth,
last
6j

my money on bobtail nag, 7*7 b Beteem, not b. winds of heaven,


Bet
x, Betelg lgueux,

64oa
b.

muddy

ill-seeming

of

beauty, 2igb Bergson you are a magician,


Berkeley,
ter,

3ioa laughs b. who laughs last, 3 man worst-natured muse, s masterpieces not give b. at beb.,

commonly

Aldebaran
Christ

and
in

B.,

?82b Bethlehem,

born

B.,

Bishop B. said no mat56ib


ferns

Berkshire,

by B. boulders,

lO22b

men molded of faults, 2723 men of few words b., 244* men take b. they can get, 43*b minds of my generation, io8ib

ginning, goyb

come ye to B., i5oa Jesus was born in B., sga


little

town of B., 7553 slouches toward B., 88*a venite in B., isoa

1193

Bethnd
Bethnal Green, 10875 Bethuraped with words, 2363 Betokened, red morn that b., 22oa
Betray,
finds
all

INDEX
Better

known

things b. thee, 856b


b.,

emptiness
too

4iib

know useless things than nothing, i3ob a b. day, 5183 last smile, 3882 late than never, i25a

Bewail, acknowledge and b. our


sins,

6ia
all

Beware,

brothers and sisters b., fury of a patient man,

should cry

B.,

5343 87*3 68b

late

men

b.,

448 b

Fortune flatters to b., i25b Nature never did b., 5ogb one of you b. me, 44b tender happiness b., 5153
thee
to

living for more and more, loaves when heart joyous, 4b make b. chairs or knives, 6053 make worse appear b. reason,

Me, 856b promote commerce and not


betrayest

who

man

gia

than

am Gunga
b.

Din,

b. it,

3?6b

minds

made

by

presence,

Hieronymo b., 2043 ides of March, 2533 Jabberwock, 7453 jubjub bird, 7453 let buyer b., 1503 man of one book, i58b Mother Mildew, 10653 my fangs, 2343
lord of jealousy, 2743 of desperate steps, 4593 of dog, 1503 of enterprises that require new

us in deepest consequence, 281 a Betrayed and baffled still, 771 b by false within, 7goa by fancy into metaphor, 54ob

by his manners, 2oob guilt by silence b., 37ob mistress that b, man, 77 veins b. our fear, io6*4b
Betrayers of language, g88b Betrayest, betray thee who b. Me, 8 56b Betrays instead of serving, 452b
silence never b., 8o7a Betsey and I are out, 8o8b Better a little chiding, 26yb another and b. world, 4gga approve b. but follow worse,

203b nae b. than he should be, 4933 ne'er been born, 521 a Negroes are b. than we, i03ga no b. than should be, ig4b no b. thing under the sun, *8b not to be, 644b
one's
part,

68 9 a my dear

my
my
b. half,

clothes,

682b

own
866b

duty, io6a

part of valor, 241 a poverty in hand of God, 4b

punishment not make 8o 5 b


selves,

man

b.,

of entrance to quarrel, 2R8b of false prophets, 4ib of judging by appearances, 3 5gb of rashness, 638 b the middle mind, ggob when thinker loose, 6073 Beweep my outcast state, 29 ib Bewildered in m3ze of schools,

402b
people, 10163 Bewitch, more b. 3rt, 3203

seen b. days, 248b, 2gob, s62b

5ioa
to b. oft

me

th3n when

spared b. man, 241 a


striving than stars or water,

iaga

be ignorant
1273

than

half

know,

mar, g53b

277b

prosperity doth b, men, 3153

Bewitching, love brings

b. grace,

be prepared for rage, 9283 boundless b. worse, 644b broader lands b. days, 92 ib

by God she'd

b.,

6s6b

curse his b. angel, 276a

damned than not mentioned,


468b dead than alive when work done, 7o4a does it with b. grace, 25 ib don't know where go b., 926b envied than pitied, 86b
far far b. thing, 672a feed brain with b. things, gi8b few are b. than their fathers, 6 5a
fifty years of Europe, 647b for b. for worse, 6ib for being a little bad, 2723 for him a millstone, 4ya

than the minting, g8a than the vintage of Abiezer, na that thou not vow, 28a the day better the deed, 3i3b three hours too soon, 267a to be fool than dead, 822b to be lowly born, 2g8a to be vile than vile esteemed,
2943
to

bow than
die

break, i8sb
feet

to

on

than

live

on

wine, 66b his manners, soob Bewrayeth, thy speech b. thee, 44 b Bewrays, our style b. us, 3108 Beyond, a lie in world b., igob Alps lies Italy, 1253 far b. my depth, 2g8b is there anything b., ggsb this nothing but sandy deserts,

Bewrayed by

knees, 9433 to dwell in a corner, 25b to go to house of mourning,

1363
to

go

b.

is

wrong, 723

28a
to have loved and lost, 6503 to incur loss, iosb to know some questions, iO33b to light one candle, 98 ib to live alone, Sob

utmost bound of thought, 646b Bezzle increases rapidly, 10633 inventory called b., io62b Bias, assays of b., 2603 Commodity b. of the world,
2363 strongest b. rules, 4o2b Biased reporting, io2ob with compassion or favor, 3511

four

things

b.

without,

io2ga
b.,

to live one day of energy, 8oa to marry than burn, 52a

freedom the chance to be


io6ga

which
93 a

is

b.

God

only knows,

Bibendum, nunc

est b., 1213

friends not be knowing, loagb from b, selves too long parted,

women
word

5ioa
getting b. and b., 844b give place to b. men, go down dignified, g$8b

class, 866b than gift, 383 world than this, 247a world's in birth, 68oa

of b.

b.

3283

Bettered,

better

b.

expectation,

2450
Betters what is done, 2955 Between acting of dreadful thing,

Bibi-mus vivi-mus oremus, 444b Bible and a drum, 868b both read the B., 4gia breeches B., sb early familisrity with B., 8sob English B., sg5a literature not dogma, 867b
paintings the B. of laity, 1551 utterances in B., pessimistic
i66b study but litel on B., text of B. symbol, 85oa this B. for government by people,

go down on marrowbones, 88ob good b. made by ill, 2o8a good laws le?i to b., 4g6a got the b. of himself, ig7b grow wiser and b., 367a
half a loaf,
is

^b

254* dark and daylight, 62 gb how long halt ye b. two opinions, 133

is is is

a dinner of herbs, 24b a neighbor that is near, s6b a poor and wise child, a'j'b an handful with quietness,

idea

and

reality,

10033

i6sb

Lord watch b.
7a-b

me and
us, thee,

thee,

Bible-black, starless
Biblical,

3nd Homeric or B.

b.,

io7ia

canticles,

27b
is

motion and act, no hate lost b.


strife b.

life
little

of

is

a poor man, g8b with the fear of the


of

6b Betwixt stirrup and ground,


Beulah peel me a grape, Bevy of fair women, 3483
io2gb

me and

Bibliobibuli read too much, 961* Bicker down a valley, 6523

is is

Lord, 24b the end


thy
love

Bickering brattle, 49 2b to recount, Bickerings, such b.


Bicycle built for two, 88sb

a than

thing,

wine,

s8a 2gb

1194

INDEX
Bicycle

Birds
Bird, forgets dying b., 467b form is cage and sense b., 78sa foul b. that filleth own nest,

mechanics from Dayton,


b.

Billions,

10363
Bid,

chained for b. of years, ioo8b

come between

us part,

'4203 farewell to every fear, 397a thee life b. thee feed,

Billow, what a b. be, 737b Billows, rocked to sleep between


b.,

6g6a

486b
j

me discourse, *igb me Good morning, 47<>a me to live, sigb not serve God if devil b., 2723
shall I b.

smooth and bright, 745b swelling and limitless b., 5*6b thy b. far and near, 5582
Bill's, Buffalo B. defunct, lojoa Bills of rights. 446a Billy in one of new sashes, g^ob Billy-boil, waited for b., 86ga Bind another to its delight, 4893 arm b. restless wave, 7263 fast b. fast find, i8ab

176* guides me and half angel half

b.,

661 a

b., 6673.

hath made his pendent 8sa heard b. at dawn, g74b heart like singing b., 7sgb

bed,

her go, io84b

Orpheus sing, 3363 them wash their faces, a8gb


ul of

here and there b. or butterfly, gaya if men like wise b., 8ioa

immortal
in
is

time return, 2273 you a welcome adoo, 75ob o* the mornin', 8iaa you top thousands at his b. Bidding, Bide by the buff and the blue,
speed, 3412

b.,

5853
in

in gilded cage, 9033

in

much

body and found

in
I

soul

b.,

5i8b
b.,

hand worth two


'37 in the sky, 364b

bush,

could

not

95 a

on thy

4g6b weary warld nobody b. in, 857b Bids, do what manhood b., 707b a expectation rise, 447 it break, a8sb it come to heel, loooa remembrance rise, 4473 Bier, murdered Lincoln's b., 68ob
Bides,

sandals, safe b. safe find, i8ab shall joyful temples b., 3J2b the sweet influences of Pleiades,

77b

my

i6a

on the wing, 62ga was carol of b., 5593 Jubjub b., 7453 let no b. call, 10233 like b. on wing, 84gb
is it

them heart and brow, 8073


us in time, io43a up my wounds, 2i?b
nation's wounds, 64ob Binding Nature fast in fate, 41 *b Binds brave of all earth, 865a he who b. to himself a joy,

live like stoic b.,

ggoa

up

loaf to every b., 7j6b man and b. and beast, merged like the b., io65b

5263

music, io4ab night's sweet

b.,

5723

Big big D, 7663 Brother W3tching

you, io53b bushy eyebrows, 8783 business give square deal, 848b butter-3nd-egg m3n, 9803
carry b. stick, 847b city of b. shoulders, 9483

488b

vow

so dear a head, 571 a b. too strictly, Sssb


b.,

no b. but invisible thing, 5143 no b. soars too high, 4&7b no further than wanton's b.,

Binnorie, milldams o* B., io88b Biographers, Boswell first of reviewers

O
b.,

2243 comfortable

10123 monstrous b. river, 76 ib my uvern the B. Besr, 8agb lound childish hand, loy^b sleep, 10003 mskes you emperor, stcslin' iooga this too would become b., 67b words always punished, 8ab Big-boned and hardy-handsome, 8033 Bigger, eye b. thsn belly, 325b no b. than agate stone, 2233 seems no b. than his head, 2ygb Biggest dog hss been pup, 7go3 fish got 3W3y, 8203 Bigness, world in b. 3s st3r, 3443
lie,

would have been

5283 Biographies clothes and buttons, 764* geniuses shortest b., 6o8a history innumerable b., 577a Biography, heroic poem a b.,
575b
hisf-ry of world b., 5773
like

of of of of

b., s8ob bad moral character, 4233 dawning, 2573


sit,

2541 2ggb or devil, 6433 pinnsce like fluttered propitiatory b., 10573

night did

wonder

dies,

b.,

654b

rare b. on earth, 1393 rise up 3t the voice of the b.,

2ga
said b. in musical voice, io46b
shall carry the voice, a8b silence with W3king b.,

big

game hunting, icmb


after

no
of

man

history only b., 6o5b cannot be written, 7643

6sab

small hot
soft-sigh

b.,

8*ob
b.,

ready morning 678b recognized sport, loiib written by acute enemy, 8133
Biological,
is

demise,

me home,
to,

soul

of

ip64b grandam inhabit

234* spray b. clung

6643

war

b.

necessity,

stamped

foot,

735b

Bigotry, gives b.

no

sanction,

461 b
Bile,
Bill,

g8ob not expressing b. characteristics, g8ob


warfare, 10153
Biologically, idle b.

swift as b. or thought, 6$b that shunnest noise of folly,

Big-Sea-Water, shining B., 6233 sentences that stir b., 8563


as
if

335
speaking,

God wrote
in b., 6a6b

b.,

6o3b

cool

dew

fellers call

me

hold more

B., 8213 than belican,


ill,

Isrger b. for d3rker

Roaring go2b
unpaid
Bill

B.

who

killed

gsgb 6863 him,

t3X relief b., g733


of
b. Despair, 5733 Rights, absolutes in B.,

io23b Biped, divide b. class, g6b Birch most shy ladylike, 6923 Tom B. brisk as a bee, 42gb twig for castigation, 8793 Birches, swinger of b., g26b Bird, a very few a b. or two, 734b as b. endearment tries, 44gb Attic b,, 348b beat bush another take b., i8ab
beating io66b
b.

solemn b., 345b thou never wert, 57ob thou warbling b., 4g4a to nest from wandering, 8543 to others flew, 3i8b turkey 3 more respectable b.,
this her

with b. the sbiding lesf, io66b wonderful b. is pelican, gssb


Birdcsge, like den, igia
Bird's,

summer

b. in g3r-

Birdless silence, io8ob

guarantee of freedom, gB$b


into suicide pact, loaib landmarks in B., logyb take B. for granted, g8$b

extending
to

wings,
b.,

consciousness like b.

life,

change

me

winged

84b

793 a sweet b. throat, 2483


Birds,
all

Billabong, camped by b., 86ga Billboard lovely as tree, io5ib Billboards, unless b. fall, losib

crop-full b., 666a cuckoo shall I call thee b., 514* day after day b. flies, 6a6b

the tribes of b. sang,

Dinkey B. goes singing, 8aob


divine b. of Zeus, 7ga drink to the b., gooa flee as a b., 173 flies out, io66b

youngest little bullet has its Billet, 5223


Billee,

B.,
b.,

6613
3833,

Billisrd,

ellipticsl

b.

balls,

768b

i56b babes snd ssges, 6563 bees stirring b. on wing, 52?b begsn to sing, iog4b blossoms b. and bowers, 3igb chant ye little b., 4943 charm of earliest b., 345b

1195

Birds
Birds, clouds stars b., gi?b

INDEX
Birth, distinction of b. or fortune, so4b dream that is coming to
Biting, eager

soul

b. for anger,

days when

b.

come back, 734b


little

333
b.,

eagle suffers

b.

to

Bitter
all

all

sing,

utterly

things
b.,

street,

2i8b
fear b. of prey, ayob flowers fruits and

easing savior's

b.,

we know

in love

loiob

many

b.,

embraves

this

morn,

i7*a flowing with


if

false idol or

b.,

io66a

fly to calico tree,

67jb

b. confabulate or no, 459 in little nests agree, 396!) the in trees, 88sb kinds of knowledge, g6a knew stars flowers b., goga leaves snows, io57a little b. that fly, sg8a man lived with b. and beasts,

noble true b., 95b famous by their b., sa6b fashion b. intellect, 78 1 a from b. to age eighteen, 9843 frowned not on humble b., 44 ia
grievous

as coloquintida, 2733 as wormwood, agb

burden

was

thy

b.,

ai7b high b. vigor of bone, 2693 honor land of b., 82 ib land of b. we pledge, 8?7a land that gave you b., 8653
life

bark and burning clove, 9270 bones, 1057 a bread of banishment, 2272 chill it was, 58ib do it with b. look, S-job every b. thing is sweet, *6b feel by turns b. change, 3443 found Beauty b., 8303 from fountain wells up b. taste,
ii4a

loia

and death, 38 ib
at b. not death, love of b. as rare, b. of

groan

of

melodious b. sing madngals, aiab million golden b., S^oa mind an aviary of b., g6a morning b. mad with glee, 7583 named b. without gun, Soga no b. happy as we, 6743 no b. in last year's nest, ig7b no b. sing, 58 la not know too much about b.,

mourned

4i4b
j6oa

if life b.
it is

martyr's woe, pardon, 7763

4902

my
new

in Fate, g47b

freedom, 6sga
b.,

867b of ancient race by of morning dew, aooa

no cure

for b.,

3&8b

rejoice at b.. ?6aa of her b., 3931 repeats stoi/ rising b. rate, io6ib Saviour's b. celebrated, 25?a

joy hear wings, io4ab laugh my b. laugh, 6325 love b. with treason, 7743 make oppression b., 26 ib more b. than death, 283 mortals make earth b.,

most

not only fine feathers make fine b., 76a of a feather, 3iib of air have nests, 4ib other men catch b., i8ab our lists of b., io76b pretty b. do sing, joob silent in forest, 47ga a8oa sing like b. f the cage,
singing b. sweet, go6b sit brooding in snow, aaga

73 D

sleep and a forgetting, starves her generous b.,

sunshine a glorious their b. weeping, 3154


training

b.,

5isb 43gb 5133


37ga

b. is scornful jest, nailed on b. cross, 7b news to hear, 7igb

no

rather

than

b.,

Birthday of my life, 7sgb Birthplace of valor, 494b sell picture of b., 751 a
sold his Birthright, Esau
Birthrights,
b.,

b. ending, g68b of it and the sweet, 88gb old and b. of tongue, old law sad not b., 94ib

b. springs,

87?a

88oa

peaches, gSoa read in the b. letter, 27 ab

?a

shed b.

tear,

745b

bearing

b.

proudly,

some

spring unheralded by b.,


still

io6ib

hopping on tree, Saga their trackless way, 661 a


these

23621 Birth's invidious bar, 6sob Births, joyful b., 245* latent b. of vowels, Sgoa

b. o'er flowers, 555a sweet and b. fancy, 25ob things conduce to sweet, 10803
'tis

to

b. cold, 2$6b have known love, 7743

are days b.

come back,
b.,

time of the singing of


trees

agb

Birth-strangled babe, a8sa Bis dat qui cito dat, isoa of B. 9, 499 Biscay, in the Bay Biscuits, beef and captain's b.,

look into happiness, 25ob truth always b., 1453 vintage of race problem, 9983
to
Bitterest,

watercraft, 73^ unperplexed like migratory b.,

flowers

66ob
b. they go, Bishop, all at once to 53* a

or Tory sour, gSgb this lot is b., 7gb Bitterness, by convention b., 88a

Whig

93 8b warble 828b

sweet

in

springtime,

church without

b.,

sgia

we are nest of singing b., 4290 when b. do sing, 25ob when small b. sighed, io6sb
where
white wild b. rounding hill, io78b without despair to get in, igob Birds', wind full of b. cries, 947* Birdsong at morning, 824b Birnam wood to Dunsinane, 285^
953a Birth and copulation and death, 10043 Angel that presided o'er b.,
late sweet b. sang, b. flying after, 947*

ib hypocrisy of b., 109 Bit babies in cradles, 662b by him that comes behind, sgoa

gall of b., 4gb heart knoweth his own b., 24a-b mingles sweet b. with her cares,

i^a
of life, 747a of my soul, 32 b of things, 5173 rose's scent b., 8s6a
Bitterns,

dogs have a
hair of haven't

b.,

logga
b.

2g2b

i84b io54a I b. my arm sucked blood, 525a though he had b. me, 28oa went mad and b. the man, 44&b Bitch, deciding not to be b.,

dog that
changed

us,

b.,

London

habitation of

b.,

Bitters,

4gob
as if
b. sundered, 68 ib

bed
befits

for
to

this
b.,

huge
8ia

b.,

31

begins

die from b., better world's in b., 68oa

proud

gone in the teeth, g88b son of mongrel b., a77b toothless mastiff b., 5243 Bitch-goddess Success, 792b Bite, bark and b., 3g6a bark worse than b., 325b dead man cannot b., naa dog prosperous will not
76ab

b.,

435
ioo4a

hand

between b.

and dying,

boasts his b., 5633

border nor breed nor b., 872b certain is b. for the dead, io6a day of one's b., 28a death borders upon our b.

that fed them, 4553 jaws that b., 745a man recovered of the b., smaller still to b. 'em, sgo sorrow hath less power to b., aa6a

mawkishness and b., Bivouac of the dead, 704b Bizarre world of cards, loiga Bizziness, gang about b., Blabbing eastern scout, 3s6b gaudy b. and remorseful aisa Blabs, when my tongue b., Black A white E red I, already with blood, 8a7b and midnight hags, a&5a and unknown bards, go6b and white not blue, io75b as hell, ag4b as if bereaved of light, as our loss, ggSb
as pit as the devil, as they might be, io88b

595

5808

5o8a
day,

35 ia 83oa

486b

from pole

to pole, 8i6a

43b

this fish will b., Bites, air b. shrewdly,

a6a
asga

dew

of thy b., 2ooa

Biteth like a serpent, a6a

bat night flown, 6saa black's not so b., 5o6b

INDEX
Black,

Bleed
Blank, bumbast out b. verse,

burn out to b., burned b. with sun, io22b but comely, 293 by morning storms, 5343 creeping through the b., 95sa devU damn thee b., 2863 drop of b. blood, io5ia eyes and lemonade, 542b
bucks, 95b from b. to red turn, 3533 Hecate's summons, 84b
fat b.

Blackness, faces as b. of a kettle,

35t

2o6a

102*3 of darkness, 573 of death, 1130 Black-purple, in gloom b., gi8b Black's not so black, 0o6b Blacks, enemies of persecuted b.,
Black-sailed unfamiliar, io8ob Bladder, blows man up like a b.,

faces all gather b., 35b in sudden b. the pall,

our b. in bliss to pain has element of surveying a b., 977 a universal b., 3440
old

fill,

b.,

7343 7$6b

Blanket of the dark, *82a

woman

tossed in b., logsb

sleeping is a wool b., gsa Blankets, rough male kiss of b.,

993
Blare, barricades b., 9i8a of bugles ruffle of drums, 866a Blasphemies, great truths begin as
b., 837b Blasphemy, in soldier
is

b. and blue, 8763 hung be heavens with b., 2143 I am b. but O my soul is -white, 4 86b

hump

23ga
Bladders, boys that
2 9 8b

swim on

b.,

in
let

B.

Mud

kingfisher,
b.,

the

little b. long b. land, 6633 love of children whether b. or

wear sheep, 87$b


devil

io?5a 2633

of philosophy, g8ab Blade, destroy b. of grass, gi7b


first b.

flat

b.,

then ear, 453

27 la Mass the greatest

b.,

i7gb

not, losga

men are pearls, 22 la men fought on Coromandel,


59 6a

grasp by b. or handle, 6g4b knife without a b., 4703 of grass, 31 la steel not alone for b., 6773 trenchant b. Toledo trusty,
vorpal b., 7453
Blade's, grass b.
35*|>

middle-class b., 8375


Blast, contrary b. proclaims,

34gb

drives wicked spirits, 1590-1608

more

b.

than

ashbuds,

646a

b. hen, iog6b night's b. arch, 49$b

my

no

easier

than
dear,

b. raiment when I am gone, io7a Old B. Joe, 727b iresa pall of nothing, piano appassionato, 9855 played b. or white, 5973 portent of atomic age, 9013

no

oak, 6g2b Blades to Meg

and Molly

two b. of grass grow, sSgb which b. bears better temper, 2i4a Blade-straight, steel-true and b.,
Elaine marched
Blaize,

pot calls kettle b., 197 a powerful, 1051 a ram tupping your ewe, rank and file, 7523
secret

lament for

down halls, 7493 Madame B.,

2723

447*
Blake,

midnight b., 5623 of no b. he died, 367b of war blows in our ears, S4$b one b. upon bugle horn, 520 spread wings on b., 5593 stormy b., 3g6b striding the b., *8sb Blast-beruffled plume, 7&3b Blasted with antiquity, 24ib with excess of light, 441 b with the east wind, 7b Blastments, contagious b. imminent, 258b Blasts, hollow b. of wind, 4013 newborn infant's tear, 48gb night b. cold, gi8b
roots of trees, 10703 sunk to silence, io5a

midnight hags, 2853 shawl hides her body, 981 a

b.

since b.
spirits

womb
keep

held, 10693

and white, 3143


concealed,
b.,

spot
suit

to

7293

9533 257b swan rare bird, 1393 these b. bodies, 4873 thou readest b., 491 a
suits of

of ancient

solemn

b.,

b. and they white, io67a wet b. bough, gSyb white not neutralize b., 6673 who art b. as hell, 294b

dance with William B., io66b William B. beat on wall, 8853 Blame, alike reserved to b., 41 ** bloody full of b., 294* needless to b. things past, 7ia neither is most to b., 775b no dispraise or b., 35oa no reason to b. Trojans, 633 or b. it too much, 45ia poor wot gets b., 11033
praise at

Blatant Bassarid of Boston, 7763 land, 6523 Blaw, Sherard B. the dramatist,

9043

them a b., 5023 io88b Blaze, burst out into sudden b.,

up

an*

gie

wind

sail b.,

we

morning

b. at night,

Widow death, io75a wings one b. other white, 34gb wires grow on her head, 294b with gilt surcingles, 7$8b years like great b. oxen, 8795 yellow b. pale hectic red, sSgb Blackamoor, as if sun b., 955b Blackberries, reasons as plenty as b., 2393 sit round it pluck b., 6193 Blackbird snipped off nose, 109 5 a than b. 'tis to whistle, 3523 whistling or just after, 955b Blackbirds, four and twenty b.,
sitting

praise nor b. writings, praise or b. momentary, 5853 praise or b. too far, gaga readers share b., 8550
secret thoughts without b., 3i8a take some iv th* b* oursilves,

dark amid b. of noon, 3493 heavens b. forth, 254b the sapphire b., 44ib Blazing evidence of immortality, 6053 heaven b. into head, 884b no more b. hearth, 44oa
potentates
b.

in

the heavens,

ungrateful man less to b., 355b yet not afraid to b., 404a Blamed living man, 7i5a Blameless life, 652b
vestal's lot, 405b Blameworthy, least b. was Confucius, 455b the other strife is b., 67b Blaming, always b. circumstances, 8 3 6a

8gib

78b tail, 955b Blazon of sweet 293D

beauty's

best,

Blazoning, quirks of b. pens, 2733 Bleached, driftwood b. and dry,

on a

hill, i<x)8b

Blackens every blot, 653a skuttle fish b. water, 3953


Blackest,

Cerberus and b. mid-

night, 334b perfect through b. air, 10793 Black-eyed, landlord's b. daugh-

96ib Blackguard whose faulty 79ib


ter,

vision,

mortals are b. the gods, 653 Blanch, Tray B. and Sweetheart, 279a without owner's crime, 5i7a Blanching, under b. mays, 854b Bland as a Jesuit, 8i5b childlike and b., ?6gb cruel composed b., 7153 Blandishing persuasion, 643 Blandishments not fascinate us,

758b Bleak December, 642b in b. midwinter frosty wind, 74oa Bleakness, country of b. 6323 Bleat the one at the other, 2953 Bleats articulate monotony, 513 Bled, buried Caesar b., 629b in freedom's cause, 5083 Scots wha hae wi' Wallace b.,
f

Bleed awhile, io87b


carcasses b. at sight of

murder-

Blackguards both, 561 a


Hitlerite b.,

475* a b. Blank,;

er, i6ga heart begins to b., 10923 I fall upon thorns I b., 56gb if you prick us do we not b.,

my

lord, 252a

1197

Bleed
Bleed

INDEX
Blessed he

my bones, io66b Bleeding brow of labor, 8585 from Roman rods, 4593 piece of earth, 2553 purple testament of b. war,
Blemish, Christianity immortal b., 8o6a evidence of industry b., 7542. formed without b., yob lamb shall be without b., Sa Blent, beauty truly b., 25 ib Bless, except thou b. me, yb God b. Prince of Wales, s8gb God b. the Pretender, 4i4b God b. us every one, 671 a

who

has dear one


his

Blessing, shall yourselves find


b.,

dead, 8oya

he who has found


5783

work,

society

687b is a

b.,

466b

the man that trusteth, 343 the man that walketh not in counsel of ungodly, i6b Islands of B,, 874a, 9473
is is

hope whereof he knew, 783b horny hands of toil, 69 ib I had lived a b. time, 2843 is the fruit of thy womb, 45b

sharing of b., 9252 unqualified b., 5o$b free trade one of b. Blessings,

unequal

(Jtf from whom


L

all

b.

flow
b.,

and

intellect the

two

lO2b
of civilization, 763b on thee little man, 6a6a on this house, 4630

God God

b. you, b. you

iog8b

good-bye

God

my

dear, 4343

b. you, Sssoa

b., 383 b., 4955 with soft phrase, 272b Lord b. the latter end of Job, i6b love of God had b., 55 ib man who possesses keen mind,

judge none
kings
little

may be

b,

on your frosty pow, 4g4b one of evils and another


b. of

of b.,

hand that gave blow, 3693 her when she is riggish, sSyb
his

92a

memory

of the just

is

b.,

24a

name, sia

hold angel until he b. thee, 42ia house from wikked wight, i6yb I b. God in libraries, 444b Lord b. and keep thee, gb man who invented sleep, 68oa
squire and relations, 671 a thee Bottom, sgoa them that curse you, 4ob turf that wraps clay, 44$a
b. day, 675b ye the Lord, gga ye who now b. poor, 687b Blessed Abbot of Aberbrothok,

mood, 5oga more b. to give, soa mother of us all, 4743


mutter of Mass, 66*4b nor what b. prove
6673 over whose acres b. part to heaven, 2gga
plot this earth, ss6b

freedom, 46?a reap secure b. of liberty, 4743 two supreme b., 853 unevenness of b., loG^b upon head of the just, 241 use b. of gods with wisdom, 122b without number, 3g6b
Blessings-of-civilization trust, 7635

accursed,
feet,

Blew, fair breeze b., 524b great guns, Gyaa slughorn to my lips and 2780

b.,

rage for order, gs6a seeming b. they grow,


so b. in climate, g26b soul or body more b., sprung from b. abodes,

work and

4o6a

them unaware, 525b


they
that have not seen,

53* b
all

4gb
2gga

abodes, 4o6a, 4o8a generations call

me

b.,

45b

always to be b., 4o8a are the dead, 5&b are the forgetful, &>5b are the meek, 4oa are the merciful, 4oa are the peacemakers, 4oa, si4b are the poor in spirit, 5gb are the pure in heart, 4oa are they that mourn, 4oa are they that put their trust in

fallest a b. martyr, thrice b. are friends, g42b thrice four times b., ii7b to put cares away, u4b

thou

Blicke nicht trauemd, 62 la Blight man was bom for, Sogb Blighted buildings, io63a seared and b. heart, 6413 Blights with plagues, 48gb Blind, all of them were b., 68oa and drinks his drop, 8835 and ignorant in all, joia

and naked ignorance, 65^ and often tipsy, 6oob as nails upon Cross, gg8b
beggar's daughter, io87b

twice b., 234b were but as b. as I, 3g8a who have no talent, 6o4b who having nothing to

Booth died
say,

b.,

952b
b.,

causes conspire to
desire,

4o2b

7733
go6a

him, 173 are they which are persecuted,

whom thou blessest is b., gb with milk and honey b., 68yb with natural abundance, io2$a youth becomes as aged, 27 la
Blessedness,

6goa

ecstasy, 10435 eyes b. with stars,

eyes for the b., 74ga eyes of the b. shall be opened,

perfect

b.

vision

of

4oa
are they

God, i58b

eyes to the b,, i$b for being b. God prepare me,

who hunger and

thirst,

4oa art thou among women, 45b barrier between day and day, 5 l 5b be he that cometh, 22a be Lord God of Israel, 463

single b., 228b Blesses stars and thinks it luxury,

393 a
Blessest,

whom

thou b.

is

blessed,

gb
Blesseth him that gives that takes, 234b

and him
20 ib

376a Fortune painted b. with muffler, aoga Fortune though b. not invisible, 2oga Fury with abhorred shears,

be man that spares these stones, *99b be the name of the Lord, 143 be thy name Vogue, 10353 bed be b. that I lie on, 3573 by country's wishes b., 4433

with

two happy

hands,

Blessing and cursing, lob ask me b., 28oa baby b. and bother, 75gb

lit and he was

b.,

473
often
to
Celt,
scene,

as

i67b

Homer sing
of

me, 2i3a
6sia

by everything, 884a by yonder b. moon, 2243


candles of night, 23$b children call her b., 272

brother hath taken away thy b., 7* full meal more than a b., 5353
great b., 67b gives b., 625b had most need of b., 28$b makes a b. dear, gsob

hysterics I was b., 48b justice b. deef

and dumb, 8gob

good neighbor
fast
till

is

hold
I
b.,

come what may been


endless

5583
see,

damozel, 7313 sabbaths


154*

money cannot buy, 326b


b.

ones
b.

national debt

b.,

484b, 5473

no harm in
God,

b.,

4i4b

fell

upon knees and

green groves of the b., uga half part of b. man, 2363 he who expects nothing, 4o7b

of St. Peter's Master, 326b out of God's b. into sun, 1853 paid thy utmost b., gi4b public debt a public b., 4845 science be b. not curse, 9503

leaders of the b., 4$a leading blind to pit, 145* light when else wert b., 497b love is b., i68b, 2333 love needs be b., 228b love to faults always b., 488a man's ditch, 884a mouths, 33&b

none

so b., 386b not b. soul vtith day, 64gb not b. to differences, io?4a

b. hearts,

H3b

1198

INDEX
Blind obedience to

Blood-swollen
Blood of martyrs seed of Church,
of of of of of of of of

command,

8sia
oblivion swallowed cities, 2686 old mad b. despised king, 5703
b. sometimes, 4923 right to be three b. mice, 10926 till some b. hand, 4893

Blockheads read what b. write, 4163 Blond beast, 8o5b more b. than you, 10313 or dark sir, 10346
Blondes, gentlemen prefer b., io2?a Blood, all nations one b., 502 alone melt iron earth, 10553

nation never be shed,

Tiresias
to faults

though
a

b.,

loosb

little b., ffla.

2286 wretched b. pit ponies, go6a Blinded boy, io84b Blinder, be a little b., g63b Blindly, had we never loved sae
b.,
b.,

loSgb winged Cupid painted

urge to kill b.,

and

fire,

8373

bath, 977b

47 ib the lamb, 583 the new testament, 446 the slaughtered, 9066 the world, 10323 this just person, 453 old man had so much b., 2863

our heroes, 4?2b and tyrants, patriots

be on your own heads, 503


bit

one

arm sucked

b.,

5253

494*

blow in cold b., 8373 burns in veins, 702b by man shall his b. be shed, 6b
Christ's b. streams, 2136

b. ye and I, 8?4b b. rise against you, part of the sea, 9866

own

9093

pint of sweat save gallon of present joys


b.,

7i5b about poverty, 10823 heathen in his b., 5496 inner b., looob him in b., 9766 pitied we may forgive, 89ga Blinds, drawing down of b.,
striving b.,

more

to flesh

and

Blindness

crusted with

b.,
f

9953

37ob

cry aloud for b. 7053 devise laws for b., 23 ib drenched in fraternal b., 5476

price of admiralty, 8753

io28b too much light often b., 4623 Blind-skinned indelicate, 10573 Blind-worms, newts and b. do no

drop of manly b., 6o4b earth one mighty b. spot, 6136 enriched our b., 392a every drop of b. drawn, 64ob faith beats with b., 6496
felt in the b., 5093 fizz like wine, 9463 flesh and b. so cheap, 5926 for this all that b. shed, 88 la

wrong, 2agb Blink facts not to our taste, 7o$b Bliss and bale, 7ggb bought by years, 68sb contrary bringeth b., 2i4b cuckold lives in b., 2743 deprived of everlasting b., 2133 happy be and have immortal b., 2003 he lives in b., 4960 heart intoxicated with b., 4983 hours of b., 537b in our brows bent, 2873 in proof, 2g4b kill and b. me, 10853 like thine, 68&b mutual and partaken b., 337b never parted b. or woe, 3483 not beds of down, 3223 O b. O poop-poop, 8523 of dying, 4043 of numan b. to human woe,
35 ia of solitude,
perfect b.

pure and eloquent b., 3075 rather than water on hands, J054b sets gypsy b. astir, 86oa shed by immortal King, 1583 sheds his b. with me, 2453 sign to know gentle b., 2Oib smell b. of British man, 2793 souls of b., 9876 spend her b. and might, 8423 sprinkled upon garments, 336
still

freeze thy young b., 25gb French and German b., 9796 glories of our b. and state, 3276 good enough to shed b., 847b good honest fighting b., 8iob guiltless of country's b., 44ob

b.

is

strong, 5903
b.,

stir

men's
as

255b

strong strong

flesh

and
as

b.,

5156
1673

wyn

reed
the

b.,

such impetuous

hand

summon up
92ob

b., 51 la b., 2436

raised
I

to

shed

b.,

4o8a

harbors

by sweating

b.

won,

sun's o'ercast with b., 2g6a sweat and tear-wrung millions,

i74a heart dry of b., 58 ib heyday in the b. is tame, 2643


his b.
if

swesting blood, i74a tears sweat or b., g2ob


thick water's thin, 7683 thicker than water, saob thicks man's b. with cold, 5253
this is to drink,
toil

be on us, 45a impetuous b., 5113


b.

price of admiralty,
b.

impure

drench

field,

in b. stepped in so far, in torrents pour, 8453 inhabits our frail b., 2533
insatiate b., io66a

8753 4993 2853

b., 44b 6146 tears sweat, gzob

my

trade
tree
b.,

of b. and guile, 526b of liberty refreshed with

5146
b.,

our blank in

7343

and
b.,

sole felicity, 2123

ioo2a shadow's b., 2333 soul in b., 28oa

pneumatic

source of all my b., 45ob sum of earthly b., 3473 was it in that dawn, 5103

and b., 677b nipped and ways be foul, 222D is their argument, 2446 is their thinking, 8jb it will have b. they say, 2853 liquors in my b., 247b lo it is black with b., 82?b lust for b. and plunder, 9226 magic to stir men's b., 8iob
iron
is

trilling

47ib wire in

b.,

10053
b.,

up to eyes in b., 4523 voice of thy brother's


wssh
this b.

63

from hand,

waking b., 3373 where ignorance is b., which centers in mind, Blisses about my pilgrimage, Blissful dreams of long ago,

43gb 4483 78ab 7783 Blister, never had b. in hand, 913 thirst b. easier, 7353

make thick my b., 28 ib man of flesh and b., 86gb

man whose

b.

is

snow-broth,

man whose
meditate on

2703

b.
b.,

is

warm, 2313

2443

Blithe,

buxom

b.

and debonair,

537b newcomer, 5143 no lark more b. than he, 4643 spirit, 57ob
Bloc, Communist b., io56a Block, chip of old b., 45gb each b. cut smooth, g88b mind a b. of wax, g$b

Irish lad,

merely flesh and b., ioo2a mingle b. with b. of children, 5943 more stirs to rouse lion, 238b

Negro b. sure powerful, 10513 no Jewish b. in my veins, 10833 no sure foundation on b., 2373

watered by b. of tyrants, 4843 weltering in his b., 37 ib what little b. is left, 946a when the b. bums, 2593 whoso sheddeth man's b., 6b will have blood, 2853 without shedding of b., 563 young b. have its course, 691 a young b. not obey old decree, 222a Blood-dimmed tide loosed, 8823 Bloodied envelope, io57b Bloodless sportsman I, 8463 substitute for life, 822b week of repose, gib Blood-red banner, 5496 flag ahead, 9581 sunset glorious b., 6633
wine, 10873 Blood's a rover, 8s2b

Blockhead, bookful b., 4043 no man but a b., 4$2a

Norman b., 6453 not a drop of b. shed, 4733 not against flesh and b., 543 of an Englishman. 10983 of Christians is seed, i4gb of followers, ioi6b

Bloodshed, fear and b., 5153 Bloodstream, O Altitude in b. swims, loiia Blood-swollen, war b. god, 9046

1199

Bloodthirsty
Bloodthirsty guttersnipe, gsja of Blood-tinctured humanity,

INDEX
Blotted

6i7b Bloody and invisible hand, 2845 be b. bold and resolute, 2855 book, of law, ayab but unbowed, 8i6a dark and b. ground, yo4b even so my b. thoughts, 2753 full of blame, 2943 iron curtain, 9245

from life's page, 555b out man's image, 88oa Shakespeare never b. line, so4a words that b. unpleasantest
paper, 234*

word out forever, 4383 would he had b. a thousand,


3043
Blotter, write in b. I

Blown, dust that is b. away, 372 hair is sweet, loogb pipe b. by surmises, 2413 what though mast b. overboard 2i6b with restless violence, 27 ib
Blows,
apostolic
b.

and knocks,
2435

was born,
b.,

man

alone no b. chance, 10453

10093 Blow, all aloud wind doth 2233

blast of war b. in ears, cruel wind b., 10573

mothers a b. brood, 10353 not b. likely, 837b often wipe b. nose, 40 ib sang within the b. wood, 10023 sweats, 8413 treason flourished, 2555 where's the b. horse, io4gb Bloom along the bough, 852b April came to b., 8243 flower b. another year, 5803 flowers that b. in spring, 768b full on thy b., 4933 how can ye b., 4943 is gone, 7143 its b. is shed, 4gsb kill b. before its time, 5i6b lemon trees b., 4773 look at things in b., 8525 make deserts b., 10486 meadow flower b. unfold, 5i7b now withering in my b., 4055 o'er earth comes b., 5933 of young Desire, 4416 perfect in bud as in b., 7543 sight of vernal b., 344b sort of b. on woman, 8583 spoiling b. of memory, 844b water lily b., 645b well in prison air, 8413 with the b. go I, 7143 o'er folded b., 8193 Bloomed, when lilacs in dooryard b., yoaa Bloomin' cosmopolouse, 87$a lyre, 8743 shame, 11033 Blooming, left b. alone, 5423 Blooms each thing, goob o'er folded b., 8193 Bloomy, nightingale on b. spray, 339 a Blossom by b. spring begins, 7733
desert b. as the rose, 323

and swallow
io6a

at

same moment,

Dick the shepherd b. his nail, 222b dust b. in your face, 2793 feather for each wind that b.,

as straws that b., 8163 3ve bless hand thst

b.,

3693

6483 buds forgot to b., 7803 blow, 648b bugle but a word and a
b.,

breathe and

grass
ill

from yon f3r country b., 8533 must bend when wind b.,
723

wind
in

b.

no

man

good,

b.,

come from moon and


east

b.,

gyob 648b

death loves signal b., 399b wind never b., 325b


first b.

half battle, 4sob

for freedom,

gg^b

genius gave final b., 5553 great winds shorewards b., 7iob him again to me, 64&b horrid deed in every eye, 2$2b hot and cold, 763 I the b. and cheek, 7O7a
I will b. you out, 723b in cold blood not forgiven, 8373 know what wood by the b.,

my face, 26 ib man up like 3 bladder, 2393 meanest flower that b., 5143 never b. so red, 62gb of circumstance, 6500 soft zephyr b., 44ib taught by rod and b., i7gb unkempt about hedges b., 9933 vile b. and buffets, 2843 which way hot air b., 864b wild thyme b., 22gb
it

35*b
496* 2823 logsb on whom I please, 2486 out you bugles, 9943 p3y with a deadly b., 793 pealing organ b., 3363 perhaps return the b., 5o6b puff and b. till bursts, 7763 selfsame winds that b., 825b stormy winds do b., 328b, 537b struck a deep mortal b., 7&b thou whiter wind, 24gb through life like breeze, losib through my ear, 5103 to strike the b., g66b trumpet to arms, 466b upon my garden, 2gb when wilt thou b., 10843 wind come wrack, 286b winds crack your cheeks, 2783 word and a b., 224b wreathed horn, 5isb your trumpets angels, 3o7b Bloweth med, 10833
north wind doth
b.,

wind b. cradle rock, 8iob wind b. it bsck again, 48gb wind from blue heaven b., 4773 wind that b. through me, gSsb
Blubber of charity, g58b
Blucher, Napoleon forgot B., 8i5b Blude-red wine, 10873

liberty's in every b,, might be the be-all,

Bludgeoning, democracy means b., 84ob Bludgeonings of chance, 8i6a Blue, against b. a pine tree, s84a all the time 3-feelin' b., 845a all's b., 668a and gold mistake, 734^ April's b. surprise, g8ia beneath b. of day, 852b breeches b., 5333 buff 3nd the b., 49 6b china th3t's 3ncient and b., 8o4b color source of delight, 6g8b
dsisies pied

3nd

violets b., 222b

dsrkened on blueness, 9863


darkly deeply b., 5323, 5613 etheresi sky, 3933 forked torch of flower, 9861 fragmentary b., 9273 fresh ever free, 554* freshest b., 9563 of green, 58ob gentle cousin grappling in central b., 6473 of things b., 775* greenest hammer of red 3nd b., 9560

every b.

on bush, 73&b hundred flowers b., iO27b


in purple and red, 65*b in the dust, g27b into speech, 666a
leaf b.

or bole, SSgb
lusty heart b., 1753

May when

that hangs on bough, 2970 with pleasure, 6643 Blossomed lovely stars, 6223 Blossomer, great rooted b., 88gb Blossoms, apple b. fill air, ioogb birds 3nd bowers, 3igb of my sin, 25gb rose in my heart, 88ob tomorrow b., 2g8b Blot, art to b., 4isb

and is still, 7ua where it listeth, 483 Blowin', what bugles b. for, 8733
spirit b.

wind

b.

Blowing, Elfland faintly b., 648b furious winter b., ioogb

iumds

b.,

6733

new

direction

of

Time, g8sb
io56b

next winter into mind, noise of tongues, 644b of dry dust, g88b

hump

he3ven's height, 8123 bl3ck 3nd b., 8763 inns of molten b., 7353 into b. 3nd gold into morning,

strong nor'wester's b. Bill, 5i7b thoughts go b. through them,

94oa
kingfisher l3vender's
little

dives,
b.,

993 b

10753 iog7b

blsckens every

b.,

6533

discreetly b., 3333 in thy scutcheon, 1973

throwing 948b
3733

confetti

b.

horns,

boy

Little
little

b. blow horn, logsb 82ob Boy B. kissed them,

Lord
sin

b.

out his

name,

what Blown buds of barren


are bugles b. for,

tent of b., 84ob b. sky, living 3ir 3nd

5ogb

out his name, 57b

and b., ySgb where is the b., 668a

775s by wind of criticism, crimes broad b., 2643

night one b. dew, 10673 not b. on Boston, io75b O, 8303

1200

INDEX
b. weather, Blue, October's bright

Body
and Nod,
B.,
73631 b.,

BIynkcn,

Wynken

B.
like

Bodies, gave b. to commonwealth,

7413 old books old Nankin


pine needles, g8ob

Ssob
Boanerges, neigh Board, heart for

b.,

ao7b

bed

and

with trees, s88b promontory remembered hills, 8533 rest of heaven b., 64ib rushing of arrowy Rhone, 556b over all, 5242 sty bends sky of spring, 7293 something b., nosb
true b., 35 a

Presbyterian true b., 3522

io75b

money in ginger jar, 753b struck the b., 3233


well-benched ships, 6ga Boards, ships are but b., 2323 Boast, can I b. I see, gy6b frantic b., 87 5b having my freedom b. of nothing, 2263

twitched his mantle b., unclouded weather, 645b unholy b., 5423 wave rolls nightly, 558b wings were b., 67sb
Bluebeard's chaplain said, Bluebell and that queen, Bluebells, bottle with b., Bluebird carries sky, 68ib

3393

66ga 581 a 72 ib

independence be our b., 5o8a let not him that girdeth on his harness b., i$b not b. who puts armor on, 64b not kneel like vulgar b., 8g8b not of what thou wouldst have done, 34gb not thyself of tomorrow, 263
thee death, 28ga of heraldry, 4401 I this of can, 2a6b such is the patriot's b., 447b who dost thy millions b., 3583 Boasteth, when he is gone his way

now b.

Blueeyed boy, lo^ob


Blue-fringed lids,

56a

Blue-massing clouds, QQjb Blueness abundant, 668a blue darkened on b., g86a Bluer, skies a trifle b., gi4a Blue's but mist from wind, 9263 Blues, in our parlance the b., 593b u twentieth-century b., 10433 Bluest of things gray, 7753 Bluestocking, sagacious b., 5963 Blume, du bist wie eine B., 5883 Blunder, frae monie a b. free us, 493 a made by commanders, ioi6b man b. of God or God of man, 8o 5 b so grotesque a b., 9.343 worse than crime it is b., 4ggb youth a b., 6i2a Blunderbuss against religion, 4goa Blundered, someone had b., 652% Blundering kind of melody, 36ga moth b. by, io66a
Blunders, forgetful get better of
b.,

903 ghosts of defunct b. fly, 3523 house b. but not souls, 975b molecules that compose b., 474b movements of largest b., 4793 mutual actions of two b., $7gb of unburied men, 3153 our b. are our gardens, 2733 persons with torn b. happy, 9053 pile b. at Austerlitz, 9483 princes like to heavenly b., 2o8b rough notes and dead b., 8963 single soul in two b., 973 soldiers bore dead b. by, 2$8b these black b., 4872 unclothed, 3o7b wavy b. 'gainst streams, 5793 we have seen dead b., 593b Bodiless and simple, io78b Bodily decrepitude wisdom, 884b exercise when compulsory, 94b form from natural thing, 8833 form of them b., 77 5b
states

following
tremblers, 44gb

perception.

794*

then he

b.,

253

Boding

Boastful, high and b. neighs, 2443 in war daring b., 5643

Boasting on my wall, io57b strength without b., 47 ib


Boasts,

Bodkin, bare b., 26aa Body, absent in b. present in spirit, 5** age and b. of the time,

that

which

b.

his birth,

563*

262^2633 and spirit twins, 776b


beautiful

two soul

sides,

Boat, carry ii2b


forefathers
is

66sb Caesar in your

passionate

b.,

77 3b

b.,

book makes
io6ib

b. cold, 7sgb carry b. for sentimental value,

drifts quietly, io65a

met the

b.,

gs4a

dog

of his b., 33gb


rest,

on the shore, 55gb news of the b., 6o5b of life be light, 8553
pea-green b., 673a
sings in b.

continues in state of

damned of demd damp


dies

b,
b.,

and
66gb

soul,
lives,

37gb 72b

body's beauty

on bay, 6483 speed bonny b., 84gb


they sank my b., 10723 sewer in through bottomed b., 94ia
glass-

disciplined and limber, 10563 distressed in mind b. or estate,

95b

8o5b
b.,

Blunders like ropes, 5993 nature never makes

68ga

round meaning, 4iob Blunt monster with uncounted heads, 241 a plain b. man, 25sb
Blunted, perception b., 1057 a Blush, born to b. unseen, 44ob nymphs b. not he, 731 a

took b. and went to sea, 66ob Boats against the current, logGb messing about in b., 8523 oh the little cargo b., 874b shallow bauble b., sSyb that are not steered, 291 a Boatswain, memory of B. a dog,
tight

6oa does get around, loggb droops debarred from air, 544b dungeon yet palaces, 824* each cell within b., io$6b each petty artery in b., 25gb

employ b. to serve, iiijb filled and vacant mind, 244b find thy b. by wall, 7153
gave b. to country's earth, 227b gets sop, 6653 give b. to be burned, 5*b happiness beneficial for b., go8a her b. thought, 3o7b here in the b. pent, 5183 human b. a watch, 4343 human b. sacred, 7013 ideals in one dark b., 8g4b in b. and in soul bind, 5i8b
infirm and exhausted, 1743 instrument for art, 86ia
is

shame where
that
flies

is

at

thy b., 2642 seventeen, 87ib

Bob for whale, 3323 Bobbies, don't count your b., io33b Bobby finest thing in London,
gosb Shaf toe's gone to sea, iog8a Bobolink for chorister, 735b Bobtail nag, 727b
Bobtails fu'

and midshipmite, 765b

to find it to give it to make

fame, 4123 in, 4383


blush, 5585

man

truth does not b., i4sb Blushed at herself, 272b saw its God and b., 354a Blushes at the name, 7203 into wine, 3543 man only animal that b., 7633 who b, at name, 72oa Blushful Hippocrene, 58ab Blushing, bears his b. honors, 2g8b
flowers shall rise, 4o2b veils fires, 4i4a religion b. Blustering, pity from b. wind,
Blut,

de

rabbits,

gub
eruption,

Bodes some 256b

strange

is his is

haven for b. book, 3o6b

possible,

1563

Bodice, loosens fragrant b., 5823 Bodies, abstain from abusing b.,

88a
are buried in peace, jga
as clothes to b., 8623 as imagination b. forth, clothes without b., 8623
2 gob

died before b. died, io6ob elements or principles of

b.,

und

B.,

474b freedom of living

b.,

6753

not b. more than raiment, 4ia its b. brevity, 5271 John Brown's b., 7553 joint and motive of b., 2693 lean b. and visage, sssa-b lifeless b. little valued, 6i4b light of the b., 4ob like b. wholly b., 9563 little' b. mighty he3rt, 243b loves world as his b. T 73b

12O1

Body
Body, marry my b, to that dust, 3213 mind or b. to prefer, 4o8b my b. a floating weed, i5$a
Boilers,

INDEX
parcel

of

b.

and
io77a

vats,

433 a
Boiling, Hiroshima
b.,

why
Boils,

sea b. hot, 7463


last,
isles,

my my my my

b.

b, now an old tree, gSoa good bright dog, 1078 a

my dungeon

is,

8243.

day b. at round naked


n'irons

661 b

igb

Bois,

plus

house, 10784

Boisterously, as b.

7iga maintained as
b.,

aux

Nature God soul, 48ob naught cared b. for wind, $a*jb no riches above sound b., $8b not b. enough to cover mind, 522b not more than soul, 7oob of Benjamin Franklin Printer,
42ia
of little recruit, io4ob of this death, 512

gained, 2$6b earth, Bold, alive and so b. 571* and turbulent of wit, 3683 anfractuous rocks, looib

Bona Republica, 1105! Bonaparte, ashes of Napoleon B., 5063 Jeanne d'Arc and B., I0 i6a Bond, break that sole b.,
happy

b. burst in hands ' 888a atomic energy lead to b., geob bursting in air, 5413 Bon mots, not enough b ' ioaa
3

Bombs, atomic

whom

45*1

unbroken

old in b. but never mind, iiaa one motion, io66a oppressions of b. and mind,

bad man, sooa, 2983 be b., aoob be bloody b. and resolute, 2855 be not too b., aoob brave men and b., noob cook and captain b., 7655
destruction of tea so b., 462b in conscious virtue b., 4o4b in that freedom b., 5i7b
inspiring
b.

unites, i2ia I'll seal to such a b., 2**b let him look to his b., 2331 neither b. nor free, 54b of iniquity, 4gb of one immortal look, 666b of scattered family, 7523 b. of love, prosperity's very
scatter

and

unloose

from
b.,

b.,

473* part of man's

2203
so

self,

John Barleycorn,
b.,

perfect little b., 8oia perfectly spherical, 6733


politic like

human

jockey of Norfolk not too


let

in mind and b., iib presence of b. in question, 5$5b

body, 4355

power

lies

aoob our minds be b., 8333 look with favor on b. beginning, ii7a

nominsted in the tske a b. of fate, 28sb tied by chance b., 68ob 'tis not in the b., 234b

234b

trust

man on

oath or

b.,
b.,

universal

and common

pygmy

b.,

3683

reading to mind as exercise to b., 395b Resurrection of the b., 6oa


ruler

maiden never

b.,

man men

272b

having subject, gsb

human

b.

as

first eat oyster, ggob are parabolas, io8$b peasantry, 4493

which keeps me pale, 2&4b word as good as b., ig7a Bondage, hold fellow men in
503*

2goa igia

b.,

sex woven into whole b., 85ob ship of the b., 7oib sickness-broken b., 3333 so young b. with so old head,

persistent experimentation, g7ob righteous are b. as a lion, a6b story of Cambuscan b., 3363 too b. to imagine, 45gb virtue is b., 27 ib

of irrational fears, 832b out of the house of b., 8b to previous history, 7323 Bondman in hand bears power,

234*
soul

what makes robbers

b.

but

leni-

gentle i4ia soul is form

companion of

b.,

and doth

b.

make,

aoib
soul its b. off, 884b soul look b. touch, 884b sound mind in sound b., 1390,

ty, 2i5b Bolder and stronger peoples, 847b knits a b. one, 7ssb note than this swell, 64ib Boldest held his breath, 5383 painters cannot trace, 397a

Bondman's, in a b. key, 2323 Bonds, bear b. that gall, 7745 no b. attached him to life, i6b
of Union dissolved, 5303 that unite only in mind, Bondsra3n's unrequited toil, Bone, behind mortal b., 735!) break b. suck out marrow, bright hair about the b.,
rat

go8a 64ob i8ob

373*

Boldly,
ride,
tells

sons of toil, 721 a attack all

$o6b

the

more

b.,

sound of b. and mind, isia sprigs root in horse's b., 468a


swayed
to music,

n8b

8835

swung
this is
'tis

gently, 79 ib

644a disagreeable truth b., 46gb Boldness certain to win praise, i27b
lends
Bole,
leaf

and b., 8853 consuming divorced from eye 3nd b., 10383 fetch poor dog 3 b., 10963
fever of the b., 10023 flesh of flesh b. of b., 348a life near b. sweetest, 6843 mouths sentence as curs b.,

my b., 44b mind makes b. rich, 2igb be buried obscurely, 2ogb whole b. not be cast into hell, 4oa wholly body, g56a without spirit dead, 56b
to

hand

elm

to honest tree b., 6633


b.,

b.,

ioab

4563
of manhood, 452b of my bones, 50 of thy bone, ig$b

woman's

b.

the

worms

woman, 79 ib
b., 15!)

destroy this

Body-hungry, soul-hungry worse than b., noaa Body's beauty lives, g$$b casting b. vest aside, 36oa go Soul the b. quest, 199 a hardly in a b. power, 4933 Body-snatching not natural, g8ob Bog, snow falling on B. of Allen, g68a to an admiring b., 7353 Bogus revelation, g6oa Bohemia little country, B6^b Boil, cannot bake or b. whole, goib her down until simmers, 8i4b maketh the deep b. like a pot, i6b

88gb Bolingbroke, this canker B., agSb Bolster, head on sweaty b., io7gb Bolt, Ben B., 6goa fool's b. soon shot, i84b of Cupid fell, 22gb old age coming b. door, i4gb running home, 1081 a Bolts, something picked lock slid
b.,

blossom or

94oa

stronger b. than Aphrodite, 84b up change, 288 b Bomb, don't let anyone b. me, 10593

rag and b. and hair, 8753 reform taking b. from dog, 8633 secret life of b., io6gb vigor of b., 2693 white as rain-w3shed b., 8743 Boneless gums, 282b Bones and leather, 9063 are dust, 5273
arise

from

my

b.,

u8b

bitter b., 10573

Lord b. Germans, 10593 might destroy -whole port, g$ob on Hiroshima, g82b, g67b severity path to b., 78oa war fought with atomic b.,

bleed

bone of

my b., io66b my b., $b


b.
b.

bound
bury

3nd veins
in

in me, 8oab

Bombast out blank


Bombastiloquent, g2a of Chinese

verse,
b.,

second sublime third

2o6a 1443

hide3ways, can these b. live, 353 chalk of my b., io64b cursed be he that moves
lost b.,
b.,

io5ib

mf b.,

2ggb dead men


dice

ioo2b

we

b. at different degrees,

6oga

Bombing

cities,

9843

human

563*

1202

INDEX
Bones, dry b., 35a

Books
life,

England keep my b,, 2373 exercises b. with toil, loob from one graveyard to another,
loooa
full of dead men's b., 4jb with b., 255b good oft interred

Book, blot out of b. of body is his b., 3o6b

57b

Book of knowledge
of of of of of of
life

fair,

Life begins, 8403

camerado

this

no

b.,

7033

was opened, 58b

collecting best sport, 94 ib curse with b. bell and candle,

i75b

grind b.

to

make

bread, iog8a

have quietly rested, j^ob honored b., 334a breaks no b., 433b jest b. among ye, agga lay his weary let us have tongs and b., 2303
lie

scattered

on

the

Alpine

mountains, 341 a lovely in her b., io65b mutine in matron's


of
his

b.,

2642.

bred of a b., 221 b destroys b. kills reason, 34oa discourse of b. friends, gs8b do not throw b. about, goia doings of mankind subject of my b., i3ga English dictionary best b., gi6a face is as a b., 2823 farewell my b. and my devocioun, 1655 fate of b. in hands of women,
dainties

moons defend ye, 10855 Nature, ig$b Songs and Sonnets, z66b verses underneath bough,
for b.
b.

oh
one

and shady nook, 7861

coral made, 2g6b b. wanders through b., io66a pain paste and cover to our b., zvjb

77*a
furnishes

furnishes treatise, 4363 only one b. in them, 5233 people praise don't read, 7633 present new b. to Cornelius, 1143 read b. not year old, 6o8b read b. of fate, 2423 reads but one b., 325b request of wings but b., 738b

give

man

Puritan

marrow of my

b.,

ggoa

pushing their b., 10823 sit in my b., 5233


strengthens their b., 73b

go b. go b. pursue thy way, i65b go forth my b., i65b go litel b. litel myn tragedye,
i6sb

no quotations, 552 b he can read, 753b and wish to all, i6sb


b.

same today and

forever,

6583

say in sentences what others in


b., 8o6a sealed with seven seals, 583 shapeless mass and b. of rules, 8o8a sour misfortune's b., 2256

weave
*5 2a

their

thread

with

b.,

Bonfire, everlasting b.,

283b

Bonfires

and illuminations, 4&$b Bong, land where B. tree grows, a &73 Bonhomie, overcame natural b.,
934a Bonjour, et puis b., 7sib Bonnet, in her latest new b., 78ab war b. of Medicine Hat, io4ib while b. trimming face grows
old,

go little b., g6ab go now b. to every place, i6sb good b. best friend, 6583 good b. happened to you, io44b good b. not necessarily hard,
5652 puts in working mood, 6o4a good reader makes good b., 6oga great b. great evil, io4b I'll drown my b., 207b in b. of my memory a rubric,

take down this b., 87gb th3t they were printed in 3 b.,

i5b
that took him out of bed, 3103 thst wonderful b., 5g53 this grand b. the universe, 2iib thou art the b., 3213

good

77ob

Bonnets of

Bonny Dundee, 5223 Bonny, am I no a b. fighter, Sagb banks and braes o' b. Boon,
494* f banks o Loch Lomond, iogga bonnets of B. Dundee, 5*aa

159*
kill

in his hand, gGsb man as kill b., 3403 knows my b. in me, 191 a leaves of Judgment B, unfold,

554b us, 6g4b be read in twilight, 6143 turn over library make b., 43 ib well-chosen b. or friend, 3oob what is this marvelous b., 4363 what is use of b., 7433 whst not in b. is priv3te, 7483 what thou seest write in a b., 57b
't,

though nothing in

Time
to

criticized

for

what you don't know make


5*3b whatever

b.,

brow was brent, 4g4b gin love be b., io88b


milldams
o*

726a
lifeblood of spirit, 3403 like cover of old b., 421 a
like

Binnorie, io88b

speed b. boat, 84gb thou b. gem, 4933 Bono, cui b. fuerit, nob pro b. publico, isib Bononcini, some say Signor B., 415* Bons, ah les b. vieux temps, no5b Boas mots, laboring to produce b., 3613 not enough b., 10323 Bonsoir, et puis b., 75 ib Bonum, summum b., nib, 1143 Boo, under the b., ioo4a Boob, one b. may die, g4sb
Booboisie, 96 ib Booby, give her b.
for another,

liked
little
little

person has fortunes, 78 ib the b. the better, 45ob b. go without me, i6sb
b, I

in b. public, 7483 when b. of life opening, g$ib when nobleman writes b., 433b which does not sell, 5363 without pictures or conversa-

cast thee

on waters,

i6sb

by b. and creed, 7goa Macaulay a b. in breeches, 5233 made by Mr. Mark Twain, 761 a makes my body cold, 73gb may be very amusing, 448a mighty b. mighty theme, 6g7a mine adversary had written a
lives
b.,

i6a
b.,

moral or immoral

8393

my b. friends talk to me, gs8b nature's infinite b. of secrecy,


2873

4oia Boojum, Snark was a B., 7473 Book, alive while thy b. live, sosb all world knows me in my b.,
igia

new
no

era in
b. so

life from b., 6833 bad but some good,

tion, 7433 works 3t body of b., 4473 you resd from duty, 43ob Bookcase, I have a b., 8313 Bookful blockhead, 4043 Bookish ambition, 3ogb theoric, 2723 Bookmen, you two are b., 2223 Book's 3 book though nothing in 't, 554b an inn, g4sb Books, all b. else so poor, gSsb all b. he reads, 4043 all good b. alike, io44b ambition stored with b., gogb

i4ob

American literature from one


b.,

io44b

and heart never part, io8ga and volume of my brain, 2603


angel writing in b., 55 ib another damned thick b., 47oa bad b. as much labor, 10323 bad b. generally easy b., s64b bell b. and candle, 236b

no frigate like b., 7383 not at his picture but his b., 303b not concerned with poetry, io28b not more in b. than before,
10543 note it in a b., 323 note you in b. of memory, 2143 of a certain Cicero, 1473 of egoism, 7gob of female logic, 661 a

are not absolutely dead, 3403 as schoolboys from b., 2243 author who speaks of own b.,

6133
authority from others' b., 2213 bad criticism of b., gi6b

bear him up, g8sb belong to eyes, 6o7b


best b. universal sppesl, bloodless substitute, 822b

9153

borrowers of

b.,

of one bloody b. of law,

beware

man

b.,

is8b

by by

persons

in

which

printers

534b Americs, 6563 have lost,

1203

Books
Books cannot always
4833 cannot learn
please,
b.,

INDEX
Books, some b. not adequately reviewed, 77gb
61 a
1

Bore, forgive those

who

b. us,

356*
gracefully dodge b., 8i8b me in southern wild, 486b

men from

some

children of brain, s88b dad in blak or reed, i66b

be tasted, spectacles of b., 3673


b.

to

2ogb

consumed

midnight

oil,

4 ia

la spoil bookcase's looks, 83 start life with good b.,

no
85oa

b.

we dread

as

own minds

6 94b

cover country in b., 8o4a crushed by b., 10695 deep versed in b., j$4ga do with friends as b., 6o6b do you read b. through, dreams b. each a world, drunk on b., 961 a
feeds on b. alone, ygoa few friends and many b., 35?b few thousand battered b., g88b find b. wearing out, 77a from b. of honor razed, 29 ib from b. surcease of sorrow, 6433 gentleman not in your b., 245b God be thanked for b., 544b God written all the b., 756b good b. truer than real, io44b
historical b.

sweet serenity of b., 624b 222a they are the b. the arts, think for me, 535b
three b.

not only as sin but b., 5615 secret of being a b., 4i6b
soldiers b.
talks,

dead bodies by, sjSb

66sb trees shall be my b., 24gb true levelers, 544b


soul,
truest

on

79 ib tells you how he is, 888a to be in society a b., 8403


too short to b. ourselves, 8055

of
b.

b.

Solomon's,

6g7a

twenty i66b

at his beddes heed,

two

classes of b.,

6g8b
a

undeservedly forgotten, 1061 weapons, g73b well or badly written, B&a.

waking up same person, 8775 Bored, Bores and B., 56aa if I had not been there, 8592 mankind by thee less b., 8sa

more contemptible than


755 a

bore,

which are no b., 535b why so few good b. f 726b with b. the same, 6g^a
worst b. universal appeal, 9153
carry to fire, 42ga Booksellers, for all b. in world,

one spend night other, 8s8b Boredom, against b. gods


with
gle,

with
strug-

4g8b

with no

lies,

80 ib

you

may

Homer
I
I'll

all b. you need, 38ab have read all the b., 7973 burn my b., 2igb

at core of life, 36sa foe of happiness, 5643

444b
Bookstore,
b.,

God

created

woman
b.,

b.

ceased,

human
in
far,

nature weak in

8o6a
obesity brought on by
state of

in b. soul of past, 577a in running brooks, 247b intercourse with superior minds,

674b
pajamas,
io76a

544a-b

Bookworming Boom, guns b. Boomed cut

man

gi8b plucked
of

booted,

knowing

loved my b., 2g6a lard their lean b., sioa learn anatomy not from b.,
I

3i2b
learning wiser without b., 4593 legacies genius leaves, 394b like men their authors, jSSb lineaments of Gospel b., 31 4b
live without b., 741 b magic preservation in

Aegean, g2b Booming surge Booms, beetle b. adown glooms, 8iga windy b. hoo-hooed it, 955b Boon, sordid b., 51 sb southern country, 7i4b Boot, hey for b. and horse, 691 a

many
3ogb

b.

57?b and never use them,


b.,

men

more

read as b. too much, 4062 on b. than other b. subjects, 19 ib

look for me under b. soles, 701 a saddle to horse, 662a Booted, boomed cut plucked b., io75b ready b. and spurred, 3623 Booth died blind, g52b
Bootless cries, 2gib

Bores and Bored, 562 a through his castle wall, 27b Born, a man be b. again, 48a a roaster of meat, 4&4b all men b. free, 341 a as one b. out of time, 52b as soon as b. begin to die, ijib as soon as we were b., $71 they had never been b., jga begotten b. and dies, 882b being b. to die, 2ioa

^b

b., 10531

being human b. alone, ggob best never to be b., $88b best not to be b., 773,
better ne'er been b., 52 la better to be lowly b., 2g8a blight man b. for, 8o3b bred en b. in brier patch, 8143 but I was free b., 500

more for b. than gum, 8355 more in woods than in b., i54a must follow sciences, 2ioa
never die, 97 $b never read children's b., 865b new French b., 66sa next o'er his b., 41 $b no b. but score and tally, 2isb

Boots boots boots, 876b died in b. like pioneer, 1041 a drunk and asleep in b., gssa ls of b., gunpowder ran out heels

but to
certain

die,

4o8b

no furniture charming

as

b.,

52b
not all b. dull as readers, 6833 not in your b., 245b not killed by fire, g73b of all time, 6g8b of making many b., 2ga, o62b
of quotations, g2oa of the hour, 6g8b old b. manners wine, 4sob old b. old Nankin blue, 2o7b old clothes a few b., 9793
b. woman's looks, 542b out of olde b. newe science,

443* long b. hard b., g48b look at his b., 8$7b not to resist wind and 2i6a what b. it at one gate to defense, 3493

tide,

is death for the b., io6a Christ b. across sea, 6gob Christ b. in Bethlehem, 42$b conscious of being b., s8ib cross cause why we were b.,

22sa

make
care,

cry for being b., 2ioa day perish wherein I

was

b.,

what

b.

with incessant

i4b died before god of love was


3 o6b else wherefore b.,

b.,

Booze, Georgia b., io4ia Bo-peep, as if they played at b.,

Gssa
age,
start,

32ob

only

read

1643 quit your b., soga deliberately

io95b Borden, Lizzie B. took ax, noia Border, Germany's river but not b., 5O3b nor breed nor birth, son of Middle B., Ssga through all wide b., 51 ga Borders, invade b. of any realm,
i8ga Bore, accursed

little B.,

empty into modern envy b. from the


for success,
free, 34ia,

378b 86b

6o3b
435 b
>

101 5 b

as

written,

6833 read what

b. I please, 411 a readers like my b., 2ioa valueless b., 6g8b reading real war never in b,, 73a receive value from esteem, s66b rural quiet friendship b., 4igb sins scarlet b. read, go2b

the night she b. me, 84a bored more contemptible than

free and equal, 47ob friends b. not made, 776b ia genius must be b., 37 io26a gentlemen b. to purple, glad not b. before tea, 52$b not been b., had 44b good if he happy is he b. and taught, soob have to be b. there, losgb he was not b. to shame, 2253

hour I was b., logga house where I was

b.,

59

>

every
first

nero
lion

becomes
thought

b.,

6o7b
a
b..

human
i6ia
I

race b. to
dat's

fly

upward,

last

53<>b

was b.

de charge, looga

12O4

INDEX
Bom,
in in in in in in in
if

Bottle
is b.,

millions b. millions
die,

Born, unto us a child

Bosom,

liest in

Abraham's

b.,

must

a cellar,
half

9953 44* b
die,

3a
unto you is b., 46a we were b. free, loisb we were not b. to sue, ss6a went to trouble to be b. r 46oa wept that he was b., &9gb

51 *a

bed in bed we

loosened from her b. the girdle,


of his Father and his Cod, 44ia of urgent west, Soia pearl in b. of sea, jogb in Abraham's b., 2iyb sleep stuffed b. of perilous stuff,

my

savage country, b. days, 1943

other's pain, 8s6b soft regions b. soft men, , 873 this century, loyab b. with love, 3s6a jealousy life worth being b., 102 1 a live die an American, 54&b
loveliest lucky to

woman
be
b.,

b.,

88ab

7003

made

man man man man man man

his own bed ere b., b. in chains, 497b b. suffers dies, 86gb is b. for uprightness, 7ib
is b. free,

is

b.

4356 unto trouble,

i4b
,

that is b. of a

woman,
too

153
late,

Miniver

Cheevy

b.

monster b. on itself, 275b naked and falls a- whining, 1322 no man b. an angler, j25b no man b. unto himself, 3223 nobly b. must nobly meet fate, 85b none of woman b., z8sb
not a world of b., lojib not b. for death, 5833 not b. under rhyming planet, 24?a not to be b., 2ioa not to be b. best, 77a, losgb not to be b. surpasses thought, 8sa of a little Sin, 10235 of blackest Midnight b., 3g4b of the Spirit, 4a of the sun, io6*7b of their confrontation, io68b of Virgin Mary, 6oa of virgin mother b., 3343 old and ugly, 6703

when we are b. we cry, 27gb with anxiety about weather, 7700 with gjft of laughter, ggSb with silver spoon, 19713 would thou hadst ne'er been b., *75 D Borne and yet must bear, 5685 angel b. on my bosom, 66sb back into past, 10365 every thing in world can be b., 479* his faculties so meek, s8sb like thy bubbles, 5583 me on his back, s&$b not b. this in my hot youth,
issa
oldest hath b. most, s8ob

286b
swell b. with thy fraught, 2753 third in your b., *24b thorns that in b. lodge, 26oa

warm

cheek and rising b., 44 ib which thy frozen b. bears, 27 ib wife of thy b., lob within b. of rose, 647b
within b.
is
b.,

September,

io85a

wring his

4480

write sorrow on b. of the earth,


in vines, 4143 high in tufted trees, 3353 Bosoms, hair hang and brush
66*5a

Bosomed deep

b.,

the burden, 43b through hatred

men's

business

and

b.,

2oyb

up by
well

b. apart, 8jb limitless fury, ioi6a b. without defeat, 2433

waters lift their b., 268a white b. of actresses, 4agb


Boss, just talking to your b., 941 a Boss's daughter, 10090 celebrities such as B.,

Borogoves, mimsy were b., 7453 Borrow every changing shape, looia good and truth to b., 6043

Bossuet,

men who

b.

men who

lend,

sad old earth b. mirth, 8s6a to live within means, 751 a


trouble, 953b vainly sought to
b.,

642b

Borrowed plumes, 76a


something b., uosb wit, 3i8b Borrower, borrowing not bettered by b., sbob is servant to the lender, 25b neither b. nor lender be, 258b
Borrowers
of the night, 2843. always ill-spenders,

749 b Boston, at Thucydides at B., 442a audience four thousand critics, 759 a blatant Bassarid of B,, 776a Bostonian who leaves B., 7723 Cluett Shirt B. Garter, logob Concord Lexington, 547a looib, Evening Transcript,

good old

B.,

8583

hub

of solar system, 6343 in B. ask how much does

he

on a Monday, i(X)6a on Christmas Day, icgga One b. in a manger, 36^


out of
poet's

my due

made

time, 7533

of books,

as well as b., sojb

Borrowing

accounted

Plagiare,

posthumously, 8o6b
powerless to be b., 7i2b saint object of suspicion, so many not yet b., lossa soil good to be b. on, some b. to endless night, some b. to sweet delight,
781 a

B., loyGb marriage serious around B., a 1027 not blue on B., io75b runs to brains, 8313 Bostonian who leaves Boston, 772a

know, 765b marching through

6g4a

4gob 4gob

souls never b. out of If, io48a

spurn not nobly


strength

b., 767b though of muses

b.,

58oa
every minute, 655b sun b. over and over, io7ob terrible beauty b., 88aa thing I was b. to do, ana time to be b., 7b
to be king, 84gb to be nobly b. now crime, to blush unseen, 44ob to set it right, s6oa to the manner b., 2593 to write, 4iob too soon or too late, 8g4a

sucker

b.

3i5b

banqueting upon b., 3&a dulls edge of husbandry, asga everything of neighbors, 3763 goeth a-b., i88a life that depends on b., 72ga only lingers it out, 241 b Whistler's ideas about art, 8s8b Boshaft ist er mcht, 95ia Bosom, Abraham's b., 473, 2170, 5i2a angel borne on my b., 665b Arthur's b., 243b barren b, starves birth, 4sgb beggar in Abraham's b., 473 can a man take fire in his b., *3b carry them in his b., 2b crept into b. of the sea, 2153
friend of sun, 5&4a glory in His b., 6gob heart out of b., 852b

Bostonitis

chronic

irritability,

777b
Boston's a hole, 666b

Marlborough
Bo'sun
Boswell
tight
first

Street, 107621

and

midshipmite,

of biographers, 42gb Botanist, puzzle to b., 754b Botanize, peep and b., 51 la Botany, all their b. Latin, Soga beetles or butterflies, 8x8a Botch of it trying to swap, 64oa

Botched

civilization,

g88b
of
b.,

Boteler, Dr. B. berries, 3263

said

straw-

Both,
I

am

by adventuring
with
b.,

2$ib

2g6b
2173
b.,

plague o' b. houses, 225a wear b. for b, are thine,


Bother,
,

baby

blessing

and

toward 88sa

Bethlehem

to

be

b.,

under one law to another bound, 2o2a under that was I b., S46a

2?6a heroic b. beats no more, s6ob I must not see, s6ob in ocean's b. unespied, 3603 in your fragrant b. dies, 3873
let

her hand on her

b.,

759D long words b. me, 97oa Bothered, hot and b,, 877b
Bo-tree, place by the b., io6sb Bottle, a little for the b., 475b

me

empires
friend

to

Thy

b.

fly,

in

changed by need nor

b.,
b.,

481 a

6713

1205

Bottle
Bottle, large cold b., 8*ob leave b. on chimleypiece, my b. of salvation, igga

INDEX
Bound, bourn b, of land, 296!) criticism, by own definition of 713b ^ K each to each, 511 b what this nband give me but
heaven not at single
b.,

Bow, draw
truth,

b. ride

and speak

6700

s62b he bar and arwes bright, i67b

of hay, agoa with bluebells, 72 ib

many

strings to b., i84a


stretch

Bottled lightning, 6690 Bottleneck, president is


Bottles,

b.,

io68a

6goa

new wine

narrow-necked b., in old b., 4 2a

4*3a

i6a stay the b. of heaven, Bottom, bless thee B., 2303

I'mb. away, 92gb, noia ib in icy chains by thee, 27 in shallows and miseries, 2563
in to saucy doubts, 284b in with triumphant sea,

nor does Apollo always b., i2ib of burning gold, 4gob or brooch or braid, 8o3b
set

strong

my b. men

in

the

cloud,

6b

shall b. themselves,

build from b. up, gyob dive into b. of deep, ajSb I see not the b. of it,

2273

28b
tensely

man
not

still

sits

on

his b.,

26ga igib

not free, 9503 his b., 2i8a nothing but hath 8a the of everlasting hills,

much

b. I could

strung easily broken, i26a themselves when he did sine, 8

one b. trusted, 231 a of the monstrous world, 3393 the of worst, a68a of woe deep, 6g6a precious wine cup without b., i6ab sees into b. of my grief, 2253 sees sea b. from shore, i6aa strike rock and go to b., 49 lb thou art translated, 2303 unknown b. like bay of Portugal, 25ob
in

utmost b. of thought, 646b with red tape, 6723 Boundaries burst, 9633 b. or race, 7055 geographical here b. meet, 7o8a b., g?4b within in safety national and imperial b., 10380 which divide life, 642b

my wing closely b., 3593 28oa upon wheel of fire,


though

2g8a
to that whose course run, 4393 was made in England, 8503 what water lapping b., 10043 when trees b. heads, 7390 with my b. and arrow, logsb Bowed, at her feet he b., ua by weight of centuries, 826b he fell where he b., ua head and held breath, yua his comely head down, 35gb to idolatries patient knee, 5565

Boundary,

Bottomless gulf of 545b


in

civil

pensions,

landmark on b., 4b no b. to efforts of man, 6i6b Bounded in a nutshell, 261 a our country however b., 6553
waters
lift

b. nights you perdition, 34ib

sleep,

8303

bosoms, 268a

some ponds thought b., 68sb Bough, apple reddens on high b., 6gb bloom along b., 8s2b blossom that hangs on b., 2Q7b book of verses underneath b.,
breaks cradle fall, 8iob golden b., 8833 old forsaken b., 6s4b sings on orchard b., 6633 touch not single b., 6ooa wet black b., g87b Boughs, cedar green with b., 8273 the apple b., io7ob easy under incense hangs upon b., s82b lowest b. brushwood sheaf, 663a of creeds hide God, 8363 off many a tree, 322b out of b. he came, 9063 shade of melancholy b., 248b shadows of pine b., g86a soul into b. does glide, 3603 which shake against cold, 2g2b

Bounding at emotion new, 714* happy b. flea, 9993 Boundless as we wish our souls,
ity

with galling crown, 8ggb with grief and shame b. down, 333 a Bowels, molten b., g^b no belly no b., ioogb of Christ, 3283, gi2a of compassion, 573
of fierce fire, 10753 of the land, 2i7b were moved for him, 2gb Bower, in hall or b., 336b in heaven's high b., 4873 keep b. quiet for us, gSoa lime tree b. my prison, 5$b of roses by Bendemeer's, 5433 orange flower perfumes b., 52 ib Bowers, blossoms birds and b.,

of shade, 457 b
b. deep,

drew from

62gb

655a endless sublime, 557b his wealth, 5193


is

b.

better

b.

worse,

power without
Bounds, he

abusing,

644b 5g6b

universe, 644b vision grows, 720b


fills

he

b.,

4o8b

living know no b., 327b of place and time, 44*b wider b. be set, 862a

Bowie, pinned to bark with

b.,

Bountiful,

Lady

Bounty, few show, 382b


for his b.

B., 397 b great b.

he may

769b Bowl brimming

over, 7473

no winter, 2893
his b., 44i*

called for his b., iog2b capacious salad b., 8243


fill

large
lust

was

Bouquets
3 87b

of God, 48 those his former b. fed, 37 ib while I'm living, g49 a


of goat b.

b. with Samian wine, 5613 golden b. be broken, 293 goldfish in glass b., 9043

Bourbon or Nassau claim higher,


Bourgeois anyone whose thinking
vulgar, 7ogb epater le b., 7oga hatred of b. beginning of wis-

Bought, beauty eye, ssib


bliss b.

b.

by judgment of

inverted love in a lurk I in of night,

b.

we

call
b.,

sky, 63ob

golden

486b

gossip's b., 22ga

68sb crooked cat, iog6b Dickon thy master b., 20ob golden opinions, aSab good names to be b., 2383 Hudibras again, 3753 knowledge b. in market, 688a life your death b., 958b men who can't be b., 948b

by

years,

dom, 7ogb
horrible invention the b., 7093

b., 5233 roasted crabs hiss in b., 2233 went to sea in b., iog4a whither in b. so free, 5533 b. sun, Bowled, in bowling alley

62ga onion atoms lurk in

how beastly b. is, g86a b. Bourgeoisie, face to face with


Bourn bound of land, 2g6b country from whose b.,
262a Bout, notes with many a winding b., 335* with love, 7oa Bow, always made awkward b. 586a and accept end, g26a arrow from Almighty's b., 4903 PS unto b. cord is. 62 *a better to b. than break, 183 bow lower middle classes, 767 cannot stand bent, ig5b down thine ear, 25b

somehow

. b.

them

all, ,

three pecks of meal, 10983 Boughten friendship by side, 928b Bouillabaisse noble dish is, 66ob

3813 bowled sun, Bowling, in b. alley 38ia Tom B., 475b poor make Bowls, injury to willow to b., looa b. bent, 7?2b Bows, come with down to wood and stone, 549*

Boulder,

nearly

dying

at

B.,

from which children

sent, 9763

Boulders, build house of b., 6073 ferns by Berkshire b., io22b

wood of English b., 8503 Bowwow, big b. strain, 534a


rather have a b., 8323

Bounce for her

too,

io36b

Bowwows, demnition
Box, alabaster
of

b.,

0690
b.,

Bound

befitting each, 7033 bones and veins in me, 8o2b born under one law to another
as
b.,

b. of ointment, 443

Devil enters prompter's

933 a

counters

red-veined

stone,

2023

72ib

1206

INDEX
in ballot Box, paper you drop
b.,

Brave
Biain, memory warder of b., of feathers heart of lead, 41 3 bullets of the b., *46a

Bov's will wind's will, Ba^b Bo\s and girls level with
'

men.

pouncet
at

b.,

2383

opened of itself, 5o5b twelve good men into b., 54ob a vote worth two in b., 891 where sweets compacted lie,

288b and girls together, 862b


are marching, 74 D as b. do sparrows, 388b as flies to wanton b.,

paper pen gleaned teeming Plato's b., 604*

b.,

581 a

2793
|

on B., 6693 BoxuV Day, beadle 'twixt b. and youth,


Boy,

be damned dear b., 8743 being human though b., goob


the liquor for dead hardly more than
claret
b.,

sub possess a poet's b., schoolmasters puzzle b. t 45ob best have b., 749 a

age 5193

b.,

4333 9623

<

barefoot be a farmer's b., 10873

b.,

626a

few b. late at play, 7i5a giving b. more Latin, 7i5b


infants
b.

superior too finely wrought, 4563 unquiet heart and b., 64gb weeds of mine own b., 32gb and temperate well -composed
b.,

igoa
lies

beamish

745* beggarly b., 6943 b., losob blueeyed Chatterton marvelous b., 5110 close upon the growing b., 51 3b eternal, 295* even when little b., 7010
b.,

men

Ifs

eternally,

where heart

b. also, 66sb
b.,

lightfoot b., 853b


little b.

wider than sky, 7s6b work like madness in

524*

made

of,

iog6b

mealy

every

b.

3nd every
of

from

sandhills

g3l, 767 b Nantucket,

iSrshness for good of


if

b.,

3793
gift,

b.

have not woman's

b. healthy, 5803 inclination of in love with janitor's b., 10693 of Hellenes, is most powerful 77 lad of mettle a good b., 2393 let b. win his spurs, 1633
like

Bozzy,

b. beef-faced b., 66gb not in hands of b., ioa8b not sent into foreign wars, g72b rally round flag b., 7o4b say b. another whiskey, 7973 steady b. steady, 4393 that swim on bladders, 2g8b there we saw men and b., logoa three merry b. are we, 313* throw stones at frogs, io4b till b. come home, 9173 we are the b., 45ob when I W3s 3 boy, 9023 wooing in my b., io86b come to me my dear B.,

b. and fancy, 376b written troubles of the b., 286a Brain's old ghostly house, io22a Brains as well as beans, 8313

work of

Boston runs to
cudgel

b., 8313 thy b. no more, 2&5b dashed the b. out, 282b eyes quicker than b., 966b

hair not curl less if b. within,


of better heads, 32gb steal away their b., 274a to make fool of self, 822b
trust, 10503 unhappy b. for drinking, 27 3b Brainsick brain workers, 7533

Bramble, gold and

b.

dew, 824b
10983

b.

playing

on

seashore,

Brace lace latch or catch, 8osb


ourselves to duties, 92 ib Bracelet of bright hair, so6b Braces oneself to risk declaration,

lily-livered b.,
little

s86a
them,

b. blue, logsb Blue kissed Little B.

Brambles pale with mist, 7Hb Branch, honors talent in every b., 8qb
not hang b. over wine, i*7 a shall grow out of his roots, 3ia snow on bare b., 526a
that might have

jumped

into

b.

bush,

7QO3
Brach, Lady the b., 27?b rather hear Lady my
b.,

82ob
little

tiny b., 253a love is 3 b., 3533 minstrel b., 54* a

239b

b. showers, Bracing, drying after


b., 9813 all ani-

grown

straight,
stars,

more fun when cabin most unmanageable of mals, g6a

Bradford, there goes i86b Brae, waly doun the


Braes,

John
b.,

B.,

2isb Branch-charmed by earnest


Branche, sur la b., Branches, fruit of my giant b. tossed, 57sb

io88b

my my

greatness, 2893 lovely living b., igsb to attorney's b. office

firm,

oh where was he, 574*


parlous
b.,

766a

banks and b. o' bonny Boon, 494a green b., 495 a Brag, beauty is Nature's b., 337b
left

b.,

775b

this

vault to b. of, 284a


b.,

ne'er remember, ijSoa of evil, 682b and Brandy, glass of b.

water,

2173

one went to
8203

pitcher b. brings

up

hall,

Bragg,

more

354a grape Captain B.,

22 ib purblind W3yward b., read to by a b., looib schoolrooms for b., 686a smiling b. fell dead, 6623

spe3k roughly to
stood

little b.,

743 b

on burning deck, 57 3b sun errand b., 697 teach orphan b., 6453 than when I W3S b., 5923 that shoots so trim, io84b too much hope of thee loved
302b
well
for

8ib Bragging, bray of b. tongues, Brahmin caste of New England, 6 3 4b hymn B. sings, 6043 Braid, bow or brooch or b., 8osb

5523,

5oob hero must drink b., 433 a sipped b. and water gaily, sooa Branksome Hall, custom of B.,
Brass

5i8a bands and barrel 97531

organs,

Braids, twisted b. of lilies, 3 Brain, all that cakes b., & bear of very little b., 9703 book and volume of my b.
b.,

b. collar, 493 a to b. tacks, 10043 live in b., manners evil feet like unto fine b,, 57b

braw come

2993

hat, 10333

2603 books children of

fisherman's

b.,

6483

388b brainsick b. workers, 753a


b.,

what good b. am I, 10933 when I was a b., 5923, goob,


9023

bum

from

b.

and

breast,
b.,

gi8b
*
.

changes continuous, 793a


children of an
idle

who who

Isne, 10933 looks after sheep, logsb wine dear b. and truth, 693 wud ye send b. to colledge,

lives

down

8923

Boyhood changing into man, 883b ignominy of b., 883b


Boyhood's thoughtless faith, 6g7b years, 542b Boylston Street, on B. photograph, 10773 Boy's love, 2793

feed b. with better things, gi8b gladness thy b. know, 57ob heat-oppressed b., 2833 him with lady's fan, 2393 how this small b. think, C,,, in what furnace thy b., 48 9 a intoxicate the b., 4<>3 a
light broke light doth

and paint, 8760 putty b. sounding b., 5b thou mayest dig b., loa throat of iron chest of b., uga vessels of b. oft handled, 2133 b Brattle, bickering b., 49* Brave Americans all, 400 and earnest men, 6o7a binds b. of all earth, 8653 both coward and b. held in
same honor, 63b clime of unforgotten delirium of b., 88ia
fair
b.,

5583

upon
seize

b.,

5593
b.,

women and

b.

men, 5550

my

486b
in b.

love not alone

immured

2223

may

devise laws, 23 ib

fortune favors the b., 1093, ngb fortune helps the b., 1093 home of the b., s4i a loisb how sleep the b., 443 a

1207

Brave
Brave, I would be
b.,

INDEX
9793
Breach, not a b. but an expansion, 3063 once more unto the b., 243b

in action patient in labors, just friends and b. enemies,

472b

know how

man man man man

to forgive, 4g7a braver less daring, inattentive to duty,

with America calamity, 82ga Bread and circuses, isgb angels' b. made b. of man, 1583
ate b. with tears, 477a beans and brown b., 83 la
bit of butter to my b., bitter b. of banishment,

Bread with one fish ball, 7sob with you more than bread. ^ loiob wringing b. from sweat, 64ob you earn b. I'll eat, 6*6a Breadth of heaven betwixt you
6i8a
;
'

struggling, 404b

with a sword, 841 a man's choice is danger, 853 man's folly life's wisdom, 8g4b

men and bold, i loob men and worthy patriots, 34oa men brave from first, 33 ib men lived before Agamemnon,
122b

broken life up for b., broth without o., ioga

9703 2273 7743

by b. of nail, 3&ga Break, bend but do not b., 1503 best you get is even b., glib better to bow than b., 18 *b 3
taller

bids

it b.,

28 5 b

brown

b.

and the Gospel, $86b


fall,

buttered b.
cast thy b.

553b
to

upon the
b.

consecrated
crust

waters, 28b take, 734b


b.,

men living and dead, 6gga more b. than me, 10313 new world, 2g7b none but b. deserves fair, 371 a on ye b., 5$8a
our soldiers were
b.,

country people had no

4g6b
41 ib

outrage b. man dead, 8ia overhanging firmament, s6ia resistance or submission, 461 a secret of freedom a b. heart,

3g*b

of b. and liberty, cursed the b., gooa cutting b. and butter, daily b., 4ob, 9453, g4sb daily b. of the eyes, 6o4b dear flesh cheap, 5gzb
distressful b.,

66ob

244b

goa
so true so b., 5o8a that are no more, 4$ga

was dean and to fight aloud b., 734b


then
I

b.,

85&b

to the vigilant active b., 46sa toll for the b., 45ga

dry as paper, g88b eat b. in sweat of thy face, 6a eat b. without scarceness, loa eat dusty b., lO^Sa eaten in secret, 24a eaten your b. and salt, 8yib ever more stale rags, g88b from mouth of labor, 47 sa
give me thus my daily b. g4sb give thine enemy b., s6a give us our daily b., 4ob giver of breath and b., 8o*b grind bones to make b., iog8a halfpennyworth of b., 23gb how salt is another's b., i6aa how spoiled the b., 72 ib I am the b. of life, 48b
t

bloody glass, io62a break break, 648a bruised reed shall he not b., **a earth's sleep, io28b embraces, losgb eternal Sabbath, 3693 even b., 842b, g6ab faith with us who die, gisb frame of Nature b., sgja given thee till b. of day, 488b heart b. piecemeal, 68ob hugest hearts that b., I'll b. my staff, 2g7b into hundred thousand flaws. 2y8a it to our hope, 287 a

mounting at b. of day, 51^ never doubted clouds b., 668b


never give sucker even b., 84b no canon of code, 8493 no waters breed or b., io8ob oath he never made, 3533
off last lamenting kiss, jo6b onetwothreefourfive pigeons,

war

we b. what we know, ioi4b when were b. in majority, 684a


world kills the b., 10443 world's b. heroes, i looa Braved, deep difficulty b., 7ggb wise man, Brave-hearted, O b.

translunary things, spares not the

sub

gave Esau

b.

and pottage, 7a

b.,

yoa

out rather than surrender, 9242 shins against wit, 24&a some heart did b., 6*joa that sole bond, 453a
those eyes the b. of day, 27 ib
thou'll b. my heart, 4g4a time to b. down, 2?b until the day b., 2gb up by b. of day, 323a wolf that b. it die, g32b

Bravely, do all b., 6$6a fleshed maiden sword, 24ia

think or b. die, 4o6a nobly fought and b., ggsa


greatly

Braver, brave

man

b. less daring,

broke with you, loiob if son ask b., 4ia hi sorrow ate, 621 a live for b., 6o3b living b. from heaven, i58a living Homer begged b., soib
I

you may

b.

you may

shatter,

I have done one b. thing, 3053 to be rebel, 868b Bravery never out of fashion,

loaf of b. and thou, 6agb looked to government for

b.,

66ia

on and tackle trim, 34gb Bravest, agricultural men the b., ^S 3 always to be b., 6ga battle ever fought, 78gb
-

loob who have dearest vision, 8gb Braw brass collar, 4933 brecht moonlecht necht, 9033 Brawling courts, 65ob judgments unashamed, 653a of sparrow in eaves, 88oa stormy husky b., 9482 woman in a wide house, 25b

by

far,

b., i8b not live by b. only, loa of adversity, 323 of affliction, igb of deceit is sweet, 25b of idleness, aya of life, 48b of life dropped in mouth, 38 ib on which side b. buttered, i85b quarrel with b. and butter,

nor his seed begging

Breaker recede tide come in, Breakers, more dangerous b., wandering by lone sea b., wantoned with b., 558a Breakfast dinner lunch tea, for her own b. a scheme, from b. to madness, io8sa

5951 561 a

8073

gosa 3g8b

hope

is

good

b.

bad

supper,

39<>b

kills seven dozen Scots at b., *39 a Michelangelo for b., 7$ga ready for national b. table,

ravens brought

him

b.,

i3a
six impossible things before b.,

royal slice of b., gQgb sauce of happy ending, 7993 seven days shall ye eat unleav-

where our

b. take, io88b
is

Brawn, abundance
82ia

result

of

b.,

Brawny, muscles of b. arms, 621 a Bray of bragging tongues, 81 b


Vicar of B., logob

ened b., 8b shows b. in other hand, io5b sky daily b. of eyes, 6o4b
smell
of b.

with appetite, 2g8a Breakfastfood, freedom


lojia
Breakfasts at five-o'clock critical Breakfasttime

b.,

and

butter,

tea,

746b

Brazen

bells,

644a

forehead of every traitor, 74ga Stentor with b. voice, 6ga throat of war, 3483 Brazil he twirled a button, 736a Breach, could not approve slightest b.,

ggia
b.,

imminent deadly more honored in

*72b

b., 2 59 a

b., logab 386a strengthens man's heart, struggle for b., 844a to one dying of thirst, took b. and blessed it, 44*> took b. and brake it, white b. and butter, iog4a who ne'er b. in sorrow ate, whole stay of b., soa

some gave white


staff of life,

period,

3863 83 ib
i8ga
621 a

Breaking,
in,

cheerfulness always b.

434b

b., 594b, g46b not b., sleep that knows from heart b., 737a stop through foul and ugly mists,

gray

dawn

5a

tired

waves vainly

b.,

688b

1208

INDEX
Breaking waves dashed high, . 573 , ., c wrestled until b. of d3y,
Breasts like two >oung roes, zgb Sestos and Abydot of her b.,

Breeding
Breath, world gray from thy
b.,

7743
writing 10372
is

7b
that feed France, 2o6a Breath, a b. thou art, 271 a

holding

your

b.,

8iob Breaks, bough b. cradle fall, butterfly upon wheel, 4113 chains from every mind, 4883
jest

a
1

little

flesh

little

b.,

b.

no bones, 433b
through yonder window

lance of justice b., 27gb


light

able to take b. away, bated b. and whispering


bleness, 232b

i4ib 666b

Breathe 7045 and blow, 6483


air again,

as

hum-

like Atlantic Ocean, 10763

my pate across, 26 ib rider that b. youth, 3253 sorrow b. seasons, 2173


sun b. through darkest clouds, sigh world b. everyone, 10442
Breast, against fear

our b.

steel,

arm the obdured b., 344* burn from brain and b., gi8b cherish at charitable b., ggob crude Orson-like b., 797b silent like b. deep in her wound, n8b
sweet flowing b., 9923 from her hardy b., 6923 with dauntless b.,
earth's

boldest held his b., 5383 bowed head held b., 7113 breathes with human b., 6440 brief as giving b., loiia by the gate of b., 7743 call the fleeting b., 44ob Chaucer whose sweet b., 6455 draw thy b. in pain, 266b dulcet and harmonious b., 2tga ecstasy come to b., 10383 everything that hath b., 2ja
fail

hate were why men b., 10315 hear bronze Negroes b., 10765 heart pause to b., 5595 his native air, 4023 if such there b., 5i8b not his name, 541 b prayer for all beneath, 8773 slaves cannot b. in England,

though

to

b.

life,

6465

457b thou thereon


thoughts that

didst
b.,

only

b.,

441 b

sun and

b.,

6993

fancied life in others' b., 4pgb flattered its rank b., 556b fluttered failed for b., 7i2b

yearning to b. free, 8173 you but knock b. shine, 3083 Breathed, first true gentleman that b., 3023 killing chills, 824*
still

away b., 2523 from one mother both draw


fly

b. in sighs,

4osb

b.,

79
give hautboys b. he comes, 3713 giver of b. and bread, Sosb he giveth b., 503 heslthy b. of morn, 5843 heaven's b. smells wooingly,

Hampden
44ob

heart at rest within b., heart in some quiet b., hold me to your deep b., hope springs in human b., in thy b. stars of f3te, lacerate his b., 8843 love lodged in woman's b., Madeline's fair b., 5823
nutrble of her

48?b 8133 7583 4083 4983


3oob 332b

2823 hot and cold with same I sing on one b., 94gb
if

Breathes all night for me, &54b enjoys air it b., 5o8b hell itself b. out, 263b of nations ssved, 561 b there the man, 51 8b upon bank of violets, 2513 with human breath, 644b Breathing and sighing round it,

b.,

763

b.

terrible

as

terminations,

2463
is

snowy

b.,

marched b. forward, 668b mark on red b., 626b


master passion in
niy
b., 4093 my b., 2893 lesrned b., igsb N3ture's nunnery of thy chaste b., 358b

baby at

in treetops scarce b., 4793 in his nostrils, 303 68a kept b. to cool his pottoge, Isst b. most V3lued, 7633 latest b., of love's last gasp

He than b., 654!) health and quiet b., 5803 household laws, 5123 music b. from her face, 358b revenge, 6843 ib talking coeval with b., 39 of lips one b., 10863 two
closer

797b

whether

pairs

2iib
6s2b 5o8b lightly draws love endures for b., 7733 make them as breath made, 449a mist from b. of wind, 9263 mouth-honor b., 2863
life

Breathless,
b.,
its b.,

b. is esting, 923 ranging b. on

fate,

of mortal

of

huge Mississippi, 7i3b one thought in b. snother on


tongue, ngb pe3ce within my b., 94b to pressed with excitement
b.,

10593

upon her patient b., 2670 same heart in every b., 7nb as b. of doves, 99 ib soft soft hand softer b., 5813 soothe 3 savage b., sgib soul wears out b., 55gb b spit brown get hairy b., 947 sweetness flows into b., 8843 tamer of human b., 439b that gives rose, 7 sob
sail

my quiet b., 5&2b never drawn b. of life, 883b no b. at all, s8ob of autumn's being, 56gb of life, 5b, 88 3b
of new-mown bay, ox>5b of self-respect, io48b of the night wind, 7i4b of vernal shower, 442a poetry b. of knowledge, 5113 2D princes but b. of kings, 49 rehearsing Istest b., 10793 rides on posting winds, 2913 say with final b., 6963 slowly chilling b., 714* some of us out of b., 7463 summer's ripening b., 2243 sweet is the b. of morn, 345b sweeter ne'er drew b., 7043 thought takes b. away, 7203 thy b. W3S shed, 88gb to cool pottage, 683 to l3st moment of b., 4473 toil of b., 5303 twilight hour of b., 8gob utter sweet b., 23ob want of words lack of b., 34o,b

thy b. encloseth my heart, 2173 trembles in the b., 5183 truth hath a quiet b., 2263
turtle's b.,

10043

two souls dwell in my b., 478b W3il or knock the b., 3503 we3riness toss him to my b.,

622b flung us on hill, 9933 with adoration, 5123 Breath's 3 ware that will not keep, &52b Bred, dainties b. of a book, 22 ib en bswn in brier patch, 8143 I 3m American b., 9$2b me long ago, 8533 where is fancy b., 23$b Bredon, bells sound on B., 8533 Breeches Bible, 5b cost red b. blue, 5333 cost 3 crown, 10853 band in b. pocket, 5&4b Macaulay 3 book in b., 5233 women wear the b., giob Breed and haunt, 2823 border nor b. nor birth, 87 2b careful of b. of horses, 38ia fesred by their b., 2*6b happy b. of men, 226b

we

Hyla b., 9265 if sun b. maggots, 26ob

no waters

b. nor break, loSob

Wedding Guest beat


what
Breast-burned,

b.,

524b

bis b. forges, s8gb

named B., 6*6b Breastie, panic's in thy b., 492b of faith, 553 Breastplate what stronger b. than heart,
2153
Breasts

or England b. agsin, 2113 resolute b. of men, 7043 use doth b. habit, 2213

blows

of

circumstance,

6 5 ob

manBreeding, b3d b. 3nd vulg3r ner, 913 without b., -10333 Burgundy eating drinking b., 7003 good b. is conceding, 7645 lilacs out of dead land, 10023
test of man's b., 8363 write with ease to show b.,

brown b., io22b come to my woman's


her b. are dun, 2945

weary of
b,,

b.,
till

592b
time lose
b.,

2823

when
will

b. blew back, 7s4b

be

4823

12O9

Breeds
Breeds,
b. contempt, 764b lesser b. without Law, Sysb Breeze, Athena sent favorable b.,

INDEX
familiarity

Bridegroom

all

night

through,

763,

coming

out of his chamber, i7b

fresh as a b., agSa

653
battle

happy

and the

blow through fair b. blew, 524b


flag to April's b.,

b., sgyb life like b.,

in

my

i05ib

lyeth

b. Hesper brings, 8543 death, 2885 between bride and b.,

Bright, best of dark and b., 5fc8b billows smooth and b., 74^ bracelet of b. hair, 3o6b container can contain, iosb countenance of truth, 3jgb creature scorn not one, 51 fb dark with excessive b., 3445

g88b-g8 9 a

6o$a folds rippling in b., 65gb free as the b., 5183 ghost fled like fluttering

mourn

as

b.

with them, 410

day is done, 28ga day so cool so calm


early
b.

went forth to meet b., 44* Bridegrooms brides and bridal


b.,

n8b

cakes, 3igb Brides, as lion

on the sea, 52 ib of morning moves, 6ssb snuff thee up sea b., 6g5b
is

bridegrooms cakes, sigb

woos his and b.

b.,

445 a

bridal

edges of world, 9403 exhalation in the evening, 2982 eye of heaven shined b., sooa eyes of danger, 8243
girdle furled, 7145 gleam of noble deeds, 7gb
glories afar shine b., 3153 glory b. tragic thing, 7393 goddess excellently b., 3O2a

b., 3*54 transient chaste, 37*5

so

spring-laden b. sinister, 8gga tyranny in tainted b., 4532 Breezes dusk and shiver, 6450 genial b. rare in spring, sunset b. shiver, 865b
thereafter

Bridge, body swung beneath b., 79 1D broken arch of London B., 595b

by rude b., 6o3a cobweb b. from

mind,

866a

hard medal, yggb

they

had mild

b.,

Breezy call of morn, 44<>a Breitmann, Hans B. gife a barty,

Brekekekex, gaa

Brennt

Paris, lo

Brent, bonny

brow was

b.,

494b

Brer Fox he lay low, 8143


Brethren, for b. to dwell together,

22b
forget love
to

friends
b.,

and

b.,

36b
least of these

6033 twenty men crossing b., 9553 b. crossed, 6503 when thy 682a youth build b. to moon, Bridges, crossing twenty b., 9553 forbids to sleep under b., 8o2a

don't cross b., 6243 grave a covered b., 624a London B. broken down, London B. falling down, of asses, io$b of Sighs, 556b of time, 77b stood on b. at midnight, that arched the flood,

harmony in her b. he saw lady b., io88b


10933

eye,

J58b

honor

b.,

268b

862b

in heaven's jeweled crown, 7582 incalculable soul, logob

62 ib

earth when thou risest, 43 the ring of words, 824b keep up your b. swords, 2)*b ladies whose b. eyes, 3353
is is

lamps shone
land
little
is b.,

o'er, 555b 68ga package, 96^

little tight little, 768b merged with b. air, io65b

my
b.,

44*
field,

our b. already in we be b., 6b


Breve, la vie est
Brevis, vita b. est,

4653

Bridle, between spur and b., 3253 a gae his b. reins a shake, 494 taxed horse with taxed b., 5223

moon
more

shines moonstill as
b.

b.,
b.,

2353 5$gb

than

Mayday mom,
2zsa

75 ib

Bridled, millions saddled

and

b.,

482b
musical as b. Apollo's lute, my b. mane forever, 4873 neither pale nor b., 10793 no b. reversion in sky, not gold that showeth b., October's b. blue weather, old age serene and b., orange b., 3603

88b

3623
Brief
b.,

Brevity, its body b., 527a soul of wit, 26ob

as

lightning

in

collied

Brewer's, I am a b. horse, 24oa Brews, as he b. so shall he drink,

Brewed, 734b

taste

liquor

never

3O23

night, 228b as water falling, lona as woman's love, 2633 s beauty has word so b., 944 chronicles of the time, 26 ib crowd into two b. words, 52ob

4o6a i55b
741 a

5153

than Muse, 85sb Bribe, too poor for b., 442a


livelier liquor
tell

Bribes,

everyone

take b.,

December day, 626b 88ob dreamy kind of delight, hours and weeks, 2943
life

particular star, 26gb patines of b. gold, 2351* pearl 3nd crystal shining

b.,

6g2a
Brick,

here our portion, 687b

no more straw

to

make

b.,

little b.

8a
whistle on a b., 10753 Bricks alive to testify, 2i5b and sermons, 76jjb

authority, 2?ob out out b. candle, 286b rude b. recitative, 7o2b thanksgiving, 7753 thus b. is grief, loiia
transit

gilded
lie to

b., 9450 throw b.

where

dreams

cross,

at,

76sb

loosb

a city of b., i24b somebody's always throwing b., 95*b in Brickyard, dewdrops gathered b., 864a b. and brides Bridal, bridegrooms cakes, 3igb of earth and sky, 3233 Bride, barren b., 4o6b bridegroom seek your b., 854* encounter darkness as a b., 271 a holy city as a b., 58b in her rich adornin', 8 lib and bridelyeth between b. groom, g88b-g8ga never turns to b., 8s2b of quietness, 5833 paced into the hall, 5240 society my glittering b., 5i6a Bride-bed, thought b. to have decked, 266a Bridechamber, can children of b.

Rome

when

b. I

become obscure, i24a

4903 perseverance keeps honor b., 268b pluck b. honor from moon, 238b pomp ascended jubilant, 3473 all burning b., pretty Babe 2iob in reversion sky, 4063

when our b. light has set, H4b Briefcase of enthusiasm, losGb Brier, bred en bawn in b. patch,
8143 sharp ez bamboo b., 8i4a thorough bush thorough b., 22ga Briers, full of b. is working-day world, 247b
sin's

seraphim in burning row,


shoots

of everlastingness, sleep sleep beauty b., 4883


softest clothing

wooly

b.,

486b

spouse
st3r

so

b.
I

and

would

clear, 3083 were steadfast,

5813
their

things
tiger

memory fair and b., come to confusion,


tiger
b., 2g4b burning
b.,

36*b 228b
4S9a

Brig,

mate of

Nancy

b.,

thought thee
torch

transom of merchant b., Brigade, Light B., 6523 thy b. with cold cascade, was b., Bright, all calm as it
all

and casement, 583b


4** a

things

b.

beautiful,

684b

and battering sandal, 8o3b and violet-crowned, 7gb


angels are b.
angels' visits
still,

used key always b., wherever b. sun sh3ll shine, 2ggb with freedom's light, 627b

young lady
youth passes
9igb
3853

named
swiftly,

B.,

917

28sb

773
.

short

and

b.,

b. flower, Bright-colored, victory

mourn, 41 b

Apollo's lute, 222a ib April shakes out her hair, 98 beauteous b. creation, 1523

soon Brightened, countenance

b.,

5i6b

1210

INDEX
his prospects b. t Brightening, all

Broken
British sneer, 68ob

449*
b. glance,

Bring ihe rathe primrose, 3393 with thee jest, 3j4b


Bringer of that joy, 2 job of unwelcome news, 2413

8835
b.,

stony B. stare, 652a structure of B. sentence,

the wit Brightens, Brighter, allured to b,

how

gigb

4o*b

worlds,

Bringeth forth his fruit in season,


i6b thee into a good land, loa to light the shadow of death, i5a Bringing his sheaves with him,

449b
emits a b. ray, 4470 in some b. clime, 47oa look b. when we come, 560* best of sons of Brightest and

warrior queen, 45ga have British-Americans, with B., 82 ib


Britons,

done

morning, 5493
best and b. come away, 5733 fashion's b. arts, 4503 flashes of thought, yosb

asb owls to Athens, gia whom thou takest iioa

in

secret,

heaven of invention, 2433

wood burn b., $i4b sometimes hath b. day a cloud, 2i4b though the b. fell, 28sb wisest b. meanest, 4ogb
old
Brightness,

Brings desired timely things, 8543 fortune b. in some boats, 291 a loathing to stomach b., 2302
loosened spirit b., 7$8b love remembered such wealth b., 292a to pass every word, 78b wretchedness that glory b., sgob yew to deck my grave, 486a Brink, scared to go to b., looob tread upon b. of meaning, 4*8b Brinkmanship, looob Briny, along b. beach, 745b Brioche, qu'ils mangent de la b.,
Brisk,
airs

air to B. dearest, 6*6a never will be slaves, 4202 while B. true, 7273 bonds were b,, Brittle, dream 774b of is b., 7742 glass years Broached, Christmas b. mightiest ale, 5igb death has b. him to, 475b

Broad acres patent of


733*
as

nobility,

ten

thousand

beeves,

731 a

brooks too b. for leaping, crimes b. blown, 2642

53b

ancestors

cut

off

b.,

down

b.

way young and unre-

993 a

gretting, i$$a.

from the air, goob not lost original b., 34*b when god-given b. comes, 7gb
falls

famous English poet, 5143 is the way, 41 b limbo large and b., $44b

Brignall

banks

wild

and

fair,

man

is

52ob
Brilliance, minute b., 9793 Brilliant and warm, logsa envy of b. men, gioa

margin

too b., 7082 to my life, 6832.

martial

b.

or grave,

moon milky sky, 88oa Brillig and slithy toves. 745a Brim, bubbles winking at b., s8sb filled to b. with glee, 768a o'er night's b. day, 66 ib
primrose

45 8b

and giddy-paced

times, 2523 as bee in conversation, 42gb


life,

Brisking about the

444b

by

river's

b.,

sogb

sparkles near the b., 555b

Brimming over with curds, 747a Brimstone bed at break of day,


533 a
fire

Brisk's the London air, g47b Bristol fashion, 6783 three sailors of B., 66ob Britain, battle of B., 92 ia

passage b. to hell, io4b where b. ocean leans, 447b with b. flat nails, 6b Broad-backed hippopotamus, ioo2a Broad-based upon people's will, 65ib Broadcast doings of day and night, 6ggb
industry's planners, 10643 Broadcloth without, 4592 Broader lands better days, 92 ib Broads, fenlands and illimitable
B.,

connection
B.,

between them and

46ob

and

b.,

75gb

Brindled,
hair,

dear

Andrew with
before

country for heroes, 866a


b.

B road -s tree ted Richmond,


Broadway, 944a
Broccoli,
it's

gsib

io4ib
to
B.,

fight
first

on
at

alone, gz$b

give

regards

8ajb

Heaven's

command,
i4oa

Bring

all

Heaven

mine

42oa
limits

eyes, 3S 6a balloon talloon of mind, 88aa can I b. him back, iab cease to ask what morrow will
b.,

wins

of B. laid bare, that once was B., 41 $b last battle, 9243

ma

Britain's,

ambassador

from

B.

crown, 56a

chance b. us through,

ynb
yi4b
b.

forgot was B.

glory, 7262

Brod, wer Broider world upon loom, SySb Broke, all hell b. loose, 3463 bank at Monte Carlo, 82 la cable b. anchor lost, 2i6b cable that in storm ne'er b.,

b. dear, 10464 nie sein B., 621 a

down fruit unheard of, 8993 down my gray hairs, 7b


eternal

Britannia

needs

no

bulwarks,

33a
chancel window-squares, 7843 come in well keep ye b., 8gob die in molding Sheridan, 5593

note of sadness,
all

rule le B., 42oa


Brither,
British,

evening star you b.

things,

Tarn

lo'ed

him
to

like
B.,

b.,

6gb fear Greeks even when they


gifts,

made him and then


i78a

b.

mold,

n8a

allegiance

46ob

come back B.
dirty B.

forth a son, 393 forth children in sorrow, fresh showers, 57ob go Death b. her, 9073

soldier, coaster, 9473

Sygb

my
gijb 4&4b
3953

high-blown

pride b.

under

6a

Empire and United


government best
greatness

States, 921 b

me, 2g8b no promise served no end, 4073

friendliness of B. Empire,

when time

is b.,

2283

model,
nation,

Broken and a

contrite heart, igb

good old bugle, 747b


in lion among ladies, 2303 it to achievement, 84b me a beaker of wine, gob

of

B.

Grenadier,

nooa

me arrows of desire, 4gob me my bow, 4gob me my chariot of fire, me my spear, 4gob men to match mountains* much money as 'twill b., my kisses b. again, 27 ib

hold B. as rest of mankind, 47ob I smell blood of a B. man, 2793 B. if Empire last thousand
4gob
if

arch of London Bridge, 595b be merciful to b. reed, 2073 bow tensely strung easily b., 1263 by sorrow spirit b., 24b
cheerful
factory

hesrts

now

b.,

years, 92 ib

windows always

b.,

542b g$2b
b.,

8s6b J52b

B. went by water, 4&4b life and institutions, 9213 liquidation of B. Empire, 924^ maxim of B., 91 gb

flutes of Arcady, 8ggb fortune like glass easily

i25b
glass obscured or b., io8oa

never good to b. bad news, 288a redemption from above did b., 534* silent thought can b., 5o8b
slovenly ?3 8 ? suit in

unhandsome

corpse,

Supreme Court, 9823

Sweeney to Mrs. Porter, ioo2b

people like to be told worst, 922b piece of B. manhood, 57$b power of B. fleet, gijb prime minister returned, SgSb public in fit of morality, 5953 refusal to accept defeat, gsgb shadow of B. oak, 454b

golden bowl be b., 293 he has departed withdrawn b.


out,

nob

heap of
heart

b. images, 1002 a

lies here,

hell's b. loose,

5g6b 2o6a
b. hesrt, b. vessel,

how but through


I

8413
i8a

am

like

1211

Broken
Broken
it

INDEX
up
for daily bread,

7743 land of b. hearts b. heads, 91 8a laughs at b. hammers, g4&b life's bubble b. f g^b more than ocean water b., g$8a Nature's social union, 4gsb not with club heart b., 7$8a oar and gear of dead men, ioo6a

Broomstick, Old Glory on b., 864a write finely upon b., gSga Broomsticks, all their b. and
tears, 88ib Broth without any bread, 10952

Brothers all in honor, sioa all the b. too, s&b

and
are

sisters
evil,

beware, 8773

33

Brother,

am

not
:

man and

b.,

as b. live together, 623a band of b., 2453

and companion
57 a

tribulation,

on earth b. arcs, 6655 picked up b. point, ioi6a


pitcher b. at the fountain, sga
b. lost, 10575 renewal of b. relations, resting upon b. staff, 46ia staff of this b. reed, jsb

be my b. or I kill you, 46ga Big B. watching, 10535 brown-frocked b., gosa came with subtilty, 7a
critic b.

from bay, 7iob forty thousand b., 2663 good-bye b., 8433 high beyond all stars, 4g7a linsey-woolsey b., 4i3b
call

mankind knows men

ransomed

of artist, 7g8b

777 a

things b. and scattered, go7b things uncomely and b., 88ob

b. Sleep, 5683 death's b. sleep, iiga devil to Despair, 8o6b every one said to his b., 333 every sword against his b., 353

Death and

two gross b. statues, g88b unto the ground, jib wall burning tower, 88jb wheel b. at the astern,
with storms of
state,

far off, 26b

sga

sgga
b.,

fight against his b., $ib follow the plow, 8073 gently scan b. man, 4g$b given b. dust to eat, 8g8b
b. who had friend, half b. of world, 67ga I that insect b., 7o8a lawless linsey-woolsey b. t

waiting time my b., 7g7b ye are b. ye are men, 5383 Brought, Antony b. drunken forth, 28ga before the mountains were b. forth, 2oa daughters of music b. low, *ga death into the world, 34ib
forth

b., 4073 sons kindred slain, 4iob valiant sisters virtuous, no4b

wound

heart

that's
b.,

had

9655

Brokenhearted, half

hoped we were b., 775a languish b., 764b


lean above
b.,

5545

am

352b

we had ne'er been b., 4g4a Bromide number one, giob


Bronze, hear b. Negroes breathe,

98 ib

little b.

sweet b., 6oia of rich, 835b loved him like a b., 495b
life

this continent, 6sga to knees, io66a to glory, 64 ib mouse will be b. forth, 1242 never b. to mind, 4g4b nothing into this world, ssa over vast and furious ocean,

on

me down me home

3*9*
palsy to bed, g88b ravens b. him bread, 133

man and
more

b.,

close

456a than b., 8772

mangled by the monument more


b., i22b stone b. stone

b. spear, 64b lasting than

my

fellow

man my

b.,

10043 work with breathing b., Bronzed lank man, g5$a Brooch, bow or b. or braid,
steel,

no b. near the throne, of loved Assisian, 9052 of the Angle, 3255


offended
is

7o6b iiob

in this city, 5ob b. us hither, sigb Brought'st Thy sweets along with

up

which

Thee, 3223 Brow, athlete crowned in sweat


b.,

of

uga

harder to be won,
his b.

i45a

*5*

Remus and
life,

knew

this

ii7b

of gold ful sheene, i66a Brooches, make you b. and toys,

safety for

my

son b. shipmates,

i74a
shall

bind them heart and b., 8072 bonny b. was brent, 4945 candid b., 843b dangerous b. by night, 2$4b flushing his b., 58ib
forty

8s4b Brood like decrepit herons, Sob mothers a bloody b., 10353 of Folly, 335b

on Christian thing, io57a-b Broodest o'er troubled sea, 58ob Broodin' over bein' a dog, 8iia Brooding, birds sit b. in snow, 2233 on country's fate, 688a on God, io66a toads b. in wells, io64b Broods, darkness b., 4a Brook, dwelt by the b. Cherith,
133 many can b. the weather, 2223 noise like hidden b., 5255

2453 sinned against my b. the i57b sleep death's twin b., 643 sleep the b. of death, 643,
b.,

be

my

winters
seated

besiege

thy
b.,

b,,

ass,

agib
2642 grace Helen's beauty in b. of Egypt,

on

this

2iob
sticketh closer than a b., still to my b. turns, 447b

no wrinkle on azure
253

now your
pain

Sun who brings us day, i57a


the b. the real thy
tail

b., 557b b. is beld John, 4gib of labor, 8585 of lip of eye of b., 2gsb

to all to dragons, iSa

b., 86gb hangs down, 8?4b creatures, io77b

and
in

anguish
beauty's

wring
b.,

b.,

parallels

agsb

where is my b. gone, 5743 which of us known b., io4gb whom someone should save,
826a
cheat, is6b yet line up with brother, g48b Brotherhood bind rich and poor, 757* crown good with b., 84ga intellect triumphed over b.,

smooth water where


igga

b.

deep,

would brother

promise written on my b., 7582 pure unclouded b., 744b shine upon b. today, 8153 so grim mouth so prim, ioo4b sweat of b., 682b tinge b. with sunset glow, 8ogb upon his b. shame ashamed,
2253 view with

went to the b., 10975 where b. and river meet, 62 ib


willowy b. that turns mill, 5oob Brookland, far in western b., 8533 Brooks, as b. make rivers, 3723 as hart panteth after water b.,
iga

wrinkled

b,,

135*
62

weariness not on b., 7i5b wet with honest sweat,

books in running
golden
sands

b,,

2475
b.,

for fishers of song, 8463


crystal

3063

I sing of b.,

3igb

shallow b. and rivers wide, 3345 strow b. in Vallombrosa, 3423 too broad for leaping, 8$3b Broom, beat barrel with b., gssa

love the b., 56b of venerable trees, ftijja that binds brave, 8653 Brother-in-law haberdasher, 755b Brotherly, feel it so b., io68b love, 51 a, 56a Brother's, called b. father dad,

where he got that high b., 1593 wrinkle deeper on b., 5550 Brown, baked me too b., 744*> bread and the Gospel, s86b
breasts,

io22b
to gray,

bright nightingale, 772b

236a
keeper, 6a mote in b. eye, 41 a

changing from b. suit 9 86b dark b. is river, 8233 Father B., giga

new

b.

sweepeth

dean,

under arm carried b., Brooms, new b. sweep well,

i84b iog5b

murder, 2630
sad mad b. name, 77 6a voice of thy b. blood, 6a

i5b

heath and shaggy wood,

hair and speaks small, *66b hair over mouth, ioosb hair sprent with gray, 7141

5^

1212

INDEX
Brown
hills

Build
io68a
b. v 2033 24a worm in the b., *5*b Buddha, go for refuge to B., Sob Budding historians, 9973 Buddy, Christ Himself b., 10783 Budge, I'll not b. an inch, siga Ten Commandments not b.,

melted into spring,

Brute,

beast

b.

bastard,

Bud, rose

is

sweeter in

68sb
in b. study, 202b b. hair, 727b Jeanie with light long and lank and b., 52 sa before b. me, 701 a path long man's burden, 87 5b

beauty and valor, 8033 chuck 'im out the b., 87 ja


et tu B., nib, 2551 love of a b., 6426 b. hissed countess, 88?b Brutes, eating and drinking like
i

this b. of love,

you

meadows

b.

and

sere,

574b

b.,

7o2b
b.,

longer, 6843 prefer philanthropy of Captain


B., 684a iioia quick b. fox,

myrtles b., 3383 not Old B. any

exterminate

8443
divine, 72 ib
b.,

made

b.

men men

man's difference from


nation of b., &44a not born to live like without you, gSgb
Brutish, nasty b.

794a
i6ob
i8a

b.,

some gave them b., icgsb spit b. my son, g47b


strong b. god, ioo6a very plain b. stone, 6343 when all trees b., 691 a

and

short,

Brutus and Cassius not displayed,


i4oa Caesar had his B., 464b dear B., 253b exit B. now she'll read,

sedulous ape to Sir B., 8243 Brown-frocked brother, 9053 B. plain, 6643 find Browning, from B. some Pomegranate, 6i7b

Browne,

Thomas

issb

an honorable man, 2550 makes mine greater, 25a no orator as B. is, 255^
is

set

of vocal cords, io4ya


teach-

hang
is

it

all

Robert

B.,

g88b

what, 668a Meredith prose B., 8s8b Mrs. B. guard silence,


picked
since

g$ib
8573 5g6b

you also B., ii2b Bubble blown by successful er, 8i8b fire burn caldron b., 28sa
gonfalon g62b honor but an empty
life
b.,

694b Buds, cankers in musk rose b., 22gb darling b. of May, sgib forgot to blow, 7&oa of barren flowers, 7752 young b. sleep in root, 58oa Buff and the blue, 4g6b bare to the b,, 8s4b Buffalo, elephant with sign saying B., 68 4 b home where b. roam, 8o8a thought he saw b., 7473 Buffalo Bill's defunct, 10302 Buffaloes, water b. neurasthenic, 997 a Buffet, not wise who b. against
love,

Buffets,

82b blows and

b.

of world,

284a
37 ib
fortune's b. and rewards, 26$a Buffon, is it Aristotle Pliny B.,
4<i6a

fair-coined

Chaucer was

soul, alive,

b.,

Browning's, Mrs. B. death relief, 6gia Brown's, John B. body, 7553 Browns, beeches in b. and duns,

life's

b., 2ioa troubled

b.,

gi4b

Buffoon and poet, 8i5b


fiddler and b., j68b Buffs, private of B., 6563 the B., $7sa steady Bug, flap b. with gilded wings,

784b
Brows, bliss in our b. bent, 2873 earned with sweat of b., 1943 greener from b., 65 ib like gathering storm, 49$b nightcap decked his b., 4473 nodded with his darkish b., 6sb not seen in either of our b.,

like b. on fountain, 5201 no b. so iridescent, 8i8b now a b. burst, 4o8a

chemist

reputation, 24ga world's a b., 2ogb Bubbles, borne like thy b. ward, ss8a earth hath b., 28 la

on-

man and i6a

his

dwellings as b.,
us,

aiib
of dauntless courage, $42b Browsed, cattle b. on plain, gggb Bruce has aften led, 4g6a
Briider, alle

millions of b. like tattoo soap b., io47a we* buy, 6g2a

6sob

Menschen werden

B.,

winking at brim, 58sb Bubbling and loud-hissing urn,


45&a
cry of swimmer, 56oa-b with b. groan, sinks

497*
Bruise, ax fitter to b., 35ib better for b. than arnica, 666b it shall b. thy head, 6a thou shalt b. his heel, 6a Bruised reed shall he not break,

557b

4iia snug as b. in rug, 4220 Bugle, blow b. blow, 648b bring good old b. boys, 747b one blast upon b. horn, 52oa sound upon b. horn, 6473 Bugles, blare of b., 866a blow out you b., 994a calling for them, io28b of b. going by, 86oa cry what are b. blowin' for, 87ga Build a new world, gSab beneath stars, jggb except the Lord b. the house,
arch to b. upon, 776b from bottom up, g7ob Great Society, io64a houses and inhabit them, s$b I must b. church, if io5?b
experience
lofty

33 a together crushed and b., 4o$a Brunswick, Hamelin town's in B., 66aa Brunt, bear b. pay arrears, 666b
stands b. of Brush, blind
life,

5553 wellspring, 7gob Buccaneer, Morgan the B., 74gb Buccaneers of buzz, 738b Buck stops here, g84a
flings,

venom

Bucket down and full of I, 228a drop of a b., 32b

tears

am

84b
b.

hand

my

wing,

4893
essential in painting, 1533

of whitewash, 75ga old oaken b., 5gsa past a b. of ashes, g48b

intending to b. tower, 47a rhyme, sg8a me nest on greatness of God,

painter's b. consumes dreams, 88 3b structural basis established by


b.,

1483

whether chisel pen b., 88aa whitewash and long-handled b.,


fine a b., 533b534a hand has b. away, 48ga Brushed, past palms on staircase, io5ga Brushwood sheaf, 663a Brutal arm appear, 88sa Brutality, industry without art b., 699* oppressor commit b. openly*

work with so

Brutalizing lower

class,

7i6b

up doun as b. in a welle, i67b Buckets into empty wells, 4583, 5 a 3a two b. filling one another, 228a Bucketshop of refrigerator, &77b Buckhurst, I would B. choose, 3&2a Buckingham, changing guard at B. Palace, g6gb so much for B., sg2b Buckle, pride plume here b., 8o3a Buckler, his truth shall be thy shield and b., 2ob Buckles, silver b. on knee, iog8a Bucks, fat black b., 952b Bud, canker lives in sweetest b., 2g2a in age I b. again, 323^ not as in b. of spring, so8b

me

straight, 6g2b middle-aged b. woodshed, 6823 fortune build on sand, gi8b on on human heart, 66 ib pair nor b. nor sing, 527b schoolrooms for boy, 686a small cabin b. there, 87gb thee more stately mansions,

6335
they labor in vain that b.
it,

22b
throne of bayonets, &5gb time to b. up, 2?b trout crystal stair, 944*

upon

this rock b.
b.,

my

church,

what we plan we

722b your ship of death, g86b 68aa to moon, b. bridge youth

1213

Builded
Builded better than knew, 6oa was Jerusalem b. here, 4gob wisdom hath b. her house, 23b Builders, stone which the b. refused, 22a Buildeth on vulgar heart, 2423 Building beginning of arts, 851 a
castles in Spain, 1713 principal beauty in a
b,,

INDEX
Bulrush, seeking knot in a b., io5b Bulrushes, ark of b., 8a Bulwark, civic genius b. of democracy, 79sb
floating b. of our island, 444b

33$b

never failing, i7gb of continuing liberty, g72a of Greece famous Athens, 7gb
of our liberty, 6$Ba. Bulwarks, Britannia needs no
b.,

Burdens, bearing b. of government, 63ga had such b. on mind, 88ta in Burdensome, school which nothing b., i48b when life is b., 87a Bureau, super legal aid b., g67a

roofs of gold, 24ja


stole life o' the b.,

three things in

b.,

284a 477b
bells,

with

tower

and

4833
I

537 great b. of liberty, 4463

wood brings forth 6sa Banker Father, 7343 Burglar Burglaree, with a little b., 7665 Burglary, flat b. as ever commitBurgeoning
ted, 2465 vary piracy with b., 766b Burgonet, arm and b. of

Buildings, blighted b., io63a he may never enter, 478a you may have all the b., 7413 Builds. Devil b. chapel there,

Bum, belly shoulder b., 88sa Bumbast 'out blank verse, 2o6a
Bumble, the law B., 66gb
is

men
B.,

a ass said Mr.

Burgundy,
principle

naive

domestic

385*

Bumblebee
fly,

in

cannot
treat

heaven in
hell

hell's

despair,
b.,

in

heaven's despite,

48ga 48ga

10623
b.,

wretch with B., 386b

marsh

hen

secretly

7g6b

Moses on b., io4ib Bumblebees, life among


io6aa-b

Burial,

no

b.

this

pretty

pair,

io84a

palaces in

Kingdom

come, 9 47 a

phoenix b. phoenix' nest, 3545 phoenix b. spicy nest, 327a though he b. glorious temples, 6oab valiant dust b. on dust, 875b what man b. has but a day, 94ib
Built absolute trust, 28 ib against will of gods, 6$b almost lost that b. it, 33 za before I b. wall, g26a bicycle b. for two, 88$b fortress b. by Nature for herself, 2265 a church, 4573 house that Jack b., iog8b in such logical way, 6343

Bump, go Bumper of

b. in the night, claret, 552b

iog8b

register of b. signed, 67ob Buried, bodies are b. in peace,

of good liquor, 4813 Bumps along the dusk, Biga miss many hard b., 3&7a Bumptious, self-confidence
plete

com-

and

b.,

g87b

God

Bunbury, invaluable invalid B., 84oa Bunch, rich b. of red roses, g8ia Bunched in mutual glee, 10435 Bunches, shakes down few b. at least, 8s85 Buncombe and millions mostly
fools, 57 8a

to be b. obscurely, sogb Caesar bled, 6sgb and is b. with them, 85b Evangelist Saint John, 6g7a hatchet, 8953 heart's dead never b., ioi7a here children born one b., 6s6b him before prime, io88b lie deep b., 77a life, 7i2a old Adam b., 6ib

body

dies

on Sunday, iog6a outworn b. age, 292})


putrid
soil

in the eclipse, 338b love b. on beauty, 37a


soul pleasure-house, 6453 nests in beard, 67ab of just a syllable, 7s8b Rome not b. in one day, i84a ruined love when b. anew, 2g4a science b. with facts, 8zgb

my

Bundle, great b. of grief, g4qa Bunghole, stopping a b., 266a Bunk, been in his b. below, 7g2a history more or less b., ?i4a Buns, hot cross b., logsa Bunting, baby b., iog4b Bunyan, swart convict B., 6g6b

corpse

of liberty,

977b
6943

dead and b., 6oa was where Michael Furey b., g68a Buries, day one b. her, 7oa

good to crucified

be

b.

in,

Buoy

too

small

for

sight,

,7gb

Burke

empires in common grave, 466a universal darkness b. all, 4143 because brings great
thought, 7ia Kelly and B. and Shea, 8iob
girl

Burbled as it came, 745a Burden, assume b. of


ioi6a bear any b., i072b bear his own b,, 54a borne the b., 43b

France,

till

we have
b.

b. Jerusalem,

4gob

Burma

a-settin',

8735

i4b Bulben's, bare Ben B. head, 8853 Bull, a Cock and a B., 43a Assyrian B., 6523 cloud that looked like b., 91 a greatest of all is John B., 56ab
places,

which

desolate

Burn and

brown man's

b.,

87sb

changes labor from b. to honor,


shall

rave, io7ob another Troy to b., 88 la at heart of living, io4oa bays b. deep and chafe, 774a better to marry than b., $2a children will b., logsa

handsome

half the b. he was, 9063 as b. that kidnapped

be a

b.,

2ga

Europa,

ma

John B. or Englishman's
side, 5ooa moose, 47b savage b. bear yoke, 24gb Bullen's, dawned from B.

Fire-

great b. upon his back, 3655 grievous b. was thy birth, life hollow existence b., 75ga

eyes,
b.,

439
Bullet,
ballot

stronger

than

billet, 3832, 5ssa that will kill not cast,

635* has its

me

54b

through his head, gooa Bullets, from rifle b. free, 9583 made of lead, 10975 made of platinum, goib paper b. of the brain, 246a word as b. flying, 843a Bullied into following master artist,

my b. is light, 42a not b. our remembrances, of his song, 464a of incommunicable, 552a of long living, 774b of my song, 10845 of nothing to do, 377b of the desert of the sea, of the mystery, soga of the world, 826b
of them on back
is

intolerable, 61 a

loooa

out of vice, 6ua Bullocks, whose talk is of b., $8b Bullpen, waiting sentence in b.,
io76a
Bulls,

prayer weight of another's b., 32 sa white man's b., 875b with superfluous b. loads day, 34ob years are still a b., 84a youth and age equally a b., gsb Burdened, shakes fires in b. air,
,

b. of world, 826b b. of a sigh, 5i8a

dry fields b., 7g6b caldron bubble, 2853 fire b. flag yet terrific b., 537b from brain and breast, gi8b frost itself doth b., 2643 great sphere thou movest in, 2885 heart b. within us, 47b I'll b. my books, 2isb like fabulous candles, io8ob no blazing hearth b., 44oa old wood b. brightest, 3i4b old wood to b., 207b out false shames, g86a out to black, 85sb stars that round her b., 3932 time the fire in which we b., io6ga to the socket, 5i6a violent fires soon b. out, 2260 we b. daylight, zaja with hard gemlike flame, y8ia

48 7 b
b.,

plowman's story of

1275

with grave responsibilities, giob

words that b., 44i*> Burned, and his feet not be 235 black with sun, io22b

b.,

1214

INDEX
fire, 8a Burned, bush candle b. on the table, ioi8a charmed water b, alway, 5255 child fire dreadeth, 1840 feared witches and b. women,

Busy
Business, great b. of life, 77gb he had talents equal to b., i4oa hell where mind own b., 7513
if

b.

with

Burst joy's grape, 5&4a now a bubble b., 4o8a


of music down street, &36a singer to b. into clamor, g%$b Bursts, melodious b., 645b Burthen of the mystery, 5oga

everybody minded

b.,

74sb

8s*b
Christians b. each other, 5603 a furnace, $jb fire of thine eyes, 48ga to be b. f 52b give my body half his Troy was b., 2413 heart ne'er within b., 5185 is Apollo's laurel bough, sigb
feet as if b. in

weight of another's b., 3x51 Burton, great direction B. left, 433 a Bury bones in hideaways, 105 ib
for

in battle or b., 68oa in hands of a few, 757a is business, g6b laid aside b., 35b
life's b. choice,

667b

nothing, 6700 Great Duke, 65 ib


heart at
I
it

and house b., goab out his purse, lySb lojSa my candles are b. out, night's 2252 on the water, sSyb some b. alive, io8ob take fire and his clothes not be
Matilda

Wounded Knee, come to b. Caesar, 25^


fathoms in earth, dead b. their
scarce
stg^b

love only b. in life, 5513 to b., isga love yields marriage damnably serious
102721

b.,

1041 b

money

b.

life,

let

dead,

4ib

may bring money, 533b men ought to mind b., 75oa men some to b. take, 4o6b
his own b., igsa Father's b., 46a no b. carried on at all, no b. like show b. 999 b no better ballast than b., no feeling of his b., 2655 no foreigner do b. here, of America is business, of comic poet, sgib of the samurai, 36sa

living

able to b. dead,

319*

marry ancient them, 333b

people

to

b.

mind mind

men's b. and bosoms, ao7b b. and spend less, 37 5a

b., 2 3

temple of Diana, 33 la topless towers of Qium, 2133 while I was musing the fire b.,
i8b

their buryingplace, 7b no one to b., 10050 we will b. you, lojab Buryingplace, bury me in their
b.,

me

my

in

4i$b
6$$*
i72b
91 la

7b
b.,

Bus, Hitler missed


b. like

897 a

word
battle

a lamp, $ga
light,

Bush
48b

Burning and shining

is b. flower, ggsa of b. gold, 4Qob boy stood on b. deck, 57$b burns out another's b., 2233 candle b. while sleeping, $ogb dove, 97b fire in mind ever b., ig8b for ancient connection, 108 ib is Paris b.,

with God, 6iga beat the b., 1820, 3i8b bird in hand worth two in
afire

b.,

bow

1373

burned with
fear

fire,

8a

keep

home
no

ipiab

fires b.,

giya
ioo6a

let fall

lifetime

b. leaf, io2a b. in moment,


all b. bright,

marie, 342a
pretty roof and tower, 88jb Sappho, 5<5ob seraphim in b. row, $3gb sick and full of b., io75a smell of b. fills air, goib

Babe

2iob

b., 738b each b. an officer, 2i6b good wine needs no b., 1273 jumped into bramble b., iog8a man in b. God meet, 6o2a shield I left beside a b., 68a supposed a bear, 2 sob thorough b. thorough brier, 22ga through grass behind b., g6ga was not consumed, 8a white-flaming b., 10145 Bushel of silver, 8i2b put candle under a b., 4oa words won't rill b., 4223 Bushels, wheat in two b. of chaff,

every blossom on

other people's money, 72 sa overwise in doing thy b., 38a to b., 822b perpetual devotion
politics conviviality, 7O3b sick of its b., 5ioa study to do your own b.,

54b
17 ib

we love, s88a that's true b. precept, 67oa the rest not our b., loosb to be drunk the b. of day, weather attending to b.,
that

talents equal to b., 1403 talk of nothing but b.,

37*a 75gb

what what

a deal of b., 37$b b. is it of yours,

spear horse of air, io86a three words as with b.

2$ib
pen,

497 a
tiger tiger b. bright,

Bushes, author out from b., 975b Bushtails, Him dat give squir'ls
b.,

48ga

gub

your lights

b.,

47a

Burnished, barge like b. throne,

28;b

Bums, adores and

2g2b 4o8b blood b. in veins, yoab candle b. at both ends, lozga from Glee to heaven beacon b., 8523 it b. your clothes, 4&4a not she which b. in 't, 2g$a one fire b. out another's, S23a Shelley with us, 662b
b.,

livery of b. sun,

smell fire

whose gown
unprofitably now, io66a

b., b.,

wasted

oil

what

b.

me

g24a 457a

Bushy eyebrows and message, 8783 Busied with crowded hour, Sosb Busier, yet semed b. than he was, i66b Busily all the night, 6g$b Business above sellin' tinpinny nails, 891 a as usual, gigb best b. father's farm, 6s8b big b. give square deal, 848b could not make dull, 7iob crises at intervals, 8igb denied sight better b., 778b diligent in his b., ssb dinner lubricates b., 475b dirty b., 788b
dispatch dispatch do b. in do b. of
b. quickly, 17 ib the soul of b., great waters, sib day in day, 5o6a

with income at heels, 457a without some dissimulation no b., 4i5b Businesslike, more b. than businessmen, Q27a Businessman give public libr'y to beef thrust, 8gib Businessmen, more businesslike than b., g27a Bussoftlhee mememormee, g6ga Bust, animated b., 44oa
friendly b., looaa outlasts citadel, 6s8a outlasts throne, 782b pallid b. of Pallas, 64sa science of going to b., 6853 Bustle, love of b. not industry,

i3oa
so illustrious, 7383 Busts, picture placed the b. be-

tween, 4ooa three b. all secondhand,

8jia

when the blood b., 25ga Burnside, waly yon b., io88b Burnt of fering, 7a
Burr, I am a kind of b., 272a Burro, no laurel crown for outofferings,

4isb

Busy as a bee, so2b as one-armed man, 864a bee improve each hour, 3g6b bee has no time for sorrow,
curious

35b

economic g7ib

slavery

nobody's

b.,

running b., i35b Burrow, go b. underground, ggoa Burrs and thorns of life, 5oa conversation's b., 6$3a
Burst cannon's roar, first that ever b., hot heart's shell, 6g7a

end of this day's b., 256b everybody's b. nobody's b., 3263


fares disastrously, sosb fiendishness of b. competition,

6a

ggia
fitter

for

new than

settled b.,

2oga

rivets, 244a haunts of men, 574a housewife ply evening care, 44oa how doth the b. bee, 3g6b hum of men, 3353 leisure, 442b monster manunkind, losib nature's b. democracy, 8gga

hammers dosing

8b thirsty fly, 41

1215

Busy
Busy old

INDEX
fool

on

unruly Sun, 3053 686a ground, really b. person, 8s8a riches make one b., 1765 the stop to b. fools, $6ea

Tom

Tiddler's

Buy, bubbles we b., 6g2a cherries which none


Sooa
decline
costly

may

b.,

till

night, 37gb while there's a b. street, io6gb


circling round, tattlers and b.,

as purse can b., 258b to b. repentance, gga desire to b., dispraise thing you

Cabined cribbed confined, 2845 from her c. loophole peep, 336!) Cabinet is formed of gold, 4goa post offices and c. appointments,
Cabinets,
ters c.,

make
draw

6^b
parties
as
lost,

minis-

2693
full

whisper
Busybodies,

44gb
ssa

and

fair

ones come and

b.,

Cable

6goa broke anchor

2i6b
love,

no
I will b. with you, 2323 lose it that b. it with care, 23ia no man might b. or sell, 58a nor can b. tomorrow, 3023

c.

forcibly

as

Butcher baker candlestick-maker,


his father was a b., $65a hog b. for world, g48a Butchered to make Roman holi-

pawn
spoils

intelligence to b. drink,

day, 557 a Butchers, gentle

lojob

with

these

b.,

of

office

not
b.

b.,

6gob

8I2a on seventh day scrape c., 67&a that in storm ne'er broke, 3j*a Cabots talk only to God, 858a Cackle, don't c. w'en fin' wum, 8143 Cackles, codfish never c., iioib groans and dies, 57 ^b Cad, cocoa c. and coward, giga

Butchery, work of b. and desolation, gs2b Butt and very sea-mark, 276a

tomorrow, 3osa two white feet

him, iioib what would you b., 6oob what you do not want, 474*
Buyer, city to perish ii6a
it
is

Cadence from

man named

Yeats,

as an aim or b., 243 a knocks you with b. end, 45ib Butter, cutting bread and b., 66ob eggs pound of cheese, 74ob for royal slice of bread, g6gb guns or b., io4oa in a lordly dish, ua it was the best b., 744s ladling b. from tubs, uoia little bit of b., Q7oa not melt in her mouth, i8$b only make us fat, ios6b and b., quarrel with bread smell of bread and b., and white bread b., 10942 words b. no parsnips, 521 a words smoother than b., igb Butter-and-egg man, g8oa Buttercup, called Little B,, 76sb Buttered, always on b. side, 5&sb bread fall on good side, 553b on which side bread b. iSsb

fixed

if it finds b.,

naught saith the

b.,

25a

beware, isoa a hundred eyes, Buying and selling, 68sb


let b.

needs
it's

324b

10653 harsh c. of rugged line, 36gb of consenting feet, io2gb to his verse a smooth c., 3771 tremulous c. slow, ?i4b Cadets of Gascoyne, 8g6a Cadiz, reeking into C. Bay, 66*3a

no

fish ye're b.,


less b.,

more giving

52ob 914*

Cadmean
Cadmus,

victory, 86b letters C. gave,


si

56ia
c.

Buys, who b. a minute's mirth, 22oa Buzz, buccaneers of b., 738b crowd b. and murmurings, 357b the witty and fair annoys, 41 la B.VJ)., from every B., iO30b

Caeli, fiat iustitia ruant c, 33ob

Caelum, quid io8b

nunc

mat,

mat

c. fiat

voluntas tua, 33ob

By and by

easily said,

26sb

and by God caught eye, io4ob Bye baby bunting, iog4b Bygone days, io52a
only things b. last,

Caesar, appeal unto C., 5ob buried C. bled, 62gb carry C. in your boat, every wound of C., 256a great C.
fell,

ii2b

255b

8ogb
than

had his Brutus, 464^ I come to bury C., 25sa


imperious C. dead, 266a not that I loved C. less, 2553 O mighty C., 255a poor cried C. wept 255b render unto C., 43 sawdust C., ioi8b upon what meat C. feed, 253b with senate at heels, 4ogb without ambition, 747b word of C. stood, 255b Caesar's, all is C., 354 a dead C. trencher, 288a hand Plato's brain, 6o4a self is God's, 354a wife must be above suspicion,

Byproduct

more

valuable

Butterflies

are

already
b.,

yellow,

9 88a botany beetles

product, 8513 Byron, dose thy B., 576a cuts a figure, 58&b from poetry of B. ethics, Lord B. was Englishman, 8i2a

8i8a

mad bad dangerous

to

know,

frogs eat b., gwb laugh at gilded b., *8oa no b. no bees, 5Q2a Butterfly, blue in b., gs?a breaks b. upon wheel, 41 la

Byron's eyes shut in death, 7iia 8iab perhaps Lord B. fault,

Byway
loia

struggle cease, 7iia to heaven, 38sb


b.,

dreaming I was I'd be a b., 58?b

b.,

a Byword, proverb and story and b. through

isa world,

in eternity as b. in air, 8i4b upon road, 87 ib Butter's spread too thick, 746a Butters, Stubbs b. Freeman, noia Butting through the Channel, 947 a Button, Brazil he twirled b.,

3i8a thou shalt become a b., IOD of B., Byzantium, lords and ladies 8833

44sb 8ob pray you undo this b., Buttoned-up and white-chokered, 7g6a Buttonhole, take you a b. lower, 222b Buttons be disclosed, 258b biographies clothes and b., 7643 matched b. pattern sold, 77ob soul above b., 5002 taken of b. off, 8733 Buttress nor coign of vantage,
a8sa
Butts, beast with

little b. at top,

major of

this life,
i

666a
io5b

Ca

ira ca tiendra,

madness of the C., 679!) Cafe every street c., io2oa tan with henna, 9558 of Caftan sense bird, 782a Cage, form c. gilded c., gosa minute within net of gold, io6aa nor iron bars a c., 358b put me in a c., looga robin redbreast in c., 4goa
Caesars,
1

Cabbage, cut a c. leaf, 442b with college education, Cabbages and kings, 746a death seize me whilst setting
i8gb
those

c.,

happy no c. sprouting out,

who

plant

c.,

18 la

many heads

b.

skunk c., 944a Cabin, enter Logan's


445b

8oa the c, sing like birds i' as with c, igob Cages, marriage of my pores, io83b Cain, cruel sons of C., 887a a eye stared at C., 599 set a mark upon C., 6a of man C. might, 6773 Tubal was tiller of the ground, 6a

c.

hungry,

went out from presence

of the

me, 28gb

Buxom
Buy

blithe

and debonair,
2173

a fat pig, iog?a

more fun when c. boy, g8ia mounted to his c., go4b


small
c.

Lord, 6a Caissons go rolling along, 952a Caius is a man, 732b


Cake, bake
c.

a world of happy days, annuity cheap, &7oa apple on corner, loooa

willow

c.

build there, &7 at gate, 25 ib


spirit,

fast as can,

iog*1>

Cabined ample

7i2b

eat c. and have it, iSsb heaven's sugar c., 38 ib

12l6

INDEX
Cake, let see to
Cakes,

Came
Called

them eat

c.,

4$6b
of
c.,

Call back yesterday, 2x73, 3016

substance
c.,

85 ib

bawd a bawd, loib


cattle

some gave plum


all

that

10933
brain,

6g6b

brother back to me, 574* brothers c. from bay, 7iob

and

ale,

*5ib

home, 6gob
c.

bridegrooms brides and bridal c., 3190 Calabash, goodnight Mrs. C., io26b
Calais, find C. lying in

delicate creatures ours, *74b

don't

out National
to
c.

Guard,

macaroni, 1090 a are c,, 43b neither two nor one c., New World into existence, 5073 out of Egypt c. my son, them untaught knaves, 2j8b we are c. to rise, till
it

many

osa
dunno what
fig

Calleth, deep

c.

unto deep,

him, 845b

them

all

by

my

heart,

fig,

losb
c.

Callimachus,

their names, 232 tomb of C., io4b


c.

i87b
Calamities of
life,
c.

first

to

3855
to

nib
warn men,

philosophy

down,

Calling, all

my

and

all

my

art,

and portents

iogb rather be notorious for c., i$4b reckon benevolence and righteousness c., looa Calamitous in drawn-out witticism, 5$6b necessity of going on, to the conquered, gob

for robin redbreast, ji4b forth thundering Aeschylus, 3O3b gods to witness, 2<joa grief at not wanting to c. dead

back, 937b heard country's c., 8?5b heaven and earth to

igoa bugles c. for them, io*8b dignity of high c., 4535 each honest c., 10263 faint and far away, 96 ib followed mercenary c., 8543

witness,

467b
her blessed, *7a Himself a man, 10313

Calamity, child of c., 76oa fortune not satisfied with one

Callooh callay, 7453 Calls back lovely April, 2gib beauty c., s84b death c. ye to the crowd, 327b far c. coming far, 9693
fool c.
if

i25b in English history, Saga in power of no c., 8osa makes c. of so long life, s6sa man's true touchstone, $i6b morale not destroyed by c., 959* no c. greater than lavish dec.,

home the child, 10403 how you c. to me c. to me,


in and invite God, joSb in thy death's head, gtsb it not vain, 5185 let no bird c., 10233 let us c. thee devil, 273b

7843

you anybody

foolish,
c.,

8a

Jerusalem

me Tom,

9343 thy sister

c.,

49 la

^oib

sires,

74b
to
c.,

wedded

sssa
sic c. saevior

Calamus, hinc

quam

ense patet, 3iia Calaveras County, 758b Calcaria, de c, in carbonarium,

loud winds when they c., 5123 me anything, jgob me early mother dear, 645a me horse, 239a me Ishmael, 6gsb me madame, 97oa neighbors in, 10943 nigh unto them that c., 933

not Thee to guard, 875b stated c. to worship, 42 8b who c. me villain, 26 ib Calm, after storm c., logsa after storm comes c., s86b
all
c.

as

it
c.

was bright, g62b

cankers of

world, 2403 contending kings, 2200 so so cool c., 3233 day drifted in sheepish c., 10763 envisage circumstance c., 5845
escape into
c.

i44a
Calculate,

no wisdom can

c.

end,

no man foe, loaia none dare c. it treason, 2ioa


not easy to c. back, g48b nothing c. our own but death,

regions,
free,

434b

evening
for

c.

and

5i2a

4673
Calculated, nicely c. less or more, 5J 7a so c. so malignant, 102 ib take c. risks, g87b Calculating average of virtues,

227b obey the important c,, of running tide, g46b one dear c. for me, 6553

a c. unfit, 3683 gloomy c. of idle vacancy, 43ia he of c. and happy nature, g$b
in
c.

4jj8b

sea every

man

my

soul's c. retreat,

30b

pilot,

366a

77oa
looks so c., 8403 Calculation shining out of other,
it

please to c. it rush candle, sigb saints aid if men c., 5243

no joy but c., 645b peace and public c., 71 2b Peace and Quiet, 33$b

spade a spade, losb


spirits

sum

67oa
defies
c.,

from vasty deep,

477b
careful

Calculations,

upset most

c, 37ga Calculus, common sense reduced to c., 479b

that backing your friends, that which we c. a rose, the fleeting breath, 44ob

quiet innocent recreation, 326b quiet interchange, 4315 region where no night, 32ia sea is c. tonight, 7i4b
so deep, 5123 Soul of all things, 7113 stars in their c., 7iib thou mayst smile, 4763 Calme, luxe c. et volupte", 7073

Caldron, fire burn c. bubble, 2852 of dissolute loves, i46b Caledonia stern and wild, 5193 Caledonia's, support C. cause,
Calendar, a
c,

by right names, through curtains c. on us, 3053 to battle and battle done, 8363 to the earth and sea, 7ooa today his own, 36gb
things
truce to terror, io73b truth obeyed c., 88sa
try
first

look in almanac,

thyself
c.

and

after

c.

Calmer of thoughts, 326a Calmness, law in c. made, 5isa to remember, 7263 Calumniating, envious and c.
time, 2693

God, 76b
striking from c., 6gob Calf and young lion together, gia

unless

they

signals,

io25b

bring fatted c., 473 false as wolf to c., s68b killed c. in high style, 3653 second beast like a c., 57b
trod
Calf's

up your men, 5223 upon all who love freedom,


ioi6b

upon my soul, 25ib when you c. me


wild
will
c.

that

smile,

Calumnies answered best with silence, 3O2b Calumnious strokes, 2583 Calumny, envy c. hate pain, 572a thou shalt not escape c., 262b Calvary, place called C., 47b
Calves, shins ankles c. knees, 9023 Calvin oatcakes and sulphur, 522b Cambridge ladies, lojob people rarely smile, gg$b ye fields of C., 3583 Cambridgeshire of all England,

in footsteps of c., 8463 skin on recreant limbs,

2363
Caliban, 'Ban 'Ban Ca-C., 2973 Calico cat replied Meeow, 8sob
pie,
tree,

and clear c., 946b they come when you

c.,

673b 67$b

California, talk C., gs6b Californian, I met a C., gs6b Califoroians race of people, 8643 Calisthenics with words, io2ga Call, almost like c. to come, gs8b back world of shadows, 9933

2390 you back dear love, 8sb you c. for faith, 665a you c. me misbeliever, 2323 you Shepherd from hill, 7i2a
Called brother's father dad, 2363 fool c. her lady fair, 875a for his pipe, logsb him son names, 5$2b if shape it might be c., 344a

Cambuscan, story of C. bold,


Carabyses', King C. vein, Came across a time, io64b fear c. upon me, i4b forth to see again stars,

asga

i6ob

1217

Came
Came,
I c. I

INDEX
saw
I

conquered,

Candied,

let c.

tongue lick pomp,

I c. like I
c.

water, 6303

Candle, bell
better
to

saw

3nd overcame, *4*b

into

woods Master c., 7g6b naked c. I out, 143 once a world, 7353 out from Egypt, 8b
Satan
also, 143 tell them I c., gi4b
c.

book and c., 236b one c., 98 ib book bell and c., i7$b 10183 burned on uble, burning while sleeping, sogb
light

burns 3t both ends, 10233


extinguishes natural c., 3813 feel steady c. flame, 664b

three thousand miles


to to

and died,

dark tower

c.,

making of man, 7733 to scoff, 44gb upon midnight clear, upon no wine, loa^b Cameelious hump, 8763
Camel, cloud in shape of a
easier for c. to go,
c.,

43b

hold c. to my shames, 2333 hold fsrthing c. to sun, 3123 how f3r c. throws besms, 235b light c. to the sun, 3623 if you please to call it a rush c., 2igb lights c. to sun, 3123 lights gleaming, go$b not C3re 3 farthing c., 535b of understanding, 366 one sm3ll c. light a thoussnd,
out out brief
c.,

Csnnot, he who c. teaches, Sjdb Csnoe, psddle own c., 1283, $&jb Canon 'gsinst self -slaughter, 257 b of social code, 8493 Canopy, most excellent c. the air, 2613 my c. the skies, 4083 who spread its c., 3813 Cans, paved with tin c., Sjjb Csnst, give all thou c., 5173 Csnt, desr your mind of c., in American moral ism, nothing but c., 552b of criticism, 4383
,

of hypocrites the worst, 4383 of not men but measures, 4523 Cantankerous, small speech c.,

loia

Canted
4383
Csnter,

in

this

canting

world,

swallow a c., 43b Camellis, wh3t violet hss c. not, 8583 Csmelot, looked down to C., 64$b Camel's, not e'en admit c. nose, 5 66b Camels are snobbish, 9973 Cameo, more affable than c., 9103 Csmera, I am 3 c., io54b Camerado this is no book, 7033 Csmlet, my fine c. cloak, 3753 C3mp, court the c. the grove,

286b

little finishing c., 7893 Csnters, 35 they c. 3W3iiy, 654b Canticles, Homeric or Biblical c.,

put

scarcely

5i8b father snd I to c., 10903 Csmpsigning weather, 10423 Campaigns 3re emotions! orgies,
866b Campaspe, Cupid and my 2033 Csmpbells 3re comin', io8gb
original seat of C., 5213
C.,

Candlelight, dress by yellow c., 8233 Candlelit, old 3t evening c., Candles are all out, 2833 blessed c. of night, 235b

a bushel hold c., 41 5 a set 3 c. in the sun, 3123 this dsy light such 3 c., i8oa to be c. or mirror, 86sb to bed, to light you two chairs h3lf c., 67 sb a in white c. holy pl3ce, 9 6 3 colors by c., 6i8a
c.

under
fit

73 b
Csntie,

to

mony

c.

day John,

494b
wi' mair, 4943

Canting, canted in this


Cants,
clear

c.

world,

myself

of

c.,

576b
side,

which are canted, 4383 Canvas drooping side by 688b of heavy foresail, 8433 sail even with c. rent,
sail

1303

burn like fsbulous c., io8ob held to speed them, io28b night's c. burnt out, 2253 rather light c., 98 ib when c. out 311 women fair,
Candlestick,
c., iog6b 403 baker butcher Candlestick-maker, c., iog6b-iog7a Gsndlesticks, seven golden c., 57 b Candor and amic3ble relations,

with all thy c. set, 1052 our imaginations, 68 ib Canyon, dropping petal down Grand C., 9460 Canyons, neighing c., io43b
to

Cap and bells, 69 2 a and gown atavistic, 845b


by night, 4473
feather in his c., 4383 for c. and bells lives pay, 6923 riband in c. of youth, 26sb

C3mped by

biltebong, 86ga
c.,

jump over
c.,

old Campground, tenting on

put candle on a

c, Camping, Fsme's eternal ground, 7o4b conwith covered Europe C3mps,

Capability

and

godlike

reason,

centration
terrible

c.,
c.,

954b
10583
auris
c.,

4923

from

Candy
acu-

Campus habet lumen


Can, come
cry I
c.

deal of courtesy, 238b is dandy, 105 ib not made of sugar c., g23b

fill up my no more, 8o3b


c.,

5223

guess
if

he who
if

you c. does, Stfb poor whenever you we c. we must, 853b

if

33 ib

Cane, carrying 3 small c., io46b Canem, C3ve c., 1503 Canker, as killing 3S c. to rose,
infants of spring, 2583 without c. or C3rk, 8o4b Io3thesome c., 2g23 th3t benumbs, 7693 this c. Bolingbrpke, 238b worm c. and grief, 5633 Cankers in musk rose buds, 22gb of calm world, 2403 root and fruit, io34b Cannibals that each other eat,
jralls

negative c., 5840 I am c. of becoming, Cap3ble, all 10143 3nd wide revenge, 275 a become all c. of, 5753

hand now warm and


mathematician
c.

c.,

58 ib

of reasoning,

c.,

g6b

joy

live as
live

we c., 1023 we how we c., 2i6b make us do wh3t we c., 6o8b


pass

me the c. lad, Sssb something hope wish, Sosb youth replies I c., 6o3b Cana, many guests had C., 8g8a Canasn, Abram dwelled in C., 6b Canadian frontier pattern for world, g2ob Canary wine, 583b Cancel all our vows, 2iib and tear to pieces, 284b half a line, 63ob power to c. captivity, 2543

c. of anything, 843b not all c. of everything, ii6b of being in uncertainties, s84b of every wickedness, 8443 of gre3test vices, 327b of higher things, 9523 of nothing but dumbshows, 262b Capacious salad bowl, 8243 men have is c. for Cap3dty, all work, 94ib

mind

Cannikin,

Cannon
7313
then

his

why clink name


more and he

c.,

662b
his
shot,
voice,

by

c.

is

wisdom acquired, 1050


according
to
c.,

c.

contribution

revolution
c.

c.

comes,

8853 gi8b
59 ib

Canceled, scross c. skies, 10223 Cancels, end of life c. bsnds, 2403

Cannonbsll

to right of them, 6523 took off legs,


c.

for for taking pains, 77 a a for t3king trouble, 4*4 ,

wonder, 8433 delight and


Q 57 sa
-

Cannon's, burst

ro3r, 6333
c.

time c. young pain, 843 Candid, be c. where we C3n, 4o7b brow, 843b
save

opening ro3r, 5563


t3ken
c.

in seeking reputation

mouth,
7323

me from

c.
c.,

friend,

Cannons

or
rosr,

ssved,

ye marshes

how

7g6b

thundering

45ob

4753 gBgb nan's c. for justice, io24b c., 2513 enters thy nsught to despise himself, 867b C3p-3-pe, 2583
functions!
c.,

genius

is c. to see,

12l8

INDEX
no c. if you please, 48ob Cape, nobly C. St. Vincent, 6633 oftenest round C. Horn, 6955 round c. of a sudden, 6633
Caparisons,
Capella,
star

Careless-handed
Care keeps his watch, 224b killed a cat, 2473
least feel
little c.
c.

Captains, star c glow, 9802 thunder of the c., i6b Cap ten art tha sleepin', 86$b Captivating as new knowledge,

of law, 2O*a-b

we, 66ob
that
like

564b
Captive, carried us away c., 2Sb good attending captain ill, xgsb
Israel,

lose
c.,

it

buy

it

with

much
i88b

called
leg,

C.

yellow,

2313
c.

782b Caper and shake a


Capers,
c.

946a

687b
c,

he 5673 nimbly in lady's chamber, ai6b strange c., 2483

he dances,

taking today unbind

lands every day,


c.,

jb

weak minds
Captive's,

led

c.,

6ojb 3485
c.

Capital

and labor get


c.

together,

sleep
is

the

liberty,

naught but c. on ev'ry ban', 4930 nor c. beyond today, 4sgb nor for itself hath c., 488$ not who sees your back, 2393
of of of of of
discipline
life
is

my

my

shadow,

8953 art with

siob
A, Slab
c.

love, 373

Captivity

consciousness,

7j5b

heaven, 4oga

Belgium's
has
in

gathered, 555b

fruit of labor,
its rights,

6s7b 6s7b

ascendancy system of plunder, 687a


c.,

labor not ask patronage of

c., 7943 to cancel his c., 2543 spent years in c., jb Capture of men by women, 6sgb Porto Bello, 74gb Captured, faced enslavement if c.,

not Jews of

and happiness, 472b

power

the poor, 374a this world, 42b punch with c., 7483 raveled sleave of c., t reason is past c., 2g4b
rest sat

546b
c., 6tfb nothing without labor, 931 a for ocean trip, 7923 ship where kindly Death, 57 la vice of c., inherent Capitalism, 9*5 a practice not principle, io5$b own Capitalist production begets negation, 687a society unchecked, ioi4b wars between c. countries, 954b

752a
Capulet,
I'll

labor prior to

no longer be a

C.,

on

223b
Car, drive the rapid c., 45gb gilded c. of day, gjCb low-backed c., 5893 radio bleats, ioj6b rattling o'er stony street, 5563 rich man has motor c., g6sb

so

wan with
it

that knows no c., his faded cheek, c, 237b

iisb j42b

sought sounds

with

c.,

7473
of
themselves,

take

c.

steering with c., 70 ib there are those who c., things past redress past

c.,

Caravan, innumerable moves, 574b put up your c., go6a


Caravanserai, battered

c.

which

tiresome

verse-reciter

C.,

2273 5733

Capitalists,

class

of

modern

c.,

686b
Capitol,

woman

betrayed the C.,

c., 62gb Caraway, a-splitting c., io4a Carcass fit for hounds, 254b

to coffin adds nail, 468b weep away life of c., 568b what boots it with incessant

c.,

338a

3830
Capitulate to superzealots, loaob Capitulation, keep friends with-

c. of the lion, lib of leopard, 10453

honey in the

what c. I how fair she be, 3i8b what is life if full of c., go5a where c. lodges sleep never lie,
side of c., 2463 did not c., 8753 wrinkled C. derides, 334b sex's earliest c., 4343 your Care-charmer Sleep, 2iob Cared as much as bird, 735b not to be at all, 3433 Careens, American empire c. onward, 10383 Career, awe man from c. of his humor, 2463 die at height of c., 92*3 now dose my military c., 9593 poetry not c., 1008 a public life crown of c, 934b Careful, be c. what you do, 9533 ivry man equal if not c., 8g2b never to set up system, 45ib not c. what they mean, 2i8b o' vidders, 66ga so c. of type, 6sob surgeons must be c., 7343 Carefulness bringeth age, s8b Careless, be not c. in deeds, 1433 desolation, 2503 ease from tree to tree, 3983 eye on men who drown, 4goa first fine c. rapture, 6633 I tasted c. then, 7353 love, io76b man in his talk, 778b merits or faults to scan, 44gb of censure, 4o4a of mankind, 645b of single life, 6sob on granary floor, 5843 people Tom and Daisy, io36b shoestring, 3203 trifle, 28 ib with artful care, 3923 Careless-handed, Nature c. gives,

Sssa Capon, belly with good 24ga Capons, unless minutes you cannot feed c.
c.,

out

c.

lined,

where c. is eagles gather, 44a Carcasses bleed at sight of murderer, 1693


Card, by
c.

windy

woman who

by

letter

by

press,

*37b 2633 and 8393 lifelong passion, Caprice lasts a little longer, 8393 of minutest event, 6976 Capricious, gods' c. hand, io57a Caps, threw their c., s8gb Captain and his crew, ffyb art tha sleepin', 86sb captive good attending c. ill, 2g2b Carpenter rose up, ioogb chief c. answered, sob cook and c. bold, 76sb crew and c. understand, 876b Death old c., 7073 his c. Christ, ss8a my Captain, 7O2a no c. do very wrong, 4Q2a O C. my C., 7o2a of all these men of death, 3663 of Hampshire Grenadiers, 466a of his soul, ioi4b
c.,

8g6b
clear conscience is sure c., *o*b he's a sure c., 3693 insipid as queen on c., 6543 master to those below, 10193

so,

speak by the c., zQ$b Cardinal, two c. sins, g8ob Cards, cheat at c. genteelly, 43 ib luck not holding best c., 778b
patience

played

c.

and shuffle c., for kisses, 2032

ig6b

thrust ivrybody but cut c., 8gia world of c., loiga Care a farthing candle, gssb age full of c., io84a

and not to care, loo^b begone dull C., io86b, io87a beyond His love and c., 6s6b careless with artful c., 3923
cast

away

c.,

ig4b, 3023

dark C.

sits

enthroned,
c.,

isib

deliberation and public driveth away sleep, s8b


earliest latest fig
c.,

$4sb

of my soul, 8i6a, 981 a of second rank, 599a of the Pinafore, 7663 of thine own fate, i i6a

434*

for

for

who

i8aa c. fig for woe, shall have borne battle,

64ob
full of c.

good c. too, 766a should be judged as a c., shouted as he staggered, soul the c. of life, n6a walk deck my C. lies, Captain's choleric word, 271 a crew of c. gig, 76sb troubled c. mind, 792a Captains and kings depart, courageous, io87b of industry, 5783
right

no

time, 9052

17 $b

67gb
7023

happy man void of c., 397a happy whose wish and c., 402a
housewife ply evening I c. for nobody, 464a
I don't
c.
c.,

golden

c.,

24sb

44oa

875b

one straw, 1093 I prayed and did God c., 735b I sac weary fu* o* c., 494*
I shall not
c.,

98 ib

sea

c.

young and

old,

7osb

insensate c. of mortals, iigb irks c. the crop-full bird, 566a

1219

Carelessly
Carelessly, fleet the time c., 2473 Carelessness, lose both parents c.,

INDEX
Carried, beggar c. by angels, 47a not get self c. aloft, 8o5a pardon slowly c., 27oa though the mountains be c. into the sea, iga us away captive, 22b with every wind of doctrine,
Case, nothing to do with
c.,

Rome
still

768b
has spoken
c.

concluded

Care-ridden nights, 4773


Care's

147*

an

enemy

to

life,

2513

semblance in another's

canker that benumbs, 7693 check and curb, 3623 Cares and joys abound, 2i4b
blessed
cast all to
c.

we

c., 4595 before courts, 1243 doctors know hopeless c,,

put c. away, on God, 6543


c.,

ii4b

eating c, 3353 heart depressed with

54 a Carrier of news and knowledge, 75* a aux ouverte Carriere talents,


5<>4b,

Casement, at 6450

c.

seen her stand

4mb

humble

5iib kingdoms are but c., 1713 no one c. for me, 4643 now all ended, 242b psrtissn c. nothing about rights, gsb prime of youth a frost of c.,

c.

delicate fears,

put old c. to flight, 7$8a soothe c. lift thoughts, that fretted me, noia that infest day, 622a
to
fret

s8oa

thy soul with

c.,

201 a

and c., 66ob unbounded by sordid c., g6ob what c. he cannot know, 7i9a
toils

874a regardless who c. ball, io25b rich bunch of red roses, g8ia Carriest, thou c. them away as with a flood, 2oa Carrion comfort despair, 8osb god kissing c., 26ob Carry all he knew, 4503 big stick, 847b Caesar in your boat, nab gentle peace, 2gga in traveling c. knowledge, 432b lad born to be king, 84gb lesson seems to c., 45gb me along taddy, g6ga me back to old Virginny, 828b
crest,

Carries

575b no color or

jessamine stirred, 652b on c. shone wintry moon, 5828 Casements, magic c., 5833 Cases, circumstances alter c., 587b
concrete
c.
c.,

7&7b
7872 7871

law, law, hfs quillets his c., 265b Casey at the bat, 868a

great

c.

hard

make bad make bad

Jones, 9o4b mighty C. struck out, 868a Casey's, ease in C. manner, 868a tabble dote, 8aoa

Cash,

from

fifty-five

needs

c.,

9845
squalid c. interpretation, 7925 take c. let credit go, 6agb Cashboxes for hearts, 591 a Cashiered, when he's old c., 2723 Cashiering kings and senates, 5762 Cask, take fill at beginning of c.,

Caress, life

or knows, 5733 grow sweet as c, 8s8b Caretaker, president is c., io68a Cargo, little c. boats, $74b of ivory, g47a of Tyne coal, g47a Cargoes of meat drink clothes,
c.

who

me home, uoia me out of Egypt, 7b


message to Garcia, 8353

on dread naught, 9200

out your own dead, 941 a praise or blame too far,, g2ga sun in golden cup, 8&4b

iogob
Carian, dear old C. guest, 7igb Carib fire, 10433 Caricature a swollen shadow,

io6gb
decrepit age, 88$a world c. of itself, 867b Caricatures most penetrating
criticisms, 10323

bosom, ^ab nothing out, 553 wealth of Indies, 432b with us wonders we seek, 32gb Carrying coals to Newcastle, i2oa you into fields of light, ,$3b
his
c.

them in we can

67b Caspar Milquetoast, g8gb Caspian fact, 7383 Casque has outdone elegance, g8ga Casques that did affright air at Agincourt, 243a
Casse, tout c., nosb Cassius, Brutus and

C. not

dis-

of

Cark, without canker or c., 8o4b Carlyle expressed opinion, 775b Carnage and conquests cease, 5583

Cars, giant finned c., io77a ten years on Pullman c., 1009 a Cart, carried in a c., 6a6a creak of lumbering c., 88ob draw sin with a c. rope, sob set c. before horse, 1853

played, i4oa forever farewell C., 2563 has lean hungry look, 25$b no terror C., 2563

Cassock band hymnbook too, 6171 Cassowary, if I were a c., 6173 Cast a stone at her, 48b
all

war and c. be lost, 70 ib Carnal interests, 35$b pearl for c. swine, 35ga Carnegie, Johnnie C. lais heer, 387 b Lydian notes of C., 8313
Carol, it was c. of bird, ssga Caroline, find Sister C., go6b Cazolings, so little cause for c.,

Carthage,

come again

to C.,

235a

cares

on God,

6543.

must be destroyed, ioya


to C. I came, i46b

away

78 3 b
Carols, varied c. I hear, 6ggb Carouse, eerie faint c., io22a Carp at weakness of human mind,

delenda est C., io7a Carve him as dish, 254b let neighbor c. for you, 3goa on lintel of year, 10570 thing thou lovest, 833b to all but just enough, 3goa Carved beforn his fader at table,
Carthago,
i66a

joaa of own eye, 413 better c. into sea, 473 bullet to kill me not c., 504* cold eye, 885b die is c., ii2b forth no more, 8s4b to be gifts of the gods not
care, ig4b,

beam out

aside,
it

6ab

monuments c. from snow, gg8a new dynasties, 971 a


not a line, 566b Carves bow of beauty, 6o2b Carving, conversation is but 39<> a
Caryatid on vacation, 5ggb Casca, envious C., 255b Cascade, brigade with cold

373&
of truth, s6oa

manhood
c.,

into outer darkness, 4ib from thee, 4oa longing eye on offices, 47 ib lots upon my vesture, i?b

Carpe diem, i2ia Carpent tua poma nepotes,


Carpenter, loogb

me

c. down, g8sb not off in the time of old

n6b
753

Captain C. rose up,


for master
c.,

hewing wood

c.,

said nothing but, 7463 Walrus and the C., 745b Carpenter's, is not this the

767b
c.

son,

Cascades, clear c., g8ob Case, argued each c. with wife,

age, igb me off discourteously, io84b off his friends, 45 ia off works of darkness, sib one longing look, 44ia one's eyes so low, 27ga over Edom will I c. out

my

42b
Carpet, after a bit c. ends, gaob Carpets, long c. rose, 5823 Carriage, can't afford c., 885b

743b
as the c. stands, 3143 He never lost his c., 38 ib heard only one side of c., 756b her nominative c., 47 6a in c. anything turned up, 6713 lady's in the c., 40 ib medicine for c. like mine, 7osb no one should judge own c.,

shoe, igb pale c. of thought, 2623 pearls before swine, 4ia release me from c., ioi8a
salt on woman's tail, 35*b set exact wealth at one c., 24oa life upon c., 2i8a set

held just ourselves, 736b king in c. ride, 631 a small second class c., 768a Carriages motorcars omnibuses,

my

^ without horses go, 1087 a

9Z 5a

thy bread time to


tree
is

c.

upon the waters, 280 away stones, 2?b


into the
fire,

ia6a

c.

sgb

1220

INDEX
Cast,

Cause
Catholicism
c.,

why
'

art thou

c.

down,

193
wilt
c.

forth

no more, 8545
c.

Cat watch mouse, 3913 when I play with my

minus
all

Christianity,

Caste,

Brahmin

of

New

Engsoul,

who who

1903
Catholics,

shall bell the c., 763 will bell c., i6gb


c.,

equal

except

C.,

land, 634h
Castest,

worried the

why

c.

thou off

my

would eat

fish,
c.

soa
Casteth, perfect love c. out fear, 57 a Castigation, birch twig for c.,

Catalogue, in 2843 no reading

logSb 1843 ye go for men,


fascinating

and Communists,
Catiline,

1054.5

how

long C.,

nob
possessions,
c.,

prodigal

of

own

1150

more

Catins,

mes pcnses sont mes


c.

than

c.,

Soib

437 a
Catlike, undulantly with
steps,

8793
Castile,

no prince of C. gained

of common things, 58 ib of things necessary, 3765

land, 1730
Castilian, choose what becomes C., 5873 Casting body's vest aside, 3603

read

c.

sooner
faint
c.

than

nothing,
c.,

Cato,

like

C.

give
C.,

laws,

4113

93*a
idea of Cataract, leaps in glory, 648b

vanquished had
Cat's a
cat

1343

5965

and Rolet a knave,

377*

religious light, 3363 Cast-iron back with hinge, 733b Castle, bores through his c. wall,

dim

sounding
Cataracts

haunted me, 5093

mean
run

and hurricanoes, 2783 Catastrophe, education and c.,


888b
of old comedy, 2773 tickle your c., 2423 Catastrophes, unparalleled Catch a falling star, go4b

as c. meat, 9323 pull chestnuts with 6ob 3

c.

paw,
10983

227b
contentions like bars of
c.,

away
c. c.

with

string,

253

what
Cats, all
c.,

averse

to

fish,

43gb

Doubting

C.,
c.

36sb
gray, 685b

gray

when

candles out,
c.,

habitant of

9513

hath pleasant seat, 2823 house my c. is, 578a man's house his c., 1983 rich man in c., 684b
walls, 6485 splendor falls on stand in window of c., 1133 to C., g8oa belongs village Castled crag of Drachenfels, 556 Castlereagh, mask like C., 5703 Castle's strength will laugh, g86b Castles, building c. in Spain, 1713 Castration, Negro past of c., loSia Casts, shadow that it c, 5i7b to write a living line, sosb Casual creeds, 7123 flocks of pigeons, 955a tongue, 8993 Casualties, mistakes paid in c., ioi6b Cat and fiddle, iog4a bell the c, 76a, i6gb bought crooked c., iog6b calico c. replied Meeow, 82ob can't be vice in c., 748a care killed a c., 2473 cat's a c. Rolet a knave, 377a Cheshire C. vanished slowly,
c.

and monkeys monkeys and


798*

i37b

another Antony, s&gb as catch can, 442b bargain c. cold and starve, 2gob Christ with worm, 10753 daws that c., 7453
conscience of the king, 261 b earth's heedless sons, 10363 ere she change, 4o6b hard to c. and conquer, 73ob him once upon hip, 2323 nets to c. the wind, 3isb

do

c.

eat bats, 7433

fought dogs killed c., 662b rain c. and dogs, 3913 seven c., 10933 those who play with c., 1953 Cattle beneath shadow of oak,

not

God

he'll
c. c.

c.,

10543

browsed on plain, call c. home, 6gob cursed above all c., 6a die as c., io28b
if c.

my soul, 2743 up, 9033 springes to c. woodcocks, 2593 the driving gale, 4ogb the manners living, 4o7b the nearest way, 28 ib up with advanced countries, go$b when pleasure can be had c. it,
perdition perish or

herdman who drives c., 3b 3nd horses had hands, 7ob


lowly c. shed, 684b pedigree of horses c., 628b upon a thousand hills, 193
like
c.,

would draw gods

7ob
firm,

yellow c. browsed, 033b Catullus be resolved and

4323 with his surcease success, 2823 you will never c. up, 886b C3tched fish 3nd talked, 7613 swallow gudgeons ere they're c.,
Catcher in the rye, 10783 slow man c. up with
swift,

ii4b

walk that way, 88ib


worst of all poets, ii4b you should cease folly, H4b Caucasus, thinking on frosty C., 2263 Caught at God's skirts, 6623

744a
consider my c. Jeoffrey, 444b differences be'tween c. and lie,

Catches,

God
him

c.

65b

Catchwords,

man

lives

by c,
c.,

hanging around on, 9303


his

his eye, io4pb


till

you've

c.

7623

822b
college or
c.,

dog pipe or two, 855a

endow

4o7a

Catechism, so ends my Catechist, something of


C.,

24ob

dear

yes I held him, 7993 accents, 66sb

Shorter

fog comes on c. feet, 948a had seven kits, 10933

8i5b
c.,

Categorical imperative, 445b

had Tiberius been c., 7153 harmless necessary c., 234* has only nine lives, 7623
in gloves catches is in well, iog$b
I've got

order

766b
I

in that sensual music, 88sb moral man regrets even if not c., 961 a morning's minion, 8033
c. her, logsb my heavenly jewel, 2O3b our youth, 9943 she c. him by his garment, 7b trout c. with tickling, 252b with his sweet perfections c.,

Caterpillar,

don't see said C.,


of the

mother came and

no mice, 4223
8323

Caterpillars

common-

little c.,

languishes loudly, 8isb mad if they behold a c., 2343 made a c. laugh, 5873 may look on king, 1853 melancholy as gib c., ajyb mew and dog have day, 266a more ways of killing c., 691 a

wealth, 2273 Caters for the sparrow, 247b Catharsis, tragedy a c., 993

Cathay, cycle of C., 64?b Cathedral, in vast c. leave him,

3Mb
without diadem, 737b Cauld, when auld waxeth c., io88b Cauliflower cabbage with education, 7623 C3US3 Utet vis notissima, i28b Causation, law of c., 752b Cause and effect from economy, io62b 3rmor of righteous c., 8s8b bad c. bad means, 4673 be c. strong or weak, 6g2b beauty of good old c., 5123

6sib
looking like bank, 10093

mankind

inspired tunes, 7353

made

c.,

8223

my

c.

Jeoffrey, 444b

Cathedrals,

nine lives like a c., 1853 owest c. no perfume, 78b poor c. i' the adage, 282b room to swing c., 67 ib
stronger than that c., 5o5b that sits on hot stove lid, 762b walked by himself, 8763

more benefit bathroom than c., io35b

from

c., 9983 Gather, Willas c., io4ob Catholic C.O., 10763 holy C. Church, 6oa nor agnostic, judges neither C.

our Gothic

9673

1221

INDEX
"ause, calledst
c., 234a cannot cross

me dog
c.

before

Cave, courts thee in some pleas-

Ceiling,

ant

C.,

120b

down from the c., 53 ib Cdbrait, Ronsard me c., i87b

common common
effect

why

born, 2223

c.

decays, 8gb

error correct c., io7ga idols of the c., 2073

Celebrate, I c. myself, 7ooa not c. funeral with

c. to save Union, 6$7a died in virtue's c., 2i8b do not kill or c. to kill, Sob

defective

comes
is

by

c.,

s6ob
effect
final

evolution not
c.

c. God, 45ga c. but law, 77gb produces motion, g7b found spiritual c., 7oga full c. of weeping, 278a Germany the c. of Hitler, ggga given his heart to c., 994b good old c. is gone, 5iza Great First C., 45gb

whose

shadows on opposite wall of c., g4b sky will c. in on him, 10233 Stygian c. forlorn, 334b vacant intexlunar c., 3492 Cave ab homine unius libri, i58b canem, isoa Caveat emptor, 1503 Cavern, mossy c., sSjb
Pan's
in
c.,

weeping, io6b Celebrated cultivated Duke of Plaza Toro, 76ga Saviour's birth c., 3573 Celebrates his obsequies, 51 8b pale Hecate's offerings, 28sa Celebration of freedom, io7*b of man, 1071 a
Gelebres, causes
c.,

3g6a

88sa

Caverns cool and deep, 7iob


c. all alone, 10793 measureless to man, 5235 pure and deep, 587b sand-strewn c., 7iob twice ten thousand c., Caves, beetles in c., io64b

Celebrities, congress of c., 74gb Celeriter, sat c. fieri satis bene,

i24b
Celerity never
Celestial,

more admired, 288a


in
c.

appareled
c.

Sib griefs hear me for my c., 25$a result well hidden but known, i28b idea of oneself as c., 37$b if any man show just c., 6ia
c.

we

ourselves,

5 J 3a

light,

57gb

pattern of
so
c.

peace, si4b
c.

sate itself in

if
is

astray c. there any

is

c.

in you, i6ib in nature, 27ga

it is just, 54ia laws or kings

c.

or cure, 4283
c.,
c.,

grace my c., 27*b magnificent and awful not a field but a not be judge in own not jealous for the
little

4583 4673
i26a

c.,
c.,

nothing comes without


obstinacy in

75b 42ob ssgb, 437b of freedom cause of God, 4ggb of this effect, s6ob or men of Emerald Isle, 48 $b perseverance in good c., 43?b produces more than one effect, 7o6a
c.,

dark unfathomed c., 44ob of ice, 5243 Caviar to the general, 26ia Cavil on ninth part of hair, 23gb Cawdor, Glamis thou art and C., s8ib I am Thane of C., 28ia shall sleep no more, aS^b Cease and then again begin, 7i4b Byron's struggle c., ?na Catullus you should c. folly, 1145 day and night shall not c., 6b
efforts to find

article
c.

as

wisdom calms the mind, 47b


with
clearness
C.,

bed, 25gb freedom, 4673


wrote,
81 ib

Celia,

bad

c.,

where

last rose

has undone me, 4393 Celibacy has no pleasures, 4*8a Cell, deposit little c. by c., 78 la does c. have soul, icSjb dwell on rock or in c., igga ill-spirit sob in each c., icy/Gb in body holds heart, 10565 in narrow c. forever laid, 4403 thine eternal c., s66b tight hot c., ios8a
Cellar, born in a c., 44ab lived in c. damp, 6943 secretly nurtured in c., warm delicious c., io46b
Cells,
all
c.

come my

3O2b

lingers, i2ib every joy, 537b fears that I may

c.,

58 la

gg8a
c.,

report sea of
set c.

what

c. and theory, gigb above renown, 8653 support Caledonia's c., 4g6b tenacious of purpose in rightful c., isib try c. condemn to death, 743b turn him to c. of policy, 2433 \vatercolors to impaint c,, 24ob

me and my

c.,

266b, <;o6a

from mental fight, 4gob from thine own wisdom, 25b grinders c., 28b hatreds never c. by hatred, 8oa
c., 7i5a c. to be, 6523 from not exploration, ioo7a poor shall never c., lob sing or c. to sing, 4i2b the wicked c. from troubling,

from pre-existing

7iob
better schoolrooms than c., 686a condemned c. of Newgate, 7563 held in cohesion by c., <J47b

long contention

man

am

c.

unresting

c.,

g47b

in

effect

already

in

c.,

wherein tongue confuted, wit in other men, 24 ib Zeus first c., 78b Caused the widow's heart to sing, 150 Causes celebres, 3963 flowers as in c. sleep, 327 a from amorous c. springs, 4o4a great c. on move, gssb

i 4b time c. and midnight never come, sigb to ask what morrow will bring, i2ia to be free for religion, io22a upon the midnight, 58ab weeping without c., 8o8a ye from man, joa Ceased, God created woman boredom c., 8o6a

Cellula, omnis c. a c., 7iob Celt, blind hysterics of C., 65ia Celtic, locale was C., g68b Cement glue and lime of love,

Sigh gummed with bicycle c., 10363 Cemetery, father buy plot in c.,
of

dead
c.,

ideas,

86gb

Censorship, assassination extreme

837b

happy man who could out c., n?a home of lost c., 7i$b

search

investigation of hidden c., igab lost c. preface victory, 1008 a of destruction, 4$5b of disaster, 847 a

which impel separation, 47ob why and wherefore, 2453 Caution in refusing benefits, 3743
scars

of others teach
c.,

c.,

i45b

upward look of
Cautious, plant loiib
politic c.

9292
c.

of

growth,

and meticulous, looia

8073 under whose c. hand, 7023 Cavalry of woe, 734b

seldom err, 7ib statistical Christ,

c. to be, 5iob devouring of weak by strong, 7o6a thoughts of roaming, 3803 turns with c. pain, 447b Ceases, forbearance c. to be virtue, 452a happiness c. like dream, g28b to be free for irreligion, io22a Ceasing, O swiftness never c., 2o4b of exquisite music, 622a pray without c., 55a Cedant arma togae, nib Cedar, as c. tall and slender, 476a grow like a c. in Lebanon, 21 a lordly c. green with boughs, 827a Cedars of Lebanon, 2ib roots of c. of Lebanon, g4$a Cedarwood, sandalwood c., g47a

when Lucy

if c. reigns, 46oa Censure, careless of c., 4o4a durst not c., 426b every trade save c., 554b

Ceaseless

fear of c., g88a folks no right to


freely

c.,

who have
c.

gub
well,

written

4osb

mankind

injustice,

g4a

pardons raven, 1393 take each man's c., 258b tax for being eminent,
Census,
test of civilization

j8ga not c.,

6o8b Cent, not one c. for tribute, 50 ib what did with every c., g*8b
Centaur, cloud that looked like gia in dragon world, g8ga Center cannot hold, 882a intention stabs the c., 2g5a
c.,

man

c.

many

lines

of circle, 748b in dial's

c.,

243*

my

c.

giving way, 8a6a

INDEX
Center of
of silent

Chance
Chalice that is Grail, 6553 Chaliced, on c. flowers that
lies,

mv

sinful earth, 2g4b

Word, ioo3b unfathomed c., s86b


wore
fire's c.,

io67b
c.

Certainty generally illusion, 7873 not lightly sacrificed, go*b of power, '10553 of the words of truth, 25 b
pass from suspicion to c., 3553 principles of icy c., 864b quit c. for uncertainty, 4x83 sober c. of waking bliss, 3373

Centerlight, blue Central stream of

what we

pop,

io8ob
feel,

Cents! feel like thirty c., 886b hours and minutes dollars and
Centuries, across
all c.
c.

Certitude

nor

peace

nor

help,

across oceans,

test of certainty, 7883 Certum est quia impossibile

not

cliffs of Dover, 8893 give me piece of c., 797b of my bones, io64b Challenge of communism, io54b of next half century, 10643 send c. to his end, 3543 to authority of President, 9843 Challenges, New Frontier is c.,

Chalk

est,

10723

but this, 7683 bowed by weight of c., 8a6b air of c., gg2b crystallized heaven in c., ioo4b cycles of
care for great c., look down, 5043 over fifty c., 7693 joked

Chamber, bridegroom coming out


Cervantes,

arm

of

old

C.,

6o,6b

of his
get

c.,

170

on

his galley,

giSb

don't
forty

7863

c.

lie

through

c.,

664b

of folly noise sin, 66sb prior 'work of past c., 8agb roll back to age of gold, i2b

smiled chivalry away, 5623 Cervantes' serious 31^*4133 Cesspool, London great c., 84gb Cetera quis nescit, 1283 Chacun au bien aspire, ig8a Chafe, bays burn deep and c., 7743

you to my lady's c., s6sb he capers nimbly in lady's c., 2i6b hear in c. above me, 623b I throw myself down in my c.,
in my lady's c. in silent halls, 5745 music's not for you, 5055 rapping at c. door, 6420 rose- gilded c., 10566
f

champ and
Chafes,

c.

and
c.,

toss,

7iob

sequent c., 6036 three c. removed, 10533 wit lasts two c., 55ob years roll into c., 6543 Century, born in this c., io7b challenge of next half c., 10643
fantsstic c. move, 4823 l3in for c. dead, 652b live for more thsn one

reason c., 6043 Chafed, high blood

s6ob

on unnumbered pebbles
c.,

Star C. matter, s66b

Chaff, hope corn in


principles
less

554b
c.,

Chambering and wantonness, 5ib Chambermaid, as happy in arms


843b
of c., 432b Chambers, layeth the beams of
his c., sia Chameleon's dish, 2633 tuning skin to it, io78b Chameleons feed on light, 5695 Champ and chafe and toss, 7iob

than

wheat hid in bushels of c., 23 ib which the wind driveth away,


i6b Chaffinch sings on bough, 6633 Chagrined, not be very much c.,

c., 1143 of common man, loioa of sonnets, 6655 ring bells for new c., gs?3 seventeenth c. dissoci3tion,

634b
Chain, as with an iron c., 5933 drags lengthening c., 447b golden c. from heaven, 6^b handled with a c., 73b hanging in a golden c., 3443 never broke c. freed soul, 7&4b of life, io7?b of responsibility, 9833 pesrl c. of all virtues, 3ogb wear c. I forged, 67ob what the c., 48ga winds th' exh3usted c., 4g53

Champagne and
4143
teetotaler,

chicken at

last,

too old, 6573 Cerberus and blackest Midnight, 334b like C. three gentlemen, 4813 Cerebration, slight powers of c., 866b Ceremonies, hampering with c. and music, 1013

8363

Champed

grasses,

Champion, Gray C., of freedom, g24b


people have always some c., 953 playboy, goga Champions, cullest thy selectest
c.,

6g6b
c.

Ceremony, distinctions by means


Of
idol
C.,

four
all

fierce strive, 3443


all

1013

Chance,

c.,

244b
3s

Chained

for

billions
c.

of

yesrs,
fire,

sfternoon tea, 7983 love useth enforced c., 2563 of innocence drowned, 882a save c. save general c., 244b that to great ones 'longs, ayob thrice gorgeous c., 244b Cerise sir-conditioned automobile, 10633 Certain am I of the spot, 737b because impossible, i4$b is birth for the dead, 1063 is death for the born, 1063 no c. life 3chieved, 2373 nothing c. but death and taxes, 4233 of his fate, 2743 of nothing but affection, 5&4b

known

ioo8b Chains, adamantine

and

and slavery, 4653, 4963 bound in icy c., 27 ib


c. from every mind, everywhere he is in c., familiarize with c., 6363 intellectu3l c., lossb m3n born in c., 4g7b not 311 free who scorn c., nothing to lose but c., ocean loose c. of things, sang in my c., io7ob untwisting c, that tie, 3353

breaks

4883

435b

4553 6873
1313

have equal c., 6373 hath slain, 3o7b c. bludgeonings of c., 8i6a comes from art not c., 4ogb dart of c., 75b dice never abolish c., 7973 direction thou canst not see, 4o8b favors mind prepared, 7i8b fool right by c., 4573 give them a c., 686a history cannot tolerate c., io38b hour before this c., 2843 if c. will have me king, s8ib

whom

main

c.,

Chair, draw 10373


electric
c.

man alone no c., 10453 may crown me, 28 ib


nativity c. or death, 267b nickname for Providence, 4693 nor yet exempt from c., 5693

3533

c.

up

close to edge,

permanent and tics, 427b


signs should II 13

c.

characteris-

like 03sis, 10763

prefigure
fine

events,

one
thing,

there

is

no

881 a

Certainties, begin with c. end in doubts, ao6b begin with doubts end in c., 2o6b hot for c., 73ob public demands c., 9603 there 3re no c., g6o3 Ceminty, certitude not test of c., 7883 enslavement c. of worse, io6ga

give Dsyrolles 3 c., 4i6b is the c. empty, 2176 c. for solitude, 683b oranges in sunny c., 9553 Rabelais' easy c., 41 $b ses best in c. before fire, gi6b seated in thy silver c., 3023

not leave right to of war, 26?b


1913

c.,

68ia
c.,

our wisdom for most psrt

power erring pseudonym of God, 8023 set my life on any c.,


shall not control, 7113 skirts of happy c., 65ob sisve to fate c. kings,

men

call C.,

vacant
Chsir,

c.,

622b, 676b
c.

13

triste

Chairman, by God Mr.

helas, C.,

Chairs, three c. for society, two c. for friendship, 68sb two old c. half candle, 673b why smash the c., 6323

7973 445b 683b

something

3083 left to c., 4923 stand to the main c., aos>b take c. that traitors escape,

1223

Chance
Chance, Tinker 9620
to

INDEX
Evers to
C,,

Change, werewolf's painful c,

to find yourself, 8435 to talk a little wild, 2983 weight of c. desires, 5140 will bring us through, 7 Chanced to meet old man, iog8a

what man made man can


ioi8b

Chaos, knowledge reduce of the sun, 9553


c.,

c..

of

nb

what should be changed, io24a when worse it must c., 1793 Change, nous avons c. tout cela,
3613 Changeable, young men's minds
are c., 620 Changed, accept what cannot be
c.,

thought and passion, 4003 our policy 3gainst c., g$gb poised c. of Waterloo, 95^ rough unordered mass, i28b

Chancel, broke c. window-squares, 7843 Chancellor, conscience of C., 3173


susceptible c., 7&7b Chancellor's foot, 3173

what a

this is why there is c., thy dread empire C., 4143


c. is

ioib

man, 3643

Chaos-like together crushed, 4054 Chaotic stage of humanity, io2b

io24a
utterly,

Chap,
8823 him, 797a

intellectual

c.,

767b

Chancery, wards in C., 767b Chances change by course, 2ioa like sunbeams pass, 4223 spake of disastrous c., S7sb take c. for peace, looob Chancy, history very c., 997 b

changed

eternity has c.

from the one all to me, 784* haven't c. a bit, 10543 innocence for innocence, 2952
like

Change
soul,

and

migration

of

the

mind not

change in my face, 8igb to be c., 3423


c.

gsa anything we c. in child, 9363 bolts up c., s88b but cannot die, 57ob by tomorrow and fleet, 5423 can't c. mind won't c. subject, 9*5 a catch ere she c., 4o6b chances c. by course, aioa clime not disposition, ia$b ever-whirling wheel of c., aoob everything except loves, 4i8a extremes by c. more fierce, 3443 fear of c., 342b feel by turns bitter c., 3443 given heart c. of mood, 9273 hands and still confute, 3523 heavy c. now thou art gone, 3$8a hopes no more c. name, 5140 human nature not c, 6403 I would not c. for thine, 3033 itself give no more, 378b me to winged bird, ib my state with kings, 2923 never c. when love has found home, is7b nonviolent action supplement
c.,

minds of gods not


653 not c. a wink, 6g7b not c. from him 9*5

suddenly,

Chapel, afternoon in secluded c., 10073 Devil builds c. there, 3853 Devil would build c., i7gb God's greenwood c., 9533 Chapels had been churches, 25 ib legend of green c., io7ob stolen looks are nice in c., 55 ib
Chapfallen, quite c., 26sb Chaplain, Bluebeard's c., 6693

they

knew,

Chapmen, you do
Chspmen's,

as

c.

do, 2693

sea c. Egdon remained, 7833 something better c. in ourselves, 9?6a we have c. all that, 3613 we shall be c., 533 whole world have been c., 36gb ye too c. ye hills, 7143 Changeful mind of mortals, 8oa presuming on c. potency, 2693 Changeless, fain keep her c., ygob Changes, absurd man never c.,

not uttered by c. tongues, 22 ib with Chaps couple o' guns, 9813 Chapter, autobiographies begin C. Two, 9133 of accidents, 4163 said he could repeat c., 432b write the next c., lodgb Chapters of lives to natural end,

8i6b
thirty
c.,

4b

M8b

great c. irksome, 4633 desire c., 9083 follow c. of the moon,


all

274b

God c. and man and form, 775b human nature c., 84ob man c. not at all, gSyb
monthly
c.

Character, accommodatin' c., 7sob 3cquire everything but c., 550!^ 3dopt c. of octopus, 773 bearing on excellence of c., g8a best W3y to define c., 7g2b bird of bad moral c., 4233 e3sier kept th3n recovered, 4673 education for c., 7055
family

in circled orb, 2243

stamped

c.

on

child,

io8sa

nothing nothing
31 8b

endures
lasts

but

c.,

7yb
c.,

past c. constantly, 10173 sea never c., 843b sky c. when wives, 25ob woman often c., ii8b world's a scene of c., Changeth, old order c., 6543

936*

formed in world's

torrent, 477b

357b
c.

give action its c., 923 habits and manners, 7213 hereditary strokes of c., 109 la his c. 3rbiter of everyone's for-

save

eternal

sweareth to his
not, 173

own hurt and


c.

tune, 1163 influence of

of air, 9373 of heart, io5gb of motion proportional, old lamps for new, loSgb

Changing, borrow every


looia

shape,
Palace,

judging

37gb

guard 9 69b

at

Buckingham

one quality we predicate, $4ob


pace of
renewal
seats
c.,

ioi4b
is

places and which


as

thief,
c.,

well

as
c.,

sygb loysb

ringing grooves of

647b

and fiddles too, 5O5b secure from c., 6943


she earth or sky, io86a
skies above them, 8?4b stamp of nature, 2640

method of c. governors, 10133 life, 3843 shallow c. woman, 2i?b sorrows of c. face, 879!) stress on not c. mind, 93 ib things according to desire, 9083 Chankly Bore, 6743 Channel, butting through the C.,
scenes of

c. in infancy, 6o7b motive impulse, 976b liberal arts humanizes c., 1293 limitations of own c., 77gb man that makes c., ggSb man's guiding destiny, 77b
c.

men of contrary c., 7ib no talent but c., s88b of mistress from dress of maids,
i45b
of perfection, 7163
poeticsl
c.,

58sb
c.,

politics ruins

677b
in
c.,

947*
5723

the many c. and pass, the more things c., 6273

and tossing, 767b crossing drum them up C., 8653


C.

power
reap 3
Scott

of
c.,

Latin

7isb

noob

them when we

will,

Thou

does not c., thought love never c., 801 a time for a c., io5ob time will c. your opinions, 963
times
c.

64Qb 688b

and move continually, and we


c.

throw beer into C., 8183 Chant, do use to c. it, 2523 how can ye c., 4943 Chanticleer, lungs crow like 248b Chanting, exaltation in c. Muses, 843
f3int hymns to moon, 228b Chants doleful hymn, 2373 Chaos and old Night, $42b beauty dead black c., 22oa

in Southern c., 76ob simplicity of c., 77gb for c., 6953 wholesome society Ch3r3cteristic 3rtistic person3lity,

h3nd

c.
of

73 a
Ch3racteristics,

coloring

spplied
c.,

according to c., 1483 not expressing biological


9 8ob of democracy, io45b of modern spirit, 8633 of populsr political, 913 of vigorous mind, 4276 Ch3r3cterless, mighty st3tes

2oob
times
c.

with them,

i52b
to virtue and worthiness, 2543 universe is c., i4ib we think we see, 9263 weapons c. but not man, gSyb

bounded by primeval
breeds
is

c.,

6553

life,

7773

c.,

come again, 2743 1 77/1

268b

INDEX
Characters,
c.,

Chatter
Charming form
940
friendly *79 b

dreams touchstones of

68ib

Charity, love friendship c, :6ga mankind's concern if c,

of
c.

government,
relationship,

fashioning our c. wrong, 7932 high c. cries one, 3500 most women have no c., 4060 of hell to trace, 441 b venerate four c., 46gb Charge Chester charge, 5196 compulsive ardor gives c., 2643 Cromwell I c. thee, agga c. over thee, sob give his angels give lie to slander c., 55$b in earnest were it a mill, ySsa me with murder, 747a once more be dumb, 7158 prepared lawyers met, 4osa such is the c., 933 take thou in c., 5963 with all thy chivalry, 538a within the bosom, 734b Charged, hear it c. against me, 701 a language c. with meaning, gSga troops of error, 3*gb with punishments, 8i6a Charger, John Baptist's head in c., 4sb come others against Charges home, i46a die to save c., 3iob Chariest maid prodigal enough, 2583 Charing Cross, heaven and C.,
8 57 a Chariot, appeared a c. of fire, isb dust beneath c. wheels, 871 a
flying c. through air, 45gb maketh clouds his c., sia of fire, 49ob

never faileth, now abideth c., 5*b not puffed up, tjab
of saynte c., io8$b pity gave ere c. began, 44gb rarity of Christian c., sgja

5b

and

how

c.

divine philosophy, 3373

34?a never so wisely, igb


c. as books, to totter into vogue, 442a Charms by accepting, 4073

left his voice,

no furniture

$2sb

scrimped and iced, 8071 shall cover multitude of


suffereth long, 5*b

sins,

towards each other, 4&5b towards others, 33oa vaunteth not, szb weep for me who has c.,
1743
c. neither fear nor ignorance, 157 a Charity's golden ladder, i5$b Charlatan, defamed by every c.,

endearing young c., 54*a freedom has thousand c., 456b Icy arms hold c., 10353 music has c. to soothe, 39 ib O solitude where are c., 457b or ear or sight, $2?a
other maids' surpass, 48*b

where

Sabina has thousand c., strike the sight, 4o4b


sweets I

know

c. I feel,

4833

Charon could not prevent me, 8gb


Chart, map the battle c., g6za that faith deciphered, 86?a Charter, large a c. as wind, 248b this was c. of land, 42oa

65ia Charles Augustus Fortescue, goab gentlehearted C., 534a

immense
Fifth,

navy

5a of C. the
of
his

empire

of

C.

the

Chartered libertine, 24ja

successors

Second, the C.

Charwoman's

sister's son,

96sb

466a the First


Charles's,

Cromwell,

464b

King C. golden days,

iogoa

King C. head, 67 ib
Charlie
is my darling, soaa live and die wi' C., 5o?b o'er the water to C., so7b Charlotte, \Verther love for

C.,

66ob

Charybdis, I fall into C., 2343 implacable C. guards left, 234* on starboard beam C., S34a Chase glowing hours, 556a had a beast in view, 375^ lead a wild-goose c., ig4b me everywhere I go, Sggb my gloom away, 5000 panting syllable, 4573 piteous c., *47b the sport of kings, 397a

Charm ache

with

air,

*4?a

of Israel, i3b sweet c., noia that bears human

by thoughts supplied, 5oga


soul,

unhurrying c., 856b when heated in the


Chased,

c.,

73&a

creation with their art, 5053 distance lends double c., 6333
histories
c., 7143 in melancholy, soob indispensable to women, 8s8a music oft hath such a c, 2?a

more

c.

than
98 la

3843 enjoyed,

3sb
Chassis, state of
c.,

Time's winged

c.,

36oa

Chariots, why tarry the wheels of his c., i la Charitable, cherish at c. breast,
intents
lie,

Chaste and

fair,

3O2a

no
wicked or
c.,

c.

against tyranny, 7osb


c.,

25ga

northern
tains

1074!)

as ice, 26sb as the icicle, 2903 as unsunned snow, sgob early bright transient c., 372b
fair
c. unexpressive she, 249b modest and commonly c., 5645 nunnery of thy c. breast,

ios4a men's c. speeches, 2ogb Charite, of saynte c., loS^b Charities of kiss or smile, 5303
Charity, affecting
c.

reobject in possession seldom

and devotion,

loia

and have not


anticipate
erty,
c.

c.,

5a-b

by preventing pov-

i4ob of all the Muses, 6s4b of earliest birds, 345^ one native c., 4503 people who have c., 75ib perpetual c. in letter, 76sa simplicity and c., isoa
c.,

to her husband, 4o6b was she not c., i$6b Chastely, write c. and elegantly,

i55b

beareth all things, begins at home, io8b, $3oa


believeth all things, 5sb blubber of c., 958b crawling for c., loia creates multitude of sins, 84ob

5b

good mouth, g88b some have c. for none, 8$8a


smiling at

some women

c. all, 8s8a strength man's c., 858a strengthen and teach, 6233

9 6oa Chasten, power to c. and subdue, 509 Chasteneth, he that loveth c. him, 243 whom the Lord loveth he c.,
56a Chastening in hour of pride, 636b c. with scorpions,
Chastised, father hath
c.

52a endureth all things, envieth not, 52b faith hope c., 5$6b for all, 64ob frozen as c., 53$a greatest is c., 2b
edifieth,

5b

nopeth
I

am
c. c,

in

all things, c. with

5b
world,

3ob
5oab

in in

no

excess, 2o8b to all mankind,


c.,

indiscriminate is kind, 5*b

757a
c.,

morning star, 526b touching all the muses' c., wasted on sky, 6o2b what c. soothe melancholy, what is c., 858a witch hath power to c., without c. no literature, woman's strength, 8s8a Charmed, bear a c. life, fond love c. me, io85b it with smiles and soap, magic casements, 583a water burnt alway, 5*b with foolish whistling,

to stay

lisa

Chastise, I will

448b
you, isa

2573 87ga

having been a
Chastity, give i47

little c.,
c.

me

s6b but not now,

2&7a 7478

lectures or a little liberty like c., 10262 little earth for c., agga

7oob

Charmer, cheat and c., 8 were t'other c. away, 4o2a Charmers, will not hearken
voice of
c.,

to

igb
88ga

living

need

c.,

7503

Charmian

is

this well done,

my brother Chastity, 337a of honor, 454a Chat, before we have our c., 746a la patte du c., jSob qui pendra la sonnette au c., i6gb seasons O c., 8soa Chateaux, Chatter against bird of Zeus, 7ga and love and hate, 7i5b harebrained c., 6133 of transcendental kind, 766b

1225'

Chatter
Chatter, those
art
c.,

INDEX
who have
learned

Cheek,

warm

c.

and

rising bos-

793 Chattered all the way, 9580 Chattering swallow is come, voltage, xoiSa Chatterton marvelous boy, Chaucer, Dan C. first warbler, nigh to learned C., 3193 not lodge thee by C.,
since C.

om, 44ib
1053

5110 645b
jojb

was

alive,

5j6b
English

that

broad poet, si4a

famous

well of English, soob whose sweet breath, 6455 Chaucer's, corruption since

withered c. tresses gray, 5183 yellow c. white beard, 241 b Cheekbone, short a c. and ear, 7o$a Cheekbones protruding, 978b Cheeks, blood spoke in her c., 307b blow winds and crack c., 2783 crimson in lips and c., 225b dimpled c. to gaze upon, io86b make pale my c. with care,

Cheeses, ate c, out of vats, 66*b Cheevy, Miniver C., 8ggb Chemical barrage against life, io6ib
c. personalities like 935** st fiddler and

contact,

buffoon

Cherchez
Cherish,

la

femme, 5985 achieve and c.

peace

64ob
at charitable breast, ggob those hearts that hate
thee,

3i8b
C.
of sorry grain, 337b
rosy lips and c., 2943 so red and so white, 6913 stain my man's c., 278a tears are on her c., 34b

2993
rigorous conception, ioi8a to love and to c., 61 b to love c. and obey, 61 b Cherished, country c. in hearts,

Thy

Chaud comme

day, 3i4a

1'enfer,

4835

Chavender or Chub, 3263 Cheap defense of nations, 454a flesh and blood so c., sgab for hundred pages, io57b good counsel c., 31 ib greet c. holde at litel prys, i68a hold c. the strain, 666a ill ware is never c., 34a
man's
life
c.

wind on our

c.,

68ob

as

beast's,
c.,

ayyb
8oj>b

Cheer, all his c. as in his herte, i67b at Christmas make good c., i88a be of good c., 420, 493 but not inebriate, 399b, 45 8a
best physician, 7gb one on tedious way, 7403 our weary hearts, 75sb poor man's heart, 5igb scarce forbear to c., 5g6b
is

memory of loved and lost, 64oa Cherishes, art most c., 66sb love of comfort, 723 Cherishin', prof'tible c. mera'ry, 75 ia Cherishing enemy in disguise,
4623
Cherith, dwelt by the brook C.,
Cherries
fairly

men

cherish

consistency,

never buy because


sitting as standing,

474a $gob

sleep a sold c.

pleasure, 1973 what is most dear, 294*

c.

grow

which
air,

do enclose, 3<x>a none may buy,


like

tin trays,

947b

small

c.

and

great

welcome,

3ooa tremble in
Cherry,

what we obtain too c., 466b Cheapened Paradise, 72 ib


Cheapens, possession c., 77 ib Cheaper than keep cow, 7s6b-757a
Cheapest,

2i8a
three cheers one c. more, 766a unite with a c., 466b

grew

io7gb a double

c.,

man

richest

whose plea-

sures c., 6823 Cheap-lived show-off, Q78b Cheat against cheat, ijGb and charmer, 8$4b at cards genteelly, 43 ib

up comrades they come, 704b up worst to come, 887a Cheered, Admiral c. them holding
out hope, 1723
ship was c., 524b up with ends of verse, 35ab

pleasure as great as 353* could not c. grave, 79 ib


life 'tis all

to

c.,

Cheerer of spirits, 326a Cheerful giver, ssb


godliness,

themselves do cry, gooa Cherub, he rode upon a c., 173 Cherubims east of the garden, 6a Cherubin, heaven's c. horsed,
ripe

2303 hung with snow, 8s2b isle, 32oa killed little c. tree, 4993 now hung with bloom, ripe I cry, 3igb

852b

c.,

go^b

out of love c. others, go8a sweet c. gone, gi4b Cheated, age to c. age, 876b by anyone but himself, illusions by which c., go8a pleasure of being c., 3533 worthwhile to be c., 8783 Cheater, old bald c. Time, Check, care's c. and curb, judicial power a c., 463b rod to c. the erring, 5i4b Checked, be c. for silence, Checkerboard of nights and

of c yesterdays, 5i6b merry heart maketh a c. countenance, 24b

5120

man

to bells'

c.

sound, 486b

warm

6ob

ways of

precincts of c. day, 4413 men cut off, 3440


c.
c.,

young and rose-lipped c., 27sb Cherubin's, fire-red c. face, 1673 Cherubins, young-eyed c., *35b Ches, to her son she c., 10843 Cheshire Cat vanished slowly,
7443 Chess pieces phenomena of universe, 724^ Chessboard is the world, 724 Chest, as if c. a mortar, 6973 contrived double debt, 4503 Dead Man's C., 822b 3b if it is well with your c., of drawers by day, 45<> a

when God sends


Cheerfully, bear all

hour, 34ob 6563

3oab
36aa

do evil so c., 3p4a he seems to grin, 743a


part with life c., i42b support government, 77ia-b Cheerfulness always breaking in,

a6gb
days,

434^
keeps
daylight
in

mind,

394^3953
Checkered shade, 3353
Checks, as
if c.

throat of iron c. of brass, iiga Chester, charge C. charge, sigb

given, 737b

handed in his c., 7695 Cheek, care sat on his faded c., 342b feed on her damask c., 25*b give c. a little red, 4o6b grown thin, 7i4a he that loves a rosy c., 3273 I the blow and c., 7073 iron tears down Pluto's c., 3363 language in her eye her c., 2693 leans her c. upon her hand, 223b
of tan, 6s6a she hangs on c. of night, 22 sa that I might touch that c., 22gb

Cheerily, let my son go c, 945a Cheering hero or throwing confetti, 948b ib public men nor c. crowds, 88

Chestnut,

c. tree,

88sb
621 a out
of
fire.

spreading c. tree, Chestnuts, pull c. 3600, gisb


roast our
sailor's

Cheerless over hills of gray, 6a6b the rouse slumbering Cheerly

young

lad,

goga

own

c.,

9130
c.,

wife had

2813

she loves me dearly, 58ob Cheers, adorns and c. our way, 447 a responding to the c., 868a
silence

morn, 334b

young c., 5023 Chew cud 3nd are silent, 454 to be c., aogb books Chewed, few
Cheweth, whatsoever
9b
c.

Chevalier, the

the cud,

Chewing food of
for

fancy, 25ob
c.

no worse than

c.,

8533

books

than

gum, 8s5b

5633 three c. one cheer more, 7663 Cheese, apple pie and c., 8zoa
butter eggs

tar's labor,

little bits

of string, 9023

pound

of

c.,

74ob

Chicago at northwest gates, 8g8b rather hear about C., 10472 responsible for Tribune, 9993
Chicken,
last,

tongue not far from Kilmer


loooa turn the other
c.,

c.,

dessert without c., 484b dreamed of toasted c., 8233

champagne and

c.

at

4143

4ob

moon made

of green

c.,

i85b

in pot every Sunday, 2023

1220

INDEX
Chicken, she's

Children
c.,

some

c.

no c, jgob some neck, gajb

Child, lie
5 68b

down

like tired

Childish, practice

c.

ways, 653
c.

put away
religion

c.

things, 10553

Chickens, all

my

as hen gatheretn c., beside white c. f 9793

pretty

c. t

*S$b

430
750

count

c.

before

hatched,

over food, 9463 quit quarreling Chide, fall out and c. and fight,

froward c, j66b like three years' c., $t4b little c. snail lead them, 312 look upon a little c., 4*5b love him because my c., 8613 meet nurse for poetic c., 5193
life like

but

toy,

*isb

sweet

c.

days, 51 ib

things, 5*b treble, 9493

Childishly, sucked

on pleasures

c.,

Monday's
countenance, 2503 vv me for loving armchair, 686a

c. fair,

more hideous

in

10963 a

c.,

*7yb 2i6b go*b

my

c.

wife, 6723

Childishness, second c., 2493 Childless and crownless, 5573 Childlike, smile c, and bland,

trumpets 'gan to c., 58 ib Chides, at fifty c. delay, better a little c.,

3993

aSyb Chiding, Chief, a c. a rod, 4090 defect of Henry King, 9023 good and market, 2645 hail to the C., 5203
beside, 6623 rich quiet, 5963 Justice was nourisher in life's feast, s8$b
his
c.

ne'er spend fury on c., nicest c. I ever knew, of calamity, 7603 of my right hand, joab of our grandmother Eve, of pure unclouded brow, of scorn, &ggb old man twice a c., *6ia

Children, an'

all

us other c, 8193

and and
ssib 744b
as
c.

fools cannot lie, i84b fools want everything, 3763 fear in darkness, ngb
c.

as

he would wish
10743
as little
c.,

treated,

on a cloud I saw a c., 4865 on parent knees newborn c,,


476a painted c. of dirt, 411 a permit c. to join, 734b room of absent c., x$6b Rowland to dark tower, *78b said What is grass, 7ooa saving little c., 778b seemed a small ungainly c., 69b seen a curious c., 5i6b Shakespeare Fancy's c., 3353 shall play on hole of the asp, 3ia she was a c., 6443 c. in womb, g88b slayeth so nigh you are, 9876 sometimes say Poor c., 7223 spare rod and spoil c., 1020, 353* teach c. to doubt, 4903 thankless c., 277b there is a man c. conceived, i4b this c. to myself take, 5iob thought as a c., 52b to mother sheep to fold, 8543 train up a c. in the way, 2$b trumpet of c. of Rome, 775b tyrant is c. of pride, 8ib understood as a c, sab unto us a c. is born, 3ia virgin shall be with c., 393 warble c., 22 ib weep like c. for past, g85b

of the

Army, 5053
c.,

him fallen pity sinners of


train

whom

9063
I

am

c.,

553
c.,

society's c. joys,

4573

anyone to be merchant

Chiefest treasure, 90 ib Chiefs, vain the c. pride, 41 zb Chieftain Iffucan of Azcan, 9553
Chield's

433 begin by loving parents, 8393 behold chimpanzee, 866a belonged to man I didn't know, 7613 books c. of brain, 388 b blood on us and on our c., 453 breed of horses dogs c., 3813 bring forth c. in sorrow, 6a bringing up c., io53b can c. of bridechamber mourn,

become

4ib

amang you
c.,

takin' notes,

come dear

c. let

us away, 7iob

495b Child, a simple

5<>8b

again just for tonight, always say what's true, and the child's father, anything we change in c.,

around
as yet a

c.
c.,

bend 4iob

all

74*b 8233 8923 9363 three, s^Sb


58 la

drinkest tears of c., 5523 even c. followed, 44$b familiarity breeds c., 7&4b fear death as c. fear dark, 2083 give c. right to study painting,

4633

had

God have mercy on so many c., 10953

c,

g67b

beautiful a fairy's

c.,

behold the c., 4093 better is a poor and wise c., 27 b bring c. back to its mother, 6gb burnt c. fire dreadeth, 1845 call home the c., io4oa christom c., 2430 cry of c. by roadway, 88ob dear C. of Nature, 5i4b do not throw book, 901 a duty's faithful c., sgob Eros Zeus's c., 84b every c. may joy to hear, 486b
family stamped character on
c.,

hates c. and dogs can't be all bad, 95 ib

936*
fast fold

what

will

c.

learn sooner, 41 2a

thy

c.,

8osb
51 ib

father of the

man,

foster c. of silence,

5833

root, 3O4b get with c. give a little love to c., 6g8b gives a c. a treat, 9473 with c. great longing for

mandrake

prunes, 27ob
half devil half
c.,

I was a c., 52b white as angel English c, 486b wise father knows own c., 232b with sighs complain, 5933 woman with c., i io2a wretched c. expires, 9023 young c. with Mary, 3gb Childhood, barb in arrow of c.,

when

her c. arise up, 273 here my c. born, 636b in days of our c., 8483 in peace c. inter parents, 86b in the foliage, 10053 in the wood, 10843 indifferent c. of earth, 2613 iniquity of the fathers upon the c., 9 3 invent a game, 9853 king over c. of pride, i6b know and suffer, 10423 laboring c. look out, g4ob lisping on lips of c., sggb
listen

my

c.,

623b

living arrows, 9763 love of c. whether black or not, 10393

made
nature

c.

fits c.,

laugh and play, $6$b 6g2b

8?5b
in

832a
eye of
c.,

happy English c., 5463 hard heart of c., 9903 has fairy godmother, 8573 heard one calling C., 323b Heaven-born c., 334a her innocence a c, 36gb here a little c. I stand, 3*ia I spake as a c., 52b idiotic c., 8593 if you strike a c., 8373 in simplicity a c., jGgb
man, 51 ib his doings, 253 Christ her little C., 684b Jesus keeps secret well, 5ggb
is

263b
c.,

my

days of

little

world of

c.,

534a 9363

c., 10773 Negro nigger saying he would steal his c., 7613 no longer any c., 3623

school

make glad heart of c., 78ob manhood and decrepit age,


322a

model of greater world, 9363


scenes of my c., 5533 shows the man, 34&b this is c. of world, 8173 Childhood's hour, 5433, 641 b Childish but divinely beautiful,

infirm, 6030^ is father of the

known by

497b glamour of
inconstant
live life

c,

days, g8sb

hand, io57b
c.

of kingdom cast out, 41 b of larger growth, 4i5b of light, 47 7i3b of light and day, 553 of men full of wiles, 913 of the day, 553 of this world wiser, 473 of yestentey, 7893 old men are c., 913

nor do c. prattle about his knees, 633 not leave unless I do, io47b of an idle brain, 2233

know what

it

is

to

be

c.,

8573

not

c.

proud, 5793 task, 10183

parents bore their people are like c.,

c,,

122 7

Children
Children, provoke not
c.

INDEX
to

anger, 540 put c. on wheels, 9443 Rachel weeping for her c., 390 return ye c of men, 203 Revolution eats own c., 6755 second wife hateful to c., 830 shall wander in the wilderness,

X#

Chimeras, nothing great without c, 7223 Chimerical, reduction to atoms c.


ideal,

Chivalry, charge with c., 53 8a

all

thy

7793

Chimes

at midnight, 2423

little jingle little c.,

4oob

Chimleypiece, bottle on c., 67ob Chimney, as c. sweepers come to


dust, 29 la

beauty and her c,, 55&b herein c. courtesy humanity 7f 1746 smiled c. away, 5623 Chloe, what C3n C. W3nt, 4o6b
Chocolate,

her

no

c.

to

eat,

io8oa

9b
sins

of

fathers
c.

upon

c.,

86a

from

so act toward

so toward wife,

hung
little

so

youth, suffer armed men, 10423

1380 are

c.

of

the

2sb

made
makes
old

11053 by c. with care, 5413 c. hot in moment, 2193 c. in my father's house,


c.

tax

cell

free,

Choice snd master spirits, 2553 between quick and dead, 901 a brave man's c. is danger, 853 careful in c. of enemies, 8393 courage of making c., 9113
difficulty

2i5b
c.

suffer little c., 450 swarmed like settlers, io6oa sweeter than apples to c., 8*gb
tale

of

your
c.

men from

nose, corner,

which holdeth play, 203b

c.

from

tan-faced c., 70 ib teach them diligently unto thy c., loa their country their c., i i6a they shall be called c. of God,

watching what comes 6753 Chimneypiece, buffalo upon 747* out stretched Chimney's,
length, 3353

4843 2osb out c.,


c.,

hidden handful of inert, 6g6b Hobson's c., 3i2b in the worth and c., 3023 life's business c., 667b of horse snd wife, 7103
of point of view, g78a pays money takes c., 8ioa
reckless
c.,

in life is c., 8273 grain into this wilderness, 372b

c.

Chimneys

consume own

smoke,

9265

4oa walk on frozen toes, 9003 weeping O brothers, 6i7b were all thy c. kind, 4sb

when

voices of

c.,

487 b

576b your c. I sweep, 4873 Chimpanzee, children behold c., 866a Chimpanzees, might be c. today, 866b
Chin, close-buttoned to the c., 459* dogs shame the gray c., 64b new-reaped, 2383 China, benavior in C. licentious, 537 a break c. plates of others, 8s7b
crost the bay, 873b great revolutions of C.,

small

c.

word measured phrase, 5123


Choir, full-voiced
invisible,
c.

in rotten apples, 2193

below, 3363

of saints,

68ga 3083

where did c. vanish, 10583 who needed his protection,


io8ia wife and c. impediments, so8a wife and c. stand afraid, 3303 will burn, 10933

win world for c., g*$b wisdom exalte th her c., wisdom justified of c., 4*a
with Hyacinth's 904b

sanctusry snd c., icodb singing in the c., loggb St. Stephen's c., 10753 wsilful c, 5843 Choirs, bare ruined c., agab Choix, le c. fsit les 3mis, 4683 Choke fountsin of industry, 548a heart c. from pleasure, 10433

37b

temperament,
ioggb
fate,

how troublesome
4iga

io27b a country C.,

them amid flowers, 1143 Choked with smbition of meaner


sort, 2143 Chokes, error c. windows of mind,

women and
Children's,

c. first,

all

our

c.

877b
8843

mankind from C. to Peru, 4273 not seeking to dominate world,


suffering poverty, 88ga that's ancient and blue,
c. fall,

3013 Choking
6913

to

death

with
c.,

cream,
576!)

books of

my

day, 865b
love,

gratitude woman's

hour, 62 3b lips shall echo, 5563 teeth set on edge, 34b Child's amang you takin* notes,

8o4b

Choler, consume Choleric, captain's

own
c.

495
credulity
c.

no

c.

pley

strength, 5353 to take wyf,

i68b

we in C. today, ioiga Chinee, heathen C. peculiar, 76gb Chinese, bombing of C. cities, g84a
cheap labor, 76gb contradiction between imperialism and C., io27b
contradictions

4073 though thought of C. and Greece, 10543

word, 2711 passion, 4690 Choose, any language you c., 767b author as you c. friend, 374b do not c. to run, 9 lib

who subdued

don't

c.

to run, 9543

not lose his c. heart, looa sob curses deeper, 61 7b Child's-heart, not lose his c,, zooa Chill and drear, 5193
c., 4593 mantle of wind and c. and rain, i7ob penury, 44ob sun was warm wind c., gs8a thy dreaming nights, 58 ib wind is c., 5igb you through and through, 8aob young whom age doth c., 351 a c. breath invade, 7i4a breathed killing c., 8243 of c. and fever died, ioogb winter lingering c. May, 447b Chilly, although room c., gjob December day, io36a I feel c. and old, 6653 Chime, faintly as tolls evening c., 54ia higher than the sphery c., 3383 hours to which heaven c., 3<52b set c. of words tinkling, 8783 to guide their c., 3<5ob Chimera, what a c. is man, 3643

equality, 7163 firm cloud, 4o6b fool multitude c. by show, 2333 free to c. government, 10252

in

C.

society,

ground and t3ke thy


if

rest,

bitter c. it was, 58 ib in wintry age feel no

love jade, gg2b nightingale, 9533

Chilling, slowly
Chills,

people have solidarity, 88ga people's philosophy, ioigb poetry most human, 8633 sages to guide C., 5373 sediment of long C. past, wouldn't dare to, 10433 Chink, importunate c., 454b in floor of Wicklow house, go8b Chinks of her sickness-broken
that Time has made, 3333 Chinnymen, civilize th' C., 8gia Chip of old block, 453b Chips, let c. fall where may, 7333 Chisel, whether c. pen or brush,

you dare, 33ib intellect forced to c., 8843 it is time to c., 9563 let's c. executors, 227b msn in preference likely
rich,

to

8823
Chiseled,

down

c.

names raindrop,

783 multitude that c. by show, 2338 not alone proper mste, 45gb not c. not to be, 8o3b on'y wut guv'ment c., 6ggb pstn lesding where I c., 7013 ,sl3very or desth, sgsb therefore c. life, lob thine own time, 4703 to live without friends, g8a Venus here c. dwelling, 3712 we c. our friends, 4683 what becomes Castilian, 5872 Choosers, beggars should be no c.,
1843 Chooses, consciousness c. object, 7933-b 88*b intimacy that c. right, Choosest not better part, 866b

784b
Chivalrous, proud and c. spirit, 99 a quixotic sense of c., 6443 Chivalry, age of c. past, 69 ib

1228

INDEX
Choosing, long c. and beginning late, 3470 presidential nominee, Chop off her head, 743^ off your head, icxjjb Chopper to chop off your head
,

Chrysanthemum
C, 575
Christianity, narcotics alcohol

Christ, testimony of Jesus that is to be, 6512

that it were possible, 6$*b that my love in my arms, 10843 the Lord risen today, 4252 the Son in Father's stead,
thief said last word to C., this world all aleak, 1031 a thou art the C., 431 to live is C., 543

and C., 8055 one great curse, 8o6a


takes great deal of C., 87 ib Christianize Christendom, 6955 Christians, all C. agree, 43oa-b blood of C. is seed, Mjb good C. good citizens, 546b

S^b
6673

io93b

Chord

in melancholy, 5923 in unison is touched, 458^4593

mirth

has

c.

in

melancholy,

struck c. of music, 7263 Chords of memory, 637 b that vibrate pleasure, 4943 Chorister, bobolink for c., Chortled in his joy, 7453 Chorus ending from Euripides,

took the kindness, 6672 vision of C. thou see, 4913 walks on black water, 10753 what are patterns for, 931 b

have burnt each other, 5603 have comfortable creed, 5605 have little difference, 4313 if C. were C. no anti-Semitism,
lord
see

believing

C.

from

sky,

Christendom, christianize eager to get stake, 76jb


live

C.,

6g5b

ijsb

how

C. love one snother,

from Atlanta to sea, 7483 of Union, 637b what a c., 536b Chose, David c. him five smooth
stones, 123 Chosen, few are c., 43b I have c. you, 493 Lord hath c. thee, loa old ocean c. by thee, 7033 people of God, 4713 to wilderness the c. start, 947b
vessel,

in C. where Christian, 6o6b in any place in C., 1893 wisest fool in C., sosa

143 three paynims three Jews three


C., i74b

Christened on Tuesday, iog6a


Christcs

want

something

for

nothing,
desire

loore

and

his

apostles,

i66b
Christian,

8 3 8a Christmas, at C.
rose,

no more

any husband rather than C., 2353 bear other's misfortunes like C.,
4i?a
charity, 5933
civilization, 92 la

2213

at C. play, i88a

born on C. Day, 10993 broached mightiest ale,

sitjb

4gb
that
la

Choughs

Choux, que

wing 2793 mort me trouve


air,
c.,

darkness fell upon C., s66a endeavor hard on pulchritude, 9613


enterprise for glory of C. religion, i72b
feels

plantant mes

i8gb

Christ ain't going to be too hard,

repentance

on

Sunday,

778b
all at once what C. is, 8o4a born across the sea, 6gob born in Bethlehem, 4250 bowels of C., 3283, 9123 but this earth goes over, io22b came to save sinners, 553 catch C. with worm, 10753 cautious statistical C., 8073 deep did rot O C., 5253 Don Quixote and I, 5493 everyone in world is C., 93gb half a drop ah my C., aijb Himself buddy, 10783 his captain C., 2283

9623
fled with a C., 3333 forgive them as C., 533b

C., 9103 coming, i<x)8b here, 66ob it was C. Day, 2iob jest 'fore C., 8213
is
is

home

brought sports again, $igb comes but once a year, i88a, 6273 D3y in workhouse, 8133 gambol, 5i9b happy C. to all, 5413

ground, 4143 hate him for a C., 2323 honorable style of C., 3295 I am a C. faithful man, 2173 ideal difficult, 9183
if

keep our C. merry still, 51 gb night before C., 5413 one C. much like another,
over and business
pie, 10933
is

business,

victory

shall

become
C.
C.

C.,
die,

i47b
in what peace a 395 a
inconsistent

can

with

religion,

told merriest tale, $igb won't be Christmas, 7423 Chrfstmases, merry C. long

lives,

history

incomprehensible with6oa 533

out C., 7223 I believe in Jesus C., in C. all made alive,


is all is

in C. days, 5463 men be sure, 687b not so good C. as thinks,

made me

4432

67b
Christom child, 24$b
824b
parts,

O my

and in all, 54b C. thy advocate, 38ib it is the Inchcape Rock, 532b fesus C. her little child, 684b Jesus C. son of man, 9583 esus C. the same yesterday, 563 joint heirs with C., 513 keep your hearts through C.
.

only i72b

C. ducats, 2333 C. come to these


spoiled, &7ob

pagan

persuadest

me

to

be

C.,

practice C. forbearance, Protestant or priest, 78gb

sob 46&b

Christopher Robin goes hoppity, 9703 Robin had wheezles, 9703 Robin saying prayers, gQc/b Christ's blood streams, sigb in C. coach, 3813 l3dy of C. College, s6sa Lord C. heart, 6043
lore

and

his

apostles

twelve,

richest in C. world, 497b Scientists more science, 8gob

i66b
progress

and His prayer time,

Jesus, 54b kingdom and patience


C.,

of Jesus

573

O C. the plow, 9473 our Savior, 10993 receive him, 6$ib redemption by Jesus C., 6ob risen from dead, 533 rule given by C., 7323 save us all, 6213 Savior which is C., 463 show me dear C. Thy 7 spouse, 3083 shut up asylum, 8$ib sin forgiven by C., 6igb so Judas did to C., 228a soldier* of C. 3rise, 425b

kingdoms of his C., 583 Lord C. enter in, 8413

pagan, 8705 75ob thing, ios7b where C. in Christendom, 6o6b with four aces, 764b without hypocrisy, 747b
soldiers,

Science, 7093 scratch C, find

st3mp, 322b

witness

of

soul

naturally

C.,

i4*a

wonders of C. religion, 3873 word of gentleman and C., 1953 you are Ciceronian not C., 1453 you were a C, slave, 8i6a
Christianity a son religion, Sg^b blemish of mankind, 8o6a Catholicism minus C., 724b cult called C., 783b

upon barricades, 8 3 8b Chromis did not save himself, 6ab Chronic anxiety about weather, 77ob do not weep it's c., 6703 hotel guests, Sgsb melancholy of civilized, 7833 Chronicle of wasted time, 293b
pride his own c., 268a small beer, 273b wars of kites, 3503
c.

Christs that die

Chronicles, brief

of the time,

26ib
transcribe my c,, sggb Chrononhotonthologos, 4oob c. remains immaculate, g8ob
,

more C., 8ox)b enormous perversion, 8o6a


doctors

Chrysanthemum, white

muscular

C.,

6133

1229

Chub
Chub, Chavender or

INDEX
C., 326* out the brute, 873* with c. replied, o6 3 b of low c., 7614

Chuck *im Chuckle, he little kind Chuds, the


Chunkin',

Cigar, post -prandial c, 7863

Circumstance, some
us,

c.

C.

Slavs

and Krivc.,

smoke mild c., 888a smokes fifty-cent c., g6sb Cigarette smoking may be hazardsouls, 8gsb 5ob Cinara, reign of the good C., issb Cincinnatus of the West, 5585
Cilicia,

to please

3560

unsifted in perilous c., 259* Circumst3nces, all cl3$ses timet c,


alter cases,

chians, 170%
'ear

ous, ios7a Cigars, bv c.

know
C.,

s8yb
c.,

Church and

paddles
state

and

demand
7i7b

87 $b for

Tarsus in

concatenation of

547b

country, 971 a
state separate.

authority of C. moved me, 1473 bells knolled to c., 4?b blood of martyrs seed of C.,
i43*>

Cinders ashes dust, 58 ib sat among the c., 10955 somebody's always heaving

c.,

creatures of men, 61 ib fortuitous c., 52 la m3ke the c. they want, man not creature of c., of civil society, 4803

3863
611 b

Cinnamon,
c.,

built

God a

nutmegs

ginger

c,

4571

to c. good people, Sssa erased no c., o$7b Catholic C., 6oa holy
I like

come

cloves, 3223 tree, 10533

W3r

people alwsys blaming rule men, 873 train of c., 4673

c.,

8363

Cipher,
Circle,

write and c. too, 4503 all within this c. move,


c.

c.,

6o*a

Circumst3nti3l, lie c., 2513 some c. evidence strong, 68sa things essential or things c.,

I like silent c., 6o6a if I must build c., i(>57b

dose drew
7$5b

c.

of felidties, 4723 shut me out, 8373


c.

Circumvent God, s65b


shade,
Circuses, bresd and c., i39b Cistern contains, ffib wheel broken at the c., 292 Cisterns, empty c. exhausted
wells, 10033 c., 6583 did not go to c. of Troy, 691 S3cked the holy c. of Troy, 653 towered c. pend3nt rock, 288b Citadels, V3in c. not wslled, io28b Citstions, 3void c. from poets, 88b Cite, devil csn c. Scripture, 2323 Cit, le buste survit a 13 c., 6s8b

keep Sabbath going to

c.,

Mother
1833

C,, 145!)
c.

nearer to

further from God,

ever-weaving 7143 glory like a


if

weaves

c.

in water, 2143

understood, sgsb c. except hog, 7613 not forgotten inside of c., 1403 not God for father if not C. for mother, 1441 persecuted c. of God, 5*b plain as way to parish c., S48b prayers of c. to preserve travel,
c.

no other nobody at

in

you have formed a c., 4gob which relations appear to


c., c.,

Citadel, bust outlasts

stop, 7993 life self -evolving live too much in

6isa 6123

748b of potential being, ygzb


c.,

man

center of

of the golden year, 6463 of wedding ring, 59 sb


restricted
c.

saw a wedding in the c., 375b see a c. by daylight, *4sb

of potentisl,

79b

Cities,

some
993

stands

to c. repair, 403* c. dock at ten to three,

take car* of the c., 558 to be of no c. dangerous, 4285 to c. and with my mourning
very handsome, 3763 two lanterns in North C., 464b upon this rock build my c., 432 wall between c. and state, 991 a

what is a c., 4832 where God built c., i7gb wide as a c. door, 2353.

shock of recognition whole c. round, 695b small c. as we will, 4783 swinging round c., 6273 that took him in, 8273 vidous c., 7513 weave c. round him, 5243 wheel is come full c., 28ob Girded, dsrkly c., 6s6b monthly changes in c. orb, 2243 Cirdes of blind ecstasy, io43b produce perfect c., ggb triangles c. and other geometrical figures,

alabaster c. gleam, 8493 snarchy why c. tumble, 823 badly paved, 10633
c.

buries

in

common

grave,

c., 10833 Eros builder of c., io6oa

4663 embers of

in 3 hundred c., of c. torture, 556b art built c., 2ogb London flower of c. all, Lot dwelled in the c., 73

hum

grass

9313

humsn

1763

sub

marble well-governed c., 10603 most pccksniffisn of c., goob never have rest from evils,
94a-b oblivion swallowed c. up, 268b of men and manners, 6463

without bishop, 5911 world or c. or state, 6943 Churches, chapels had been c., *3ib in flat countries, 5i6b scab of c., 301 a seven c, in Asia, 57b Churchman, I that cowled c. be, 6osa Churchyard abounds with images, 4s8b Drumdiff c., 8852 thing, 58*3 where Michael Furey buried, g6Sa Churchyards yawn, 26sb Churlish, reply c., 851 a Churn, silver c., 767a
Gibus, ali c. aliis venenum, 1143 Cicada, wild c. cried, ioi8a Cicadas, cries of c., 3803 like c. so leaders of Trojans,

Girding, busy whisper

c.

round,

449b

morn waked by
Circuit, his
c.

hours, 346b unto the ends of it,


c.

i?b
Circulating
library

in

town,

our c. badly built, loigb place philosophy in c., nib say unto the c. of Jud3h, 32b
suffer siege, io57b towered c. please us then, 3353 wsrred for Homev dead, 30 ib

48ob Circumambulatory

aphrodisiac,

io6ib Circumdsed, took by throat the c. dog, 27<5b Circumcision, neither c. nor uncircumcision, 54b Circumference, disseminsting their c,, 7373 fst3l c., 748b Circumlocution Office, 6723 Circumnavigator of soul, 8793 Circumscribed, not c. in one self
place, 2133 Circumspect, parent c. in choosing, iSgb Circumspection deliberation fortitude, 4443 Circumspectly, goes most c., 6o.5b Circumstance and proper timing,

Citizen consider traveling expens-

of good free nation great, $ggb

es, 10283 first requisite


c.

c.,

847b

good humblest
I

not
c.

silent,

7a8b

am

3
c.

Roman

keep

of land, 8s8b c., i lob from error, 102 ib

obliged to be c., 7103 of no mean city, 5ob of the world, 87b, 2o8b priv3te c., 47 2b priv3te c. without wrong, 747b
Citizens

633

pour out
63a
Cicero,

their

clamoring wrong, 1223


selves as

for

what
c.,

is

piping voices,

demean
faction
fat

book of a certain C., i47a Demosthenes or C., 5073 Ciceronian, you are C. not Christian, 1453 Cigar, good c.
is
c.,

good equal before law, 748b


is

461 b

9*a

number
c.,

of

c.,

4803

good five-cent

a smoke, 87 ib 8293

783b blows of c., 65ob c. calm, 5&4b envisage fell clutch of c., 8163
of glorious W3r, 2753

3rtistries in c.,

and greasy
c.

force

247b to confess, i02ib

frenzy of his fellow c., 1210-1223 good Christians good c., 546b no ruling class of c., *

1230

INDEX
Citizens of Berlin, 10743
Civil discord,

Class
Civilized, pastime of c. man crooliy, 8g2a society five qualities, 86ia-b

of death's land, 9923 of middle class, g8b of the world, 9743 of other c., 4803 rights rulers snd ruled, 10493

io25a to arms c., 499 a welfare of good c., 8483 about what Citizenship anxious do for nation, 10733 for c., 8453 science education
second class
c.,

Citoyens, City and

aux armes c. proud sest

3942 engaged in great c. war, 6393 founder of c. society, 435b fury first grew high, 35 ib in respect of c. rights, 7485 limitation daunts utterance, 7313 violent and over over c., s68b rights of Englishman, logia sea grew c. at her song, 2293 text of c. instruction, 47*b too c. by half, 4&ob Civil War rebirth of Union, 84 ib
Civilian control of military, g84a Civilians, wish to be c., 11043
Civility,

woman
Civilizes,

valued by
last

men, 8333
c.,

thing
c.

7303

Civilizers,

two
sex

man, 6i2b whose presence c.,


of

Lucifer,

Athens divine c., 7gb Babylon that great c.,

little

c,

uooa

bomb
Dutch

fell

on no
of

c., gl

defend

village
c.

town

_.,

Q2lb ;,_

York, 864b education to Greece, goa entire c. has suffered, 67b the c., except the Lord keep

New

3203 Civilization, advance American c., 10642 advances poetry declines, $g4b architecture test of c., 5873 at cock-crowing, 6o7b
c.,

wild

457* Civis Romanus sum, i lob Clad in beauty of thousand stars, 2i3b in complete steel, 3373 in sober livery c., J45b morn in russet mantle c., 2573 naked every day he c. f 448b with native honor c., 3453 Claim that our city is education,

woman
86b

903

t3kes off

c.

to respect,
c.,

Claims, adjustment of colonial

blessings-of-c. trust, i6$l>

842b of long descent, 645a


snakeskin titles of c., io4ib Clamor, not in c. of street, 624b of crowded street, 624b of waters and might, 77 2b
persons who constantly c., 5483 singer to burst into c., 985)3

22b
the rest of the failing that
94**
c.,

famous Hanover c, 6623


for sale, 1163

botched c., g88b cannot survive wrongs, Christian c., gsia civilize c., 6g$b could be restored, g5ob
curiosity lifeblood of definition of c., 861 a drama only develop in
c.,

icsib

God nwde
great

first

c, 3583

941 b

c. greatest men, 7013 harder to be won than a strong c., 253 he that taketh 3 c., 24b hell c. like London, 5703 honor once at home in c., 3i6b how doth the c. sit splitsry, 34b in country you praise c., i2ob in the c. of Dsvid, 463 tescher of the man, 7ob is land raises tsxes, 733b like rain falling on c., 8o8a

c.,
c.,

8ooa
57 5b

Clamoring, citizens wrong, 1223

c.

for
it,

what

is

elements
English farmers
first
c.

of

modern

humanizing, 7i6b founders of c., 5483 permanent c. in America,

g7ga Clamorous lapwings, 4053

hammering ring
that

of

owl

nightly

hoots,

long in populous c. pent, looking over hsrbor and men make the c., gob most glorious c, of God, 1473 no continuing c., 563

no mean

c.,

$ob

10383 France conquered for c., 7*ob homicidal c., g6gb ideals of c., 9393 in middle stage, go5b in the balance, 8422 materialistic c., loigb nature and c. literary field, 797 nobody writes for c., 8g4a not exhausted, 6gib not wiped out by atomic war,
95 OD

Clamors, immortal c., 2753

Jove's

22gb dread

venom
2i8b

c.

of

jealous

woman,

Clan, family party tribe c, uooa leaf last of its c., 5243 taking from one c., 4i?b Clang of hurrying feet, 6743 Clanging rookery home, 6473 Clangor, trumpet's loud c., 3703 Clangs, iron door c open, 10573 Clap, if you believe c. hands,

obedient to his will, 94b of big shoulders, 9483 of night perchsnce death, 753b
of the soul, 5573 one long in c. pent, 5793 3 c. of bricks, i24b
c.,

8583 padlock on her mind, 3&7b


soul
toll
c.

path of

c.

paved with

tin cans,

hands and
c.,

sing,
c.,

Clapper, his tongue the

88sb 2463
wings,
c.,

Rome

room of Transcript, io45b


rose-red
set

675b
c.,

plan c. or perish, 10273 poets in our c. difficult, ioo7b requires slaves, 84ob respect for c., io74b ridicule Western c., loigb
safety

purple

7043
c.

Claps, at neaven's gates

2033
Claptrap,
3it

independent of

754b

royal David's

684b 4oa since the founding of the i4gb speck of light below, 825b

enlightenment

c.,

7o8b

Cl3ret,

on an

hill,

salvage of our c, gsgb


c.,

sweet
this

c. dresming spires, 7143 taking in hand a c., 77b great hive the c., 357b throne in a strange c., 64ib to the c. and the world, 1523 up and down C. Road, loggb upon a hill, 3183, loyzb what is the c. but people, 28gb without 3 c. wall, 684b Zion c. of our God, 4463

speech is c., g37b temple of our c., g7i3 theory of true c., 7o?b thin crust over revolution, 8513 true test of c is the poor,
is man, c., 786b worth saving, loisb what dissatisfies in c., 7i6b workers mainstay of c., 821 a worship Eastern c., loigb Civilize civilization, 6g5b

Clarifies,

time cools time c., g$7b Clarion laid away, 10383 sound sound the c., 455b of c., Clarity, culture moment
give each moment c., gs7b et venerabile nomen, i34b Clash, bring to our ears c. of

bumper of c., 55*b liquor for boys, 4333

977b

true test of c. usual interval of

6oBb

Clarum

Western

c.

City's disinherited,
feel

857b

them

stiff,

8gia
c.

arms, 4653 ignorant armies c., 7153 Clasp, dare deadly terrors c., 4893 them because they die, 7igb thrice tried to c. her image, 663 Clasps crag with crooked hands,
Class,

c.J3r, 7113 City-st3tes of Greece, io4ga Civet, give me an ounce of


in the room, 4573 Civic genius of people,

amid

Civilized, efflorescence of
c.,

life,

7063 higher law in


in
c.

6513 advanced guard of working


c.,

c. societies,

10133
brutalizing lower

human being, gs6b


not
live

7i6b

nation, 752a Japan law as soon as c, 7883

debtor c., 7713 ideas of ruling


cooks,

c.,

6873

some
Civil,

c.

manhood, 64gb
with
c.

man
4113 4803

without

3ssent

leer,

circumstances of

c. society,

74ib no c. life without

middle
clothes,

materializing upper c,, 7i6b c. best political community,

86za

g8b

1231

Class
Class,

INDEX

middle c in America the nation, 7i6b no criminal c. except Congress,

Q can,

let other people mess, io36b

c up
c.,

new broom sweepeth

1845

no superior ruling c., 7485 proletariat revolutionary


686b
second
c.

c,

our trunk of death, io57b passed c over Jordan, lob pasture spring, 9255
purge

me and

I shall

be

c.,

iga

Clear your mind of cant, Clear-cut criteria, 10283 Cleared, if this were only c, ship cheered harbor c., 4b Clearer, age c. than noonday, IM view ourselves with c. eyes, 32 ia Clearest of God's creatures, 10761

citizen*,

10252
c.,

686b vulgarizing middle


struggles,

starved for a look, 2gxb then c and brave, 85&b

who have

c. vision,

8gb

7166
88ga

war

things holy profane

c.

obscene,

c. I am in it, 8316 of better c,, 866b Classes, all c. times circumstances,

destroy

inequalities,

while lower

women

6783 antagonism between

c.,

6871,

99a
aspirin of middle c., io5ob back masses against c., 63 ib

bow lower middle


cultivated

c.,

76?a
higher
c.,

draw
4730

c., yo6b powers into

3i8a think of c. beds, gg2b tumbler and corkscrew, 66gb wash blood c. from hand, aSgb Cleaned windows swept floor, 766a Cleaner greener land, 8735 Clean-gleaming, plates and cups c., 993b Cleanliest shift is to kiss, 25oa Cleanliness next to godliness, 421 a who of late for c., 3155 Cleanly, fight c, then, 10345
leave sack and live c, 241 a not too c. manger, 354b room lavender in windows, 326a thus so c. I myself can free,

Clearinghouse of world, 76sb Clearly, well conceived c. said 377* Clearness of eternal love, io?gb virtue of style, 8793 wrote with celestial c., 8nb
Clears today of past regrets, 6303 Cleave to her, 653b to sunnier side of doubt, 6558 tongue c. to the roof of my

wood
Glee,
Cleft,

mouth, 23a unto his wife, 5b from

there am I, 827b C. to heaven,


c.

8528
core,

apple's

four c. of idols, 2073 noblest work she c. O, other c. delay disappear,


Classic

through

xvw*. of Ages

who

c.

tempt upper c., 8453 book people praise don't

Clemenceau

c. for me, 4693 Devil's foot, 3o4b

had

one

illusion,

read, f^ya. face, 64 ib Paris our black

2iia Cleanse stuffed bosom of perilous


stuff, 286b thou me from secret faults, i7b thoughts of our hearts, Sob Cleansed, what God hath c., soa Cleanses, poetry c., io74b Clean-shaven, buttoned-up and c., 7g6a Clean-winged hearth, 6sj6b

Clemency

species of

nobility,

c.,

io75b

373b Clemens Lincoln of


77sa

literature,

reread c., 105431 tread on c. ground, jgja Classical quotation, 433b Classicist in literature, ioo8a
royalist Anglo-Catholic, Classics at home drowsily

Clement's, bells of St. C., iog3b Cleopatra, every man's C., s67b

squeaking C., 28ga


Cleopatra's nose, 363b Clergy, without benefit of
c.,

icoSa
read,

6o8a

Clear,

action

faithful

honor

c.,

charm

country in paraphrase, g88a

in

inn,

6o8a

4073

voucher of respectability, 845b Classified, objects c., 4?8a


Clatter of hailstones

and cool clear and cool, 691 a and present danger, 7&8a-b
as as as as as as

on

a whistle, 4i$a

icebergs,

American Constitution, io74a crystal, 6?2b


nose hi face, 181 b the sun, *gb

Clergyman, avoid c. who is man of business, i45b proud c., 425a so much at home, 756a who never refuses dinner, i45b Clergymen, bankers schoolmates
c, 881 a men women and c., 52ga Clergymen's households unhappy,
Cleric

goga

of presses, g88b they make with his coach, 37<5a Clause, servant with this c., 3243 Claw, red in tooth and c, 6$ob Clawed, age c. me in his dutch, i87a Claws, neatly spreads c., 7453 pair of ragged c., looia that catch, 745a
Clay,
bless

you go, 7&5a


twilight

brown
6i4a

atmosphere,
c.,

before and

Lay

behind,

but one rule to be coast was c., 21 ib

55ob
2O2b
35ja

Clerical, features of c. cut, 10041 printless toe, gg$b

turf

that
to

wraps
c.,

c.,

conscience is sure card, conscience or none, 105 ib doctrines plain and c.,

Clerk,

a bed C. Saunders

said,

io88b foredoomed, 4ioa


less illustrious c.,

doubt slow to dead and turned


feet of
c.,

c.,

66sb

457b

s66a

3a

fire clean hearth, 5353 for life six hundred pounds,

no

difference 'twixt Priest and

C.,

32oa
c.

own, gssb none is, 10973 kingdoms are c, 2872 lies still, 85*5 man mass of thawing
its

has

in

c.

4iib honor c., 4o7a honor purchased by merit, 2gsa


c.,

send
there

to province, 37ga

68 $b
6*4gb

not
of

blind
c.

and

soul with c., wattles made,


c.

in clearness of love, io7gb in cool September morn, 6a6a in his great office, 28ab
literature
c.

was of Oxenford, Clerks, greatest c. noght men, i67b


Clever, encouraging
if c.

i66b
wisest

pupil, 4*5a

all

c.

people

good,

78sb

87gb

and

cold,

g87a

let

who

will

be

c.,

691 a, g6zb
c.

porcelain

of

humankind,

37ob power over the


say to 33 a sons of

him

c., 51 a that fashioneth

it,

my sad thoughts doth c., 36ab one c. call for me, 6553 read my title c., 3973 religion of heaven, s8ob ship c. she leaps, 7033
spouse so bright and c., 3083 stained the water c., 486b summers wet and winters c.,

of the turtle, io52a


silliest

woman manage
c.,

man,

87&a think oneself more

355!*
c.,

c.,

6s7b
c.,

tenement of

wet mind and say something gia

$68a
c.,

weak

woman manage
91 9D

fool, 87 2 a
c.

creatures of

gib
8i4b

Clay-shuttered doors, 857a Clean, art only c. thing,


as a lady, ggoa

ii7a they could get

young poets, 5303 Cleverer, advantage over

boys,

it c.,

745b

bid them keep teeth c., a8gb create in me a c heart, iga he that hath c. hands, i8a hearth, 535a horse of courage, io8oa

though deep yet c., 3573 unconquerable cry, 78$b viol of her memory, 95b what is not c. is not French, 48zb wild call and c. call, g46b

Cleverness, sages superior only in

Clicked behind the door, 45a off by little wheels, io3ga of dock, tickin' Clickin* like

8igb

1232

INDEX
Client, art
Clients,
c.,

Clotilda
c. I

thou his

c.,

38 ib

good counselors lack no

Cloak, sold 1741

even to

wore,

Cliff

2703 between lowland and high-

Cloaked, firs darkly c., 8i6b Clock, a-dickin' like tick in' of

c.,

land, 776a

dreadful summit of the c., 25gb Cliffs of Dover, 88ga of fall frightful sheer, 8o4a white c. of Dover, g$*b would I were under the c., 84b Climacteric of his want, io76b Climate, age too late or cold c.,
347 b
coal portable
fell
c.,

8igb
collected in tower, 8543 doth strike by algebra, 3522 forgot to wind c., 4378 in belfry strikes one, 74yb stands c. at ten to three, o^b stops time come to life, 10591 struck one, 10933

is He than . breathing, stkketh c. than a brother, 253 walk with God, 4s6b Clroes, life as it c., 77$b one door c. another open, 1766 path emerge* then c., %oa Closet, back in c. lays, 63ob

Closer

do

very

well

in
c.,

c.,

4155
rivets,

knowledge not in
Cloning, busy

4153
c.

hammers

6o8a

difference of soil

upon ungenial
c.,

and c., 5113 c., 7iyb

so blessed in

gz6b

time made me numbering c., 228b turned into a c., 7*4b varnished c., 4503 will strike Devil will come,

diapason c. full in Man, 3703 Innocence c. up hit eyes, sub Clot bedded axletrce, 10053 Cloth, cut my coat after my c,
1833
giecii
c. to us, 18 ib untrue with twisted cue, 768 b Clothe general earth, 5263 Greece in freedom, 7ob my naked villainy, 2173 with hammered gold, 6g6b with rags, 263 Clothed all in leather, 10981 and in right mind, 45b his neck with thunder, i6b in white samite held sword,
c., 7^3^ meat drink and

of opinion, io6oa Climate's sultry, 5603 councils Climates governments, 646a

whole

c.

2130

worn

out

with

eating

time,

Climb back to upper


but I must
c. c.

air,

n8b

Clocks si striking hour of courage,

ioi4b
tongues of bawds, tsyb were striking hour, 62 ib Clod, a kneaded c., 27 ib
feverish selfish little
if c.
c.,

the tree, jssb to fall, igga fain yet i c. far, loga high if heart fails c. not, igga into the fold, jjSb
fear

8 56b

no man 779b
Sinais

washed away, 3o8b

c.

beyond

limitations,
it

c.

and
to

know
c.,

not,

ye

how

in cloud and c., $74b no dull c. on my coffin, 6gsb of wayward marl, Clods, only a man harrowing c.,

4b

in

man

white samite mystic, c. with rags, 3655

6533

337b

hill as light fell, go6a c. Mount Sion, io76b Climber upward turns face, 2543 Climber-up, young c. of knees, 5oib Climbest, moon c. skies, sogb Climbing, down thou c. sorrow,

Climbed
never

784a Clog, anger at


three

c.

of his

body,
c.

naked and he c. him, 44sb naked and ye c. me, 443


with derision, 7733 with heavens, 377b with integrity, 3613
Clothes,
as
c.

generations and c, 757b

between

Clogs which else might overscar, 569* Cloister, pale with breath of c.,

to
c.

biographies

and

bodies, 8623 buttons,

277b
night c., io22b shakes his dewy
still

72ob
Cloistered,

7643 buying

c.

and

groceries,

948b
c.,

flown

his

c.

flight,

enterprises that require

new

wings,

3323

2845
virtue, 34oa

c.

after

knowledge

infinite,

Close
third stair,

Climbs, sun c. slow how slowly, 68ga Clime, change c. not disposition, i23b deeds done in their c., 558a
in some brighter love no season
c.,

bare-bosomed night, 7002 behind him tread, 5255 cannot hold thee c. enough, 10238 circle of felicities, 4723 decay grossly c. it in, 235b designs crooked counsels, 3683

4703
c.,

draw the curtain


her

c.,

2153

iog4b his old c. a few books, 9793 it burns your c., 4843 kindles in c. a wantonness, 3203 liquefaction of her c, 3213 loves but their oldest c., 3053 Mordecai rent his c., 143 nothing to wear but c., 8453 nothing wears c but Man,
c.,

682b hanging out

knows nor

305 a melt frozen c., 10853 of unforgotten brave, 558a that lieth sublime, 6433
Climes,
cloudless
c.

eyes with holy dread, 5242 from ancient walls, 491 a


instantly
little
c.

old

c.

venerable, 576b

with

offer,
its c.,

life closed

before

7253 7393

on hickory limb, 11033


out of these wet c., 9993 part of man's self, 79jb
put on his Sunday c., 5683 smell of old c., ggjb spoiling nice new c., iog5b of c. 884b stepped out swaddling c., 463 take fire and his c. not be burned, 23b through tattered c., 27gb thrown on with pitchfork, sgob walked away with c., 6123 wear our c. and what differf

starry
c.,

skies,

Cling, babes

around thee bough where I c., 6g4b


catlike steps that
c.,

8y8b
gigb
5ioa gi8b

kiss

and

c.,

82 ib
cross,

to old

rugged
in

together

one

society,

c., Clings, desire for glory c., i4oa leaves drifted one c., g6ga

cowardice

that

garden c., 7ssa mistake not to c. eyes, 8653 c. than brother, 877a not a friend to c. eyes, 37 ib position to look c., g27b rave at c. of day, io7ob scent survives c., 8563 setting sun and music at c., 226b shutters fast, 4583 so c. to dwelling place, g26b to edge of precipice, 10373

more

pain c. cruelly, s8ob Clink of ice in pitcher,

up
82oa

his eyes

and draw

curtain,
51 3b

ence,

2153

cannikin, 662b c. wings, 58 ib Clipper ships of 1850*5, ggSa worst c. one man, Cliques,

why

c.

upon
wall

the

growing boy,
English

when he put on his c., 448b Clothing, come in sheep's c., 4b


of delight, 486b of the grave, ooia
softest
c.

Clip,

philosophy

up with

dead,

Clive,

what

I like

about

C.,

Cloak, covers man like c., martial c. around him, my fine camlet c., 3753 not alone my inky c., 257b old c. about thee, 10853 smiler with knyf under c., i67b

weary lips I c., 4423 Close-buttoned to the chin, 45ga Closed, duet hath c. Helen's eye,
30ob
eyes in endless night, 44il> in death attentive eyes, 4293
life
c. life begins, 7033 twice before its close, 7393

wooly

bright,

486b
c.,

strength and honor are her

273 wolf in sheep's


Cloths,
Clotilda,

c.,

he3vens'

75b embroidered

c. t

88ob

God

of C. grant victory,

i47b

1233

Cloud
Cloud, a little c. like a man's hand, ijb are as a floating c., 7ib brightest day hath c., 2145

INDEX
Clouds, pack c. away, 30 ib prince of c., 7073 return after the rain, s8b robe of c., 559b

but c. and like shady grove, 4873 choose a firm c., 4o6b comes over sunlit arch, gs8a every c. engenders not storm, 2i6b fair luminous c., 5273
geese like snow c., loogb in c. and clod to sing, in pants, ios8a in shape of a camel, 26jb joy the luminous c., ffiz lift me as wave leaf c., lightning out of dark c., like a fiend in a c., 4863,

round setting sun,


scare white sees God in
c.
c.,

51 4a

on, gs6b

4o8a

ships

dim-discovered
c.,

from

c.,

4igb
silk-sack

8033

somewhere
88ib
spirits

beyond
sit

c.

above,
c.,

Clutching inviolable shade m.* 7 C.O., Catholic C.O., io76a Coach, Christ's c., 381 a clatter they make with c. tTfia 3/ come my c., 2653 rascals in c., 6gga rattling of a c., 3o8b through act of Parliament io8gb Coach house, cottage with double
'

974b

$6gb 8o5a 48gb

like a man's hand, i$b nature mutable c., 6o5b not a c. in heart, 74oa of barbarism and despotism.

of ignorance, 1041 a of mortal destiny, ynb of witnesses, 563 on a c. I saw a child, 486b sable c., 3$6b scowl of c., 668a seemed to be local dust c.,

473

my bow in the c., Son of man coming


set

io6gb

6b
in
c.,

4yb

stirred by solitary c., 3803 stooping through a fleecy c., 355 that looked like centaur, gia that's dragonish, a88b

thickest c. stretched, 66ya through dark c. shining, 9173 took form of demon, 64 ib

wandered lonely as

c.,

scattered, rain, 57 ib will turn to rain, 64b Cloud-capped towers, 2Q7b

when

c. is

which outwept

5ia 57b

Cloud-Cudcoo-Land, gib Clouded, moon rising in ty, 345b


shine forth

c.

majes-

upon

c.

hills,

4gob

Cloud-kissing Ilion, ssob Cloudless climes starry skies,

242a storm c. brood on heights, 6743 sun breaks through darkest c., 2igb sweep c. no more, 6333 thank her though c. arise, 6943 to soar again, 555a trailing c. of glory, 5i3b tumult in the c., 88 ib what with all these c., gib white c. on wing, 7293 with what motion moved c., 5ioa wrapped in c. and snow, 5563 Cloud-topped hill, 4o8a Cloudy, among c. trophies hung, 584* flaming opal ring, 878b huge c. symbols, 581 a pleasant and c. weather, 4yoa skies not c. all day, 8o8a tabernacle parted, 5&7a was the weather, iog8a Clove, burning c., 9270 Cloven tongues as of fire, 4gb Clovenfooted, whatsoever is c., gb Clover and one bee, 7393 any time aristocracy, daisies and c., 7043 Cloves, nutmegs ginger cinnamon c., 32aa Clown, be you c. or be you king, 8sib emperor and c., 5833 of spirit's motive, io6gb Cloy appetites they feed, 287b hungry edge of appetite, 226a of all meats soonest c., ssyb Cloyless sauce, s87b Club assembly of good fellows,
loyal to
c.

of wise

in

Coaches, turn pumpkins into c 8573 Coal, cargo of Tyne c., Q47a portable climate, 6o8a Coals, can one go upon hot c,

230
carrying c. to Newcastle, iioa heap c. of fire, 26a

Coarse

complexions and cheeks 337b familiar but not c., 4*83 style

Coast, apple-bearing Hesperian c,

and rockbound was dear, 2iib


stern

c.,

57*!)

Coaster, dirty British c., g47a Coasts, bristling sea c., 6g6a Coat, cut my c. after my doth

1833 Footman hold looia her c. so warm, 546a made song a c., 88ib
eternal

my

c.,

of many colors, 7b passion for a scarlet red breeches blue, 5333

c.,

s8gb

558b
fill

rather than planet,

sky with
in

c.

sunshine, i22a
c.

scintillant

days,

Clouds and eclipses stain, and stars and birds, giyb base contagious c., 2g8a blue-massing c, ggsb
color that paints

9793 2923

io46a not with

c.

heart broken, 7383

morning

eve-

place where twenty pay, no4b spear to thrust c. to strike, i8ob swamp elm c., 831 a wife joined woman's c., 864a Clubs, deuce of c. pinned to bark,

ning
colors

c.,

i6ia
861 a

76gb
7323
i2sa
typical of strife, 458b Cluett, land of the C. Shirt,

on c. on water, creeping quietly over it, fill sky with black c., he that regardeth the c.,
hooded
c.

red-gold-and-snow of c., 9136 riband to stick in c., 66*b upon a stick, 882b Coats, if hole in a' your c., 4gsa in c. of red, gi4b make my small elves c., 22gb Coats-of-arms, worth hundred c, 6453 Coaxed, habit c. downstairs, 7628 Cobbler should not judge above last, 1023 stick to your last, 1023 Cobblers, souls of emperors and c., igoa Cobham, and you brave C., 4o6b Cobweb bridge flung from mind, 86 5 b-866a Cobweb-covered, dusty c. maimed, 755 Cobwebs, laws are like c., 388b sweep c. from sky, logsb Cochineal, rush of c., 738b Cock, a C. and a Bull, 4s8a a doodle doo, iog2a before the c. crow, 44b crow louder in own farmyard,
c., 2573 universal c., g$5b diminished to her c., 27gb Diogenes plucked a c., g6b has great influence on own dunghill, i25b her c. a buoy, 27gb immediately the c. crew, 44b lion and c., g45a Robin, icggb that crowed in morn, iog8b thought sun risen to hear him,

28b

Clumsiness, face to face with

crowing of the

c.,

damned

like friars,

6sob

884a

hung

oppressively, 642*
c.

swag, 487b looks i'n the c., *54a maketh the c. his chariot, sia never doubted c. break, 668b new-made c., io7ob no pity sitting in c., 225a nor c. soak with showers, 6$b now here now there, 5733 number the c. in wisdom, i6a O c. unfold, 49ob of June, 741 a out of c. silence, 8ioa

hungry

Clumsy feet of April, io3ia Clumsy-fingered bear, 505a Clung, spray Bird c. to, 664a Clusium, Lars Porsena of C., 5963
Cluster of gifts constitute experience, 7g8b

woes

c.,

26sa

Clustered spires of Frederick, 626a Clutch, age clawed me in his c., 1873

come
either
fell

let
c.

me

c.

hand
of

thee, 2833 rightly c.,

circumstance,

877a 8i6a

68ga trumpet to the morn, 257a killed C. Robin, icgjb with lively din, 334b

who

1234

INDEX
Cockatoo, cage not natural to
Cotkattite' den, $ia Cock -crowing, civilization
c.,
:

Collector
Grid, neither
c,

<

*J

no?
<
,

ta/j,

paid in
at
c.,

never caught a
in r,wn
f

p;m him

?')**
** c.,

Cotkhortc, ride a c., G*kle hat and staff, Crxkleburs, corn cotton
Cockleshell, silver bells
,

valuable c. *;f Comt.dcr.rc, want


at counts, HIJJ

ru:Hct, n f c. bci

rwu

rath

c.

oijt <' c.

and
c.,

c.,

woid*

ram,

74 b

mini

of
c

b Corns hw
55

\ery soul, rtj^b

Cockney impudence, 754a Cockroach archy a c., $45b Cocks and Horn jocund be, jo6b crowing of c. and barking of <iS. 75*

drowned the
ere barn

c.,

t;8a

c. say,

74a
was
c.

two French copper V, 7aib Cold accretion called world, 781* age or c. tiirnate, M;b and heat, fib and hot moist and dry, nfyb and naked and he clothed Lin, 445b

and
parid^e
put
i:

c,,

in in

i,

Cocksure, wish
thing, 5412 Cocktail, stiffish

of any-

c., 666b Cocoa cad and coward, 9194 Cod, home of bean and c., 8582 home of sacred c., 8581 Coddling army, 9593 Code, canon of social c,, 8404 of modern morals, 571 a Codfish lays ten thousand eggs,

and not cleanly rcangtr, 3546 and to temptation stow, st^a and unhonored his relics, 34 ib
approbation, 42 $b as any stone, 2435 as cucumbers, $i6a ai paddocks, js la
at

fleep
sntn* M> c start

duh r. nuiblc, heat for C M i$7a


c.

af^a.

la.d

?aid sleep.

101 ob

> f?re wai&j. 75^0 h>k i, about iky, 9*7 b weat bathet me, fxjb temper leaps tr.er c. decree, 13 ib

summit

c.

increases,
c.

$o$a

bargain

catch

and

tune,

thitki three

noib
Coeli, fiat iusthia ruant c, jjob Coelum, quid si c ruat, io8b ruat c. fiat voluntas tua, 3job

Coeur, blessent mon c. d'unc langueur, Soyb il pleure dans mon c., SoSa le c. a ses raisons, 3636 Coexistence, peaceful c., icg&b Coffee and oranges in sunny chair, 9553 government decided over c.,

Co-eternity,

endure

c.,

7573

sgob blow hot and c., 761 blow in c. blood, 8$7a book makes body c., 7S$b bough* which snake against *9*b
calculating

man'K buod ith c., 5*3* month* of c. weather, b dark c. and desolation,
CM

till

*un grows

7v6a

c.,

'tj*

hitter c-, ajfib

average of virtues,

to distant misery, 4^a trembling c. in ghastly

77oa
cast c. eye, 88sb comfort,' *37b comfort like c. porridge, 896b comfort to fill hungry bellies,

upon dead

4a

fean,

Caesar's

trencher,

sS8a wait for napkin soap c.. 77ob war getting wanner, 901 a

war profoundly
coming we had of
it,

waters

to

thirsty
c.,

altered, 105 jb imil, t6a

48ia
if this is c. I want tea, Siob makes politician wise, 4o4b measured life with c. spoons,

dined upon c. meat. 375b doth not sting, joob dull c. ear of death, 44ob
every drop of ink ran fallen c and dead, 7011
c.,

way long wind


442*

5i8a

we are dying of c., 86gb when auld waxeth c., when he desires, jb
winter

io&$b

looob Racine will go out of

style like
c.,

Coffee-pickers, sweaty faces of

feeling his c. strength, g$4b foot and hand go c, i88b friendship sounds too c., 543*

98 5 Coffeepot, small gray c., 9908 Coffin asks whither, 749* care to c. adds nail, 468b even in c. face the same, 7j*a no dull clod on my c, 6o5b
Coffins, shook Cogibundity of
all

8b moon, good-bye and keep c., 4*7b


fruitless

with wrathful nipping c., xi4b wordi of tongue or pen, 9055 years grow c. to love, 1175 Colder than the Hebrides, 980* Coldlv furnish forth marriage
tables, 5&a descends autumn, 715* sublime, Boob Coldness of my dear, 401 a Cold-shouldered, nothing harder

gray

dawn

of

morning

after,

our

c.,

7843

cogitation,

4pob
c.,

Cogitation,

cogibundity
faculties

of

4oob
Cogitative

immersed,

4oob
Cogito ergo sum, 52?b Cognition of modern world, 9382 Cognitive, perception would be c., 794* Coherence, all in pieces all c. gone,

gray stones O sea, &4&a hand of death, 141 a hardens and grows c., io6&a heart grown c. in vain, 57*1 her empty room is c., noa his limbs c. in death, 1195 hot and c. fareth love, i7$b hot c. moist and dry, 344* imagination c. and barren, 452 b
in c. blood, S^a in the earth, Sfijb in thy c. bed, 3*
it

sadly

than being
Cole, old

c.,

King

C.,

7866 logab
98 ib

Coleridge poet and philosopher,

7'7* Cdin's, kiss in C. eyes, CoUteum, while stands C.


stand, 557b Col lapsed, then
Collar,
all
c.

Rome

sea rolled.

Coherent geographical unit, 10385 Cohesion, held in c. by cells, $47b Cohesive power of vast surplus,

grew wondrous c,, 5*4b keep c. young orchard, 9376 large c. bottle, 8sob
lie in c. obstruction, *?ia light and hot shade, 49ob literature clear and c., 9878 mad father, 968b marble leaped to life, s66a

braw bran c., 4951 no c. comes back twice, 8$8a CoHan, Earl * Wilson C., lojob Collect, better to c. library, 8t9b
Collected, bee's
c.

treasures, 441*
c.

Collecting,
i

book
of

exhilarating

Cohort of the damned, 87jb Cohorts gleaming in purple, Coign of cliff, 776a of vantage, s8*a Coil, mortal c., i6xa

sport, 941!)

Collection

facts

not

science,

Saab
j

mountains curl up

hi

c.,

Coin, advice smallest c., 79 ib beauty is Nature's c,, J37b Duke 'keep your c., loSoa
far

mom

as

c.

would

stretch,

ground, 7*7b c. iron, sooa you than I, 64$a and c. indifference, J96a my feet are c., io34b my lodging on c. ground, 40 neither c. nor care John, 5ob
c.

massa's in

meddles with

Collections, mutilators of c., S54b Collective, monism thinks c. only

more

c.

to

form,
]
i

79^
,

security, 9400-941 a

unconscious 935,* unit form, 79521


Collector, ticket
c.,

&5b

1235

College
College, age boy
fit

INDEX
to

be in c,

cabbage with

c.

education, 7621

endow
intent
it is

c.

or cat, 4073
getting results, gi6a
c.,

on

a small

5465

not much between unless c, 9283 send boy to c., 8923 whaleship my Yale C., 6966 Colleges lit up relish, 79$b to do with progress, 8912 Collied night, *s8b
Collins,

lady of Christ's C*, 3653

Colors of imagination, 5293 oldest c. have faded, 8725 on clouds on water, 861 a painter* today mix c. mud, 1533 perfumes c. sounds echo, seen by candlelight, 6183 that a're but skin deep, that never fade, 862b their c. and their forms,

Come, cannot
with
7073
j

c. to good, 2V7b cheer up they c., 7o4b children shut up box, 66oa consider where you c. out

cry is still They c. t aBfib curates will c. and go, cut and c. again,

ira '
5

oo*b "

aggb
5093

dance wyth me, log^b days to c. are wisest witnesses,


dear children
let

4833

under whose
long, 2283

c.

he fought so

us

Colossal, inscrutable c.

and alone,

8123

Mr. C. had only to change, 5333 Collision, avoid foreign c., 5j8b Collop cut of own flesh, 1842 Cologne, Rhine wash city of C.,
Colonel lean as needle, 10773 Colonel's lady an' Judy O'Grady,
Colonels full of corn, Colonial, adjustment of

c.

claims,

763b complete c., 76ob Colossus, bestride world like C., *53 D of Rhodes, iioab Colt, let little c. go bare, 10983 Columbia, hail C., 5083 Columbine open folded wrapper, 704* Columbus enjoyed pure delight, 997* found world had no chart, 8673
symmetrical

silent c. national He,

dreaming on things to c., aq*b etheresl mildness c., 4iqb


fill
fill

death c. when it will down redeem us, 773b


the cup, 6293 cup, saaa first c. kiss me, 10853

away, 7 , ob c ., iUib

up my

from wrath to c., sgb for the life to c., 2g5b forth into light of things, *ooa friends who plow sea, 66b
flee

from dying moon, 648b from ends of earth, 872b from haunts, 6523

Colonies are and ought to be free, tfja-b

God had
Column,

given

C.

strength,

commerce with

our

c.,

religion prevalent in these united c., 46ob

c.,

4S2b 4533

fifth c.,

995b

Colonization, American continent

not

no

c.

49 ib without misrepresentation,
c.,

c., 5265 pray Thee make c. read, 945b toward heaven, 5460 rising throws up 3 steamy c., 4583 Comb me all to thunder, 759b

fountain's silvery

gentle Spring, 4igb ghost c. back again, io49b give us taste of quality, 26ia he slow, 5193 here I want you, 81 ib hither, 2483

957 Colony, dissenting c., 4633 Coloquintida, bitter as c., 27 33 Color, blue c. delight, 6g8b by convention there is c., 88a flash of c. beneath sky, 866a her c. comes and goes, 7823 his c. can't be seen, 10906 horse of that c., 2522 in the cup, *6a
loves

Combat

ceased for

want of com-

batants, 33 ib

deepens, 5383
get repose, 777b free to c., 4723 Combatants, dust involves the c.,
obstacles
to

reason

honor has c. back, 9943 hour is not yet c., 483 I c. quickly, 58b I c. to bury Caesar, 2553 I hear you I will c.,
I will c. 3gain, 493 I would not c. in, 9293

home to roost, 532b home with me now, 747b

85*1

left

want of c., 33ib Combination and a form indeed,


2643

and skin, 3053 no c. or crest, 8743 no matter c. of skin, 10253 none knew c. of sky, 9053

human
of

c.

or society, 3293

no powers
5213

of c., 4553 fortuitous circumstances,


c.,

not superior by c., 7493 of ground in him, 8273 prison for c. of hair, 8553 race and c. problem, 9983 sergeant said, 8733 shade without c., 10033 some because of c., loCjb that I had had on, 9853
that paints morning and evening clouds, i6sa till heart tinged with c,, 5*gb white is their c., gsgb

Combine, when bad men Combined, knotted and

4523
locks

c.

Combing down
10983

his

yellow hair,
c.,

Combustion, hideous ruin and

Come

Colorado,

Kansas quarrel, 9823


748b

and C. have
is
c.,

again another day, logab again Jack, logBb again to Carthage, 2353 again with rejoicing, 22b all things c. of thee, 143 all to church good people, 8533 all you rounders, 9O4b

idea whose time c., 5985 not to c. will be now, 266b now 'tis not to c., 266b in the evening, 676b in the re3rward of woe, 2933 in under shadow, 10023 in well keep ye broke, 89ob into our heritage, 9943 into the garden Maud, 6523 it shall not c. nigh thee, zob jump the life to c., 2823 of shsll c. in, i8a King glory kiss me sweet and twenty, 25 ib knit hands, 3$6b know end ere it c., 256b
if

if

knowledge must c. through tion, 82b let me dutch thee, 2833 let us kiss and part, sna
let

ac-

us

mock

let's

away to

at great, 8833 prison, 2803

Color-blind,

Constitution

3nd trip it as you go, 334b as chimney sweepers c. to dust,


2Q13

Colored, bring you c. toys, 86ia twopence c, 8x42 white or c. signs, 10743

shadows so depart, :8$b little love c. to me, 944b live with me and be my love,
like

Coloring

according characteristics, 1483 sober c, from eye, 5143


applied
c.

to

winds come, you soon must, i avoid what is to c., 2643


as tne

2123, 3063

Lord

is c.,

3973 $8$b

as

lovely soothing death, 7023

3- waltzing

Matilda, 8693

man who has c. through, men may c. and go, 6523


Mr. W3tson
c.

away death, 2523


back to earth begin over,

here, 8 lib

Colors, all

suffusion from light,


c.

5*7a

changing ioo8b
coat of

shooting
c.,

upward,

many

7b
c.,

embroidered girdle of many 643 for vowels, 8303 hoist c. to peak, 9593
nailed
c.

to

the

mast,

51921

back to Mandalay, 87 jb before his presence with sing ing, 213 before the swallow dares, between bid us part, 4203 blow wind c. wrack, s86b blow your horn, cannot c. again, 8533

my Celia let us prove, 302b my coach, 2653 my l3d 3nd drink beer, 4298 my own c. to me, 77ob my tan-faced children, 70 ib near me while I sing, 8
never c. back to me, 6483 never c. back to us, 66*b not between dragon and wrath,

2773

1236

INDEX
Cosne not near our fairy queen,
22<lb

ComiV
till

Come, won't c back


oxer, 9441 worst vet to
c.,

u'n

not to steal away hearts, 55b nothing will c. of nothing, *76b now and let us reason, joa nowhere to c. but back, 845*

f54a, SB; a

ye thankful people. 6550 ye to the waten, 333

is c, 4$* diKotcrcrt as c., 425* when beggars die no c., 2$4b Comfort, age of c. and violence,

Cometh, whence

Comets,

Emmanuel, 6875 on now young men, g*oa one come all, 5*oa
c.

; '

you back Brithh soldier. 873b you spirits that tend, 2*1 b Comedian can last t:H he ukei
himself wrimis, 051* no matter if country need
c,,

ide*pair, carrion c., 8*031 cold c, I beg, cold c. to fill hungry


i

bellies,

out of Gogol's Overcoat, 7o8b over into Macedonia, soa over way with tears watered,

3*9?
|

954*

Comedy, catastrophe

of the old

c.,

go6b
palaces in kingdom c., 9473 to c. seem best, 2423 past and or to c., past passing

primrose way, Sxjb Romeo c. forth, s*5


season to c. and go, *ee my shining palace, seeling night, 2$4b shan't be gone long you

ios$b
c. too,

shape of things to c., 888b soon soon, 57b that it should c. to this, *57b that it will never c. again, 7sga that they might have life, 48b the foe they c., 5563 they c. they stay, 94sb
to c., gSsb things past or things things to c., 268a the of vine, *88a monarch thou

c., logb killing time ewence of c., 8702 most lamentable c., 2a8b world is a c., 44ib Comely, attire c. not costly, 202b black but c., 2oa bowed his c. head down, 35Qb grace, io86a spanking Jack was so c., 475b Comer, grasps in the c., 2693 Comers, entertain all c., 633 Comes appareled like spring, gob at one stride c. the dark, 525*.

dressed for this short

conceited carry c, 68o,b continual c. in a face, from New World to CM, gives c. in despair, 2146 giving enemies aid and c., 474* hi* sad heart, 72 ib hobbU-hoie and that means c*,
<

30253
like cold porridge,
|
,

with apple?, 291 to one not sociable, 291 a of c. no man speak, 2273 of miserable partners in woes,

me

2gb

no
{

c.

old poets
,

c.

scholar

who

to man, 8i6b cherishes love of

c.,

at the Ian, zfjb

autumn
Death
effect

c.

jovial on,
c.,

conquering hero

4igb 4200
last,

she hath none to c. her, $4b so will I c. you. 33b

who c

at
c.

5193
cause,

defective

by

26ob
ever 'gainst that season c., *57 a everything c. too late, 77ob fog c. on cat feet, g48a God behind them, 666b God c. as sun at noon, yoBb

thoult
three

c.

no more, 28ob

of world, *37b thy kingdom c., 4ob till boys c. home, 9i7a to aid of party, i icob to bad end, oioa to dedicate field, 6jga to lay weary bones among ye,

corners

he

here

hope never
knowledge 647b
look

c., 3718 the lady, 224b c., 342a in the sweet o' the year, 2gsa

c.

he

c.

*99a
to to to to to to to to to

c.

wisdom

lingers,

breasts, s8sa pluck your berries, $38a see and be seen, is8b take their ease, sggb thee by moonlight, g6ib this favor she must c., *66a this stage of fools, aygb-sSoa treading path through blood,

me my dear my arms, 745* my woman's

Bozzy,

4333

who

c. c.

love that

here, 236b too late, 2?oa

to decide, 6gib nearer c. the sun, g86a

moment

pat he

c.,

2778

c. and goes, 51 3a silent flooding in the main,

rainbow

688b something wicked

this

way

c.,

unbutton here, 2?8b


until I c. in peace, isb unto me ye that labor,

stealing comes creeping, take it as it c., 760*

82ob

6i8b nor forget, 758^ thy rod and thy staff c. me, 181 to my age, 2470 values money or c. more, 9311 warn to c. and command, 5148 what gnashing is not a c., 3o8b ye my people, 32b Comfortable advice, s8sb creed, 560 b easy and c. on raft, 7611 feeling of superiority, g6ob minds, lojob no c. fed, 5923 not both grand and c, $570 O c. bird, 5&>b progress a c. disease, io$ib words, 6ssa Comfortably in debt, 6s$b padded lunatic asylums, 9753 b speak c. to Jerusalem, Comforted, be c. for him, s8b folly of being c., 88ob they shall be c., 4oa would not be c., *gb Comforters, miserable c are ye
social c. in hospital,

take

c.

42a

unto my love, 20 ib unto these yellow sands, 2g6a up and see me, io*gb weal come woe, 507b what come may, 28ib what dreams may c., 26ib what is to c. I know not, s6b what may I have been blessed,

then cannon and be c., 9180 thrill that c. once in lifetime,


to me o'er and o'er, ?22b unlocked for if c. at all, 402b want for one who c. not, ios7a wear day out before it c., 8i6b while she c is gone, 8g8b wine c. in at mouth, 88ia Comest in so slowly, 1051 a such questionable shape, in

all,

153
c.

99 a

Comforteth, love 22O8

like sunshine,

one whom his mother c., 33b Comforting thought when not our trouble, g46b Comfortless, grim-visaged c. Despair,

4390
c.,

not leave you

4ga

through

c.

what may Sinon


wheel
is
c.

said, i2gb full circle,


c.

when

shall I

whistle and I'll whistle and she'll

28ob to thee, io85b c. to you, 494b


c.

whence c. thou, i4a Cometh, another generation


272

c.,

to

you

Comforts, c., 2o8a creature c, 3863 essential c. of life, 58?a flee, s67a

despairs, 2Oia adversity not without

will they c. when you call, 2$9 will ye no c. back again, 5023

3i6b

with bows bent, 772b with singing unto Zion, 333 within a pint of wine, 395b within bending sickle's compass c., 2942 without warning, 676b women c. and go, looob

behold the day c., 363 forth like a flower, 153 from afar, 5i3b from whence c. my help, 22a hour c, and now is, 48a in the name of the Lord, 22a
joy

from whence c. increased, 46a of life not indispensable, 682b of weary pilgrimage, 433

what

aspired

c.

me,

666a

Comic, perception of

c.

tie,

Gogb

morning, i8a a2a my help c, from the Lord, the night c., 4&b
c.

in

the

ib poet paint follies, 39 Comical how nature contrive, 76?b Comin', Campbells are c., loegb
for to

this

dreamer

c.,

7b

carry

me home, noia

1237

Comin'
Comin*
in

INDEX
on a wing, 10713
c.

Commandments,
fear

aren't
his

no
c.,

ten

Committed,

sins

Coming back and


bridegroom

back, 9573 out of his chamc.

God and keep


c.,

293
c.,

ber, i7b Campbells are c., io8gb cold c. we had of it, events cast shadows, 5383
far calls c. far, 9693 far off his c. shone, 3465 for to carry me home,

hearkened to my public opinion


10033
set

333
ten

and

to

c., 6ia themselves to God, 3185 to unerring time c., 6s8b

most grievous:?

whom men
c.

have

c.

much

'

47*

my

ten

c.

in your face, 2140

ten c. not budge, 6945 wrote words of ten c., gb

iioia

Commands, he
liberty,

genteelly, 43^ Committee inquisition, 9513 Committees, intellectual before c

vices

that

c.

sea

is

at

95*a

from Alabama, loggb good time c., 52 la, 6773


hither, s8oa

209 b

law

c.

that

which

is

hold fort
1

am

c.,

am

7058, 777b

c.

says Death,

iigb

the beauteous files, those he c. move in 286a

good, 46 2 b 3633

Committing suicide by workinz 8>


8703 Commodities, hateful tax on
bias
c

command,

I'm
in

man a long time c., 948 b my own my sweet, 6s2b


night of dark intent c., 9283 of the Lord, s6b, 6gob patient unto c. of Lord, s6b preserve thy going out and c. in, 22a see anyone c, iogga

c., 727b on a wing, 1071 a

war necessary
1773

to

one who

Commodity
c.,

of

the

world

2363
of good names, 2383 oil of c., gsSb

who
7 8a

c.

the sea has

command,

Commemorated
ance, 46gb

as day of deliver-

Commencement
past,
2 21 a

of

history,
c.

45gb

Commences, heaven
44ga
all

ere world
c.

Commend,
all

our swains

her,

seem
she
is

c.

are going, 778b c. my dove, 652})


c.

sometimes S7 8b

sometimes

coy,

long, 882b blame or to c., 411 a

summer

> s to the sacrifice, 5833 together foretaste of

resurrec-

tion,

5&3b

my spirit, 47 b those who are afflicted, to cold oblivion, 571 a to write to to c., 3o6b
c.,

6oa

way of c, into world, $88b we are c. Father Abraham, 6s6b


Yanks are
c.,

Commendable, humility a thing


i83b
c.

smooth-faced C gentleman 2363 tickling C., 2363 Commodores, proud gods and c. 6g6a Common affsirs of life, ssgb as light is love, 56ga buries empires in c. grave, 4663 bush afire with God, 6iga call not thou c., 503 cause decays, 8gb cause to save Union, 6373 century of c. m3n, loioa crowd of c. men, 327b crude material, 7723

944*
c.,

Command
by
his

Comings-in, what are thy

244b
in

Commendations, paltry 642b

of

man,

stealing against Bible, 75gb best fitted to c., ogsb


c,

Commended
Comment, no
sion, 924b nothing but igib

denominstor of progress, loCjb dictate of c. sense, 4aob distinctions between gentlemen

yellow
c.

stockings,

and

c.

people, 1013

25b

splendid expres-

words

cut,
c.,

correspondent to fit for c., 461 a


give what you
c.,

8853 2963

c.

on one another,
friendship,

i47a

Commerce and honest

earth and every c. sight, 5132 education forms c. mind, 4o6b faction united by c. impulse, 48oa fade into light of c. day, 5ijb
friends have all in
gift
c.,

gzb
7302

42oa them, 5063 and sobriety, 32ga peace justice man to c., 64ga morals simply obedience to
c.,

Heaven's
iron
fist

to

c.

words of c., 851 a more invitation than

472a between equals, 448b equal to whole of that c., 452b heavens fill with c., 647a hi matters of c., 5O7a instrument of trade and c., 7523
interstate
let
c.,

to

beauty
for
c.

c. c.

sense,

government
happiness of
hate the
I
c.

benefit, 4462

man, g4gb
373

herd, 12 ib
c. air,

drew in the

c.,

$95b

102 ib

move only in c., 286a my heart and me, 354a


not born to sue but to c., 226a not full c. of myself, 18 la obedient to c. of God,
prize of general
is c.,

wealth and c. die, 686b c. agriculture, 4633 promote c. not betray it, 376b where c. long prevails, 447b with our colonies, 4$2b Commercial liturgies, 8gga
navigation
morality, io63a no middle c., 10643 Commercials, singing lowed, 10643

law not omnipresence, 7883 law nothing but reason, i$8a law of England, 10173 life's c. way, 5i2b make good thing too c., 24ib man, 8o5b, 94gb, loioa

man

protection

against

war,

979

7870

she might c. him tasks, sneer of cold c., s68b


success, 393a

c.

not

al-

take c. of troops, 5042. threaten and c., 2643

comfort and c., 5143 I adore, 252b who commands sea has c., 783 Commanded, do without being c.,

warn where

to

Commercing, looks c. with the skies, 335b Commission, dropped his warm c., 795b sins of c. mortal, 4343 Commit, follies that themselves c.,
233 a sins newest ways, 242b thou shalt not c. adultery, ga Commitment, each gesture a c.,
oldest

more than c. land, 6g7b murderer uncommon cook, 9042 not jump with c. spirits, 2338 nothing c. did or mean, 359!) old c. arbitrator Time, 26gb
opinions

uncommon
skies,
c.

abilities,

people of the provide for


rich in
c.

defense,

474*

sense, 65 ib

God

so

c.,

347b

Hellenes c. by Athenians, 77b nature to be c. must be obeyed,

207a
rain

ios8b
c.

shower of
to
I

tears,

Commander
whereof
ioi6b

am

the people, c., io86a

2iga 333
c.,

Commitments and power in


ance, 10133

bal-

Commanders, blunder made by

Commandment,
eighth
first
c.

a new c., 4ga not for bards, 52?a c., ioi5b one unconditional c., 7g4b

and great

Commits, no evil for one who c. none, Sob Committed, crimes c. in thy name, 48sb flat burglary as ever c., 246b government not more c., 10493 not for sins c., 7gob

right of humanity, 6363 roll of c. men, 23gb sense and plain dealing, 6072 sense appall, &5gb sense hasty superficial, 68ib sense master workman, 5652 sense not so common, 4176 sense on ground floor, 6j4b sense reduced to calculus, 47b sense without genius, loigb
steals c. from goose, 791 a sun air skies, 4413

sweets grown c., 2gsb talk of the town, 3753

1238

INDEX
Common,
sense,

Complaints
:

the actual world the

c.

Community, quarantine
tect c
,

68ob
c.,

<ib

pro-

Compare *uth IDC >e


Compared, not
fit

that

men be

c.

thou knowest 'tis touch, 877a uncommon valor


universal

257a

cvohed, 9323 safeguarding c., W>4b


c.

rules

wuh

to an

god*. 1154 imam, 74 b


c

c. virtue,

o^a
19 ia

standing in the

c.,

bsHa
life,

and

(.omparrton, nu

no

c.

bond,

world

c.,

yt>4b

weal

and woe

is c., 320^.

Commuter one vho spends


10463

where climate's sultry, 56oa Commonest, see-vility of the c, goddamnedest kind, iiooa best, people Common-looking

Compact, highest
tioSb

c.

we can make,
2$ob 2iyb

Companions are odinuv 1712 make no c,, 4503 she and c. are odious, 3072
Onnpaitiarnu
!

the Jlwr*,
c,,

f*>>ii

of imagination

all c.,

(lompaw, bending nickles


lean as
c.

jtqia

spirit all c. of fire,

Commonplace, never yawn or


c.,

say

io8ob
of the
c.,

Compacted, sweets c. lie, 3233 Compacts between lions and men,

poetry

8i8a

needle, 10779 narrow c. and yet there, jjab of national authority, 4*^5

produces perfect

circles,

unassuming

Commons
the
c.,

of Nature, 5i2b faithful to system, 50 ib


c.

Corapagnon Roland sonnei, i$4b Companion, brother and c. in


companionable
tribulation, 573 as solitude, 68jb
,

995

quadrant through
*tde
c.

and
a!I
c.

sextant, lo^jb of notes, 5703

kingly c., 6g6b Commonwealth,

truth within
j

little

c, vtfb

caterpillars

of

22?a

God

debate of c. affairs, 243a ooa gave bodies to c.,


in
lie
c.

female c., no better c. than oar, 721 a none like unto mind, 187 a

gave

man

909 b

round fetched, 6672 Compassed about with cloud of


witnesses, 361 by inviolate sea, 63 ib with dangers c. round, 34$b Compasses, stiff twin c., $o6a Compassion, bowels of c., 573 full of c. and mercy, 372 Samaritan had c., 46b to poor or favor to rich, 3513 Compassionating, in charity even c., 5020

last

by contraries execute, 296b thousand years, 92 ib abroad for the c., 3013
combination,
3293

of pleasures and toils, 52 ib peaceful and sweet c., 38 la sad c. dull-eyed melancholy,
so

<

or

human

realization of c, 75321 wise men meddle in c., i78b Commonwealths, raise c., 3683 Communicate, poetry can c. be-

man

feel solitude,

gogb
souls,

suspicion c. of to owls, i6a

mean

466b

fore understood, ioo8a speech given to c., 376b to do good asd to c.,

s6a

Companionable as solitude, 683b Companion's words of persuasion, 63b Companions, a few select c., 394*
all

Compatriots, all men my c., 191 a Compeer, without c. among swindles,

76ob
to

Communicated by contagion, 7o6b good the more c., 346a


Communicatest with dreams, 2953 Communication in free society,
of the dead, ioo6b poetry c. of pleasure, science c. of truth, 527b
theory, io33b

her lovely
c.
c.,

c.,

54*a

Compel us
8 5 7b

be equal
their

upstairs,

of imagination, 10913

have had foomy

5283

5341 in misery, i2?a innocence and health, 449* many c. for food and drink, rja not keep pace with c., 68sb
of our journey, 92 ib such c. thou'dst unfold, 275b think of c. true, 5o6b while their c. slept, 623b accident counts

lled from Compell

own worSgjb

ship, 5sga say nothin* without c., to fight back tears, loioa
to

Communications,

evil c.,

$3a

Communion, further union deeper c., ioo6a good marriage a


last c. in haze,
c.,

iygb

734b

not grow strange, 8o7a of Holy Ghost, 53b of Saints, 6oa with her visible forms, 5743 Communism, challenge of c.,
ethics of c., 10583

Companionship, c., 7?6b with fool no c., Sob Company, belong to C. G, 755* best c. when you read, 523a crowds without c., 466* delighting in your c., io84b

keep on guard, 8o6b Compels, astronomy c. soul to look upwards, g4b you or me to get up, 457b Compensate bad in man, 66yb Compensation, world of c,, 6562 Compensations, paltry c. of man,

Compete,
75 b

act

but

not

to

c.,

Competency
Competition 3i8a

lives longer,

and

ajib mutual envy,

doomed

government plus
repudiate

electrification,
c.,

with pain, 5i5a except the present c., 47&a fool yet he keeps much c., S75a discourse, 326a good c. good he is wont to keep, 86a
to
c.

best for race, 7573 fiendishnesa of business happiest conversation

c.,

ggia
c.,

no

support of

97 ib

high-lived
is
it

c.,

448*

Communist
what
is

bloc, io56a dictatorship of C. Party, 95?b

because

we have c, 9i5a
c.,

hard for individual, 7571 socialist c., 954^


Competitive, international
life c.,

c.,

545a

keep no bad c., 45oa love and good c., 3g8a


love to be worst of misery loves c., i27b

Communists,
rally

world, looob, 1058 a Catholics

388b

Complacencies

of

and
C.,

C.,

Communities divide into few and the many, 4&4b


industrialized c., 9623 overlook one another, 753 prosperity of all c., 9643

people against

of just and righteous, 8&b ib poverty parts good c., 52 of c., separate from pleasure 534*1 worth saving. so small hardly

Complacency and thoughtlessness, 8G7b


of new-married couple, 535*

peignoir,

9558

Complain,
hain't
I

Community

in dissolution, 91 sa
c.,

best political c., 98b brothers as in one

5ioa

974a, io55b like a ship, jstgb


c.,

human

management
c.,

nothing without 9310-93** of power, 84 ib permanent interests of c,, 48oa property subject to c. 848a prosperity of political c, g64a
f

759b v ^ such a jocund c., 5140 take tone of c., 41 5* tell me thy c., ig6b thou keenest, 246b time lost in idle c., 375a to bear him c., 621 a villainous c. spoil of me, 24oa with the c. of heaven, 6ia Compare great with small, ii6a,
.

tail me hi c., 667b no use to c., Siga heard him c., jg6b moping owl to moon c,, 44oa of of government, injustice

53b

with heavy sighs Complaining, soft

c.,

59ja
flute,
c.,

c.

woods no voice but Complaint, anno domini


10470
strange
c.,

37oa 755*

fatal c.,

76*a
heart's
c.,

of Complaints, dust and soot

young man's

7oob
c.,

learn c. collect facts, 8i8b thee to summer's day,

&7b
29 ib

many and

various, ios4 b

1239

Complete
Complete, dad in c. steel, 3373 dead corse in c. steel, 2593 in herself c., 3474 just my vengeance c., 66*23 saved and hold c., CSyb
self-confidence
tious,
c.

INDEX
Comprehensive, most 833* most c. soul, 367a
poet
c.

of rights,

Conceived in liberty, 6393 nation so c., 6393


dearly said, *4 a Concentered, wretch c. all in jiff 519* Concentrate their energies 8tw Concentrates his mind wonderful. ly, 43 Concentration, covered Europe *^ with c. camps, gs4b of business, 757a
c. is

become

more

c. f

ioo7b

there well

is

man

child

c.

ub

word of great honor, 4683


Comprendre, tout c. tout pardonner, 5O2b Compromise, government founded on c., 453* no government without c., gg7b Compulsion, fools by heavenly c.,
c., 23ga knowledge acquired under c., 94b put upon writers, g86b sweet c. in music lie, 334b two gods Persuasion and C., 78a Compulsive ardor gives charge,

and

bumpg$gb

g87b
c.

simplicity, 10073

something

and

great,

statement literature, 9753 symmetrical c. colossal, 76ob Thy spinning-wheel c., 381 a Completed, melancholia of everything c., 8o5b nothing c. in lifetime, Completely, men never do c., 364* Completeness, unities sir

*77 a give reason on

on

Concept,

electric chair, 10763 essential c. and

first

io24b
evil so

truth, io68b of length, g66a of time makes possible

Day

of

c.,

Judgment, g8ob
portray

66gb Completing, in c. one discovery, 4623 Completion of their appointed rounds, 8ya Complex, amoebas not c., gosb military-industrial c., ioi6b
Complexion,
is

phenomenon

c.

needed

2642. icy current


c.,

474b

and
on

c.

course, 2753

Compulsory, bodily exercise

when

94b
c.

education

all,

6953

Compunctious

visitings of nature,

fresh

c.

and

heart,

soever, 2673 coarse Complexions,

mislike of what

perfect gallows, 2963 me not for


c.

c.,

c.

and

cheeks, 337b Complicated, pattern and living, ioo6a state of mind, 766b Complicators, female

c.

of dead

shapes
will,

are

Complies against Compliment, he


iog8a

his

began

to

c.,

28ib Computation backward from ourselves, 2o6b material c., gsab Comrade, kind and foolish c., 854b Comrades, cheer up c. they come, 7o4b leave me here a little, 6473 Comrades' eyes, 7igb Comradeship, capable of genuine c., 85ob Comtek philosophy, 724b Concatenation of circumstances,
547b Concave,
hell's
c.,

to call forth c., 474b Conception, low intdlect have ?93b. sin their c., 3153 Thy rigorous c., 10183 Conceptions, nonsense of c. of vereignty, 10393 Concepts, abstract c., 4740
.

10-

physical
stairs

c.
c.,

of

free creations, 9508

Conceptual,

io52b polyp would be


c.

c.,

793b
Concern, conduct largest 7i6a
for of
life,

man and

his

fate,

9502

mankind's c. is charity, 4ogb of American education, 10263 your c. Roman to rule under
law, iiga

your
342b

c.

when
i23b

neighbor's wall on

Compliments only things we can pay, 839b teaching proper ears, 87ib Component, decay inherent in all c. things, Sob Composed and bland, 7153 superior man satisfied and c., 7ib
thy decent limbs
c.,

kiss through veil, 5ggb to be called agnostic, 844b

fire,

shores, 2533

Concerns, entrusted with great c,

4o6a

Composers, by c. know souls, 8gab Composes visible poem, io54a Composition and fierce quality,

to be everlasting possession, 8ga

mad

2773
c.,

236a

Conceal dreary morals like vice, 8253 half c. soul within, 64gb its sex, 10523 knowing how to c. skill, 355b no disguise can c. love, 3553 reveal love it would c., 52?b speech given to c. mind, 376b speech to c. thoughts, speech to c. wants, 37 what c. from reader, 1061 a Concealed beauties of writer, lay c. throughout war, Concealing, hazard of c., Concealment like worm in bud,
Conceals, luster c. king from us, igia Conceit, all in high c., 6oib lies in his hamstring, 268a man wise in his own c., 26a pride and c. original sin, 391 a Conceited carry their comfort,
satisfied with effect on himself, giob throw away love on c., 68gb Conceits, wise in your c., 5ia Conceive, heart to c., logib in sin did my mother c. me,

72b
Concert of free peoples, 8423 Concessions of the weak, Conciliate with dignity, 4353
Conciliation, no government out c., 997b
religion
c.

452!)

with-

of

powers,

8293

Condse, vigorous writing c., goob Conclave of the night's stars, 78b

Condude

against

wall
c.

of stone,

10793 graiit before


only

we

on edge of
with

prayer, 370!) grave, 776!)

regular orderly c,, 4*7b Compositions, read over your c,

252b

43*b
for sins they are inclined to, 3523 Compounded of many simples,

Concludes Cupid's curse, 2o4b Condusion, foregone c., 2753 lame and impotent c., 273!)
leap to c., 10713 of the whole matter, 293 insufficient from Conclusions
premises, 7563 most impossible of necesssry c., 82gb
c.,

Compound
25oa

Comprehend,
intelligence

first

seems

to

c.

8673

whole, 7363

which

could

c.,

man

68gb

Concord and Lexington, 5473


6ob give to all nations c., c, give you home 3nd gradous

479*

whose faculties can c., 2i2a Comprehended, darkness c. it not, 47b mystery of beauty not c., 878b Comprehends, intellect which c. by itself, i77b some bringer of joy, 23ob who c. art, 5o6b Comprehensible, think nothing not c. can be, 7&ob Comprehension, apply heart to c., 4b

65b
love quarrels in c. end, 349 lover of c., 603 of sweet sounds, 235b sweet milk of c., 2855 traveled a good deal in C., 68aa
c.,

iga

many without
so hopeless to

the one, 953


c.,

7393
to
c.,

tongue

not

able
c.,

23ob

virgin shall

sob

Conceived by the Holy Ghost, 6oa greater than God cannot be c.,
i54a

wolves and lambs have no 64b Concordia discors, i23b Concrete cases, 787b general with c., 5293

1240

INDEX
Concur,
w"r^21

Conned
by
c.

humbly but
fault

heartily
act,
ill,

c.,

Conferring,
(JO!

rather

favors,
!

reason in

itself

Condemn

and not
c.

i;ob

Confer*, hrosor to

him

>bt>

c.

'

tt,

Confounding

c, it>7b bei

nsen whom neither do I

innocent person, 4173

men
c.,

as

7&gb

395 Confess faith therein, 102 ib

nor year*
these
try

c.,

48b 8960
to

man knows how


our
sins,

to

c..

472*
!

few, 684a death, 74jb wrongs we seek to c., ictib Condemnation, justice thunders c., 68oa

men because
c.

5gb
35$a

Confounds, attempt and not deed c., a8$b Confrontation bom of their c.,
,

to little faults,

cause

yourself to heaven, ?$4a Confessed, its presence c., Confection in open court next thing to innocence,
,

Confront?,
501 a

condition
Jea*t

us

not

theory, 7711

4741 i*7b

ConfuciuV
j
,

blameworthy,

455*>

Condemned
cell*

alike to groan, 4jgb

into

~"

of Newgate, 756* everlasting redemption,


\

$47b Confessions, trench c., gBSa


c,,

no refuge from

Confuted alarms of druggie, 7151


!
'

judge

c.

when

criminal

ab-

solve ided, ia6a soul c. to be, 7378 jo repeat past, 8673


thyself,
c.

Confessor, deceive not thy c., 3243 Confetti, throwing c. blowing horns, g48b Confide in without strength boasting, 47 ib

sob me, Ji7b Condensations of sensations, 8g8b Condescend to take a bit, j8ga Condescending, not c. to anything within reach, gsb Condition, abnormal exhausting
c.,

Condemnest, thou c. Condemns, every tale

Confided, secret not secret if c., 68sa Confidence and strength in air,

be not c, in words, 1432 thought and passion all c., 4091 *orki barman iously c., 4053 Confuting, dreams are c., 671 Confusion, all else c., 6498 all is c. bevond it, 4522 be whole again beyond c.. bright things come to c., a*8
ruin and c. hurled, jgja inclusion and c 790)3 never swept into c., 8850 now made masterpiece, t&4a on thy banners wait, 44 ib
in
life
,

gia
by experience with
fear,

98 ib
47 jb

forfeit c. of citizens, 641 a have c. in the people,

bears stamp of human c., igob confronts us not theory, 771 a inviolable c. of life, death

8373

in justice of people, 6j7a-b of Christian with four aces,

'

today's achievement tomorrow's


c., 77 ib worse confounded, 3441 Confute change hands and

of twenty-one, 4$oa

still

on which

ideal

937* decoyed into our c., 375b c. to be right by instinct, 8*a indispensable c. of freedom, 9033
live

all else depends, gisb peace a disposition for c., 3733 plant of slow growth, 4*6a zeal loyalty, gjgb

confute, 3522 Confuted, tongue

c.

by conscience,

Confidences, passages seem c., 6oga Confident, elad c. morning, 66ab


in this will I be
c.,

Congenial horrors hail, 4igb to my heart, 4*oa Congo, God of the C., gssa
Congratulate, to
haste,
j
j

c.

friends

made

in
c.

equality

of

c.,

of
of

man

complete

simplicity,

753a 10071

i8a

36gb
c.,

on which 479 b

of war, 3i7b God given

liberty,

Confides, England c. every man do duty, 4gca Confiding, beauty for c. youth,

tomorrows, 5i6b

Congratulatory regrets, 61 sa Congregation, latter has largest

sweat and whine about c., 7<x>b world in good c.. 375b Conditions, all sorts and c. of

5i6b
Confine, , hies to his c., 157* on very verge of her c., *77b c., Confined, cabined cribbed
forfeit to

***** * of vapors, *6ia Congrees, le C. ne marche pas,

men, 6oa
approaching misery, g8sb dat prevail, ios6b fundamentally sound, gjob new c. new remedies, 9733 stars govern our c., 27ga Condolement, obstinate c., 57b Condones, as the turn c., 10573 Condor's quill, 6g7a Conduct, courage and c. of army,
4612
if

c.

doom, agjb

Confirm,

c. mean and paltry, gga right argument wrong, 4513 rottenness begins in c., 47 ib
c.

shaped

on

faith,

gosh

we do not
Conducting

three-fourths of life, 7162 unethical and lousy, losgb


inspire c., jsSb orchestral Strand,

501 a experiments not to c. &75b tidings as they roll, 3933 c. to Confirmations, jealous strong, *74b Confirms, each c. a prison, icoja Conflict, field of human c, 9x1 b heat of c., 5153 laws c. courts decide, 4&5b the harder the c, 466b victory by expanding c., 9843 Conflicting faiths, io$sb interests and appetites, $6gb
ideas,
interests of society, gua Conflicts, elemental c, loua resolve inner c., g8$a Conform and be dull, loooa to tyrant custom, ig3b

slender waist c., $32b Confines, on c. of earth,

464* Congress doesn't run it waltzes, 4642 halls of American C., 749* Jehovah and Continental C., 4683 no criminal class except C., 76sb of eminent celebrities, 74gb power to declare Act of C. void,

7$7b
shall

make no

law, 47 4b

Congruity of reason and nature, 5*8a Congs, kxaqucring c. tides take.


Conjecture,

though puzzling not


c.,

beyond
withhold

3$ia finding

or

c, 4?8b

ductor, passengers ask c., g48b when you receive fare, 7483 Conductors, truths of which symbols c., 5x8b Cone, country an inverted c., 43sb nature in terms of c., 7803 Cones, eat c. under pines, g*6a Confabulate, if birds c, 45gb Confederacy, principle kept C. together, 6373 Confer, heaven about to
office,
c.

Conjectures, superficial c,, 5371 surmises jealousies c.. *4* a ioB6b Conjure, in vain c. him, Conjured, Nazarite c the devil,

*3*a Conjures

up most

evil

demons,

world c. to mathematics, gisa Conformation of his mind, 5953 soul and naConformity between ture, 8673 knowledge c. of object and intellect,

1553

great

Confound

loob
c.,

nothing to

5i7b

Conference, labors at this c., g8sb maketh a ready man, xogb

most in request, 6o6a all unity on earth, sSjb foolish things to c. wise, 5ib the language of all earth, 6b Confounded, confusion worse c.,
344*

Connect, only c, gjib Connection, andent heavenly c, io8tb between common good and authority, 9648 between them and Britain, 4$ob
of individual man. i iooa Connections, air of lost c., 10764 Connects and equals all, 4o8b Conned, learned and c. by rote,

156*

1241

Connubidity
Connubiality, wictim o*
c.,

INDEX
66ga
Conscience, argue according to
c.,

Consciousness, existence deter-

Conquer but
die
if

to save,

they

5s8a cannot c.,

7*33

34ob aroused popular

c.,

9673

England wont to c. others, S27a fight and c. again, 4392 hard to catch and c., 7300 he went forth to c., s8a if one c. himself, 8oa if one c. thousand thousand men, 8oa in the end truth will c., 1633
in this sign
like
c.,

bend c. to dealing, 6g4b beyond physicians, 63ib but word cowards use,
catch
c.

mines c., 686b freedom only to ftoRH

limit* of

^
**

1443

Douglas

c.,

4453

love that run away, 32?a nature, loigb

one

man

resolve to

c.

with dream c., 8073 or die, 46ia


us,

2i8a of the king, *6ib dear c. is sure card, aoab dear c. or none, 105 ib confides in c., iog2a courage of c., 5gia coward c. dost afflict, 2i7b dictates of c., 465b does make cowards, 26aa excused from it as against c., 443 a

growth of mind widening * 935 Hellenism spirit of c., 7161


inseparable
like
life

c_

and

c.

g86a
is

disease,

86gb

life c.

of what we can do,

like bird's life, 7933

national

c.,

no

841 b
existence

c.

freedom of

c.,

76sa

war or war conquer

loiga

541 a without risk, 33ib you cannot c. America, 4*6b Conquered, establish peace spare
c.,

we must,

gentle beast of good c., *3ob god to all mortals, 10321 guardian of community rules,

not c, that determines 686b of freedom, 5o7b

without pain, g35 b

^^'

one unbroken stream, 7931


pace of parts of
c., 7933 painful achievement, g$$b poor slipping out of c, io8ta

hath

iiga
c.

fame of heroes, 7oia


at last, 644a human natur, 66gb I came I saw I c., nab most calamitous to c., gob nation perpetually to be

fever

tongues, 2i7b Hebraism strictness of c., 7163 in everything, 43&a is a coward, 448b
eternal,

thousand

religious

feeling

in

c,

justice
c.,

judgment enough, 8ioa temporary but c.


i7gb
liberty of
live
c.,

32ga
c.,

without

741 b

pale Galilean, 774a


his

makes
I
c.

egotists,
c.,

through 3i6b through

honor

him,

Conquering army on border, 6770 he went forth c., 583 hero comes, 4200 stretches out c. limb, g8gb Conqueror creates a muse, 33Sa favorite of mother a c.,
lie

time time c., tyranny not easily c., 466b what causes war, gg6b woe, agsa woe to the c., isza women like to be c., 66 la you have c. Galilean, i44b

no more

matters of money in

8gga 444a

jar c. dear, 75sb to do with gallantry, la 48 no witness so dreadful as c,, io8a of Chancellor, 3i7a of her worth, J47a of people's representatives, g67a

stream of c., 793a use small portion of c., welcomes or rejects, 7932-0 Consciousnesses melt into eadi other, 7gsa unvictorious Conscripted ooes, ggab Consecrate to thee, sg6a we cannot c., 630* with thine own hues, 5684 Consecrated bread to take, 7340 it above our power, 6393 Consecration and poet's dream,

70$

7b

from within himself, io33b what we did had c., 6i4a


Consecutive,

two

c.

moments,

only guide perception

c.,

g2aa
Consensus, President is c. seeker, io68a Consent, deriving powers from c,,

rejection, Sgsb of life, ggia perfect interpreter

of

private c. for guide, 37oa quiet c. stands brunt of

life,

47ob
if

84b
science without
c.

sinners

entice

thee

c.

not,

at

proud foot of

c.,

ruin of soul,

Worm, 64ab Conquers, daily c. 478b if nature c., 4g8b


love
c. all

them anew,

things, iiya

no one
171!)

c.

who
c.

doesn't

fight,

ruling passion

wherever
1313

Roman

reason, 4o?a c. he dwells,

Conquest, every thought a c., 10585 gain spent in c. of Jerusalem, i72b horse noblest c. of man, 42gb of illiteracy first, io63b of world by creed, io73b
right of
c.,

i8ia seared with hot iron, 55a sit alone with c., 8ioa sodal c. of nation, io83a still and quiet c., ag8b strict regard to c., 4&4b tongue confuted by c., 333b uncreated c. of race, g68b upright and stainless, i6ia value it next to good c., 36b void of offense, 500 warns somebody looking, g6ia with injustice corrupted, 2i5a Consciences, historian of fine c.,

*3 a not govern without c., 6351 not inferior without your c,, 9 8ib of governed, 4?ob Sgsb reference to one c., 2433 silence gives c., 44&b taxed without c., 446b to play part therein, ioi8a whispering I will ne'er c. consented, 56oa Consenting, cadence of c. feet, io2gb
f

Consents,

no
c.,

injustice to person
wfll

who

1523

844b
Conscience-calmed,

poverty

but not my

c,

thou

be

c.,

58ib
Conscientious,
sensible
c.

Consequence, applause of great c,

435b
of
itself,

and

c.

433*
deepest
c.,

asya Conquest's crimson wing, 44 ib Conquests, carnage and c. cease, 558a even to Antipodes, 2ogb honorable c., 45gb shrunk to this, 255a through legislation, s8gb tramplings of three c., 33ob Con's, from pro's and c. they fell, J 95 a Conscience ae thing I cannae bear, 8ioa alone with c., 8ioa and cowardice the same, 8sga

shameful

c.

men, 4gob Conscious, beyond

ego reach,

fluent

men

281 a of c., 8gga


is

repentance
elevate life by c. endeavor, in c. virtue bold, 4o4b less c. actions mold lives, mind c. of rectitude, n8a mind trained like parrot, gs6a

fear of

c.,

J55

servitude
'tis

c.

of crime, 480*

almost

c.,

7s8a
o8ob Sooa

trammel up the c., s8aa the c, Consequences, endure I note and enjoy noting,
in nature
logical
c.
c.,

of sincerity, loob

God, 354a Consciously, not try to think 877b


its

water saw

c.,

Consciousness,

all

in reader's

c.,

g4oa
captivity
is c.,

74ga are beacons, 7253 c., 678a serious and alarming c., 461* will be the same, 467* . f of Conservation, principle of c,
pernicious
force,

73$b

7ogb

1242

INDEX
Conservatism

Container
O>n'iii?jti^nuii statesman, 7*ftb

and
6073

tried,

adherence 6j6b

to

old
of
c.,
TV

omen who

!u*e

me,
star,

meanness

in

argument of

Conservative government hypocrfsy,

Bisa
c.

Constant as northern a* Penelope, m*$h as various, m.vib but yet woman, 2333

^fa a^b

symptom of

c.

Omimutium,

hbertv, 4}?a equity OUT c,


c.,

en-

fhrine, liberalism oider than

911 b

1013*

habit
little

agent

of

society,

make me

Liberal or C., 76?b


c.

when

old,

g*8b

Consider anything don't cry, 7463 beauty sufficient end, 83ta her wa\s and be wise, gjb

in te*e, a4jb friendship c, heart, ioH6a image of the treature, a^ia in nature inconstancy j^-b

we

make and alter c., 4^1 b Constiameth pim vnthin me, 5* -a

me

c.

him
in
let

well,

2?8b
light
is

how my
every
life

spent,
c.,

341 a

day of adversity

s8a

c.'last day, 8ib years, 8j5b lilies of field, 41 a my cat Jeoffrey, 444b

man
its

and

few

nothing c. but inconstancy, 3 K*b one here will c. be, ;,<5fa sacrament of praise, V5b so c. to me and so kind, jSob to one thinj? c. never. ajfia Constantinople, Rumiam not have C., 7273
Constellation,
j
j

urm Constraining icleaively shaping, <?45b Constraint freedom and c,, 10483 Comtruded. thing c. fcwed after
,*

:tin# tribal Jav$,

71*

creation, 9183 find the mind's c., 28ib Constructive, superstition c. reli-

Commirt:nn and

gion, 7tr,b

constitutional

c.,

Comtiue. have profferer


Consul,

c.

Ave,

losib
principles bright c., 4723 Constellations, not want c. nearer,

my

one must

traveling expenses, c. the end, jsgb

10283
j

m>

\\>uth

when Planca*

these thirty chapters, 4b where you come out, 1273 wise what they cleave to, 1423

7oia
seasons

and

c.,

ua< c., 1223 shantv of c., 8643 Consule, foriunatam natam


c.

me
:<xjb

Consideration,
ing, 378b like an angel

first c.

earning

liv-

the> wane, Constituted for practice of good,

when

Rornam, nib

Consuls, each \ear

new

c.,

loob
Constitution, act against C. void,

Consulship,
c.,

Rome

natal neath

came, 2433 made arrogant by c., 902 of public object, 8ga


Considers,

sub

my

no physician

c.

own

446a and laws of U.S., 4743 basic element in C., 9843


cases involving Federal C., 8332 clear as American C., 10743

Consult conteining great godde&s,

good, gsb
c. wonderful of Consimility, fancy, jiSa Consist, by him all things c., 54b Consisted of lines like these, 74ob Consistency, foolish c., 6o6a

Consume according

color-blind, 74&b
difficulties

from

C.,

6i6b

does

paste jewel, 8g6b Consistent, not one altogether

provide for second class, 10253 end within scope of C., 4&$b

not

c.,

follows flag, 8900

888b

and spirit, 48sb Consolation, companions c.


with letter
in

to

wretched, i27a thanks of Republic, 6403 mediocrity has no greater c.,

478a thought of suicide c., 8o$a Console, not to be consoled but to c., i57b Consoler of lonely, 7523 Consoling in depths of affliction,
Consonants, only ioogb Consort, such c.
336a
c.

forbidden by C., 4853 freedoms guaranteed by C., 9673 genius of c., 426b in view of C., 748b intended to endure, 48 5b it is a c. we are expounding, 485b law for rulers and people, 6783 laws and c., logib
letter and spirit of C., 4$$b like British C., 7&2b looks to indestructible Union,

our private ends, ?5&b to need, 6873 engines of despotism, 47;b heart my away, 8833 their own smoke, 576b time c. strongest cord, saob without producing, 8j6a your own smoke, 8176 Comumed, bush was not c., 8a bv either fire or fire, icK>7a days are c. like smoke, 2ia pale soul c. by fear, io8ib
first
c.

them

as stubble,

8b
laughed

Consumedly,

they

c,

Consumes, delight that c. desire, 77jb painter's brush c. dreams, SSgb Consumeth, watching for riches c. flesh, j8b Consuming rat and bone, 8853

Consummated,
earth, 2033

marriages

c.

on
be

and vowels,
they
keep,

as

Conspicuous by absence, 5&7b consumption, 8455 wastefulness, 845b


Conspiracies, organized c., 10563 Conspiracy against law and order, 10823 against manhood, 6o6a

6273 most remarkable work, 63 ib named a democracy, 8gb not contain word democracy, 9173 not merely for generation, 538!)of 'United States a shield, 6783 c., 5483 openly invaded, logib ordain and establish C., 474* our C. is in operation, 4233 people made the C., 485b principle of English c., 444b principles of free c. lost, 465b

devoutly wished, 261 b quiet c. have, 2913 Consumption, captain of

Consummation

to

men

of

one country one

death was C., 3663 conspicuous c., 845b of the purse, 24ib private c., io63b Contact contact, 68ob
possible to flesh, 10023 preserves c., 937b foul c. spread, of sickness, $96b

254b open-eyed C., 2973 Conspirators, bearded c., 9983 c. to causes which Conspire, blind, 4o2b and I with Him c., you 631 a
C.,

word

Contagion,

jjSb

Conspired against God with Lucifer, 2133 Constable with lifted hand, oo5b Constabulary duty's to be done, 766b Constancy and valor our shield, 92 ib* hope c. in wind, 554b in realms above, 5243
'

proportioned to human c., 39Qb sail no anchor, 5973 support C. obey Uws, Sgsb venerable parts of c. 4&sb what judges say it is, 864b what's C. between friends, 7823 Constitutional constellation, 102 ib
t

exercise

obstinacy good,

in

bad cause

c.

in

c. right, 6373 government, 8653, 88$a means which are c., 48 5b period of c. government, 88ga rights, 864b

of trust, 996b of world's slow stain, 5723 to this world, 26sb truth communicated by c., 7o6b war is a c., 9723 Contagious, base c. clouds, 2383 blastments imminent, ssSb Contain. I c. multitudes, 7ocb one the other will c, 7$6b show c. and nourish all world,

Cont3ined nothing but


Container, bright 10655
c.

itself,

7773

can contain,

shield, 991 a

1243

Contains
Contains all nothing lacking, 7013 the cistern c, 4875

INDEX
Content, nothing less will
c.

me,

Continental, Jehovah and


gress,

what fortitude Gontemneth small


6a8a

soul

c.,

7393
bank,

4520 poor and


shut

4683

c. is

rich,

274b

two

c.

things, g8a

Contemplate

entangled

my

flaccid shape, logsa


to

our forefathers, 444a Contemplated, object is 87oa Contemplation, beneath 68 7 b

in measureless c., 28ga thoughts that savor of c., 2o6a to breathe his native air, 40 2 a to entertain lag-end of my life,

up

be

c.,

24ob
to live it all again, 884a travelers must be c., 2483 wisdom of just c., 74a

thy

c.,

never^tolerate Continents dissolve into sea i potters' fields of four c, Continual comfort in a face contentions of wife are c, ping, 25a endeavor in c. motion, */ ***
feast, 24b live in c.

everything object of c., he for c. formed, 3453 her best nurse C., 337a leisurely c. of art, gisb mind serene for c., $Q$b

sagb

with

life

retire

trom

world,

small

have

mortification,
c.

i2oa

4*,* plodders w<m,


c.

more than reading, 364^3653


sundry c. of Contemporaries,
society of
c.,

my travels, 2502 man lives life of


c.

with my harm, 24gb with ruin, 9470 with small means, 6555 with vegetable love, 767a with your lot, 763 Contented, live on little with mind, ii4a

Continually,

think

of
c.,

great, io67b

trait 7
2i)ob

times change and move Continue, stealing will c .

6b

stealing 6'
faithful

c.

Continued,

not

one

c.

6o6a Contemporary, both itary, 6g7a

men employed
and heredof

best

c.,

until old age, Continueth, he fleeth

ga

and
c.

c.

not
im-

most enjoy
then
wi*

c.

least,
c.,

2Q2a

slaves howe'er

Contempt

against heaven, 42ob

majesty

ye

c.

456!) your souls,

153 Continuing, faculty of


prove, 45Qb

to

and anger of

lip, 2525 comes from head, 5635

494a with life dinner wife, 593a Contentedness, procurer of


little,

no
c.,

c. city,

56a

Continuous

and

seems

always

familiarity breeds c., 76a, 76^ for c. too high, 357b for governor who is afraid, 8ib for wildest blow, 7923 no weakness no c., 35oa silence is c., 6i5a speak of moderns without c., 4i5b treating with c. all from God, i8oa

36a
Contention, let long c. cease, 7153 man of strife and c., $4a Contentions are like bars of a cas-

and

existing, 7 3 b

stationary music, ijosb as stars that shine, 5145

25a fat c., 34oa of a wife, *5a


tle,

brain changes c., 793a nature one and c., 68 ib use of any organ, 4753 Contra naturam, g8ga
Contract, passions we inspire time, go7b succession bourn none,
'twixt
c.

Contentious, iota

petty

wisdom

c.,

Contentment
East, ioigb
fails,

characteristic

of

Hannah God and

Contemptible, bored more c. than bore, 755a rendered United States c., 84sa ridiculous c. animal, 42 5 a struggle, 4523 Contemptuous, discerning reader
c., 85ib Contend, different schools c. freely, 102 8a gods c. in vain, 4g8b no more love, 66sa schools of thought c., loayb seven towns c. for Homer, 3oib ye powers of heaven, 354b Contending against some being, 7oib calm c. kings, 22ob fierce c nations, 394a for liberty, 46ob-46ia leaders ambitiously c., 4&oa with adversity, 3iia Content at the last, ioo6b be c. with your lot, 76a don't be c., gsoa farewell c., 275a good pleasure ease c., 4ogb humble livers in c., 2g8a I am c., sosa if reversion nourish, ioo6b in health and mind's c, 37sb in tight hot cell, 10383 in whatsoever state to be c., 54b land of lost c., 8$3a majority of men c., i77b make c. with fortunes fit, 2788 mind c. both crown and kingdom, 2o6a

sg6b me,

749b
c.,

447b nor poorest receive


c. c.

3oga

verbal c. not worth paper, gfyb Contracted, orbed in this c. star,

preaches recover through

to toad, 87 ib

ggob
Contraction of life, g35b Contracts with the people, gSjb Contradict, do I c. myself, 7oob Contradiction between imperial' ism and Chinese, 10275 what a c. is man, 5642.

with physi-

to know c., ioigb Contents torn out and stripped, 42ia Contest, end a c. quicker, 481 a great c. follows, 4583

88b Western not


cian,

when we
world a
7o8a

risk
c.,

no

c.,

4090 Contests, hard c. men must win, 847b saints in fierce c., 353b what mighty c. rise, 4o4a Context, immediate c. of history,
io24b
Contiguity, boundless 457 Continence, give me
c.

let fools c.,

woman's a

c. still,

4oia 4o7a
side,

867b

Contradictions exist side by


in Chinese society, io27b

Contraption, homemade verbal c., io6ia


Contraries,

c.,

10361
all

of shade,

by

c.

execute

things, 2g6b
c.

but not

now, i47a Continent allotted by Providence, 676a almost a c. hardly a nation, g8gb American c. not colonization, 4gib Americans prefer C., 8g5b brought forth on c., Sgga disappoint a c., 754b heart no island but c., 2o8b iron curtain across C., g24b man is a piece of the c., 3o8b mighty c. hitherto unknown,
173

dreams by c, 58ga life of one another, jgoa Contrariously, work c., 2433 Contrariwise, 745b
Contrary blast proclaims, 34gb bringeth bliss, 2i4b everythink c. with me, 67ia facts c *z mules, sgib hear what you say to c., 6ogb Mary quite c., logjb men or c. character, 7ib not state things c. to fact, io7b runneth not to the c., 444b Spirit and flesh c., sjb
to the

Contribute
c.,

money means and

most momentous question on

notwithstanding, 4^> to diversion or improvement of country, 394*


c.

c.,

24gb
c.,

my
not not

crown
c.,

7ia
2isb

is

called

natural
c.

88 la

sigh

with attacks on me, 973b for moon c., 75ia

one small spot a c., 742a our c. the old one, 47ga striving to grasp c., 72ob untamed c., 72ob

Contribution according to capacity, 687a to current literature, 7566 Contributions to peace of world. 983*

1244

INDEX
Contrite,

Cord
Couks, as c. go sbe went, 9ojb are gentlemen, 3 Job Epicurean c., S7b God nds meat Devil tends c.,

broken and

humble and
Contrivance
4543,

c heart, igb heart, &75b


human wisdom,

of

Conversation souahung muniment, 97 a three cannot take pan in

c.,

Contrivances,

wisdom of human

Contrive, bead to c., 466a no farther tides, io4^b our fees to pilfer, gia

Contrived corridors, looib double debt to pay, 4504 Contriving, life a jest of Fate's

6o6b wants leisure, 9321 when you fall into a man's c 95b I without pictures or c,, 7433 writing name for c., 437b Conversational or homely type,
,

guesu praiic it not c, not jive without c., 74ib Cools' own ad2e, 66ab Coo! ai giass, <$oa caverns c. and deep, 7 sob
clear draj
c.

2ioa

gob
c.,

dear and

c ,,

4oaa
Control and communication theory,

Conversationalist, industrious 1031 a Conversation's burrs, 63$a

c.,

io33b
c.,

atomic energy, goSb authority nation cannot

75oa

chance shall not c., 7iia civilian c. of military, o84a

experiments to c. ideas, not learned to c., grammar c. even kings, lease of my true love c., man c. the wind, 7iib nothing short of club c., nuclear c., io?4b ought to c. thoughts, 6s8a cannot c., prison walls b stops at the shore, 557
forces

6?5b
goia 36 ib *g$b
83 la

Converse and li\e with ease, 4iob formed by thy c, 4ioa high c. with mighty dead, 4195 Hispanic for c. with God, 434b with men of unseen generations, i6ab with mountains and fens, 9093 Conversing I forget all time, 345b Conversion, refuse till c. of Jews, 359 Convert Bill of Rights, losib

d*v to c, so calm, 3x311 glawy c. translucent wave, 337b in any case keep c., iO3^a in dust in c, tombs, $4&b in gardens when eve c., 7343 keep c. it w>ll be all one, 6o8a kept breath to c. pottage, 68a
kindliness of sheets, ggsb of the day, b

one pain, place was

7373.
c.

sequestered vale of life, Siloam't ^hady rill, 5493

and pleasant, io6gb 44ob

3593

Controlled, events c. me, 6v}b underintelligence Controlling stands, i42b love of other sights Controls,
c.,

304b
social
c.,

new

9733
c,

Controversy, fear of ranted, 10643. hearts of c, s$3b

not war-

you into stew, ioo4a Converted and become as children, 43* love c. from thing it was, sgza silenced man not c., 77gb Converting human beings to machines, 6871 Convex, organ too c. or concave, 6o7b 66b Convey the wise it call, Convict, swart c. Bunyan, 6g6b had them, c. Daniel Convicted,
%oa Conviction, do evil from religious c., 3&4a editor's c., 1014* faithful to c. to old age, g6a sadness of c., 786b the best lack all c, 88za we are loved, 5gga Convictions, enter c. in open lists,

winding saxophones, g4$b Cooled a Jong age, 5#2a Cool-enfolding death, 7013 Coolibar tree, 6ga Cooling, dark t. star, < plash of rain, 8275
*

streams, 3843 Coolness, wind


Cools,

to
c.,

bring

c.

to

4o7a time c. time clarifies, 9376 Coon, gone c., 553b


live

men, 6&b till husband

Cooped we

and

die,

6$ob

Contumely, proud man's c., 2623 without resentment, 8j5b Conturbat, timor mortis c. me,

Cooperation, spontaneous c. of free people, 842 b Coordinate, nature has c. system,


Coort, supreme
c.

Convenience

comfort
c. c.

prestige,

follows Uictkm,

8gob
Coot, haunts of
c,,

he that for
Convenient, a
that there

takes oath, 3533 season, 5ob

6$aa

Cope, starry

c.

of heaven, 3463
intellectual

light switch, io4ga

be gods, is8b Convention, by c. there is


88a
is

gisa
color,

opposition with

c.,

transcend
all,
c.,

own

c.,

5&6b 7&7b

c., Co-perception, 6ioa Cophetua loved the beggarmaid.

ruler of

sartorial

8oa gsSa

system has faults, gS^b Conventional, ground in mill of


c., 7g8a merely c. signs, 746b

Convince hearers of own assertions, gsb to c. is to weaken, gi4a Convinced of too little, ioo7b
Convinces, 8i 5 b

man who c

the world,

Conventionalities,
c.,

punctilious

in

75&b

Conventions and restrictions of world, 757b Convent's narrow room, 5153 solitary eioom, 4O5b Convents, happy c., 4143 Conversation, brisk as bee in c.,
well endued, gift of unaffected c., s
for
c.

while they thought of dining, 451 a Conviviality, taper of c, 66gb of Convolutions smooth-lipped

Convincing

shell,

5i6b
c.,

Convulsions, system liable to

sware oath, 6488 Copied all they could follow, 8y4a Copious Dryden, 4ita Copper, Irishman lined with c, 7 Sob kettledrums, qx8b whiskey polishes c., ySob Copperhead^ forgot c. and assassin, 9485 Coppice, leant upon c. gate, 78jb Copulate in the foam, 885* Copulation, birth c. and death,
10042

8igb
Conwiviality,
taper
to of
c.,

66gb
C.,

Cook,

amount

Hannah

n 02 a
o4a
c.
c.

and captain bold, 76&b


c.,

good nature in c, 3Q4b


happiest 43 lb hinges in French
c.

common murderer uncommon

no
c.,

competition,

4s8b

_
c.

improved for literary c., 3ioa is but carving, 3$oa Johnson's c. was mustard, 4$8b of most searching sort, 6o6b of select companions, 3943. one of greatest pleasures, g$2a preaching word for dull c.,
smaller excellences of
c.,

learn to govern, 9038 as cooks go, oosb that cannot lick fingers,

makes his c. his merit, 361 a one can become a c. 4840 Cookery is an art a noble science, 3iob
kissing don't
last
c.
c.

*?gb Copy, couldn't c my mind, 8?4a leave the world no c., sijib show c. to whom you please, 46gb Copycat, life is a c., toooa Copyists, shortened labor of c., 57&* Coquette, death and i c., g46a Coquettes, refuge of old c., sggb Cor lacerare nequit, 391 a

let c. thrive,

Corage God mend


Coral
is

al,

far

more

red,

7t3b sg4b

lip admires,

3*73

Cooking,

ruling like

do, small

4692

74b

of his bones c. Corals, maple puts Cord, as unto bow

made,
c. c.

on,
is,

*g6b 6942 6%3a

1245

Cord
Cord, no
love,
c.

INDEX
draw
forcibly as

3iaa or axe or flame, 6563 silver c. be loosed, aga


stretch
c.

however

fine,

575a

threefold Cordelia,
Cordial,

c. not quickly broken, time consume strongest c., saob such sacrifices my C.,

a8ob
gold in phisik
is

c.,

Corner, head stone of the c., 22a in deepest heart, 794a in the thing I love, 274b never c. opponent, i035a of foreign field, gg4si of nonsense, 53oa old men from chimney c., 2O3b red star in c., io4?b sits wind in that c., 246a thing not done in c., 5ob where I can get out, g25b
years around seatown
c.,

Corrupt, judge no king can

c.

moth

and rust doth c., 4ob one good custom c. world, 654*
peace c., 348a plea tainted and c., zggb power tends to c., 750*

i66b
hospitality c. and frank, restore with c. fruit, saja

ip7ob
inch,

gigb

Cornered,

could
belie

be
c.

c.

in

8i4b
Corners,
c.

Cords, draw iniquity with


vanity, sob scourge of small
c.,

speech, 6o4b

all

of

world,

progeny yet more c., public mind, io48b unlimited power apt to c., 426a Corrupted, conscience with injustice c., 2i5a goodness with power c., io4b sun not c., g6b
traitorously c. youth, aisb Corruptible put on incorruption, 53 a Corruption and pernicious example, 54ga guilty of c. and renounce defense, 207a honest words suffered c., 3142
I

ia

of

2gia
of world, 237b four angels on c. of earth, 583 c. of earth, sgb are in his hand not wholly reap the c., gb

come three

c.

48a

vocal c. wrapped in toga, io47 a Core, apple's deft through c.,

4g8b

round
i2b

earth's

boredom

at

c.

of

life,

s6sa

Cornets, played before


Cornfield,
o'er

imagined c., 3O7b Lord on c.,


in

deep heart's c., 88oa a pounces on human c., 79^ song at the c., 87ga wear him in heart's c., a63a
Corinth, not everyone can get to C., i23b Corinthian a lad of mettle, 23ga Corioli, Volscians in C., 2goa

down

de

c.,

727b

have said to
in
c.,

c.,

i$a

green c. did pass, 25ob Cornish, twenty thousand C. men, 6ioa Cornwall, in Paddington all C. la-

smiting

c. swiftly,

7gsb

sown

53a

strong

c.

symptom
wins
2gga

inhabits blood, 2533 of liberty, 4&6a

Cork, drunkard cannot meet

c.,

gsib Corollaries, axioms and c., 786b Coromandel, black men fought on
tent,

not more

than honesty,
c.,

Corruptly, offices not derived

lighter than c. on waves, 82gb Cork-heeled shoon, io87b Corkscrew, clean tumbler and c., 66gb Cormorant devouring Time, 22ia sat like a c., 345 a

738b

C., sg6a coast of C.,

673b

Coronation, kind as kings upon c. day, 37oa Coronets, kind hearts more than
c., 6453 Corporal, in
c.

Corrupts, absolute power c. absolutely, 75oa power c. poetry cleanses, io74b Socrates c. the youth, gga
Corsair's, left c.

name,

55b
steel,

sufferance,

Corn, alien
before
-

c.,

5833
tears did

my

drown

it,

Corporation 66oa

of

the

27 la Goosequill,
trea-

Corse, dead
to

c.

in complete

colonels full of c., 855b cotton c. and taters, 8a8b cow's in the c., logsb of tares, 2o4b crop of c. a field farmer sowing the c., iog8b
field of ripe fields of c.
c.,

Corporations cannot son, 198 a cry out against c., 5483 have no souls, ig8a c. was he, Corpse, frozen make a lovely c., 67ob
of public credit, 547b
politician's
c.,

commit

Cortege, himself his own Cortez, stout C., 57gb

rampart we hurried, 568)


c.,

10793

Cory,
621 a

Richard C. one summer night, gooa Corydon what madness has caught
you,

n6b

looib

Cosmic night, gs6a


Cosmographers, physicians grown c., 3o8a Cosmography, period of c., 10851 Cosmopolite, best c. loves country, 6 55 a
8752 Cosmopolouse, bloomin' c., ~ oftk Cosmos, part of incarnate c.,

where Troy was,

goib

isSb
full c. in
c.

the ear, 45a

full of kernels,

855b

c., 238b slovenly unhandsome no c. when I am Corpse-gazings,

putrid

c.

of liberty, g77*>

in chaff, 554b licker stop victim's watch, g4ob meadows rich with c., 6s6a never thrust sickle in another's

hope

gone, io7a
Corpses,
c.,

behold they were dead

558b

CM ia6b

no use of metal
rain on sent not
c.

c.

out of olde feldes newe


c.

or wine, agob c., i64

a sad thing, ii6b for rich men only,

shock of c. cometh in season, i4b staff of life, 386a state that raises c., 8sob two ears of c. grow, 38gb

time turns loves to c., a Corpulent man of fifty, 551 Corpus, habeas c., 1513, 4723 hoc est c., 4i4b C. heart, io75a Corpus Christi, on Correct, easier critical than c., 6i2a in cypress wood, 10293 what all mortals may c., sgoa
Corrected, revised thor, 42 ib Corrections, error
c.,

push and pressure


sent

Sputniks

of into

c.,

c.,

y^

795

and

c.

by Au-

bursting with
c.,

Cost a sigh a tear, 47oa damn the c., io57b ever mindful what it c., so8a count c., i8ob give and not good words c. little, 324a new, than less sgab little loved and c. me so much, g28b of outworn buried age, 2Q*b and counteth c., 47 a sitteth than everything, Costing not less
, Costlier, living is c., 737 not c., 2020 Costly, attire comely c. luxury, 777* private morality

was orient, 377b whar man gits c. pone, ?64a


Cornea, speck in c. fifty cents, 8i7a Cornelia said These are my jewels, 3iaa
f

8i4b

Correctness, passion with

7g6a

ia Correggios and stuff, 45


Correlative, objective
c.,

ioo7b
of
c.,

Correspondences, io66a

storm

Cornelius, my new book to you C. ii4a Corner, better to dwell in a c.,

Correspondent to command, agoa Corridors, contrived c., looib


of power, io5ga of time, 62aa Corrupt a saint, a$8a
abilities utterly 53ib evil communications c.,
c.,

seasons, io8aa so c. a sacrifice, 64ob thy habit, 258b


Costs,

good counsel
to

c.

nothing,

buy apple on
draft

25b

c.,

loooa
c..

polite, nothing to keep in paint and powder,

be

cemetery plot in
fluttered

g25b
c.,

flame, driven from every other

ioi8a 444*

53a

influence, 453

Cotswold, along the C.

Goldmine be

c.

beside

hill,

lanes, g66b

5j

1246

INDEX
from otugc, hide* not visage our f., 295 modest looks c. adorn, 45<>b of gentility, 533* poor man in mean c., 38b
poorest
es,

Country
*J

(>>um myself king

of spate,

Counm,
al]

affluent

c.,

1063*

only sunny hour*, 53^ that day lott, 10902 them over ever* one apart,

man

in

his
c.

c.,

4*60

Ts dark

c., 333a poor men's

palaces,

;otton,

corn and

c.

and

cockle-

burs,

8305

ivhere c. and taters grow, 8*8b Sottons mather, io4ob Sottontail and Peter, 887b 3ouch, frowsy c. in sorrow steep,
cry, 2g?b wraps drapery of c., 574b a c., 324* and Cough, love Coughed and called it fate, 8ggb Coughing drowns parson's saw,

taking, 598b land of c., 6783 spinning noble, 577b

time by heartthrobs, 6791 time to c. your crime*, jjojb until nothing else to c., 609* when angry c. ten, 474* Counted as 'the small dust, 325 them and cursed luck, 8542 two and seventy stenches, 5275 Countenance, bright c. of truth, 339b cannot he, 3145 chide God for c., 1501 damned disinheriting c., 48 ib did the c. divine, 4900
heart changeth his c., 382 his c. like richest alchemy, *5ia

places aU air* one c., America m\ c.. 933b, r>fk)b American sayx he love* c., anything for good of c., 39? a a* 'soldier for c., 8651 ask not what c. do for you,
:

1073*

behind

people

your

c.,

7i?b

belong to people, 837* bent c. is at home, 447b


best service for
c., c., c.,

Bohemia little boon southern


to

7$7b 86jb 7i4b

be free for irreligton,

when owls do

49*>b

human
parts,
lift lift

c.

composed

of

ten

ijtb

cherished in hearts, 6555 construction of c., ffigan cover c. in books, 8042 defended by our hands, departed into their own c., devotion will light our

c,

up his c. upon thee, gb up the light of thy c., i?a

3232 Could, if youth but knew and old age c., i88b nor even thing I c. be, 4g6b Council, outcome of words is in the c., 64a achable in C. of Ten,

like lightning, 451

merry heart maketh a cheerful

die but once to serve c., 393b die in defense of his c., 64a disable benefits of your c., 250% disenthrall selves save c., 6j8b
diversion, 3923 dreary tract of c., 6421 duty to c. love it, 8$5b essential service to c., jSgb every c. but his own, 768a

more
258a
of

in

sorrow

than

anger,

all science, 5iia soon brightened, 5i6b

tyrant's threatening

c., i a

Zeus god of c., 62b Councilor ought not to sleep, 62b


Councils,

Counter original 8051


Counteracts Devil

spare

strange,
is

every
i7'6b

c.

hath

its

Machiavel,

takes

wisdom from

c.,

who

Death,

fame noised throughout c, iia


fate of c. not in ballot, 68ta father of your c., 46ob fight for one's c., 63b

Counsel, fitter for execution than

453

444b Countercheck

good

c.

cheap, 31 ib
for

bow hard
if

women

to keep

c.,

this c.

love

be of men, 4gb overwhelms wise c., &7b

quarrelsome, 251 a Counterfeit a gloom, 33gb jasmine impossible to c., 8i4b Jove's dread clamors c., *75a sleep death's c., 2843 Counterfeited, laughed with c.
glee, 449b Countermarch right about, 9$sa

fight to set c. free, 4&7a five and c. senses, io7oa

man who c. can bestow, 404a of thine own heart, s8b


in his face, 343b sometimes c. take, 4>4b of c. and might, 3ia spirit three keep c. if two away, i8sa took sweet c. together, i9b
princely
c.

Flora and c. green, 5823 for heroes to live in, 866a foreign troop in my c., 46a fornication but in another c.,

Counterpane, land of Counterparts in world


Counters,

c.,

8x33
fact,

titb
that famous c, lotib friend of every c. but own, so6b from yon far c. blows, 853* genius is of no c., 456a a give c. to Indians, 1042 heart to cause or c., 9g4b

of

found

box

of

c.

red-veined

two may keep c., i8t>a walketh not in c. of ungodly, i6b who darkeneth c. by words, i6a Counseled ignoble ease, 3435 Counselor, isolation worst c., 8703 name shall be called C., 3ia
Counselors,
clients,

stone, 72 ib wise men's c., 3i7b Countess, hissed the c., 887b Countesses had no outlines, 66gb Counteth, sitteth and c. cost, 473 Counting this row, loSab Countinghouse, king in c., io94b Countless infinitesimals of feeling,

given

b glory to free his c, 561 Cod made the c., 457b


good news from a far c., *6a governed by desjppt, 432b government spirit of c., 828a grow up with c., 678b half savage c., g88a

good
2702
c.

c.

lack

no

kings

and

of the earth, i4b


c.,

multitude of
wisest of c.

24a
c.,

Time, 8ob Counsels, dose designs crooked


excellent things in

hate

c.

not

in

c., 25b such quality,

530* thousands mourn, 4Q2b Countree, hame to my ain c., 55 ia is this mine own c., 5*5b North C. hard c., lossa Countries, air in new c., 94oa churches in flat c., 5i6b give themselves to you, g85a our country source of other c.,
outdistance advanced c., peace of all c. connected,
preferreth
all c.

hame

to my ain c., 55 ia his ruling passion, 82 ib history of c. begins in beart,

2330

how monie
sic c.

c. sweet, 495b of moderation, 9110 as c., 91 ib serve principles

before his own,

ye give, io87b Count, as long as I c. votes, 7*2b as naught in world, 694* chickens before hatched, 75!)
don't
let

3>5 D
seek

939 b honorable to die for ooe'i c., itib I loathe the c., 5928 I tremble for my c., 47 ia if my c. require my life, 4631 in c. you praise city, i2ob in highlands in c. places, 824b in town, i3&b is this mine own c., 5*5b
it's

no aggrandizement, 974a tamed and made to bear, 94oa


to distant
c.

autumn

in

c.,

gssb
io4?b
4383,

king will not leave c,

roam, 49 ib

know something
leaving
c.

of

own

c.,

let

your boobies, me c. the ways, 6i8b us c. our spoons, 43ob


c.

wandering

through

many

c.,

for

country's

sake,

milestones till haze dances, 6$2b in nothing else so myself

1155 wars between capitalist c., 954b Country, abroad for good of c.,
39 8a absorbs poet, 699b

let me have free c., 46ja love c. and be poor, 4138 love home love c, 6708 loved c. as no other man, 7i8a

398a

happy, 227a

1247

Country
Country, loves native 6 55 a
c.

INDEX
best,

man to all c. dear, 44gb master of sea master of every


men
sogb
write for
c.

c.,

for sect, 8943

merchants have no c., 473a most beautiful in West C., gi4a mouth of no other c., io22b

my c. is the world, 46yb my c. is Kil tartan Cross, my c. 'tis of thee, 6*7b my c. 'tis of you, losob my soul there is a c.,

88 ib

Country with no antiquity, 6i4b wooed not wed, 663b word new with our c., 76oa Countrymen, all one c. now, 205^ are mankind, 6i5b first in hearts of c., 486a friends Romans c., 255a Kiltartan's poor, 88ib rebels our c. again, 7i?a Romans c. and lovers, 255a warring on that day, 5563 what a fall was there my c., be thy Country's, all the ends
2992.
c.,

Courage

secret of
c.,
i

liberty,

spark of

8jtb

losb

species of c., 37 sb steadfastness c. hope, 9596 strong and of good c,

iob

to

change
10243

what

should

be

'

to feel daily daggers, 94*5 to forget, 726a to him that can get it, 3661 to say I am ignorant, 8ioa two o'clock in morning c., coib

$6$z needs good five-cent cigar, 8sga never so virtuous, 85ob no c. for old men, 882b no matter if c. need comedian,

North C. hard

c., io35a nothing old about c., 76oa O woman-c., 66sb of worth, 494b one c. one constitution, 548a one life to lose for my c., 4840 our c. however bounded, 655a our c. right or wrong, 456b, 733* . e our c. source of others, 455b our c. the world, 6i5b patriotism puts c. ahead, io48a peace of each c., g64a pride of c., 6sgb down, 10853 pride puts c. prophet in his own c., 42b of as c., 5033 enemy punished

bold peasantry c. pride, 449 a brooding on c. fate, 688a by all c. wishes blessed, 448a nooa fight our c. battles, for c. glory fast, siga c. blood, 44ob of guiltless heard c. call, 875b leaving country for c. sake, 3g8a never to see my c. ruin, 33a
pleasant spare c. flag, 6a6b Countryside, may c. content me,
c., 84gb Count's, nobody without C. permissions, g8oa Counts, isn't hurt that c., 8873 who c. wampum of night, 734b ib County Guy hour is nigh, 52 Coupled for a common flight,

unprepared c., 5o4b was mine, io28b were we men of c., io72b with which men died, 107% with which men lived, 107*1 without ferocity, 554b won by men with c., <joa words such as c. obscene, 10443 Courageous because of deep low, 75*
captains
Couriers,
c.,

loSyb
c.,

intellectual virile
sightless
c.,

8gsb
of
the
air,

c.

earth, 227b

c.

282b
stays these

87a

Course,

bow

to that

whose

c,

run,

smiling beautiful

439* . chances change by c., 2ioa earth's diurnal c., 51 la


finished my c., 55b great nature's second c., *8jb I must stand the c., 2793 icy current compulsive c, 2751 impediments in fancy's c., 2702
c. proportion, 2675 preserve steady c, 46tb on single c., 978* bees many my whole c. of love, 27 2b of empire, 4ooa of impious stubbornness, 257b of true love, 228b preudunt c. steadied, 6938 straight c. to highest good, 1141 turned from one's c. by opinions, io5a westward the c. of empire, 4ooa what c. others may take, 465* whate'er the c., 27oa when in c. of human event*,

i8oa

of relinquish life for good


richest

c.,

Coupling

of

man and woman,


conduct
of
this

insisture

law

which nourishes happy

Courage

and

beings, 6g8b right or wrong, 456b, 733a

army, 461 a
patriot, 752a

saved from

itself,

8sob

and devotion of be of good c., 33a

savior of 'is c., 873a serve c. and mankind, 75 ib serves party best serves c., 7i8a

she is my c. still, 4563 shed blood for his c., 847b shrink from service of c., 466b slow sort of c., 745* small c. with few people, 7sa in c., 109 la spirit of resistance spread over globe, 6g2b stand by c. as mother,

bear his share with c., 7243 bear with a good c., 36b befitting a man, 8i8a brows of dauntless c., 34*0 ib by experience with fear, 98
civic
fires
c.,

795b

fear they call

c., 9073 us with c. love joy, 4oib on c., 91 6a based freedom

gaiety

and quiet mind, 825a


c.,

God had given Columbus

7i8a
stranger in strange c., 82b stroll a gallery, 7243

God mend
his
c.

i72b

all,

j* 723b^

young blood have c., 6gia Coursers, nor c. like a page, 73&a Courses, accomplishing their appointed
stars
c.,

47ob

sucked

on

c.

pleasures,

^,_

foes proclaim, 368b horse of our c., io8oa

87a
c.

in

their

fought,

na
you,

survive or perish with c., 46sa their c. their children, u6a they've undone his c., 393b
this
this
this
c. c.

hour of

c. f

to preserve liberty, 473 b with its institutions,


c.,

lonely c., mastiffs of unmatchable May giveth unto lovers

ioi4b 795b

Court a mistress she denies


attacks

244* i75 a moral c. physical timidity, 78 3 a mounteth with occasion, 2$6a


c., c.,

3033 upon the C., 78?b bring suit in Supreme C., g8ta
confession in open
c.,

474*
c.,

happy
is

444a
c.,

this

a
c.,

beautiful

this slave

5943
shackles
c.

touch our
trouble

c.

fall,
c.,

__.

running any
is

9463

troublesome

China, 4iga

Union

my

c.,

5g8b

a unjustly overrun, 681 vegetate like the c., ssga for has done us, what c.

spark of c., no3b never to submit or yield, 3^ 61 __ notJtq. believe in anything, of conscience, 591 a N or holiness, heart of go2a of making choice, giia of my companions, 8g6a of New England, 59 ia one man with c. a majority,

my

English envious

not Turkish 247b for owls, 32a hear rogues talk of 28oa him elude him, ios6a
c.,

4*b

c.

news,

keeps
let

in beauty and decay, 571* in perpetual session, g8ob Death his c., *t7b

_
56ob

King Ballyhoo's C,998b her alone she will c.


moderation
gone
no
c.

you,
save,

where where
446b

art

thou
is

my
there

c.,

liberty

is

my

c.

where no pretense of
6 35a

liberty

who serves c. well, 4*7 a whole c. nothing but c., 546b

ib pathos piety c., 95 to world, io44a people bring c. price life exacts, io42b red badge of c., go5a resistance to fear, 7 62 a Robert Shaw showed, 795b screw your c., 28sa

in or out of c, 844 injustice J overruled earlier decisions, 853* of Jovcs u, starry threshold

1248

INDEX
Our;, sun that shines upon
his

Cradles
4-jMb
.

Ojver,

onh an

guilt to c

uke
,

supreme c. follows iliction, 8gob temper doctrinaire logic, loaib the camp the grove, 5i8b though Icwdncss c. it, 2$9b world history is world's c. 497b Courted by all the winds, 34gb in girls again c., io86b
t

paste and c. to our bonev 127 b that bosom I mutt not see, jfx>b thee with his feathers, aob

*jfr or c 1942 that c. churchman be.


.

C*7w2ev had

fanciful

Courteous,

gracious

and

c.

to

strangers, 2o8b
intellectual virile,

Sgsb
f

servysable, i66a retort c., 251 a Courtesan, word love in mouth of

lowly

and

c.,

6o|b

Courtesies, sweet c. of life, 438b Courtesy, always time for c., 6ogb

j
{

and
earl

self-possession,
c.,

candy deal of
fine

88sb 238b
c.

sense men call c., frygb in c., oo2a grace of God man greater c., &53b greater herein chivalry c. humanity,

by right by

man, 754b
j I

them with leaves, IO*JA Covered, death a c. wav, 6243 up our names, 73(22 Coven, out of night that CM 8i6a small grass c. him, ctfyb * who c. faults 2773 Covert from the tempest, 331 Covet no people's lands, 102591 sin to c. honor, 945% those that c. with gain fond, 22oa thou shalt not c., ga Coveted her and me, 6442 Covetous desires of the world, ftia man ever in want, 1232 of others' possessions, ii$b sordid fellow, 4152 Covetousness, wealth cause of c.,

mind, jaeb

Cow's in the torn, io$3b the c. cwnw home, 47$b Cr<n art my pjwtkm, fyyia Gwt^ip't, hang pearl

c.

ear,

22(43.

c/beH
c,

I lie,

tgjb

sweet

grace, 47tia

Coxcomb^, some made c. nature meant fool*, 4osb OA and hard to please, den, a] vain and c. rxcuw, _ sometimes coming nwrtiroeVc.,
yielded with
r. c.

Covnew.

this

submission, 3453 were no crime,

Cow and

high-erected thoughts in heart of c., 203a in c. have her learned, 88sb like longshoreman's union, 8921 mirror of all c., i68a, 2982 no defense like c., Sg$b pink of c., 1963, 224b true alchemy, 7302 wins as valor, 653b Courthouse, portals of every c.,
Courtier, heel of c., s6sb worthy of being c., 4b Courtier's soldier's scholar's, s6ab Courtiers, our c. were good, jgab

upon every road, 66oa Courting, stayeth young man's


g88b
Courtliness and
desire

c.,

is old c,, 734 bear shall feed, 311 cheaper than keep c., 7560*7572 good animal in field, 4318 jumped over moon, looia little Kyloc c., iog4b milk c. of world, milked goat instead 'of c., 10992 purple c., 886b red and white, 8t^b till the c. comes home, 3163 with crumpled horn, iog8b you do de pullin' Sis C., 8i4a Coward and brave held in same honor, 6$b cocoa cad and c., giga conscience dost afflict, aijb conscience is a c., 44&b count myself the c., 6540 does it with kiss, 8411 fight when sure of winning,

212b when he

Cozenage, strange c., g^b Cozy women dead, io57b Crab, hermit c. whale'* backbone,

kept stepping back, yj^b pike c. swan, 5056 teach c. to walk straight, 91* very likeness of roasted c., 2292 Crabbed age and youth, 10841 philosophy not" harsh and c., 337 a talk of c. old men, ii4b Crabs, diplomats women and c., 778b roasted c. hiss in bowl, 9232 Crack any of those old jokes, gib blow winds c. cheeks, 27&a door begins to c., 109*2
glass eye across, 4ob hear the mighty c., 3932 heaven's vaults should c., 28ob in teacup opens, io6oa nature's molds, 278%
sail -yards tremble masts c., tosb stretch out to c. of doom, a8sb
j

of

fame,
flattery to

653b
Courtly nurture, 72 la
Courts, brawling c., Grjob case still before c., 1243 day in thy c., 2ia

name

c.,

soSb
to fire
it,

had not

resolution

Cracked growled roared bowled,


the mirror c., 6461 Crackers, pretty mottoes inside

never forgave, 4373 no c. soul mine, 68sb


so great
c.

c.,

forsaken

c.

hollow 5oia
into

murmurs

pale pavilions, io47b through c,,

as

he thinks, 8*4b
Crackle of frost, ioi{b Crackled and gone np in smoke,

turns away, 85*

c. laws decide, not enter political thicket, prophecies of what c. do, shown in c. at feasts, thee on roses, isob thrusting on c. nurture of it, 91 2a

his c. conflict

with

praise,

2ia

48sb 9673 787a 337b


spir-

worth little more than c, 5032 and c. conscience Cowardice, same, 839* distinguished from panic, 10452 here all c. be ended, isgb herein friendship c. murder,
peace with disgrace and c, io7b protection against temptation,
that dings, giSb

856b
Crackling of thorns under * pot, *8a Cracks, now c. a noble heart,

*66b
sinews cakes brain. 6$6b Cradle asks whence, 749*

between

c.

and

grave,

49*

where

Jamshyd

gloried,

62gb
Cowardly,
fatal

Cousin of forest green, 58ob


Cousin's whistle, 664b Cousins, sisters c. and aunts, 766a Coute, il n'y a que le premier pas qui c., 41 8b Couvrez ce sein que je ne saurais
voir,

1017* bough breaks


it

c, fall,

8iob

as

is

c,,

7O5b
c.
.

spares the c., 702 Cowards, conscience but word


use, 2i8a

war

36ob
c.,

Covenant, token of a with death, 322, words of the c., gb

6b

conscience does make die many times, 2$4b hundred c., loiib
in reasoning, 4&3a

c.,

262a

endlessly rocking, 7oib from c. to grave, 560* hand that rocks c., 6g$b of all that is, io6sb of every science, 724b of liberty, 54b of the deep, 554*

mannish
silver,

c.,

2476

procreant c., 2822 stands in the grave, 3ogb


will rock,

Covenanted with him for

Covenants, open c. of peace, 842b Cover country in books, 8042.

not preserve republic, ioi5b plague of all c., 2392 public greatest of c., 53gb

Siob
poetry
babies

Cradled
Cradtes,

into
bit

by wrong,
in
to

when

c.

mock

patriot's

fate,

c, 66*b
graves,

cunning

sin c. itself,

246b
Cowards' funerals, io3a Cowl does not make monk, I like a c., 6o2a

her face, 3isa I c. all, 948a like c. of old book, 4213

plodding 695b

from

c.

some

c.

preserve as sicred, 760*

to graves,

1249

Craft
Craft,
life so short c. so long, i64a neat little sweet little c., 7680

INDEX
Creaking, h3y
c.

Cream and mantle

to bsrn, 10753 like standing

so long to learn, 88b to seme fle fro thyng

men

hunte, 1640
Craftiness, taketh wise in their c,

Hb
Craftsman against craftsman, 6?b be c. in speech, 33
Craftsmanship, criticism easier than c., Q2b leaves holes, 1071 a
literary
c.,

pond, 23 la choking to death with c., 6913 emperor of ice c., 9553 gives c. with 311 might, Ss^b masquerades as c., 7663 Cre3m-faced loon, 2863 Creste, belief help c. fsct, 7943 creative c. itself, 5853 critics or but half c., 8823

Creation S3me 3s destruction sleeps, 3993 the tire of all c. 6343


?

ioi a

we

which whole c. mov 6nn tremendous object of c .,'


to
bless
c.

whole

thee for our groaneth, 51 a

4^
fcb

c.,

Creation's cry, 876b dawn beheld, 557b Creations of mind bleaimr e not
curse,

9503
itself,

do not

9973

Crafty afraid to act, 7$b old and c. and wise, 88oa Crag, castled c. of Drachenfels,

4793 earth sccording to hesrt, 43 to c., 6803 godlike in me a dean heart, 193 martyrs c. faith, 86gb new heavens and a new earth,
t3lk,

Creative create
critical

power

c.

5853 power,

i 7 '

hate, gsgb

want of
without 935*

c. spirit,

go8a playing no
is

c.

work

556b
clasps
c.

with

crooked hands,

6513
Crags,

among

these

barren

c.,

33 noblest of sailing vessels, 9983 science of physics, 8153 strains that might c. a soul,

Creativeness, life

deeds c., 8054 Creator and Preserver, 6oa

6463.

337*

duty we owe C., 46sb endowed by their c., 47ob from his work returned,

Cram within this wooden O, 2433 Crammed with distressful bread,


*44b

Cramped up and smothery, 7613


Cranes of Ibycus, 7oa
Crankiness, saving

5163 looob to know to kill to c., 7o7b what half c. what perceive, sogb

taste

time to murder and

by which

relished,
c.,

God

Created, all

men

c.

equal,

47ob,

good when it leaves C., 4361 great C. drew his spirit, 37^ law of our C., 4543 made It3ly from designs by
Michelangelo, 7593
of
3ll

of Life C., 9623

5474 '

mind from

c.,

639*

6953 Cranks, cursed with army of 8gia quips and c., 334b

c.,

by him all things c., 54b by him and for him, 54b God c. heaven and earth, 53
half to rise, 4093

pity C.

3nd giver, 3b had not taken

advice,

157^

Crannied wall, 6545 Crannies, pluck you out of c., 6 5 4b Crannying wind, 55&b Cras amet qui nunquam amavit,
1503 ingens iterabimus aequor, 121 a Crash, stand by to c., 102 la Crater, Vesuvius' c. for inkstand, 6g7a Craters of my eyes gape, 10833 Crave, my mind forbids to c., igaa

h3th not one God c. us, 363 m3le and femsle c. he, 53
497 maji to be immortsl, 36b hsd monster I c., 5893 new thrill, 5993 not c. sense of oblig3tion, 9053 nothing can be c. from nothing, 1133 nothing great c. suddenly, 1383 something of nothing, 3335 thing c. loved before it exists, gi8a thou hast c. all things, 583 to operate on continuing basis,
is c. free,

remember now thy C., *8b Creators of odd volumes, realities and c., 6o6a
Creature, bright
c.

5351

m3n

scorn not one,

5*70
comforts, 3863 constant image of the c., 25x2 Constitution c. of people, 48sb drink pretty c., 5110 every c. drink but I, J57b

every every every

c.
c.

mystery to other,
of

67

God

is

good, 553

no

pelf,

2903

shelter of ink, $42b stain of tears,

purified, 2133 God's first c. light, g44b Hobbes proves every c., 390* imitator poor c., 754b kindness to fellow c., 5313

c.

gs^b then Lucasta might I c., 3593 thing we may not have, i68a too much still do c., 1923 we crie al day and c., i68a who doth not c. rest, 6773

world but small parenthesis, 33ib world of shadows, 9933


Creates,
little
c.

lash magic
little c.

c.,

7383
joy,

formed of
c.,

4gob

lone lorn

6173

more

preserves,

Craved no crumb, 7693 Craven, some c. scruple, 2&4b Craves a kind of wit, 2$2b
Craving, accurst
credulity, 61 2b
c.

8323 poet c. world, 9573


state

m3n most man not

detestable c., 7642 c. of circumstances,

6nb
nor any other c., 513 not a c. stirring, 5413 of circumstances, 61 ib
of the
c. ?

which

c.

revolutions, g8b

for gold,
c.,

n8b
4833

Creating, in c. begin, 6gsb new doubts, 4623 whole tribe of fops, 2773
Creation, be3uteous bright

moment, ssgb
c.,

minds are not ever to go to law, 7703


Crawl,
felt siroccos c.,

preach to every

45b

1523

7363

charm

thunder in, 10713 upon earth, gSgb with legs, 5353 Crawling between heaven and earth, 2623 cooped we live die, cruel c. foam, 6900
flash or

with their 3rt, 5053 construction 3nd c., 9183 despise tailless m3n, 7973
c.

did ever

woman since c., 437 division same as c., loia drives plowshare o'er c., sggb
earlier

progressively thirsty, gg*b from others, quite separate sweeter c., 275b that made footprint, 9673 that thou madest, 854b

7$b

what more felicity to wine a good famili3r

c., c.,

soia 2742

and other

c.,

ioo6a

on

for charity, loia all fours, 4i7b


c.,

essentially subjective, 9363 f3lse c. from brain, 2833

wretched despicable c., 4*ol> Creatures, all c. here below, 3770

both insects and humans, 94ob


5373
brother to
all c.,

gods formed world 3t


in infinite I

c.,

io77b
teach, 243*

Crawls, crew

9793
c.,

Am, 528b
7373
love,
c.,

by rule in nature

sea beneath

him

65 ib

Crazed with avarice, 86ob Crazy as hauling timber into woods, isoa
h3lf c. for love of you, 885b salad with their meat, 88ab Creak of lumbering cart, 88ob

of kelson of
initi3l

c.,

c.

Unguage
life is c.,

of

7003 gogb

England

clearest of God's c., 10763 delic3te c. ours, 2740 breeds valiant c., s44*

6753

essences of seasons became

lords o' the c., 4933 O fairest of c., 347b one thing in c. to demonstrate

myriad c., iioa from f3irest c. desire


2913
generations
of living
c.

increase,

Creaking, echoes 10223

down

c.

floor,

rhythmic3l

Providence, 1383 of besuty, c.

6440

chsnged, ii3b

INDEX

Criminal
T/WH

r
cs

Cd"s

c.,

64 ib

deed*, dust of
i ,

c.

omwon;,

and small, t&4b n Leviathan hugest of c.. 346b httlc c. cverywncte, $74b love my fellow c., 7&ba make fellow c. happy, 467b
makes meaner c, kings, 2i?b meanest of c., 66sb of a day, 7gb of all c. man most detestable,
poets for all thy praise
c.

dust

of i) stems and XTOV* so thick, b^fta

c,.

ti^b

Cued Give me, 7^b in ft**rtc Alas, iW;b


67 $b more, ja^a nor c. aloud, 3i6a out <rf the depths have X c., sxb Peier denied Lord c., ioH^a
in touih It,, icyrb nsficy Jo inywH 1 <., 5iob MY how fair you are,

human hopes and


j

c,,

79 a a
7**tf>

so
{
| <

new names for iimter>, many god* ao many c,,

keys of

Jill

c.,

6504

No

toto

nm Hmtrd
poi

than in half the c., 63 ia that refuse and restrain, 77^ Creeks, through c. and inlets, t&3b

Creep and

let

no more be
c.

said,

most absurd, 4126


c.,

Crier,

1573

beasts of the forest


feet like mails flesh c., 66oa

forth,

aib

seem coming are going, smashed up c., ios6b


spiritual tnat creep
c.

dwarfed and abased, 8a6b


did
c..

c. Caeiuir wept, a$$b \ou suddenly c,, 9932 good r, of screen sauce, iSia trwn c. ^x^r my linet, sfob

nsob

daniiicd
2*7.1

that

c.

Hold enough,
4&3a

walk unseen,

swim or

fly,

that once were men, 894b *eak c. of clay, gib what marvelous c. we are,

for bellies' sake c., 3386 in one dull line, 403* into narrow bed, 7153

fied with
hx/ly

man who
mv
out

learn to

widows most perverse vou dissect, 4o6a


Creatures', Credit, an't

c.,

394b

human c. lives, much c. in that,

sgib
6yoa

ere learn to go, let music c. in our ears, love will c. in service, men c. not walk, 6aGa nevermore to c. again, 9151 something not in poem c. in,
c.

>tld c., d4$a iceek she c., turnips c., 4293 fate c, out, tyjb

and

of cicadas, g&oa of sandpaper, 10655

Where

is it,

^a6b
c.,

pitvinj? toe tender

4&ja

dead corpse of public c., 547b done my c. much wrong, 6$ob gradual growth of c., 61 ab his c. that he is greatly to Englishman, 7662 having more c. than money,
477 a
his
I let

10712

swim or fly, 37ya where it may not


Creeping, gray douds

go,

184*

wit that can c., 41 ib Creepers, bacterial c., io&4b


c.

quietly,

rump- fed ion von c., 281 a that which world c. up, 3758 to world from tower, 97ob voice of Nature loud/y c.. 4951 whistle spontaneous c., 9553 wind full of birds' c., $47a Crieth, brother's blood c., 6a in the wilderness, 3&b

own lie, 29631 wdl can c. it, o^ga


the
c.

hours of time, 248b


like snail to school, 2498

wisdom c. without, s^a Crime, blanch without owner's

c.,

not to

idea occurs, 8ijb places last stone gets c., 040b and Muse, Goja plans c. shadow of authority and c.,

whom

go,

6sgb

453b
stories

thing in sober way, 6#5b things c. innumerable, sib through the black, 9532 Creeps, how slow shadow c., 90 ib in this petty pace, 286b Creetur, lone lorn c., 6718

5' >a criminal not cause of c., 9ogb curious c. wickedness, 6673
electricity

and

c.,

910^1

foulest

from

in history, 7021 single c. know nation,


c.

not to thy

c.,

to

man who

74ob
8ijb

convinces,

Cremated Sam McGee, 9333 Crepidam, ne supra c. tutor


Crept into bosom of the
music
c.

n8a
Iscariotlike c., 9966 like virtue has degrees,

iudi-

used my c., Creditable acquaintance, s88b Credited, always c. to Exchai nge,

caret, ioia sea, 2152 like frightened girl, 8 3 8b

37&b
4602

now madden
numbers
of beine

to c., 5583 sanctified the

c.,

executors or c., 6g6b we are debtors or c., 478a Credo quia impossibile, i43b Credulities, ambitions climb on c., &44a Credulity, a little c. helps, 6s6b
Creditors,

by upon waters, 296a 56a night c. upon our talk, Crepuscular time, 688a
Cressid, as false as C., s68b where C, lay that night, Crest, no color 'or c., 8741

young man, 4*sb


c,,

popularity a c., yj6b prevention of mutual

g8b

23$a

Crested, reared

arm

c.

the world,

punishment fit c., 7&8b servitude consequence of c^ 48oa stupid c. war, 933%
successful c. called virtue, this coyness were no c., to be nobly born now c,

craving c., 6i2b helps enjoyment,

288b

1312

73b
man,

man's weakness, 5353


supine
to
c.

Cretan, played C. against C., i36b Crew and captain understand,

jggb

characteristic of

whispers of fancy, 4s>8a youth the season of c., Credulous first hours, 10403 hatred renders votaries c., Creed, Athanasian C. lyric, comfortable c., s6ob faith or c. today, 741 a is a rod, 775b life to neighbor's c., 6oza lives alone by book and c., most authentic c., 7493 necessity the c. of slaves, nonviolence article of c., not question school or c., of our political faith, 4720 put c. into your deed, sapping solemn c.
single

426a

beguQed leisure of c, ?6sb Bellman cry c. reply, 746b captain and his c., 7655
crawls, 979a darling of our c., 475b dismayed her c., 792*

who

to love too well, 4062 for my willful

c.,

J48b

worse

than

c.

it

is

blunder,

436b
6133

ghastly

c., 525b immediately the cock Mirth admit me of thy

c.,

c.

44b 334b

Crimes against peace, 102 ib and misfortunes, 4*7b broad blown, 264* committed c. but not stood
aside,

io54b

no ship
7goa

better

c.,

7650'
rest,

of captain's gig, 765b Crews, merry c. laid to

committed in thy name, 48jb history register of c., 4&5b


never

9473
c.,

among my

c.,

747*
c.,

4g6b
8973

Crib, ass knoweth his master's

one virtue thousand


reach the dignity of teems with c., lOQob

7gb

3oa Cribbed,

c.,

5$8b 47Sb

cabined
is

c.

confined,
dear,

s84b
Cricket
to
c.,

cricket

1043

merry as

1843

dogmatic

c.

suckled
theory

in c. outworn, of matter not c.,


c.

8383

no relief, 1002 a on the hearth, 335b where c. sings, 87gb


Cried
for

time to count your c., sosb worst of c. is poverty, 8371 Criminal element I am of it, 83 ib abjudge condemned when c.
solved, 1263

no

whatever race 99ia


Creeds, casual
c.,

or persuasion,

A sail

sail,
c.

525*

Agamemnon
?i2a

aloud, ioo2a

madder music, 8903

c. class except Congress, 76ab not c. unless intent c,, igoa not cause of crime, 9ogb

1251

Criminals
Criminals, less evil that

INDEX
some

c
c.,

escape, 788b Crimson, beauty's ensign yet is

Criticism rod of divination, 87ga stealthy school of c., 73 la to make enjoyment aware, 8oob

when

c.

parts with reality, g22a


c.

Crops flowery food, 4083 watering last year's c., sparklin * c - **


blind as nails up n C., ooSb cannot c. cause wt born, hot c. buns, 10954 nailed on bitter c.,

conquest's c. wing, 44 ib of c. joy, 48ga


petal, u4oa

work of
385*
Criticisms,
c.,

shaped by geometry,
penetrating

torchlight

c.

on

kettledrums,

parodies losza
as
c.

Si

9i8b with fury, 7443 Crimson-tipped flower, 49$a Crines ingenio suo flexi,
Cringe,
souls

Criticize

some

hitherto,

8ia

cannot

Testament, 8633

13
6923

to c. is to appreciate, 7ggb Criticized, book Time c. for us,

that

c.

plot,

Crippled palsied and slain, Crises, business c. wrecked industries, 8igb Constitution adapted to c., 4855
great
c.

show

resources,

7920

marriage seldom develop without c., gssb


Crisis,

good joke not c., gi8b not pleasant to be c., io67a relation with c. thing, 7ggb tradition perpetually c., ioo8b Criticizes, Testament c. you, 863a Critic's, don't view with c. eye, 5<>7 a
before you trust in c., 554b Boston audience c., 75ga failed therefore turn c., 5*8a go hang yourselves, 18 ib in peace ye c. dwell, 4osb men who have failed, 6iab or but half create, 88sa ready made, 554b shouting He's unknown, 7gib when c. talk of sublime, 4&7b Critique, killed off by one c.,
Critics,

5 fown, of gold,, 8s8b of Jesus, 75ob old rugged c., gi3b over river and rest, 7*3* that rules southern
transit

no

c-

where dreams

iky,
c.,

Crossbow, with

my

c.,

5*4b

Crossed, every hope c., oyster may be c. in love, the Sierras, loaab

7b

48*

when
with

force

moment

to

its

c.,

bar, 65sa direct eyes, ioo*a

have

c.

looia

moulting season c., 68*b quiet but urgent, 10775 Crisp, deep and c. and even, 687b Crisped, leaves c. and sere, 6~43b
Crispian, feast of C., 24a Criteria, clear-cut c., ios8a Critic, better be actor than cry of
c.

Crosses, crooked c. and stones, g68a relics crucifixes, j53b

head-

row on row, gi2b

to fret thy soul with Cross-gartered, see thee

c.,
c.,

toia

tub
*8ia

Crossing Channel and

tossing,

c,

767b death

is

but

c.

for five, 754a


c.

dreamer
dwell

of dream, g$6a
excellencies,

upon
c. tells

394b

good

of

masterpieces,

8oaa helper of artist, 7g8b most degraded of trades, 764a no longer artist but c., 888b not bein* author gr-reat c., 8923 peep or cynic bark, 6osb praise not c., 84*b severe c. on own works, 5&5a Sir C. good day, 6"7gb unsuccessful author turns c., 5s8a valuable instrument, 7gga well if every c. would, 78xa when cannot be artist, 7ogb wise skepticism in good c., 6g5a you have frowned, 5i7a youngest c. died, 872!) Critical, easier c. than correct, 6isa effort, 7isa generous sternly c., 8i5b nothing if not c., 27$a power creative power, 7ija readers should be c. of historians, io7b sense rare, 7g8b Criticism, ask c. want praise, 93 ib

Crito I owe a cock, 88a Croaks fatal entrance of Duncan, 28ib Hall o' Fame when you c.,

Thames, Crosspatch draw latch, 1094* Crossroads, dirty work at


stripling

7m

world,

c.,

loggb
strange Crossways,
c. lie,

io4ob
at

things

home

t,

8o8b
Crotchets in thy head, 2672

looga how doth little c., 743a not move underjaw, gaga tears, so5b Crocodiles, not be seized by c., isgb Cromwell, celebrities such as C., 749b Charles the First his C., 464b damned to fame, 4ioa of country's blood, guiltless 44ob I charge thee, agga if thou fallest O C., agga Crony, ancient trusty drouthy c., 495b government by c., 931 a Crook, by hook or by c., i63b pregnant hinges of knees, 2&3a shepherd's c. beside scepter, 601 a Crooked cannot be made straight,
Crocodile,

Crouch, master and make c, 6671

Crow

to fawn to c. to wait, sou to television set, 10773

beautified with our

feathers,

2o6a

before the cock c., 44b Indian Sioux or C., 83b louder in own farmyard, 6?8b lungs c. like chanticleer, tjSb makes wing to rooky wood,

2&4b many-wintered c., 64ya not have me roar or


safer 'n to
c.,

c.,

9451

6gja
6892
i8a

shook down on me, 9273 sun risen to hear him c,


think thy swan a
c.,

2*3a
6341

pluck c. Crowbar, creation

we'll

together, for c.,


c.,

hammer me

into

g48b

automatism but also c,, io*8b bad c. as serious as careless drainage, gi6b blown by wind of c., 43$b cant of c., 43&a conducted along proper lines,
definition of
c.,

27a-b dose designs hands, 651 a house, 10966


lane, sg2a

c.

counsels,

s68a

hoe and barrow, 553a Crowd, after night I do c., 4861 all at once I saw a c., &i4b and buzz and murmuring*, gftb beauty not comprehended by c..
878b-87ga
faces in the
c.,

dominated by outworn theory, 9090


dramatic
c.

tattoo soap bubbles,

Leviathan that c. serpent, $2a man went crooked mile, iog6b roads are roads of genius, 48yb set c. straight, 753a shall be made straight, slim and c. genius, 7g8a tell the c. rose, io7oa Crookedest river in world, 76oa Croolty, pastime of civilized man

firm against
fools that c. for c. they

c.,

g87b 64gb
interpreters,

thee so, 3583

need

3b

great

man how many

79 a

in

c., oooa sorrows c., 5*ob

easier than craftsmanship, easy art difficult, gg8b

gsb

g4ga father of English c., 4$8b not govern without c, poetry a c. of life, g4ga reviewing not c., 7g8b
life,

epigram a

c.

of

ioi4a

c., 8g2a Crop, familiar as c. in summer, i4*a fungus c. of sentiment, 77 ib of corn a field of tares, 2o4b Crop-full bird, 666a

the c., 948a I into a shade, 4oab into two brief words, 52ob

am

muse

in

c. all

day, 6i8a

not feel the c., 45^b not on my soul, 44** of common men, 387b only beast in arena the

c.,

Crops are ripe, gi4b

88gb

1252

INDEX
mistress or Crowd, out of the c. a friend, 571 a truth not assimilated by c., 7060 whole thing in minute, 8140
will support itself, 73b you were a good c., 8433 Crowded, for sake of c. audience, 88b hour of glorious life, 455b too busied with c. hour, 6o$b with glorious action, 5223 world's most c. streets, 711 b

Cry
Crudest
lies told in silence,

Crown, sorrow's

of sorrow, 647a still the fine's the c., 27oa sweet fruition of earthly c.,
c.

82b

she 3live, 25 ib
Cruelly, Fortune c. scratched, 2703 pain clings c. to us, s8ob Cruelty, all the pride c. and

2123 sword mace c. imperial, 244b that seldom kings enjoy, 2i5b the watery glade, 4393 themselves assured, 29$b
thorns thy only c., 333a though they possess c., g8sb virtuous woman is a c., 24a

ambition, iggb
farewell fair c., 25 ib fear source of c., 9133 full of direst c., s*8ib

has

human

heart,

48gb

Mr.

Crowd's,
strife,

madding

c.

ignoble

44ob Crowds, beauty c. me till I die, 8b 73 noise c. beloved smoke, 534b


not act arbitrarily, 10133 public men nor cheering
c,,

Crowned again discrowned, 8933 due to be c. again, g86a ghost sitting c. upon grave,
3i8a ago, 5595 knot of fire, 10073 Peace c. with smiles, 3633 with lilies, 10243 with stars, 3776 Crownest year with thy goodness, igb Crownets, walked crowns and c., 8ga Crowning, reason God's c. gift, 823 Crownless in voiceless woe, 5573 Crowns and pounds and guineas,

C., 3 6sb

of pirates, Sggb pastime of civilized

man

c.,

8923
soldier without c., 747b stories of bloodthirsty c., to load falling man, gg8b

him long

855b

88ib talk with c. keep virtue, 877a without company, 466a Crowed, cock that c. in morn, iog8b Crowing, faded on c. of the cock,
25721

of cocks

and barking of dogs,


f

75 a

Crown, allegiance to c. 46ob ambassador from Britain's c., 6563 becomes monarch better than c., 234b bowed with galling c., 8ggb breeches cost a c., 10853 chance may c. me, 28 ib
contrary to
cross for
c.,

are empty things, 3&5b birds rounding hill c.,

io78b

end end
if

c. all,

26gb

us not fight, 3203 ending c. the work, isob


c.

c.

built paper mill,

store of c. be scant, in shades like these, 4493 last act c. play, 3223

goga

defiance to forces of C., 426b

emperor without c., 3993 fell down broke c., 10943 fighting for c., logsb
to toe, 28 ib from c. of head to sole, 246a c. like a deep well, 228a golden
fill

me from
with
gold

c.

good
hairy

brotherhood,
c.

on

'ead,

8493 8733

hath worn the c., 383 have I no bays to c. it, 323b head that wears a c., 2423 heaven's jeweled c., 758a hoary head a c. of glory, 24b hollow c., 22?b
holly bears the
c.,

not c. but men, 5453 walked c. and crownets, 2893 Crows and choughs that wing air, 2?9 a throw him to c., noib wars of kites or c., 35oa Crow's-feet, til c. be growen, 164^ Cru j'ai pleur et j'ai c., 503b Crucible, God's c., 87ob not test faith in c., 8i8b Crucified dead and buried, 6oa everyone Christ and all c., g$gb let him be c., 44b where dear Lord c., 684b Crucifixes, crosses relics c., 35gb Cruciform shadow, ioi8b
Crucify mankind on cross of gold,
afresh, $$b Crude, berries harsh and c., 3383 no c. surfeit reigns, 3373 Cruel and unrelenting enemy, 4613 aristocracy always c., 6593 as death, 4igb but composed and bland, 7153 crawling foam, 6gob death of Pyramus, 228b doubts more c. than truths,

7053 Cruise, all on our last c., 82 2b Crumb, craved no c., 7693 just a c. to me, 76b Crumbled out again to his atomies, 3o7b Crumbs, dogs eat of c., 433 Crumpetty tree, 67 3b Crumpled, cow with c. horn, iog8b Cruse, little oil in a c., 133 Crush amang the stoure, 4933 him before he has struck, 97 3b the infamous thing, 4i7b thought not c. to stone, io64b Crushed, hope c. less quick, 7143 human being c. by books, io6gb in winepress of passion, 17 ib most fragrant when c., 2o8a odors c. sweeter still, 2083 the sweet poison, 336b to ground diffuse sweets, 2083 together c. and bruised, 4053 truth c. to C3rth, 574b
Crushes,
friend

war

is c.,

supports

whom
c.,

Fortune c., 1343 Crusoe, Robinson C., 4363 Crust, dinosaur death-steps on

eaten in peace, 763 of bread and liberty, 41 ib over volcano of revolution, 8513
c. s64b, 587b water and c., 58 ib wretched c., 6g2a Crusted with blood, 9953 Cry against hemlocks, 9553 all should c. Beware, 5243 at a play to laugh or c., 38gb battle c. of freedom, 7o4b Bellman c. crew reply, 746b bubbling c. of swimmer, 56oa-b but behold a c, sob caused constantly a c., 9563

upper

10993

immortal
is

c.,

42oa

8 5 8b Son of God

love and friendship, of night, 77 5b kingly c. to gain, 5493


is

called content, 2i5b is in my heart, 2i5b

58ob

is

knave scourge
laurel
c.

yield

tool, 791 a to praise,

nib

cherry-ripe

themselves do

c..

with dream conquer c., 8o7a mind content both c. and kingdom, 2o6a no cross no c., 322a, s8ob not the king's c. nor sword, 27ob of glory, 57a
of of
of
life,

man

3613
c. to be kind, 264b jealousy is c. as the grave, 303 love more c. than lust, 77 3b mother of sweet loves, i22b

must be

563,

57b

773b of Monomakh, 59$b


thorns

life as it closes,

price c. high, 87ab savage extreme rude


slain

c.,

by

fair

c.

maid,
the

2943 2523

on brow of

labor,

8 5 8b old agec. of life, naa old Winter's head, 354a ourselves with rosebuds, 36b quiet mind richer than c., so6a

sons of Cain, 8873 tender mercies of are. c., 243 'tis S3id she, 58ob wind blows, 10573

wicked

Crudest, April

c.

month, 10023

3003 dear unconquerable c., 78sb consider anything don't c., 7463 couch when owls do c., 297b crestion's c., 876b don't you c. for me, 727b every infant's c. of fear, 48gb far c. to Lochow, 5213 feel sorry because c., 7943 for being born, aioa for restful death I c., sg2b forgot c. of gulls, 10033 God for Harry, 2443 great c. in Egypt, 8b harlot's c. from street, 4903 Havoc, 2553 hear us when we c., 7263

Cry
Cry, heard the dead c., io64b heard them c. the peacocks, 9546 he'll be sure to c., logjb hi or any loud c., 7466

INDEX
Cuckoo then on every tree, 222b thus sings he C., 222b Cuckoo-buds of yellow hue, 222b
Cuckoopint
Cucullus
c.,

toll

Hold hold, 2823 hounds join in glorious I can no more, 8o$b

clapper, 7043
facit

non

monachum,

4243

1503

in bed laugh in bed c., 3513 in every c. of every man, 4895

inhuman as hawk's c., is still They come, a86b kitten and c. mew, 2ggb
laugh 46oa
for fear of

9953

having

to c.,

Cucumbers, cold as c., 3i6a lodge in garden of c., 303, 7&4b sunbeams out of c., 3896 Cud, chew c. and are silent, 454b whatsoever cheweth the c., gb Cudgel his own jackass, 7855 thy brains no more, 265b
Cudgel's,

Cumulative, scientific activity c g8ib Cunning alphabet, 6983 duplicate in mind, 6973 Esau was a c. hunter, 73 history has c. passages, looib Hocus old c. sttorney, 4i4b
in

wsr boastful

c.,

5643

livery of hell, 2713 pass for wise, 2oga more c. to be

men

strange,

nature's sweet old Fury, 743b


right

c.

hand,

2243 25 ib

know what wood

c.

of,

made

woman

c.,

7235

35b
Cue, twisted c., 768b villainous melancholy, 2773 Cueillez les roses de la vie, i88a

man's image and

much c. no mum, i97a

his c., 88oa wool, 17 la

my

eyes out, 1953

Cui bono
Culled,

fuerit,

nob
of
c.

nor swooned nor c., 64ga not when father dies, 4293 of Absence Absence in heart, iooga of bugles going by, 86oa of child by roadway, 88ob of little peoples, 8873 of pulleys, io78b onward sailors c., 8g4b out liberty freedom, 2553 out loudest its abuse, 374b out Olivia, 25ib
raise a

nosegay

flowers,

igib
Cullest race in time, 7033

champions, 6g6b c., 593 5g3 Culprit, stirs c. life, 7343 Cult called Christianity, jS$b of personality, 10326
Culpa,

selectest

mea

felix

c.,

punishment sharpens c., 8osb hand forget her c., 22b seldom gain ends, 10993 sin cover itself, 246b strong dose of c., 10163 truth which c. times put on, 233b what plighted c. hides, 2773 Cunningly, little world made c., 3070 Cunning'st psttern, 2763 Cup, between c. 3nd lip, 3nb

come come

Cultivate appreciation of responsibilities, 10263 peace and harmony, 46 ib

fill the c., 6293 fill up my c., 5223 dssh down yon c., 5613 drained c. of Lethe, i2ob

drowned glory

in

c.,

63ob
5253

hue and

c.,

1953

sedulously

c.

free speech, 9243

Etruscan c., i075b fear at heart as at

c.,

scarcely c. weep, 487a secrets c. aloud, io64b shake me like a c., 86oa

our garden, 4173 Cultivated, celebrated c. Duke,


c.

we must
7693

giveth his color in the c., 263 he took the c., 44b Ie3ve 3 kiss but in the c., 3033
life's

simple lonely c., ios7b stone shall c. out of wall, 2833


stones
out, 47b sudden c. of pain, 974b that was not ours, 9563 the more it made them c., 45ob
c.

classes,

7o6b

Cultivates the golden mean, 12 ib Cultiver, il faut c. notre jardin,

man

4173
Cultural, ivory tower of c., 937b nsture of Japsnese, 9383 Culture, above 311 believer in c.,

there little girl don't c., 8iga too big to c., 6383 truth c. of all, gggb voice c. Sleep no more, 28gb war war still the c., 5553 was still More hay, 821 a wave c. wind c., ioo6a we c. that we are come, 2?gb

7i5 b
believe only in French

44b c., 555b whose hand the found, 7b my c. runneth over, 183 o* kindness yet, 4gsa of hot wine, 28gb of Samian wine, 5613
enchanted
in

let this c. pass,

c.

is

European

c.

c., 8o6a misunderstand-

ing, 8o6a-b formalism hallmark of national


c.,

one sun

of trembling, 333 c. to desd slresdy,


in

7203

golden

c.,

884b

g6oa

Germany

we

still

should

c.,

2ioa

ruins c., 8o6b great law of c., 5753

take c. drink it up, 10943 that clears today, 6303 Cupboard, glacier knocks in

c.,

i059b

Cryin' at the lock, 6573 Crying, first voice was c., 373 in the wilderness, 3gb
infant
spiders
c.

Greek essentisl

to

c.,

728b
c.,

in night, 65ob
c.,

hear anyone talk of highest moral c., 6283 in finest flower, 86 ib


initial act
is

io26b

no more
c.

s8b

why

c.

together, io76b after love, g82a


c.,

with sighing and


Cryptic,

ig2b
c.

met rancor with

mirth,

of c., 9783 acquainting with the 7163 lives by symp3thies, 7963 mechanics of c,, 8g4b

W3S b3re, 10963 went to the c., 10963 Cupid and my Campaspe, 2033 bolt of C. fell, 22gb has his camps, 1280
it

best,

has

long

stood

void,

32 ib

paid, 2033 senior-junior Dan C., 22 ib silent note C. strikes, 3303

Crystal, build trout c stair, 9443 golden sands c. brooks, 3063 parapet between, 10363

899

men

of

c,

true

apostles,

7163

pearl and

c.

shining bright,

4903
river of c. light, 82ob soul pure as c., 672b of Crystallization action

moment of clarity, g77b no better than its woods, io6ob not c. but personality, 7033 not even German c., 8o6b pursue c. in bands, 86sb
socialist c. to thrive,

winged and doth range, io86a winged C. psinted blind, 228b young Adam C., 22 3b
Cupiditas, radix

malorum

est

c.,

55b

Cupido upon his shuldres wynges,


i67b Cupid's 3rms, io8gb concludes with C. curse, 2O4b Cups, flowing c. pass swiftly, 358b injury to willow to mske c., 1003
that cheer, 4583

10283

mind,

soul takes nothing but education and c., 935

55ob
Crystallized air of centuries, 992b Cubic inch of space miracle, 7oab Cubit, add one c. to stature, 4ia

study of perfection, 7163 too much c. sick animal, 9365 touring c. like museum, 10573 Cultures rotten -when they part,

Cuccu, Ihude sing

c.,

10833

when
1333 grano Cumbered with much serving, 46b Cumbers, vale which dew c., ?84b
salis,

they 3re in their

c.,

363

Cuckold 2743 Cuckoo, as c. is in June, 2403 Cloud-Cuckoo-Land, gib jug- jug pu-we, soob Ihude sing c., 10833 shall I call thee bird, 5143
lives in bliss,

Cum

Cummin,
43*>

tithe

of

anise

and

c.,

white pistes snd c., ggsb Cur, esrs of the old c., 352b ergo haec ipse non facis, i45b Curable, presume disease c., s64b Curate, things youngest c. cannot
explain, 953b

Cumnor, walls of C. Hall, 4643

1254

INDEX
have Curate thinks you

Cut
Curtained, dreams abuse 28sa Curtain's fall, ioi8a Curtains, for whom your
c.

no

soul,

Curlicues of m3riju3n3, 10763


Curls, frocks

sleep,

dust, ggtf> Curates long shower of c., 67gb

will come and go, 9930 c. pathology, Curative, economics

7373 Hyperion's c., 2643 natural c., 1343 Curlylocks wilt be mine, 10953 to quercine Curr, let me c.
c.,

3nd

c.

drawn, gigb
thine eye, fringed c. of hell take c., 97ga let fall the c., 45 8a
of Solomon, 2ga or spread canopy
c.

2g6b

shades,

nob
c.

10343
rs,T-H C

^'Se
io4Qb

rare's

check and

c.,

3623
right,

Current, genisl

of

soul,

and

c.

all

icy c. compulsive noiseless c. strong, 7163

course,

44ob 2753

spun, 38ia

86a Your magnanimity, 5 of ass's milk, Curd, white c.

41"
2 9 oa

from snow, Curdied by frost Curds and whey, iog6b a quivering c., 747 , of love, c. Cure, abslnce disease kill patient, 2093 freedom c. of anarchy, or c., laws or kings cause no c. for birth and death, the i2gb pain, not worth on exercise depend, 3723
am, ag4b c. past help, past hope past
past
c. I

swollen c. nwsses of ice, t3ke c. when it serves, time 3 river of strong c.,

through
Curtius

c. call on us, 305a Rufus seems descended

1423
i95

Currents, fresh c. of turn 3wry, 2623

life,

6563-b

from himself, g6a Curtsied when you have, 2963. c. to great kings, Curtsy, customs
c. and quadrille, io78b while you're thinking, 745 a a sit on c., Cushion, logjsb

453 a 4283 867b

Curriculum W3S rum, 868b Curried, short horse soon c., i83b Currite, lente c. noctis equi, 2isb Curs, mouths sentence 3s c. bone,
of low degree, 448b Curse, began to c., 44b bless them that c. you, 4ob

leaves

Cussedness, trust in his c., 7?8b Custodians, new c. have fervor,

225b seem to offer


tale

c.,

io2ob
deafness,

8o6a Christisnity one great c., crestions of mind blessing not


2963

86ib Custom, age cannot wither nor c. stale, 287b almost second nature, 221 a conform to tyrant c., i93b follow c. of church where you
are, i44b

would
c.,

c.

thrust of

10823
c.

God and

die, i4a

Cured
I

am

frizzled stale, 10763

mated him God

him, i8?b

more than Galen c., 324b 6a of every folly but vanity, 43 some hurts you c., 6o4b
Cures,

endure neither
of

evils

nor

c.,

me

my

b pain, io8 9

h3s come upon me, 6463 his better 3ngel, 2763 I know how to c., 2963 O c. of nwrriage, 274b of hell frae me, io87b on his virtues, 39 jb primal eldest c., 263b selfishness grestest c., 6323
the darkness, 98 ib

to fear worst c. worse, Curfew bell must ring


far-off c.

268b
tonight,

Curiosity,

sound, 335b must not ring tonight, 8253 tolls knell, 439& , culture origin not in
. .
.

with book bell snd candle, 1751 youthful h3riot's c., 4890 Cursed 3bove 3ll cattle, 63 be he that moves my bones,

Fortune more kind than her c., 234b to bring low greatness, gods' c. 871 human life, 434b of guide in all line of order, 267b lord of mankind, sggb made property of easiness, 2650 make it their perch, 27ob maturity of c., 901 a more honored in breach, 25ga nature her c. holds, 265b
of

Branksome Hall, 5i8a


c.

old

made
c.

life

sweet,

247 b

c.,

damnable detestable do well in closet by

c.,

628b
of
c.,

way

be msn trusteth in m3n, 34a be my tribe, 2323 be the verse, 41 ia c. her, 8303 Be3uty in Isp and
Boston
c.

one good

corrupt, 654a
c.,

with cranks, 8313

a reconciles to everything, 45 of c., 41^ sitting at receipt stern c. spreads afar, 497 a
to

public use and

i88b

intellectual c., g4*b love c. freckles doubt,

10293

must be kept

alive,

98 ib

my

wonder, 8693 of young, 8023 newsp3pers excite c., 535b offers to our c., ioo6a order awakened c., 6053 permsnent snd certain, 42?b
c.

my

nstursl

c.

Curious,

amazed and
thirsty fly,

c.,

49 6a

bread, gooa by man c. alw3y, 6igb counted 3nd c. luck, 8543 Fste has c. you, 843 floundered enjoyed, 8003 hard reading, 4823 me with his eye, 5253 nsme to 311 3ges c., 3683 c. spite, 2603 past, 10103

whom
c.
)

c.

due, gib
truths,

when

Customary

presses, 947 fate of new

suits of solemn black, 257b Customer, tough c., 6?oa Customers, empire for raising 445 a sign brings c., 359 ,
.

c.,

Customs curtsy
c.,

to great kings,

busy

c.

4*8b

crime, 6673 in unnecessary m3tters, 373 incident of dog, 8503


objects

which pl3gues with 38 5b


S3t

nwnkmd
her,

Be3uty 3nd

c.

8303

and knowledge c., 7023 W3r is, 78sb qusint 3nd c.

seen 3 c. child, 5i6b volume of forgotten lore, 642b Curiouser 3nd curiouser, 743 a Curl, bad 3 little c., 6253 make your hair c., 768b New H3mpshire mountains c.,

thoughts, 2833 Curses all Eve's daughters, 2673 m3n, 6i7b deeper than strong like young chickens, 532b not loud but deep, 2863 of the firmsment, 373 a c. d3rk, 338b rigged with 3nd c., lob Cursing, blessing Cursores vitae Iampad3 trsdunt,
a Curtain, Ansrch lets c. fall, 4M close his eyes 3nd dr3W c., 2153 iron c., g24b never c. between you 3nd me,

245b China, 35?a laws c., 5iia language manners and tongue, 72ib politics
evil c. in

Cut,

all

one

c.

away in reader s

consciousness, g4oa

and come

diamond
features

again, 483a anyone introduced to, 74ob c. diamond, 3i7b

of clerical c., 10043 hawsers haul out, 702b him out in little stars, 2253 c. it if thy hand offend thee
off,

9273 not c. less gracefully, 724b Curled Assyrian Bull, 6523 h3ir so charmingly c., 6913 last holy drop, 953b

4oa

in the evening it that is branch


it

is c.

down, 2oa might have

rainbow c. around shoulder, 9 o6b up on the floor, 7703 we3lthy c. darlings, 272b wonderful waters c., 7iga

9283 never outw3rd swings, 6253


Pri3ra's
c.,
c.,

241 a

purple

643 a
c.

when

she drew

by, 10883

grown, 2isb we fly is soon c. off and away, 2ob it without any knife, iog4a kite c. from string, g85b knives that serve or c., 6940

1255

Cut
Cut, laurels all c., 7193 like a flower and is 15*
c.

INDEX
down,
Daddy, are you lost d., 9855 Daddy's gone a-hunting, io94b

Damn
cost,

authors

they

never read

moment

Daemon, when your


87*7b

d. in charge,

my
off off

no more
tails,

I c. his throat, 10813 coat after my doth, 1833 grass to c. away, 9890 in blosoms of sin, 2590

Daffodil doth of the dew, 736b


sky, 652b surfeit when d., 736b Daffodils, fair d. we weep to see,

10920

short c. to everything, 42ga stems struggling, 10640


stripes away, 8733

32ob
host of golden
d.,

devil d. thee black, 286a doesn't give a d., no3b don't care twopenny d., 5063 don't give a d., 772b for land of freedom not give a d., 772b

$i4b

unkindest

raining

d.,

86ga

no general proposition worth d* 7 88b


such, 46gb torpedoes, 597b with fault praise, 4113

all, 2550 ways of men c. of, 3445 where were the righteous

c.

of

c. off,

140

with beard of formal c, 24ga Cuts off what we possessed, 3670 psychology c. both ways, 7o8b Cutthroat dog, 2323 Cutting all pictures out, goib bread and butter, 66ob corner of nonsense, 5303 each other's hair, io25b through the forest, 953b Cutty sark o' Paisley ham, 4963 weel done C. Sark, 4g6a
Cybele, sea C. fresh from ocean,

that come before swallow, sgsb Dagger, air-drawn d., 2853. into back of neighbor, g7b is this a d. which I see, 2833 of the mind, 2833 wear not my d. in my mouth,

Damnable

deceitful woman, 3835 detestable curiosity, 628b


iteration,

557* Cybernetics from Greek steersman, i033b Cycle of Cathay, 64yb of the ages renewed, n6b Cycles of heaven, ioo4b Cygnet to this pale swan, 2373 Cylinder, nature in terms of c., ?8oa

2gia Daggers, daily d. of steel, g4ab give me the d., 283b speak d. to her, 2635 Dago, made by a D., 864a Daily beauty in his life, 276a before us lies in d. life, 3473 bread, 9453 die d., 3303 duly and d. serving him, 444b give me thus my d. bread, g45b give us our d. bread, 4ob revolutionized d. life, ggsb wealth small aid for d. gladness,

Damnably,

2383 marriage

d.

serious

business, 10273

Damnation, deal d. round land, 41 2b deep d. of his taking off, 2825 distilled d., 5013 marriage bed to this d., 3o8b two fingers' breadth of d., 693 Damned, another d. thick book,
4703
at certain revolutions all the d.,

344a

be d. dear boys, 8743 be him that first cries Hold,


2873
better d. th3n

853
that cringe, bred of a book,

with
Dainties

souls

6923
22 ib
sweet,

such d. to them, 4513


Daintiest last to

make end

not mentioned, 468b born by dying and being d.,


i8oa cohort of the
d.,

Cymbal, tinkling c., 52b Cymbals, played before the Lord one., 12 ib Cynara, faithful to thee C., 8goa falls thy shadow C., 8903 fell thy shadow C., 88gb Cynic bark, 6o2b from study of mankind, ygib knows price of everything, Ssgb sees things as they are, 7gib Cynicism deadly sin, Sggb intellectual dandyism, Cynic's, hurl c. ban, 8463 Cynosure of neighboring eyes, 335* Cynthia of this minute, 4o6b regent of night, 4643 Cypress, alley of c., 643b and myrtle, 5583 correct in c wood, 10293 in palace walk, 64ga sad c., 252a shady c. tree, 73gb Cyprian, forsake her C. groves,

2i6a

873b

Dainty Dairymaid, queen asked d., g6gb Daisies and clover, 7043 lie upon the d., y66b meadows trim with d. pied,
pied and violets blue, 222b she can hear d. grow, 8s8b such as men callen d., i65b
Daisy, blessings-of-civilization trust

dish, iog4b

conjecturally d., 7833

could have had d. good time, 10443 darkness of d., 635b dear d. distracting town, 4o5b devilish and d. tobacco, 3ub disinheriting countenance, 48 ib

a d., 76$b by shadow it

casts,

5iyb

every d. in dell, 832a give me answer do, SB^b


there's a d., 265a Dakotas under her hull, io22b Dale, haunted spring and d., 3343 hawthorn in the d., 334b over hill over d., 2293, 9523 Dalliance, not give d. rein, 2973 primrose path of d., 258b

drama whether d. or not, 481 a every man to be slave, 901 a Faustus must be d., zi$b forever d. with Lucifer, 2133 from here to eternity, 873b his fellows for his own unworth, 79 ib I will see thee d. first, 5o6b
if if I if

dissolute d. despairful,

932b

goats cannot be d., 3083 see how helican, gsgb

you do or don't, 5393 in fair wife, 272a


lie

dead and

d.,

6623
t

silken d., 24jjb Dallies with innocence

many an
of love,
of body

old host d. 23gb

37a
Cyrus, Palace of C., iioab Czar, I am a c. a slave,
last

252*

47oa

Russian
c.,

C.,

10763

Dam, all my chickens and their d., 28 5 b Damaged, archangel a little d.,
534h

one one 2130 out d.

soul, Sysb d. thing after another, 9383 hour then d. perpetually,


spot,

and

2863

long live

sgsb

troops by the C., noob Czechs Greeks or Norwegians,


led

Damask,
252b

feed

on her

perpetually, 2i$b
d.

cheek,

D
D, never use big big D, Da da da iti, 62a mi basia mille, ii4b Dab at an index, 4473
766a

springtime d. grace, io86b Dam'd by earthquake, 76oa Dame, dance in old d. yet, 9463 has lost shoe, 10923 la belle d. sans merci, 581 a life in old d. yet, g46a

public be d., 7103 publish and be d., 5063 salute eloquence, io42a smiling d. villain, 2603 those who dare resist, to everl3sting fame, 4103 to fame, 4193
universal cock, 955b

iogob

at electricity and crime, 9193 Dad, called brother's father d.,

one for my d., 10933 our sulky sullen d., 4g5b smiled at the d., 488a Dames, ah gentle d., 495b
struts his d. before,

what

d.

minutes

tells

he,

2743

Damning those they have no mind to, 3523


Damp, demd
Damozel, blessed d., 7313 d. moist unpleasant body, 66gb

2363

that squire of d., sooa

1256

INDEX
Damp,
lived in cellar d., 6g4a a nights are very d., ?47 souls of housemaids, looib

Dare
d.,

Dances, in what ethereal

642a

tonnage, io43b
years
d.

my

intended

wing,

347 b

lulled with d. and delight, 22gb oh she d. such a way, 35ob when she d. in the wind, j6gb Dancing and architecture, 85 la dancers d. in tune, 652b

Dangerous, realities less d. than fancies, gigb say nothing in d. times, 3i7b such men are d., S53b temptation in gay colors, sggb

Damsel lay deploring, 4013 to every man a d. or two, na with dulcimer, 5243 Damyata datta dayadhvamiti, 623 Dan, Dangerous D. McGrew, 93ga from D. to Beersheba, 116, 438b ib senior-junior D. Cupid, 22 Danae to the stars, 64ga Danaos, timeo D. et dona ferentis,

days are done, 2233, ioggb dining and d. begin, 10523 dogs and bears, go6a emptier ever d. in air, 228a in the checkered shade, 3353 is life itself, 851 a

keeping

rhythm

in

d.,

10053

428b meet culture alone, 86sb our peace and safety, 4gsa when appear to retreat, g46b who make no noise are d., 3ggb Danger's troubled night, 537b Dangers, defend us from d. of
to
to

thirst d. thing, 8553. to be of no church d.,

loftiest of arts, 851 a

music of

d. waves, gg8a

u8a
Dance, a god has given the
d.,

on volcano, 575a
past our d. days, 2233 source of arts, 8513 to frenzied drum, 8823

63b

and drink and sing, 48ga and Provencal song, 5823 antic hay, 2iab
as often as d.
it

can, 5243

attendance, stggb attention on old age, 8853 barefoot on wedding day, 2iga

very merry d. drinking, 3723 wonderful training, 10170 Dandin, asked for it Georges D., 36ib Dandruff, toothpaste and d. ads,

night, Sob delays breed d., stosb greatest d. to liberty, 833a in what great d. ye spend little span, ngb no d. fright him, 42 7 a of the seas, gsSb she loved me for the d., 273a thorns and d. of world, 2373

what

d.

thou make us scorn,

495 b

dancer from d., SSjb in old dame yet, g46a join the d., 744b
like

wave of

sea,

88ob

little

lady, 10433

Dandy, candy is d., 105 ib Yankee Doodle d., logoa Dandyism, intellectual d., vgob Dane, more antique Roman than D., 266b
never rid of D., 87 6b Danegeld, once paid him D., 8765 Danger, above noise and d., 3633 and tempest of war, 661 a brave man's choice is d., 853 bright eyes of d., 8243 clear and present d., 788a-b days of d., 5203 difficulty and d., iogib familiarity with d., 6gsb feared no d. knew no sin, 3703
foretold that
d.

with d. compassed round, 346b Daniel, cast D. into the den of


lions,

353

come to judgment, 2g4b had convicted them, sga


second D., 2353

maids d. in a ring, $oob

Dank, addled mosses

d.,

g8ga

make

hills and forest d., 5053 mehitabel dance, g46a move easiest who learned to d.,

4Q3b

on this ball-floor, 10363 on with the d., 556a


Pyrrhic d. as yet, 561 a

rhythms for rain, io77b round in ring and suppose, gaga rouses him up to d., 66b
sweet to d. to violins, i84a the antic hay, sisb there is only the d., 1005 a time to d., 27b
tipsy d. and jollity, 336b to flutes dance to lutes,

lurks

within,

tarn of Auber, 64$b Dsnny, hangin' D. Deever, 8733 Dans, no time for fancy d., io25b Dante greatest depth of passion, 1008 a language of D. common language, ioo8a more learned from D., 1008 a of dread Inferno, 66sb towards saner attitude life, ioo8a

2i6a
glory and
graceful
d. alike,

Daphnis,

8gb
before
d.
d.,

n6b

my

songs draw D. home,

the small

8413
d.,

hackneyed phrases
in view of d. give is in discord, 62sa

signals,
life,

tossing

heads in
air,

sprightly

5*4b
841 a walk before they d., 4isa

up

723

upon the

d., sggb while you can, losgb with rapture that we alive,

when you do

less d. from stranger, iO5ib morale not destroyed by d., gsga neither shape of d. dismay, 5153

with William Blake, io66b wyth me in Irlonde, loSgb Danced along dingy days, 738b by light of moon, 6733 daughter of Herodias d., 4b David d. before the Lord, isb death-fires d., $25a his did, 10310 lighter than cork, 82gb like dinglebodies, io8ob moon on Monan's rill, 5203 star d., 246a till doomsday, 39 ib to see that banner, 6333 Dancer from the dance, 883b stealthy d. comes, 878b Dancers all gone under hill, ioo5b dancing in tune, 652b Dances as often as dance it can,

nettle d., 23ga of faction, 48oa-b of violent death, 3183 on the deep, 5883 or treasure, 10783

when

pleased with d., 3683 fatherland in where is man out of

d.,
d.,

4g6b
7253 524 2143

Dangerous brow

by

night,

Dan McGrew,

g33a

delays d. in war, aosb, delays have d. ends, 2i4a demur you're d., 735b edge of things, 6653 forties the d. ages, 10223 guiled shore to d. sea,

233b

have in me something d., a66a idea d. when only one, 8g$b ideas d. for good or evil, g7^a

if

little

knowledge

d,,

54a
he capers he d., 267 a in golden escape, 10503 in hamlets d. on green, 5i8b in sight of heaven, 10793

into d. world I leaped, Mittle learning d., 4o2b

7253 48gb

mad bad
most

d. to

d. situation

know, 552!) humanity has

faced, io2gb
politics as d, as war,

Dapple, name was D. Gray, logyb Dappled things, 8033 turf at ease, 5i2b Dapple-dawn-drawn Falcon, 8033 Darbies, ease d. at wrist, 6g8a Darby, always same D. my own, 8153 Dare and dare again, 4g6b ask just God's assistance, 64ob bear to live or d. to die, 4ogb call soul my own, 6i8b choose if you d., 33 ib deadly terrors clasp, 48ga do duty as understand it, 6g6b endure greater than d., 66ia enter you who d., 73ob first ponder then d., sg7a heart would deny and d. not, 286a I d. do all, 28ab I d. yet may not, ig2b if they d. not forgive, 7083 imitate him if you d., 8843 is highest wisdom, 5443 letting I d. not, 28ab love that and say so too, 3053 mighty things, 8473 more as I grow older, igob never d. utter untruth, nob never grudge throe, 666a no no no I d. not, io84b none d. call it treason, 2ioa O what men d. do, 246b on what wings d. he aspire,

gigb

Dare
Dare, others teach

INDEX
how
to d.,

71 ib slaves who d. not be, soul to d., 5203 there is much to d., g7ga to to to to to

Dark, go home in

d.,

8645

Darkies

how

heart grows weary

great leap in the d., $i8a

6910

hawks hear

us,

g68b

think unthinkable, 10563 be ahead of the world, 75a

be be

horse, 61 ib hour or twain, 284a hunt it in the d., 4573 in d. time eye begins to see,

Darkling plain, 7153

I listen,

Darkly

true,

gwb
poor,

wise, 1233 eat a peach, looia love country and be

io66a in the d. and silent grave, i inscrutable workmanship, 5ioa iron New England d.,
irrecoverably d., 3493 let d. come upon you, lie awake in d. weep for sins,

roll d. down torrent, 4273 stsnd varying shore, 288b deeply beautifully blue, 5323, 5613 it knows obstacles, 10793

see

through glass

d., tj2b

413* unpastured dragon, 57 ib

wise and rudely great, 4o8b Darkness, absence d. death, 3063


affronts with his

own

d.,

what hand d. seize fire, 4893 what man d. I d., 2853 wonder Do I d., looob Dared be radical young, gs8b determined d. and done, 444b none d. thou hast, iggb
be obscene, 8sob Daren't go a-hunting, 7293
to

again and silence, 6243

io6gb

7oob long d. autumn evenings, 663b Maid and her Lord, 8sb mutinous Shannon waves, g68a never refuse drink after d., 9613
night 5g7b, nogb night of d. intent, 9283 night of the soul, logSb not d. days great days, 9233 o'er d. her mantle threw, 345b on a d. hill, 9823 on d. theme trace verses of
is d.,

snd light 3like to thee, 233 snd shadow of death, 153, 2ib,
463
as

children

fear

in

d.,

Dares,

come before swallow

d.,

awful d. silence reign, 6743 d., 573 broods, 43 cast into outer d., 41 b
blackness of

iigb

295b
send challenge, 3543 to call Himself a man, 103 la
life d.

comprehended crown of our

it not, 47b life is d.,

curse the d., 98 ib

773b

g6gb who d. do more is none, aSsb Darest thou now O soul, 7o2b thou then, 5igb Darien, peak in D., 57gb Daring, brave man braver less d., 695D dare and go on d., 4g6b in war d. boastful, 5643 pilot in extremity, g68a well-doing and d., 43ob young man on trapeze, 78oa Dark, abyss of new D. Age, 921 a abysmal d. of center, 5860 after that the d., 6553
d.,

whisper

who

dawn on our

d.,

5493

light, 1133

pillared d., g28b raging in the d., 8843

road whence no one returns, ii4b Satanic mills, 4gob

deep but dazzling d., 3626 deep in d. 3 slim hand, 9813 deep things out of d., 153 deepens, 5673 distant voice in d., 6243

downwsrd
embalmed

to d.

on wings,
d.,

some days

d.

and dreary, 62 ib
3333 3493

soul's d. cottage, sun to me is d.,

955 a dying of cold not


d.,

86gb

s82b

they all go into d., loosb Sant3 d. besides things in Cl3us, 9313

night in d. and wet, 82 33 amid blaze of noon, 3493


all

tower came, 278b soon be d., 6o2b unconscious not only d.


to d.
'twill

but

and bloody ground, 7o4b and his d. secret love, 48ga and lonely hiding place, 526a
as Erebus, 2355 as good in the d., 3203 as sages say, 67gb as world of man, gg8b at one stride comes the d., 5253 backward and abysm of time,

light,

9363

caves, 44ob violets are d. too, 116 b

unfsthomed

wall between us and d., logsb wandering in d. tebyrinth, 2iib ways th3t are d., 76gb we are for the d., 2893 whst in me is d. illumine, 34ib

encounter d. as 3 bride, 2713 falls from wings, 62 ib fell upon Christian, 3663 gives light in d., 2140 good kind d., 79 ib horror of outer d., 748b how great that d., 413 how in your d. know, go6b if light in thee be d., 4ob-4i3 in d. and with dangers, 346b in d. the people march, 9493 in him is no d., 573 in wh3t d. of life spend little
span, nsb instruments of
d.,

what

is

Amyntas

is

d.,

n6b

2813

2963
best
of
d. d.

between

and bright, 558b and daylight, 62^0

whistles in d., 833b who 3rt d. 35 night, 2g4b with excessive bright, 344b

into d. peering, 6433 into d. they go, 10243 into eternal d. fire

and

ice,

with torment and

tesrs,

685b
lost,

blanket of the d., sSaa blond or d. sir, io34b blue ocean roll, 557!)

wood where
'59*

straight

way

woods

brown

lovely d. deep, g27b

59 b jaws of d. do devour it, 228b land of d. and shadow, 153 lead me from d. to light, 623
J

is

river,

8233

Care sits enthroned, Chromis did not save himself from d. death, 62b cold and empty desolation,
ioo6a

mb

come

to

d.

and lament, g28b

star, cpsb dark dark amid blaze, 3493 dark dark spaces, 10055 days d. and dreary, 62 ib dove with flickering tongue,

cooling

world and wide, 3413 Dark-blue, night d. hunter, Sg$b Darkened, blue d. on blueness, p86a hurtles in d. air, 4423 ocesn-booms, gssb sun or light be not d., 28b windows be d., 28b Darkeneth, who d. counsel by
words, 163

leaves world to d., 4403


lest d.

come, 493

light excelleth d., 27b light shineth in d., 47b

lighten our

d.,

6ob

like death, gb love in spite of d.,

35b

ioo6b
dull d. soundless day, 6423 ever-during d., 344b every hour of light d., 7oab

Darker and darker stairs, g86a 3S d. grows the night, 447b grows the V3lley, 7sob l3rger bill for d. ill, 6863 the tinge that saddens, 6143
Darkest altar of heartbreak, 10683 before d3y dawneth, g33b d3y will have psssed, 4593 sun breaks through d. clouds,

mainly in d., ioS$b in unsearchable d., 801 b no d. into light without emotion, 936b no light but d. visible, 34 ib not walk in d., 48b of God, loogb of her eyes, go6a

man

everyone 7363

moon with

d.

side,

of the damned, of the land, 6513 outer d., 41 b, 748b

fate sits on d. battlements, 501 a fear death as children fear d.,

2o8a
fell

2igb Dark-heaving boundless,


Darkies a-weeping, 7

of d. not day, 8o4a

pain d. and cold, 666b peace and d., 854b people thst walked in people who sit in d.,

d.,

313

1258

INDEX
Darkness, pestilence eth in d., sob of d. a gentleman, 2780 prince raven down of d., 337 a the d., 54a of rulers scatters rear of d. thin, gs4b shaft of light in d., io74b
shares the d., loagb

Day
David prevailed over the
isjia

that walk-

Daughter, Bess the landlord's


d.,

Philis-

g6ib
d.

fairer

of fair mother,
d.
soft

farmer's

brown

hair,

tine, isa the son of Jesse, i2b David's, once in royal

D.

city,

343 such as sit in d., aib them that sit in d., 46a thou drivest away d., 4a thou makest d., 2ib through a brief d., 6a4a
sit

in d. here,

74ob harping on my d., 26ob have you a d., 26ob I have a d., 2$5a images return O my d., ioo4a king of Spain's d., 10955 light God's eldest d., ssgb
little d.

684b

upon St. D. Day, iog7a word with Sibyl s blending, i57b


Davil, ole d. sea, 1009 a

Davos,

am

D. not Oedipus, 108 a

whispered, 67gb

Daw, Margery D., iog4a no wiser than a d., 2i4a Dawn, before d. of day, 446b
bodiless as false d., 10785 comes up like thunder, 87 3b creation's d. beheld, 557b

marry marry
6505

boss's d., loogb d. when you can,

324a

God, through d. up to d. and to me, 44ob universal d. buries all, face of the deep, 53
to

Mrs. Porter and

my
4Ha
of of of of of of of of

we are not of d., 55a where d. let me sow light, i57b which may be felt, 8a wind torrent of d., g6ib works of d., 5ib worms and shrouds, s8oa now done d., 8o3b year of Dark-shining Pacific, gg4b heart longed to go, 8s8b Darky's ib Darling buds of May, 29
Charlie
I
is

upon

d., 10020 d. O my ducats, 2333 a hundred earls, 64sa debate, i8ga earth and water, 57ob Elysium, 4g7a Herodias danced, 42b

embraced summer

d.,

8305

gray d. breaking, 594b, g46b heard bird at d., g74b in Helen's arms, 884a in that d. to be alive, 5ioa
into silver d., 10303
live gray d., io8ib Morning Star herald of d., noa of knowledge false dawn, 10393 of morning after, 886b on other side of Atlantic, 442a on our darkness, 54ga past is twilight of d., 888a

Jove, 4390

Moon Nokomis,

62 ga

the gods, 64sb one fair d., 26ia sole d. of his voice, 347b
stern d. of voice of God, 0i4b
still

harping on
little d.,

my
621 a

d.,

26ob

my

d.,

5oaa

taken his

rosy-fingered d., 62b


said to d. Be sudden, 8565 speeds a man, 68a things the bright d. scattered,

nosa am growing old, 8i5a d. dear, loggb my my d. from the lions, i8b
daughter,

undaunted d. of desires, 354b whipped her little d., 10955


yes

my

darling

d.,

iioga

Nature's d.,
of of

44 ib
gods, ii2b

men and

my heart, 4oob of our crew, 47 $b old man's d., iB^b


sin,

your d. and the Moor, 272b Daughter's a daughter all her life, 277a preaching down d. heart, 647a
Daughters, curses 267a degenerate sons
all

6gb will dispel night, 56sb with silver-sandaled feet,

Dawned from

Bullen's eyes,

Eve's
d.,

d.,

Dawnest, thou d., 4a thou d. beautifully, sb

526b

and
sons

8g8a
d.,

Dawneth, darkest before day


Dawning, bird of here hath been
not as
d.,

d.

Darlings, wealthy curled d., Dart, every look a d., io8gb feather on fatal d., 555a of chance, 752 b

S72b

earth's

heedless

and

poisonous d. not pugnacity, g8ob


time throw a d. at thee, gigb Darwin Abraham of scientific

fairest of her d. Eve, $45a have done virtuously, 7a horseleach hath two d., 26b if you have no d., 10953

my

d. I suppose, ios8a
d.,

257a 57&a so8b Dawn's early light, 54ob Daws, for d. to peck at, 272a Day, a little work and good d.,
d.,

d. of day,

none of Beauty's

men, 7osb Darwinian man, 768a Darwin's theory conjectural, 62oa Dash down yon cup, 5613 most a d. between two, 73oa thy foot against a stone, 2ob Dashed, breaking waves d. high,
573 b
in pieces the enemy, the brains out, 2820

d. of Jerusalem, sga, 2gb of music brought low, 2ga of my father's house, 252b of time, 6o3b prayers are d. of Zeus, 6$b sage d. of Muses, 7gb
tigers not d., 27ga

55ga

75b
a summer's d. and with the setting sun, 343a after d. is over, io25b afterwards d., 734a all d. no road hoofs, 86oa all days as marriage d., 322a all on summer's d., 10945 all things all d. long, 6533 and night shall not cease, 6b and way we met, 775a another blue d., 578a apple a d., nosa April d., 928a as it fell upon a d., 3093 as morning shows the d., 348b
a-tiptoe

who Shem and Shaun


g68b words are
d.

d.

of,

8b

through thick and thin, $6ga with pain, 72gb Dastard in war, 5igb Dastardly pitiful Public, 53gb Dat veniam corvis vexat censura columbas, igga
Data, distorted incomplete d.,

earth, 427b Daughter-sons, all Livia's d., g68b

of

Daunt, death could not d., io87b Dauntless, brows of d. courage,

Hampden

with d. breast, 44ob

when

d.

named, 2453
o' leal,

in war, 5iga

aye fair in land

losoa

slughorn to

submit d. to analysis, 47ga South d. from war, 76ob out of d., g88a will live in infamy, 97 3b Dates of wars deaths of kings, 765* Daubed with slime and pitch, 8a Daughter all her life, 72?a am I in mother's house, 875a any man's fair d., as mother so her d., at point of death, 45b beggar's d. of Bethnal Green,
Date, in

Dauphin, David, and D.


isa

lips, 278b daylight's d., 8o3a

my

and barrier between battle d. past, 7273


d.

d.,

502b 5155

his ten thousands,

danced before the Lord, i2b died full of days, i4a in the city of D., 46a in the midst, 444a Josias, io8ga King D. and King Solomon,
85gb

my

no more behind your 42gb

sling the sling of D., 828b scenes D.,

be day never so long, i85b be she fairer than the d., 31 85 behold the d. cometh, 363 beneath blue of d., &52b better d. better deed, 3i3b better live one d. of energy, 8oa boils at last, 66 ib bounded by D. of Judgment, 6553 breaks not it is heart, io86b
brief

December

d.,

66b

played before the Lord, lab

bright d. is done, 28ga bright d. not for aye,

1259

Day
Day, broadcast doings of d., 6ggb brought back my night, j4ib burden and heat of d., 4jb by d. in a pillar of cloud, 8b
called feast of Crispian, cares that infest d., 6ssa chest of drawers by d.,

INDEX
Day, gwine to run all d., happiest d. happiest hour, 64 la hath brightest d. a cloud, 2i4b he that outlives this d., 2453 health and a d., 6p5a home being washing d., 3756 hope to make d. go through,

Day, not a

245a

d. without a line, ioaa not as dawning of d., goSb not look same by d., 61 8a not to me returns d., 3445 not up soon as I, 2$7a

now

d. over,

4soa
with April d., gaSa I had rued, 9275 I hate the d., 201 a I have lived my d., i22a idle singer of empty d., 7533 if she be a d., sgob in d. of adversity consider, s8a
it
is

children of the d., 55a Christmas D. in workhouse,

how

now's the d., 4g6a of adversity, 28a


of of of of of of of of of of of
affliction, $8a death better than birth, 28a

8iga close eye of d., sggb come another d., iogsb compare thee to summer's

deliverance,

46gb

empires come, 765b


glory has come, 4gga my destiny's over, 55ga one's birth, a8a
prosperity, 38a small things, g6a

d.,

sgib
cool of the d., $b count that d. lost, logoa creatures of a d., ygb

in

d.

of prosperity

be

joyful,

28a
d..

dance barefoot on wedding

siga darkest before d. dawneth, jjsb darkest d., 45ga death will have his d., 227a dependency of d. and night,

in its hotness, 7iib in the d. in the night, 7023 in the d. of vengeance, 23b in the posteriors of this d.,

222b
in thy courts, 2oa in which ye came out, 8b infinite d. excludes the night,
is

spirits, 362b the Lord, 54b of vengeance, 2gb of wrath, 157^ 5*ga

on seventh
work, sa

d.

God ended

his

955*
dies at the opening d., 3973 light of immortal d., s6ga dines on following d., 746b do business of d. in d., so6a dog hath a d., i84b

dim

is
is

397* a poem, 9953 at hand, 5ib

is is is

d., losSb dreadful d., 5193 drink oblivion of d., ^soa dying d. sir, logob each d. like a year, 841 a each d. two things disliked,

his dog doomsday eighth

will

have

d.,

266a

done and darkness, 62 ib for honest men, 8a gone sweets done, 581 a past and gone, 7453
his d., i7sa

one buries her, 7oa one marries her, 7oa pack clouds away and welcome d., 3oib past and yet I saw no sun, 2053 perfect d., 862b perpetual morning, 6833
petty pace precincts of

from

d. to d.,

286b

it is it

was Christmas D., 2iob


22 sa
d.,

I've lost a d., 3gga jocund d. stands tiptoe,

proper man d., 22ga

cheerful d., 441 a as see in summer's

joint-laborer with d., 256b

rain foretells pleasant d., 6ygb rain it raineth every d., 2533,

932* eighth d. of week, io56b elephant ate all d., 8s i a

journey 739b
July's
d.

take

whole
as

long

short

December,

end of perfect
endures

d.,

86sb
d.,

*95*

moment or

entertains the harmless d., ere I had seen that d.,

88sb goob 2583

just for

kings

one d., go6a upon coronation

d.,

syoa

knell of parting d.,

43gb

evening and morning were first d., 5a every d. got up and gone to bed, 932a every d. hidden growth, 68gb every d. in every way, 844b every d. passed as if our last, is6b
every dog his d., 6gia everyone has his d., gssa exact d. labor light denied, 3413 faint in the d. of adversity, s6a fair d. adieu, 2$6a famous d. and year, 62 $b faster and more fast, 66 ib
fate put heads together, feet of d. and of night, fell of dark not d.. 8o4a
first
first

a better d., $i8a left alone with our d., io$gb lengthens not a d., 302 a let every man consider last d.,

known

8ib
let the d. perish, i4b let them have their d.,
life

88 ib

but a

d.,

57gb

light of common d., light of fuller d., 6gia light through the word
d.,

named

2?8a rape of every blessed d., io7ga rare as d. in June, 6g2a red-letter d., ig6a remember die sabbath d., ga returns too soon, 55gb Rome not built in one d., i84a runs through roughest d., 28 ib Saint Patrick's d., iogob seize the d., i2ia set down as gain each d., 12 la seventh d. thou shalt not work, 9* shall declare it, 523 shall stand at the latter d., isb she set out one d., giyb shineth unto perfect d., 2$b
Sir Critic
sister

good

d.,

67gb

1523

gs8a

77b
3O5b

last

everlasting
d.,

d.,

spring

828a

fogs prevail upon the d., 36ga follow as night the d., 2593 forever and a d., 205oa

without sunshine, 484b little girl by d., g42a long weary d. have end, 20 ib looked into eye of d., 8&3b p love o life's young d., s8ga love resembleth April d., 22ob maddest merriest d., 645a made black by storms, 5$4a made for you night and d.,
like d.

the whole d. long, 675b sleep neither night nor d., 28ia so cool so calm, 323a so foul and fair ad., 281 a soundless d. in autumn, 642a specter night and d., 48gb stocking all the d., 447a sufficient unto d. is evil, 4ia sun gone down while it was d.

i4ga

34a

meditate d. and night, i6b


is long, 245b merry merry heart goes all d., 2g5b mildewed d. in August, io75a mony a cantie d. John, 4g4b most wasted d. of all, 46ga motion of rising d., io66b mounting at break of d., 5i5b night mother of d., 62 sb night of time surpasseth d.,

sun

shall not smite thee

by

d.,

frabjous d., 74sa friends I have lost a d.,

as d.

22a

igsb

sunbeam
d.,

in

winter's

d.,

from our immortal d., 4873 from this d. forward, 6ib gaudy blabbing remorseful d.,
2i5a
gilded car of d., 336b given thee till break of d., 488b

superfluous to

demand time
d.

4iga of

237b support us

all

long,

go to bed by
Lord, 363

d.,

Saga
d.

great and dreadful

of
d.,

the

guest that tarrieth but a

373

33ia night thousand 826a

eyes

d.

one,

tender eye of pitiful d., tenderly haughty d., 6osb that d. read no more, that is dead, 648a think every d. your last, third d. comes a frost, third d. he rose again,

5g8a 2$4b

55ia
1233

2g8b 6oa

X260

INDEX
d. he will raise us Day, third up. 35b for a memorial, this d.
this

Dayton
Days, nine d. old, 10953 no d. like good old d., 6s$b no guest welcome 3fter three d.,

d.

we must
d.,

part,

8b 5940
d.,

this

January
eyes

those
those

7385 the break

of
d.,

who dream by
I

6423

thou d. thought

hour, 7673

it

time makes possible D. of Judg-

Judgment

D., 784a

ment, g8ob
tire
'tis

Days, a few prosaic d., 7g4b about which I never worry, 80 ib age not numbered by d., igjb all d. as marriage day, 3223 all my d. are trances, 6423 alluvial march of d., io43b among dead are past, 5$2b Ancient of d., 353, 7433 and nights to Addison, 428b are consumed like smoke, 2ia are swifter than shuttle, i4b as thy d. so thy strength, lob
best dull and hoary, g62b beauty and length of d., 7733 begin with trouble, io8ga broader lands better d., 92 ib checkerboard of nights d., 63ob dancing d. are done, loggb
at

nor hours d. months, 3053 not dark d. great d., 9233

number
of of of of of of of
3ll d.

the d. of eternity, 373 in week, 4013


better
psrt,

d.

lived

8243

the d. in toil, 32 ib true 'tis d., 305 b

other d., 4673 today isn't any tomorrow a new d., ig6b tomorrow as today, 2953 took d. to search for God, 86oa trysting d., 5963 turn and fight another d., 1033 turn by night or d., 5133 'twas on market d., 5893
nights to every d., 3233 until the d. break, 2gb unto day uttereth speech, i7b up by break of d., 3233 veil draw soft across d., 7143 6iob vulgarize d. of judgment, weakening eye of d., Jfyb wear d. out before comes, 8i6b

danger, 5203 Herod the king, 393 Methuselah, 6b our yesrs, 2ob our youth are d. of glory, 5&2b of wine and roses, 8903 often often in old d. f 7 1 4a on the earth 3re as 3 shsdow,

dark and dreary, 62 ib David died full of d., 143


dead-letter
d.,

our d. 3re scored against us,


135* past our dancing
.

534b

two

depends on seasons and d., g42b dingy d., 738b dividing lover and lover, 7733 evil d. come not, 28b
expect hslcyon
d.,

d.,

2233

red-letter d., 534b

remember bygone d., 10523 remember thy Cre3tor in d. of


thy youth, 28b sacrament of summer
d.,

2143

wedding d. fixed, 44b well-spent d. happy sleep, i74b what a d. may bring, 263

fsllen on evil d., 346b f3sted forty d. 3nd nights, 3gb fled Him down d., 8s6b flight of future d., 343b flowers withered while I spent

734b

forty

when heaven was falling, 8543 which the Lord hath made, 223
while it is d v 48b with superfluous burden loads
d., 34ob without all hope of d., 349* withstand in the evil d., 54a would God d. were dead, 774b

d. snd forty nights, 6b glamour of childish d., g&5b

my

d.,

i52b

golden d. of golden deeds, $44b greatest d. country lived, 9233 h3lcyon d., gib, 2143 h3ppy those early d., g62b have been wondrous free, 3983 hesrt followed sll my d., 945^ hesvenly d. th3t cannot die,

sad Rose of all my d., 87gb S3l3d d., 287b seemed but a few d., 73 seen better d., 248b, 2900, series of besutiful d., 4793 shuts up story of our d., 19 sit here on and off for d., six d. shalt l3bor, ga, 6783 slow drag of d., 8sb smell in three d., io5b so hsunt thy d., 58 ib sober studious d., 4osb some d. dsrk and dreary, 62 ib
.

some

d.

longer
of

trwn

others,
d.,

would God

were here, 774b wrestled until breaking of d., 7b year and a d., 6733
d.

5iob
his d. are as grass, 2ia humanity only three

d.

old,

942b
hypocritic d., 6o3b in length of d. understanding,

yield d. to night, 2i4a

Dayadhvam, 1003 a Daybreak, it is d. everywhere, 6253 ib very plainly before d., 70


Daylight, 62 sb

between dark and

d.,

found common d. sweet, 8i3a in death d. finish, 667b in the mind, 394b-395a never drink by d., 961 a night but d. sick, see a church by d., we burn d., 223a when d. comes comes light, 688b you love the d., 84a Daylight's dauphin, 8033 rapids near d. past, 54 ib Dayrolles, give D. a chair, 41 6b Day's, all in d. work, i09oa
at the

153 in my born d., 1943 in my school d., 23 ib in the d. of my youth, 53 ib in yellow Ie3f, 5633 joyfulness prolongeth his d., 380 King Charles's golden d., iogoa leave them in midst of his d.,

sterner d. not d3rker d., 9233 sweet childish d., 51 ib teach us to number our d., sob ten d. th3t shook world, gg8b th3t are gone Maggie, 779 a th3t 3re no more, 648b that m3ke us hsppy, g473 th3t might be better spent, 201 a

spring full

sweet

3*3*

th3t thy d. may be long, g3 th3t wove your doom, 774b then if ever perfect d., 6923

34b
length of d. in her right hand,
light of other d., 54ab all d. of your life,

thousand d., 10733 three whole d. together, 35ob Time in hours d. yesrs, 362b to come are wisest witnesses,
travelers of eternity, 3803 two d. when woman is pleasure,

live

3gob 338b ib d. as now, 51 twenty long looked on better d., 248b loved them in other d., gi4b
live laborious d.,

703
unalterable d., 6o3b untell the d. ., 30 ib virtue extends our d., 13 353 ways to lengthen our d., 5423 weary of d. and hours, 7753 when birds come back, 734b when earth young, 6773 will grow to weeks, 6543

lying

morn, 66 ib death of each d. life, aSgb


disasters,

d. of my youth, 881 3 m3d Msrch d., 9473 m3n born of 3 woman is of few
d.,

153 dsys

44gb
this

msy come
256b

may

go, 7783

end of

d. .business,

every d. news, 27 ib garish eye, 3363

measure of my d., i8b melsncholy d. 3re come, 574b Moses W3s there forty d., gb
multitude of
d.,

good d. work, 423b journey take whole day, 7sgb long d. journey, 1009 a long d. task is done, 288b march nearer home, 5i8a
wages for day's work, 577b year's midnight and the d., 3063

4273

wish my d. to be, 5iib world of happy d., 2173 year whose d. long, 8413
his six d.

my d. are past, 153 my d. 3re vsnity, 153 my d. hsve crackled, 8s6b my d. of endless doubt, my dancing d. are done, my salad d.,
.,

work 3 world, 3473

ig8b 2233

Dsyspring from on high, 463 Daystar arise in your hearts, 573 in ocesn bed, 3393 Dsyton, bicycle mechanics from
D., 10363

126l

Dazzle
mine eyes d., $153. eyes d., 786b Dazzled at beholding myself, 8g6a by ways of God, gsab Dazzles at it as at eternity, gSab
Dazzle,

INDEX
Dead, earth to living not d., 473* England finished and d., envy for d., 76gb envy of the d., 843 ere I was d., 7823 fairy somewhere falls d., 8583 faith d. which does not doubt,
8703
faith without works is d., fallen cold and d., 7023

my

Dead, Lord of living and 8o2b


loses past

d.,

and

d. for future, 86a

Dazzling,

foib 3620 ioi4b taught her d. fence, 337b De gustibus non disputandum, i5oa

all

beams

full d.,

deep but

d. darkness,

icy roses,

56b

te fabula, isoa

fame sun of
fell

d.,

sgob

Deacon, enough to make d. swear,


693 Dead, absent or d. friend, 5903 Adonais is d., 57 la after people are d., 9073

fell

across picture d., 797b at his feet as d., 57b

never sick old d., ig8b d. but sleepeth, 423 cannot bite, ii2a held on end, 7843 Man's Chest, 822b may divine as myself d., 7023 men rise up never, 7753 mie love ys d., 4823 mighty d., 4igb mindful of unhonored d., 4413 MisUh Kurtz he d., 8443
love

maid not

man man

for a ducat dead, 2643 for Love is d., 203b


for Lycidas sorrow forgotten as 3 d.

more to say when d., gooa mother patient being d., 72 ib


d.,

not

Agamemnon
all all all

d.,

88$b
d.,

man

3393 out of

once so beautiful

loiob

mind, i8a
full

mourn the d., io78b mouth of one just my enemy is d., 7023

d.,

g44b

the d. lie down, 7363 the rest are d., 6s$b

of d. men's bones, 4$b gear of foreign d. men, 10063

my

always popular, 8gob and dumb and done, 9153

govern living, sSgb


great god Tfsn is d., i^b greatest service or injury to d.

sparrow is d., 1143 nature seems d., 2833 need charity mere than d., 7503
Isdy's

ne'er said

till

and gone lady, 2653 and rotten, 42 ib and turned to clay, 266*3
are but as pictures, 28$b
art of poetry, 9883

no longer mourn when

friend d., 8ogb


I

am

d.,

man, g$b
half d. a living death, hslf regiment d., io76b
d.,

34ga

barbarian

weeping
chaos

above
d.,

749*
beautiful Evelyn

Hope

beauty

d.

comes,

eegb 22oa
slain,

become lumber of world, gSab


being d. with him beauty 2203
besides the wench is d., 2i2b better d. when work done, 7O4a better to be fool than d., Sasb bivouac of the d., 7<>4b blessed who has dear one d.,

happier to be d., 6o3b hardly more than boys, 9623 harrow house of d., io5gb he is d., 7143 heads of d. up line, io4ob healthy wealthy and d., logjb heard the d. cry, io64b heart fell d., 10303 heart's d. never buried, 10173 Hector is d., s6gb
help for living hope for 749* her wsrrior d., 6493 herself ere evensong, io88b high converse with mighty
d.,

2g2b noble living and noble d., 5103 not a house where not one d., 8b not d. but gone before, 1303 not d. who live in hearts, 5383 not God of d., 47b not interested in living, 10413 not know we are d., 933 not make war on d., i86a not reverence of d. but envy of
living,

3i8a

now he is d. now the old

should
lion

I fast,
is

i2b

d.,

476b

8073 blow bugles over rich d., gg4a Body good dog d., io78a body without spirit is d., s6b books not absolutely d., 3403 brave men living d., 6393 breed maggots in d. dog, 26ob by ships lies a d. man, 645 Caesar's trencher, 2883 can tell you being d., ioo6b carry out your own d., 9413

d,,

4igb honor dies

man

objects essentially d., 5293 old bawd is d., 8853 once d. never return, 6303 one cup to the d. already, 7203 one-d. other powerless, 7i2b

d.,

6255
3303

the d. arise, every d. thing, 3063 ideas and d. beliefs, yagb if I were d. you'd say,
shall
I

how

am

72*3 if Lucy should be d., 5100 immortal d. who live again, 6893
in praise of ladies d., 29 3b
is

only d. who do not return, 484b only good Indians d., 7423 our English d., 8753 out of d. cold ashes life, 8ioa outrage brave man d., 8ia
past bury d., 62ob pattern of d. and living, 1006 a people so d. to liberty, 4263
perfection, 6523 Phlebas a fortnight d., icoab plucks d. lions by beard, 2363 poetry of earth never d., 57gb

cemetery of d. ideas, 86gb certain is birth for the d., io6a Christ risen from d., 533 dose wall with English d., 24$b communication of d., ioo6b corpse of public credit, 547b corse in complete steel, 2593
cozy women d., io57b crucified d. buried, 6oa

cup to the d. already, 72oa day that is d., 6483


days

among

d. past,

5$2b

dead and dead indeed, 10923 deadly when most d., 10223 deal to be said for being d., 934b
dear d. women, 6653 d., sg4b deathless hour, 73 ib descent of last end on d., 9683 desire d. be near us, 6503 dirge for doubly d., 6423 dishonor not trouble once I am d., 843 dooms imagined for d., s8ob doubled globe of d., 10703 drunk judge, 1068 a earth that bears thee d., 2413

Death once

at rest, $8b he d. then, 8033 is the king d., 2i7b just 3s d. as if wrong, nosb King Pandion he is d., 3093 kissed by English d., i028b knocking when I'm d., 9493 know not 3ny thing, 28b kin for century d., 6s2b land of d., 10413, 10603 laughter out of d. bellies, 9883 law hath not been d., 2 yob left it d. and with head, 7453 let d. bury their d., 4ib level of msss, 6960 lie d. and damned, 6623 life is shrunk d. and interred,
is

poets d. and gone, $&$> poets in misery d., 5123 posture th3t we give the

d.,

4823
praised the d. alresdy
professors
like
d.,

2?b
d.,

literature

9013 remembered footsteps, 8ggb

9873 quick and the

d., 603,

renown and grace is respite to be d., 737b


rest for the d,, 7503 rest her soul she's d.,
revisit

d.,

2843

s65b

3063
light in dust lies d., 572b like vampire d. many times,

resurrection of the d., 533 in dreams the dear d.,


d., 88 ib d. bodies, 8963

83b romantic Ireland's

78ia
lilacs

rough notes and


out
is

of

d.

land,
d.,

1002 a

literature

something

g86b

living

dog

better than d. lion,

rule over the dep3rted d., 66b say I'm sick I'm d., 4103 Sea and Sea of Galilee, 9453

28b
living

scarce

able to

bury

d.,

Se3 fruits tempt eye, Se3's shore, 550*3,


seek living

543b

319*

among

d.,

47b

1262

INDEX
Dead
shall be raised, ssa shall live living die, 37oa

Death
Dear, to

256b sleeping but never d., 6gib with enduring d., 5723 sleeps smiling the boy fell d., 662a to d., 74ob so death
sheeted
d.,

Deadly, pay with a d. blow, 7ga poverty most d. of disease looga soap and education d., 75ga when most dead, io22a wither and come to d. use, 27ga Dead-sure, duty d. thing, 778b

me more

d.,

45oa

too d. for my possessing, sg^a too d. for what's given freely, 95 a what restraint to grief for one so d., i2ia

wisdom never
Wotton a most
man's
d.

d.

if

so dull so d. in look, 241 a so long as refuse to die, 72sb so many not yet d., 10523 soldiers bore d. bodies by, 238b

Deadwood and
io4ib

Lost

Mule

genuine,

Flat,

something
84 ia

d.

in

each of

us,

Deaf and dumb has wooden leg, 8 9 ob ears of the d. shall be unstopped, 32a
justice blind d. and dumb, 8gob law d. inexorable, 462b like the d. adder, igb

soul so d., 5i8b

5613 Spartan speak ill of the d., 68b


d.,

stare

and sting

forever, io22a

music good nor bad to

d.,

374a

326a life, igsa than to himself, 30$a yet the brotherhood, 865a Dearest, met my d. foe in heaven, 258a nearest and d. enemy, 24oa throw away d. thing owed, 28ib
Dearer, honor d. than

d.

lover,

stars are d.,

icsgb

steppingstones of d. selves, 64gb talk of pushing bones, still


tell

trouble d. heaven, 2gib Deafness, tale would cure d., 2g6a Deal, candy d. of courtesy, 23&b

when

am dead my

d.,

Dearly let or let alone, Dearness only gives value,


d.,

73gb 32 ib 466b

damnation
'em Queen Anne's
d.,

round

land,

4i2b

Dears, Nature swears the lovely

4ggb

falsely

with God, gi8a

493b
little doll d.,

the d. ride swiftly, 476a there are no d., 8653 there he fell down d., na these d. not died in vain, 63ga these honored d., 6sga those who fear life part d., gisa

in remnants of remnants, ggaa infinite d. of nothing, 2316 intolerable d. of sack, s$gb

sweet

6gia
tears,

Dearth

of

woman's

627b
d.,

new

d.,

g7ob

d. age agues, 3O7b Deary, flew o'er me and

war

my

of scorn looks beautiful, 2$2b of skimble-skamble stuff, aggb

though d. shall he live, 48b three keep secret if two d., 42 ib


thy greatest

square

d.,

847

to d. plainly, 28oa

enemy

d.,

37b
d.,

iogga Heraclitus wages and are topics of sex and the


told

time

is

d.,

me

took

d.,
d.,
d.,

7igb 8s4a 885b


571 a

what a d. of business, 37 5 b Dealing, bend conscience to d., 6 94b

common
hard

d. teaches

sense plain d., 607 a them suspect,

495 a in short my d. kiss me, 4i4a Death a necessary end, 254b a secret of Nature, 1416 absence darkness d., goGa absolute for d., 27 ia Adam brought d. into world, 7623 after d. better bad epitaph,

travel to tree gives

home among
no

26ib

trophies truth never


until

and

shelter, ioo2a d. things, 3153 fell d. 657a

Dean

unhonored he is

d.,

d.

441 a do not

call

man
d.,

happy, 6ga
vast

could write finely upon broomstick, s8ga Deans, dowagers for d., 648a Dear, absent friend d., 5903 all they hold d., 847b as light and life, 4gsa
as

after first d. no other. io7oa after life does please, 2ooa after life is d,, 775a aims with fouler spite, 32 ib all seasons thine D., 57 4 a aloft gigantically down, io43b

and middle of
for

night, 258a

remembered

kisses,

648b
d,,

warred

Homer

being

301 b was crucified d. and buried, 6oa was d. and is alive, 47a what d. had no speech for,

beauty for earth too Brutus, 253b coldness of my d. 401 a

22$a

damned

ioo6b

what was

d.

when when when

I I

am am

was hope, 8413


d.,

distracting town, 405b dead women, 66sa experience keeps d. school, 422 a Fatherland, 6gga

always a tragedy, 847b amiable lovely d., 236b anchor of love is d., 8073 and brother Sleep, 568a and hate and hell, gi8a

98 ib

friends

d.

my

dearest,

73gb
d.,

living

might exceed

we love so d., 752b bless you d., 4g4a d. to this heart, 553a I die, josh

God how

my

and i coquette, g46a and life not alternatives, ggsa and life one, goib and Night wash world, 7023 and sorrow our companions, and taxes, 42 $a angel of d. abroad, 658a angel of d. spread wings, 55ga any man's d. diminishes me,
3 o8b arise arise from d., 307 b ashamed of d., 23gb

where d. men lost bones, which die in the Lord, 58b which he slew at his death, nb who fed the guns, gg2b winds' riot, 775a with d. desire not die, 5i8b

so d., 4652. jesses my d. heartstrings, 274b land that gave you birth, 86sa
is life

little

dormouse, g7oa

Lord and Father, 626b


lose their d. delight, 2gsb

word

d.

when

said,

7$8a

working for d. horse, ig7a would God day were d., 774b would that I were d., 644b
youth stone d., ggsb Dead Sea fruits, 54sb Dead Sea's shore, 556a Dead-born, fell d. from the press, 434b Dead-letter days, 534b Deadliest enemies within borders,
Deadlock, holy d., ioi7a Deadly, dare d. terrors clasp, 48ga forfeit should release, 334a

makes a blessing d., 35ob makes remembrance d.,

man to all my d. times' my dove my


name

country
d.,

d.,

2703 4g4b

asterisk of d., 6240 be absolute for d., 2713 be not proud, goSa

waste, sgaa

652b
sad forever
d.,

forever

beautiful adventure, 7ooa become sought-after refuge, 8?a beggars mounted run horse to
d.,

405 nurse of arts, 245a old Carian guest, 7igb people who have charm, 75 ib
Plato

2i5b

and truth are so d. I love him, 347b


is

d.,

g7b
d.,

better than day of birth, a8a beyond us even before d., 4ogb birth copulation and d., ioo4a birth life and d., s8ib

sold cheap what

most

imminent d. breach, 272b more d. than mad dog's


2i8b

tooth,

more

d.

than male, 8y7a

2g4a son of memory, 334a think on thee d. friend, sgaa thoughts to memory d., 5aob to God famous to all ages, $4oa to me as ruddy drops, 254b

Black Widow d., io75a blackness of d., ngb blaze forth d. of princes, 254b body of this d., 5ia

borders upon our birth, 3ogh bridegroom in my d., 288b brief as water falling d., lona bring d. to a friend, 82a

1263

Death
Death, bringeth to light the shadow of d., 153. brought d. into world, build your ship of d., by beauty made amends, by inches, agoa by man came d., 5ga by the shadow of d., 7<5ob Byron's eyes shut in d., the crowd, calls ye to came d. into the world,
captain certain
of

INDEX
Death, exodus of
34 ib
d.,

face of d., 8gob face to meet d. with, 2g6a


faithful

g86b Sgga

unto

d.,

57b

Falstaff sweats to d., 2s8b fear and danger of violent d.,

3i8a
fear d. as children fear dark,

7iia jayb 36b

2o8a
fear d. feel fog, 666b fear of d. hath me in thrall,

of d,, 3<36a the born, io6a certain to all, 242a chance d. and mutability, s6ga chants doleful hymn to d., 237a Chromis did not save himself
is

men

i76a
fear of d.

Death, in his d. all things appear fair, 64b in itself is nothing, 3673 in one sense no d., 9433 in our own power, 8osa in ranks of d. find him, 54aa in stars written d. of every man, i68a in the midst of life d., 6ib in the pot, i3b in the shadow of d., sib, 463 in vain to wish for d., 82 b
interest in d. interest in life,

d. for

more dread than


d.,

d.,

i26a fed on fullness of feed on D., SQ4b


fell

937 b

774*

sergeant

d.,

66b

from dark

d.,

6ab

final accounting, 1513

city of night perchance d., clean trunk of d., 10575 closed in d. attentive eyes, 42ga

D., 10693 fly for restful d. I cry, 2g2b for thirty pence my d., $22b

down

closes all,

646b

foreknowledge of

d.,

7733

hand of d., 241 a come away d., 252a come close eyes, io86a
cold

foretaste of d., 56^ fortune favored him in

moment

cometh soon or

late,

5963

found

cool -enfolding d., 7o2a

of d., i4ob d. in life, 53oa fraternity or d., 4693

could not daunt, io87b counteracts Devil who


f

is

D.,

crossing cruel as cruel d. cruel d.

444b covenant with d. gaa, 6i5b the world, 381 a d., 4igb always near, io8gb of Pyramus, asSb darkness and shadow of d., 153, 2ib, 46a darkness like d., sb
daughter at point of d. 45b dear beauteous d.. 3633 defend to d. your right to say it, 4i8a delicate d., 7O2a desire father's d., 7o8b desireth not d. of sinner, sgb
f

from d. to immortality, 62a from d. to life recover, 2 lib from sudden d., 6ob fruit threw d., so8a functions which resist d., 5i7b
a gallop Pegasus to d., 41
gates of dark

3o8b a sleep, 774b a debt, 481 a is afraid of him, i4gb is as lover's pinch, 28ga is before me today, sb is dead not he, 5723 is knowledge, 4g8b is not D. at watch, 10363 is nothing to us, 1033, ii$b is only a horizon, 7853 is slumber, 568a is swallowed up, 53a island surrounded by d., 7475 jaws of d., 1933, 6523 judge none blessed before his
is
is

intricate as d.,

d.,

s8a

D. stand wide,

iiSb
give me liberty or d., 465b go down D. bring her, go7a go with anyone to d., 9263 nor d., gods have neither age 8sa to her d., 5g2b gone good d. does honor to whole
life,

just d. kind umpire, 2143 just that distance from d., 6ga keeps D. his court, aayb keys of hell and d., 57b

kingly D. keeps court, 57ia kings did king to d., io7oa kiss of d., gi6b land of darkness and shadow of
d., 153 land of the shadow of d., 3ia last enemy is d., 533 last guerdon of d., ii$b laugh myself to d., 2973 lays icy hand on kings, 327b leaden d., 4<>5a leaves body at d., io6b life d. and that forever, 691 a life mystery deep as d., 74ob

i6sa
d.,

good thing to escape


9053 grim d., gi6a grim D. my son and
great
d.,

82a

destroyer of worlds, i055a devours lovely things, io2|jb die a dry d.,'sg6a die not poor d., goSa

foe,

344*

had undone so many, ioo2b half dead a living d., 34ga


has broached him to,^475b hath no more dominion, sob hath ten thousand doors, 3153 he also to d. must fall, s64b he brought them d., go4a he taketh all away, 7igb heaven gives favorites early d.,
io2a here find life in d., ssoa hideous storm of terror,
his d. eclipsed gaiety,

die the d. of the righteous, loa


direst shapes of d., 7213

halls of d., 574b happened in his berth, 59 ib

life

does not end

all,

is8a

done

by slanderous tongues, 247a doomed to d. though fated not


to d.

perfected by d., 6i7b shadow of d., 3313, 7733 life that which men call d., 86a life well used brings happy d.,
life

i74b
life

your

d.

bought, 958b

to die, 3703 draw trigger at

life's

old d. new, 668b

his d., 43oa dread d., 64b dread of something after d., 26sa dry d., 2g6a dull cold ear of d., 44ob dumb d., io3ib dung and d., 10053 dusty d., 286b easeful d., s8ab eaten to d. with rust, 24ib eclat of d., 738a eloquent just and mighty D.,
J 99 b embrace is d., iog4b end of worldly soore, i67b enviable d. was his, g24b

like sleep steal like this, 621 a

on me, s68b

limbs cold in deatn, ngb lively form of d., 2O4a

3153
d.,

long since D. had majority,


33 b looks gigantically, 642a love better after d., 6i8b love is strong as d., goa love posterior to d., 737a love to woman life or d.,

428b how can you know about


7aa

how

little

room we take
for d.,
is

in d.,

387 b

how they pray how wonderful


I
I

8sb
568a

8sb

d.,

am

idle
if

near to d., 6gb here importune d., 288b and who has done much

meet
d.

d. alike,

63b
to forgive,

knew how

H7b

lovely and soothing d., 702a loves shining mark, sggb low delicious word d., yoib made d. his ladder, 201 a make d. proud to take us, 288b and low, i82a makes

equal high
his arrest,

equal presence of d., iS5a equal piece of justice D., 32gb ere thou hast slain another,
in

immortal d. has taken mortal


life,

nsb
d.,

makes makes

9470
77sb

improved by

go4b

life live, 667b marriage d. and division,

3'9b
eternal sleep, 5ooa everybody's looks of
d.,

in d. daylight finish, 667b in d. they were not divided,

37sb

i2b

may be gift to life, io56b men at point of d., 225b men of d., 366a

1264

INDEX
Death milder fate than tyranny, 78b Mister D., lojob more bitter than d., 28a most melancholy topic, 6

Death's
of
life,

Death part and parcel


93.7*

Death, swallow up
tory, 31 b

d. in vic-

mourned
naked in
ii8b

at birth not
d.

d.,

on unknown

shore,

parting foretaste of d., 563b play to you d. to us, 357a pleasure before d., io4ga-b pomp of d., io7ga portal we call d., 622b
posterior to d., 737a precious is the d. of the saints,

swallowed up in d., ggb sweet is d., 653b sword sung song of d., 488b taste of d. but once, 2g4b there is no d., 622b, 7583 think not disdainfully of d.,
143*
thirsty for d. too, gg4b this fell sergeant d., 266b

nativity chance or

d., zG'jb

nearness to d.

no nearer God,
1081 a
d.,

S2a

prepare as

Negro past of
neither
fear

d.,

nor long for

proud proud

d.,

though 266b

for d., 10143

i35b never taste of d. but once,

777a newspaper no cure for d., SSyb no god stronger than d., 774b no life by others' d., stfa. no more d., $8b no one knew my d., io66a no parenthesis, logia no work pause for d., 667a none died natural d., gs6b none hath joy of d., 774b nor life nor angels, sia not atoned too dearly by d.,
d.,

35oa quiet ranks of d., 54sa reaper whose name D., 6aob reared himself throne, 64 ib reasonable moderator D., 32gb

to take us, 288b us in d. so noble,

thou not born for d., 58^ thou shalt die, ^oSa till d. us do part, 6ib time of d. every moment, io6a
touch the great d., go5a tramples it to fragments, treats us all alike, y true to thee till d.,
truly longed for d., try cause condemn to d., twitches my ear, ngb two fates of dread d., 64b ugly fact nature hides,

redeem them from d., 35b remain until d. do part, 837a

remembered

kisses

after

d.,

74gb

648b rendezvous with d., loogb reports of d. exaggerated, 7&3a ribs of D., 33?a ride not free horse to d., ig7a
ruling
passion

unknown song sounded by


useless
life

74ob
D.,

strong

in

d.,

497 b not born for death, 58ija not d. but dying terrible, 4*4b not D. but Love, 6i8a not d. for I stood up, 7s6a not d. for who is he, 7g6a not stop for d., 736b not the worst, Sab nothing call our own but d.,

4o6b
sad stories of d. of kings, 227b sane and sacred d., 7023 seems covered way. 624a seize whilst setting cabbages,

vacancies by valley of d., 652a valley of shadow of vasty hall of d., 7i2b

early d., d. few, 47 2b


d.,

is

i7b

i8gb
seized Argus, 66b sense of d. in apprehension,

veil called life, 56ga violent d. of slaveholder,


visit us with wages of sin

684a

2713
sentence of Versailles, loiaa set before you life and d., lob set d. i' the other, 53b
shall be no more, 3o8a shall be surely put to d., ga shall have no dominion, io7oa shame worse than d., io67b

nothing more beautiful than

27b

giga 5ia of d. smoother, 56sa way to 286b d., way dusty


is d.,

d.,

d.,

Webster possessed by

d.,

1002 a

yooa nothing to look forward to but d., i74a nothing to us, lo^a, n^b now boast thee d., 2893 now to D. devote, 348a O d. I will be thy plagues, 35b O d. in life, 648b

what should it know of d., 5o8b what ugly sights of d., 2i7a what we fear of d., 27 ib where is thy sting, 53a

ship of

d.,

g86b

proud

d.,

266b

sickness sin d., Yoga side of life away from us, silent halls of d., 574b

938b

of of of of of

a dear friend, 230^23 la beautiful woman, 643b

single d. tragedy, 954b sit in shadow of d., 2ib, 46a


slavery or d., sgsb sleep brother of d., 64a sleep brother of quiet d., 2iob Sleep brother to D., 2iob

democracy, io45b each day's life, 2&3b endeavor birth of disgust, 7 9 ib of friends inspire us, g43a of one god d. of all, 95<5b
the

of

most

noblest

knights,

175D
of the race, io7gb of water and fire, ioo6b

sleep good d. better, s88b sleep is a d., 53ob sleep of d., 26 ib sleep the sleep of d., 491 a slew at d. more than in

life,

lib
slew not him, 201 a so d. to dead, 74ob sole equality is d., 67ga someone's d., 6653

old captain, 7oya

life on d., 88sb once dead, 2g4b one in life and d. are we, 767a one of things Nature wills, i43a one studied in his d., 28 ib one such d. to come, 7iia one talent d. to hide, 34ia only a horizon, 7&5a or dreamful ease, 6455 our souls survive d., i28a out of jaws of d., ig3a overtake you though in lofty

on on on

else immortal us, 3083 his pale horse, 348a

song attain

full

purport after

d. of singer, 73b stalk of d., io82a state of nothingness, 933 storm desertion d., s87a strange that d. should

65 sb have his day, 227a with impartial tread, i2ob world easily reconciled to d., 6i4b worse things than d., 7743 worst friend and enemy D., 994* worst is d., 227a would be his pride, 9453 your loveliness and my d., 586a Death-bedde, gon to hys d., 482a Death-fires danced at night, 5$5a Deathless Aphrodite on your throne, 6gb dead d. hour, 73 ib his mansions are d., 653 lines ahem, g62b music, 8g8b royal race of hicks, g45b Deathly slumber, gi4b Death-moth, beetle nor d., 584a Death's a debt, 481 a beg d. pardon now, io78b
will
call in

who comes at last, 5iga who longs for d., 32 la who puts end to pain,

sing,

stretch hand in hour of d., goga strict in his arrest, 266b stroke of d. lover's pinch, a8ga

brother Sleep, uga thy d. head, 32gb fearful forehead, 7goa fell d. untimely frost, 4g5a gray land, gg2a
ironic scraping, gssb

towers, i4ga

owe God a

d.,

242b

strong lean upon d., ggsa struck sharp on d., 6i8b sudden d. best, ii2b
suffuses all with blackness of d.,

pale

other kingdom, looga flag not advanced,


sleep d. counterfeit, 2843. sleep D. twin brother, 64a why fear d. call, 7ooa

225b

pale horse and on him was D., 58a pang preceding d., 447a

sure as

d.,

302 a

1265

Deaths
Deaths, after so many d., 33b all d. could endure, 34yb by feigned d. to die, 305b die many times before d., 254b glorious in thy defense, sgja happen at ebb tide, Saga many d. in men, gi7b million d. statistic, 954b more d. than one, 841 a of kings, 7653 ye died watched beside, 87 ib Death-steps, dinosaur d., ioy6b Debases, virtue d. in justifying,

INDEX
Decay, love sicken and d., 2563 make haste on d., gg4b man dupe deceiver d., 5$ga muddy vesture of d,, 2j5b no flood, 88oa of that colossal wreck, s68b on d. greenest mosses cling,
Deceiveth, serpent d. whole world,

Deceiving, appearances often


d., 75b December, brief D. day, 6a6b chilly D. day, 10362 drear-nighted D., 5&oa

are

625b our love hath no

d.,

3osb

physical d., io6oa


riches hasten to d., 1713 state falls into d., 548b

in heart cold D., 10853. in the bleak D., 648b July's day short as D., xg$a. love you in D., 7g6a

thoughts of

men

d.,

201 a

4i6b Debate, daughter of


of

d.,

i8ga

commonwealth
senate

Roman
Debauch

Debated, greatest d., 46ga


friend's

affairs, 2432 long d., sg^b question ever

Time makes these d., 3273 unperceived d., 449* wealth accumulates and men
d., 4493 while great and wise d., 7793 Decayed, cottage battered and d., 333 a think sufficiently d., 768b

never dim D., 824a seek roses in D., 545b wallow naked in D. snow, 2263 when they wed, 25ob Decembers, fifteeen wild D., 68sb Decency, want of d. want of
sense, 374b Decent and manly examination, 531* J decent, io4ob easy men, 466a provision for poor, 431 a respect to opinions, 47ob thy d. limbs composed, 4o6a Decently and in order, 52b Deception of thrush, 10053

wife genteelly,

43ib Debauchee of dew, 7j5a


Debonair, 334b

Decaying refuse,

10632.

buxom

blithe

and

d.,

Decays,

common

cause

d.,

mere glimmering and


2973
d.,

d.,

8gb 3633

Deborah

arose, iia Deboshed, thou d. fish thou,

Debt, by no means run 322b comfortably in d., 6sgb death's a d., 48 la


discharged 478a

in

unconscious of d., 3&7b Deceased, ghost of d. Roman pire, 3i8a he first d., 301 a

Em-

Deceptive,

masterpieces

less

d.

through

eternity,

double d. to pay, 4soa gratitude repays installment on

of late d., Syab Deceit, bread of d. is sweet, 25b the dear d., 421 a hug look of soft d., 488b men creatures of d., 37#b men favor d., 367b noble and incapable of d., 52 ib

name

than life, goyb Decide, comes moment to betwixt two forever

d.,

6gib

things,

how
life

well live in d., 6sgb that depends on d., yaga millions of d., 453b national d. blessing, 484b, 5473 not dishonest because in d., 77 ia

not up to small d., 77oa rumor of oppression and

d.,

76ib law conflict courts d., 48$b d. considered Decided, matter true, isib on what they will not do., looa only to be undecided, Q2oa
Decides,

doctors

differ

who

d.,

small d. or sinful games, 77oa smile of d., 4goa threshold high to turn d., 82?b
Deceitful,

pay d. to past, 94gb pay every d., 6o3b promise is d. unpaid, 933a
public d. public blessing, 4&4b put future in d. to ourselves,

damnable
273 34b
d.,

d,

woman,

383b
favor heart
is d.,
is d.,

4o7a Deciding not to be bitch, io44a Decimals, sixth place of d., Saya Decipher, pleasanter if able to d., 7 6 5a Deciphered, faith d. in skies, 867a stones that cannot be d., ioo6a
Decision by majorities expedient,

kisses of

enemy

26b

934b

remember
run in
d.

to

pay the

d.,

88a

simplicity d. mistress, 777b Deceitfully, who hath not sworn


d.,

6sib
heroic d. not from cowards,

to die a d.

by disputation, 3523 we must discharge,

8ia

lonb
once a d. made, gSga valley of d., 350
Decisions, afraid to make d., g&$b careful resolutions unerring d.,
i

Deceitfulness of riches, 42b Deceits, from all d. of the world,

which cancels all Debtor class, 77 la

to imagination, gssa to Nature's quickly paid, 32 ib others, 5452

6ob
Deceive, dreams at length d. 'em, 387 falsehood no longer d., iogib not thy physician, 324a one's own self, 601 a pleasure to d. deceiver, ssga
practice to d., 5igb we d. ourselves, 573, 4363

3 8b
d.,

court overruled earlier

833a
will,

Debtors, as we forgive our d., 4ob we are d. or creditors, 478a Debts, forgive us our d., 4ob he that dies pays all d., 2973 new way to pay old d., 3163

more

great d. of life, g35b of instincts than

935
political d.

under
not

pressure,

87ob
Decisive,

words pay no d., 268a Decade, promise of d. of loneliness, io36b Decalogue, futile d. of mode, 8493 Decanted, sweeter wine in tavern than bishop d., 1545 Decay, all beauteous things d.,
7i 9 b by gentle

Deceived, be not d., 543 by bad women been d., 34ga good sense not d., iogia more ignominious to mistrust than be d., 355b
the mother of mankind, 341 b true way to be d., 355b

man

material

d.,

io27b Deck, boy

stood

on burning

d.,

57 3 b of cards hierarchies, ioiga

walk

yew

d. to d.

my Captain lies, my grave, 486a


to

7023
d.,

world
d.,

wants

to

be

d.,

i74b

307a court in beauty and d., 5713 degeneracy and d., 5g6b energies of system d., 8i3a fondest hope d., 54$a found its d., 4$?a
fretted the
3 68a

Deceiver, gay d., 4ggb man dupe d. decay, 56ga

Decked, 266a

bride-bed
d.

have

crown not

with diamonds,

man's d. never mine, 854b memory thou fond d., 447a


pleasure to deceive d., 35ga Deceivers, men were d. ever, 246a Deceives, everything that d. enchants, 94a

pygmy body
subject
all

to

d.,

human
is

things

to

d.,

36ga inherent in

things,

Sob

nature never d. us, 4363 with whispering ambitions, icoib

2i5b nightcap d. his brows, 447 a Decks, holystone d., 678a turtle 'twixt plated d., io52a Declamation, New World favorable to d., 8443 roared Passion slept, 426b Declaration, for support of this
d.,

47 ia

1266

INDEX
Declaration, I am for the D-, 4633 of Human Rights, g64a-b of Independence generalities,

Deepest
Deep and gloomy wood, 5oga as first love, 648b attention like d. harmony, 22 6b autumnal tone, 57oa beauty's but skin d., atggb
beauty's orient d., 327a

Deed, good 35 b

d. in

naughty world,
2g8a
d. to suffer,

good
79*

d. to say well,

5ia-b
sentiment in D. of Independence, 6373 Declare, day shall d. it, 523 death hate hell d., gi8a fishes shall d. unto thee, i5a heavens d. glory of God, i7a-b if thou hast understanding, i6a older men d. war, 931 a seen what she could not d., 5083
all d. for liberty, Decline of belief, 7833

him who has done


horrid
in
is

d. in every eye, s82b every d. of mischief, 466a d. really done for heaven,
d.,

makes no noise over good


i42b nameless

no
\>f

501 a evil d. live on, 7gia


d.,
d.,

we
to to

6sgb

dreadful note, 284b

put creed into

6o3b

accept end of man, loggb buy repentance, gga Declined election some years ago, 9 86b
into vale of years, 274b star of fate d., 55ga Declines and falls, &72b Declineth, shadow when it

both may be called d., 733 but dazzling darkness, s6ab calleth unto deep, iga caverns cool and d., 7iob clouds swag on the d., 48yb curses not loud but d., s86a damnation of his taking off, 282b danger on d., 588a
darkness upon face of the d., 5a dark-shining Pacific, gg4b dive into bottom of d., st$8b drew from boundless d., 6553

right d. wrong reason, ioo4b so I may do d., sygb unsung noblest d. will die, 8oa whereat valor will weep, 2goa without a name, 28sb word shadow of d., 88a matchless d. Deed's, achieved,

drop
felt

me

d.

fathoms down, 6g8a

calm so

from

d., 5123 d. to d. varies pace,

8g8b

d.,

aib

444b
Deeds, a god has given d. of war,

Declining, without d. west, 304b Decompose, not yet been able to

golden crown like a d. well, 228a


great d. to great d., 654a ground four thousand miles d.,
733*>

63b
bright gleam of noble d., 7gb die however nobly done, 2oob

474b Decomposing in eternity of print, 975*


d.,

done
evil
fail

in their clime, 5583


d. I

he discovered!

d.

Decoration, strip away useless d., 993 a Decorum, dulce et d. est, i2ib observances of paltry d., 5223 D6couvrir saint Pierre pour couvrir saint Paul, i84a Decoy, fashion's brightest arts d.,

do not
his

excused

prosper, 6sb devilish d., 345b

heart's core, 88oa

in words

and

d.,

664a

home is on the d., home on rolling d.,


in darkness a slim hand, 981 a in lowest d. lower d., 3453 in shady sadness, 5843 into darkness peering, 6433 lie d. buried, 773 maketh the d. boil like a pot,

foul d. will rise, 2583 fruitful of golden d., j44b

45oa Decoyed into our condition. Decreasing leg increasing 24 ib


Decree,
stately pleasure

gentle gentle that i68b

mind by
653b

dooth

gentle gentil

d.,

2oob
d.,

golden
87a

d.,

great d. wrought at great risks,

i6b

God and man dome

d.,
d.,

8543 523b

great
ill

d.

thoughts good d., 6793 doubled with evil word,

midnight lair made, 52oa moans round, 646b


natural

philosophy

d.

moral

temper leaps over cold d., 23 ib young blood not obey old d.,
2223.

2i8b
life is d. creativeness, 8gsa like poison weeds, 841 a little d. of kindness, 7igb

grave, 2ogb
d., ii7b 224b 2563 crept, on his front engraven, 343b one is of the d., 5163 places of the earth, 2ia potations pottle d., 273b rocked in cradle of d., 5543 shallow murmur but d. are

night not so

lies

upon the
a
well,

d. as
is

Decreed,
it

my own

soul

has

d.,

of night

live in d.

not years, 67ga

brood

me, 88 ga Sob childhood manhood and d. age,


age tied to like d. herons,

bodily d. wisdom, 884b Dedde, mie love ys d., 48aa Dedicate our lives and fortunes, 8423 we cannot d., 63ga Dedicated here to unfinished work, 6sga nation similarly d., io2ob nation so d., 6gga to babs, g45b to great task remaining, 6sga to proposition men equal, 63ga
Dedication, patriotism lifetime d., io48a-b were we men of d., io72b

3223 Decrepitude,

looks quite through d. of men, *53 b man of words not d., iog2a matter for virtuous d., 205b

means
i26b

to

do

ill d.,

237a
devilish
d.,

necessity

excused

dumb, igga
silence d.

noise of tongues

and

d.,

not

let

d.

belie

words,

644b i45b
i68b

skin

and white, 6g$b d., 2ggb smooth water where brook


!99 a
strikes,

d.,

pinions of great d., 477b privy to do gentil d., render the d. of mercy,

sound
strong

5563

234b

sager sort our d. reprove, 3ooa speaker of words and doer of d.,

6sb
thing that ends other d., 288b unlucky d. relate, 2y6b war and d. of carnage, 70 ib

spirits from vasty d., 23gb obscure and d., 7163 surmise pierces and scatters, 68 ib terms too d. for me, 766b

who aim

at great d. suffer, 108 a

must

Deduced, not

d.

from phenomena,
d.,

379 Dee, diddle we take it is lived on River D., 464a sands of D., 6gob Deed, attempt and not 28 3 b

776b

words are no d., 2g8a words are women d. men, 3253 words have longer life than d., 79 b
Deef, justice blind d.

gloom, 4773 though d. yet clear, 3573 thoughts too d. for tears, si4a too d. for his hearers, 4513 trenches in beauty's field, 2gib versed in books, g4ga very d. did rot O Christ, 5251 woods lovely dark d., g27b

thicket's

and dumb,

young man, 766b


Deep-contemplative,
fools

the d.,

8gob

so

d.,

better day better d., 3ijb better lowly d. done, Siga

Deem himself god or beast, 4o8b it not presumptuous folly, 76gb this which you d. of no moment, g6a

Deep -delved earth, 5823


Deepening
fidelity

with

friends,

by thought word and d., 61 a do a d. without God's knowledge, 7ga foul d. which she plotted, 66a

Deep and crisp and even, 687b and dark blue ocean, 557b and dreamless sleep, 755a

363* Deeper, eyes d. than depth, 731 a than plummet sound, 2g7b Deepest consequence, 281 a

1267

Deepest
Deepest feeling In silence, gg6b loathing to stomach, agoa rivers least sound, 199 a stream smoothest water d., igga thrill d. notes of woe, 494a Deeply, I d. sympathize, 746a music heard so d., ioo6b Deep-mouthed welcome, gGoa Deeps, distant d. or skies, 48ga far in yon azure d., 6s ib Deep-searched, not d. with saucy looks, 221 a Deer and antelope play, 8o8a
I

INDEX
Defend our island whatever
$2ia
ourselves and henroosts, ready to d. liberty, 5483 refuses to d. rights, 5oga
to death
cost,

Define
to d.

life in
is

a word, 675a
d.,

6843

to exclude, 9y8a Definition, difference escapes *7Q2b

your right

to say

it,

4i8a us thy humble servants, 6oa will d. what's mine, ig8a with their helps only d., si6a you from seasons, 27&b your departed friend, 371 a

of a philosopher, 742b of criticism, 7i3b of oats meant to vex, 42?b of style, s8ga of word liberty, 6$gb Definitions, I hate d., 61 la Deflower, age that will pride

d.,

Defended,

country

d.

by hands

2ooa Deflowered

and now

to

Death

was a stricken d., 4583 in Highlands a-chasing d.,

mice and such small d., poor d. thou makes t testament, 2470 running of the d., loggb stricken d. go weep, 26gb stricken d. that left herd, 45&a walk upon our mountains, gssa
Deever, hangin* Danny D., Syja Deface, no rude hand d., sub Defaced, by Time's fell hand d., sgab lost d. deflowered, g48a Defamed by every charlatan, 651 a Defauts, quelle ame sans d., Sgoa Defeat enemy in one battle, 4673 from folly to d., io8o m d. as great, io4ib in d. defiance, 92 5a in ourselves triumph and d., 624b is orphan, losga much wrested from sure d., ioo8b night this world's d., 36aa not interested in d., 6gga not victory nor d., 847a
preface to ioo8a
successors'

4g4b 2785

these d., 8545 Defender, Faith's D., 4i4b Defenders, no error fails to find
d., 749*> of old homes, 8g6a truth suffers by heat of d., gSob Defending not field but cause,

aba God abandoned

devote, 348a Defoe, sedulous ape to D., 8243 Defunct, Buffalo Bill's d., 10303 economist, 977a ghosts of d. bodies fly, 352a

Defy augury, 266b

man know

467*
Defense, as well for d. as repose, ig8a at one gate to make d., $4ga cheap d. of nations, 454a deaths glorious in thy d., sgga die in d. of his country, 6421 friend is strong d., 37b and reguilty of corruption

to d. opinion, 5035 the Omnipotent to arms, tooth of time, $g8b

Degeneracy and decay, 5


progress in d. rapid, 6

Degenerate into hands 56ob poor d. from ape, sons and daughters, 8g8a

mine,

nounce d., 207a he is my d., igb immodest words admit no 374b is in law and order, gsia
local d. important, looob millions for d. soib
(

Degenerates, extensive state 548b-54ga in hands of man, 4$6a

d.,

Degeneration, from barbarism to


d.,

d.. 786b Degradation not to overcome pov-

erty, 8o.b

of idea of liberty, io68b

Degrade
76421

first

the

arts,

4gob
d. of trades,
liveli-

navy its greatest d., 444b no adequate military d., g82b no d. against reproach, jg4b no d. like courtesy, 8g5b
not in armaments, gsia of our Liberty Tree, 466b provide for common d., 474a ready in d., 4533 vain to look for d. against lightning, 127 a Defenseless as thou wert, 57 ib
shield for d., 74ga Defensible, no d. frontier, io67b Defensive, d. to a house moat,

Degraded,

critic

most

Degrading
classes

victory,

refusal to accept d., gsgb through battle through d., 70 ib unkindness may d. my life, 2?6a victories worse than d., 68ga

well borne without d., 24ga Defeated, destroyed but not d.,

people, 6g5a beauty and high d., Degree, loogb curs of low d., 44&b exalted them of low d., 4sb law depends on differences of d.. 7 88a

anxiety hood, gs2a of white

about

no

best in kind

but

d.,

6233

10450
history to the d.,

only difference
priority

lies

in d., J77a

make

d.

io5gb empires good neigh-

226b
Defer, not d. kindness, 5$ia not to be wise, gg2a 'tis madness to d., $gga Deference, out of d. cheat others,

bors, g76b

principles never d., 6i6a Defect, cause of this d., chief d. of Henry King, of modern literature, 7iab pay in affliction or d., satire points at no d.,

place, 67b stand each in our d., 7&4a take but d. away, 267b unless d. preserved place not

and

26ob goaa
giob $goa

when

safe, i27b d. is snaked,

267b

go8a
Deferential glad to be of use, looia Deferred, hope d. maketh the heart sick, 24a Defiance, in defeat d., g25a in their eye, 44?b of my orders, g84a spirit of d., 7ogb to all forces of Crown, 426b Deficiency, easier discover d. than

Degrees, boil at different d., 6oga crime like virtue has d., 378b
estates d. and offices, 23$a grows up by d., $i6b habits by unseen d., s?2a ill one battle or by d., 467a scorning the base d., 254* set down to adversity by d.,

comes by Defective, effect d. cause, 26ob d. for all faith Defects, supplying,
1583

Defend, against side she would

d.,

book of moons

io8sb country against enemies, 8g5b dog foremost to d., 455b every village town city, 92 ib
ye,

d.

755 b then by gradual

d.,

go2a
d.,

from

all perils,

Sob

God

me

d. the right, 2i4b from friends, 5073 ministers of grace d. us, S5ga neighbor he promised to d.,

596* newspapers not d. if can help it, g6oa not ashamed to d. a friend, g8a of England on Rhine, 88ga

5o7b vengeance presume to d., 48gb Defiled his father's grave, i24b they that touch pitch d., 246b Defileth, not that which goeth into mouth d., 4$a that which cometh out of mouth d., 4$a Define, facts which d. U.S., iog8b hold good d. it well, 6sob how d. Christian Science, 7oga
Defile,

see value,

what wound heal but by


274a

things through all d., 5i2b

Dehumanizing Negro, 635b Dei, Agnus D., 593 Deified, by our own spirits
5iib

d.,

on passing world, 4*7 a Deity ever vindictively, 64$b D., everlastingly appointed by 6g8b Greeks give sea separate d.,
Deign
6 95 b

1268

INDEX
Deity offended, ib Dejected Mariana, sy most d. thing of fortune, 2792
d. his seat, Dejectedly, takes

Demand
Delighteth,
Delightful,

Delight, bright with d. though poor, 7 53 b capacity for d. and wonder,

whom
both

the king d. to

honor, 143
wise

both

d.,

843a
clothing of
d.,

yiaa
Delacroix, recipe for

486b

making

D.,

Delay, in d. no plenty, 25 ib in me is no d., 348b

7goa

infamous
law's d.,

sgga a6aa
d.,

d. of race, 7333 desire that outruns d., 773b d. to bark and bite, sg6a dogs enjoy d. with liberty, 201 a far upward and inward d., 6g6a followed d. with heart unsatisfied, i52b gave exceeding d. by his verse, gob give back lost d., 758a give d. and hurt not, 297a go to it with d., 288a Greensleeves my d., io84b hear thy shrill d., 57ob hell's d., 86ob

commonest

still

tadpole, 87ob in this d. garden grows, sooa air of d. studies, ssgb task rear tender thought, 4igb

human

ib preferable to error, 47 reproved each dull d., 449b sweet reluctant amorous d., 345 a

ugly as sin almost as d., 7ioa Delighting and instructing at the same time, i24b in your company, io84b O d. me, go6a Delights, all d. are vain, 221 a
all thoughts passions d., 5265 anarchy of poverty d. me, Q79b fleeting d. of days, 565^

Delayed 42gb

till

am

indifferent,

Delaying, by

d.

preserved state,

from heart of
ii4a

fountain, of d.,
d.

not hurrying not, 70 ib Delays breed dangers, aoab


disease

dangerous in war, 2020, 2i4a gained strength by d.,


i2ga

have dangerous ends, 2i4a admits not of d., 4323 life Delectable mountains, 366*3 not because troubles are d. joy,
1131

higher top of d., 6962 impulse of d., 88 ib in conceiving lago, $B$b in her strains, 54 ib in misfortunes of others, 45 ib in simple things, Syya in singing, 536b is in law of the Lord, i6b is in pursuit, 4133
labor

you vain joy d. in joy, 29 ib man d. not me, s6ia


all

hence

misery still d. to trace, 45gb reader and instructs too, scorn d., sgSb stylization d. minds, 3843
these d. if thou canst give, 3353 violent d. have violent ends,

Delenda

est

Carthago, io7a

we

d.

in

Deliberate, accustomed to d.

when

physics

pain,

were dolphin-like, 2893


winter his
d.,

283b
lady of my d., 8isa land of pure d., $g7a lo she that was world's d., 773b love with d. discourses, i5ga lulled with dances and d., 22gb lurks in all d., 8i2a moon of my d., 63ob my d. and thy d., 801 a my ever new d., s46a never d. in another's misfortune, i26a never too late for d., 542a no season such d. can bring,
319
of battle, 646b of husband aunts infant, looob on starboard of woe sure d.,

sooa

drunk, 86b

derangement of senses, 8sob shaping of things, 88sb


a speed, &56b, 1021 Deliberately, live d., 68sa as d. as read written, 6833 shield d. planned, 991 a Deliberates, woman that d. is lost,
393*>

Delineation, happiest d., Delinquents, beg d. for lif Delirious riot of religion, 776a Delirium, all that d. of brave,

88ia

New York thy name's D., 86ob Deliver, from winter plague Lord d. us, 30ob
good Lord
I will d.

d. us, 6ob,

iog8b

Deliberation fortitude ance, 444a


sat

persever-

and public
907b

care,

g43b

Deliberations, chose after endless


d.,

Deliberative forces over arbitrary, 8 3 2b Delicacy, all man has of d., 825a fortitude and d., 825a
Delicate, air
is d.,

282a

6g6a paint the

him to you, 44b from body of death, 513 from errors of wise, 3513 no human efforts d. them, 461 a round unvarnished tale d., 72b thee from the snare, 2ob us from evil, 4ob Deliverance, day of d., 46jb Delivered from perils and miser-

me me

meadows
d.,

with

d.,

ies,

3193

algae

and

sea

anemone, ioo6a

222b

upon
of

mellowing

of

occasion,

and

rare,

84ia

phantom
38b

5Ha
io37b
d.,
d.,

222a

creatures ours, 274b death, 7O2a fare in another's house,


fears,

playing plaything gives youth some born to sweet


space for d., 773a spirit of D., 572b
stars

Idiot's D.,

4oga 4gob

5iib

Lord is my d., i2b Delivering improvements by generation, 45gb Dell, every daisy in d., 8323
Deliverer,
heart-stifled in d., 5823 Deluding, vain d. Joys, 335b Deluge, after us the d., pedigree far as D., 661 a rain a d. showered, 4ggb Dluge, apres nous le d., 443!)

invisible web, looya

relationship of author to works,

843*
Delicate-filmed as new-spun
Delicately gelded, i03ob Delicious, low d. word
silk,

gave the first d., $$sb pure d., 9973 strongest tower of d., 6g7b studies a d. to the old, nob
stretches of

sweets

grown common

lose d.,

death,

7oib

moan,
torment, 6o6b
Deliciousness, eternal delight d., 6 9 6a Delight, aim of oratory to
all

and
d.,

love all liking

all

d.,

32ob

and deliciousness, 6g6a and wonder of our stage, sosb appetite makes eating d., 35ob
begins in d.

ends in wisdom,

293& temple of d., s84a that consumes desire, 77sb these virtues of d., 487a to d. paid blessing, gi4b to do things I ought, 5463 toys for your d., 824b unrest men miscall d., 572a weighing d. and dole, 2573 wept with d., 6goa what d. without Aphrodite, 68b ifrith silent d., 4873 Zeus grant sweet d., 7gb
Delighted spirit, 27 ib us long enough, 533b Delighteth, speech finely framed
d.,

Delusion, give
d., 453*>

up
of

liberties
d.,

under

pinning

down

g8ob

Solon was under a d., 94b to be paid before work, ig7a to the philanthropist, 754b trial by jury a d., 54ob Delusive, most d. of passions, 8 37 a

pinning down of delusion, g8ob


Delve, let other d. mystery, io66b Delved, Adam d., 10843 Delves parallels in beauty's brow,

bind another to its d., 48ga blue color d., 6g8b brief dreamy d., 88ob

Demand, superfluous
of day,

292b Delving in patient industry, 78sa to d. time

27b

12&9

Demanded
Demanded an
rebellion

INDEX
image, g88a
d.
zeal,

Demands, heavenly race

Democratic methods, g7aa nations not care for past, 61 6b


party ain't on speakin*
terms,

Dentals,

42oa makes upon us, io68b time like this d., 6gob Demarcations, ghostlier d., 9563 Demd damp moist unpleasant body, 66gb dowager's a d. outline, 66gb horrid grind, 66gb Demean themselves as good cit46 ib Demented with owning things,
izens,

8gob
party like mule, 4543 party remain liberal, 97a public men, 837 b society like ours, 9673 Democrats, afford a few D., io47a raises corn and D., Ssob Demon in my view, 64 ib when your d. in charge, 877

mumble omitting d., 7i8a Denunciation in place of evidence, giaa Deny, easier to believe than d., 77ob

me

thrice,

was no

d.,

44b 488a

participation of freedom, 453a heart would fain d., a6a

7oob Demesne, private pagus or d., io6ob Demeter, goddess D. or Earth, 853 Demi-Atlas of this earth, s87b
Demi-paradise, d., 226b
this

you have roused, 635^6363 Demon-lover, wailing for her d.,

53b
Demoniac frenzy, 3483 Demonic, semihuman and d., Demonisms, subtle d. of life, Demon's that is dreaming, Demons down under sea,
Demonstrandum,
936a 6g6b 6433 6443 half-tamed d. in breast, 8s3b

themselves nothing, 66oa thy father, 22$b us for our good, a87b Deo, gloria in excelsis D., 593 Decs fortiorbius adesse, i4oa ah she doth d., 4883 Depart,

poor

be

off,

nob

better to serve, 75 ib

other

Eden

captains

come
from

like
evil,

and kings shadows so


i8b

d.,

d.,

875b *&$>

Demirep that loves, 66sa Demise, biography morning after d., 678b Demitasses, villainous d., 8452 Demnition bowwows, 66gb Democracies, security to d. against despots, 479b weakness of d., gygb Democracy arises out of notion,
g8b
arsenal of d., g7sb attitude of mind, g^4b bludgeoning of people, 84ob boundaries of d. widened, 10143 characteristics of d., io45b charming form of government,

friends d., 587b

quod

erat

d.,

iosb Demonstrate, cannot d. an emotion, 77gb Demonstrating careless desolation, 2503 divine Principle, 7oga Demonstration, full monstrous d., 8oob Demonstrative or persuasive type,

Ibth to d., 387b

ready to d., 536b servant d. in peace, 46a this vale, gSob to be to do to d., 77gb to d. from evil is understanding, i5b

when
it,

old

he

will not d.

from

asb

goab
Demoralizing,

human

slavery

a.,

84ob oaa nothing so d. as money, Demosthenes first of orators, 4agb


or Cicero, 5O7a Demur you're dangerous, 735b Demure, sober steadfast and

when ye d. shake off dust, 423 he d., 5433 Departed, all but defend your d. friend, 3713 d. quantities, sggb of ghosts
glory
is

d.

from

Israel,

123

he has d. withdrawn gone away,

g4b
citizens of this d., io4ga

nob
d.,

constitution

named
io45b

d.,

8gb

his spirit

is

d.,

38b
country, 3gb

death of

d.,

direct self-government, 657b egg of d., 6gsa in d., 10450 equality and justice

3350 Demurrer, no bail no d., 481 a Den, beard lion in his d., 5igb cast Daniel into the d. of lions,
35 a
cockatrice' d., 3ia every lion from d., 3b living in underground d., made it a d. of thieves,

into their

own

mind me

o' d. joys,

4943

everybody but me, losob founded on dignity, io45b freedom and d. principles, lossb government of people, 657b
if d. loses

never to return, 494* rule over the d. dead, 66b sacred to d. spirit, isob souls d. shadows of living, 3313
took

man's

life

when he
from
d.

d.,

g4b
43 b

touch, 10153 if liberty and equality found in d., 9 8b in a republic, 8g5b


injustice
is

of wild things, go6a

seven sleepers' d., so4b Denial that men may be 10133 vain and coy excuse, 338a Denied, call may not be d.,
trary,

575 d. Departeth, heart Lord, 343 Departing, knolling

the

friend,

arbijudicial Department, duty 4850 fair sex your d., 8503 d. has arrived, Departure, hour of

leave behind us, 6aob of

d.,

makes

d.

necessary,

on trial, 8oga ism charge American d., g7ib d. possible, io24b justice makes means to end, ioi4b more unsafe than ever, 866b

exact day labor light no other was d., 7363 Peter d. Lord, io8ga the faith, 553
this only d. to

d.,

341 a

93 a
is

taken for misery, 36b


fleeting

Depend on
943^
of art
d.,

things,

49 8b

my

idea of d., 635b nature's busy d., 8993 neither despotism nor d., 4 passes into despotism, 953 pervading evil of d., 75oa d. gymnasium, 7 political

God, g2a

in marriage, Dependence mutual

Denies, court a mistress she d.

you, sosa

on

felt life,

7993

gaudy day spirit that always d., 478b voyager further sailing, 84b
57 a

heaven

to

ssSb

recurrent suspicion, io46b


self -canceling business,

Denieth, antichrist d. the Father,

577a
6i7a

day and Dependency, night, 9553 soul of us. Dependent, all d. every 837b
mortals
live d.

upon

militia, 461 a old d. of

shuts
still

past opens future,


trial,

Denmark, ne'er
Prince
of

villain in D., 2<5oa


left

upon

another.

upon

7gsb

true d. never existed, 435b

United States not proclaimed


d., 9173 whatever differs from

out, something rotten in D., sure it may be so in D,, Denominator, common d. of


d.
ress,

D.

52 ib

asgb a6oa
prog-

this

no

io63b

635 D world safe for d., 8423, 866b Democrat, no person called d., gi?b

Denoted foregone conclusion, 2753 Denouncing someone or some


sel

thing

else,

g6oa

Dens and
lay

fastnesses of

barbarism

d. as Nature Depends, happiness shows, 45&b so much d. upon, g7ga a Deploring, damsel lay d., 401 but not my Depose my state 2a8a griefs, Deposed, ghosts they have d., as7b some have been d., 227b

ngb

Democratic, basis of d. state, g8b

God, 6g6b

them down

in their d., aib

Deposit for 47 la

substantial

virtue,

127O

INDEX
Deposit
little cell by cell, 781 a Deposited, near this spot d., 5545 Depository of public interests,

Desire
from

Descended,

all

d.

immifrom
1373

grants, g78a

Deserve, Sempronius we'll d. 393 a

it,

Curtius Rufus seems d.


himself, g6a desirable to be

of truth, 364a safe d. of ultimate powers, 4735 Deposits of accumulated experience, 9353 Depravations of Europe, 3873 Depraved, no one becomes d. in moment, igga Depraves all good dispositions, 47ia

well

d.,

d. hanging, igia Deserved, least d. such a fate, gob less at country's Iiands, 7182

would

not

from a god, 54gb from heroic monkey, 6s8b


into hell, 6oa

so

mighty a Redeemer, 592

Depravity, perverse d. of nature, 3 8 3*>

of so many kings, 28ga Descending, angels ascending and d., 73, 48a angels twice d., 7343 black and white, 10755 like a dove, 3gb

Deserves, government it d.. 482b love and thanks, 466b none but brave d. fair, 3713 one good turn d. another, ijsb to be a slave, 5033

ggia Depressed, heart d. with cares,

within

classes,

4oib Deprive or divest posterity, 446a Deprived, melody d. of pitch, 999 a of everlasting bliss, 2133 poor man d. of power, g4b Depth, far beyond my d., 2g8b gods appprove d. not tumult, 5i6b height nor d., 513 in philosophy bringeth to religion, 2o8b of divine despair, 648b
to

low d. sun, icgoa Descends autumn evening, 7153 new generation d. from heaven, ii6b Descent, Americans of African d., 75*a claims of long d., 6453
if

73b Deserving, lost without d., like looking Design cathedral bank, iooga to make haste to be gone, 3283 Designed, great masterpiece d., 495 a to make people stumble, g8ob to operate on continuing basis,
9830
Designing Saint Paul's, 9343 Designs, close d. crooked counsels, 68a ladder to all high d., nature full of d., 7953

from heroic sires, 377 a of last end on living, 9682 to Hades is same, 8oa
d.

Describe undescribable, 5572 Descried, scarce leagues apart d.,

were

strictly

688b
Description, beggared all d., sSyb of nature, 9843 short d. of happy state, 3733 Descriptions of the fairest wights,

Desirable,

more
Desire,

d.

honorable. little folly d., 1912 than fortunate hour.

weep make
2isb
lies

less

d. of grief,

truth i6a

in the d., 88a


d.,

walked in the search of the


Depths, cannot fathom their

d.,

8o6b

Dese are conditions dat prevail, io26b Desert, Arab in d., 43ob heath in the d., 34a Hohokaros on Arizona d., io77b

1153 a' the learning I d.. 4933 accomplished is sweet, 242 antidote to d., 3923 arrows of d., 4gob

down
d.,

to d. of sea,

Germans and women have no


8o6b
the d., sib

7iia

hunt

for a d. isle, io6ga in service, 26ga

beginning of d., g56b beholding face of d., 8433 believe that which they d., sfyb blind d., 7733 bloom of young D., 44 ib
changes, go8a

inaccessible,

248b

again to of height, 103 ib

go down

of the ocean, 5013 out of the d. have I cried, asb pellucid in azure d., 7osb

legs of stone in d., 5683 make a d. call it peace, i4ob make straight in the d. a high-

Deputed sword, 27ob Deputies, not d. but

way, 32b make world d., io48b mice d. building about to


133* my dwelling place, 557b never d. Mr. Micawber,
of a thousand lines, 4123 of the sea,

fall,

despoilers,

dead be near us, 6503 death end of man's d., 7753 delight that consumes d., 77 gb dispraise thing you d., 2693 drink provokes d., s8$b father's death, 7o8b flaming some old d., 10405 from fairest creatures d. increase, 291 a gratified plants fruits, 488b hast given him his heart's

507D Derangement, immense d. of senses, 8gob nice d. of epitaphs, 48ob of all senses, 8sob Derby, Justice Bennet of D., 3643 Dereglement de tous les sens, 8sob
Derides,

67 ib

d.,

|ib

i7b
heart's d., 6313, 88oa his d. is toward me, 303 in fair d. joy renew, 801 a in it was love and d.,

rats d. sinking ship, 1333

sagebrush

d.,

g4oa

shall rejoice, 323

shame them
d.,

d.,

2773

wrinkled Care

d., 773a Derision, time turns old days to d., 773b

334b clothed with

sighs in bed, io5gb these gardens of d., 574b until d. knows water grows,

643

kindle soft

d.,

37 ib
to d.,

know what he ought

uglification

Derive

from

and d., 744b women's eyes

this

doctrine, 222a Derives axioms from particulars, 207a Deriving just powers from consent,

73 8a use every man after d., 26 ib waste sweetness on d. air, 44ob water but the d., 5573 where no life found, 59 ib wildernesses, 3g6b you for creeds that refuse, 77 3b Deserted at his utmost need, 37 ib

is8b lineaments of gratified d., 488b liveth not in fierce d., 5i8b love and d. and hate, 8goa love distills d., 84b men by nature d. knowledge,
97t>

men

d. the good,

g8a

47ob

banquet
Desertion,

hall d.,

542b

sight better business, 778b Dervishes, barefoot d., 6o3b Descant, amorous d. sung, 345b and yet again d., 884b Descartes, seen further than D.,
379t>

Derned

storm d. death, 5873 Desert's dusty face, 62gb Deserts, beyond this nothing but

mixing memory and d., looaa more love and knowledge, 2473 my d. is that the Almighty answer me, i6a nature of d. not to be satisfied,

sandy

d.,

1363

Descend, ready to d. throne, to meet, 6o6b we d. from Jove, ngb we too in dust d., 6303

5045

d. bloom, io48b of vast eternity, 36oa or his d. are small, 35gb

make

no more * d.

98a

rose, 221 a
d.,

when
Deserve
d.,
if

she
all

d.

the

night,
kittens,

these

34ga 9463
to

not mortal what you of discipline, 373 of fame, 6535

iz8b

better of

Descendants, democracy hides

God punish men according

mankind, g8gb

6i7a
shall gather

your

fruits,

ii6b

what they d., 149 a neither liberty nor safety, 422b

of knowledge increases, of moth for star, 57 2b of power in excess, 2o8b outlive performance, 2423

4$7b

perpetual rack, 3iob

1271

desire
)esire,

INDEX
d.,

prayer soul's sincere 5183

Desirous, aught else on earth d.,

4oib
Desist,
I

pure and just d. of man, 1783 remold it nearer to d., 6313


satisfies!

shall

ask
to

leave

to

d.,

the d. of every living


d.,

33*a Desk, but a d.

write

upon,

Desperate seas long wont to roam, 64 ib slave to d. men, joSa tempt not d. man, 225b the joy, 551 a wisdom not to do d. things,

thing, 233

second silence of

624b

shall fail, sga sick with d., 8833 so hillmen d. hills,

8763

that outruns delight, 773b those who d. slavery, 64ob to a bottle of hay, 2$oa
to appear natural, 356b to be immortal, 6576 to be irresistibly desired, 9303 to get on in world, 9973 to live again, 8o6a to
live

student glued to d., 72 la turn upward from d., ioo2b Desolate amid sad forest, 61 gb and sick of old passion, 8goa dark weeks, 97gb

682b
Desperately, deceitful

and

d.

wicked, 34b Desperation, our policy against

d.,

home

of mirth

made

d.,

6i3b

no one
shores,

indefinitely d., 87&b so d., 62 ib

passions aching hours, 8933

57gb which built d. places, i4b windswept space, 764b


winter's

beyond

income,

7562

dregs

made

d.,

7&3b

to think well of oneself. ioo7b train noble natures not to d.

more, g8a

under the elms, 1009 a unspeakable d., 7123 vanquished by d., 69 b

we may be
2495

better

strangers,
d.,

what I've tasted of what we ought not

9273
have,

to

i26b which of us has his d,, 66oa with dead d. not die, 5i8b without hope we live in d.,

without knowledge or d., 73b wonder and wild d., 667a yearning in d., 646b Desired and timely things, 8543 irresistibly d., ggoa more to be d. than gold, i7b not one to be d., 6453

without you all is d., loiob Desolation, abomination of d., 443 and dim night, 6423 blood vengeance d., ?osa butchery and d., g22b careless d., 2503 dark cold and empty d., ioo6a intellectual d., 687a seat of d. void of light, 3423 to d., 588b Despair, almost about begotten by d., 3603 beyond hope and d., loo^b carrion comfort d., 8o3b comfort and d., 294b comfortless D., 43gb divine d., 648b Doubt brother devil to D., 8o6b

quiet d., 682a Despicable, wretched d. creature, 42ob heart thou wilt Despise, a contrite not d., igb capacity to d. himself, 86yb hold to one d. other, 413 is6b ignorant d. education, not thy mother, 26a and d. him, 66gb pity what female heart gold d., 43gb Despised and dying king, 5703 and rejected of men, 333 being unarmed be d., 1773 day of small things, g6a poor infirm d. old man, 2783 race, 7523 straight, 2g4b thus the poor agent d., 2ogb husband frae wife d.,
Despises,

495

pinch which hurts and 2893 that which most d., s83b who hath d, sea, 876a
Desires

is

d.,

and Adorations, 57 ib and dreams and powers, 7753 and petitions of thy servants, 6ob be for what is good, 72a cold when he d., 3b
covetous d. of the world, 61 a each of us d. worth, ig8a equally without d., loia

dying and in d., 732b endure my own d., 3873 fiercer by d., 343a from d. high uplifted, 3433 Giant D., 365b rives comfort in d., 2i4b hell's d., 48ga German people d., ioi2b if infinite wrath and d,, 345a law chance hath slain, 3 mournful lean D., 486a my ending is d., 2g7b my only hope lies in d., 3783 never d., i2ob

almost d,, 29 2 a Despising, myself Despite, heaven's d., 48ga which d. use Despitefully, them you, 400 not deputies but d., Despoilers,

Despond, slough was D., j65b Despondency and madness, 5123, io7sb d. at Despondently, sprouting
gates, 100 ib

5<>7b

Desponding view of present, 5g6b d., Despot, country governed by 432b and d. slave, once man 5693
Despotism,
cloud
of

barbarism

and

d.,

473b

degenerates into d., 5493

no

man

of

peace

d.,

io

of Pygmalion, gi5b racked with deep d.,

34a

grant 6 5b have few

all

things your heart d.


d.,

rash-embraced d., 233b replace d. with opportunity,


10643
reveals

democracy passes into d., 953 feeble engines of d., 473b neither d. nor democracy, 4853 never led to d., 997b sea

power

74a heart's d. be with you, 247 Z heat when he d., sb liberty doing what one d., 6igb limited nature infinite d., 565!
love that so d., 73ob mastery of d., 8o5b

own

folly

and

d.,

10393

seeds of d. at doors, 6$6a to liberty in featherbed, where d. taken pure, 6353


d.,

47 lb

seraphs might d., 555a shall I wasting in d.,

shame

d.

her

teachers,

3183 6i4a

no calamity
d.,

greater than lavish

387 b twin-born of devotion, 77 3b warder is D., 8413 where d, let me sow hope, 1573 white sustenance d., 7g6b
toils d. to reach,

47gb Despots, security against Dessert without cheese, 484b Destined, his d. hour, 62gb Destinies, veiled D., 57 ib
his d., io56b Destiny, chosen cloud of mortal d., 71 ib day of d. is over, ssga exercises influence, 8o4b

74b

to d., 964! painting gives form priest d. philosopher d., 956! with in falls d., 8341 religion

ye mighty and d., s68b you with unpaid bill D., 57sa
Despairful,
dissolute

follow ideals reach d., 733a hanging and wiving go by

d.,

damned

d.

i8sb
heavenly
d.,

93*b
Despairing songs loveliest, 6573 Despairs, leaden-eyed d., 582!) comfortless d., aoia

5133
io58b

reviving old d., 6293 sinful d. of the flesh, 6ia

man

manifest

forges for himself, d., 6763, 6853

submitting things to d. o mind, 207a undaunted daughter of d., 354 unto whom all d. known, 6o1 weaned heart from low d., 178 weight of chance d., 5i4b Desireth not death of sinner, Desiring this man's art, 2g2a

through Desperandum, nil d., i2ob of d. steps Desperate, beware 459 s by constant infelicity, 356b
-

by d. appliance relieved, 264^ diseases d. grown, 264b marriage a d. thing, 3173

man's guiding d., 7?b not by material computation, g22b obscure, 44oa of New England, 10383 one country one d., 5483
reap a d., noob rendezvous with d., 97ib

1272

INDEX
Destiny, repose not d. of 7 87 a shady leaves of d., 3543 waits alike, 7ga

Devil
Devastation, slaughter pillage d.,

man,

Destruction, give enemies means


of our
d.,

76b
Develop,

wedding
with
Destitute

is d.,

i8sb

hell of nuclear d., loSzb I will be thy d., 35 b if d. be our lot, 6353

men

free to d. faculties,

men
of

for pieces plays,

emotional
vice d.

6305 warmth,
virtue,

means of
98*b

d. hitherto

unknown,

794*
Destroy,

abolish

evil

blade of grass, gi7b does thy life d., 48ga they set out to d., loiia fib or sophistry, 4iob for one grape vine d., ssoa free world, 10563 natural resources, 8483 nor sword nor age d., isga not come to d. law, 403 not to d. but fulfill, 4oa

of life and happiness, 472^4733 of natural integrity, loib of Nazi tyranny, g74b of tea so bold, 4626 of world not dreadful, 62 9 a pride goeth before d., 2*b

saving
set

world

from

d.,

10583

him apart

shows
6323
that

for d., 3733 authorities, activity of

wasteth at noonday, their going seemed utter d., thou turnest man to d.,

to d. is murder, sg8b power of reasoning, 953 power to tax not power to d., 7 88b power to tax power to d., 48sb

one

way

universe meets own d., that leadeth to d.,


is d.,

aob s6b 203 g64b 41 b

whose end

54b

word

deals d., 8433

sought to d. institutions, 701 a surely not in wrath d., 6*3ob they shall not hurt nor d., 313 thought would d. paradise, 439 b

world peace or world d., goia Destruction's, out of d. reach,


78 ib Destructions, rescue my soul from their d., i8b Destructive damnable woman,

Development, great unital continuous d., 752b in language d. in feeling, 10075 psychic d. of individual, Sggb uninterrupted d. of man* 8953 Develops and enlarges organ, 4753 De Vere hast thou no tear, 6423 Deviates, Shadwell never d. into sense, 3693 Deviation from truth is multiplied, 97b Device, banner with strange d., 62ib miracle of rare d., 5243 no work nor d. nor knowledge, 28b that is our d., sg8b Devil, abashed the D. stood, 3463 an angel too, 86gb spology for D., 756b a-walking the D. is gone, 5333 became woman, sg8b beggar will outride the D., aisb
bird or d., 6433 black as the d., 4835 brother d. to Despair, 8o6b builds a ch3pel there, 3853 can cite Scripture, 2323 come and Faustus damned,

whom God

wishes

to

d.,

86a

33b
smiling d. man, 3845 Desuetude, innocuous d., 7713
Detail, feel forces behind d., finding what d. to do without,

winged

life d.,

488b

d. this body, i5b Destroyed, brain d. by thought,

worms

456a but not defeated, io45b by each other, 3833 by madness, 1081 b Carthage must be d., io7a
flower of kings and knights
d.,

2isb
counteracts

94oa
frittered

D.

who

is

Death,

away by
it

d.,

6833
d.,

444b

Detect, lose

in

moment you

damn

thee black, 2863

4063
Detection, traitors esc3pe d., 9123 Detective, nothing but d. stories,

i75b
if

eat with

men

are

d.,

Sob

enemy d. is death, 533 love without power d,, io24b nations are d. or flourish,
last

999 b Deter him

Deteriorating,

from portrait, giob shabby equipment

4913 poetry painting music d., 49 la the very ruins d., i34b things violently d., 5113 were Tao and virtue not d., loib when once d., 4493

d., 10055 Determinate, every thing has d. idea, 953 Determination enough in mighty

enterprises, i27b esprit de corps and d., gsgb for better world, 8633 Determine, education will d. fu-

did grin, 526b drink and d. had done, 8233 d. hsve long spoon, 1693 enters prompter's box, 9333 envy of the d., 36b every man God or D., g68b fears a painted d., aSgb from d. does proceed, 4843 from deceits of the d., 6ob give d. his due, 1943

go poor

d.,

437b

God 3nd d. fighting, 7083 God sends meat D. sends cooks*


1833

women

d.

Destroyer

by subtleties, 73ob and preserver hear,

ture

life,

men

d.

943 gods dispose, 31 ib

had

final say,

io6gb

56gb death d. of worlds, io55a


is my d., io7oa Destroying, fighting

still

still

d.

37ib

people seldom d. right, 4853 Determined dared and done, 444b so long d. not to do it, 373b to know beans, 68$b Determinism, history abhors d.,

half d. h3lf child, 8755

hath not arrow, 5623 having trouble with wife, 835b


he's 3 very d., 2533 how the d. they got there, 41 ob if the d, dress her not, 2893

mankind worth d., 56ib not by d. but promoting, 453b


Destroys good book kills reason,

34oa outrage

when man
township

d. in

nature,
sleep,

logSb Deterrent of massive retaliatory power, looob Detest a siesta, 10433 begin to d. him, 109 ib
I d.

94ib
peaceful

whst you

write, 41 8b

a gentlenwn, 278b asleep, 8350 is ever God's 3pe, i7gb Jim h3ving seen d., 76ia knows how to row, 525b
is
is

g8ob
saliva d. serpents, igab

offender d. offense, pageantry of king, logib


love

3723

use d. beauty, Syoa Destruction, all other to d. draw,

and barbarism victors, g7gb brought her dowry d., 78^ causes of d., 435b
creation
flight
fool's

same

perh3ps

as d., to d.,

1013

7o8b

mouth is his d., for d. ice suffice, 9273 forces of nuclesr d., io74b

8563 Sabbath day, 76ib first husband, Sjgb Jim d. it, 9023 Dethroned bereft of reason, 6053 Detract, power to add or d., 6393 Detraction will not suffer it, 24ob Deuce of clubs pinned to bark, 76gb Deus ex machina, io2b
Detested
vult, i5ob

phrases I d.,

the d. wear bl3ck, us call thee d., 273b looks less terrible, 8203 love a mischievous devil, man for himself d. for all, match for d., 10423 must be in little jackdaw,
let
let

2633

756b i8sb
5543

Nazarite conjured the d., 2323 needs go whom d. drive, 1853

Deutschland uber

alles,

5&gb

God if d. bid, 2723 old serpent cslled the D., 583 ole d. sea, 10093 renounce the d., 61 3 resist the d., 56b
not serve

1273

Devil
Devil, sarcasm language of d.,

INDEX
Devotion, unthinking
ganization, gi5b
d.,

d. to or-

57 6a-b

seem saint when most play


2i7a

Devotion's visage, 26 ib Devotions, hide d. under indiffer-

showed him kingdoms, 460 speak truth and shame D.,


sugar o'er d. himself, 26ib take her, 3503 take the hindmost, 3166 thou wast made d., ^iga
to pay, , igsb

181 b

Devour entire

soa army, 92 ib jaws of darkness do d. it, 228b whom he may d., 573 seeking
hostile

ence, 934b beheld your

d.,

Dhrink, is d. necessary evil, 8g2b Dhry, wet eye d. heart, 8gia Diable, noir comme le d., 48gb que d. allait-il fa ire dans cette gal ere, 36 ib Diabolical, tree of d. knowledge, 5 48ob Diadem, caught without d., 73;b of snow, 55gb

walketh abo about as roaring lion, 57* what the d. was he doing in that galley, 361 b whispered behind leaves, 8y3b why d. have all good tunes,
475 a
wi'

we d. ourselves, gg6b which d. widows' houses, 45b Devoured, great ones d. the small, 2gob
Devourer, time d. of i2ga Devouring, cormorant 22ia
all

Diadems and
Diagrams,
Dial,

fagots,

6o^b
of
d.

midst equations, gsoa


in

and

drew

d.

from

his poke,

things,

2483
finger that turns the d., 9852 laugh an hour by his d., 248b not figures on d., 67ga true as d. to sun, 353b Dialect, Babylonish d., 352a my Bay State d., 6g2a purify d. of tribe, ioo6b Dialogue, wooden d. and sound,

d.

Time,

green azures, Ssgb


of

usquebae face the d., 495b would build chapel, i7gb

weak by

strong, 7o6a

Devours,

animal

which

d.

own

your father the d., 48b Devil-and-all to pay, ig5b Devildoms of Spain, 6$4b Devilish and damned tobacco, giib excused his
sly,

d. deeds,
is d.,

345b

things, io23b Devoutly to be wished, 26ib Dew, as sun the morning d., 372b begotten drops of d., i6a bespangling herb and tree, 32ob

kind, 471 a death d. lovely

268a
Dial's,

many
signs

lines

in

d.

center,

243a
Dials
of

leaping

houses,

671 a

this

wisdom

56b

Devilment, midst of so much d., gosa Devil's, got over D. back, 3i3b had final say, io6gb leavings, 4133 madness war, g33a true poet and of d. party, 487b who cleft the D. foot, 3o4b
Devils, as

626b 7s6b debauchee of d., 735a fades like morning d., io88b fearfully o'ertrip the d., 2353
cool d. in little bill, daffodil doth of d.,

237b

Diamond
8043

cut diamond, 3i7b


d.
is

immortal

immortal

d.,

ghastly d., 647a

in the sky, 546a lacks glitter of d.,


lasts forever,

ggab

gold and bramble d., 824& honey-heavy d. of slumber, 254


into a sea of d., 82ob
like d.

D. thou little knowest the mischief done, 3803 point of a d., 34a

io27a

many

d. in

Worms

as

on mountain, 5203

rough

d.,

4i5b

tiles, i8oa being offended, 273a fight like d., 244a heart place d. dwell in, 33oa in twists of road, goga Lord transformed them to

liquid d. of youth, 258b

meet morning d., 7i4a night one blue d., io67a no d. on daisies and

clover,

74*
d.,

5865 458b Diamonds, crown not decked with d., 2i5b see sky all d., 8 5 8b
Dian, Temple of D., no2b Diana, burned temple of D.,
33 ia of the Ephesians, 503

sixty d. minutes, spots of d. form,

i$2a

than hell hold, 2 gob more seven and seventy d., goga to ourselves, s6ga wrote at liberty when of d.,
d.

not think we D., 7gia of thy birth, 2ooa of yon high eastern hill, 2573 of youth, aib, 258b on face of dead, 7282 pour sweet d. on his tongue, 673

48?b
Devils',

one

more

d.

triumph.

662b
Devise, for thirty pence
d.,

my

death

32b

laws for blood, 23 ib wit write pen, 22 ib Devised to keep strong in awe, 2i8a who d. torment, ioo7a Deviseth, man's heart d. his way,

24b Devoid of sense and motion, 34gb Devon, if Dons sight D., 8&5a Devote himself to life, Q3ga not to Death d., 3483 Devoting himself to duty, 363a Devotion, affecting charity and
loia despair twin-born of
d.,
d.,

and rain, 32^ thaw and resolve into a d., *57b d. of sleep, 345b timely vale which d. cumbers, 784b was on the lawn, 974b will rust them, 72b womb of morning d., sooa Dewdrop, lingering d., 5i7b on perilous way, $7gb starlight and d., 7282 woman like a d., 66ib Dewdrops gathered in brickyard,
smell d.

Diana's foresters, 2$7b Dian's, hangs on D. temple, 2902 Diapason closing full in Man, 37oa Diary, never travel without d., 84oa of superfluous man, 68yb Dice, God plays d. with world.

g5ob
Hercules and Lichas play at
d.,

human
Dicers',

232b

bones, 5633 never abolish chance, 797a


false

as

d.

oaths,

2643
nail.

864a seek some d. here, 22ga with showers and d. wet, 73gb

Dick the shepherd blows his 222b


Dickens,

Dewey
Dews,

feel

discouraged, 791 a
d.,

was the morning, 791 a


Dew-pearled, hillside's

66 ib

773b
d.,

fresh

d.

of

night,

338a

farewell

my book and my

i65b me man capable of d., 77oa ignorance mother of d., 3iaa increased 'd. to cause, 63ga last full measure of d., 6sga no concern with art, 754b of patriot soldier, 75sa
give

of evening shun, 4i6a of summer nights, 4&4a silence fall like d., ggoa Dewy, from noon to d. eve, 3432 morn to d. night, 75ga shakes his d. wings, 33a

what the d. his name is, 267a Dickon thy master bought and sold, 2oob Dick's, Dirty D., io6oa Dickybird why do you sit, 768b Dictate of common sense, 42ob terms between old and new world, 4853
what direction work must
io28a
Dictates of conscience, 4655 of the heart, 4g8a Dictator, German d., g2ob Dictators ride on tigers, g2oa Dictatorship as absolute as
other, g72b
take,

William

D.

Tranter

Reuben,

Dewy-feathered sleep, 336a


Dexterous,
acute
inquisitive
d.,

sweet look of
to

d.,

781 a

any

something afar, 572b

453*

1274

INDEX
Dictatorship of
Party, 9575

Die
Die, in what peace a Christian can d., 3953 in yon rich sky, 648b
is cast,

Communist

Die,

of proletariat, 88ga perpetuated as autocracy, 10555 proletarian d., go$b Soviet Union run by d., gyab Dictatorships grow out of weak
Dictionaries and temporary

governments, 9723

poems, 427b
are like watches, 4293 writer of d., 427b
Dictionary, English d. best reading, gi6a

not grammar, 5g8a Did, danced his d., 103 ib it for the best, 8563 Lucrece swears he d. her wrong,

cooped we live and d., 63ob cowards d. many times, 54b curse God and d., 143 daily, gsoa dare to d., 4ogb dead live the living d., 3703 dead so long as refuse to d., 7 23b dead which d. in the Lord, 58b dear d., 6oia dear I d., gosb death thou shalt d., 3083 deeds d. however nobly done, 2oob do or d., 3130, 4g6a down over feet humbly, g6ga dry death, 2963
easy live quiet d., 52 la

iisb

jealousy not d. with love, 3563 joys will d., io86b

king
lads
lest

tomorrow
that
d.

shall

d.,

in

glory,

s8a 8533

we

d.,

ga

let friendship d., 4335 let in tavern d., i54b let us d. like men, 6275

me

let us

like live
live live live live

do or d., 4g6a Douglas d., 4453 and d. all I have to do,


d. for idea, 86 ib d. in Aristotle's works,

4iia

and and

22ob till we loved, 3043 Diddle diddle, iog4a diddle dumpling, iog6b we take it is dee, 7y6b Didn't, sang his d., 103 ib Dido with willow in her hand,

energies and hopes not d., 78sb ere she shall grieve, 3i8b ere their story d., 7&4b excellence is nobly to d., 7ob

2133

and d. in Dixie, 6y8b and d. wi Charlie,


f

live in hearts

face man might d. for, 666b fated not to d., 37oa fighting in defense of his country,

Die a'bachelor, 2463 achieving nothing then


all

64a

not d., 5383 live like a wretch and d. rich, 3iob live through time or d. suicide, 6352 lives on hope d. fasting, 4223

d.,

7i5b

die merrily, 24oa

all shall d., all

2423

that live

must
go

d.,

2573

Americans

d.

to Paris,

Sjgb

and endow college, 4073 and go we know not where,


2?ia

for friends or fatherland, i22b for love, 26gb for such a long time, g6ob for the people, 4ga for truth ought to d., 6043 frogs do not d. in sport,

know they shall d., 28b look about us and to d., 4<>7b love her till I d., io86a love like ours never d., 871!)
living

love

me

sure to d., 543a

io4b

and

rise

the same, 3053

8235 go since I needs must


gladly
d.,

d.,

igga

no sorrow to d., 94 3b and d., loiob lucky to d. and I know it, 7003 man can d. but once, 2426
loved
life

lovely things fade

anything
appetite

but
sicken

d.

for

tobacco,
d.,

good good

d.

early

bad

late,

$B$b
d.,

men

d. fast

enough, 38 3a
d.,
d.,

d. first,

and
as

251 a
d.,

greatly

5i6a think or
sinks

more deaths than one must


bravely

as cattle, loaSb as much beauty

4o6a
could
gross
flesh

8413 mortal or immortal here


6g6a

here

to

d.,

33 a
fathers died, 7743 soon as born begin to igib at height of career, 9223
as as

my

228b Guards
d.,

music when
d. never surrender,

soft voices d., 57 2b


d.,

5083

hang there till tree d., 291 a happy people d. whole, gg4b
hazard of the hearken ere I
d.,

must d. at last, gosb names not born to


never

know
so

$&
d.,

2i8a
6453

no one
i76b

life till d., 667b young he cannot

at the top, 391 a be ashamed to d., s86b

d.,

heart-stifled in dell, 5823

no young man

believes he shall

monk d., 95 ib beauty crowds till I d., 738b Beauty lives though lilies d., g8oa beauty that must d., 5843 beauty's rose never d., 291 a because a woman's fair, 3183
beast and

heavenly days that cannot d., 5iob here in rage, 3goa honorable to d. for one's country, 12

ib

how how

before grow old and d., 881 a before I wake, io8gb before our own eyes, 8i6b before they come to d., gi7b before we laugh, 38 ib begins to d. from birth, 4g5b being born to d., 2ioa
better start to d., losgb better to suffer than d.,

man d. better, to d. harder lesson, I sick I must d., I d. but have possessed, I d. hard, 46 ib
can

am

5962 i8gb 3oob 558a

d., 54oa nobly to d., 8ia not know when to d., 8403 not poor death, 3083 not quickened it d., 533 except not willingly let it d., 33gb of nothing but rage to live, 4o6b

I shall not wholly d., i22b I to d. and you to live, g$a. I will show you how to d., i8gb
if I
if I

of of of of

must
it

d.,

271 a

should

d.,

994a
to
d.,

remedies, 3623 rose in aromatic pain, 4oSa that roar, 6goa thirst at fountainside, io8oa oh do not d., 305 b oh might it d. or rest, 57ob old soldiers never d., 9593,

35ga

if

were

now
shall

273b
153

11033

books never d., g7jjb born but to d., 4o8b born in bed in bed we d., 35ia break faith with us who d., gi2b broke d. in molding Sheridan, 559* but once to d., 32 ib but once to serve country, 3ggb by famine die by inches, 3863 by feigned deaths to d., 3055 change but cannot d., 57ob Christs that d., 8s8b
clasp

d. if millions
if
.

man

he

live,

born millions must

if

if

d.,995* they cannot conquer, 7238 you poison us do we not d.,

them because

they

d.,

in in in in in in in in

Adam

all d.,

533

bed, 8iob, ggab

2873 only art is to d., 448b or let me d., 51 ib or rest at last, 5700 Owen why did you d.,

on feet not live on on feet than live on on gallows or of on mine own sword,

knees, g733 knees, 9433

pox,

4473

67 6b

evening without regret, 7ib last dike, 454a lowly pomp ride to d., 5663 music, gsb the last ditch, 3833
this faith I will live

pale in mist seem to d., loiob pattern to live and d., 66ab perceives it d. sway, 5isb pie in sky when you d., nogb
poets d. of loneliness, 88sb praise that will never d., goa

and

d.,

7igb

i7ia

pray as

if

to d. tomorrow, 4223

1275

Die
Die proudly, 86oa regret can d., 65ob

INDEX
Die without visiting one another,
that break it d., g3b wolf t world a place to d. in, 33ob Xerxes did d., io8ga ye shall d. like men, zoa youth fight and d., 931 a Died as one studied in death, 28ib as soldier for his country, 8653 before bodies d., io6ob before god of love born, 3o6b

Died, would i2b

had

d.

for thee,

remember

that we d. all, 37b resolve to conquer or d., 4613 reverences age d. with it, 5763
rich,
root,

would we had

d. in the land of

432b
d.,

Egypt, 8b you who would have d., io78b youngest critic d., 872b
zealous locksmith d.,
inibus, io8b carpe d., 12 la

hog or d., 10473 rose with maize to


sail until I d.,

no4b
horn-

io4jb

Diem adimere aegritudinem


Dies, above all man who d., after many a summer d., all that was theirs d., B^b

646b

saw spider d., io75a seem though I d. old, 884b seems rich to d., 5&2b seldom d. in bed, 8iob shall never d., 4ga shall Trelawny d., 6ioa sink or swim live or d., 546b soil good to d. for, 6943 some will d., gg6b speeches by hour d. by hour,
spirit d. of

86gb 652b

Booth d. blind, 952b came three thousand miles 6gsb courage with which men
David
d. full of days, 143
d.,

d., d.,

among

worshippers, 574b an honest fellow, 3i2b


as when a giant d., at the opening day,

2713 ggya

begotten born and

d.,

88ab
lives,

inanition, 71 gb
d.,

swanlike sing and

5613
462b-

swim or sink
4633

live or d.,
d.,

87 ib die as my fathers d., 774a dog it was that d., 448b far away before his time, 8653 for beauty, 7363 for this Fitzgerald d., 88 la

deaths ye

bird of wonder d., 2ggb body d. body's beauty

955h
cackles groans and d., 573b cry not when father d. f 42ga

enshrine her and she d., ggoa


ere he knows it, 664b fling stone giant d., 4i8b

Tamburlaine must
taught us

2123

how

to d.,

4oob

gloriously on field, 64oa had I d. hour before,

2843

teach men to d., i8gb teach us how to d. f 557 a

had no poet and d., 4i*b he that d. o' Wednesday, 24ob


I d.

me I must d., 57 ga the death of the righteous, loa theirs but to do d., 6523 there smothered, g8sb
tells

young,

105 a

he d. and makes no sign, 2i5a he that d. pays all debts, 2973 hurrah for next that d., 7203
if

if

I only d. last night, ?64b only gladiators d., g4ga

tree d.

plant another, 4253

they seemed to
thus d. time to
to d.
to d.
is

s6b thou shalt surely d., 5b


d.,
still

searching, 8ggb

d., 27b debt we must discharge,

32 ib
is gain, 543, 933 to d. to sleep, 26 ib to itself it live and d., to leave to d. a little, to make men free, 6gob to part is to d. a little, to save charges, 3iob toddle home d. in bed, too scanty to d. for you, trust that when we d.,

in in in in in in in

bed, 753b
bitter pains, boots like

74 ib
pioneer,
d.,

in single blessedness, 228b in your fragrant bosom d., 3273 kicks the dust, 68 2 b

1041 a

harness, g24a

hollow

murmurs
2i8b

44gb

light d. before thy word, 4143 light d. with dying sun, 826a like a dog, 626b

virtue's cause,

love built

on beauty

d.,

3073

want, io75b land where fathers d., 627b last night of my physician, 38^

love-sick heart d., io22b man born suffers d., 86gb man d. in pain, $8ib

2933 8353

56$b

unlamented let me d., unsung noblest deed will d., 8oa unto the Lord, 5ib we about to d. salute you, 1413 we d. only once, 3&ob we must, 2i6b we must be free or d., 5i2b we must needs d., i2b we shall d. alone, fifo we will d. free men, 475*

gg2b 7373 75ib 4023

learn from having d., gsgb like wise one d., ig7b liked it not and d., 301 a maintaining right of way, ugsa man that d. for men, 778b men d. but not for love, 2503 Mithridates he d. old, 853b Mother d. today, io68b

ne'er like angels

till

passion

d.,

3023

no gossip ever noblest lives and


not

d.
d.,

away,

68a 431 a

7o7b
lives,

how man

d.

but

primrose that forsaken

d.,

33ga

never 8gga

knew worth
d.

till

he

d.,

reputation d., 4o4b reputation d. quickly, 3743 re-resolves then d., sgga
rich d. disgraced,

757b

no one none d.

of laughter, natural death,

of chills and fever d., of grief I d., io66a of no blast he d., s6yb

giob g26b loogb

Sahara

d.,

73&a

silence never d., 8i3b something in us never d., 4g5a stretches out feet and d., 10753

on Saturday, iog6a one and all d. in bed, 75sb one who d. for truth, 7363 and fair, queens have d. young
30ob she d. so young, 642a she d. young, 3153 she should have d. hereafter, 286b some pro patria, g88a sonnets d. in misnomer, g44a there d. a myriad, g88b these dead not d. in vain, 6393 to have d. once enough, iigb
to

weep or she will d., 6493 went abroad to d., g6ga what it is to d., 33ob when beggars d., 254b when dream is past, 61 8a when eras d., 9253 when good men d., 8sb when he shall d. cut him
stars,

in

2253

when

came

to d., 6831

who saw him d., 10936 who would wish to d.,


wisdom

601 a

to

make men holy, 6gob make verse free, g8ia


away, 663a

shall d. with you, cm, 153 i, with dead desire not dL, 5i8b with harness on our back, 286b with honor, 86oa with you be ready to d., 1223 without benefit of clergy, goga without Thee dare not d., 5673

to northwest d.
to save

us all, 684b was what you did, 10443 wandered till I d., 7i4b when I d. last, gosb when my mother d., 4&7a

swan, 652b tumult and shouting d., 875b what an artist d. with me, 1343 when just man d., io6ob when old man d., 10523 when the Poet d., 5i8b who d. if England live, 8?7b whom gods love d. young, 1023 youth grows pale and d., 5&2b Dies irae dies ilia, i57b nulla d. sine linea, io2a Diet, Doctor D., sgob oft with gods doth d., 335b praise best d. for us, 523* scrip of joy immortal d., igga sober in d., 414* Dieth, how d. the wise man, 2?b man d. and wasteth away, 153 no man d. to himself, 5ib Dieu a done oublie", 3783

mesure

le froid

a
d.,

la brebis ton-

due, i88b Differ, agreed to


d.,

532b

withered
2653

when my

father

all

things d. all agree, 4053

in their mountains, g27a

1276

INDEX
Differ, when doctors d., 4073 Difference, distinction without d.,
Difficulties, willingness great d. not great, i77b

Diners-out
Dike, last 454 a
d.

of

prevarication,

extent of d.
is

no democracy, 6355

important, 7940
d.

whose ox gored, 180 a night makes no d., 3203 of opinion divide, $890 of opinion makes horse races, 7 62b

Difficulty and danger, 109 ib daunted by no d., 661 a deep d. braved, 7g0b

Dilemma, horns of my d., 4583 Dilettante, no room for d., gajb Dilettantes and pedants, 86gb
Diligence, best of

makes

friend long sought with d. kept,

145*

govern
in life

tongues with is choice, 8273

d.,

373b

me is d. 2773 keep thy heart with all d., 2$b mother of good fortune, 1973 observe physician with same d.,
f

of religion breeds quarrels,

6sga
of taste in jokes, 6goa oh the d. to me, 5iob only d. lies in degree,

makes d. his first business, 7ib most worth tackling, yggb of what it is to be, $56b Diffused knowledge immortalizes, 5oib
Diffuses,

3083

work out salvation with d., Sob Diligent dispensation of pleasure,


in his business, 25b

3773

dissolves

d.

dissipates,

sameness with

d.,

5293
the
d.,

that the d. to him, 5iob wear our clothes they


all

made

528b

Diligently, teach them thy children, loa

d.

unto

gs6b

and what

numbness d. my senses, isob Dig deep into actual, 8oob deep trenches in beauty's field,
sgib
forbear
to

they d. practice
Dillar, a a.

it,

dollar,

743 iog7b

d.,

gub

wear rue with a d., 2653 Differences among experts, 8640 not blind to d,, 10743
Different

d.
let

dust

enclosed
lie,

here, 299b

Dim, adazzle d., 8033 and joyless if not shared, 543b behind d. unknown, 923 desolation and d. night, 6433
ecstasy holds her life, 9536 forsake their temples d., in intense inane, 5693

and political, 43ob drummer, 6836 forms and styles, 10283 from being rash, g87b from ordinary men, 7403 hatched o'er and hatched
trivial

grave

and

me

Sajb
to
d.,

them up again, 3153 Digest, edible wholesome 79ib


d..

3343

religious light, 3363

6893
7613 integration, io$8b like but oh how d,, 5153 mob not ask better only

hog

is d.,

inwardly d. the Scriptures, 6ia d., 8513 d., 3903 of anarchy, 4543 some writers cannot them d., 2ioa

more beliefs than can no more than able to

spot which men call earth, 3363 sun in d. eclipse, 342b time grows beautifully d., 9923

upland

d.,

7Hb
soul,

windows of the

4913

d.,

something to d., 9463 Digested, few books to be


Digestion, give

d.,

2ogb

1793

names

3fter they are produced,

me good

d. Lord,

Dim-discovered, ships d., 4igb worth of something, g6gb Dimension of final thing, io66b Dimensions, hath not a Jew d,,

946a

23gb
Diminish, joys with age d., 667b some races increase others d.,

said hundred d. ways, 10303 schools in science, 10283 something d. from either, 10023 to d. minds, 6o4b and d., 1723 trees beautiful zeal for d. opinions, 4803

god on side of best d., 9463 good d. wait on appetite, 2&4b


prove in d. sour, 2263 sleep from pure d. bred, 3463 Digestions, unquiet meals make
ill d.,

ugb
Diminished, force in nature not d., 7ogb hide your d. rays, $44b stars hide their d. heads, 344b to her cock, aygb Diminishes, any man's death d.

2i8b
as d.

Differeth, one star d., 533 Differs, whatever d. from this is no democracy, 6355 Difficile, Latin was no more d.,

Digests experiences
t,

meats,

263

windows
Dignified, better

richly d..

35* a
Difficilis facilis

iucundus acerbus.

go

down

d.,

me, 3o8b functional capacity, 4753 Diminution of original sin,


without increase or d., Diminutions needs must be,

*35 b
Difficult and left untried, 9183 as easy as temperance d., 42gb Christian ideal d., 9183 criticism easy art d., $g&b

928b
right to d. life, vice by 3Ction d.,

Dignitate, otium cum d., Dignities, earthly d., sg8b

nob

Diminutives, lovely d., 10653 Dimitri, long live D. Ivanovich,

do immediately, no3b doing d. easily, 7o6b dreams surely are d., 673
even those d. to please, excellent things d. as rare,
3273

Dignity and worth of person, 11043 conciliate with d., 4353


contrary to d. built paper mill,

2i5b
in effort of patriots, 46*b In tilling field, 8383
leisure

Dimmed, glory of sun d., 8133 Dimmycratic party ain't on speakin* terms, 8gob Dimness, elms fade into d., 7153 Dimpled cheeks to gaze upon,
io86b Dimpling, shallow streams run d., 4iib Din, cock with lively d., 334b hear the merry d., 524b
of strife, 7iib

fascination of what's d., 681 a in d, are friendly forces, ggBb judgment d., 88b, 477b
living

with

d.,

nob

up

to it d.,

66oa

nothing so d. found, io8b


of things

but

may be
d.,

known most
is

88 ib

Olympian

a d. foe, 6ab

people d. to govern, 74b poets must be d., looyb


poetry d. to read, 6673

Negroes find new sense of d., io82b of high calling, 453b of history, 397b, sg6b of man not some men, io45b of man respected, g8zb of person acknowledged, 964]* of truth lost with protesting,
302b

when my
Dine

d. done,

7723

at journey's end, 88 ib at ten sup at six, 5ggb going to d. with men, to

9343

statesmanship

d.,

loizb

to flee from reality, g78b to lay aside long-cherished love,

1153
too
d.
to

think
it

nobly,

4g6b

when you do
io8b
Difficulties

reluctantly,
are,

show what men

1383

and ease, 4113 proper d. 3nd proportion, 1423 reach the d. of crimes, 475b Washingtonian d., 7583 wear undeserved d., 2333 Digression, began a lang d., 4933 Digressions, eloquent d., 72$b sunshine of reading, 437b Digressively, said I rather d., 6963
poet's d.

that jurymen d., 404b dress to call to d., 8493 when Noah sat down to d,,

hang

9193 with some men, 9343 Dined, I hsve d. today, 523b on mince, 6733 upon cold meat, 375b

When

Jefferson d. alone, 10743

Diners-out from
spoons, 5953

whom we

guard

Dines
Dines on following day, 7460 Ding dong bell, 10930 hey d. a d. d., 2506 Dinginess, country of d., 6323
Dingledodies,

INDEX
Direction, dictate d.
take, 10283

work must

Disarray, on d. lays wing, Disaster clouded Union cause,

danced

like

d.,

great thing is what d., 63$b guide horse in d. it wants, 8343 in which education starts, 942
d. of Time, g8sb of right line, 37gb which thou canst not see, 4o8b Directions, by indirections find
d., 25ob rode off in all d.,

7523
evil

gains equivalent of d., 67b exaltation from d. and ruin,


all d.,

io8ob Dingy, danced along d. days, 7g8b raising d. shades, looib Dining and dancing begin, 10523 while they thought of d., 451 a Dinkey Bird goes singing, Saob Dinner, after d. is after d., 388b among old soakers, 37sa better is a d. of herbs, 24b breakfast d. lunch tea, gosa

new

9*90 laugh at

622b

8g8a

Directs the storm, 393a, 4i3b Direful spring of Grecian woes,

greater d. than greed, 74b noble spirit raises itself in d., i 3 6b nuclear d. engulf all, io73b occasions not causes of d., 8473

no

triumph and
unmerciful
Disasters,
face,

d.,

4053
Direst,
full

d.,

77a 6433
d.

of

d.

cruelty,

28 ib

day's

in

good

d.

and

feasting,

37b

in d. talk fling on fagot, Stfb lubricates business, 475b Michelangelo for d., 75a

shapes of death, 721 a d. sung, Dirge, by forms unseen 443 a for her doubly dead, 642a
in marriage, 2573 of dying year, s6gb
Dirt, bequeathe myself to d., 701 a eats d. in the line, io25b

morning

44gb

not a d. to ask a man to, 4313 seldom thinks more than of d., 562a three hours' march to d., 53gb tocsin the d. bell, s6ib what gat ye to d., io8ga write with no d., loogb
Dinner's, over glass

much depends on

d.,

5623

guilty of our d., 2773 middle station fewest d., 3855 weary with d., 284b Disastrous beating of wings, go5b born to d. end, 201 a spake of d. chances, ayab

make

hairs or straws or d., 4iob if d. was trumps, 5J5b loss of wealth loss of d., 1823 child of d., 41 ia

twilight sheds, 342b business Disastrously,

fares

d.,

painted

when

d. done,

664b
Dinners,
d., visits

a Dirty, all d. and wet, 391 at his d. work again, British coaster, g47a

4iob

true
his
d.

Amphitryon gives
not
361 a

36ib

business, 788b Dick's and Sloppy Joe's, io6oa


for all
'is

him, were precarious, 5353 Dinosaur death-steps, ioy6b

d. 'ide,

87sa
504a

5050 Disbanded, funeral done and d., 10690 Disbelief in great men, 577a suspension of d., 5293 then skepticism then d., 6g7b Disbranch, sliver and d., 2793 Disburdened of my gear, io57b Discard knowledge, loib
Discarded,
faith,

tobacco a d. weed, iO37a wash d. linen at home,

welcome
237a

home

d.

Dinotherium wandered by, 797a Dinted, where snow lay d., 687b Diogenes crept into vat, 742b if not Alexander would be D.,
io2a

work work

again, 4iob
at crossroads, loggb

Dis aliter visum, n8b manibus sacrum, i5ob Disable benefits of your country,

Discern, as I can now d.. infinite passion, 664a innocence of neighbors,

68ob 683b

what can we
with

d.,

this clear eye,

3013 68ob

plucked a cock, g6b struck father when son swore.


3123

2503 Disabused, by himself abused or


d.,

4oga
d.,

Diomede, this sodeyn D., 1653 Dip wings in tears, 6503 Diplomacy is to do and say, gg4a of such stuff d. made, gtjSb Diplomat regular Moby Dick, 9580 whale of a d., 9585
Diplomat's, in d. soul iron ore,

Disaffection, nonconformity

mark

of

giaa
d.,

Disagree, doctors d., 4o7a in faith and hope world

Discerner of the thoughts, 55b Discerning, gives genius better d., 45 ob to a d. eye, 7355 Discharge, no d. in war, 28a, 876b to die a debt we must d., 32 ib

Discharged, at once indebted and

4ogb
share rights with those 103 5 a
Disagreeable, such tells d. truth boldly,

who

d.,

a d. man, 7683

95b
Diplomats, pens of d. not ruin,

women and crabs, 778b Dipped into the future, 6473 Jonathan d. it in honeycomb,
i2a ing

46gb

record Disagreements, scholarship of d., 864b

have Disappeared, sun would


8 5 ia

d.,

cU 344b debt d. through eternity, 4783 with greater ease, 32 ib Discharging less than tenth, 268b Disciple not above master, 423 true teacher has no d., 5gob Disciples, gave bread to d., 44b threatening against d., 4gb
Discipline, care of d. is love. 373 desire of d., 373 in military unit, gsga liberty a beloved d., io67b organization and d. of war.

pigeon, Disappoint continent, 754b


finality

with

of

gg8a

nose

in

Gascon

wine.

that

not d. hoping soul, 497 I may not d. myself, 68ob


of d.

white d. sails, g47a Dirck galloped, 6633 Dire, beckoning shadows d., 336b dimension of final thing, io66b effects from civil discord, 394a gorge of salt sea tide, 2343 offense from amorous causes, 404* Direct and honest not safe, 2753 eminently plain and d., 7i2b7*3 a

Disappointed, fury ggaa he shall never be

woman,

1773
rising or falling's one d., io66a soul of army, 46ob

d., 4<>7b

in monkey, 7643 tide, 734b unhouseled d. unaneled, 25gb

and Disappointment, boredom 1053* as ourselves, 6?ga great down newspaper with
lay

d.,

Disciplined and limber, 10563 by peace, io72b inaction, 50 ib Disciplines, I know d. of wars,

244a
d.,
.

Disclose, merits to d., 44ia not d. essence of phenomena,

535 b
to look for

g84a
Disclosed,

him where
lie d.,

leaving to d.
relations

3o7b themselves, ioa6b


it,

mathematics 86ia

commence
too

in

d.,

before
press

buttons be
lives

d.,

258b
familiar
Disclosures,

2513 with good joke, gi8b x understanding to d., logib Directed unerringly to you, 702b advances in d. of Direction, dreams, 8gb

Disappointments, with d., 634b


Disappoints, d., 1700 Disapprove of

by

d.,

man
is

appoints
say,

God

loggb Discobolus standeth face to wall,

what you

Disarmament

4i8a essential, g74b

755 Discomforts accompany blind, 3763

my

being

1278

INDEX
Disconsolate, at gate of

Dish
ways of d.
Disease, medicine has to

Eden

d.,

Discovering, only two


truth, 2073 Discovers, flute in

examine
d.,

543*

Q94b Discontent, but only want and 353 b


it,

to

watch

dying notes d

d.,

3703
fresh perfection, 55ob Discovery, errors portals

d., i36a-i37b medicine more harmful than 1020b

meet
of
d.,

d.

at

first

divine

d.,

6gib
6o6a 201 a

stage,

1335

want of

self-reliance,

waste nights in d., wealth and poverty parents of d., 94a winter of our d., 26b yields nothing but d., 4523 Discontented, stirs of d. strife, 3090 Discontentment, no greater guilt than d., 740
Discord, age of d. and civil d., 3943
strife,

g68b gave ungrudgingly of d., 9043 if European d. delayed, gg7b in completing one d., 4633 joy of sudden d., g6oa mistaking paradox for d., o/>gb reality brings d., go8a terra firma of accomplished d., 949b Discredit what they do not excel
in,

of evil conscience, 63 ib of modern life, 7123 of not listening, 24 ib of old men avarice, 3143 old age only d., 6073 or sorrows strike him,

688b

2i4b

loib

perfect d. rare, $653. physician hath favorite d., 4^4b presume d. curable, s64b quarrels sedition, 3833 remedies analyzers of d., 5653

remedies worse than

d.,

i25b
d.,

danger in d., 6233 eke d. doth sow, i8ga

Discreditable, regrets d. act, 96 la Discreet, too d. to run amuck

remedy too strong


shapes of foul
specialists
d.,

for

833

4ub
Discreetest,

in

harmony in d., i2gb harmony not understood, 4o8b music must investigate d., 1373
so musical a d., 2303 d. follows, sG'jb Discordant, drum's d. sound, 45sb reconciles d. elements, 5ioa

6513 mental

d.,

virtuousest

d.

best,

success

our national
is

d.,

9773 7gab

347a
Discreetly blot, 333a entered into reverently d. advisedly, 6ia Discretion, better part of valor d.,

the d.

incurable, 241 b

what

reconciliation 5*9 a

of

d.

qualities,

24ia drunkenness sepulture of his


i6ga
fair

to pretend to know is a d., 753 tyranny poverty d. war, 10733 tyranny's d., 783 victims of d., g8sb wine cause of d., 3833

d.

wavering multitude, 241 a


Discouraged, Dewey feel lest they be d., 54b Discouragement, there's 3 66a
d.,

79 la
d.,

no

Discouraging, seldom heard d. word, 8o8a Discourse according to learning,

242b
bid me d., 2igb everybody's d. of death, excellent dumb d., 2973

375b
3263

i3ib 473b but d., 3173 philosophy nothing should be thrown aside, iosa to the young man knowledge and d., 233 Discriminate between important and negligible, g4ga keen d. sight, Discriminating, 5o6b inform their
d.,

in

woman without man not too young,

d.,

24a

writing a contagious d., 1543 Diseased, man d. animal, 86gb minister to mind d,, 2863

Discrimination, art d.
tion,

and

selec-

good

company good

d.,

7ggb

in novel phrases, 766b made us with large d.,

2645

exactness and d., 43 la lack of d., ggsa


sophisticated modes of d., 9673 Discrowned, crowned and d., 8ga

of book-friends, g$b of fools is irksome, s8b of reason, 257b of the elders, 37b rather thy d. than play, 31 ib showers of sweet d., 3543 Discourteously, cast me off d.,

nature breaks forth, 23gb own beauty mind d., 5573 words are physicians of mind d., 783 Diseases desperate grown, 2645 of physical frame, 6143 poverty most deadly of d., 10093 Disembodied emotion nonentity, 794* Disenthrall ourselves save country, 6 3 8b Disfigure, in a moment so d. us, 33<> a Disfranchised, in literature not d.,
of

Discuss freely settle question, sgsa Discussing duty to God, 7000 Discussion, free political d., 8653

Disgrace and ignominy of natures,

open mind
policy

free d.,

gisb
free d.,

in

settled

10846 Discover everybody's

Disdain,
face

for

but

own, 388b I had no talent, lona I had not lived, 6833 never d. land of nowadays, goob not to d. weakness, 737b Discovered, America d. accidentally. 997^ himself gave discovery to world, go4a late d. earth, ggob plant whose virtues not d., 6ioa race never yet d., io4gb unconscious before me, 8343 when d. not wanted, gg7b Discoverer, exultation only d. can
experience, gg7a Discoverers among them as comets,
ill

give me 3 2 ?a
to

by 934b me to d. it, 572b more love or more d..

impatient of d., 3683 d. with fortune and men's eyes, 29 ib


d. to

might as well be

be poor,

Lady D., 24sb be instruments, 4853

Disdained, one feeling d., 57 2b Disdainful smile, 44oa think not d. of Disdainfully, death, 1433 Disdaining littlenesses, 95b Disdains all things above his reach, 315^ culture not live by d., 7g6a Disease, against d. of writing precautions, i54a
as

895* not without d. associated, 681 a peace with d., ioyb to be vice-prisidint, 8923 when in d. with fortune, 29 ib Disgraced, dies rich dies d., 75?b Disgraces, labor d. no man, 7i7b Disgruntled, not d. but far from
Disguise, cherfshing

enemy

in

d.,

4623
nature with rage, 24sb no d. can conceal love, 3553 pantheism atheism in d., 8&gb
fair

physician observes

d. f

3o8a

425a think there 2073


d. d. to

is

no land,
3o4b
things,

bad rhyming a d., 41 sb brought on by boredom, 10533 called lack of money, i8ia consciousness d., 86gb cure d. kill patient, 2oga cured yesterday of my d., 387 b
2773 gained strength by delays, i2ga
d.,

profession
to

is

to d.,

i78b

go naked best d., ggib virtues but vices in d., 354b Disguises, gods go in various d., 66b
troublesome d. we wear, 3463 Disgust, achievement birth of d.,

fee bestow
interest

sea

new
he
d.

upon

foul

worlds,

Discovereth, 15*

deep

in d.

interest in
d.,

life,

79ib carry work without d., 78 ib not exist where hunger is, 8430
Disgusting instead of persuading,

937b
life
is

Discoveries, future d. in decimals,

8272

long

d.

an incurable my life, 4iob

3583

473b
Dish, as a

man wipeth a

d.,

143

1279

Dish
Dish, butter in a lordly
d.,

INDEX

na

chameleon's

dainty d., feast of joy a d. of pain, so4b fit for gods, 54b

2633 log^b
d.,

Disobedient, even if d. I shall low, 1035 Disorder, all prodigality and

fol-

d.,

Disputation, too exacting d., 5933 Disputations, doubtful d., 5ib Dispute confute change hands,

453
discontent d. disobedience, 4523
it

352a
like 3

man, 2855

goib of meat too good, 3a6b other men serving d. 8893 ran away with spoon, 10943 thirty-two religions one d., 484a woman a d. for the gods, 2893 Dishes, homemade d., sgab shalt not wash d., 10953 Dishonest, man assumed to be d.,
d.,
f

nor serve him in

domestic
great d.

d.,
is

3833

order, 9563

right none to d., 457b scholars d. and case still before

my

order and d., 4193 sweet d. in the dress, 3203 violent order d., 9563 Disordered, men d. like you, 4333 Disorders, all ruinous d., 2773 medicine for mental d., iO34b

courts, is4a . 'twixt Tweedledum

and Twee-

dledee, 4153

10633

not d. because in debt, 77 la Dishonor, by honor and d., 5$b fears d. worse than death, issb honor rooted in d., 65$b no d. to halt at second place,

end to it, 995 Dispatch in putting the soul of business, 4isb the better, d. sooner Dispatched, 77 6a
Dispatchful looks, 3463 tongue Dispelled, live
all

upon everything disputable, 3813 Disputed barricade, 10090 in private Disputes, equal justice d., 8gb
Disputing, itch of d., 30 la warmer way of d., 1953
Disquieted, never to be they are d. in vain,

d.,

ma

io8oa mist d.

why
when woman
gleams
d.,

art

thou

d.

appears,

Disquieting,

drums

3213 iSb-iga 193 continuous d.,


d.,

in

me,

sia ways to d. Sabbath, 761 b will not trouble me, 84a Dishonorable graves, 25jb Dishonorably, to speak d. is pardonable, Sga Dishonored fragments of Union, 547* shroud, loosa Disiecti membra poetae, 1203 Disillusion, one d. mankind, Q76b Disingenuousness of years, 5J)6b Disinherited, city's d., 8&7b
d.,

vessel

unto

4oib
Dispelling,

878b

through

fog

without

438b

Dispensary, anthology a d., 10345 Dispensation of pleasure, 5503 Dispense with necessaries, 6343

to d. OUT follow Disquietly, graves, 2773 Disquiets, almighty time d., 833 Disregard, atones for Ister d.,

9*&b
Disrespectfully, speak d. of equ3tor,

with trifles, 2672 Dispensing equality, 94b Disperse, by spreading d. to naught, 2143 whole Dispersed, Scots d. over
earth, 2053 d. race, Dispirited, fainting of d. Display, electrical

522b

Disruption, noise d. of thought, 5643 Dissatisfaction with world, 8633


Dissatisfied, I

3m

troubled I'm

d.,

Disinheriting, damned nance, 48 1 b Disinterested as being

d. counte-

7i5b God,

99 6b not one

is d.,

10093

Socrates d.,
Dissatisfies,

yoob 6iQb

who made

extended to d.
ridiculous d.,

its

patterns, 783

with what I learn, gagb


d. in American 7i6b Dissect, creatures you d., 4063 Dissections, Ie3m anatomy from
civilization,
d.,

him, 462b commerce between equals, 448 b endeavor to learn, 7igb intellectual curiosity, 94ib
Disinterestedness, self-interest

90 ib
d.

what

Displayed,

flower

doth

fall,

2523
glory of world d., 889b misfortune of our Displeasing, friends not d., 356b Dispoged, lips to it when d., 67ob

3i2b

plays d., 355a Disjoins remorse from power,

54a
Dislike, hesitate d., 41 la same things is friendship,

Dispose,

men determine
d.,

gods

d.,

Dissemble, right to d. your love, 49 ia circumfertheir Disseminating


ence, 7373 Dissension, in d. never judge, 86a Dissent, dissidence of d., 4533 in few days I should d., 32gb

3ub
usb
3503 Disposed, tyrant has d. of foreign enemies, 953 Disposer of other men's stuff,
igib
Disposes,

unsearchable

Disliked, each day two things d.,

9322 ib person who d. gravy, 36 Dislikes, culture not live by

d.,

7g6a
Dislocate language into meaning,

man

proposes

God

d..

1703
Disposition, antic d., 26oa horridly to shake our d., 2593 of women, 1093 I know d.

orthodoxy chokes d., 9123 voices of d., 10563 one d. Dissenting, psssed without colony, 4633
Dissever

my

soul

from the

soul,

Dismal, at d. treatise rouse, 286b headache, 76?b science, 5783 b tidings when he frowned, 449 universal hiss, 3483 Waterloo d. plain, 5993 Dismay, neither shape or danger d., 515* nothing you d., 10993 old d., io78b Dismayed her crew, 7923 live laugh nor be d., Bggb neither be d., lob ran d. away, 2353 was there man d., 6523 Dismember or overthrow it, 6373 whirl asunder and d. me, 2g6b Dismembered poet, 1202 Dismissed, at length d. from thee, 552a

6443
sacred hair d., 4O4b Dissevered discordant belligerent, 547 a Dissidence of dissent, 4533 Dissimulation innate in women,

patronizing d., 6893

be pleased, 4323 truant d., 2583 towards d. unfriendly


to

U.S.,
d.,

4923

5643
love without d., 513 playing the knave and d., 3753 without d. no business, 415^
Dissipates to re-create, 528b to shining ether, 6osb

on Dispositions, praise depends 942b


Dispossessed, his little

heart d.,

7993

no d. or blame, thing you desire to buy, Dispraised no small praise, Dispraises, praising most d.,
Dispraise,

3503 2693

348b 4113

Dissipation without pleasure, 4663 Dissociate language from science,

474b
Dissociation of sensibility, Dissolute, caldron of d.

2623 Disprized, pangs of d. love, Disput3ble, dispute upon everything d., 3813 Disputandi pruritus scabies, 301 a
ecclesiarum

ioo7b
loves,

i46b

Dismount, rides tiger afraid 92oa


45*a of man's first d.
d.,

to d.,

Disputants

like

sportsmen,

4133

put

me

in

mind

of skuttle fish,

damned despairful, 932b mornDissolutely spent Tuesday . ing, 237b in Dissolution, anguish not often
d.,

Disobedience, discontent disorder

3953 Disputation, feeling d., 239^ run in debt by d., 3523

5653
in
d.,

keep these limbs from

community

91 23
d.,

3065

1280

INDEX
Dissolve, all

Diyine
d. town,

which
forget,

it

inherit d.,

Distracting, de3r

damned

2975

4Q5b

5825 me into ecstasies, 3363 bands, 4700 political wish to d. Union, 4723 Dissolved in a moment, 9940 into something great, 9390 mingle with d. limb, 8993 ought to be totally d., 46ob Union not to be d., 6$$b

and quite

Diverse, strong 1041 b

and

d.

heart,

my
to

d. grief, 4453

Diversion

or

Distraction music of flute, loogb

improvement

of

mankind, 3133 uglification, 7445


Distraught, 10803
all

men

country, 3943 walking 'tis 3 country d., 3923 Diversity, universal quality is d.,

born

d,,

igob world safe for

d.,

with dreams visions, 6246 Distress, all pray in their d., 4873

10743

economic

Diverter of sadness, 326*3 Divest, deprive or d. posterity,

d. will teach,

Union virtually d., 5303 Dissolves diffuses dissipates, 5*8b

g^b
3nd
d..

exposed 5*5*

to
is

suffering

when

all

the

world

4463 Divide and rule, i$ob biped class, g6b


distinguish

d.,

2133

greatest d.
7 ib

Dissonance, barbarous d., 3373 Dissonant, no sound d., 5343 Distance, airy d. 557a augur misgovernment at d.,
f

mean man always

poverty, 3793 full of d,.

and

d.,

3523

et impera, i^ob

45 3a endears friendship, 5883 just that d. from death, lends enchantment, 5373
Distances, infinite d.

needy in d., gib of boyhood into man, 88^5 pray in your d. and need, 9763 reality of d., 4<57b
time removes
d.,

great scramble and big d., 7853 life from death, 64*b

693

io8b
3bility,

Distressed by his

want of
d.,

between hu-

mountains d. us, 5903 never d. upon opinion, 3290 not d. Sundsy from week, 256b sense from thought d., 3683 therefore doth heaven d., 2433
thin partitions their

4893 dull prospect of d. good, 37ob from heaven alike, 31 ib in what d. deeps, 4893 misery, 466a Ophir, 947a religion of which rewards d., 428b speaking of voices, loyob to d. countries roam, 49 ib ye d. spires, 4393 Distasteful, found life d., 6675 nothing more d. than complaskies,

mans, 938b Distant deeps or

72b town like place


vacant

bounds

d.,

$75b
are d.,

mind d., 4573 we commend those who


603
Distresses of our friends, Distressful bresd, S44b

3683

3565

two almost d. the kind, 4060 two loving he3rts d., 8o6f> words d. 3nd rend, 7733 Divided an inheritance with him,
duty, 2733
fair d. excellence, 2363 Gaul d. into three parts, naa have they not d. the prey,

Distributed,
d.,

good

sense

equally
to

3273

Distribution

according

need,

687b
l3ws of
d.,

na

757b
of

unequal
455*

d.

property,
d.

4803

Distributive,

economy

virtue,

cency, 5353
Distastes,
d.,

Distributively, pluralism lets exist


d.,

prosperity not without

795a

2o8a

Distrust all in
d. goodness

whom

impulse to
brings
wis-

house d. against itself, 453, 635b in death they were not d., iab mankind into parties, 4803 thy kingdom is d., 353 we fall, 6ooa with but half a heart, 32 ib
Dividends, literature pays d., 77ob Dividing asunder of soul and spirit, 55b

Distemper, of no d. died, 36yb


Distill,

would men

punish, 8053 doctrine that age

out, 244b Distilled almost to jelly, 2583

dom, 9<x>b fear and d. the people, 473b


here
all

damnation, 5013

d.

left

behind,

1595
9123
d.

Distills,

happy from limbecks foul, 2943 love d. desire, 84b Distinction between virtue and vice, 43ob make no d. between Trojan and Tynan, n8a
safe for persons! d., io74b without difference, 424b

earthlier

is

rose d., 228 b

is

safeguard, 4ygb

by d. we fall, 46ob lover and lover, 7733 your sweet d. throat, 3273
Divina natura dedit agros, aogb Divination, criticism rod oE d., 8793 Divine, 3g3inst thy D. Majesty, 613 all save man d., 5583 all things by law d., 5703 and terrible radiance, 5993 ardor d., 7i5b ask 3 drink d., 3033 Athens d. city, 798 bird of Zeus, 793 comfortable words, 6533 countenance d. shine forth, 4gob despair, 64&b discontent, 6910 discovery of d. truths, 3975 drink d., 3033 event, 6513 fear of some d. powers, 3123 fellowship d., 5806 God the Father a school d.,
41 aa

spirit of suspicion

and

d.,

to

make man untrustworthy

him, Sgsb
Distrusting, heart d. asks, 4503 Distrusts, him who d. self, 3553

Distinctions

between gentlemen and common people, 1013 means of ceremony, loia by of race, 7o5b
mark,
to be-

Disturb not her dream, 4953 Disturbance of the spring. 10053 Disturbed by planetary war, 99ob Disturbing delicate balance, 10673 Disturbs, presence that d. me,
5<>9b

Distinctive, man's d.

Disuse, iron rusts from d., of 3ny organ, 4753

1743

666a
Distinctiveness, vice of d.

come queer, 8043


Distinctly I remember, 642b Distinguish, he could d. 3nd divide, 3523

Ditch, blind man's d., 8843 both fall into d., 433 die in the last d., 3833 Ditch-delivered by 3 drab, 2853

read but not d. what worth

it,

94ib

from false, 3733 wisdom to d., 10243


true

Distinguished for ignorance, 6123

no two men who cannot be


i32b

d.,

Distorted incomplete data, 10203 Distorting my gesture, 10693 Distorts the heavens, 4913 Distract attention from issues.

and gravemakers, 26sb Ditches impure, SSjb other men's d., io97b Diurnal, earth's d. course, 5113 Dive, heaven's great lamps d., 3003 into bottom of deep, 23&b Dive-bomber's screaming orgasm, 995 a Diver in deep seas, 7813
Ditchers, gardeners d.

good

amiable
that

or

sweet,
is d,,

Hand

made us
less d.,

3483 3933

heavy but no

5613

866b
Distracted, seat in this d. globe.

plucked them, 6g4b Diverb, as the d. goes, 3123 Diverged, two roads d., gs&b Divers, state of man in d. functions,

Omar

how d. a thing woman, human face d., 344b human form d., 4873, 48gb
I myself more d., 6563 idea which esch represents, 6o6a ideas below, 6o2b
illusion,

2433

2603

why

d. send out oil, 1323

7i6b

128l

Divine
Divine Inert, 6g6b

INDEX
Division, salvation not in d., 9033 same as creation, loia saw d. grow together, 2&7b

Do, so

Love the human form love which graybeards 2i6b lyre so long d., s6ob

d., 4873 call d.,

Divorce, absurd essentially

d.,

io68b
d.,

much to d., 65ob, 8&8b that thou doejst d. quickly, 493 the evil I d., 513 the very best I can, 6413 theirs but to d. and die, 6523
they d. things we can't, 10673 they know not what they d., 47b thing I was born to d., 2113 thing that ends other deeds,

made

brutes

men men

72 ib

majority, 7353

long d. of steel, 2983 Divorced divorced, io75b

man

makes drudgery
d. as

d., 3243 myself dead, 7023

marks of a
7890
Milton's

men whom men pronounce


no
is

d. origin,

5443

d.,

from eye 3nd bone, 10383 from wh3le-f3t, io75b sorrow from which not d., 5503 wsr not d. from politics, io7b
Divulge,
I

288b
thing think you cannot, 98 ib thing you have to, 7253 things worth writing, 42 ib this in remembrance, 47 b this one thing I d., 543 this will never d., 5163
to

will

never

d.

such

less d.,

moonlight no government by 531* nor glimpse d., 4143

d.,

561 a 10693
d.
right,

things, 883-b Dixie Land, 6783


live

and die in

D.,

678b

philosophy, 3373, plain face, 534b principle and rule of harmony,

Dixit, ipse d., 1513 Dizziness from success, love like 3 d., 5083 Dizzy, across that d.

954^
way, 9443
d.,

thou but thine, 3473 be to d. to d. without, 77gb


to will

and

to

d. his pleasure,

how

fearful
is

7091
profane no d. ordinances, 4503 profusion, 7485 relations with good joke, gi8b
reliance

Do.
all

a'

and d., 2793 done that men can


good
you
can,

54a

two

4943
the 421 a
as chapmen do, 2693 as I say not as I do, giyb 35 you would be done by, 4153 boys do, 8143

things 1253

is

to

do

neither,

on

d. providence,

4713

unto other feller fust, 8113 wh3t country d. for you, 10733 what d. about it, 722!)

right d. of kings, 4isb right of kings, 6363 sign indicates future, 8yb

damned
d.,

superhuman
936*
tale of

spiritual
d.,

and

Troy

3363
d.,

if you d., 5393 decided on what they will not d., 1003 esch dsy two things disliked,

wh3t d. when you fallen, 10783 what d. you mean to d., 7843 wh3t hsve you or I to d. with
i't,

437*>

terror

human form

48gb

whst he may, 2663 what I will with mine, 4gb what man may d. to himself,
what man would d. exalts, 665!) whst manhood bids, 7o7b what then thou would'st, g4gb what thou wilt, 18 la what we back ourselves to d., 793b what you can d. for country,
10733
952

thought thinks of itself, gyb to forgive d., 403 b tobacco d. nothing equal, 5633 tobacco d. rare, giib
train d.,

enough work to d., 8773 go and d. likewise, 46b


great right
his
little

arms might

d.

wrong, 234b what this has


6723

7i4b
precious and d., 3533

truth

is

done, 332b how not to d.


I d. it I
if to d.
it

it,

d., 5363 whatever poet writes with d. inspiration, 88a Divinely, childish but d. beautiful, 497b in 'the wrong,

what the form

more
all,

natural, 25ib

dare d.
after

282b

3s essy as to

know, 23ib
fashion,

high

Roman

what you
28b

d.

still

betters

what

is

288b
as for thee, 3243 with thy might, 28b just as one pleases, $$gb justly 3nd love mercy, 35b know not whst they d.,
it

subsidized,
tall,

sg8b io6ib

done, 295b whatsoever thy hand findeth to


d.,

it

645b

Divineness, in poesy particip3tion of d., 2o6b-2o73

Diviner

air,

5i6b
d.

know wh3t he ought


let us d.

barmaids

than
d.

mermaids,

105 ib Diviner's, glad

theme, Divinest anguish, 68sb

368b

msdness
Divining,

d. sense,

735b
rod
to

Melancholy, 335b
takes
d.

find.

4?b to d., is8b or die, 4963 make it d. or d. without, ii02b nsstiest thing in nicest wsy, 994* never d. today what can put off, 7193 never tell how to d. things,
987

5203 without being commanded, 973 write what men d., 2073 ye even so unto them, 413 Doasyouwouldbedoneby, Mrs. D.,
69 ib Dobie, sate upon her Docent, decent d., io4ob
d.,

will to d.,

Gygb

Doch-3n'-dorris, wee d., 9033 Docile and omnipotent, 7363

833*
Divinities,

new

d. of his

own, 933

no one knows what he can

d.,

Dockyard fellow, 74gb mine factory d., g23b Doctor 3nd saint, 6303
apple keeps d. 3way, 1 1023 Diet Quiet Merrym3n, 3gpb
every
fee
d.

Divinity, all the d. I understand,

ig6b

doth hedge a king, 2653 dry volumes of d., 4?ob gives weslth even to wicked man, 773 gossip 3 kind of d., 683 in odd numbers, 26yb
lectures

1273 noble things not dream, 6gia not as some pastors, 25&b not do what we want, ios8b not choose to run, 91 ib not d. what another d. as well,
897 b not do

msn own
for

d. of divinity,

8223

nauseous
to

draught,

3723
Foster

went

Gloucester,
general,

of

msn own
stirs

or doctor of
ethics

d., d.,

3833 8223

piece of d. in us, sjjob

within us, 393!)

that shapes our ends, 2663 wingy mysteries in d., 32gb Divisa, Gallia est omnis d. in p3es tres, 1123 Division, equal d. of unequal
is

thing they most do show, 2933 not do to others, 72b not go gentle, io7ob not we wanderer awsit, 7123 not what we ought, 7iib nothing we d. wiped out, 7933

10973
kills

more thsn
d.

3823

Livingstone
silent

I presume, 7gi3 shook his hesd, 4012

now

I'll

d.

it,

what men dare or die, 313^ 4g6a


other

2630
d.,

three f3ces wesrs d., 8203 train anyone to be d., g4g3 while runnin' for d., g8ia Doctor's, failing that D. thesis,

246b

earnings, 5453 as bad, io84b marriage death and mirth the music of

men

for they d. you, 6703

d., d.,

77 sb iggb

reckless what I d., 2&4b seeks little thing to d.,

10353 outlived the d. pill, 40 ib peaceful mission, 8203 Doctors, best d. in the world,
is all

6643
swabs, 8233

she can d. no other, 8423

1282

INDEX
Doctors, if d.

Dome
d.,

had more

Christi-

Dog, hold-fast the only


I

anity, 8gob we d. know hopeless case, 10323 when d. disagree, 4073

Doctrinaire logic, 102 ib Doctrine, all the winds

his Highness' d., in grave like old d., 10713 in life firmest friend, 554b in the manger, 763

am

243b 4iab

Dogs, hark

d. do bark, hates children and d., 951 b Inquisition d., 654b let slip d. of war, 2553
lies

with d. riseth with

fleas,

of

d.,

34ob
every

wind

of d., 543

from women's eyes this d., 2223 go for refuge to D., Sob hidden under strange verses,
i6oa
conseinvolving pernicious quences, 6783 little diffeience in d., 4313 not for d. but music, 4033 of pathological generation, 7iob of separate but equal, 1021 a of strenuous life, 8473 or practice or interpretation, i43 a

thy servant 3 d., isb it W3s that died, 4486 jumps over lazy d., noia let no d. bark, 23 ib
is

like d. hunts in dreams, 6473 little d. laughed, 10943 living d. better than dead lion,

and all, 2793 mad d. and Englishmen, 10433 more I admire my d., 5663 not live as d. in manger, 9743
little d.

pedigree of cattle

d.,

6a8b

28b
looking io67b
for

rain cats and d., 3913 shall eat Jezebel, igb

place
4.

to

sleep,

shame the gray head, 64b


d., 286b which hath deeper mouth, 2143

make

stsrving
bites d.,

prosperous,

man

762b
8o8b
d.,

sleeping d. lie, 6723 straw d., 73b throw physic to the

mine enemy's

2803

Dogs',

my

little d. Fala,

g73b

d.

my God,

io68a

puppy d. tails, 10960 Dog-st3r rages, 4103 Doing, being not d., 10663
cease
to

peculiar d., 6843


so illogical and dull, 976b that each select one, 5713 yesterday fact today d., 1091 a Doctrines, makes d. plain and
clear, 3533 Documents, historian

prove

their

d.

orthodox,

3523

offers drowning d. drink, 3243 old d. Tray, 537b old wife old d. ready money,

think about d.,

5403

difficult easily,
is full,

7o6b

good one of professions which


682b
impossible genius, 7o6b another thing, igob
all

42ib poor d. Tray, 537b rather be d. and bay the moon,


reform 8633
since I so poor

is

it

takes d.

and

do, 8ooa

wants

d.,

taking

bone from

d.,

joy's soul lies in d,,

267b

799

Dodge, gracefully d. bore, 8i8b Dodger, artful D., 66ga Doe, came a fallow d., io88b Doer, speaker of words and d. of deeds, 63b Doers of the word, 5&b talkers no good d., 2173 Does, dogged as d. it, 6793 he who can d., 836b sees it and d. it, 6643
Doeth, what thy right hand
d.,

learn by d., g7b

returneth to his vomit, 2<>a 3m a d. bew3re, 2343 he could not keep 3 d.,

manners happy W3ys of d., 6o8b miserable d. or suffering, 3423 secure friends by d. favors, 903
strain of the d.,

i47b
3t master's g3te, 4903 stsrving d. behind, 9583 stronger d. be on top, 9953 suspicious of buried bone, 7ggb this d. my d., 23ob thou calledst me d., 2343 to gain private ends, 448b to this d. pr3ise, 6i7b tossed d. thst worried rat, iog8b

74gb

st3rved

the great god Fan, 6193

up and
Doings,

d.,
d.,

6aob
your

amend
343

ways

and

your

broadcast d. of day night, 6ggb child known by his d., 253 of mankind subject of my book,

4ob whatsoever he d. shall prosper, i6b Doff it for shame, 2363 Doffed, lightly d. hat, 868a Dog, Almighty gave d., 5216 better than his d., 6473 beware of d., 1503 biggest d. has been pup, 7903 bites man not news, 8o8b Boatswain a d., 554b Body my good bright d., 10783 breed maggots in dead d., 26ob broodin' over bein' a d., 8ua cat d. pipe or two, 8553 circumcised d., 2760

toy d, covered with dust, 82ob truth's 3 d. must to kennel,

commends
cutthroat
d.,

himself

to

f3vor,

Doglike, on bended arm d., 78b Dogma, Bible literature not

277b turned to his own vomit, 573 d. 3re you, 4i2b why should a d. have life, a8ob will have his day, 2663 woman or d., 6573 wool of bat tongue of d., 2853 Dogged as does it, 6793 strength, 8g4b strong d. unenlightened, yisb Doggedly, set himself d. to it. 429b

something in d. of man, 6ggb Dol3bella's Cleop3tr3, ffib Dolce far niente, 1400 vita, 1623
Dole, happy

whose

nun be his d., i82b happy man happy d., i82b


d.,

unequal laws, 6463 weighing delight and


Doleful,

chants

d.

hymn,

2573 2373

dumps, 2i8b, io84b shades, 34 ib Doll, once had sweet little d., 6913 Dollar, a dillar a d., iog7b
3lmighty d., 55ob broken never dollsr again, 6853 Dollars, hours and minutes d. and cents, 422b
silver

d.,

2323

867b

did nothing in nighttime, 8503 dies like a d., 6a6b


difference between d.

Dogmas

and man,

76ab door what d. on wrong side of, io52b drunken d. ragged head, 5343 empty house like stray d., 7563 every d. his d3y, 691 a faithful d. be3r him company, 4083 fetch poor d. a bone, 109 6a

of past inadequ3te, 638b ignorance greater Dogmatism, greater d., 8173 puppyism 3t full growth, 6iob

million d. timorous, loiyb not distributed d.,


gifts,

aa

7713

Dog's, more deadly than m3d


tooth, 2i8b

Dogm3tisms, nsrrow

d.,

7993

Dolores, splendid and sterile D., 77 3 1 Dolphin-like, his delights were d.,
*

d.

2893
Dolphin's,

mermaid on
3nd

d.

back,

W3lking, 43ob Dogs, all the d. in town, 10933


as many d. there be, 448b csreful of breed of d., 3813 crowing of cocks snd barking of
d., 753 dancing d. and bears, 9063

trident d,, Dolts, three greatest d., 5493 Domain, such d. France

2293 Dolphins,

9543
con-

quered, 72ob

gingham
hair
of
d.

d.
d.,

went
B$b
bit

Bowwow,
us,

Dome,

fired

Ephesian

d.,

3313

82ob grim king's

that

i84b

hath a day, i84b have his day, 2663, 691 a


heart to d. to tear, 8773

delight to b3rk and bite, 3963 display reluctance, 1051 b drink running at the Nile, i2gb es t of crumbs, 433

of many-colored gl3ss, 5723 of thought palace of soul, 555b of vast sepulcher, 56gb

orchard for a

d.,

rounded

Peter's

fought d. killed

cats,

66ab

ststely ple3sure d.,

735b dome, 6023 $23b

1283

Dome
Dome, sunny pleasure d., 5243 with d. more vast, $33b
Domes, silver d. of Lucknow, 6263 Domestic disorder, 3833
insure d. tranquillity, 4743 internal d. empire, io$8b malice d. foreign levy, 2840 naive d. Burgundy, 10333 sentiment of mankind, 6120 d. set sede Domestica, quae iucundior, Domestics, few admired by own

INDEX
Done, peace of the
d.,

74gb

Doomed,

sentient beings

d.,

6aga

servant of God well d., 346b sight of means makes ill deeds
d.,

237a
65ob, SaSb
villain

so

little d.,

Dooms imagined
wrong,

story ephemeral and d., iO39b to company with pain, 5153 to death though fated not, 3703

for

some
still

hath

d.
is

me

mighty dead,

58ob
of love, 103 ib

220b
surprised
betters to

what
find

it

d., agsb d. at all,

Doomsday, danced

till

d.,

3gib

ma

43ob
take honor and my life is d., 226a there shall be d. a deed, 284b things that are d., 7ia
things we ought not to, 5gb things won are d., nfyb to deserve kittens, g46a to have loved thought d., 71 ib treason has d. his worst, 284b 'twere well d. quickly, aSaa well begun is half d., g8b well d. is quickly d., i24b what have I d. unto thee, loa

d.,

igob

Domina mater ecclesia, i43b Dominant X, gs6b


Dominate, China not seeking to d. world, io25b serve and not d. world, g8sa Dominated, horse d. mind of early races, g86a Domination of the world, 84?b Dominations, Thrones D. Princedoms, 346b Domine speravi in te, igsb Dominion, between Grand Array and d. of world, 7853 death hath no more d., sob death shall have no d., io7oa glory means d., 7sga good old D., 474a

eighth day, 10565 is near, 2403 sick almost to d., 2573 Doomsters, purblind d., 7Ssb Doon, banks and braes o' bonny
D., 4943 Dooney, play on fiddle in D., 88ob Door, at its own stable d., 7363 at the d. of life, 7743 at this d. England sentry, 78 ib before d. of God, 7343 before his cottage d., 5323 begins to crack, iog2a beside a human d., 5113 big front d. 7663 called push, noib came tut by same d., 6303 clicked behind d., 4503 dream hidden d. of soul, 9363 ever-open d., 8463 foot wear steps of his d., 37b form from off d., 64^ golden d., 8173 handle of big front d., 7663 I am the d., 48b
f

what have you d. what have you


youth, 8o8a

to d.

me, 7322 with your

what without Zeus is d., 78b what you do not want d. to


yourself,

72b

no such strange d., 5733 over every living thing, 53 over palm and pine, 875a
dark d., 7$ob truly sorry man's d., 4g2b Dominions, sun in d. never
tired of

what's d. is d., 284b the hurlyburly's d,, 28ob who has begun has half d., 1233

when

yet be d., 646b worldly task hast d., 2gia and clumsy-fingered bear, Donkey

work may

in

at

windows and

in

at

d.,

sets,

497 b

Dominus Hluminatio mea,

i8a

vobiscum, jjga Domus tutissimum refugium, ig8a Don John of Austria, gi8b Quixote and I, 54ga Done, a* is d. that men can do, 494* ah what have you d. to me,

Donkeys, I shall resemble io7gb let it be with d., 10793

55 a

53 lb
d.,

iron d. of north, 10573

keep wolf from

d.,

1763

know

Donna

e mobile,

n8b

D. Anne D. Donne, John Un-done, 3073 whose muse on dromedary trots,


527 a

grass beyond d., 7313 lion at the d., 1092 a March is outside d., io4ob

7323
bright day
is d.,

2893

by the

rule,

*88a

Charmian is this well d., a8ga dared and d., 44ib dead and dumb and d., gi5a do as you would be d. by, 4153
fearful trip d., 7oaa foolish thing well d., 43 ib game is d. I've won, 525a God's will be d., 468b

with Landor and with D., 88 ib Donnee, subject idea d., 7g8b Donner un sens plus pur, ioo6b Dons, if D. sight Devon, 8653 Don't, advice to persons about to marry D., 8ioa advice to persons about to write
history D., 7$oa

moonlit d., gi4b no d. is shut, 86ob no right to open d., 933 nor so wide as church d., 2253 of all subtleties, 733 old age coming bolt d., i4gb one d. closes another open,
i76b

be gentle

her wrong, noib him who has d. deed to suffer,


79 a
his
I
if

your wife, 66a you d,, 53ga see whites fire until you eyes, 446b the ship, 54sb give up go near water, 11033
to

damned

if

of

open d., 7793 open either d. he pleased, 7533 opening of a d., 73ga over that same d. was writ, 2oob pity stands before the d., 48gb put in his hand by the hole of
the d., 2gb rapping at chamber d., 642b S3y over d. of heaven, io7gb shut shut the d., 4ioa sits on horse 3t hostess* d., 2363 some forgotten d., 10223 stack or the barn d., 334b stand at the d. and knock, 5?b steed stolen shut stable d., i8sb stone leaf unfound d., io4gb then shuts the d., 7353 to which no key, 6303 turn in d. once only, 10033

look back, 10483


for

best

his

time,

have d. the

state service,

4983 2?6b

sell
tell

America short, 11033

it
it
it

d. when 'tis d., 2823 can't be d., 887a

her everything, 66a tread on me, icgob

Doodle

handlebar

moustaches,

couldn't be d., g6$b unto the least, 44a I've d. it from my youth, knowing when to have d., let what will be d., 47 ib long day's task is d., s88b much to be d., 428b my dancing days are d., my story being d., 272b my task is smoothly d., nay I have d., 211 a never d. no good to me, no sooner said than d., no worthy action d., logoa not my will be d., 47b one braver thing, 3053

10763 Dooley, I think said Mr. D., 8gob

4833 5783

Doom,

3dolescence'
d,,

doubt

com-

mon

6g?b

edge of d., 2g4a feeling inevitable


2232
felicity or d., forfeit to a

g37b

as d., 6143 7sga confined d., 2gsb involve others in our d., 4443 regardless of their d., 43ga shaft by which he meets his d.,

874b io6b

773
stretch out to crack of d., 2%$b wrath and d. impending, i57b your d. Faustine, 774b Doomed conscripted ones, gg2b

unfound d., io4gb up to old inn d., 96 ib watching what goes in d., 6753 we never opened, ioo4b weed that grows beside d., 8713 what dog on wrong side of,
io52b

what

when

wind in that d., 1753 Life knocks at d., 9470 whining of a d., 3o8b
is

1284

INDEX
Door, wide as a church wolf at d., 85b
d.,

Down
6043
d.,

2253

Doubt, doubter and


explain
faith
till

d.,

all

men

world make path to d., 6053 younger generation knocking at d., 72gb Doorbells like magic game, 5353 Doorkeeper in the house of my God, 2oa Doornail, dead as d. 67ob Doors are widely flung, io64b as yet shut upon me, 5853 be ye lift up ye everlasting d.,
f

41 sb
d.,

dead which does not

8703
faith in honest d., 6513 frets d. maw-crammed
beast,

666a

he was worthy of hesitation and pain,


I
I

life,

10813

66s>b d. it said Carpenter, I d. some foul play, 2583


d.,

Douglas, Adamses vote for D., 8583 in his hall, 5igb like D. conquer, 4453 old song of Percy and D., xo$b tender and true, 7273 tongues of D. and myself, 6$6a Doux comme I 'amour, 4843 Dove, all eagle in thee all d.,
beside the springs of D., 5iob descending like a d., 3gb

745b

i8a
clay-shuttered d., 8573 Emily set d. ajar, 93 ib
fling open for men to
little d.,

show you d., 6653 ignorance and morbid

825b

found no
loves

rest,

6b
quarrels,
d.,

loSgb
their
exits,

take

ignorant taught to d., 7883 in d. to act or rest, 408 b loop to hang d. on, 2753 love curiosity freckles d., 10293 modest d. called beacon, 268a
d. stronger faith, days of endless d., nation beset by d., io2ob never d. I love, 26ob never d. love, 6573 never stand to d., |j2ob

when

it

1473

more serpent than

2isb

my

d.

my

Dooryard, when lilacs last in d., 7023 Dorian mood of flutes, J42b Doric lay, 3393 Dorking, hens of D., 673b Dormouse, dear little d., 9703 Dostoevski's realism, 978b and d. of plagues Dotages, humankind, 3113 Dote, Casey's tabble d., 8203

four d. were five, in to the upper d., 6033 open your living d., 3473 pictures out of d., 2733 shut d. against setting sun, 2903 shut in the streets, 293 shut-in homes closed d., 8 97 b superior for d., 736b ten thousand several d,, 3153 Doorway, Hylax barks in d., n6b to get in a god, 6g2b

more

my

6653 ig8b

roar you 2293 that I had wings like a d., igb visited upon d., 1393

dear, 652b gently as sucking d.,

new philosophy
3O7b

calls all

in d..

night of d. and sorrow, 75ob no manner of d., 7693 nowise in d., ioi4b one may prove 3 fool, 6i4b read to d., 52 la road to resolution lies by d.,
3 2lb science teaches d., 6753

white rose a d., 8073 wings of the d., 5593 with flickering tongue, ioo6b Dovecote, like eagle in a d., 2902 Dover, chalk cliffs of D., 88ga white cliffs of D., 932b Dove's, hidden under d. wing, 10043 Doves, be harmless as d., 423 in immemorial elms, 64gb soft as breast of d., 99 ib Dovetailedness, universal d., 66gb Dowager's a demd outline, SSgb Dowagers for deans, 6483

Double debt

3g8b Dotes yet doubts, 2743 to pay, 4503 ducats stolen by daughter, 2333 eyes upon d. string, 3o6b for all her sins, $2b Giant hit into d., g62b grew like a d. cherry, 2303 health to thee, 55gb life's fading space, 1 35b make assurance d. sure, tB^b of orient pearl a d. row, 3003 palter with us in d. sense, 2873
ple3sure to deceive deceiver, 559 a single nature's d. name, 2$7b snakes with d. tongue, 22gb
surely you'll grow d., 5093 toil and trouble, 2853

on on on

his very absence, 2323 myself, 7oob scraps of Ie3rning d.,

slow to clear, 665b d., 4623 moon should d., 4902 sunnier side of d., 6553 teach child to d., 4903 that sun doth move, 26ob thou stars are fire, 26ob time d. of Rome, 5613 to be once in d., 274b true science teaches d., 86gb truth to be liar, 26ob
solve one sun and

Dower scrap of sunset, 81 ib Dowered with hate of hate, 644b Down and away below, 7iob
d., 3223 gr3y hairs, 7b by salley gardens, 8793 cast d. in remembrance, gfyb

bliss

not beds of
d.

bring

my

come baby cradle and all, 8iob coming d. I can shift, 1793 down down, 7113
drink
it d.,

7703
of the 2ib-22a
d.,

when when
where where

in in

d. d.

d. let

truth, 7&2b win trick, 3963 me sow faith, 1573


tell

from

rising
d.,

sun unto

going

d. there truth, 6513 wherefore didst thou d., 42b Doubted, never d. clouds break, 668b who never d. never believed,

6423, io43b gigantically go d. again to the depths, 21 b go d. to the sea in ships, aib go up and d. as 3 talebearer, gb gone d. drain of eternity, 843 he that is d., 3663

tongue, 6o3b Double-consciousness peculiar sensation,

8g4b
of

Doubled

globe

dead,

10703

Double-darken gloomy skies, 6943 Double-faced, fame if not d., 34gb Double-mouthed, fame is d., 34gb

Doubly

benefits

who

gives quick-

ly, i25a dead, 6423

leaves of gold, 6g6b seconded with will and power, 2683 Doubt, adolescence' d., 6g7b all best though oft d., 3503 and darkness of war, 661 a

hammered

6513 Doubter and the doubt, 6043 Doubtful age, 65&b disputations, 5ib dreams of dreams, 7753 nice hazard of d. hour, 2403 thoughts, 23sb Doubting Castle, dreaming dreams, 6433 Doubtless come again with rejoicing, 22b God never did, 326b Doubts are traitors, 2703 began with fall of man, 90 ib begin with certainties end in d., 2o6b begin with d. end in certainties, 2o6b creating new d., 4623 dotes yet d., 2743 from what he sees, 4903 littlest d. are fear, 2633 more cruel than truths, 3613

keep
lay lay

d. on farm, gggb d. in peace, i7a d. in their dens, sib levelers wish to level d., 43ob

'em

me

them

^b

being who loves you, 6573 brother devil to Despair, 8o6b

of today, 9743 saucy d. and fears, s&4b Doughnut, optimist sees d.,

like a flower and is cut d., 153 look not d. but up, 666a look up not d., 7183 maketh me to lie d., i7b moon is d., 2833 never let you d., on your knees, 2503 sloth finds d. pillow hard, 29 la smoothing the raven d., 3373 the abandoned heaven, g86a the darker stairs, g86a the way Persephone goes, g86a thou climbing sorrow, 277b to depths of sea, 71 la to Gehenna up to throne, 872a to Puritan marrow, ggoa unseen full of water, 228a up and d. or round, giia vast edges drear, 7^b walking up and d. in it, 143

who why

pulls me d., sigb art thou cast d., iga

1285

Down
Down, world turned upside
jiob
you'll
d.,

INDEX
Drained
faces of

Negro children,

Drawing-down

of

meet 'em on way d., 9413 Down-gyved to his ankle, a6ob Downing Street, housemaid in D.,
9650 Down's, sea d. edge, 7763 all in the D., 40 la Downsitting, thou knowest my
233 Downstairs, habit coaxed kick you d., 74$b
d.,

10773 loungers of Empire d., 84gb Drainless shower of light, 5803 Drains, it d. your purse, 4843 opiate to d., 5823 Drake and Shakespeare, io7ib

Drawn

in pearly

linked

sweetness
.

blinds, io28b monotones, ggob long d. out,

335* never curtain d., 9283 never d. breath of life, 88sb shades d. with care, 10250

Downs,

d.,

hammock, 865b down with D., Drakes, ducks and d. with


he's in his
let

me

lie

Sgjjb
shil-

7623

lings,

2053
d. of heaven, 7393 d. with the day,

wine of life is d., 2843 with team of atomies, 2233 yet were they d. swords, igb Draws, be3uty d. with single hair,
lightly d. its breath, 5085 Dr3yhorse, great gray d., Dread abode, 441 a

threw him

d.,

why

kick

me

d.,

iog4b 49 ib

Dram, single Drama, dose


4003

8o3b

Downstream,
alike, 4a

upstream

and

d.

of plastic act, g64b only develop in

civilization,

Downward
to

beat thy wings, face d. in sun, io22b thoughts always d. bent,


darkness, 9553 voices of duty call, 7g6b

iijb
343*

8ooa

Downwards,
3 66a

-look off

no way but
this
d.

d.,

whether damned or not, 4813 writing is d. or nothing, g2gb Dramatic criticism, 10473 writing as good as it is d., gzgb Dramatist, Sherard Blaw the d.,
9043 wants more
Dramatists,
liberties,

fear of kings, 234b back from the d. fray, 633 close eyes with holy d., 5243

and

empire chaos, 4143


fifty above, 927 b grave as little as bed, 377b

Inferno, 665b

Downy, shake
2844

sleep,

8ooa
first

innocence
of

has

nothing to

d.,

Shakespeare

378b
Jove's d. damors, 275a naught's to d., 8536 nothing more d. and shameless,

Dowry, brought her d. destruction, 78b Doxy, heterodoxy another man's


d.. 4193 orthodoxy is my d., 4iQ a > 577 a Doze, docent doesn't d., io4ob student dassn't d., io4ob Dozen, kills seven d. Scots, *sga Dozens, making gods by d., igoa reckons up by d., 7663 Drab, ditch-delivered by a d., 2853 Drachenfels, crag of D., 556b Drachmas, buy repentance at ten thousand d., g$a

d., 429b Dramatize it dramatize it, Drang, Sturm und D., 482b Drank at every vine, io23b

8ooa

66a
of mother-in-law, 8293 of something after death, 2623 of tomorrow, 80 ib

words, 738b our liquor straight, i06oa of ale, 9193 English pint rich d. too much, 10453 without thirst, 38gb Drapery, one that wraps d. of couch, 574b Draught, fee doctor for nauseous
ate
d. precious
d.,

and

37*a

Draft, corner d. fluttered flame, 10183 Drafted, no loophole in case d.,

of life, 7393 of vintage, 5823 one d. above heat, 25 ib

Draughts, shallow

954*

Draw, able 7ob


all

to d.

d., 4033 with their

feet,

Drag Atlantic

for whales, 76oa slow d. of days, 8gb the slow barge, 45gb truck along the road, sSob Zeus from heaven to earth, 6$b themselves through Dragging negro streets, 108 ib Dragon, before he killed d., giga between d. and wrath, 277 a dare d. in his den, 57 ib

other to destruction

d.,

305 373

as love with thread, 3123 began to d. to our end,

preach ideal d. realization, 9313 two fates of d. death, 64b walk in fear and d., 525b what d. grasp, 48ga whence this secret d., 3935 Dreadeth, burnt child fire d., i84b Dreadful, acting of d. thing, 254a called thee mighty and d., 3083 day, 5193 deed of d. note, 284b done 3 thoussnd d. things, 2i8b endured something more d., 673 gathers samphire d. trade, 27gb hot weather, 533b

bow

ride chair up
his

and speak
close

dose

eyes

truth, 56ab to edge, 10373 and d. curtain,

knowledge of truth, 8ib


lion among ladies d., 2303 loud roared d. thunder, 4ggb no witness so d., io8a noise of waters, 2173 note of prep3ration, 2443 nothing so d. th3t philosopher
isn't

2153
evils d.

men
one

together,

from

mother

g8b both

d.

great d. was cast out, 583 Michael fought against d., 583 O to be a d., 9973 Saint George that swinged d., 2363
that is in the sea, 323 world, 9893 young lion and the d., sob Dragonflies draw flame, So^b Dragonfly on the river, 6193 Dragonish, cloud that's d., s88b Dragon's, hook baited with d. tail, 3323 teeth, 1042 a Dragons, brother to d., i6a habitation of d., 323 Drags at each remove, 44?b bellies and d. in wind, 88sa its slow length along, 4033

bresth, 79 from others lesson, io8b


line

saying

it,

noa

inwsrd quality after, 288a where God h3s not, 78gb living faces from marble, 1193
d.

past,

645b
thought, 394*

plessing d.

silence th3t d. bell,

273b

my songs u6b
new

Daphnis

home,

of the cliff, 25gb Dreading e'en fools, 41 la

summit

mischief on, 2733 not d. out more than already

Dream, Adam's
all all

know, 8o6b
out leviathan with a hook, i6b powers into higher dasses, 473b right here a picture, 797b sabry before spending, 886b thy breath in pain, a66b

d., s84b without stir, we see or d., 6413

night

s84b

snguishes writer, io4oa awakened from d. of life, 5723

8o8b the papers lawyer, you with single hair, 3123 Drawers, chest of d. by day, 4503

up

of water, 113
Shirtt3ils Into D.,

losob
his verbos-

verity d. me to ground, 4623 Drain, leave by town d., 8o7b of eternity, 843 Drainage, bad criticism as serious as careless d., gi6b

Draweth out thread of


ity,

2223
blinds, io28b less kindled earth, 5633

Drawing down

of

Drained cup of Lethe, i2ob

from no no unnecessary lines, goob nothing up, 4583

behind a d., 2g4b behold it was a d., 3663 beholding shape of d., 843* beneath tamsrind tree, 641 b bonds were brittle, 774b but I love thee still, 6543 doses within d., 8goa deep d. of peace, 55 ib disturb not her d., 4g5a dreamer making d. true, 9663 each age d. that is dying, 8o7b every d. we thought lost, 722b what my d. eye hath not heard
was, 2$ob

1286

INDEX
Dream,
fly
first d.

Dressed
Dreams, in

that comes, 8i?a

forgotten as a d., 3973 ghost fled like d., u8b glory and freshness of a d., 5i 3 a glory and the d., 5135 grandeur is a d., 4583 Hanging Gardens a d., 93313

Dream unseen unsought,


vision in higher d,, ioo3b vision or waking d., 5833 warned in a d., ggb

my

d. I'd be,

we

live

as

we

fly, 10853 land of d., 7145 land of my d., ioi2b

joys as d. do

d.

alone,

84jb

with d. of meet death with, 666b within d., 6413

happiness ceases like d., 3*8b hidden door of soul, 9363

you are crossing Channel, yfyb


youthful poets
d.,

true, 10253 d. to shame, 6i8b men in exile feed on d., 793 night full of ghastly d,, 9173

lies down to make d. come

pleasant d., 574b

man's best

3353

no mortal dared
not old

hope waking d., Q7a hope beyond shadow of

d.,

s8ob
us,

how

horrid dreams, 6g8a d. of place without io8oa


I'll

how

d.

fast

asleep,

6g8a

hungry despite d., 10506 iridescent d., 7480


is a theater, gs6a keep d. or grave apart, 6i7b let no man d., 654a life an empty d., 4023 life as lake dreams sky, 8702 life but empty d., 6sob life d. in night, 878b life is a d., igob, gsSb life not d. so dark, 6795 like a shadow like a d., love's young d 5423 mankind is d. of a shadow, might be all we d. of, no mortal dared d. before, nor Homer nods but we 402b

Dreamcrossed twilight, ioo4a Dreamed Greece might be free, 5 6ob he d. and behold a ladder, ya I dwelt in marble halls, s86b life was beauty, 68oa never d. wrong triumph, 668b of in any philosophy, 102 ib of in your philosophy, 6oa of toasted cheese, 823a never past past redeeming,

men

responsible
shall

before, for d.,


d.,

dream

6433 9363 3$b


d.,

painter's

brush

consumes

883b
pleasing d. slumbers light, sigb revisit in d. the dear dead, 8<jb rich beyond d. of avarice, 4333,

435 sighed for Agnes' d., 5810 sleep full of sweet d.,
spread

5803

not all a d., ssga not d. all day long, 691 a

nothing happens unless first d., 948b of battled fields, 5203 of home, gi?a of Jeanie, 727b of joy all but in vain, 1713 of spring, 527b of things that were, 555b of un triangulated stars, 8ggb old men shall d. dreams, 356 old men's d., 3686 one man with d. conquer, 8073 opium so they can d,, 8703 out of misty d., 8goa past the wit of man, 23oa past vanished like d., 577&-b patriot d., 8493 phantasma or hideous d., 2543
poet's d.,

Dreaming, butterfly d. I am a man, loia demon's that is d., 6433 dreams no mortal dared, 6432 eyes of wonder, 744b
false or honest d., 10785 I was a butterfly, loia lives and souls d. d., 6gya

what men d. of seeing, 8303 Dreamer, beautiful d., 7283 behold this d. cometh, 7b making dream come true, 9663 of dreams, lob, 7533 scene actor prompter, 9363 Dreamers of dreams, Soya soldiers are d., ggab Dreamful ease, 6455
saw

somnambulisms reveries, 6973 d. under your feet, 88ob

stuff as d. are

made on, 2975 surely are difficult, 6ya


than
this

world
are

d.

of,
d.,
d.,

6543

themselves

only

g8b
10513

thought to sell, 6oob


transit

of old best

touchstones of characters, 68 ib

where

d.

cross,

loo^b

tread softly on d., 88ob true I talk of d., 22ga untold, 86ob vain hopes like d. of those

who
8o7a

wake, 1363 we are dreamers of d., we have great d., 10253 what d. may come, s6ib

Dreamy,

brief

d.
d.,

delight,

88ob

lullaby, 7683

my excuse for d., 102 ib o'er joys of night, 488a on both, 271 a
on things to come, sg^b pool, 691 a
spires, 7i4a Dreamless, deep and d. sleep, 755 a Dreamlike trade of blood, 5260 Dreams abuse curtained sleep,

Drear, chill and

5iga

epitaph

d.,

872b

vast edges d., 7i4b Dreariest and longest journey, 57 ia Drear-nigh ted December, 5803

Dreary,
if

all

bad and

d. lives,

world sad 8580

d.,
d., d.,

72

morals

make you

8253
62 ib

2833 advances 68 3 b
all

in

direction
d.,

of

d.,

midnight d., 642b some days dark and these d. dumps, ai8b to be somebody, 7ssa
to live in world, tract of country, 6423

my

nightly

6422
thee,

63a
d.,

5Hb
d.,

6393 republic is a d., 9486 salesman got to d., io7ib short as any d., 228b sight to d. of not tell, silently as a d., 458b
sits

President had

5243

from d., sigb 68sb somnambulist of vanished d.,


as new-risen sleep not d. not,

Kooa

summer
taught

strange and moving


d.

d.,

8oyb
64 ib 9473 $28b

beneath

sweet d.

when

me

tree, trick's over, this wisdom,

5703 3&7b length before us like land of d., 7i4b being poor have only d., 88ob blissful d. of long ago, 7783 books each a world, 5i5b broider with d. tapestry, 878b communicatest with d., 2953 desires d. and powers, 7753 doubtful d. of d., 77$a dream horrid d., 6983 dreamer of d., lob, 7533 dying d. of his Argos, ugb England of our d., 876b forgotten d., 644b
at

arise

from

d. of deceive

'em,

Dregs, drunken the


of of
life,

333

36?b

Romulus, Drenched in fraterusl blood, 54?b our steeples, 278a


Dress, all this fleshly d., s62b as nation don't d. well, 836b

ma

by yellow candlelight, 8233


if

the devil d. her not,

2893

Peace the

human

d.,

4&ya

plain in d. sober in diet, 4143 secrecy the human d., 48gb style the d. of thoughts, 41 $b

that I forget, 774b that is coming to birth, 8o7b that it fades from kiss to kiss,

gate of ivory for false d., 1193

sweet disorder in the d., 3203 tatter in mortal d,, 88*b


to d.

88ob
theater, 936a

those
too
is

who

d.

by

day,
d.,

to sleep

perchance to

6423 26ib
real-

from Zeus, 62b


between
d.

go by contraries, 5893 have two gates, 673 house of d. untold, 86ob hunters of d., 8463 hunts in d., 6473 I have bad d., 261 a image d. wrought, 8903
in d. begins responsibility, 88 la in d. behold Hebrides, 5908

to

call

to

dine,

8493
to go,

Dressed,

all d,

up nowhere

8g6b
April d. in
all his trim, sgjb fine as I will, sg6b for this short comedy, iggb

good

spirits

when

well

d.,

6701

translators
ity,

and

how

99b

was Devil d., 5333 in brief authority, 2700


then

1287

Dressed
Dressed, lord neat trimly
d., 2383 nature to advantage d., 4033 out in all her finery, 45ob still to be d., 3020

INDEX
Drink, nor any drop to d., 5253 not meat nor d., 10243 not my design to d., 3283 not the third glass, 322b not to elevation, 423b oblivion of a day, 7303 offers drowning dog d., 3243 old wine to d., 207b one csn d. too much, 4553
Drinks, one never d. enough, 4553 she d. water her keel plows air,

205b wine with laughter, nooa


Drip, slow d. over stones, io64b Dripped, from eyelids d. love, 67b

washed d. warmed fed, 9473 world beautifully d., 7 iga

Drew

circle shut me out, 8273 Creator d. his spirit, 3?2b everything that begins with M,

744*

pawn

intelligence

to

buy

d.,

from out boundless deep, 6553 Jew that Shakespeare d., 4133 many-colored life he d., 4s6b men as they ought to be, 8ia one angel, 665b she d. an angel down, 37 ib them with bands of love, jsb
Dried carcass of leopard, 10453 sap out of veins, 881 a tubes twisted and d., Syab Drift, adamant for d., gsoa cannot d. beyond His love, 6s6b
everything begins to
d,,

Dripping snow on green grass, ioogb thought came up d., 9753 water hollows stone, 1 1 33 Drive, needs go whom devil d.,
1853

pretty creature, 51 ib Russians' joy to d., 1703

io58b

go with not d. or

d.
lie

of things, g5b at anchor, 6$3b

of pinions, 8573
tell you my d., 2463 toward unparalleled phes, 9513 wait and obey, 8y7b

shoulder sky d. ale, 853b sit and d. with me, 9023 sleep is d. to thirsty, 1973 snake came to d. there, 9863 snowed of mete and d., i66b stagger but not with strong d., 32a strive mightily d. as friends, 2193 strong d. is raging, 253 sweetest d. be sorrow, 9093 taken to d., goob think that I can d., i88b
thirsty

one heat d. out another, 205b out Nature with a pitchfork, i23b people difficult to d., 54ob the rapid car, 45gb
Driven, all d. into same i2ib by love are d. away, 4863
fold,

by passion d., 4933 by the spheres, 362b from every other corner, 4443 leaves dead d. like ghosts, 5&gb sickness is d. away, 4873 white 3s d. snow, 2gsb
Drives,
fin3l
r

and ye

gave

d.,

443

Ruin

catastro-

tippled d. more fine, tfi$b to general joy of table, 2853 to me only with thine eyes,

horses of sun, 8133 my green age, 10703

v 3

"b

fiercely

d.,

Drifted in sheepish calm,


leaves d. from

10763

3033
to the bird, gooa to the lass, 48 ib

me, 9693
g68a

on crooked
Drifting

crosses,

night along with heaven, 6293 Ruin's plowsh3re d. el3te, 4933 through green fuse d. flower,
10703^
I shelter, 1233 d. fat oxen, 433b Driveth, care d. away sleep, s8b chsff which wind d. awsy, i6b

down big still river, 76 la Drifts, all beautiful d. away, 881 a dank yellow d. of leaves, 7153 Driftwood, scattered d. bleached,
75 8b Drink, a little in
d., 395b ale's stuff to d., 85$b

unto him that ish, 26b

today and drown sorrow, 3i2b is ready to perthey eat d. and everything, 933

where storm d.

who

way

and be whole again, 9293 and devil done for rest, 8233 as he brews so shall he d., 3023
ask a d, divine, 3033

when man takes first d., 863b when men d. they are rich, gob when woman takes latest d., 86 3 b
will

blood to

d.,

6i4b

lad and d. beer, 4293 dance and d. and sing, 4893 or taste not, 4033 deep

come

my

while you live d., 6303 wild ansrchy of d., 3043 not d. with you, 2323 with me and drink as I, 41 8b women d. or snuff, io34b

d. furiously, isb time d. onw3rd, 645b Driving, catch the d. gale, 4ogb is like the d. of Jehu, isb Drizzle, Nashville d., 8643 Dr61e de guerre, 97gb

Jehu

Dromedary,

muse

on

d.

trots,

divine, 3osa eat d. be merry, 28b, 46b eat d. tomorrow we die, 3ib every creature d. but I, 357b felony to d. small beer, 2153
five reasons

ye all of it, 44b Drinker, God be merciful to this d., i55b Drinkest tears of children, 5523

5273 Drone, frogs d. their l3ment, 1173 Droned, minister d. monotonousDroning, beetle wheels d. flight, 4403 Droop, p3rted by world 3nd d., 5103 Drooped, grest star early d., 7023 Drop, blind and drinks d., 88 3b but not be dropped by, 433a can't d. it if I tried, 874b curled last holy d., gssb drop-scenes d. at once, 884b every d. drawn by Issh, 64ob in every dimpled d., 8693
lips of a strange

we

should

d.,

3823

follow strong

d M 3ob
2873 324b go8b
1723

for your lips to d., 774a give me to d. mandragora, goes in wit goes out, health to Western world, herbs to d. smoke thereof, here and there eat and d.,

Drinking, and kept on d., 8ggb and Sabbath-breaking, 552b blude-red wine, 10873 deep of divinest anguish, 685b eating and d. like brutes, 7o2b eating d. breeding, 7003 eating d. dung death, 10053 largely sobers us again, 4033 l3ws which ran like d. songs,

7isb

in comrades' eyes, 7igb is d. necessary evil, 8g2b


it

gob merry dancing

d. time,

much

d.

little

thinking,

3723 3893

woman

d.

as

down, 77oa
up, 10942

my
3023
to d.,

it
it

with pleasure, 37b

now

griefs, 2283 not d. but excess, 3173 is time for d., 121 a
d.,

let

him
is

d. merrily,

poor brains for


9563

273b

life to

the lees, 6463


lion

light

comes

man takes d. d. takes man, ypob many companions for food and
d.,

prescribe rule for d., 394b quart of milk a day, 10103 since leaving d. of wine, 3753

773
to us, to d.,

meat d. and doth more than enough 8553 never d. by daylight, 961 a never d. no spent, 6933
18 ib

man came d., 423 d., 5633 with d. fresh and fair, ssyb Drinks and gapes for drink again,
Son of
what's

honeycomb, 23b makes it run over, 4693 me deep fathoms down, 6g8a merrily did we d., 524b never d. retourne may, 1643 nor any d. to drink, 5253 not a d. of blood shed, 473 a of a bucket, 32b of allying Tiber, 28gb
of black blood, 10513 of nuuily blood, 6o4b

blind and d. drop,


eats d.

one d. would save 2igb 'ow quick we'd d.


raineth d. staineth

my
'er,

soul,

wno always d., 3043 nevermore to d. again, 9153 no longer water, 553
never taste

and

man

long time between


d.

86gb d., 824b when not thirsty, 11023


plays,

slop, tears as fast, 2y6b tiny d. of thing's essence,

876b g88a go7b

1988

INDEX
Dropped from angel's wing, 5i?a from zenith like star, 3433 his tongue d. manna, 3435
Drowning man
76gb
cling to

Dryad
straw,

Drunk, Mynheer Vandunck never


d., sooa not d. who can

no

d.

mark upon him, 2g6a

my love d. like a flower, 1140 not wish to be d. by, 433 a from his pocket, s8ga plates d.
Recording Angel d. tear, 438a Droppeth as gentle rain, 234b into empty Dropping buckets

dog drink, 3243 Drowns, coughing d. parson's saw,


aasa
third d. him, 25ib

offers d.

pleasure to be

Drowsed with fume

of

poppies,

wells, 458a contentions of a wife are continual d., 253 down ladder rung by rung,

584* Drowsiness shall clothe a man with rags, 6a Drowsy, beetle with his d. hums,

552b 424a queen be d. as we, 424a stag d. his fill, 5203 what potions have I d., 2Q4a with fire, 4973 your water and wine, 87 ib
rise,

d.,

Drunkard and glutton


to poverty,

shall

come

6a

284b
dull ear of d. man, 236b ear of night, 5553
d. emperor awake, 8833 makes heaven d. with harmony,

down with

bales, 6473

from veils of morning, one d. eye, 2573 d. slow, 87gb peace comes pearls and vermin, 5973 down Grand Canyon, petal
d. of dew, i6a Drops, begotten blue-fringed lids, 5263 to earliest ground, 2343 into poetry, 672b kindred d. been mingled, 457*> little d. of light, 332b little d. of water, 7igb number the d. of rain, 373 of water hollow out stone, 1133 on gate bars hang in row, 784b sliding from oar, 10653 that visit heart, 254b d. drop at once, Drop-scenes, all
Oi iips

keep

2223
pains, 5823 syrups of world, 274b lull, 44oa tinklings who d. at that hour, 331 a Drowsyhead, land of d., 4soa Drudge, harmless d., 427b

numbness

cannot meet cork, 7j8b rolling English d., giga town d., io47a Drunkard's eye, 8843 Drunkards, fools d. and United States, iioab liars and adulterers, 2773 where notorious d. laid, 7833

Drunken,

Antony

brought

d.

forth, 28ga

d.

from clouds, 41 gb

Drudgery, makes

d.

Drug

it's

the fashion

divine, 324a to abuse,

but not with wine, 323 dog ragged head, 5343 of things Lethean, 774a private of Buffs, 6563 sailor on a mast, 2i6a
stagger like a the dregs, 333
d.

7ga
which takes away
sion,

man,
d.,

2ib
2533

grief

and pasthy
d.

653
apothecary

Drunkenness,
is

babbling

Drugs,

true

quick, 225b Druids, stand like D. of old, 622a Drum, Bible and a d., 868b clamor of fife and d., 7280

degrees of d., sgga sepulture of wit, i6ga

dumb

884b
Dropsical,
he's
is d.,

d.

she sore-eyed,

as d. vith hole, frenzied d., 88s>a not a d. was heard, 566b

66ga

8i5a
Dross, rest

on your drums, g48b


pulpit d. ecclesiastic, $5ib rumble of distant d., Sagb
spirit-stirring d., take my d. to

g8ga of d., 2333 stoops not to show what gods call d., 6g4a of Drought, careful in the year d., 34b dust and d. of plain, io5oa of March perced to roote, i66a for d., gisb opponents blame rain snow hail d., 76oa d. crony, Drouthy, ancient trusty

them war

up
d.

275a England, 8653 Channel, 8653 throbbed no longer,


the

not in rioting and d., sib Drury, lives in D. Lane, iog7a Dry, air thoroughly small and d., loosb aromatic odor, g4oa before my sighs did d. it, 3233 blowing of d. dust, g88b bones hear word of Lord, 353 bread d. as paper, g88b cold hot moist and d., 36gb desert of a thousand lines, 41 sa die a d. death, 2g6a bleached and d., driftwood

647b

758b

Drumbeat,

morning

d.

circles

eyes

earth, 548a of St. Stephen's, 10753

fields

at fall, 664a burn, 7g6b a friend or being d., wine good

and laugh

Drumcliff churchyard, 885a

Drove out the man, 6a them out of temple, 48a to tumult in clouds, 88 ib Drown, before my tears did

Drummed,
d,

as

we

d.

them long

ago, 8653
it,

Drummer, different d., 68s Drum's discordant^ sound, Drums and fifes sweetly
8oga

455
play,

drink today and d. sorrow, 3i2b I'll d. my book, ag7b men who d., 43oa neither can floods d. it, 3oa tears shall d. the wind, aSab wake us and we d., looia what pain it was to d., 2173 Drownded now and again, goga Drowned, ceremony of innocence d., 882a dreams, 6g7a glory in shallow cup, into Mississippi and d. io4ib chance of being d. jail with 43oa not afraid of sea will be d.,
f

and tramplings

of

three

con-

quests, 33ob clang of metal beaten d.,

878b 62ob

382a hand yellow cheek, 24ib heart d. of blood, 58 ib hearts d. as summer dust, 5i6a his hands formed the d. land, 2ia hot cold moist and d., 344a in a d. and thirsty land, igb into a d. Martini, ggga into the sea upon d. ground, 8b

drum on your
hearts
like

ruffle of d.,

d., g48b muffled 866a

d.,

keep powder d,, 53ga loud d. wind, 5103


never miss water till well d., 422a O ye d. bones, 35a old man in d. month, looib

sound trumpet beat d., 4ob sound trumpets beat d., 371 a with d. and guns, loggb Drunk, accustomed to deliberate when d., 86b
all

rum-tumming everywhere, 944*

learned

all d.,

45 8b

and

now and
oceans

goga

again, goga

asleep in boots, g55a dead d. judge, io68a delight of battle, 646b gloriously d., 458b

10323 pluck up d. honor, 238b fountain and into plunged


d.,

d.

6g6a
see evil d. in mercy, 8s8b the cocks, 2783 with us in endless night, 3213

hasten to be d., 3723 hath not d. ink, 222a hearts d. with beauty, 8gsb hemlock I had d., 5823 hydroptic earth hath d., so6a
is

prepared the d. land, sgb rivers of water in a d. place, 3* a smooth-shaven green, 335b starting tear, 76sb stone no sound of water, looaa stood firm on d. ground, lob sun dry wind, i8ab volumes of ethics, 47ob wet eye d. heart, 891 a what shall be done in the d.,

47b

he who prostrate lies, milk of Paradise, 524a

when the well's d., 4*za wrung life d., 774a


Dryad, light-winged
d.,

5823

1280

Dryden
Dryden aggravated
dissociation,

INDEX
Dull privations and lean emptiness, so6a prospect of distant good, 37ob
rich d. and drank, io45a roots with spring rain,

Dundee,

bonnets

of

Bonny

ioo7b copious D., 41 aa Dryer, smaller and d. than will,

52a
hour of that D., 5133 Dunes, soar into air above d.,
single

1002 a

io36a

Drying

after

bracing

showers,

sherry
shrill

is d.,

43ob

10350

up single tear, 56ib Dubuque, old lady

from

D.,

continuous, SySb sleep in d. cold marble, 2gga so d. so dead in look, 24ia

spur
Ducat, dead for a d. dead, 2643 Ducats, my daughter O my d., 233a Duchess, arms of chambermaid as
d,,

my

d. revenge,

a64b

stale tired bed, 2773 stirring d. roots, 1002 a sublunary lovers' love,

Dunfermline town, io87a death, 1005 a Dungeon, live upon vapor of d., 274b my body my d. is, 8a4a scourged to his d., 5745 so dark as own heart, 6i4b

Dung and

3o6a

432b

66aa my said D. in hoarse growl, 74$b tut tut said D., 744a Duck, hold-fast the only dog my d., 2430 saw a little d., iog7b Ducks and drakes with shillings,
last D.,

though gentle yet not d., venerably d., 4563 were all we taste, losib without single absurdity, would he be of soul, 5i2a Dullard and the tame, 6gaa George Third honest d., Dullard's envy of brilliant
gioa Duller than fat weed, 25gb Dull-eyed melancholy, agob
Dullness,

3573

4483

8iga

men,

four d. on pond, 7aga Due, custom to whom custom


fear to whom fear d., 5ib give devil his d., 1943 honor to whom honor d.,

on own d., 125!) sun shineth upon d., g6b Duns, beeches in browns and d., 7 84b Dunsinane, Birnam wood to D., 28 5 b, g 53 a Dupe, man d. deceiver decay, 56ga mind is d. of heart, 355b Duplicate, atom in matter d. in mind, 6g7a
Duplicates,
d.,

Dunghill, cock has great influence

d.,

cause of d. j

in

others,

mob

of

unnecessary

433

6g7a

eat not to d., 42gb gentle D. loves joke, 41 $b

Dupree, Weatherby a 97p

George

D.,

5ib

meat in

d. season,

aib

participation of office, 47ab see that none is d., 7346 that you may have d., 3goa to be crowned again, g86a tribute to whom tribute d., sib word spoken in d. season, 24b Dues, render to all their d., 5ib simple d. of fellowship, 6i8b Duke, bury the Great D., 65ib everybody praised the d., 53$a

into d., 885b swept of fool whetstone of wits, 247a Dulls edge of husbandry, 25ga Duly and daily serving him, 444b

never

Durability, territory of certain d.,

Dum
as

Dumb

anima est spes and silent be

est,

ma

led, 461 a

vith hole, 66ga beggar that is d., igga

drum

6s8a Durable, make recollection d., 423b northern thought slow d., 664b odors of ointments more d., ao8a-b
true love a d. fire, ig8b

keep your coin, io8oa marquis d. and a' that, 4g6a


of Plaza Toro, 76ga

charge once more be d., 7i5a d. and done, gi5a death, losib excellent d. discourse, 2g7a great griefs d., i3ib in havens d., 8oab

Durance

vile,

4g6b

dead and

inscrutable grand, 7153


d.

Dukedom,

library

large

justice blind deaf d.,


last poetic voice d.,

enough, ag6a prize above my d., 2g6a Dulce et decorum est, iaib non d. non et decor, g88a reminiscitur moriens Dulces Argos, iigb Dulcet and harmonious breath,
aaga Dulcimer, damsel with d., 5243 alebat Parthenope, 8473 Dull academic half-dozen, g37b d. and mean, 62 6a age business not make d., 7iob
Dulcis
care, io86b-io87a

8gob 7iia

Durst defy the Omnipotent, 34ib Dusk, breezes d. and shiver, 645b bumps along the d., 8iga each slow d., ioa8b faces with silken turbans, 348 b out of d. shadow, Sioa stars in purple d., loiob

lips are d., 64tjb listen ye nations

be d., 57gb muffled and d., 6o3b bells be d., 8533 noisy one rational voice d., 1060 a Oracles are d., 334a orators d. when beauty pleadeth, saoa sense of what life means, 795a shallow murmur but deep are
d.,

Dusky, bend low d. night, 758a night rides down sky, 424a rear my d. race, 647b
trusty d. vivid true, 8a4b Dust and drought of plain, 10503 and reek of towns, 6gsb and silence of shelf, 594b and soot of complaints, 8i7b as chimney sweepers come to d.,

agia
as d. that drives, 8i6a as we are, 5ioa

igga

catalogue

of

common

things,

to d. forgetfulness a prey, 441 a to tell crooked rose, io7oa tongue of the d. shall sing, $2a

ashes

am

and

d.,

i5ab

blossom in the

d.,

327b

58ib
cold ear of death, 44ob

Dumbly, humbly d., g6ga Dumbshows, inexplicable


Dumpling,
logSb
hell idea

d.,

aGab
d.,

commercial liturgies, 8gga conform and be d., loooa creep in one d. line, 403a dark soundless day, 64*a ear of drowsy man, as6b fighter and keen guest, 24ob how d. to pause, 646b in Fleet Street, 534b man always sure, g6ob moon talk d., 76ob motions of his spirit d., a35b my days d. and hoary, 36ab narcotics numbing pain, 65oa not all books d. as readers, eSga not only d. himself, 433b opiate to drains, 58aa ought to be d. sometimes, g4b piercing night's d. ear, 244a

diddle

diddle

blowing of dry d., g88b bones are d., a7a cinders ashes d., 58 ib darkness fruit there of d., drawing near to d., 86ga

773b

born on undigested

d.,

6g6a

Dumps,

doleful d.

mind

oppress,

2i8b, 10845 these dreary d., ai8b

earth and grave and d., iggb equal but in d., 3oga even while d. moves, 1005 a excuse my d., loaga farther from God nearer d.,

Dumpy, hate a
Dun, her Duncan,
fatal

d.

woman, 56oa
of
D.,

ioo4b
forbear to dig d. enclosed here,

breasts are d., ag4b

entrance

a8ib hath borne his faculties, a8ab hear it not D., aSsa is in his grave, a84b Dunce kept at home, 4s6b sent to roam, 456b with wits, 4isb Dunces, wit with d.,

2ggb formed

man

of

d.
to

of
eat,

the

ground, 5a given brother d.

8g8b

guilty of d. and sin, sa4a handful of d., looab

hath closed Helen's eye, soob he sleeps in d., 3S7b heap called history, 8aoa

1290

INDEX
Dust, heap of d. alone remains,

Dwelt
Duty whispers low, 6o3b whole d. of man, 292 woke found life d., 68oa
Duty's,

4o6a hear -her and beat, 6$2b hearts dry as summer d.,
I shall lie in the d., 6-tb
if

Dusty cobweb-covered maimed, 755b


i6a
eat d. bread, io38a grated to d. nothing, 268b hit the d. trail, g52a purlieus of law, 65ob road long and d. to grave, Ssab way to d. death, s86b Dutch, beat the D., logob city of New York, 864b

constabulary done, 766b

d.

to

be

they say some d., ga8a in the d. the cool tombs, Q48b is for a time, gg?a kicks d., 682b whirl of d., 64a lay mightily in less than the d., 871 a 2oa the lick d., light in d. lies, 572b limns on water writes in d., 2ioa love readiest but to d., ao$b make d. of all things, 331 a
as
d. our paper, 227b maniac scattering d., 65oa marry my body to that d., 321 a mouth filled with d., much learned d., 458a mysteries beyond thy d.

faithful child,

sgob
i

Dux femina

facti,

vitae philosophia d., vitae animus est, n6a Dwarf on shoulders of giant,
sees

i7b

nib
3ioa
i$4a

determine properties, 5$7a


fault of the D., 57a Dutchman in Eden would plant
it,

farther
thief,

than
286a

giant,

Dwarfed and abased below, SaGb


Dwarfish
whole, 527 a

68sa

see Flying D.,

8o6b

Dwell

Dutchman's, 252b

icicle

on D. beard,

make

Duties, brace ourselves to d., 92 ib live without d. obscene, 6ioa new occasions new d., 6g2a

property has d., 61 2a Duty, astray from d. and interest, 46ib


better one's

a weeping hermit, 44ga at ease for aye d., 645a better to d. in a comer, 25b critic d. on excellencies, 3945 heart place devils d. in, ssoa house we d. in every day, 7385 in house of the Lord, i8a in midst of people of unclean
lips,

name not perish in d. 5$ noble d. of Alexander, 266a nor that frame was d., 7s8b not without d. and heat, 34oa of creeds outworn, s68b of snow, ga?a of systems and creeds, 644b on marble pavement d. grows,
f

own

sob

d.,

io6a
d.,

book you read from


brave
5<>3 a

man

43ob
d.,

inattentive

to

in possibility, 736!? in the tents of wickedness, 2oa in the uttermost parts of the
sea, 233 not d. in temples, 3&4a nothing ill d. in such a temple, 2g6b on heights of mankind, 4g8b and rest never d., peace

constabulary d., 766b dare do d. as we understand

it,

6s6b dead then

my

d.

noa

pays us with age

and

d.,

iggb

plummets
pride
that

to

of hope, 8ib licks the d., 41 ib


d.

devoting himself discussing d. to God, 7000 divided d., 27 sa do d. in all things, 6soa

ended, 8o3a to d., 36sa

shall

I like a hermit such as d. in tents, 6a

d.,

igga

proud and angry d., 85gb quaint honor turn to d., $6oa
quintessence of d., 261 a rain in d. on her shoulders,

do your d., 33 ib done my d. and no more, 424a done my d. ever, 825b


essence of judicial d., every man to do d., 49 2 a
faithful

1022b
raised aloft hurled in d., 7155 return to the earth, aga returneth to d. again, 748b seemed to be local d. cloud,

to perdition there to d., 3ib together in unity, 22b twin turtledoves d., 704a two souls d. in my breast, 478b where Israfel, 64 ib

below he did his

d.,

where thoughts and


742a

feelings d.,

io6gb shake off d. of your shalt them eat, 6a


silent d., 44ob small d. of earth,

feet,

42a

gives from sense of d., gratifying d. done, 7693 knowledge of their d., goa laid on me a sinner, sgsb lies in what is near, looa

6gsb

who
i7a

shall

d.

in thy holy hill,

with vilest worms to d., 2g2b world and they that d. therein,
i8a Dwelled, Abram d. in Canaan, 6b7a Lot d. in the cities, 7a Dwellers by the sea, 82ga sur la branche, 8g5b Dwelleth in the secret place, 2ob not in temples, soa Dwellin', fair maid d., io88a

limping with

d.,

loia
filial

gg6b
gsb 6ogb

lively

sense
to

of

d.,

47<>a

small

d. of the balance, so nigh grandeur to d., tear o'er English d., 5g6b that is a little gilt, 26ga that is blown away, 37 a the man, this d. once

love

is

then our
d.,

d.,

40 ib
orders,

my

d.

obey
421 a

72 sa

neatness a

702a 62ob 6a

this quiet d., 736b thou art to dust returneth, thou art unto dust return, thrown in my eyes, g28a to dust ashes to ashes, 6ib to dust pure spirit flow, toy dog covered with d., unto d. and under d., unto d. return, 6a valiant d., 2455

572a 82ob 63oa

not law nor d. bade fight, 88 ib not to be silent, 728b of being happy, 82 2b of judicial department, 485b out of d. cheat others, go8a path of d. way to glory, 65 ib performed or d. violated, 547b forever, 7283 picket's off d. possession implies d., g32b public d., 7i7b

Dwelling, desert in tents, ya

my

d. place,

557b

right, 377b of the blest, iiga single soul d. in two bodies, g7a so close to d. place, g26b thou hast been our d. place,

much on

d. builds on d., 875b whence he sprung, 51 ga was gentlemen and ladies, 736b we are but d. and shadow, i22b

valiant
vile d.

seen d. and done it, no2a seen d. dead-sure thing, 778b sense of d. pursues us, 547b some sense of d., 64gb
subject's d.
is

2oa

Venus here choose d., 37 la whose d. is light of suns, 5ogb


Dwells,
surely

in

me

d.

no

greatness,

king's,

244b

653b
d. loving Father, 4g7a unwitting where Master d., 947 water d. in lowly places, 7sb wherever Roman conquers he
d.,

sublimest word, 62oa such d. as subject owes, 2igb

we

too into

weighed me 7sga what a d. I raise, 576a what is pomp but earth and d., 2i6b with d. is dark and dim, 5iob
write good in d., i78b you are not worth the d., 27ga Duster, tomorrow feather d., gisa Dusty answer, 73ob

d. descend, d. by d.,

6soa

thank God
i42b
to

have done

d.,

4g2b

to love those

who wrong him,

my country to love it, 8g5b transforms obedience into d.,


435

igia

trespasses against d., 452a voices of d. call, 7g6b

with beauty, s84a with gods above, 268b Dwelt among untrodden 5iob

ways,

we all did our d., 468a we owe Creator,

by the brook Cherith, isa


child

who

d.

upon

tract,

5i6b

1291

Dwelt
Dwelt in marble halls, Judah and Israel d. safely, iga like star and d. apart, 51 *b too long have d. on thee, josb unerring wisdom never d., 3772 where Israfel d., 641 b

INDEX
starry d., io8ib Dynasties, carved new d., 971 a go onward though d. pass,. 7842 Dyspepsy ruin of most things,

Dynamo,

Ear, charms or

e.

or sight,

5?a
deaf adder that stoppeth her e., igb death twitches my e., i igb drowsy e. of night, sssa dull cold e. of death, 44ob
dull
e. of drowsy man, 2g6b he whispers in e., 666a first blade then e., 45a flattery lost on poet's e., 5i8b

55 2a
Dyspeptic, conditions d., 8202 Dyspeptics, hereditary d., 6g6b

Word

d.

among

us,

48a

Dwindle peak and pine, 281 a Dwindled with shame and grief,
go6a Dwindles,
d.,

few

man only growth that 447b Dyer's hand, 2943 Dyes, mingled with gorgeous d.,

E
E
equals pluribus

flea in

me2

9503

mine e., 181 a for verbal delicacies,

6oa

unum, ngb
red
I,

57 8b Dyin', young man you're d., io88a Dying and in despair, 7jsb

pur

si

muove, 2i2a

white

Sgoa

Each bears

his

own

Hell,

uga

every man thy e., 25&b hang pearl in cowslip's e., 22ga heard of thee by hearing of the e., i6b
give

behold you again in d., 8*4b between birth and d., 10042 bless hand that gave blow, s6ga bliss of d., 4o4a born by d. and being damned,
i8oa bread to one d. of
thirst,

block cut smooth, g88b from e. according to

abilities,

68?a hath one

and

is

one,

3O4b

hearing e. seeing eye, 25a I have no e., 535a I was all e., 337a I will enchant thine e.,

2igb

man

83 ib

come from
day
sir,

d.

moon, 64&b

iogob

despised and d. king, 57oa dirge of d. year, 56gb

of ig8a singing e. to e., looia slow dusk, io28b to e. according to needs, 6873 Each-form, pluralism lets exist in

for hymself, 1673 us aspires to worth,

in Adam's e. left voice, 347a in at one e. out at tother, 1653 incline thine e., 32b jest's prosperity lies in e., 222b

doubly d., 5193 dreams of his Argos, i igb dying dying, 648b each age dream that is d., 807 b Egypt d., 288b eyes were dosed, 4o6a
fall, 2 5 ia

Eager, don't be e., _ _ keep guest back who is e., 66b mount e. and quick, io78a soul biting for anger, 333b Eagerly I wished the morrow,
Eagerness, no e. for flitting, 588b Eagle, bald e. not chosen, 4233 by all the e. in thee, 354b
called does the e.
e.

keep word of promise to our e., 287a lend neither e. nor glance, 566b mighty world of eye and e., 509 more meant than meets e., 3$6a never e. did hear that tongue, 3I4 * nor e. heard, 52a nor the e. filled with hearing,

fastened to d. animal, 88ga flute in d. notes, J7oa forgets d. bird, 467b


generations, 8828

273
of jealousy heareth all, 365 of man hath not seen, 2gob one e. herde at tothir out, 165 a

bearer

down,

57 8b

green and d., io7ob has made us rarer


I

fly like e,
gifts,

am

9941

d.

Egypt

d.,

s88b

in Algiers, 6a7b in d. we are born, i$7b is a trifle, 737b light dies with d. sun,
live as

know, 486b wings of wren, 7893 forgotten, 952b fourth beast like flying e., 57b from e. in his flight, 62 ib

open vowels tire, 4033 piercing night's dull e., 2443 reasonable good e. in music,
23oa
rich jewel in Ethiop's short a cheekbone and
e.,
e.,

in a dovecote, 2goa in and out the E., ioggb

2233 705a

8s6a
d.,

like sick e.,

57gb

you

will

wish

when

looking at the sky, 57gb mewing her mighty youth, 34ob


of house of Austria, 466a of the rock, ggoa or the snake, 8743 stretched on plain, 555a suffers little birds to sing, 2i8b Jones outlive imperial e.,

soothe thine e., 443b sweetness through mine


to

living indisposeth man to d. men, 3572

for d.,

3313

e., 336a brings, 6o3a of Eve, 346a unpleasing to a married e.,

my

e.

morning

toad at

e.

men
more

enforce attention, ss6b


survivors' affair,

222b

9$7b

warm
won
'Ear Earl

e. lays,
e.,

multifold, 737b nearly d. at Boulder, io75b no more d. then, 2945 not d. for faith hard, 66oa

whorled
the

6g2b 8o2b
e.,

Tom
who
with
Eagle's

e.

of Pluto, 33$a

466a

wrong sow by

i8sb

way

not death but d. is terrible, 424b not grasp thought of d., 732b of cold, 86gb of thirst by the fountain, i7ob on log expiring frog, 66ga rage against d. of light, io7ob separate d. ember, 6425 so great an experiment as d., 33* a stay d, here all night, 48 ib to be afraid of thee, 7373 tomorrow will be d., 32ob truth on lips of d., 7iab unconscionable time d., gGSb we live, 668a when fair things fading, 5&7b whether living is d., gaa yet fancy ourselves eternal, i46a young man you're d., 108 8 a

of an e. in the air, lent his plume, 77a


e. eyes,

26b

my
754

'erse's legs, 6545 by right by courtesy man,

57gb

fate

and mine are one,


e.
e.,

slain E. of

Murray, io88b

Earlier

feathered with
Eagles, baited like look of e., gisb

plumes, 76b 24oa


e.,

later
Earliest,

and other creation, ioo6a times more aged than e.,


charm of
e. to

2o6b
e. birds, 345b ground, 234* Earls, daughter of hundred e., 6451 Early and latter rain, s6b 2b bright transient chaste, 37 call me e. mother, 645a falls e. or too late, 3isa take in God, 6gsa git up e. to

mount up with wings as of Ngong look out, g&5a


prey where 2i7a swifter than
e.
e.,

33a

drop

dare not perch,

i2b where carcass is e. gather, 44a Ear and eye expected impossible,

and
as

to

my

listening
e.

e.,

5i6b

mind
hive's

pitched

pleased,

blow through

hum soothe e., my e., 5ioa


thine
e.,

goob

good die e. bad late, had it been e. had been kind, 4290 happy those e. days, 362 horse dominated mind of e.
races, 9863 late and e. pray, 3oob late discovered e. sky,

&&

Dynamic
te, Dynamit

principle

of

fantasy,
d.,

bow down
came
o'er

2$b
like

my

e.

sweet

playing with

sound, 251 a

ggob

12Q2

INDEX
Early, leaves fall
let c.
94*>
e., g88a education be amusement,

Earth
371 a

Ears, with ravished

e.,

Earth, get away from

e.

awhile,

woods have e., i6ya word of earth in e. of world,


775

g26b
giants in the e., 6b girdle round about
e.,

nipped not rise 42ga


to

my
e.

flower sae e., 4953 never do good, 4280-

ssgb

those that seek

me

e.,

230

bed early to rise, 42 ib, lossb too e. seen unknown, 223b vote e. and often, 7i8b Early-born, dawn the e., 6sb Earn, I e. that I eat, 24gb
little

spend

little less,

825a

little to e.,

6gob

living
e.

by sweat, 68ab

852a bread I'll eat, 6s6a you Earned, hearts are e., 882b night's repose, 6210 with sweat of brows, 1943 Earnest about these objects, g86b between jest and e., ig5a frogs die in e., 104 I am in e., 6isb in seeking knowledge, fib intermingle jest with e,, 2oga life e. art gay, 4983 life real life e., 62ob
stars,

set to e. livings,

Earth abideth forever, 272 according to thy heart, 4a after e. stopped ears, 8533 all Danae to stars, 64ga all e. forgot, 542b o'envhelm them, 258a all e. all guilt punished on e., 4773 all the corners of e., 5gb all things in e., 54b all ye know on e., $&$b alone on e. as I am now, 555b always in e. and air, io&5b and every common sight, 5132 and grave and dust, iggb and high heaven, 8531 and water strive again, 4053 angels bending near e., 657 b
as in wild e. a vase, g6ga as showers that water the
e.,

glance from heaven to e., 2305 glory from the e., 5133 go from e. to Paradise, g44& God created heaven and e., 5a goddess Demeter or E., 8sa time, goes over to squall o 1022b of all the the e., na going way going to and fro on the e., i4a great society on e., 5103 has not anything to show, sisa hath bubbles, 281 a hear word of the Lord, g4b heard in dread, 444a heaven and e. pass away, 44a, 5*9 a

heaven
i4ia

like
e.,

egg

e.

like

yolk,

heaven on
hell

2oa
axis of e. sticks out, 634a bears no balsam, 791 a

on

e.,

3453 836b

beat

ma

e.

with unfettered

foot,

$84b

'twixt e. and joke, 488a Earnestness, sincerity e. and kindness,

beauty for e. too dear, 223a belongs to living, 47sa best of men that e'er wore e., 30ib bleeding piece of e., 255a blessed are peacemakers on

help of any thing on e., 4gob hold e. from heaven, 7gob holy Mother E., 78b hurt not the e., 583 hydroptic e. hath drunk, 3o6a I am part of e., g86b
I

have come back to

e.,

8sob

73a
first

I will
if e. e.,

Earning,
ing,

consideration

e. liv-

move the e., iosa be shadow of heaven, 346b


3b

378b

Earnings, division of

unequal

e.,

2Mb
brave of
all

545 a labor of F. poured e., 72 la Earns, he only e. freedom, 478b whate'er he can, 62 la Ear-piercing fife, 275a Ears, belly has no e., iO7a
blast of war in e., 243b bring to our e, clash of arms,

the

e.,

8653

in ashes ending, i5yb in darkness like death, in earthy bed, 6s2b

bridal of e. sky, 323^ bright e. when thou risest, 4a bringeth forth fruit, 45a
call

and

in him the red e., 827a indifferent children of iron e., 10553
is

e.,

2ftia

heaven and

e.

to witness,

but a

star,

g8oa

2goa
call to e.

is full

and

center

of

my
e.,

sea, 7ooa sinful e.,

is full

of his glory, sob of thy riches, 2ib

2g4b

is

the Lord's, i8a, 52a

465* compliments reaching proper


earth has stopped e., 85 3a got a wolf by the e.,

e.,

change she e. or sky, io86a cloud enveloping the e., $27a


cold in the

685b

combined
ioga
e.,

essences of

heaven and

iioa

have e. but hear not, 22a, have heard Holy Word, having e. hear not, he that hath e., 42 a hearing with sharper e., io7gb hum about mine e., agya I have e. in vain, 582!) incline e. to my sayings, 4a lend me your e., 255a let music creep in our e., asjsb look with thine e., 27gb my e. hum, 6gb noise of waters in my e., 2i7a of the deaf shall be unstopped,
3 2a of the old cur, 352b only for what experience gives
access,

confound all unity on e., 28sb confound the language of all e., 6b covenant between me and the e., 6b crawling between heaven and e.,
262a daughter of E. and Water, 57oa days on the e. are as a shadow,

kindly e. slumber, 647b kindly fruits of the e., 6ob kings and counselors of e., i4b kiss heaven gives the e., 32ga ladder set up on the e., 7a lap of e., 44 1 a lards the lean e., 238b last best hope of e., 638b late discovered e., ggob lay her in the e., 266a learned on e. practice in heaven, 66 3 b
less

Ha
when e. young, 6773 deep places of the e., 2ia deep-delved e., sSsa demi-Atlas of this e., 287b did quake, 453 differ as heaven and e., 653a dim spot men call e., 336a dust shall return to e., 2ga echo of voice of God, 8i3b element of e., ggob embroil e. about line, 377b ends of the e., &72b English e. as much, 877a every living thing that moveth
days

8o6b

porches of mine e., 25gb seven empty e., 7b she gave me e., 51 ib shout about my e., giga
small
pitchers

on e., s83b than heaven, 52oa let all the e. keep silence, s6a let go hold of e., 104 la let loose to play upon e., 34ob let the e. rejoice, 2ia lie lightly gentle e., 3i6b light be the e., 8gb like snake renew, 57ob little e. for charity, 2ggb Lord of heaven and e., 503 lovelier flower on e., 5iob lowly e. to vaulted skies, 6goa
left souls

of

e.

have
to

wide

e.,

made the e. to tremble, 3ib make e. happy, 7igb Maker of Heaven and e., 6oa

i85a
softest

man marks

e.

with ruin, 557b

music

attending

e.,

upon
false as
fell

e.,

53

speech
split
e.

delighteth the e., 3ga of groundlings, 262b

exponent of e., 737a fall to the base e., 227a


sandy
the
e.,

a68b

to hear, trust e.

42a
less
e.,

fell to e.

knew not where, 622a


e.,

than
i67a

eyes,

86b

walls have

felt

37a upon the wound, 347b

marriages consummated on e., 203a marry best man on e., Sgga master of e. and sea, 878b measuring e. and heaven, 95b meek shall inherit the e., i8b more near e. than wont, 276*

1293

Earth
Earth, more things in heaven and e., 26oa, 102 ib
Earth, table

INDEX
e.

dice

human

bones,

Earthly, very honey of all e. joy,

new heaven and new e., 580 new heavens and a new e., 330
niggard e., 43gb nigher heaven than now, 66 ib nightly to listening e., 3933 no less kindled e., 5633 no more a mother, 1323 not gray but rosy, 668a not sky of e., sioa not steadfast place, 8g8b nothing but hath bound in e., 2i8a

my

563*
take him e., 7653 that bears thee dead, 24 la the e. that is sufficient,

footstool

357b

e.,

4o8a

who mind
701 a

e.

things,

Earthquake, dam'd by

e.,

they shall

their proper element, siga inherit the e.,

403

thirsty e. soaks up rain, this blessed plot this e.,


this e. of majesty,

357b 2s6b
2613

when not smiling back, 107 ib Earthquskes with thunder lightning, 7603
Earth's, ablution

gloom of e. and eclipse, 568b Lord was not in the e., i3b

54b 7603

this goodly this is the

226b frame the


last

round

e.

shores,

e.,
e.,

5813
as
e.

those

who

labor

of in

e.,

5033 4713

close

down, 10723
10280

break

e. sleep,

on e. but laundry, io7ga of all languages of e., g$ga of the e. earthy, 533 on bare e, he lies, 37 ib on confines of e., 501 a
nothing

thy
till

though the e. be removed, iga will be done in e., 4ob


tideless

to

to

and inert, 8133 and e. pass, 403 3nd thee restore, 854b earth, 61 b
heaven
e.
e.,

crammed with heaven, 6iga diurnal course, 5113 foundations fled, 8543 foundations stand, 8553
fields, 67 6b heedless sons, 10363

green

touch of
tries

653b

human
lid,

shores,

5813

on on on on

only when we are half e., 7303 or air, 8573 or ever thou hadst formed the e., 2oa
paradise on e., 8943 peace on e. good will, 657b peace on e. mercy mild, 45b peopling e. waters and sky,

broken arcs, 66sb e. no sure happiness, soob e. peace and good will, 46a e. peace to men, sga one mighty blood spot, 6igb
e.

e. if in tune, 6g2b it truth crushed to e., 574b two kinds of people on e., Bs^b unfolds both heaven and e.,

last picture

painted, 872b

g88b

228b
e. not his like, i6b walk the earth unseen, was without form, 53 weaned away from e., what e. and its interests, what is pomp but e. and 2i6b

upon

returns, 663b right place for love, g26b round e. imagined corners, 307 b round e. shore, 7i4b

345b
10413 68 ib
dust,

when when
when

377*
pleasant country's e., 2275 plowed before man, 6s8b poetry of e. never dead, 57gb power passing from the e.,

laid in e., 383b I laid the foundations of the e., i6a


I

am

shadows fly, 5723 smoothness rough, 666a sweet flowing breast, gg23 wide regions round, 5543 Earthworm, feeble e., 3643 Earthworms, earth plowed by

e.,

religion

makes

e.

uncom-

proudly wears Parthenon, 6o2a put on e. a little space, 486b


puts forth sweet flowers, rain was upon the e., 6b
raises

nab

God, 1783 receive her King, 3g7a render back from breast, 5613 replenish the e., 52 rest lightly on you, isib reverence for e., io77b rich stone in bowels of e., 3<X)b
rid e. of

man from

e. to

fortable, 6g6a whether in e. or air, 257a which made heaven and e., 223 while the e. remaineth, 6b whole e. and all time, 5113 whole e. for religion's sake, 6ggb whole e. grows rich, 378b whole e. our hospital, ioo5b with her thousand voices, 526b

wonder of word of e.
775*

e.

and
ears

life,

in

102 la of world,
e.,

words are daughters of

47b

would

know

no

adventurer,

him
e.

room on
46?a

in my pride, 8gga for honest men,

8433 wretched of e., 68oa write sorrow on bosom of the


e.,

sad old e. borrow mirth, 8a6a saddest among kings of e., 8ggb salt of the e., 4oa scum of the e., 5o6a sepulcher of famous men, goa shall be full of knowledge, 313
shall

227b
fullness thereof, gaoa

yours and

yours is the e., 8773 Earthborn joy renew, 801 a


Earthen, kettle
Earthlier

and
is

628b Earthy and cold hand of death, 24ia earth in e. bed, 652b of the earth e., 533 Ease after war, 2ooa an age of e., 44ga 3nd speed not give work beauty, i68b at e. for aye dwell, 6453 at e. in nature, 6ggb ^at e. in own generation, 7863 'but for another gives e., 4893 careless e., 3983 dappled turf at e., 5i2b darbies at wrist, 6g8a death or dreamful e., 6455 done with so much e., 3683 equal e. unto my pain, 3273 for e. from heaven, 4gob full-throated e., 5823 gives happiness or leaves e. 4i2b good pleasure e. content, 4ogb greater e. than hogs eat, 3523 heart like satin gown, 10293
f

happy
ball

e. pot, 383 rose distilled,

not perish from


e.

e.,

63ga

228b
Earthly
a

ignoble ignoble

e.,

8473

e.

and peaceful

sloth,

343b
peopled
garden,
joys in another's loss of e., 4893 life of e. not for man, 577b live at home at e., $28b
live

began to exist, 45b sing ye heavens e. reply, 4253


since
sleepers in quiet e., SSijb small dust of e., gg6b small model of barren e., so much of e., 5113 solid e. actual world, 68ob speak to the e., 153 spirit given on e., 6413 stand at Judgment Seat, stand on e. as footstool, stood hard as iron, 74oa suffered to crawl upon e.,
sufficient, 701 a

477b
dignities, 2g8b fancies, 65 ib

with

e.,

4iob

22?b

godfathers 2213

of

heaven's

lights,

Meadows
N3ture

of E., goga

mighty e. marchings, 6g6b nothing e. surpass her, 5603


paragon, 291 a

&72b 888b
38gb
5263 goyb

power then

likest

God's,

234b

roses into e. life,

summer
sun
is

of e. bliss, 3473 sweet fruition of e. crown, 2i2a things heavenly or things e.,

sum

4g7b

to e. us, 356b never desire worldly e., 42ob no healthful e., 59 2a one life the sching, 7373 poet's dignity and e., 41 la prodigal of e., 3683 rots in e. on Lethe wharf, 25gb

bent

slothful

e.,

847b
to

some come

take

their

e.,

clothe general
lost

e.,

365b
this

and the

e.,

wisdom

is e.,

sure and firm-set e., 2833 swear not by heaven nor e., 4ob

56b

thoughts of e. men, 673 touch of e. years, 5113

299 b somebody's right zmd e., 7ggb take mine e. in mine inn, 1833 take thine e., 46b

1294

INDEX
Ease, true
in writing, 403 b side E. other, 6570 virtue can have naught to do
e.

Eating
Eat, let
like

Easy, as
as

e.

to

marry rich woman,


.

them

e.

cake,

436b

Truth one

66oa
gr3ss 3s leaves

with e., igoa with e. and you beside, 7360 with the greatest of e., 78oa woman in hours of e., 5190 words flow with e., 3773 write with e. to show breeding, 48sa Easeful death, s8ab Easier go through eye of needle,
grass blade

o w grows on weirs, 87 gb grow on tree, 87ga

bad
bid

book

me

criticism

generally e., take love e., 87ga e. art difficult,

564b

3g8b

decent

e.

evil is e., false

man
e.

men, 4663 363b

give

does e., 2843 throne would be

how
if to

e., ggb bush supposed a bear,

wolves fight like devils, 2443 Nebuchadnezzar did e. grass, 35 a neither e. it nor make flannel, 9 86a nevermore to e. again, 9153 no beans, giob no fat, iog2b no onions nor garlic, 23ob
not to dullness, 4235 not to e. not for love,
of fish that fed of worm, of the habitation, 2323 of the tree I did e., 6a

than oak, 6g2b nothing e. than rest, 7773 nothing e. than self-deceit, gga played on than pipe, 26b than swallowed flap-dragon, 222b sweats e. than I., 68sb thirst blister e., 735a to be critical than correct, 6i2a to believe than deny, 7?ob to fight for principles, io48b to get favor from Fortune, issb to get into enemy's toils, 76b to stay out than get out, 76sb
e.

43b

2 (job

no

jolly

do as and
to

e. as e.

to

know, 23 ib
66oa honor,

6o4b 264b

in

minds,
bright

Ie3p

pluck

live quiet die, 5213 morning's ride, 7s8b

plant vineyards and 33


so I did
sit

e.

the fruit,
to

poor when anything

my

yoke

is e.,

423

not e. to call back, g48b not pray for e. lives, 7553 nothing e. in war, ioi6b nothing so e. but becomes cult, io8b

e., g6b and e., 324* some hae meat canna e., 4g5b some s. I will not e., 10312

strive
diffi-

mightily
e.

e.

-as

friends,

2iga
take
tell

this

is

open hand

Easiest,

move

e.

who

learned to
said,

e. shoe, 8595 Rabelais' e. chair, 41 gb road to Hades e. to travel, io4b

me what you

my
e.,

body, 44b

484b

dance, 4ogb
Easily,

signal
e.

e.

to yell,
e.

gssa

that shall ye e., gb that they may live, 87b the fat of the land, 7b
their flesh shall ye not thou shalt not e. of to e. thy heart, 201 a to to
e.
e.,
it,

by and by
difficult
e.,

st6$b

smooth

inoffensive

down

to

7o6b how e. things go wrong, 7ssb never have come back so e.,
doing
Easiness, lend a kind of
e.,

Hell, io4b so e. and so plain a stop, 2413 there life is supremely e., fyb

gb 5b

thing

Power

Divine,

7203
e.,

live

with apple tart, 82gb not live to e., 3613,

a64b

'tis e.

property of e., 26sb Easing savior's birth, 1055* East and West will pinch heart,

to to

to be true, 378b blow and swallow

42ib
not

up

himself, 268a
e.

io6a
into hell, n8b word for casual goodbye, losoa words are e. like the wind, 3oga

us must

we, 661 a

go

down

10233

wad way

e.

that

want

it,

4g5b

argument with e. wind, 6g4a-b blasted with the e. wind, ?b cherubims e. of the garden, 6a
fill

faint e. quickens, 772b his belly with e. wind, i5a from e. to western Ind, 24gb from e. to e., 78gb is

good

good

gorgeous e. in fee, 5i2b gorgeous E. with richest hand,


I
is

writing soon element3ry, 846b hard re3ding, writing's cursed 4823 young and e., io7ob E3t, birds for people to e., go6b bread in swe3t of thy face, 6a bread without scarceness, loa cake and have it, i8sb cannibals that each other e.,

we hae meat we can


will not e. with you, with the rich, 878a

they e. drink thing, gssb

and
e.,

every-

495

2323

worm

that

e.

of a king, s64b

turn
E. E.

my

back to the

e.,

486a

is

West San Francisco, 864a West West, 872b


223b 8a5b
3273

272b cannot

e.

but

little

meat, i88b

I'll e., 6g6a Eaten a sour grape, 34b bit by bit, go2a crust e. in peace, 76a God made and e., 664b have we e. on insane root, 281 a me out of house and home,

you earn bread

it is

the e. Juliet the sun, of Suez, 87sb one ship e. another west, or west Phoenix builds, Side West Side, 862b somewheres e. of Suez, star in the e., 3ga tried to hustle the e., 87b west south north, sg6a wind never blow, sasb

873b

5i3b Eastard and points between, 76oa Easter, no sun upon an E. day,
youth

who from

e. travel,

cones under his pines, g26a dare to e. a peach, looia did e. and were filled, 42b dogs shall e. Jezebel, isb drink be merry, 28b, 46b drink tomorrow die, 3ib dust shalt them e., 6a dust to e., 8g8b dusty bread, 10383 eat me soul, 38 ib enough to e. 3nd we3r, 8553 f3me food dead men e., 7&2b
fine women e. crazy sal3d, for tomorrow we die, sib frogs e. butterflies, gs$b

242a slowly e. bit by bit, gosa thee for a word, 2220 they'd e. every one, 7463 to death with rust, 24 ib
e. them, 25oa ib your bread and salt, 87 Eater, great e. of beef, 2513 came meat, out of the e. Eateth grass as an ox, i6b

worms have

nb

882b

35k
Eastern, blabbing e, scout, 336b dew of yon high e. hill, 2573

'Eathen, pore benighted 'e., 8733 of supply, Eating air on promise 24ib and drinking like brutes, 7o2b with e., i8ob appetite comes
appetite makes
bitter
e.

great

not by e. windows, 688b wipe out E. instincts, 87 ib worship E. civilization, loigb Eastman, If It Isn't An E., i03ob East's, feeling E. gift, 664b Eastward, a garden e. in Eden, roll of world e., 782b to the sea, 873b Easy, abstinence e. to me, 42gb all zeal Mr. E., 567b and comfortable on raft, 7613

ones 2gob he h3th not

e.

up

little

ones,

delight,

bread

of

ssob banishment,

e.

p3per, 22ib-2223

his pleas3nt fruits, 2gb I e. 3nd e. I swear, 3453 I e. the 3ir, 2633
I e. I I

7443 e., 24gb you up, sosb I'll e. my head, 66ga in orchsrd enough to e., 4 in the evening, 487b it in haste, 8b
e3rn that I

wh3t

I see,
e.

want

to

227a bread and honey, iog4b cares, 335a Christmas pie, logsa curds and whey, iog6b drinking breeding, 7ooa drinking dung death, 10053 egg without salt, 8723 produce of the land, 64b
in proof of pudding several times a day,
e.,

1295

Eating
Eating, Son of man came e., 423 whether breathing is e., 923

INDEX
Eclipse, sick almost to

doomsday

worn out with

e.

time,

Eats, believes he e. dirt in the line,

with e., 257a sun in dim e., $42b


Eclipsed gaiety of nations, 428b Eclipses, clouds and e. stain, 2923 of moon and other experiments,
Ecology,
sensitive

God,

io25b drinks and plays, 86gb man e. when not hungry, no2a my meat e. me, 10653 proud e. up himself, 268a Revolution e. own children
67 5 b seeking the

Eden, voice that breathed o'er E., 5 67b Edcns, lest we lose E., 66$b Edge, as near e. as I C3n, 68 13 ax's e. did try, 359b
children's teeth set on e., 345 cloy hungry e. of appetite, 2263
e. of things, 6653 dulls e. of husbandry, 2593

science

of

e.,

dangerous
finest e.

Economic and
distress teach

racial forces,

9013

with blunt whetstone,


e.,

food he

men, gigb

202b
knife ill-used lose

e.,

young, 525b io4ib thing that e. heart, io57b whatever Miss T. e., gi4b
soles offen shoes,

she- wolfs

2483

equality, 10143 existence of e. freedom, g4ib

2933
tools,

freedom, 94 ib

of

no jesting with doom, 2943


e.

e.

3135

fundamental

e. situation,

icGab

sea land's e. also, ioo6a

Eaves, antler of e., 10573 brawling of sparrow in e., 88oa gilded e., 648b Ebb and flow by the moon, 28ob
ceaseless e.

great e. experiment, gjjob life primitive, g82b military power and e. output,

slander whose sword, 291 a

shsrper than

Edged
two
V3st

with
e.

10633

Edges, bright
e.

e.

popter pale, 3343 of world, 9403

and

monuments, 10635
outdistance in
position,

deaths at

flow, 8293

e. tide,

matters, go^b

8293

where beauty has no e., 88oa Ebenezer, pale E., go2b Ebon throne in rayless majesty,
a chacun une Ecce homo, 4gb
Seattle,
e\,

ne'er e. to humble love, 2753 ne'er feels retiring e., 2753

&57b

one of laughter, 9753 e. drear, 7i4b age employed in e. steel,


to

principle of e. production, g57b pulse of modern life e., 957b

Edible good
Edifices

eat

wholesome,
worship

pyramid, g7ob royalists, 9713 slavery nobody's business, g7ib status not depend on e. process,
965*
strongest of e. motives, 845b superstructure on e. foundation,
9<>3a

where

Greeks

God, 1703
Edifies his ears, 4043 Edifieth, charity e., 523

4133

Eccentric pattern in hair, loiib Eccentricities of genius, 6693 Eccentricity anomalies, heresy

Ecclesiarum,

disputandi

pruritus

e. scabies, 3012 Ecclesiastes fine steel of woe, 6973 Ecclesi3stic, pulpit drum e., 35 ib

tyranny's worst, 38$b Echo and light unto

eternity,
e.,

applaud thee to the very a86b began to undermine, 95 ib


catch
e.

tyranny above, 991 a in e. Economical, experience order, 7793 heedless self-interest Economics, bad e., 97 ib in terms of psthology, 10343 Economist, slaves of defunct e., 977* Economize, let us e. truth, 7&2b Economy distributive virtue, 4553 from e. to stock market, io6ab is beauty, 8ooa
e. unimpaired, gjob not ssving but selection, 4553 not e., 4553 p3rsimony Principles of Politic3l E., 9343 revival of working e., gsgb

Edi-mus bibi-mus vivi-mus oremus, 444b Edited, dead sinner revised and e., 7923 for old lady from Dubuque,
io24b
works, 99 ib Edith with golden hair, 62 3b
Edition, in

wife e. him, 99 ib wife not only e.

new more

elegant

e.,

mollusk cheap e. of man, 6093 Editions of Balbec and Palmyra,


Editor, temptation to the Editor's conviction, 10143
e.,

of infinite, 7873

g8sb
E.,

nation's

caught faintly, 5013 children's lips e., 5563 distant footsteps e., 6223 dropping petal waiting for e., 946b earth e. of voice of God, 8i3b footfalls e. in memory, ioo4b frozen e. of silent voice, 8i3b my speech to a T, i8ia name of which e. faint, 536b ne'er sink while e. left, 5633 of your mournful song, 632b perfumes colors sounds e., 7073 sound an e. to sense, 4o3b rounds that e. still, 645b sublimity the e. of noble mind, 1443 sweet E. sweetest nymph, 336b virtue no empty e., 497b woods answer and E. ring, 20 ib Echoed with parody of laughter, io68a Echoes, answer e., 648b

Edmund, here
Edom, over
Educated

lies

our good

E. will I cast out

my

shoe, igb

ficrasez 1'infame,

4i7b

Ecstasies, dissolve

me

Americans go to Euintellect,

into

e.,

rope, 6083

scoff at others' e., 9003

men
95jb

beyond
e.

7723

superior, 973
e.
se-

Ecstasy, blind e., io4$b come to breath, 10383 dim e. holds her life, in such an e., 58ab

3re free, i38b only Educating, assimilating


lecting,

gi2b
facts,

maintsin
roll

e. success,
e.

7813
feet,
e.,

in
e.

at

your

g8ob
8033

Education accumulates inert 777b and catastrophe, 888b


beer

rung upon rein in his


very

and

skittles

of love, 26ob

part

of

e.,

waked to e. living lyre, 44ob way wherein no e., ioo5b whst wild e., 5833
Ecstatic,

carol ings

of

e.

sound,

78 3 b

down
roll

creaking floor, 10223 of that voice, 5273

from soul
e. flying,

to

soul,

648b

wild

648b 486b

the e. green, Eclat of death, 7383 built in the e., Edipse,

Echoing, on

338b s68b nowhere, 4433 irrecoverably dark total e., 3493 moon hath her e. endured, agsb earthquake and
the
rest
e.,

first

each e. instant, 7343 Eddy, most men e. about, 7i5b Eden, a garden eastward in E., sb east of the garden of E., 6a find fault in E., 6853 flow'rets of E. inherit, 5433 older place than E., gi8b our woe with loss of E., 34ib still his E. keeps, 5gob that old-fashioned house, 7$8b this other E., 226b through E. took solit3ry way, 348b

7183 beginning and end of political e., 776b best provision for old age, 973 cabbage with college e., 7623 city is e. to Greece, 903 concern of American e., 10263 contact with manners is e., i27b direction in which e. st3rts, 943 first part of politics, 5903 ""for character, 7o5b * forms common mind, 4o6b hanging around till caught on,
in field of public in the obvious, 78yb
is
e.,

10213

making men, 7413 let early e. be amusement,


liberal
e.,

94)

s86b

12Q6

INDEX
Education makes people easy lead, 54ob
to

Elegance
gewesen, Eigentlich, 586a Eight or nine elderly men, 87ob victories over Syracusans, 86a-b
Eighteen,

^most valuable

not only common but compulsory, 6gsa novel is instrument of e., 8ssb of a liberal e., ig4b of imaginative life, 8oob of itself to look upon, 56^ only ignorant despise e., i26b -our e. inadequate, loigb produced population able to read, Q4ib respect poets by e., 6oga root of honesty in good e., ijya science e. for citizenship, 845a scientific e., loigb seek e. in paths of duty, 777b soap and c. deadly, 7593 soul takes nothing but e. and culture, 93b supervise national e., 54ga to love her is liberal e., 395b travel pan of e., 2o8b treatise of natural e., 4g6a what left over, i io4b
relations Educational tie, 8 2 8b
e. facilities,

result of e., 7252

Effort to get up, 684a to see and represent, 7ggb no human e. deliver Efforts,

wie

es

e.

them, 461 a noble e. in last war, 4s6a of busy multitude, 72ob


redoubling
e., Sffya

from birth

to

age

e.,

984*

to create happiness, g$8a Effund your albid hausts, nob Effusion, foils foe by e. of ink, 444b Effusions, liveliest e. of wit, 53gb

from e. to thirty-five, g84a Eighteenth Amendment, 93ob


of April, 623!?

Eighth

commandment

not

for

bards, 5273 day of week, ios6b

ggalite, libertd e. fraternite,

nosb
Egdon, glory of E. waste, 783a as one e. like another, i8ib way to boil e., 6o8b egg's way of making e., 755b from the e., i24a
,

full

of quarrels

as

e.

full

of

meat, 224b

Eight-wheeler of mighty fame, 9o4b Eildon, riding by E. Tree, io88b Ein' feste burg, i7gb Eisen und Blut, 677b constructed forms, Elaborately 628a Elaine the fair, 65^ JLlan and determination, Q$gb

good to keep nest e., ig6a hard-boiled as picnic e., heaven like e. earth like yolk, i4ia innocent as new-laid e., 7650
of democracy, 6gsa puritanism laid e. of democracy, 6953 serpent's e., 254a Wall Street lays e., gi6a without salt, 8723

84gb and vigorous thought, 68sa time is e., go7b Elate, Ruin's plowshare drives e.,
vital,

Elastic

strongest

493^1

separate Educator wielder of power, io68a

loaia

Elbow, soul hath e. room, 37a through world, 5755 Elbows, our horizon never at our
e., 68 3 a Eld, beg alms of palsied e., 2713 memories of e., 6423 Elder, more e. than thy looks,

Edward Edward, io87b


sons of E. sleep, 2i7b Edward's, proud E. power, 4963 winding-sheet of E. race, 44ib
Eel, in mud e. is, iog7a Eels boiled in broo', io8ga Eerie faint carouse. 102 2 a

yesterday

e.

tomorrow duster,

Effaced,

forget

when image

e.,

9!5 a you've got a bad e., 8iob Egg's way of making egg, 755b Eggs, all e. in one basket, 1953, 7623
as like as e., iSib as the partridge sitteth

35b
Effect, cause and e. from economy, io6ab cause has more than one e., 7063 cause of this e., s6ob

on

e.,

34b
as weasel sucks
e.,

24&a

defective comes by cause, s6ob ek gret e. write in place lite,

butter e. pound of cheese, 74ob codfish ten thousand e., iioib

goose with golden


lays set
e.

e.,

76b
iog6b
e.,

i6sa
little e.

for

labor, 534a of work, gogb nature but name for e., 45ga

much

gentlemen,
fire
e.

house on

to

roast

man

e,

2oga
silent

when

hatched,

333b

nothing exists without peace between e. and

e.,
it,

3733 a8aa
cause,
e.,

walk on e., 30 ib Eglantine, sweet musk roses


e.,

and

what in
849b
Effective,
life

e.

already

in

22gb
flocci

governed make views


e.

Ego non

pendere, ioga

a very

therapist,
e.

9853

poetry

most

wisely

mode,

7i$b
reciprocal safeguards, g8ab simplicity makes uneducated
e.,

rex Rom anus, 36aa to id as rider to horse, 834a tooth of the e., io68a where id was there e. be, 834a Egoism, book of e., 7$ob

serves three masters, 8343 soul beyond e. reach, g$6b

234b sun is e. by a year, 3051* take e. than herself, 25a Elderly, eight or nine e. men, 87ob Elders, discourse of the e., 37b regarding e. as senile, 776b strings of white e., 955b when he sitteth among e., aya Eldest, primal e. curse, s6sb Eldorado, seek for E., 644a Eleazer faculty, 868b thinned e. Elect, predestined down, 7sgb Elected between sundown and sunup, 954a if e I will not serve, 7osa silence sing to me, Scab without political understanding, 983^
declined e. some years ago, g86b supreme court follows e., 8gob tub told of his e., iy8b turned into angels by e., Elections end slavery begins, factors in winning presid
Election,
.

sum

g8b
Effects,

Egotism sloth
baneful
e.

idleness,

54ga
e.,

of party, 46 ib dire e. from civil discord, 3943 no e., 576b


of

strong dose of e., ioi6a Egotists, conscience makes

e.,

g83b

8gga

Efficiency,
e.,

Effectual fervent prayer, 5&b highest best form

842b
e.,

in struggle for bread, 8442.

Egregiously an ass, 27$b Egypt, came out from E., 8b carry me out of E., 7b great cry in E., 8b Helen's beauty in brow of E.,

succeeds in carrying e., takes e. philosophically,


Electra,

mourning

becomes
oasis,

iooga
Electric chair

hanging like
or

io74b Efflorescence of civilized life, 7o6a Efflux from hot venturi, 10723 Effluxion of time, g4gb
Effort, critical
e.,

southern

23ob
I

am

io76a lights not science, 8i5a


Electrical,

I will pass E., 8b

dying E. dying, s88b through the land of

air

pump

e.

ma-

71321

in E. pyramids laid,

no2b

dignity in e. of patriots, 46ab happiness result of man's e.,

958a keep faculty of

e.

alive,

7gsa
io8aa

nearly killed her, go2a of intellect to see poor,

one more plague upon E., 8a out of E. called my son, sgb Pharos of E., iioab Egypt's dark sea, 543a Eheu fugaces Postume Postume,
i2ib

chine, 4623 display of God, iooga Electrically prompt, 7<33b Electrician no longer there, 90 ib
Electricity and crime, giga Electrification of whole country,

gosb Elegance

of

female

friendship,

1297

Elegance
Elegance rather than luxury,
in

INDEX
Elijah the prophet, 363 went up by a whirlwind, i3b Eliminated impossible, 84gb Eliot, meet Mr. E., 10043 Elite, each calling has own e., 10263 minority, g78a
Eliza,
e.,

Embalmed and
life,

Elegant but not ostentatious, 4283

treasured

up

to

new more

3403
e.

e.

edition,

42ib

simplicity

of

three

percents,

475b
so e. so intelligent, looab sufficiency, 4igb

darkness, sSsb Embalms, precedent

principle,

61*3

Elegantiae arbiter, i4oa Elegantly, write chastely and

at

last

Elizabeth

E.

said,

7o4a

g6oa Element, back above in, 2893


basic
e.

made
e.

desperate
at
last

retreat,

65ga

Emb3rk, firs cloaked as if to e., 8i6b on bold new program, g8sb Embarrassment of riches, 4183 Embattled armies clad in iron,
349* farmers stood, 6033 3re, 10733 Embellish adventures, 4683 Embellit tout ce qu'il touche, 4i6a Ember, each separate dying e.,

they lived

Elizabeth,

E. Eliza said,

Constitution, g84a criminal e. I am of it, Sjib earth their proper e., jiga of blank, 7$6b
of earth, ggob of fire quite

in

7o4a from Jane to E., 5333 great E., 645b my son's wife E., 7043 Ell, give an inch take an

we

e.,

1855

one God law e., 6513 people most important e., loob uranium new source, gsob Elemental force freed, ioo8b this war e. conflict, ioi2a
Elementary, easy writing soon
e.,

put

out,

$o7b

Ellen, wed fair E., 5igb Elliptical billiard balls, 768b

Elm,

expect pears from i26b old as yonder e., g68b


e. tree
tell

an

e.,

642b Embers, glowing room, 335b

e.

through the our


of
e.,

round
tell

bole, 6633
e.,

me

me
e.,

g68b

joy of cities, 10833 Embezzlement, rate

that

in

sisb
grows,

e.

846b
feelings

Elms, desire under the e., looga fade into dimness apace, 7153

permanently

in

race,

immemorial
Elocution,

7iaa
said Holmes, 8503

64gb wherefore

waste

e.,

76ga

10633 undiscovered e., loGsb Embittered, renounce and not be e., 8253 Emblem, chosen e. of her land,

Elemented, 3o6a

things
e.

which

e.

it,

Element's, thy

below, 277b

Elements and angelic sprite, 3o?b by term e. we mean, 474b competitive e., 10540 essential provider of e., 7i3b framed us of our e., 2123 government balance of e., 828b heaven earth and all the e., i7ob tax you not you e., 278a I
least visible, io68a of antagonism, io54b reconciles discordant

Elongated-yellow-fruit school of writing, io45b Elopement except for presents,

578b
shears

Emblems

and pastepot e., gosb of deeds done in dime,

886a Eloquence, army not halted by e., 677b fill winepress of e., 1463 frothy e. not convince me, Sgob gods do not give all men e., 6sb in forum rhetoric in study, 6833

of untimely graves, sacred e. to partake,

Embodiment, flag
84ib

e.

of history,

mother of arts and of Mr. Webster, 10423


silence

e.,

$48b

of everything excellent, 7673 of hatred, 92 ib the law, 7673 Embodying thee untamed as thee,

Embody

e.,

5ioa

in him, 256b so something in us before

mixed

e.,

3$ob

weak and beggarly

e.,

5$b

Ekphant

ate all night, 821 a leans or stands, 3233

like e. roaming at will, like e. stuck in mud, Sob stalls above like e., io76b

Sob

6583 splendid e., 4163 take e. wring neck, 8o8a talking and e. not same, 3043 thou has inspired with, 1543 true e. takes no heed of e., 3633 truth secret of e., 7o6b turned scale, 60 ib Eloquent digressions, 7asb feeling and imagination make
e.,

more

7033 Emboldens,

nothing
in

e.

sin

as

mercy, 2gob

Embosomed
225b
as to e.

the deep, 447b Embrace, arms take your last e.,

me

she inclined, 34 ib

that practiced on fife, 7473 traveling through dense forest,


tried
to use telephant, to see e. though blind,

us
just

e.,

1363

8a

went

68oa with sign saying Buffalo, 684b Elephants endorsed with towers,

and mighty Death, iggb e., 34ob on theme of themselves, 77ob pure and e. blood, 3*070 to be not as e. more e., 4623
old

endure then pity then e., 4oga is death, 10340 my dead mother's ghost, 66a none do there e., 3603 now 3ll you millions, 4973 Pole as Frenchman, igia
possibilities

man

didn't

e.,

8ooa
4473 ii3b

principles rest that

mistresses, knows no care,

or

simplicity, 743

Else, leave all e. to the gods, 1213 Elude him reel and pass, 10363

348b
place
e.

Eludes, spiritlike
for

e.

embrace,
e.,

ib spiritlike eludes e., 72 time to e., 27b Embraced by porter at

hotel,

want of towns, i36a


e.,

72ib
Elusive, absolutely

go4a tried to use telephone, 8a2a Elevate life by conscious endeavor, 6833 Elevated if we live artistically, 995 joy of e. thoughts, 5ogb

women and

Elephone

The Vague and


Elves,

E.,

io8sb 743
e.

955 b by strumpet wind, 232b ghost e. fled, i i8b


coats,

make my small

22gb whisper in your ear, 8573


little eyes glow, 32ob e., 622b send you to E. plain, 6sb Elysium as far as nearest room, 739 a daughter of E., 4g7a palpable E., g8ga

whose

Elysian, life

Elevation and beauty, 7i6b drink not to e., 42 gb Elevator, no opium-smoking in

e.,

g4ia
Eleven, possession e. points, 3g2b Elfin from green grass, 64ib Elfland, horns of E., 648b

what

E.

known, $B$b

summer dawn, Ssob Embraces, break e., i05gb Embraves this morn, 354b Embroider world upon loom, 878b Embroidered, heavens' e. cloths, 88ob loosened the e. girdle, 643 speech like e. tapestries, 783 Embroideries, coat covered with e., 88ib Embroil earth about fancied line,
377b

Emanation, 48gb

my

e.

far

within,

Embryo,

yesterday

e.

tomorrow
of E. Isle,

Elginbrodde, Martin E., iio5a Elgin's, stands in E. place, 6563 Eli Eli lama sabachthani, 453

Emasculate, pallid and e. scholarship, 7213 Embalm minor poet, 10353

ashes, 1423

Emerald, cause or 4830

men

1208

INDEX
524b Emerald, green as resonance of e., ygSb government Emergencies,
e.
f

Encouraged
Empty
quacks, 7Q5b rich sent e. away, 463

in

e.,

Empire, British E. and United States, 92 ib course of e., 4ooa

Emerges

6935 ahead of accomplishments, io52b path e. then closes, 8903 with verb in mouth, 76ib Emerson, by E. out of Charles

great e. presence

show resources, of mind in e.,

England an e., 5903 entrusted with e., 73b for raising customers, 445a
friendliness of British E.,

room my heart keeps e., 32ia-b seek e. world again, 68sb seven e. ears, 7b so e. each head, 4563
solid

God's princes of

pudding

e.

praise,

41 3b

e.,

how
is e.

Holy Roman

great

e.

and

little

E.,

GgSb minds, 41 7a

stomach, 972b
tigers or roaring sea, to

25b
full,

be

e.

is

to

be

743

Lamb, g6ob Emetic but nowhere aphrodisiac, o68b star, 74ib Emigrated to another Emily set doors ajar, gjib and E., sonne roos 1070 up Eminence, raised to that bad e. f 343 a Eminent, censure is tax for being e-, 38ga Eminently noble, 7133 plain and direct, 7120-7133 Emits a brighter ray, 447b Emmanuel, call his name E., 393 O come O come E., 687b
Emmet, Robert E. and Wolfe Tone, 881 a Emotion, Asquith disliked e., 934b bounding at e. new, 7143 cannot demonstrate an e., 77gb communicates idea, 862a disembodied e. a nonentity,
794 a
expressing formula of
e.

is the E., 87 la institutions and our E., 921 a internal domestic e., logSb

turn down e. glass, 6313 vessel greatest sound, 2453


virtue no e. echo, 497b words are e. thanks, 392b Emptying, bows bent e. of quivers, 772b Empty-vaulted night, 3373 Emulation, propensity for e., 845b shouting their e., 28gb Enable press to serve functions,
list culture to thrive, io*7bios8a Enacting laws like drinking songs,

last

unpossessed, 2i7b thousand years, 92 ib liquidation of British E., 9243 loungers of E. drained, 849 b my mind to me an e., ig2a neither holy nor e., 4i7a Neptune's e., 2573 perfection never built e., ioi6a

power

in trust, 368b
e.,

preserve unity of rod of e., 44ob

453a

sun never sets on e., 5223 this alone e. and victory, 5693 thy dread e. Chaos, 4i4a to French e. of land, 5ooa trample e. down, 8o7b
vast
e.

gob
Enactments, wicked cruel e., 5943 Enameled, makes music with e. stones, 22ob

of

human

society, 51 la
e.,

westward the course of wide arch of ranged 2873 wilderness into e., 453b

4ooa
fall,

e.

in art, ioo7b that particular


e.,

e.,

Empire's lamentation, 65 ib Empires, buries e. in common grave, 466a

quaint e. eyes, 3393 snake throws e. skin, 22gb Enameling, hammered gold and gold e., 8833 Enamored, afflication e. of thy parts, 2253 of an ass, 2303 Encamp, though an host should
e.,

i8a

idea communicates

801 b

intellect is to e. as clothes,

862a
e.,

changed by bottle, 4813 day of e. come, 7&5b


dyspepsy ruin of e., 552a game was e., 5633 hatching vain e., 34jb make central e. good neighbors,

more than usual

e.,

10073 io6ia io44b recollected in tranquillity, 51 ib source of becoming-conscious, 93&b of e., squads undisciplined ioo5b Emotional, destitute of e. warmth,
poetry poetry express every real thing that made
e., e.,
e.,

no transforming 936b escape from

5293 without

976b
vaster

than

e.

and more

slow,

Enchafed flood, 2733 Enchains us to permitted ill, 56gb Enchant, I will e. thine ear, 2igb what deceives may be said to e., 94 a Enchanted, enter e. woods, 73ob holy and e., $a$b life's e. cup, 55gb

Employ, how
4823

359 b

6653 means requisite to ends, 48sa Employed, age e. in edging steel,

fit to e.,

Medea gathered e. herbs, 2353 Enchanter, ghosts from e. fleeing, 56gb


Enchantment, distance lends e., 537 a Enchantments, last e. of Middle . Age, 7isb a Enchantress, tune e. plays, 854b Enchants my sense, 268a Enclose, cherries fairly do e., 3003
Enclosed, forbear to dig dust
here, ZQQb
e.

Emotions, escape from

orgies,

866b
e.,

men e. best contented, 42sb Emptied some dull opiate, 5823 Emptier ever dancing in air, 2283 Emptiness, dull privations and
lean
e.,

ioo7b

3063

foreign to art, 754b of the Spaniards, 5873

Empechent,

ailes

de geant

1'e.,

Emperor and clown, 5833 big stealin' makes you e., 10093 in mine own house, 1983
keep drowsy e. awake, 883a of ice cream, 9553 pope and e., sg8b subject to no one but God, 155* without crown, 3993 you are E. yet you weep, 3783
Emperor's, she
side,

77 a

eternal smiles e. betray, 4 lib of ages in face, 8a6b produced the universe, iioa Emptor, caveat e., 1503 Empty, a little louder but as e.,

Encloseth, thy breast

e.

my

heart,

2173
Enclosing, mistake of
e.

envelope,

4093 bag cannot stand, 42 2 a beat an e. barrel, 9533 born e. into modern age, g78b buckets into e. wells, 4583, 5233 cisterns exhausted wells, 10033 crowns are e. things, 38sb go not e. unto thy motherin-law,

might lie by e. 275b Emperors have died of gout, s64b pomp of e. ridiculous, 6053 purple of e., 8743
souls of e.

nb

her

e.

room

is cold,

iioa

honor but an e. bubble, 37 ib house like stray dog, 7563


idle singer of
is

e., unflinching 878a Empire, American e. careens onward, ios8a

Emphasis Emphatic,

cobblers, igoa of passionate love, 536b

and

and

day, 7533 *i7b e. dream, ioaa, 62ob life mirrors on e. space, 797b

e.

985b e. me, Encompass, poetic fields 392b 684b unencompassable, Encompassed by horrors, 6973 finEncompasseth, my ring e. thy ger, 2i6b Encounter darkness as a bride, 2713 truth in free and open e., 34ob Encountering fly this January day, 738b Encourage, animate and e., 4oob
vice, 4503 to e. the others, 4173 water most e. flame, io3ib Encouraged, examination of government e., 5313 he ought to be e., 43$b

the chair

e.,

no

an

no

life

moves

in e. passageways,
e.

8ia

no patriot on

stomach, 8313

1299

Encourager
Encourager, 4i? a

INDEX
e.

pour

les

autres,

End, in the
1633
is

e.

truth will conquer,

Encouraging

dever pupil, 4253 Encroach, habit will e., 5233 Encroachment, insidious e. by men of zeal, 8333 Encroachments, gradual and silent
e.,

bitter as

wormwood, zjb
43b

is
is

not

yet,

the renown, 2?oa journey's e., 2763, 88ib journeys e. in lovers meeting,

End, their words to the e. of the world, i7b there's an e. of May, 853b there's an e. on 't, 43 ib this is not the e., g24a till I e. my song, 20 ib

Time

48ob

25ib

Encumbers him with help, 4sgb of Encumbrance, periodization


history e., io47b Encyclopedia of Error, 74gb End a contest quicker, 48 la apathetic e., 6463

means by the e., i45 keeps e. from being hard, 928b war going to e., when knew
justifying

appointment 984b
at his e.

at

e.

of

world,

965 knocks you with butt last e. be like his, loa latter e. of a fray, 24ob
laws
e.

e.,

45 ib

will one day e. it, to all an e., 878b to beginnings of wars, to make the e. most sweet, to pause to make e., 646b to war, 974a true beginning of our e., true lover therefore had
e.,

a6gb
974a 226a

asob good

i75b
to

tyranny

begins,

426a

truth

the
e.

e.

of reckoning,

be a at the e. take your at their wit's e., sib attempt the e., $2ob
shall

fool,
fill,

34b 6yb

let e. try the man, 242 a let the e. be legitimate, let there

2723

4850

be

e.,

66 ib

war put war that

to

mankind, io7sb
9213

beauty sufficient

e.,

88sa

liberty as e. and means, live life to e., ioi8a


e.,

83*b

we

shall

will e. war, 888a go on to e.,

began
begin

to

draw

to

our

373
in

with

certainties

e.

ib long weary day have e., 20 losses restored and sorrows e.,

doubts, 2o6b

beginning and the e., s8b beginning of the e., 4843 beginning of time resemble

made made
e.,

e.

of

life

with

light, ii4a

finer e.

and went away,

957 a being's e. and aim, 4ogb better is the e. of a thing, s8a blessed the latter e. of Job, i6b born to disastrous e., 201 a

make me

to know mine e., i8b makes a swanlike e., 233b mankind put e. to war, io7sb

2430

where e. knows God, losob where you begun, 4523 whole has beginning middle and e., gga whose e. is destruction, 54b world without e., sgb, 4595 yes to the very e., 7sgb you are beginning and e., 10493 End-all, be-all and e., 2823
of deep arguments, 8993 Endearing elegance of female friendship, 428a with e. wile, 44gb

bow and

accept
e.

by opposing by sleep we
8i6b

e., 9263 them, a6ib

e. heartache,

s6ib
e.,

minutes hasten to their e., 2gab must justify the means, 37b my wrath did e., 48gb naught at the e., 8723 no e. in wandering mazes, 3443

young charms,

54a

chapters of lives to natural

no

come but not come to bad e.,

in sight, 91 oa

io6sb

of it the voiceless wailing, ioo6a no e. to chain of responsibility,


e.

9831

crowns all, 2695 crowns us not the fight, saoa death a necessary e., 2545
decline
to

no e. to withering, ioo6b no prospect of an e., 446b


not even beginning of e., 924* not forsake me in my e., 374b of every man's desire, 775a of exploring to arrive, 10073 of fight tombstone white, 872b of journey too, 86sb of life cancels bands, 2402 of life is action, 7253 of love or season, g26a of making many books there is

Endearment, each fond e. tries, 44gb Endeavor, achievement death of e., 7gib by no e. can magnet, 7673 Christian e. hard on pulchritude, 96 1 a disinterested e. to learn, 7i3b elevate life by e., 6833 in continual motion, 2433 Endeavors to preserve peace, 9723 to live life imagined, 683b

accept

e.

of

man,

">39b

democracy means to e., 10140 depends upon beginning, ijib despondency and madness, 5123 dine at journey's e., 88ib
dispatch in putting e. to it, 99 even unto e. of world,
fairest

Ended, God be praised Georges


e.,

findeth

go

things fleetest e., e. in garden, 4b with me to my e.,


will

45a 8563

no
of of of of of of of of

e.,

my

aga, g62b tether, 49 ib

his cares now all e., 242b our revels now are e., 2Q7b so e. Sicilian expedition, gob Endin', now sees de e., 10393

934*

2g8a
these,
e.

God

put an
is

e.

to

n7b
going forth

perfect day, 862b that man is peace, i8b the beginning, g24a

from the

of

the heaven, iyb

good beginning good e., i8sb good of subjects e. of kings,


385 great e. of learning, loob guide original and e., i48a hair to stand an e., 2$gb heartache, 6ib here, 9693 here at life's e., 884b

the one-hoss shay, 634a the unending, ioo6b the world, i7a, 453, 9653
this day's business,

25b

one must consider the e., 35gb only when life comes to e., 78b pleasure the beginning and e.,
io3a quiet-colored e. of evening, 66sb recurrent e. of unending, ioo6b remember the e., 37b right true e. of love, 3073 sans e., 6303 see the e. and beginning, 10573 served no private e., 4o7a
sleep itself

Ending, 3ll lovely things have e., iciob art of e., 6253 bad beginning makes bad e., 8sb bread S3uce of happy e,, 7993 crowns the work, isob hard beginning good e., 1833 heaven 3nd earth in ashes e., i57b is despair, , 2g never e. still beginning, 37 ib O bitter e., g68b ioo6b of interminable night,
Endings, beginnings dy, 8933 Endless, absence which
extinction

and

e.

unti-

hold

fast

our

e.,

7i6b
terrible
e.,

is e.,

6793

hope to the e., s6b humanity come to


95*b
if e.

of

unhappy
ioo5b

hates,

7i2b
frontier, 10153

brings

me

out, 641 a

must

e.,

33 ib

humility

is e.,

in

despondency and madness, io75b


e.

in joy, io66a in my beginning is my e., ioo5a in my e. my beginning, igab,

snow swept world e. to e., ioi8a socialism means to e., ioi4b some say world e. in fire, 9273 something ere the e., 646b stay awhile e. the sooner, 207b
such e. true lovers have, 486a swan-like e., g$b

night, 3213, 44ib in e. error hurled, 4093 my days of e. doubt, ig8b


olives of e. age,

293b s62b

perpetual posterity, 5393

ioo6a
in

one purpose, 2432

8i6b regret or happiness,

pure and

e. light,

1300

INDEX
Endless road you tread, 8$3b

Energies
Enemies, we
friends,

Endure not
4900

some born

to

e.

night,

summer
time an

e.

days, 7353 song, 88oa


e.

yet a breach, 3063 philosopher e. toothache, 2473 so long shall your honor e.,

3re not
e.,

e.

but

6375 wise learn from

gia

n8a

Enemy and
7633

friend together hurt,

ib Endlessly, cradle e. rocking, 70 Endorsed, elephants e. with towers,

whole vocation 5135

imitation,

348b

whether nation e., 6sga the consequences, g8gb then pity then embrace, 4oga toil of growing up, 883b weeping may e. for a night, i8a
testing

art hath e. Ignorance, $o2a be able for thy e., 26gb best soul of e. msn, g87b best is e. of good, 4i7b

college or cat, 4072 my goods I thee e., 6ib Endowed by ruined millionaire,

Endow
with

what Malherbe
2043

writes

will

e.,

all

would you have songs


youth's a stuff will not

e.,

e.,

by their creator, 47ob Endows, native personality

e.

Endured, moon hsth her eclipse e., agsb

66 ib 25 ib

man, 7033
well that e. well, Ends, well that e. well, all's candle burns at both e., come from e. of earth,
all

much

e. little

enjoyed, 4283

i8sb 27oa 10233

remembers all that he wrought and e., 66b something more dreadful, 673
torments of grief e., 6o4b Endures, heaven e., 8553 man in love e. more, 8063 moment or day, 883b nothing e. but chsnge, 77b Endureth, blessed the nun thst e. temptation, 563
his mercy e. for ever, 143 his truth e., 2ia word of the Lord e., s6b

$72b our private e., 356b cunning seldom gain e., iogga delays have dangerous e., 2i4a dog to gain private e., 448b filled with e. of worms, 10253 formula for making e. meet, g66b game that never e., io37b his circuit unto the e. of it, i7b in wisdom, gagb irrelevancies and loose e., giob law e. tyranny begins, 372b means requisite to e., 4853
consult

Enduring monument, 571 b


the
e.

Endymion,
5 ? 5a

are near to virtue, 723 in E. leaped headlong,


e.,

means to achieve great e. f 10163 needless Alexandrine e. song, 4<>3 a of being and ideal grace, 6i8b of world come, 781 a one e. other begins, 642b past free of loose e., giob smile upon fingers' e., 24sb a strange eventful history, 249 thing that e. other deeds, 288b them aimest at, 2gga violent delights have violent e.,
224b watch that e. night, $g6b way the world e., 10033
your
with Revelations, 8403 family history you, g6a
e.

rj Enemies, advance on new

g2oa

amuse

friends annoy e., 8943 believers take precautions

biography written by e., 8133 cannot be hidden, 383 care's an e. to life, 2513 cherishing e. in disguise, 4623 cruel and unrelenting e., 4613 dashed in pieces the e., 8b defeat e. in one battle, 4673 drive e. beyond frontier, 5oib every man his greatest e., 3303 eye neighbor as e., 9123 faints not nor faileth, 688b find out where e. is, 7173 fury and might of e., 9213 goes over to e., 4523 happiness e. to pomp, 394a hast thou found me O mine e., i3b here shall he see no e., 2483 if thine e. be hungry, 263 in their mouths, 2743 is the unknown, 9373 kisses of e. deceitful, 26b last e. is death, 533 met e. they 3re ours, 5533 mightest still the e., 173 more formidable e. than Ger-

many, 10473

against e., 1493 called for peace, 9043 careful in choice of

my my
e.,

e. is

desd, 7023
greatest
e.,

vision's

8393

nesrest

defend country against e., 8955 defend in assaults of our e., 6oa
disposed of foreign e., 953 fourth glsss for mine e., sg German for converse with e.,

3nd de3rest ne3rly slew ye, ioggb

e.,

4913 2403

no e. but time, 883b no e. ever haul colors, 9593 no man's e., losgb
nobody's e. but own, 67 ib not how many e. are but where, 87b one e. is too much, 3253 place ship alongside e., 49" punished as e. of country, 5033
reason i8oa
rejoice

435*

with

means of our destruc76b 3id and comfort, 4743 giving giving e. the slip, 437b great woe to their e., 6gb
give
e.

tion,

e.

greatest

e.

faith
e.,

has,

Endurance and courage, 8g6a beyond e. and need rest, g76b for one moment more, 8ogb Endure accent of coming foot,
73&a all deaths
all

the dust, 2oa humanity has three e., 8i7b I can defend myself from e.,
his e. shall
lick

spy

5073
in the presence of mine e., i8a in war in peace friends, 47ob internal e., 7gsb just friends and brave e., 472b Ie3rn from our e., i2ga look e. in fsce, 3753 love him for e., 7283

not over thy could send, 736b be thine msy thyself to slander you, 7633
e.

3?b

e.,

735b

treat friend 3s

if

he might bee.

could
hearts

e., e.,

347 *>

that

human

4283

come e., 1263 weak man better

than friend,

as long as He, 737a for ages to come, 48 sb for thy peace she e., 6gga

greater than dare, 66 1 a his name shall e. forever,

love your

e.,

4ob

2oa

knows how
last

man will not men must e.

pure

to e. poverty, stretch, io66b

i22b
log

m3ke e. of nations, 457b m3ke my e. ridiculous, 417^


most intimste e., 73 ib naked to mine e., 2gga not worth living without 8gob of man, 10733 of persecuted blacks, 6i5b

my

6853 wherever e. goes troops go, 7173 will meet one e. everywhere, i48b world smsll when e. loose, 8o6b worst friend 3nd e. Death, gg43 wrong W3r with wrong e.,
io25b-ioa6a

merely

e.,

their going, 28oa misfortunes of others, 3553 more able to e., 5153

e,

you

my

e.

3nd
e.

yours,

Enemy's, by 10833

beak

4233 gouged,

my heart, 67a my own despair,


Negroes will
neither
evils
e.,

easier to get into e.

toils,

7&b

387a nation e. if we stand up, ioi5b e. but 5683 mutability, naught


losga
cures,

of the future, ioi7b old friends become

mine
e.

e.

dog, 2803

bitter

3103 saved from our


secret history of soften to us our

e..
e.,
e.,

nor

1253

no disappointment we e., 6793 no picture made to e., g88b not e. husband with beard

463 6233 8253


e.,

stsnd 3side from e. onset, gos Energetic mongrels, 8713 of men 3nd Energies, best e.

women, 7i?b
437b 32gb
126;

ten

jokes 3 trophies to
lot

hundred
e.

of

truth,

unh3ppy

finds

no

e.,

diverse e, of free men, 10743 of system decay, 8133 self-circling e., 5283 that csnnot die, 78sb

13O1

Energy
Energy and sleepless vigilance, 6g8b atomic e., go8b atomic e. lead to bombs, atomic e. menace, 95ob better to live one day 7 of e.,
8oa
equals mass times speed of light squared, 9503

INDEX
England come
to shame, 6563 common law of E., 10173 corner of field forever E., 9 dress in E., SjSb

England, whoever wakes in E 6633 wins Ust bsttle, 923^9243 with 3ll thy fkults, 4563
to conquer others, 2273 world where E. dead, Q$zb youth of E. are on fire, 243!) and pleasant England's green land, 4gob mountains green, 4gob

expects, 49*3 frontier of E. on Rhine, further off from E., 744b

wont

88ga

government want

e.

to pree.,

serve itself, 4723 horse provides locomotor

834* of thought, sgyb power wielded by abnormal

gentlemen of E., g28b goes down Germany up, 9953 Greece Italy and E. did adorn, 37ob has no name for prairies, 57 hath given warning, 466b hath need of thee, 5i2b
highroad to
history
is

old E. winding sheet, 4903 pleasant pastures, 4gob

song forever, 8650


the one land, gggb English, almost speak E. without accent, lona among E. poets after death,

e.,

E.,

43ob
E.,

777b
public life situation of quantity of e., 7ogb
release of atomic e.,
e.,

now and

4523

I
if if

am

in E.

everywhere,

10073 3303

E. to itself true,

37b

gSsb

E. was what E. seems, 8y6b

5850
attain E. style, 4283 beer into E. Channel, 8i8a can't think of E., 74$b Chaucer well of E., 2oob
civilization close wall

small quantities of e., 8343 uranium new source of e., Enfant terrible of literature,

in E. I've mate, 673b in E. now, 6633 in E. time lag, 888b

de

la patrie,

4gga

Enfer, chaud comme 1'e., Te. des femmes, 35ga Enfold, how many perils do

e.,

2003
Enforce, tongues of dying e. attention, 22Gb

Ireland gives E. generals, 7313 is a garden, 8773 keep my bones, 2373 know kings of E., ?66b knuckle-end of E., 522b let not E. forget precedence,

humanizing, 7i6b with E. dead, 24$b

dictionary best reading, 9163 father of E. criticism, 428b


fields

upland dim, 7i4b

with temper, 4353 Enforceable safeguards, gSsb Enforced from our quiet sphere,
useth e. ceremony, 2563 obedience, 2773 Enforcement, gentleness my strong
it

339 b light candle in E., i8oa many a peer of E. brews, 8s3b mariners of E., 537b martial airs of E., 5483 men of E. wherefore plow, 5703

happy E.

for suppressing other, 7133 child, 5463

hierarchy tremble, 4623 his E. sweete upon his tonge, 1663 in 3n E. l3ne, 66sb in isvor of boys learning E.,

248b Enfranchisement, liberty freedom e., 2553 Engaged in great civil war, 6$ga struggle in whch so long e., 4653 Engagement, get loose from honorable e., 452a Engarlanded, with mist e., 7i4b Engenders, every cloud e. not storm, 2i6b not white hair that e. wisdom, 102b shudder in loins e., SSgb so much more, 10393 Engine, great e. never sleeps, 66oa human e. waits, loosb power alone, gioa steam e. in trousers, 5233 two-handed e. at door, gjSb which drives enterprise, 9773 wit's an unruly e., s**b Engineer hoist with own petar, 264b sometimes striking the e., 32 2b story of brave e., go4b writer e. of soul, g54b Engineers of soul, 8g4b Enginer hoist with own petar, 2645
e.,

meteor flag of E., 537b middle class in E., 7i6b model to inward greatness, 243b my England, 8i6a navy of E., 444b neck wrung like chicken, gasb
never
at

9203
king's E., 2673 kissed by E. dead, loaSb language of E. poet, 10083 nation of philosophers, least

7273
liberalism nor Toryism, 713!} majority of E. snobs, 8373 marks our E. dead, 8753 most beautiful words in E.,

foot
I

of

conqueror,

237b nor E. did

know, 5iob

of a king of E. too, 1893 of our dreams, 876b oh to be in E., 6633 old E. to adorn, $76b or E. breed again, siia

8oob mother made moan, 69 3 b


never abolish anything, not Turkish court, 242b
8623

paradise for women, 3123 paradise of women, 201 b paradise of individuality, poison E. at roots, gi7b poorest he in E., 3i7b

867b

oak and holly, 76gb one pair of E. legs, 2443 pint of E. ale, giga
principle
of

E.

constitution,

444b
rolling E. drunkard, giga seen enough E. towns, 10473 spoke bad E. in children's

refrigerator called E., 87?b reversed system succeeded, 72 ib rightwise king of E., 1753 roast beef of old E., 3gsb Saint George for E., giga Scots friends to E., 2053 se3 once made E. secure, 932b
see allies stronger, 10123

books, 86 5 b strung on E. thread, 6g4b sweet as E. air, 6483 take of E. earth, 8773
tear, 5g6b to E. the sea,

shower of curates on E., 67gb slaves cannot breathe in E.,


stands sentry, 78 ib stately homes of E., 5730, 9753 such night in E., 595b take my drum to E., 8653 there I find flag of E., 5O4b

5003
E.

trick

of

our

nation,

24 ib

unofficial rose, 9933

Engines,

feeble e.

of despotism.

473& he has his e. set, 10363 O you mortal e., 2753 England, alas alas for

E.,

giSb

an empire, 5goa and Saint George, 2443


awake, 4gia

always be E., io6gb they that fought for E., giSb


there'll

up with which not put, 9253 we E. nation of brutes, 8443 white as angel E. child, 486b winter ending in July, 5623 wood of E. bows, 8503 Englishman beat three Frenchmen, 3g5a blood of an E., 1098 a content to say nothing, either for E. or Jew, 491 a he is an E., 7663
if I

this

realm

this E.,

226b

be E. what she

bound
2272

with

4563 triumphant
will,

thoughts by E. given, 9943 was merry England, 5igb what have I done for E., 8i6a
sea,

4333

bow made
breeds

in E., 8503 valiant creatures,

what is left of E., sg8b what would I not do E., 8i6a who dies if E. live, 877b

were American as I

am

E.,

4263
in Eden find fault, 6853 in Wellington's army,

2443

who

only E. know, 8743

13O2

INDEX
in America, Englishman interested

Entitled
Entails,

io46b
last

Lord Byron was


moral 8s6b

great E., 65 ib

E.,

when

8isa uncomfortable,

Enlarge, circle never ceaseth to e., 2i4a my life, 427a Enlarger of public life, 7523 Enlarges, develops and e. organ,

when
so e.

truth

e.

ruin, 833

Entangling

alliances,

what
Enter,

prejudices

of true E., 3953

of E., 10913 rights stirred heart of E., 8g6a

true-born E., 226b vain ill-natured E., 3853 beef was E. food, Englishman's, 0g2a E. education, 7183 part of every thoughts, 71 2b mad dogs and E., Englishmen, 10433

Enlighten people generally, 4733 Enlightened enough to exercise control, 47 gb his eyes were e., isa

who knows himself is e., 743 Enlightenment, safety e. civilization, 7o8b Ennoble, we must e. our works,
!59 a

all hope abandon who e. here, 1596 enchanted woods, 73ob into his gates with thanksgiving, 2ia into joy r 44a into kingdom of heaven, 41 b Lord Christ e. in, 8413 truth nation which keepeth may e., 31 b not into temptation, 44b they that e. must go on knees,

4723 as death, go8b

O when

shall E., 2iia

English-speaking,

our fathers were E., 3193 union of E. peo828b pies,

Engraven, deep S43b stanza when should Engross, pens e., 4ioa Enhance, rubs e. value of favors,

on

his

front

e.,

Ennobled, it e. our hearts, 3923 Enoch walked with God, 6b Enormous, knowledge e., $4b E-nor-mouse, tail is e., gyoa Enormously improved by death, go4b Enough as good as feast, i86a beauty are you not e., g82a damned that cries Hold e., 2873 for all, g46a for my life, 37b
for this
life,

315a
to grow in wisdom, 75 ib to help the sick, 88a wind storm rain may e., 426b ye shall not e. into heaven, 433

Entered, 436a

have

e,

on

enterprise,

into springs of sea, i6a into unadvisedly, 61 a

448a in mystery in e., Enigma, riddle osob Enjoin that which pleases weak,

1021 a
e.,

freedom from something not

Entergraft our hands, so6b Enterprise for glory of Christian, i72b heroic e. gone, 454a
is sick,

267b
in

God
if

if

this

were

e.,

824b

lifeblood of our

462b
Enjoy,

something, 5173
is

more
e.,

crown that seldom kings 2i5b 201 a delight with liberty, don't have to go e. it, 878b
e.,

in world for everyone, 9833

know what
long
love
e.

more than

e., 2403 walking naked, 88 ib private e. not yet- tried, 9723 profit engine of e., 9773

e.

and

just so long,

io3ib

set habits of age, 10273 thrift nurse of e., 976b

cannot e. grudge what they 763 her while she's kind, s6gb indifferent and cannot e.
4 2 9 b-43<>3 interval, 86yb

get

what want and

e.

it,

it,

most

e.

contented

least,

2Q2a

neither e. nor suffer, 8473 other people's sufferin', 8gib

private men e., 244b while we e. it, 246b prize not resources within thy reach, 7gb

is e., 7533 never know what is e., 48?b not e. to fight, gsgb not e. to help feeble up, 2goa of children's gratitude, 884a or too much, 4883 'tis e. 'twill serve, 2253 to have died once e., ngb to sit is not e., 505b tradition not e., ioo8b troll to thyself be e., 72ga

want of

e.

and

faith,

68$b

without precedent, 4363 Enterprises, in mighty e. determination enough, i27b


of great pith, 26*3 that require new clothes, 682b Enters, idly bent on him that e. next, 2283

naught e. there, 2513 W3r seldom e. but where wealth


allures,

37ob
comers, 633

word work
Enrage

things we ought, g8a too late to e. it, 375b

unpacking, 886b your dear wit, 337b of old e. in you, bards Enjoyed, 486b hours I once e., 456b in vision beatific, 3433 more chased than e., 232b much endured little e., 4283 no sooner but despised, 294b not e. if not been there, 8sga
trip after

your nuities, 4i8a Enrich yourselves, 5543 Enriched our blood, gg2a pension never e. young man,
325*
e.

to wise e., 1973 to do, 877a those paying

Entertain

all

an-

lag-end of my life, 24ob strangers, 563 this stsrry stranger, 354b

Entertained angels unawares, 563 spirit once e. you, 10653 Entert3iner who understood his
time, 9653 Entertaining, more the novels, 9323
e.

Enriches, that which not

him,

than h3lf

274*

Ensanguined hearts, 4585 Enshrine her and she dies, ggoa


Ensign, beauty's
full
e. yet is

crimson,

supinely

e.

gifts

of

founder,

high advanced, 342b


e.,

Entertsinment, knee joint not e., 9 J 5a Entert3ins exclusive worms, losga harmless d3y, soob Enthroned, d3rk Care sits e., 12 ib

466a the Lady, 488a to have e. sun, 7iib Enjoying, oh think it worth

tear tattered

63 33
e.

Enskyed, 27oa
e.,

thing

and

sainted,
e.,

mercy e. in hearts of kings, 234b on darkest altar, 10683


Enthusiasm, briefcase of e., ios6b flights of e., 462b nothing gre3t without e., 6073 whatever poet writes with e., 883 Enthusiasts, how to deal with
e.,

Enslave, people impossible to

37ib Enjoyment, 7Q3b

54ob
credulity

helps
e.,

e.,

we

fight not to
alike

e.,

4673
e.

Enslaved,
benefit
e.,

baptism
for

human
life

and

453a 4323

intellectual

8s7b

destiny 79 a

free

me, 8303 and e.,


than
e.,

not from e. to e., material e., ioigb of life and liberty, 446a variety mother or e., 6ua

London
92 ib

in ruins rather

5gsb

ib tamely and abjectly e., 92 Enslavement certainty of worse,


all
e.,

Enjoyments, seasoning of 36ia Enjoys air it breathes, 5o8b beauty ne'er e., 41 ib who e. not life, 33oa

1069 a faced e. if captured, 7523 Ensnare, man's imperial race

Entice dewy-fe3thered sleep, 3363 if sinners e. thee, 233 Entiere, Venus toute e., 378b Entire, that ye may be perfect and
e.,

e.,

Entities

563 not

multiplied

beyond
847b

necessity, i62b

Ensured

release,

854b

Entitled,

more no man

e. to,

Entity
Entity and quiddity, 3523 Entrails, in our own proper

INDEX
Envy, pride
e.,
e.

avarice three

256b webs from


Entrance,
into

sparks, 160 a pride e. malice,

536b
i4b
i4gb

e. spin, all

1933
e.

slayeth the

silly,

Equal before the law, 748b born free and e., 47ob but in dust, 3093 division of unequal earnings,
hold teacher e. to parents, 88a I am e. and whole, 775b in e. scale weighing, 2573 in presence of death, 1252 inferiors revolt to be e., g8b ivry man e. if not careful, Bgstb justice for all, 8gb more e. than others,

men have one

life,

373

arrows, slays itself stirred up with e., 34 ib


strongly rooted as
toil e.
e.,

by own

beware

e.

to quarrel, 258b

48 ib

fatal e. of

Duncan, 281 b
e.,

want, 4273

give God e. ticket, 7o8a Entrances, exits and their Entrap, seeming truth to

2493
wis-

e.

too low for e., 357b vice of republics, 622a void of e. guile lust, 42oa

233b Entreat me not


est,

whim

e.

or

resentment,

456a

to leave thee,
e.

lib
Entreats,

e. with io86b

Time

transported,

Hesperus

thy light,

302a

Entrenched greed, 97 la
Entrusted,
lace

Envying, strife and e., 51 b Envy's a coal comes hissing, 6793 Enwrought with gold and silver,

mutual actions e., 37gb nature with e. mind, 7nb none e. Alcides except himself,
13 1 * piece of
sees

man

to

whom

popuEon,

88ob
lie

justice
e.

Death,
station,

jagb

is e.,

6ab

down

for e. or two, 872b

with

eye as God, 4083


e.

with great concerns, 7ab Entrusts life to one hole only,


iosb

fipater le bourgeois,

7oga
i42a

separate and

4yob

Ephemeral, fame
story
e.

is e.,

and

doomed,

losgb

separate but e., io2ia sharing of miseries, 9253

Entwine

itself

verdantly, 5423
e.,

76gb Envelope, bloodied e., io5yb


mistake of enclosing e., g85b Enveloping earth, 527a Enviable death was his, g24b Envied, better e. than pitied, 86b Envieth, charity e. not, 52b love e. not, $2b Envious and calumniating time, 2693 beggar is e. of beggar, 67b Casca, 255b humble are usually e., 3743 more free than e. court, 247b of wounded soldiers, 9053
serpents
e.,

laurel wreaths

Ephesian sod, 6973 youth that fired E. dome, 3313 Ephesus, temple in E, built, 1102b Ephraim, gleaning of grapes of
E.,

some more
taken with

e.,

syllables require,
e.

io53b 4033

thanks, 2633

talked long e. about e. rights,

na

e. say, 523b Epicure, serenely full his apEpicurean cooks sharpen

in any respect, g8b e. to all things, 4513 to god sitting opposite you,
those

petite,

a87b
to

115*

paradox, 6343 Epicurus, he was E. owene sone, i66b set forth highest good, ii4a Epicurus', hog of E. herd, i23a

whole

of

that

commerce,

upstairs,

857b

Epidemic

of

world

lawlessness,

wnen favor of gods was e., 86b Equaling, think of e. men of worth, 7ib Equality, age of political e., 10143
apostles of e., 7163 believe in e. of of characteristic

3083.

Epidemical love of

flattery,

siege of watery Neptune, 2273 silence e. tongues, 2gga ungrateful Public, $$gb

Epigram
what
is

criticism
e.,

of

life,

395b g4ga

man,

purrs like an

g46b
shorter,

467b democracy,

Environ, what perils do

e., sooa Environment, change e., loigb controlled by e., loigb freedom in e., 6753 inequality of e., 757a internal e., 6753 satisfied with e., loigb Envisage circumstance all calm,

an e., 5273 Epigrams, your e. are


Epilogue, no
e.

10450 choose e., 7163


dispensing e., 94b economic e., 10143 if e. found in democracy, g8b justice humanity, 8g5b law in majestic e., 8023 liberty e. fraternity, i iosb live in e., 7533 never e. in servants' hall, 857b of property, 6i6b
political e., 10143 sole e. is death, 6793

pray you, 2313


e.

Episode, love 3n

in nran's

life,

502b
Episodes, Renaissance and Reformation e., 10473 Epitaph, believe woman or e.,
better
drear,

Envoys, her

e.

ubiquitous,

66oa

two punctilious e. Thine and Mine, 377b Envy and wrath shorten life, 38b
attracts e. of world,

42b

born from the start, 86b calumny hate pain, 572a


coal hissing hot, 67ga dared not hate, 55$b dullard's e. of brilliant

3063 not remembered in thy e., 2413 of those who fell, 9243 of which not ashamed, 8253 to be my story, 9293 Epitaphs, let's talk of e., 227b nice derangement of e., 4&ob
e.,

me who am

bad e., 26 ib 872 b


their

Equ3lizer, work grest e., 8i7b Equally, because e. free absolutely equal, g8b entitled to protection, 5033

men,

gioa
for the dead, 762b from e. hatred and malice, 6ob

Epithet belongs 534a


his

to

gentleman,

youth and age e. a burden, 9$b Equals and unequals alike, g4b commerce between e., 338b
e. all, 4080 mass times speed of light squared, 9503 first among e., i5ib peace between e., 8423 revolt to be superior, g8b Equanimity, cultivate e., 8i8a Equations, in midst of diagrams

connects

and

e. for knsve, i7ob Epithets, stuffed with e. of W3r,

surname

energy

e.

golden

mean

avoids

e.

of pal-

2723 Epitome,

all

ace, 12 ib

honor without e. friend who prospered, 78b no man's happiness, 24gb


not e. generals, 701 a not reverence of dead but
living, 3i8a of less happier lands,
e.

Epoch in

history,

man

lives life of e.,

mankind's e., g68b 462b 9373


to spirit of
e.,

no one immune
936b
spirit of

of

S26b

of the dead, 84a of the devil, 36b

e., 9300 Equal, admitted to that e. sky, 4083 3ll animals e., io53b all e. except Negroes, 6353 3ll evils e. when extreme, 33ib

and e., 9503 Equ3tor, spe3k disrespectfully of


e.,

Equators, north poles 3nd e., 746b Equi et poetae alendi, ig7b lente currite noctis e., 213*) noli e. dentes inspicere donati,

522b

pain

successful

men

cause

3ll

men

created
justice,

e.,

47ob,

1463

neighbors, ijib

and exact

4723

Equilibrium

from

within,

9783

1304

INDEX
Equinox,

Essential
call

who knows when was


e.,

Erring, power

e.

men

Chance,

Lscape

from
e.,

the e., 331* o Eouinoxes, precession

337b
6553

golden
s spite,

Equipment, shabby ing, loo^b

e.

deteriorat.

Equity according Chancellor, 3i?a act against natural

to conscience of
e.,

4o8b rod to check the e., 5i4b sister's shame, 5583 Erroneous, thickets of e. observations, io26b
truth in things e., 7o6a Error, all men liable to charged the troops of
e., 37sb e., 32gb chokes windows of mind, 30 la correct cave, io7ga delay preferable to e., 47 ib

reason

good

10565 10503 e. to death, thing


life,

8sa

how

446a

you e. it, 7o8b immortals cannot e., 82b into calm regions, 434b that some e., less evil let no guilty e., 7i7b

will

788b

and
is
a,

fair play,

giib

me

roguish thing, 317* law of humanity justice e., 454* e. of disasEquivalent, evil gains
ter, 67b mechanical e. of heat, 795b moral e. of war, 7Q5b I will not e., 6i5b Equivocate,

of Equivocation, poetry purged

e.,

wul undo us,


Era,

y-

new

e.

in life from reading,

of wonderful nonsense, io32b Eradicated, savage in man never e., 68 2 a


Eras,

when e. die, g25a Erdes' vein, 22ga Erebus, dark as E., *35b
Erect,

Encyclopedia of E., 74gb fruitful e., 8i4b guilty of no e., 54ob hardy plant, 658a hosts of e., 8585 if this be e., 2943 ignorance preferable to e., 471 a in endless e. hurled, 4oga in pride our e. lies, 4o8a is immense, 3Q7b is impatience, g8ob keep citizen from e., 102 ib keep government from e., io22a life a mist of e., 3153
life is

never, 664a mental exertion, 7783 not e. my iambics, i isb a poetry e. from emotion, ioo7 shifts to e. thinking, 6g4b those who dream at night, 6423 thou shalt not e. calumny, 262b thought dissolve and e., 9773

what struggle

to

e.,

$&

whipping, 26ib Escaped from the deep,

ijjga

none quite e. my smile, ggob what speech e. your teeth, 633


with skin of my teeth, 153 Escapes, hair-breadth e., 272b rarely e. injuring own hands, 75a
virtue
e.

not

calumnious
scraping,
evil,

strokes, 258a

avowed

e.

and manly

foe,

only

e.,

4g8b

Escaping

left

Death's
e.

5o6b by bending above fallen, godlike e., 345* head e. beneath years, sprang to feet stood e., two souls e. and strong,
Erected,

7493
ft

love truth pardon e., 41 6b more dangerous the more truth,

,_

7o6b

955 Eschewed, one that Escurial, thou art to

i4a

844b 662a 61 8a
io68a

no

e. not find defenders, 74gb of 1848 and 1849, 677b of opinion tolerated, 472a

Tom
Eskimo,

Jones

E., will outlive E.,

me

324b 466a

little frosty E.,

83b
835b

Ootah
Espoir,

had explanation,
e. d'e.,

fleshed

fair

e.,

342b 36gb in Erecting, corrupted youth grammar school, 2igb


with
e. look,

least e. spirit,

e.

Eremite, nature's patient E., 581 a Eretria, farewell renowned E.,,92b Erinyes who exact punishment

underground, 64b
Eripuit caelo fulmen
tyrannis, i3ib

mox

sceptra

Jovi

fulmen viresque tonandi,

Ermined and minked, 866b


goosegirl e., io42b
'Eroes, thin

red

'e.,

8733

thin red line of 'e., 75a Eros builder of cities, io6oa

ssob only e. to be exposed, g6ob opponent weaned from e., 8g7a prophecy gratuitous e., 68gb reformers of e., 47ga religion not popular e., 722a show a man he is in e., g72b sink of uncertainty and e., g64a to expect favors, 46ib trial and e., 8333 truth to one e. to other, 8g7a very e, of the moon, tffa when e. begins to appear in state, iogb wounded writhes, 574b Errors agonies and fears, 7s8a amusing with numerous e.,
e.,

old

and gray-headed

Espagnol, je parle

a Dieu, i6sb

75ib Espouse everlasting sea, 5i2b Espoused, saw my late e. saint, 34ib Esprit de corps, gsgb 1'e. de 1'escalier, 4373 1'e. de son age, 41 8a Essay loose sally of mind, 42?b

un peu

no room
975*

for impurities

in

e.,

of arms make short e., 3723 refined e. in Atlantic Monthly, g6oa-b


Essays, Essence,

my

e.

come home, 2o7b


thing's
e., e.,

drop of fellowship with

go7b

58ob

448a
besetting e., s6sa correct e. when shown e., 6 deliver from e. of wise, 351 a if to her female e. fall, 4

his glassy e., 271 a

unarm

E.,

288b

Zeus's child, 84b Erotic instinct questionable, Err, Art may e., 372a better e. with Pope, 54b cautious seldom e., 7ib
fifty

reasoned e., 725b stratagems which


volitional,

times to one does

e.,

grossly as few,

s68b

e, seem, 4o2b g68b and tempests, mists wanderings

knows e. of beauty, gsa look to e. of thing, i42b not disclose e. of phenomena, 9843 of novel is moral, Ss^b time is of e., uo2a
Essences,

combined

e.

of heaven
e.,

mortal and

may e., 327b reasoning but to e., 4o8b they do not e., 5i8b

ii3a

earth, noa Essential, assistance

and

from fate
truth,

to e. human forgive divine, to e. is human, 1370, isob

654b Errs if he do deed without God's knowledge, 7ga

'Erse's, 'ear 'e. legs,

concept and

first
is e.,

io68b

disarmament
facts of life,

974b

man

e.

while
e.,

struggle

lasts,

Errand, fool's e., 437b joyous e., 6313 sleeveless e., 1833 sun e. boy, 6g7b thy e. here below, 535b Errare humanum est, i5ob Erred, we have e. and strayed,
wisest men have e., __ Erring, blind man's e. 'Judgment,

478b Erump, evade


Erupit,
abiit

four
e..

e.

68sa freedoms, 972b

nob
evasit
e.

gaudiness of poetry, 957a


give up e. liberty, 422b be e., 455 a great expense may

excessit
to

nob
our state
e.

Eruption, strange

knowledge, 676a
natural
e. rights,

47ob

Eruptions, strange Esau, hands are hands of E., 7 a


sold his birthright, 7a

was a cunning hunter,


Escalier, 1'esprit de 1'e., Escape, better ten guilty cannot e. history, 63
e.,

4o2b
extravagant and e. spirit, 2573 Lord for the e. thought, 77 ib

poetry, 528b provider of elements, 7i3b relation to existence, 676a service to country, sSgb thing in form, 9573

444b

things
tial,

e.

or things circumstan-

1305

Essentially
Essentially,

INDEX
e.

objects

fixed

and

Eternal Father strong to save,

Eternity, it
kill

is e.

now, 8i4b
e.,

dead, gaga
Essentials, six e. in painting, 1533 Establish justice, 4743

726a
feast in thine e. cell,
feel

time injuring
e.

6823
of
tragedy,

s66b
?

killing

essence

ordain

and

e.

Constitution,

feminine

and know we are e. 374b draws us on, 478b


424b
513
snicker, 10013
e. life,

8703
Ie3ve
e. to

Thee, 6963

474* peace spare conquered, i iga thou the work of our hands,

fitness of things,

Footman
gift of

God

sob
Established for crime, g8b

prevention

of

he hath
i8a

e.

it

upon

the floods,

hope
e.,

liberal

to see peace e., g74b institutions cease


is estate,

when

8o6a

name

64 ib order rarely overthrown, loijb society, io54b


Establishment, immense e., ioi6b in America, io7ib
military
e.,

glib about e. things, io66a God is thy refuge, lob heaven's e. year, 3695 hope springs e., 4o8a hostility against tyranny, 47sa importance like baseball, g86b in whom standeth e. life, 6oa conbut temporary justice science e., i7gb lack of pence, 647b

memorial to soul's e., 73 ib no e. will return, 497 b not use again until e., 737b nothing but e. triumphed, iggb now is e., 8i4b number the days of e., 373 only a single night, 933 onset with e., 734b p3lace of e., 3363 passing through nature to e.,
*57 a Pilgrim of E., 57 ib pleasing dreadful thought, 3943 predestined from all e., 7323
responsible through e., ejjSb sea gone with sun, 8303 sells e. to get toy, 2203 shut in a span, 354b

military

lay hold on e. life, 555 lids apart, 5813 life e. love immortal, 7853 live as if e., 933

ioi6b

of religion, 474b of system of security, Q74b Estate, distressed in mind body or e., 6oa fallen from his high e., 37 ib fourth e., 5763, 5770, 66oa God ordered their e., 6&4b good fame, 6033 now fleeting the e. of man, i4*a

misery together, 383b no e. truth, 10193 note of sadness, 7i4b nothing lasts save e. change, 3 i8b now does always last, 3583

small parenthesis in e., 33 ib teacher affects e., 7773 tears of e., 854b thoughts that wander through
e., 3430 throughout all e., 48gb time the image of e., 1433 travelers of e., 3803 wants nothing but e., 2goa W3S in our lips and eyes, 2873 was in that moment, 39 ib white radiance of e., 5723

low

e.

name an

of his handmaiden, 45b in tenure, 641 b e.

our e. home, 3965 pain short joy e., 4g8b passion e. pain, yi2b points out soul's e. sleep, 4823 portion of the e., 5723 prompts e. sigh, 4ogb pulse in e. mind, 9943
quantity of force
e.,

who

pleasure during getting e., g7sb rose an e. in Sicily, 7373

7CH)b

wink of

e.,

10433

not offended with his e., i48a wish e. of world undone, 286b
Estates degrees and offices, 2333 three e. in parliament, 577b

Sabbath of his rest, 3693 Saki from bowl poured, 6303


seas

Eternity's, lives in e. sunrise,

488b

Ether, ampler
falls

e.,

5i6b
e.,

of space

and time,

sigh, 4ogb silence of infinite spaces,

shining

through dear e., 6o5b

5793

Esteem and approbation, 472b


e., 447b lightly what obtain cheap, 466b nothing above virtue, 7ib

smiles emptiness betray, 41 ib Son of Heaven's e. King, 3343


spirit real

Ethereal, blue e. sky, 3933 mildness come, 41 gb minstrel, 5173

everything give to get

e.

nothing, 36 la

and

e.,

7093

summer gilds them, s6ob swear on e. friendship, 36 ib


tasted e. joys of

wh3t
Ethic,

e.

Etherized

to all, 46ob

Heaven, 2133

l3nd

d3nces, 6423 upon 3 t3ble, looob for e. tomorrow,

value from e. of ages, $66b Esteemed, better vile than vile e., *94* man of sovereign parts, 22 ib wonder that gold e., i78b Esteems, everything man e., 883b

things not seen e., 53b thy e. summer not fade, 29 ib tracings of e. light, 4973 truths have fresh meaning, g72b

io77b
Ethicsl scceptance of world, 9393 not e. unless chosen, 793b Ethics, difficulties in e., gisb

unwept
what
e.

in e. night, i22b

man worth

as

he

e.

himself,

i8ia Estimate, *93 a

thou

knowest

loisb streams, 6423 around, whisperings 57gb years of God hers, 574b
vigilance, 4790,

dry volumes of e., 47ob flower read us lectures of

e.,

383*
of communism, 10583 of missnthropy and voluptuousness, 5953 world and e. side by side, 9393 change his skin, 343 Ethiop's, rich jewel in E. ear, 2233 Edam periere ruinae, ig4b Etiquette, isn't e. to cut anyone, 746b Eton, Waterloo won on fields of E., 5063 Etruscan cup, io75b Etude, 13 vraie 6. de 1'homme, 4o8b

thy

e.,

Eternally, secluded e.

from God,
one,
e.,

value by irritation, g46b Estranged faces, 8573. lovers e. or dead, 884b Et in Arcadia ego, 1508 tu Brute, nsb, 255a tat, 1'e". c'est moi, 3783

3o8b
Eternity
artifice

and
of
e.,

are

77 ib

Ethiopian

8833

a contract for dazzles at

becomes

e.,

babe in 74gb
as
e.,

4903

it

at

e.,

36ab

Etched by tonight's moon, 3843 Etching, an e. a mezzotint, 666b Eternal, abode where E. are, 5725 art alone e., 6583 assert e. Providence, g4ib
attributes of

debt through

4783

deserts of vast e., 3603 drain of e., 843 from e. shall not fail,

S$$b

God

are

e.,

3733

from here to e., 873b heirs of all e., 221 a horologe of e., 6223 saw E., 36ab image of E., 557b image of his own e., 36b in an hour, 4903 instant made e., 6643 intimates e. to man, 393b into himself e. changed
I

fctudie, he"

Dieu

si

j'eusse

e\,

1713

e., 2953 death an e. sleep, 5003

boy

Euclid

delight and deliciousness, 6963 dignity of man, g8sb dying yet fancy ourselves e., i46a Fame's e. beadroll, 2oob

Euboea, Athens nigh to E., g2b looked on Beauty bare,


love,
e.,

Eunuchs speak wisely about


him,
Euphemistically, asylums 975 a

know
e.,

Fame's

e.

camping

ground,
is

797*
the sea, 8303

Euphuism, preciosity or Eureka, 1053

go2b

1306

INDEX
Euripides, of E., gob
all

Everlasting
Evening, to his labor until
e.,

Hellas

monument

chorus ending from E., 6653 drew men as they were, 8ia Europa, bull that kidnapped E.,

Eve, child of our grandmother E., 22 ib fairest of daughters E., 3453

xib

from noon

to

dewy

e.,

ma

Europe,
artist

all

E.

may be

free,

92 la

no home in E. save Paris, So6b

toad at ear of E., motherless E., go6a voice at e., 6043 obey oh had simple E., go6a pensive E., 443b
like

343a 3463

twilight and e. bell, 6553 until e. comes, 5g8a watch the e. star, &j^b

welcome peaceful

e.

in,

when when
e.,

4$8b

weather, 433 slanted radiance, 9443 withhold not thine hand in the

it is e.

fair

28b

continent of energetic mongrels, 8?ia depravations of E., 3873

said to e. Be soon, 856b since E. ate apples, 5623 son of Adam and E.,

Evenings, long dark 66 3 b

autumn

e.,

educated Americans to E., 6o8a fifty years of E., 647b governments of E., 471 a
if

ffib

span, io&4a
St.

Agnes'

E.,

58ib

clod

washed away E.
E.,

less,

3o8b lamps going out over

86$b

liberation of E., ioi6b libraries of E., 47gb longest kingly line in E., 4173 new order in E., 9545 noblest river in E., agsa

what Adam and E. think, gg6a beautiful E. Hope, 66$b Evelyn, Even, approach of even or morn,

stag at e., 5203 warblest at e., 33gb

wonder

e., ggo3 Evensong, at last ring to e., iS^b at length ringeth to e., i8sb dead ere e., io88b Event, caprice of minutest e.,

we had had summer

344b
as

you and

I,

8753

6g 7 b divine e., 6513 greatest e. in war, gob haunt spot of great e., 6143 how much the greatest e., 476b men labels that name e., 7323

break, 842b, gfab

one

e.

of ancient parapets, 8303 people of Western E.,


prison of nations, g54b races of E. melting, 87ob really a swarm, g78a

ioi6b

regards her as stranger, 466b sauntered E. round, 4143 settlement in E., loijb superstitious valuation of E.,

deep and crisp and e., 68yb gray-hooded E., 3s6b such is time, iggb waters stilled at e., 7313 would God it were e., iob Even-balanced soul, 7 iob Even-handed justice, 28aa Evening and morning were first
day, 53 beauteous Boston E.
e.

happened!

to

all,
e.,

prophets thinking

make
too

sure of
precisely

27b 442b
e.,

on

third e. to me, 73ga unveil third e. to


verity
is

me,

7393

an

e.,

we know

the

e.,

7953 ioi4b

Eventful, strange e. history, 2493 Eventide, fast falls e., 5672

798a

calm

free,

5123
looib,

two continental powers in

E.,

Transcript,
in

io45b

under his heel, gs2b United States and E., 4gsa United States of E., 6ooa window on E., 5942 European, adopting E. war tactics, 997b colonization by E. powers, 49 ib
gibe of E. scholars, ggga if E. discovery delayed, gg?b instruments of E. greatness,

bright agSa

exhalation
e.,

the

e.,

Events cast shadows before, 5383 controlled me, 63gb course of human e., 4yob not lead e. but follow them,
President on top of signs should prefigure
e., e.,

come

in the
e.

6765
e.,

9833

descends

autumn

dews of

die in e. eat in the

7153 carefully shun, 4i6a without regret, 7ib

ma

e.,

487b
2i$b

expects his e. prey, 44ib


fairer than e. air,

follows morn, 10523


full of linnet's wings, gracious e. star, 6765

485*
narcotics, 8o5b nose, 1080 a

Sygb

periodization

of

E.

history,

tricked into E. war, gijb wars of E. powers, 49 ib Europe's latter hour, 7 lib

Eurydice, half-regained E., 3353 Euston, Scotland through pylons of E., gsib

Eutrapelia happy flexibility,

7i6b Euxine, more dangerous breakers than E., 561 a Evade erump, i iob Evaluation, fear mitigated by e., 10153 Evanescence, route of e., 7s8b
Evanescent, velocities of ments, sggb
e.

mild, 345b housewife ply e. care, 44oa in the e. it is cut down, aoa is come rise up, ii5a isolation of sky at e., 955a it was a summer e., 5323 life's e., 8oga like an e. gone, 3g6b man that was in e. made, ggab morning e. noon night, 6623 morning incense e. meal, 4833 must usher night, 57 ib not unpeaceful e., 534a now came still e. on, j45b
grateful
e.

soon on top of him, 9833 spirits of great e., 5383 study e. in bearings, 7213 three e. in life, 38 ib Ever-during dark surrounds me, 344b sleep one e. night, 3003 Ever-fixed mark, 2g4a Evergreen, final growth e., io57b tree of diabolical knowledge,

48ob
Ever-increasing

wonder and awe,

445*
Everlasting, achievements of intellect e., 1 163
e. now, 3583 beauty is e., 9973 bonfire, aS^b composed to be 893

an

e.

possession,

condemned
2465

into e. redemption,

of their lives, 7ob open house in e., gi8b quickly come as the

damned

to e.

deprived of
E.
Star,

e. bliss,

fame, 4103 2133

doors, i8a

incre-

noa

espouse

e. ses,

5i2b

things Evangelical, things e., 365b Evangelist Saint John, 6973 Evangels of the mind, g66b Evasion of what white men

moral

or

quiet-colored end of e., 663b rainy e. to read this discourse, 3*5 shades of e. drew on, 642a

eyes of Pierrot, 10435 farewells, 5523

Father, 313
first last e.

day, $o$b

shades prevail, 3gsa


set

flint,

2240

them, io3ga
Evasit,
abiit
excessit
e.

nob Eve, Adam and


944b

erupit,

E.

and pinch me,

and

I,

66 3 b

believe in called his

Adam and
wife's

E.,

goib
6a

name

E.,

looab shadows of the e., 75ob shut of e. flowers, 347b soup of the e., 744b spread out against sky, looob star for which e. waits, gooa star love's harbinger, 348a star you bring all things, 6gb sunset and e. star, 655a
e. rising,

shadow at

from e. to e. thou art God, soa had not fixed canon, 257b
here set up hills, 8a
his

my

e.

rest,

mercy
48a

is e.,

2ia

life,

no, 5763 open ye e. gates, 347* personal identity,

1307

Everlasting
Everlasting, sleep of one e. night, ii4b stood from e. to e., jySa the e. arms, lob

INDEX
Everything, God not willing to do e., i77b good for something, 3$ga good in e., *47b
Evidence, passions cannot alter
e.,

4<5sb
e.

some circumstantial 68 2 a
Evil, agricultural

strong,

yea, 5763 Everlastingness,


e.,

bright shoots of

g6sb

Ever-living, our e. poet, 2gib

8j7b happens has two handles, igga he is above e. he possesses, 41 7a he wants nothing you want,
yet in its place, 3653. in relation to nothing, 3635 includes itself in power, s68a
is
is is is

to everybody,

population least

given to
all e. all e.

e,, i3ga shed away, 9942

to crazy

Evermore,

probing through you io4sb Ever-nearing circl-e weaves shade,

e.,

7i8a have

e.

nothing,

ioga

be not be thou
believe

Ahab, 6g6b overcome of e., 5ib my good, 345a no e. till done, 3593

7Ha
Ever-open door, 846a Ever- returning spring, 70*3 Ever-rolling, time like e. stream, 397 a Evers, Tinker to E. to Chance,

gratuitous, 10585 in mind of man,

bent on e. never want occasion, 1263 brothers are e., 33

lawful, 7o8b

by e. and good report, communications, 533


days and e. tongues, $46b days come not, 28b deeds do not prosper, 65b deliver us from e., 4ob depart from e., i8b do after good leave e., do e. so completely, 3633 do not seek e. gains, 6yb
entire
e.

53b

naught, 543^

962b
Ever-whirling wheel, soob Every day hi e. way, 844b day's news, 27 ib inch a king, 27gb

know e. forgive e. lived in me, 7243 made of one stuff, 6o6b man accustomed to e.,

7o7b
e.,

man
fortune,

esteems, 8835

man architect of his n6a man for himself, 1855


wind
of doctrine, 543

mean between nothing and 363b


e. goes 86ga not all capable of e., order and beauty, 7o7a passes art alone eternal,

1753

moments when

well,

city
e.

suffered because

of

man, 67b

Everybody, democracy 10500 everything happens to goes Awww, io8ob hard to please e., 1273 he who praises e., 4693
if e.

e.

but me,
e.,

ii6b

has good, 6o6b every extravagance of her e., 66a


eye that looks
to

8s7b

nosb

mood

apart,

minded
e.,

business,

74$b

suspect

67oa
business

Everybody's

nobody's business, 3263 Everyday, refinement of e. thinking, gsoa Everyman I will go with thee, 10842 Everyone, enough in world for e., 983* has one sermon, i io2a
is

passes perishes palls, 6$8a, practice is e., ia6a sans e., 24gb smattering of e., 668b spirit of youth in e., that pretty is, sgob
that's lovely
is,

88ob

training is e., 762a tries e. before arms, ioga turn nothing into e., 857a

Hen on e. days, find means of e., 342 a fool is filled with e., 8oa generation, 46b good becomes indistinguishable from e., loiia good e. which is permitted,
e. side, 69 ib goodness in things e., 244b government necessary e., great book great e., io4b hacking at branches of e., hope in the day of e., how e. a country China, I will fear no e., i8a if all means permitted to
e.,
if

understand

e.

makes

742b good or

tolerant,

466b
682b 34b 4193
fight

way they
933D

eat drink learn

and

e.,

mad on one point, Sysa not e. can get to Corinth, igjb reaches future, io42a to his own, g64b upon which e. has sat, io$ib war of e. against e., 3i7b
when
e. is

in world is Christ, g$gb a moon, 76$a

we look on blessed, 884a is God e., 8oa worth what purchaser will

What

pay,

1273 written

as

good
e.

as

dramatic,

101 13

young know
Everything's

got

moral,
e.,

7443

will say,

somebody, 7693 767a


e.,

so reg'lar can't stand

Everywhere, daybreak

it, 75gb 6253

dhrink e. not nicissry, Sgab ill deeds doubled with e. word, 2i8b imagination of man's heart is
e.,

6b

world breaks
Everyone's,

io44a

he

his

world

and

e.,

is in chains, his place, 3583

435b

in life of

worms, 7243
said

inadvertently
thing,

some
e.,

e.

tired of turmoil, io76b

true worship, gab Everything, a bore to and anything, g74b answer to e., looob

roam, 727b one little room an e., out of e. into here, 73b

g6b
soul

go4b

infect
is

the

with

gsb

tell e.,

4i6b

belongs to fatherland, 4g6b cannot do e. but something,

4773 water water e., 5253 we have need of Zeus, 1043 who lives e. lives nowhere, 1353
e.,

the same as

$G$b judge should have learned to know e., Q4a keep thy tongue from e., i8b
easy,

knowing good and


lack of

e.,

sb

Eve's,

curses
star, flies

all

E.

daughters,

7i7b comes by way of strife, comes if man wait, 6iaa comes too late, 77ob
conscience in
e.,

2673

77b

one
Eves,

5843

on summer
e.

e.,

now
ioo7a

sSsb

costing not less custom reconciles to don't tell her e., 66a
else is still,

4383 than

summer
e.,

for October e., ggoa

by haunted

stream,

e.,

452a

335 a Evidence, actual e. have I none,

money root of e., 8373 law punishes e. in all, 46sb Lord shall preserve thee from all e., 223 maketh sun rise on e. and good, 4ob man of e. repute, 33 manners live in brass, 2993
e. men are rich, 68b marriage a necessary e., io2b an e. most men welmarriage come, iosb met me in e. hour, 4933 most e. of half-tamed demons,

48?b

esteem nothing, 361 a exists nothing has value, 95 ib not feeling always e., yoga
e.

esteem

965b denunciation in 9123 for God, 7953

many

place

of

e.,

find tale in e., 5o8b for poetry idea e., 7i6b for security of future glory of e., io46b

growth e. of no notion of

life,
e.,

$g7b

5653

e.,

741 a

of immortality, 6053 of things not seen, 563 of truth but only e.,

833b
necessary

for

triumph

of

e.,

454b

1308

INDEX
Evil,

Excellent
Exalteth,
tion,

never suffer

e.

in futuie,

Evils, all e.

equal

when extreme,

righteousness

e.

a na-

66b news fly faster than good, 1373 news rides post, 3503 no e. can happen to good man,
93 a no e. deed live on, 791 a

33it>

24b
e.

avoided powers exercised, i38b


cities no rest from e., 94a-b compel philosophy to inquire about e., nib

wisdom
Exalts,

her

children,

not 66 5 b

what man does

gyb
e.,

no

e.

for

one

who commits

Congress has right to prevent,

788b

none, Sob no e. in atom, io48b not into e. wrought, 77ib notion of One, 1061 a obscures the show of e., aggb and of good, 5oga e. of moral on grounds of expediency, 847b one e. ignorance, 87b one that eschewed e., 143 overcome e. with good, 5ib universal good, 4o8b partial e. pervading e. of democracy, 7503 plan is most harmful to plan.

draw men
endure
125*
greatest of

together, g8b
e.

neither
e.
is

nor

cures,

poverty, 8373

Examination, decent and manly e., 531* of acts of government, 5313 Examine, I pause I e., igib turn inwards and e., yib Example, annoyance of good e., 762b
bear patiently results of own i2gb from others take e., logb
e.,

ner,

67b
his
e.

please

neighbor,

4993
e.,

possibilities

for

good and

i033b punish world for their e., gia-b hand in e. hour, $47b recognition of e., 73b recompense no e. for e., 5ia religion potent in persuading to e., ii2b resist not e., 4ob return good for e., 3883 rewarded e. for good, 7b rewardeth e. for good, 25a root of all e., 55b see e. drowned in mercy, 8585 show me a greater e., 823 snake stood for e. in Garden, 9*7 a Socrates a doer of e., gga spinning fates good or e., 7933 stifling opinion is e., 6igb stubborn heart shall fare e., 37b submit to present e., iagb
rash
sufficient

knowledgeable of e., 783 least of the e., 97b least of two e., 643 most preferable of e., 643 no necessary e. in government, 5030 one of e. and another of blessings, 653 philosophy triumphs over past e., 355* present e. triumph over philosophy' 355 a suffering e. of long peace, iggb they say e. come from us, 653
three great

government teaches by e., 8333 is school of mankind, 4553


lower orders set
e.,

more
4283

efficacious

8403 than precept,

profit by their e., 464b salutary influence of

e.,

4i8b
to

Examples from Mao, 997b no longer able e., 355b

Alexander
to provide

bad

two

e.

e., 4173 monstrous either one,

iooga
e. age and hunger, 248b e. most free, 254!) which never arrived, 6o4b

weak

when

yield not to
e.,

e.,

n8b

Exceed, flies worms e. me still, 306b never e. your rights, 435b resch e. gr3sp, 664b Exceedeth, thy wisdom and prosperity e. the fame, i$a Exceeding, gave e. delight by his
verse,

Evolution, advance of science an

gob

82gb

general theory of e., 752b not a force but a process, 77gb of thought, 7i2b

some

call it e.,

6673

Ewe, lilting at e. milking, 446b tupping your white e., 2723 Ewes, milk my e. and weep, 2gsb Ewig-Weibliche, das E. zieht uns hinan, 478b Ex pede Herculem, 86b

grind e. small, 32ga honest e. poor man, S32b wise fair-spoken, 2ggb Exceeds, far e. all earthly 1923 man's might, 268b

bliss,

Excel, arts in which wise e,, 38ab bees for government, 1933 discredit what they do not e.

unto day
lives

is

e.,

41 a

ungue leonem, i5ob


Exact, devotion to
e.

supernatural source of
that

e.,

844a

observation,

men do
e. I

after them,

949b
equal and e. justice, 4723 knowledge of the past, 8ga
set
e.

*55 a
the

do, 513
call e.

good, $ob thing of e., 6433 think not lightly of e., 8oa to depart from e. is understanding, i5b
to

them that

timing

is e.,

wealth of 88b

states,

2403

man, sogb Exaction becomes extortion, 7713


e.

writing maketh an
1'e.

Exactitude,
thinks,

la

politesse

des
e.,

him who

evil

1633

rois,

48sb
facts detailed

tongue an unruly e., 56b tree of knowledge of good and e., 5b


unconscious not only e. but good, 9363 vanish like e. spirits, 47 3 a vice lost half its e., 454a what e. I intend to do, 84b whether it be good or e., 893 wi' tippenny fear nae e., 495b with indifference notes e., 593b with lent money e, done, 6g8b withstand in tne e. day, 543 write e. in marble, i78b wrought by want of thought, 59* a Evildoers, seeing e. taken to execution, i86b

Exactness,

with

7213
write life with e. 4313 Exaggerated, reports of death e,, 7633 stress on not changing mind, 93 l b Exaggeration, chargeable with no
f

loib because they labor, 5403 who themselves e., 4oab thou shalt not e., 8a useless to e., 4S4a Excellence, activity in accordance with e., 983 bearing on e. of character, 983 elite based on e., 10263 f3ir divided e., 2363 fame of her e., 67a imagine e., loygb in front of e. gods put sweat, 67b is nobly to die, 7ob long time to bring e. to maturiin,

not

e.

teach

ty,

1273

e.,

54ob
4gb

mental e. a splendid possession, ii5b not exchange e. for riches, 68b stewards of their e., 2gsa to few men comes e., 773
Excellencies, smaller e. of conversation, 4693 true critic dwell on e., 394b

Exalt him above all, 393 himself shall be abased,


will to live, 93ga

Exaltation from proximity of disaster,

Excellent angler

now with God,

gigb gsib 32b

326a
discourse, 2973 everything that's e., 7673

in chanting of Muses, 843 Exalted, both will be e.,

dumb

every

God
e.,

valley shall be an e. father, 8sgb


e.

e.,

fancy, 265b
first e. second good, i77b foppery of the world, 277a hard to be truly e., 7ob

Evildoing, greatest penalty of

no very
Satan

opinion, 452b

96a
pleasantness waits upon Evil's, believe no evil till
e.,

e. sat,

3433
e.,

1453

e.

done,

them of low degree, 45b whoso humble himself be

how
i8b

e.

is

thy

lovingkindness,

359 a

how

e. is

thy name, 173

1309

Excellent
Excellent I cried, 8503 man of understanding

INDEX
Excise, those to
is

whom

e.

paid,

Exegesis,

immortal

in

thy

e.,

of

e.

1035*
Excitabat enim fluctus in simpulo,

most

canopy the air, 261 a parts of it are e., 8iob situation e. I am attacking,
8262
so e. a king, 2570 so-so is e. good, 2500

spirit, e.

25a

nib

Excite languid spleen, 766b

Exemplary, our lives in acts e., 205b Exempt from public haunt, 247b
true nobility e. from fear, 2153 Exercise, being honest good e.,

my

amorous propensities, 42gb

the

e. lies

before us, 50 ib

thing in woman, 28ob


things difficult as rare, things in counsels, 25b things more e., 8493

Excited abnormal condition, 8373 passionate fantastical, 8833 passions not at will e., 642b reverie, 8823 Excitement, passion e. of heart,

bodily e. when compulsory, 94b each e. art he knows, gia free e. of religion, 4o*5b
gratuitous e. every day, 7933 prohibiting free e. thereof, 474b reading to mind as e. to body,

$74b
public e. runs high, lotfb Excites us to arms, 3703
Exciting,

to have giant's strength, 2yob to make a poet e., 35jb well a fishmonger, a6ob what actions most e., 7123

found
till

it

less

e.,

as war, politics almost e.

7693 gigb
you,

mechanic
wise

e.,

649 b
right,
e.

Exclude, not
702!)

sun do
e.,

I e.

their constitutional for cure on

6373 depend,

Excellently,
Excellest,

wretch, 2743 goddess 302a

to define
e.

is

to
till

bright,
all,

Excludes, not

Excluding
272
Exclusion, Exclusive, 102g3

fire if I can,

9783 sun e. you, 702b igob


of
e.
e.,

3723
Exercises his

mind with

suffering,

loob
Exertion, ment3l e., 7783 Exertions, what people attained

thou
e.

e.
e.

them

darkness, 7b folly, 7b Excelling, cunnmgest pattern of


Excelleth, light

principle entertains

72 ib

worms,

wisdom
e.

with

e.,

46gb

nature, 2762 Isle all isles e., 371 a Excels dunce kept at home, 456b quirks of blazoning pens, 2733 Excelsior, 62 ib Excelsis, gloria in e. Deo, 593

Excommunicate, corporations cannot be e., ig83 Excrement, pl3ce of e., 8843 Excretions, nourishment and e.,
6753 Excuse, sny
e.

Exhalation, bright e. in evening, 2g8a Exhaled, he wss e., 372b sighs infrequent e., ioo2b Exhausted business politics,

will

serve

tyrant,

763

Except a
it die,

man be born

again, 483

533 the Lord build the house, 22b the Lord keep the city, 22b the present company, 4762 thou bless me, 7b Exception, glorious to be e., 6573 in your case make e., 10353 no rule admits not some e.,

came prologue, 347b denial vain and coy


f3ult worse by e., 2373 for the glass, 48 ib I will not e., 61 5b

e.,

3383

my body infirm 3nd e., 1743 my patience 3re e., g68b no State without being e.,
resources not
e.,

every whim, g8gb

Time winds

th'

63 ib e. chain, 4953

my dust, 10293 never e., 2313 not single e. for failure, 87 5b play needs no e., 2313
Excused from
it

wells, 10033 worlds imagined new, 426b Exhibited, human relations perfectly e.,

ggb

Exhilarating,
sport,

book
3t

collecting

e.

3iob
Excess, blasted with e.
of light,
e.,

as

against

my
to

94ib
without
e.

44ib
desire

conscience, 4433 his devilish deeds,

be shot

result,

345b
himself,

of

power
it,

in

don't regret a single


give me e. of in charity no

e.,

2o8b 8ooa

Excuses himself i88b

accuses

Exigencies,

great

of

govern-

ment, 6783
Exile guise, io43b king in e., g86a
kiss

2513 e., 2o8b moderation even in e., 611 a not drinking but e., 3173 nothing in e., 1513 of glory obscured, 342b of severity not order, 7803
of subjective propensities, 794a-b of wealth cause of covetousness,

ignorance e. no man, 3173 Excusing, love shows by e. nothing, 3613 make fault worse, 2373 Execrable shape, 3443

men

long as

my

e.,

2903

sum of all villainies, 42ob Execute, by contraries e.,


hand to e., 466a, logib orders, 454b to e. laws royal office,
villainy

in e. feed on dreams, 7ga sleep in e., 8303 to e. friends everything, 9403

2g6b

Exiled,

joy

Marcellus
jeers,
e.

e.

feels,

4ogb on ground in
454b 233b
Exiles,

7073

son's appeal, 78 ib

siab reproach to religion, 3813 such e. of stupidity, 43ob surprise by fine e., 5853
wasteful and ridiculous when love is in e., 843
Excessit,
abiit
e.
e.,

2373

evasit
e.

nob
Excessive,

erupit,

dark

with

bright,

Executed, successfully e., 477 b Execution, fitter for e. than counsel, 2oga seeing evildoers taken to e., i86b stringent e. of bad laws, 7173 Executioner, I victim and e., 7073 man his own e., 3303

you

teach

me,

band of

moored bark,
figb 674b
e.,

573 paradise of
Exist,
if

e. Italy,

woe none save

e. feel,

God

is

in

me
e.,

or does not

957b

344b
f good fortune, 728b
"if

mine own
the master

e.,
e.,

3o8b 753

nstional

debt not

e.,

4&4b

Executioners

would

be

most

4183 ib pathos piety courage e., 95 saint if God does not e., io68b since earth began to e., 45gb sir I e., 9053 true democracy never will e.,
435t>

God

did not

laughter, 383

Exchange, always credited to E., g62b atheist-Isugh's 3 poor e., 493b by just e. one for other, ao$b cross for crown, gi3b excellence for riches, 68b
Scrooge's

learned, 1793 Executions for the master executioner, 753

we e. slone, go8a Existed, true democracy never


435
Existence, 3rt shield from C3lled New World into
e.,

e.,

Executive, judicial
e. >

distinct

from
e.,

463b

8s8b
5073

legislative

nominated

by

e.,

plisnt instrument of E., 5313


political e. magistracy, 454b Executors, let's choose e., 227b or more creditors, properly

name good upon

e.,

Exchequer of the poor, 2273


Excise hateful tax,

closing your sccount, 6303 consecutive moments of e., 75 D destroy reason for own e., 7783 determination to develop own
e.,
j

6g6b

131O

INDEX
consciousExistence determines
ness,

Expressed
science, Experiment3tion 3ctive 6753 bold persistent e., 97ob of moon Experiments, eclipses and other e., i73b I love fools' e., 628b sure e. 3nd demonstrated arguments, igab to control ideas, 675b Expert, believe an e., ugb knows more about less, 862b Experto credite, iigb

686b
e.,

earns freedom and


essential
fret of e.,

47 8b
e.,

Expenses, consider my traveling e., 10283 so e. as glory, Expensive, nothing


politics e., 9543 Experience, 3ccumul3ted e., 9353 an 3rch wherethrough, 646b 3rch to build upon, 776b arranged in order, 7793 art psttern on e., 86 ib believe one who has e., ugb csuses of future e., 7Q4b child of thought, 61 la

relation

to

6763

io47 b
e.

burden, 7593 life hollow nature owes me another e., 4?8a 868a of supernatural probable, an e., 739 a precisely saw him spurn reign, 42ob
sordid penis of actual
e.,

8s8b sorrow of

human

struggle for e., teach men sense of

455b 6a8a, 935*


e.,
e.,

Experts,

differences
if I e.

among

e.,

8053

cluster of gifts e., 7g8b court bows to e., 8333


effects of past e., 794b encounter reality of e., essential to great e., 726b

864b
Expire,
today, 7s8b
of

truth find

e.,

844*
to,

lamps
g68b
it,

e.,

woman's whole e., 5603 to go back you wanted


Exists,

Expires in 5223
last

8903 arms
foe

apothecary,

get out of

e.

only wisdom in

armed

e.,

$&&

everything

e.

nothing h3S
gladly beyond any e., in e., gg8b gone to end has given no access, 8o6b

V3lue, 95ib nowhere but in yourself, 8g7b Exit pursued by 3 besr, 2953

10313

unawares Morality e., 41 4a wretched child e., 9023 Expiring frog, 66 9 a


Explain,
can't
e.

myself

said

wheresoever (ailed to m3ke e., 4753 a Exits 3nd their entrances, 249 doors for men to take their e..

home where

snmll

e.

grows,

2193 of e,, 4263 ignorant in spite keeps desr school, 4223 not personsl e., 94* knowledge

Exodus, mysterious

e.

of

death,

Ump

Exp3nding

conflict to all Chhi3,

of e., 4653 Liberal tempered by life of 13W, 786b

e.,

7i5b

make me

9843 not 3 bresch but an Expsnsion, e., 3063 free o'er scene of nwn, Exp3ti3te

mother of

sad, 2503 sciences, ig4b

you e. nothing O poet, 8943 Explained, shut up he e., g$$b e. cease to unExplaining, go on derstand, 9763 surrender e. not acting, gi6a
his e., 55gb Explanation, explain inaccuracy saves e., go4b

Alice, 743b his explanation, 55gb it by trying to e., 4813 spoil till all men doubt, 41 sb time will e. all, 8gb

name

for mistakes,
life,

8sgb
e. f

no knowledge beyond
of this sweet
1623

37 2b

Expect

Ssint

M3rtin's

summer,

8283 something for nothing,


Expectation,
better

Old Age 3-nd E., s82b old e. do 3ttain, 3363 had much optimist never
9463
periods

Expletives
join,
e.,

unintelligible, 942b their feeble

aid

do

bettered
desr,

e.,

when

e.

245b

mskes

blessing

35ob

oft e. f3ils,

26gb

rise, 447 a shields of e., 6943 songs of e., 75ob whirls me round, 2683 of rising Expectations, revolution

prophecy of pushed beyond f3Cts, 843b b recognize S3me e., 793 rcl3tions between sspects of
tells in

modified, 544* wise men, 5663

4033 to poet things Explicable, thanks e., 8943 not necess3ry virtue, Explicitness

Explode huge l3ugh


Exploit3tion,
e., e.,

at feet, 8663 ultimate sanction of

10273

Exploited,
every soil, 4483 travel psrt of e., 2o8b treacherous, 88b of hope over

10773 e., 10773 e. hsppens, 61 ib Expected, le3St no re3son3ble msn e., 10173 blessed he who e. nothe.,

rising

triumph

e.,

4313

many e. by few, 10273 of e., 10583 Exploiters, interests of relsting own e., Exploits, fond 37 ?b not cesse from e.,
Exploration, 10073

wh3t e. 3nd history teach, so7b wisdom acting upon e., 49 a


write only from e., 7g8b Experienced industrious liar, 76ib not real till e., 585b for God in Experiences, evidence inner e., 7953 b flag represents e., 841 in solitude, 7g4b shared e., 504*

Explore

311

options, 10563
to
e.,

falter or e., 10793

Expects,

h3ppy N3ture
Explorers, old

49 a
to
e.,

ing, 4o7b England e., 49 a from you 3 book, 5363 of Expediency, evil on grounds

men ought
e.

be

e.,

ioo6a old men should be


Exploring, 10073

io65b
to
arrive,

e.,

end of

847b
not Expedient, all things 3s lighting by gas, 63 ib free trade e., 61 ib
e.,

523

Exponent of

that one die, 493 Sicilisn Expedition, so ended

8o5b Experiencing nsture, 726b


strong
digests
e.,

man

e.,

gob
Expeditionary, ioi6b
Allied
E.

Force,
e.,

suffering to full, 9083 Experienti3 docet, 6713 does it, 6713

Experiment
428b

ruin of Expeditions, dyspepsy

3S 311 life is e., 788b convinced of imbecility by e.,

esrth, 7373 e., Exposed, intellect improperly 522b left e. 3 friend, 7373 more e. to suffering, 5153 on bsre e3rth e. he lies, 37 ib me, 2303 Exposition of sleep upon

Expounding,

it

is

3 constitution

Expeditious, no e. ro3d, 856b Africa e. freeExpelled, Asi3 3nd

dom, 466b a Expend3ble, they were e., io49 Expende Hannib3lem, isgb e., of book public Expenditures, 545b Expense, dog item of e., 845b great e. m3y be essentisl, 4553 of spirit in waste of shame,
2943

entrusted to Americs, 46 ib i8ob every e. like we3pon, gre3t socisl e., gsob 6a8b snimsis, on so gre3t sn e. as dying, 3323
social

4 8 5b Express flowery t3le, 5833 it in numbers, 7233 to e. but conce3l, speech not

we

3re

e.,

376b

we

h3lf

e.

ourselves, 6063

and

economic

e.,

gsob

Expressed

even

such

beauty,
e
e.,

stimulate and direct e., 8383 to me every one I meet, 737b Experiment3l philosophy, 3?gb

thinking

is e.

dealing, 8343
e.,

youth

is

wholly

8253

thsn poet monitor e., 5i6b ne'er so well e., 4o3 a not e. in fancy, 258b

2 93 D find more

6153

1311

Expressed
Expressed, that -which cannot

INDEX
Extravagance, calls his
osity, 44&b of her evil, 66a
e.

gener-

be e., 6gga whatever is felicitously e., 5010 Expresses, this young man e. himself, 7660 Expressing emotion in art, 10070 itself beyond expression, goga Expression, borrow shape to find
e.,

Extravagant
*57 a flaunting
e.

and

erring

spirit,

Eye, far as human e. see, 647a fettered to her e., 3585 find in his own e., io4ob fire in each e., 4ioa fixed on horizon, icsGa
for eye, ga

quean, 48 ib

Extreme actions ascribed to vanity, 8o4b


all

fringed

curtains

of

thine
e.,

e.,

2g6b
frontiers

looia

evils

equal when

e. f

33ib

in

mind's

expressing itself beyond e., freedom of e. matrix, go$a freedom of speech and e., impassioned e., 511 a natural e. of villainy, 75ga of all e. not expressed, of working of mind, 74b paleness of symbolic e., vacant soul removed, 978b

3033

fear neither fight nor fly, *2oa for e. illnesses e. treatments,

97sb

88b
in quest to have
justice
e.,

sg4b

6gga

injustice, i$ib justice often injustice, io8b is extreme law injustice, io8b

extreme

74ib

Expressive silence, 4*oa Expunge, fool enough to e., 43$a Expunged, Nature's works to me
Exquisite, autumn rose more ig8a ceasing of e. music, 6s*a most e. and strong, 3853 passions, 781 a Extend it to everyone, io5a

.-.344

b
e.,

wickedness or folly, 637b perplexed in the e., 2760 savage e. rude cruel, 2942. Extremes, change of fierce e., 344* fate of all e., 4o6a meet, 4&*ga women run to e., s8sa Extremism in defense of liberty,
of
Extremity, daring pilot in e., 368a Exult, be secret and e., 88 ib

with soft e., 54sa glittering e., 524b God caught e., io4ob gray e. glances, 64sa great e. of heaven, 2ooa had but one e., 66gb half hidden from the e., siob halfmoon's vegetable e., 10703 harmony in her bright e., 35&b
glad
harvest of a quiet e., 51 la hath not seen, 5a hearing ear seeing e., 25a heavenly rhetoric of thine e., 222a I have good e. unde, S4sb I have only one e., 4g2a if thy right e. offend, 4oa ignorant e., g$6b in my mind's e. Horatio, *s8a in tomb stared at Cain, 5gga inquiring e. or tongue, 536b intent on wondrous plan, 4953
interest

me

107 ib

system to this hemisphere, 4923

Extended to display
78a
Extensive
quests,

its

patterns,

and
453b
it is

honorable
vain
sir

conto
e.,

Extenuate, 465*

O shores, yoaa Exultation only discoverer can experience, gg7a Exultations agonies, 5isb Exulting, people all e., 702 a Eye, adds precious seeing to the e., 222a
affection

unborrowed

from

e.,

miseries of past, gg$b

beaming
e.,

in

one

e.,

nothing

e.,

*76b

67oa

Exterior, fair e. silent

recommen-

aloof with hermit


altering
all,

526b

dation, i25b
less

io66b
e.,

g78a Exterminate all the brutes, 844a External artistries in circumstance, 7&3b differ in e. forms, 4313 falseness in impressions of
lic

e. things, 4$6b struggle with e. forces,

on

an unforgiving

e.,

apple of his e., apple of the e., i?a Athens the e. of Greece, 348b beam in thine own e., 4ia beauty bought by judgment of e., 22ib

48 ib lob

superficial

and

e.,

86oa

reimpressed

by

e.

ordinances,

428b
Extinction, continual e. of personality, ioo7a from apathy, io45b of unhaj>py hates, 7ub slavery in course of e., 635b

beauty in e. of beholder, 72ga, 83ib begins to see, io66a beholding beauty with e. of mind, g$a
careless e.

on men who drown,

5 9 5 inward e., 5i4b is not satisfied with seeing, 2?a is part of me, g86b jaundiced e., 4osb king's e. made horse fat, 1373 lackluster e., 248a language in her e., s6ga lend e. terrible aspect, 24gb than meets the e., ggga less lifting up a fearful e., 2iob light of the body is e., 4ob like Mars, 264a locked up from mortal e., 3543 looked into e. of day, 88sb looks with threatening e., agGb love comes in at e., 881 a made quiet by power, 5oga many an e. danced, 63 ga mighty world of e. and ear,
ild and magnificent e., 662b e. dry hand, 24ib mote in brother's e., 4ia my face in thine e., 3O4b

43oa
cast cold e., 88$b cast longing e. on offices, 47 ib casts a sheep's e., ig6a

moist

Extinguish hope from


e.,

soul, 8303 Extinguished, centuries after core

go8b
e.,

fire

which seems
e.,

33 ib

his soul, 635b

dose e. of day, 33gb crack glass e. across, g4ob cursed me with his e., 525a
day's garish e., 336a defiance in their e., 447b discern with dear e., 68ob divorced from e. and bone,

my my

great Taskmaster's

e.,

334b

striving e. dazzles, s62b

nature seldom

2oga

Nature's walks, 4o7b negotiate for itself, 246a

theologians, 7245

Extinguishes natural candle, 3813 Extol, how shall we e. thee, 86sa


Extolling past, s^b Extortion, exaction

becomes

e.,

77ia
Extract laws from nature, g66b yourself from bad ways, Sob Extracted from many objects,

ios8a don't view with code's e., 5o?a drunkard's e., 884a dust hath dosed Helen's e.,

neighbor as possible enemy, gisa never e. did see that face, 314^ no e. to watch, 542b not lip or e. beauty call, 4osa nothing situate under heaven's e., 2i8a

30ob
ear and
e.

now mine
expected impossible,
of of of of of of of of of

2$oa Extracting

88sa

sunbeams of cucum-

bers, 38gb

Extraction of living intellect, 34oa Extraordinary results of idealism,

go through e. of nee43h God, 4o8a equal every old man's e., 224b every tear from every e., 4goa
easier to
dle,
e. as

i6b e. seeth thee, beholder, 72ga childhood, sSsb heaven shined bright, 2ooa heaven to garnish, 2$7a lip of e. of brow, agsb man hath not heard, agoa newt toe of frog, 285a

youth the time for e. toil, g4b Extravagance, beauty without e.,
8gb

evil

that looks to
e.

mood

apart,

g9 a
expert
finds prior work, 8sgb

saint, 8&4a the law, 748b once apple of your

e.,

io75b

1312

INDEX
Eye, one auspicious e., 2$]* 2263 places e. of heaven visits, poet have sensuous e., 6ioa fine in e. frenzy, agob poet's rude e. of rebellion, 2373 sail with unshut e. 7113
f

Eyes
Eyes, I will
lift

Eyes, Byron's

e.

shut in death,
e.,

7na
candid brow pure 843b
cast one's e, so low, 27ga close e. with holy dread, 5243 close up his e. and draw curtain, 2i5a

up mine

e.,

223
I will

not give sleep to mine


foreknowledge of
e.,

e.,

22b
in
e.

death,

773
infant ntryman's

see e. to e., 333 see for hand not mind, 68 ib see with e. serene, 5143 see with half an e., ig6b see with not through e., 491 a seeing seven and seventy devils,
90951 u sees open heaven, 4g8a seller needs not one e., set honor in one e., as^b

io8ob

closed e. in endless night, 44ib confess secrets of heart, i45b craters of my e. gape, 10833 crossed with direct e., 10033
cry

my

e,

out, igsa
e.,

324b

cynosure of neighboring 335* darkness of her e., go6a


dazzle, 786b

smile in her e., 5893 smile on lips tear in sober coloring from still soliciting e., 2773 such a wistful e., S-job

e.,
e.,

5igb 5143

death come close e., io86a deeper than depth, 731 a die before our own e., 8i6b do not set e. on things far off,
79 a e. of wonder, drink in comrades' e., 7igb drink to me only with thine e., 3Q3a dry e. laugh at fall, 6643 dust thrown in my e., 9283 dying e. were closed, 4o6a eagle e., 5?gb elves whose little e, glow, $2ob eternity was in our e., 2873 everlasting e. of Pierrot, i04sb eyelids upon tired e., 645b face facts with both e. open, i78a fearless e., 8653 fields have e. woods have ears, i67a fix e. on greatness of Athens, goa fixed above sullen shields, 992 a foe with fearless e., 865a for the blind, 74ga fortune and men's e., 29 ib fountains fraught with tears, 204a from kindness cannot take e., 882b

Innocence dosing up his e., 2iib July in her e., 10853 kindling her undazzled e., 3400 kiss in Colin's e., 98 ib ladies whose bright e., 3353 let mine e. not see, 2513 lies in woman's eyes, 542b comes from thine e., light io86b
light fade from e., 9093 light of knowledge in e., 785b like agate lanterns, 10435 like unwashed platters, io4jb

such beauty as woman's e., sssa tender e. of pitiful day, s84b that sun thine e., sgsa thoughts legible in the e., 31 4b to a discerning e., 7355 tongue sword, 262b twinkling of e., 533

dreaming

living lightning from e., 4<Hb long-strayed e., $o$b look into happiness through another's
e.,

25ob
e.,

look your l3st, 225b love learned in lady's love looks not with

2223

e.,

S28b

unshut

e.,

71 la of
e.,

upward glancing vacant heart hand


wet

e.,

51 8a

52 la

view with hollow e., 235a wearing-stone or open e., gaya e. dhry heart, 891 a what immortal hand or e., 48ga

love-darting e., 337b lovely e. Cupid's arms, io8gb made for seeing, 6o2b make thy two e. like stars, 2sgb men's e. in April, g66b

mind has thousand


mine mine
e.

e.,

8a6b

dazzle,

3153

first your e. I eyed, 2g$b girls hath merriest e., 2143 wishing his foot equal with e., 2i6a with my little e., iog$b woman with one e., 48-ib Eye-beams, our e. twisted, so6b Eyebrow, mistress' e., 24ga Eyebrows, bushy e. and message, 878a Eyed, when first your eye I e.,

when

which

e. have seen the King, job mistake not to dose e., 8653

mistress* e., 2g4b never able to school e., g8ia night has thousand e., 8263 night hath a thousand e., aoga no eyes but fountains, 2043

my

not a friend to dose e., 37ib not only in my e. is Paradise,


1623
all people upon us, 3183, 10723 of flame, 7453 of gold and bramble dew, 8s4b of the blind shall be opened,

of

Eye-deep in hell, g88a Eyeless in Gaza, 3493


Eyelids a litde weary, 78 la

from starlike e. seek, 3273 from those great e., 6s5b from women's e. this doctrine,
222a

from e. dripped love, 67b from e. wiped tear, 248b heavy and red, 5Q2b of the morn, 3383 slumber to mine e., 22b take thee with her e., 23 tinged e. and hands, 78 la tired e. on tired eyes, weigh e. down, 242a Eyes, all things flourish where you turn e., 4ozb and back turn upward, looab and see not, 34a are what one is, 8933 as in a theater e. of men, 2283
attentive e., 42ga avenged for my two e., beauty e. never see, Sggb

nb

io6ob before streaming e., 746a begin to roll, 41 3b believe not your e., 684b black e. and lemonade, blind with stars, go6a bright e. of danger, 824a
e.,

bedroom

542b

e., 43gb burnt fire of thine e., 48ga buyer needs a hundred e., 3240

Bullen's

57b and stretch e., 9023 gasp to the e., 6480 gather gazer see with mortal e., 742b get thee glass e., 27gb gone under earth's lid, g88b good for sore e., 3gob greenest of things blue, 7753 had I your tongues and e., 28ob hands and e. and heart, 5573 hath not a Jew e., 2333 have all the seeming, 6433 have seen glory, 6gob have their silence, 10313 have they but see not, 22a having e. see not, 464b he turned up his e., 488a heaven before mine e., 3363 heaven to look with many e., 826a her aspect and her e., 5586 her e. were wild, 5813 him who has e. to see, 724b his e. are in his mind, 228b his e. were enlightened, i2a his flashing e., 5243 homes of silent prayer, 6503

full of e. within,

323 of unholy blue, 5423 of youth, 2673

on inward vision dose e., 866b on world to turn thine e., 4273 ope their golden e., 2gob open before marriage, 4223 open to cry of pulleys, 10785
painted to the e., 7823 painting feast for e., 5910 pair of sparkling e., 7693 Paradise stood formed in her
1653
pearls
in

e.,

beauteous ladies'
his
e.,

e.,

2213
pearls

th3t were
e,

2g6b

persu3de 2203

without
e.

orator,

pictures in our

to get,

so6b

poorly S3tisfy our e., 3oob quaint enameled e., 3393 rainy e., 227b rapt soul in thine e., jssb ravished e., 392b f read history in n3tion s e., 44ob riding e. through side, io43b right in his own e., lib
sans teeth saps
e.,

24gb
e.,

S3W him with

my own

5611

1313

Eyes
Eyes, saw with
scales fell

INDEX
open e., go6b from e., 4gb
Fabric, mystic f. sprung, of life, 1061 b of this vision, 297 b
silently
f,

458b

Face,

scornful yet jealous e., 4iob scratched out both e., iog8a see things through his e.,

make

rose,

458b
1503

10353
see whites of e., 4353 see with no e., 2796 sent tongues of love, ig4a severe and beard, 2493

Fabula, acta est de te f., i2oa

f.,

magic of a f., 3273 magic of cheerful f., 6333 f. of heaven so fine, 2253 man die for, 666b mice wear human f., 10643
mind's construction in mirror of mind, i45b mist in my f., 666b
f.,

28 ib

Fabulous shadow only sea keeps, 10430 Fac anirao haec praesenti dicas,
loga Face, a spirit passed before my f., i4b absent f. that fixed you, 6i8a
angel's
f.,

she gave me e., 51 ib shining for me, ioo8b

morning f ., 44gb Moses hid his f., 8a most loved happy

human

f.,

show

his

e.,

28sb

shut my e. to see, io66b sight for sore e., 39<>b sky daily bread of e.,
small smile
tail

20oa

6o4b

e-nor-mouse, 9703 lit e. of Kentuck, 76gb so long as e. can see, i47b soft e. looked love, 555b

April in her f., 10853 assert nose on f. his own, 457 a to save f., 10353 assist him

55 ia music breathing from her f,. 358b my f. I don't mind it, g42a

my

f.

in thine eye, 3<Hb


f.,

autumnal

f.,

3073

never eye did see that night's starred f., 581 a

gi4b
2453

Spearmint
E.,
still

Girl

With Wrigley

i03ob

beautiful f. candid brow, 84sb beauty of aged f., 9633 blackest features of f., icgia blows it in my f., 26ib

no more spoil upon my nose on man's f., 22ob of Father Brown, giga
of

f.,

God

shine

through,

10233

dazzled by God, g5*b stretched forth necks and wan-

ton
strike

e.,

gob
e.

mine

but

not
e.,

my
S4ob

52b buy soul of any man, 797b can't think of your f., 8o7b change in my f., 8igb
f.

but then

to

f.,

heart, 3O2b

suspicion stuck full of


tear each other's e., that can see, ggsa

gg6b

that

looked

with

human

e.,

climber upward turns f., 2543 continual comfort in a f., ji4b cover her f., 3153 darkness upon f. of the deep, 5a
desert's dusty
f.,

on barroom floor, 7976 on-coming snow, 1066 a one f. is somebody's ease, 7ggb open f. of heaven, 5793 pardoned all except f., 56 ib Pity has a human f., 48?a
plain as nose in
f.,

181 b

poor lean lank f., 6355 prism and silent f., 5103

that shone now dimmed, 542b that stare lips that touch, loiob that would not look on me,

65ob

divine plain

f.,

62gb 534b
2793

round

downward in

48ia
the glowworm lend thee, there the lion's ruddy e. f these wakeful e. weep, those e. the break of day,
to

sun, io22b dust blows in your f., emptiness of ages in f.,

fruitful f., 635!} jolly sages have seen in thy f., 457 b saw manners in f., 42ga
sea's
f.

32ob 4871 5363 27 ib

everybody's f. but own, fall flat on your f., io33b false f. must hide, 2833 fierce fur soft to f., io7gb
final
f.

826b 388b

sees
set

other's

and gray dawn, g46b umbered f., 2443

my

ten

commandments
f.,

in

your f., 2i4b she has a lovely

6463

keep our

e.

open longer, 3313


than

of love, io8oa

shining morning f., 24ga smiling f. dream of spring,


smiling in so pleased
f.

to the blind,
trust

isb triangular, g?8b


ears
less
e.,

find one f. lad, 6gia friend whose f. never change,


in sight,

two

e.

make one

86b gzSb

8073 furrowed

ugly sights of death in e., 2173 unused to melting mood, 276b up to e. in blood, 452 a

f., 68ob garden in her f., 3003 gazed on f. of Agamemnon,

upon double

string, $o6b upraised as inspired, 44gb

view ourselves with clearer e., 3213 where 'er casual e. cast, 532b which spake again, 555b whites of their e., 446b wipe my weeping e., 3g7a women's e. for stars, 10850
world's
e.,

give me a f., go2b God has given you one God moved upon f. of
ters,

7i8b

f.,

262b

the waf.,

mind, io86a girl, 823 some awful moment, 5153 something in a f., 3973 sorrows of changing f., 87gb strong men f. to f., 87 2b that drove me mad, 7975 that launched a thous3nd ships,
soft

of a

my my

f.,

53

2133

grace and music of her

358b

grows old, 77ob have seen God f. to f., 7b hides smiling f., 456b
honest labor bears a lovely
f.,

this this

fair

f.

the

cause,

2133
f.,

sunburnt f., 4873 thou canst not see my


f.,

gb

thy classic
to
f.

641 b

silent,

6i8a

88 ib

young maidens quiet


your
e.

shall

Eyesight 773 a

and

824b opened, sb speech wrought,


e.,

be

how am I to f. the odds, 854a how silently with how wan


20jb

30ib

.,

to f. with own clumsiness, 8843 to lose youth for, 666b transmitter of foolish ., 4ig3

Eyewitnesses, accounts of different e., 8 9 a

Eyne, Bacchus with pink e,, 288a Ezra right half the time, 10453

divine, 344b husband with beard on f., 245b I never forget a f., 10353 if I lie spit in my f., 2393 in sweat of thy f., 6a in thy f. see map of honor, 2153 is as a book, 2823
f.

human

true f. of death, 8gob truth has such f. and

mien,
undis-

3703
truth

showing guised, 7gb

its

f.

my fortune, 10953 jealousy a human f., 48gb Jezebel painted her f., igb
is

Fabian policy, io6b Fabis, a f. abstinete, siob Fable song or fleeting shade, $2ob Fabled undulations, 6973 Fables, old wives' 1, 553, 88ga
rather
believe
f.

kind

and

northern

f.,

io43b

knew

in

legends,

2o8b

thy f. or name, sosb languid patience of thy f., 523b like a benediction, 1943 like netsuke, g78b look fear in the f., 98 ib look on her f., 4043

turn thy f. tow3rds Mecca, i48b turned f. with ghastly pang, 5253 visit her f. too roughly, 257b wear one f. to himself, 6i4a whole f. of world changed, g63b why hidest thou thy f. from me, 2oa winter f ., io86b wish I loved silly f., 86ob with twain he covered his f.,

worst thing about him, you could not see, 67 3b

27ob

INDEX
Face you loved when all was young, 691 a Faced by snarled seas, looib most dangerous humanity has f., 102Qb Face's, viewed in her fair f. field, 22oa Faces all gather blackness, 35b angel f. smile, 5970 bid them wash their f., zBgb calling names making f., 887b draw living f. from marble,
Factors

Faint
Fading joys we dote upon, 3853 life f. fast away, 8153 Faery, l3nd of f., 88oa
lands forlorn, 5833
Fagot, fling on 3ny f., 857b Fagots, diadems and f., 6o3b there are f. and f., 361 a Fail, audience never f. to laugh,

winning presidential gS^b Factory, mine f. dockyard, gsgb windows always broken, 9525 Facts alarm more than principles,
elections,

in

10923
all
f.

when come

to brass tacks,

uga
dusk f. 348b
estranged

with
f.,

silken

turbans,

8573

10043 angularity of f., oosb are sacred, 8iia are stubborn things, 3910, blink f. not to our taste, collection of f. not science, contrary 'z mules, 39 ib detailed with exsctness, front essential f. of life,
if

gib
desire shall
f.,

293
shall

46ab 7osb 2gb


7213 6833

from eternity
I alone,
if

fain to feel rain, 8*7b grind the f. of the poor, goa hearts do in the f. rest, go4b in f. I see God, 7oob in the crowd, g87b lords and owners of their f.,

Lord knew

f.

iv case,

8gia
f.,

ignorance inert f., 7770 imagination baffled by imagination for f., 4822
impartial
analysis
f.

gssb

not f., 8$3b 6643 freedom f., 6043 if we should f., 28sb let no man's heart f., 123 many f. one succeeds, 647b no such word as f., 601 b not ashamed to f., 4273 not f. that rendezvous, loioa
not flag or possible to
sooner 585
f.
f., 921 a f. in many ways, g7b than not be greatest,

of

*9ga
millions of
f.

important 565*

duly
f.,

8453 arranged,
f.,

none

alike,

i^sb

in joruri describe

3843
861 a

of coffee-pickers, gSga of men and women, 7oob of Negro children, io77a old familiar f ., 5343 old men have rosy f.,

8*4b
3753

on two several f., sea of upturned f., 521 a


put
seen better
f.

inert f., 777b irreducible stubborn f., of f. not laws, judges learn compare collect f., men absorbed in f., 861 a passions cannot alter f.,
politics is ignoring
f.,

sggb 8i8b

sun and breath, 6993 this could not f., S^Sb we f., 28ab we'll not f ., 2833 world's course not f., 7223

46sb

7773
f.,

and f. fluttered Failed, breath, 7i2b if cannot use talent, io4gb

for

in

my

time, 27?b

power most

serious of

777b

strange with f. new, 6g4b sweat of other men's f., 64ob

Thracian ships foreign f., 772b three f. wears doctor, 8oa Facets, iceberg cuts f. from within,

put before ordinary folk, g7gb science built with f., Bsgb which define United States,
Faculties,

principle of exclusion f., 7210 sunrise never f. us yet, 758b therefore turn critics, 5283
tried tried

a
to

little

play

f. much, 8253 Mozart and .,

benumbs

all

his

f.,

io67b

borne
suades,

Facias ipse

quod faciamus

men
whose

his f. so meek, free to develop f.,


f.

Faileth, faints not nor f., 688b forsake me not when strength
f.,

1063
Facilis descensus Averni, Facility of octosyllabic verse, Facing fearful odds, 5963

n8b
558b

can comprehend,
f.,

igb
f.

Faculty, Eleazer was


infinite in
f.,

868b

Failing,

2613

every

man who

sits

f.

you, 6gb

Fade

of continuing to improve, as a leaf, 3$b


as it will, 54*3 colors that never
f. f

bulwark never f., i79b but their own, 5583 from f. hands throw, gib
f.

pulse

Passion speechless

lies,

Fact, awkward historical f., 95*3 belief help create f., 7943

86sb

Caspian f., 7383 death ugly f. nature hides, 74ob falsehood more miraculous than f.. 434b fatal futility of f., 7996 firm ground of f., gigb frontiers where man fronts f., 68ib grown-ups correct on f., 8523 idea is the f., 7i6b irritable reaching after f., s84b
in f. or thought, io8oa f. symbol of spiritual, 6053 not state things contrary to f., io7b simplest matter of f., 5653 spiritual f., 6053
live

far away, 58sb


first to f,

siib tell aloud greatest f., 38gb that a Doctor's thesis, io35a
that the rest of
Failings,

away, 5433

the
f.

city,

g4

into light of common day, 51 3b loved flowers that f., 801 a lovely things f. and die, loiob may flourish or may f., 4493 nothing of him that doth f.,

conspicuous

of

man-

kind, 7*6b leaned to virtue's side, 44gb


Fails,

contentment

f.,

447b

2g6b
old soldiers f. away, 9593, 11033 roses of world f., SSgb thy eternal summer not f., 29 ib

natural

Faded and gone, 5423 beautiful and f., 931 b


still lovely woman, 10373 care S3t on his f. cheek, of flowers friendship f., friendship f., gj3b insubstantial pageant f., agyb oldest colors f., 87ab on crowing of the cock, 2573 with no stain she f., 57 ib

but

goodness investment that never f., 68 3 b heart f. climb not, igga if my voice f. me, 45* a oft expectation f., 26gb f., persu3des when spesking 2 95* syntax f., 10573 Failure, forty million reasons for
.,

state

one

f.

superiority
tism, 6o7a

belie another, 6o5b in f. of conserva-

thought counterparts in f., 7<>5b f. doctrine, yesterday today logia than effective more Fact-finding
fault-finding, gi$b Faction, danger of f., 48oa-b

of citizens, 47803 latent causes of f., 4803 Factions, old religious f., 454b Factor, timinor is most important
is
f.,

number

68a
f.,

Factors, gods as psychic

935b

Fades awa' like dew, io88b glimmering landscape, 4403 o'er waters blue, 5553 out from kiss to kiss, 88ob Fadeth, crown of glory that f. not, 573 flower f., 32b Fading, bestows the f. rose, 326b down the river, 865b fading, loogb fair things f. away, 587b in music, z$$b

hell f. in great object, 5803 minute's success pays f., 668b never submit to f., gsoa Failures, benefit in f. early, 7253 haste brings f., 873 not f., history of masterwork

of all

f.

witticism worst,

in f., 7253 practical benefit Fain climb yet fear to fall, 1993

wald lie down, 10893 would I but dare


Faint,

not,

ig2b
to

chanting moon, 228b


to

f.

hymns
swan,

cygnet

pale
f.

f.

2373

damn with

praise, 4113

east quickens, 77 2b

1315

Faint
Faint, eerie f. carouse, 10223 heart ne'er won fair lady, ig6a,
Fair, holy
f.

INDEX
and wise
is

she,

Fair, what's right

7683
in light she loves, 6525 in the day of adversity, a6a man so f. so spiritless, 241 a

2Sia hot wench in

when
taffeta,

house

upon

zgyb man's another

how
I

on
to

hill

or field, 6480
f.

some
tense,

meaning make

pre-

ground, 2673 sweet and f. she seems, 33*b thee f., I have sworn

$6ga

walk and not f., 333 whole heart is f., $oa wish more f., 81 ib with envy of the dead, 843
Faintest, water hears thy
f.

word,

why

f.

thou, 7140

Fainting dispirited race, 715!) robin, 7373


Faintly then he praises, 41 la Faints at every woe, sgyb

not nor faileth, 688b Fair adventure of tomorrow, 2373 all f. is good, 20 ib
all

too, 47&b prove f. weather, 35ob but young and L, 248b in hope of f. advantages, 2333 is foul and foul is f., 2813 it will be f. weather, 43a justice in f. round belly, 24ga Lady Jane was fair, 554a laughs morn, 44 ib like through toy f., g6ga little girl, 6s4b luminous cloud, 52?a Madeline's f. breast, 5823 maid dwell in', io88a maidens commonly fortunate.
f.

was
it

and f., 7183 and life f., 8413 wild and f., 52ob wisely f. and softe, 1653 woman true and f ., 3045 women and brave men, sssb words shall prevail, 8745 young and so f., 5g2b young f. maidens quiet eyes,
love

if
if

824b
Fair- coined soul, 8573 Faire, laissez f. laissez passer, 4i6b Fairer, be she f. than the day.

ladies

daughter of fair mother, isia grows f. than at first, 2943 house than prose, 736b Isdy never seen, io87b marks, 32 ib than evening air, 2i3b when we look back, 6946 Fairest, descriptions of f. wights,

that's

good and

f.,

3$2b

2033

from
foul, 97 ib

f.

creatures

desire

in-

always f. weather, 868b ambition to be f., 4343 and f. and twice so

means or
f.,

so4b
she,

mistress moderately f., 357 b Montague I am too fond, 22 3 b

crease, 291 a Isle all isles excelling,

3713

joys give

most unrest, 58ob


f.

and flagrant things, $54b and learned and good as


3igh

most divinely

f.,

64$b

mock time with

show, 2833

and softly goes far, 165 a and unpolluted flesh, 266*3 and wise good and gay, iog6a
angels are painted f., gSjb any man's f. daughter, anything to show more f., as a star, 5iob as f. as any may be, as the moon, 290 at first when our day f., attitude, 58gb Bacchus ever f. and young,

my f. lady, 10933 my how f. you are, 67 3b my own f. hands, j88b


not

of creation, 3475 of her daughters Eve, 3453 things fleetest end, 8563

none but brave deserves f., 3713 f. to outward view, 586b

thou

f.

among women, 2ga

g5$b
51 aa

*o4b
7843

37 ia baseness to write f., s66a bevy of f. women, 3483 book of knowledge f., 344b breeze blew, 5241? buzz witty and f. annoys, 41 ia chaste and f ., 3023 chaste unexpressive she, 24gb
daffodils

nothing f. alone, 6o2a one f. daughter, 2613 open face of heaven, 5793 path more f. or flat, Bsfjb play f. just and patient, 7245 power of one f. face, 1783 practices to fair notions, 933 queens have died young and f ., 3oob rise up my f. one, 2gb Sabrina f., 337b sae fresh and f ., 4943 scent the f. annoys, 4573 Science frowned not, 4413 seedtime had my soul, 5ogb
sex, ig6a

Fair-haired Rhadamanthys, 6$b Fairies at bottom of garden, 9423 beginning of f., 8583 don't believe in f., 8583* not believe in f., 7&ob
Fairies'

rewards and f., $i5b midwife, 22 $a

Fairin,

ah Tarn thou'll get thy

f. f

4g6a
Fairly, report news f., io2ob Fair-spoken and persuading, sggb

Fairy, by

f.

fiction dressed, 4423

by f. hands knell rung, 4433 come not near our f. queen,


22gb

damned

in a

we weep
f.

to see,

32ob

wife, 2723

day adieu, 2363 day aye f. in land o' leal, 50 3 b day's wages for work, 57713 die because a woman's f., 3183 disguise f. nature, 24sb
divided excellence, 2363 Elaine the f., 653* Ellen of brave Lochinvar,
exterior

sex your department, 8503 she a f. divided excellence, she that was ever f., 27gb slain by f. cruel maid, so f . a house, 2g6b so foul and f. a day, so lovely f., 275b so sweet pure f., 5883 stood wind for France, tale of 3 tub, i78b

2363
2523 2813

and flowers, 6423 fading away, 5423 godmother in soul, 8573 gold, 2g53 love-gift of f. tale, 7453 loveliest f. in world, 691 a no f. takes, 2573 queen, 22gb somewhere falls dead, 8$8a
fruits
gifts

2iia

terms and villain's mind, 2$2b


their very memory is f., 3<i2b there be women f. as she, 7703

equity and f. play, giib a silent recommendation, i25b fairer daughter

story of simians, 9255 tale of olden days, 5883 'tis almost f. time, 2313 wide enough to wrap a
Fairy's child, 5813 Fais ce que voudras, 18 la Faith, alterative to f.
'

f.,

22gb

of
in a

f.

mother,
ground,

thou art thou art

all
f.

i2ia
fallen

unto
f.

me

f.

cruelty, 25 ib fat f. and forty, 4763 fleshed f. erected, io68a fool called her lady f., 8753 forever love and she f., 5833 forfeit f. renown, 5iga

173 farewell

tide full moon lies f., to me f. friend never old,

tKough

f.

and

f., 2gb thou art godly.7733 wise, 5713

we

lose,

--

7i4b 2g3b

treatment 959 a
trees

and

appreciation,
87 6b

an affectionate thing, gg6b and fire within us, 7843 and justice to nations, 46 ib and knowledge in medicine,
565*

that grow so f., tresses race ensnare, 404'b view f. Melrose, 5183 viewed in her f. face's

field,

and morals hold, 5i2b animated by f. and hope, 428b be alone and f. renew, 7gob become intuition, 5i6b
begets heretics, 8g6a boyhood's thoughtless f., 6g7b break f. with us who die, gi2b bresstplate of f., 553 cannot dispense with f., 8473 care enough for f. today, 7413

2iob going io93b Greece sad relic, sssb guerdon we hope to find, 338b hand that made you f., 27 ib Harvard, 5663
to
f.,

from foul
to

f.,

2203 wants us to fight f., 981 a was she not f., i$6b weather cometh out of
north, i6a

the

what care

how

f.

she be, 3i8b

INDEX
Fsith, confess f. therein, 102 ib creed of our political f., 47 2 b

Fdl
igga
for a Falconer's, Falcons, hopes like
Fall,

Faith, something of a f., 64gb staff of f. to walk upon,

f.

dead which does

not

doubt,

stand fast in
still

voice, 2S4a towering f.,


f.

f.,

533

8703 deciphered in skies, 8673 denied the f., 553 dream his f. is fast, 6183 dying for f. not h3rd,
for 3ll defects supplying,

by
f.,

f.

he

trod,

gssb
f .,

strong and active


talk

g74a

side,

387* a thousand shall 2ob

at thy

825b

that

could remove mountains,

66oa

5*b
that every flower, 5o8b too much unreasoning
f.,

Anarch lets curtain f., 4143 and leave little lives, 4o5a as wrong as to f. short, 723 below Demosthenes, 5073
benison to f., 3213 both f. into ditch, 433 by dividing we f., 4<x>b
choose cloud before
cradle will
curtain's desire of
f.,

and

full of

f.,

6m

10525

triumphant o'er
true
f.

fears,

622b

fruit of Spirit is f., 530 good fight of f., 550 great act of f., 787'b

ready hands, 6gob under another name, io54b


unfaithful, 6g3b walk by f. not sight, 5gb want of enterprise and f. 68jb wears f. as fashion of hat, 2455 welcome home discarded f.,
(

it

f.,

4o6b

8iob

guardians of the

he mauna
holy
f.,

fa'

looib that, 4g6a


f.,

677a

hope hope
if f. if if

charity, 5j6b f. and love, 4g?a

*37 a

o'ercomes doubt, 6653

when
loob

f.

lost

honor

f., 10183 power caused angels to ., 2o8b divided we f., 6003 down can f. no lower, 352b

dies,

6255

scholar

have
f.

not

f.,

strong

indulge in skeptiin

cism, 8o5b
illogical

belief

improbable,

f. in reason timid, gisa breaks his f., ig$b without works, s6b ye must have f., 847 a

where

who

dying f., 2513 fain climb yet fesr to fear no f., 3663 flat on your fsce, lo^sb flower displsyed doth

f.,

1993

f.,

2523

9 6ob in America, loSsb in f. and hope world disagree,

you

call for

f.,

6653.

4ogb

mankind, in future in her own infallibility, g4gb in human beings, 1021 a in light admirable, 8g6a in result makes result, 7g4a in some nice tenets, 3585 in supremacy of good, 8673 in the might of f., i8oa in this f. I will live and die,
of

io8sb

Faithful Achates, iiga action f. honor clear, 4o7a among the faithless f., 346b are the wounds of a friend, 26b at all times f. husband,

forts of folly f., 7153 fruit that can f. without shak-

half

ing, 4143 glass f. forever, 1062 a to rise half to

f.,

4oga

below he did his duty, Christian f. man, 2173 dog bear him company, 4o8a duty's f. child, sgob
ever

haughty spirit before a f., 24b he also to death must f., 3&4b he that trusteth in riches shall
f., 243 hero perish or sparrow
f.,

4o8a

i?ia
in
is
is

isib falling out of f. friends, io8a fierce wars and f. loves, aooa friend is medicine, 37b
f.,

Humpty Dumpty had f., i hurry to get up when f.,


I I
f.

into Charybdis, 2343


f.,

womankind, 64gb
scourge, ig4a the substance of things hoped
for,

her

own

friend is strong defense, friends hard to find, goga Gelert roam, 5083

3?b

with shuddering if freedom f., 877b


if

73ob
f.,

slip

Thou

not

56a

good and

f.

servant, 44a

kept the f., 55b kneeling by his -bed of death,

sub

in least f. in much, 47a in love, 5iga love is f., i7ob

you stay price will f., 2093 in love with Athens, goa in over pigs, 9753 in with what asked to accept,
if

martyrs create
.,

f.,

86*gb

9303
into 3 habit, 86gb into arms not hands, 7923 into Scylla to avoid Charybdis,

mine is good f., is8a modes of f 4ogb more f. in honest doubt, 6513 no f. held with him, iggb
f., 8973 nor love nor law, 56ga not create martyrs, 86gb not f. but philosophy, 3303 not for all his f. see, 6023 nothing more wonderful than f., 8i8b

ye Penelope, 673

come

all

f,,

isoa

nonviolence article of

three f. friends, 42 rb to conviction to old age, to thee Cynara, 8goa to what exists only hi you,

g6a

2343
leaves
let
let
f. f.

early,

9883

chips

897 unsubstantial persistent unto death, 570

where may, 7333 f. no burning leaf, 10233

f.,

go7b

let f.

women
hold

all alike,

9675

Faithfully to serve State, 3283 Faithfulness, His infinite f., 3873


f.

10163 of man, 6843 like 3 bright exhalation, 2983 like one of the princes, 2oa
let
lie

the curt3ins, 4583 sword of France f.,


f.

t3lking- of

now abideth

O
O

f.,

thou of

little

ye of little of our fathers, 6773 of the pronouncement, go2b other world by which f. advanced, i73b passive or hereditary f., 544b pity their want of f., 468a
plain and simple
f.,

52b f., 42b f., 4ib

and

sincerity,

to truth of Faithless,

history,

7ia 72 la
f.

liquid

sif tings f.,


f.

10023
near,

many a

linger

soob

among

tie

faithful,

346b

arm, io6oa
as a smile, looib as winds or seas,

not a sparrow f., 423 O what a f. was there, 255b of a sparrow, 266b of France, 10163

37&b

be not

f.,

4gb

256a
rights,
f.

but f. haven, 8ia in friendship Faith's Defender, 4i4b


Faiths, conflicting
.,

Punic

f.,

n6a
f.

io52b

reaffirm

in

human
enemy
f.

men's
old
f.

f.

reason greatest i8oa saved by


sea of
f.,

has,

wafer-cakes, 243b loosen and fall,

7743
F.,

room from which


f.,

gone, io54b

Fala, my little dog F., 9730 Falcon, dapple-dawn-drawn

io24b

7i4b

shines equal

arming me, 68sb show doubt prove f., 6653


f.

simple 645*

than

Norman

blood,

8033 Indian of f. glance, 566b not hear falconer, 8823 red rose a f., 8o7a towering in her pride, 2843 Falconer, falcon not hear f., 8823

one by one, 4523 out 3nd chide 3nd fight, out with those we love, 8ib pride will h3ve 3 f., Sstan as lightning f ., 46b silence f. like dews, ggo3 since Adam's f., 881 a soar not too high to f,, some by virtue f., 27ob some cities f., io57b some rain must f., 62 ib sweet music's melting f., take heed lest he f., 523 things f. apart, 8823 though china f., 4073 though the heavens f.,

3g6b 6483

31 sb

4433

sgob

1317

Fall
Fall to reprobation, 2763 to the base earth, 2273 tyrants f. in every foe, unless billboards f., 105 ib
Falls,

INDEX
nature f. into revolt, 242b nips his root then he f., 298 b no shadow where no sun, 90 ib ripest fruit first f., 2273

4963

Falsehood more miraculous than fact, 434b no f. lingers to old age, 833
of the tongue, 471 a stick the heart of f., a68b f., 69 ib time's glory to unmask f., 2?ob trouble to pull down f., 5653

upon gilded upon thorns

648b of life, s6gb we f. to rise, 668b what if sky were to f,, io8b wide arch of ranged empire f., 2873
eaves,

wit on other souls

may

f.,

882b on castle, 648b splendor the Shadow, 10033 though the heaven f., ggob thy shadow Cynara, 8goa when light f., 10560 with leaf in October, 3i2b
f.,

salmon

f.

strife of truth

upbraid my f., 268b wipe off froth of f., 7763 your bait of f., 26oa
368a
Falsehoods,
Falsely, deal

369*
Fallacy, pathetic f., 6g8b Fallen at length that tower, 65 ib Babylon is f., 3ib, $8b be forever f., 3423 by the edge of the sword, jj8b

False Achitophel was

first,

deliberate
f.

ambition drove
f.,

men

to

become

we know how
science
true,
f.

H5b
f.

loaob f., to speak f., 673 with God, 3183

among
as as as as as as

Jews, io88a

so called,

55b

and hollow, 343b


263b common fame, 3&2b Cressid, 268b
air as water,

653b

Falseness in impressions of external,

by the tongue, s8b cold and dead, yoaa from grace, 56$b from his high estate, 37 ib god who remembers heavens,
5650

Falser than

6g8b vows made in wine,


f.

dicers' oaths, 2643. tears of crocodiles,

205b

water, 2763

2503 tomorrow's 3 67 b
Falstaff

than former day,


to

how how

are mighty
art thou
f.,

f.,

i2b

betrayed by f. within, 73oa burn out f. shames, 9863

Falter
life

sweats are lost

in

death, storm,

2385 7i5b

$ib

into the sere, a86a leaves piled against doors, loia lines are f. unto me, i7a
lot is
f.

by philosopher equally f., 46sb creation from brain, 2833 distinguish true from f., 3733
face

away, 7123

when

or explore, 10793 the sun, 736b


if I f.

must

hide, 2833

Faltered,
hair, 3233

more or
all

less,

8243
f.,

moon
on

stars

evil

unto me, i7a f. on me, 9823 days, 346b


f.,

fictions only

and

f.

Fama
Fame,

volat,
all

ii8b

past retrieving, 10553 man prince and great


so f so lost, 6255
.

i2b

framed to make women f., 2733 from f. to f., 268b gallop of verses, 249b history must be f., 397b how f. the argument, usb
idea of
idle idol
if

Greek

Roman

4i2a
all the family of f., 526b blush to find it f., 4123

soldier's pole is

speak

for

f.

f., 288b and weak, 69 ib

what true and ., 37 3 a and f. imposition,


be
f.

conquered f. of heroes, 7013 created something of nothing,


333b

splendid tear, 652b strength like f. angel, s8oa


f., io78a a blessed martyr, 2993 thou f. O Cromwell, 2993 Falling, brief as water f., loiia catch a f. star, $o4b cruelty to load f. man, 2g8b gently f. on thy head, gg6b greatly f. with f. state, 405a horror of f. into naught, 39 $b in love at first sight, 87 ib

or noble

true birth, or swerve, 268b

damned damned

to everlasting to f., 4iga

f.,

4103

though f great, 55sb what do when body


.

in friendship

f.,

368b

Fallest
if

knowingly io7b
little

write

what
f.

is

f.,

better
love,

than

knaves,

246b maids in

268b

man, 3845 never say I was f., 293b


f.

man man
not

does easy, 2843

men eat, 7$2b fool to f., 41 ob foolish and false as f., 3&sb for his f. the ocean sea, 3093 for pot of ale, 2443 from zone to zone, 79 ib
food dead
great heir of
grief
f.
f., 3343 never heal, 674b

desire of f., 653b estate good f., 6033 fair F. inspires, 4iob

f. to others, 2oga of heart, sggb

melody back, 526b London Bridge f. down, 862b of a leaf, 6g7b


of a tear, 5183 on dark central plain, g68a out of faithful friends, io8a
press not
f.

in

or honest dreaming, io78b philosophy, 344a plots true or f. necessary, 368 a pretense, 7473 prophets, 4ib proved true before prove f.,

Hall

o*

F.
f.,

when you

croaks,

10093
halls of

iioib

man, 2g8b
3933 g68a

353*

righted up f. man, 684a secure amidst f. world,


softly

punishment
oath, 64b

if

one
6513

swears

f.

on Bog of Allen,

ring out the


sea

f.,
f.

heard of the f. of Solomon, 133 if not double-faced, 3495 is ephemeral, 1423 is no plant, 338b is the spur, 3383 lives in f. died in virtue's cause. 2i8b
lost to f., 1173 love and f. to nothingness, 5813 love of f. vanity, 8673 march up heights of f., gggb more of honest f., s6ib nor F. I slight, 402b nor too fond of f., 4043 nor yet fool to f., 4iob of her excellence, 673 only to myself, 3323 outlives in f. pious fool, 3313 over living head bent, 57 ib poets' food love and f., 56gb pursues f. at risk of losing self,

star, 3433 what's this

shows

alluring

smile,

am
f.,

f.,

73 ib

when heaven
with
f.

oars

8543 kept time,


f.

g6ob
there,

shoot f. love, that which accepted

f.,

gogb

Falling-off,

what a

was

259b
Fallow,
Falls, as

came

a f. doe, io88b long divorce of steel f.,


f.

ag8a
brightness

to any man, 2593 to object, io5gb to two or three, 3o4b told raucously that f., g6oa wit, 483b

from the
fall,

air,

Coliseum

Rome

3oob

557 b

say judgment f., 3*7 a declines and f., 672b force without wisdom f, of own

commonly we

witness against thy neighbor, ga witness by their own mouth, 39 a words infect the soul, 93b

weight, i22a into abatement, 2513


like Lucifer,

2g8b monotonously f. rain, io4ob

Falsehood, flattery and f., logib God's mouth knows not f,, 78b goodly outside f. hath, 2323 has to be invented, g66a let her and F. grapple, 34ob
Mississippi of
f.,

loia
rage for f ., 468b rather than love money f., 6843 Riches F. and Pleasure, 374*1 ruins of another's f., 40 ib

318

INDEX
Fame, sang of love not of 7a6a sun of dead, 5gob take my chance with temple of f., logaa thirst of youth, 5565
to
f.,

Farced
paying tax1041 b
in

Family, supporting es, 78 5 a


trees

f.

f.,

868a

remember name, unhappy f. unhappy


way, 732b

Fancy, young man's f., 6473 Fancy-free, maiden meditation

f.,

22ga
Fancy's,

own

impediments

in

f,

course,

word

fortune

and

like great

f.,

f.

unknown,

3823

trust to common f., vain for f. to wish,

Famine, die by 386a


fever
f.

f.

die by inches

and war, 8i7b


f.,

2703 misled by f. meteor ray, 4933 Shakespeare F. child, 3353 Faneuil Hall cradle of liberty,

was

noised

country, well known to

na

5315 throughout

seven years of
the

Fam'ly,

refuse

to

f.,

noob

Famous Athens divine city, awoke and found myself


558a

7b help

548b Fanged,
f.,

fields

f.

with

flints,

8gob 7gb
f,,

what's F., 4090 while f. elates thee, 541 b wisdom and prosperity exceedeth the f., iga Famed in song famous Athens,
79 b Troy walls
f.

Fangs, beware my f., 2343 Fanny's, pretty F. way, jg8a

in battle,

ii8a

Fame's eternal beadroll, aoob eternal camping ground, 7o4b Familiar acts beautiful, 56ga and well-beloved in home,
io67a
as his garter, 24sa as rose in spring, i42a

by my pen, 35 3b by my sword, 353b by their birth, 226b Chaucer broad f. poet, 3143 day and year, 62 $b earth sepulcher of f. men, goa forgotten for want of writers,
122b

thousand f. begin tnrong, ss6b twilight f., 57 ib Fantastic century move, 4$2a light f. round, 336b
Fanta-'es,

to

light

f.

toe,

334b
tricks,

plays such
reveries,

f.

2713

7813

found that

f.

country,

io22b
10523

garden never make

me

f.,

Hanover city, 662a harmony of leaves, 88oa


high top-hat, gssa
island descending, gaob let us praise f. men, s8b

summer's heat, 2263 tripped light f., 862b Fantastical, high f., 2513 imagination, SSga
Fantasy,
lure
f.

begot of vain
to utmost, 9153
f.,

f.,
f.,

be thou f., 208b beauty grows f. to lover, ggsb new things are made f., 4s8b old and f. objects, 52ga old f. faces, 534* once f. word, sSyb played f. with hoary locks, 558a not coarse, 4283 style f. but things are made new, 48b wine a good f. creature, 274a Familiarity breeds contempt, 763
breeds contempt and children,

dynamic principle of
master of
1223

223a 9353

maiden

8303

f.

to
f.

all

time,

make

thee

by

not give up loiia remarks seldom quoted correctly. 957b infinite through inferiority,
to all ages, 3403 victory, 5323

pen, 35gb writing too f.,

my

Fantasy's, not f. hot fire, 5i8b Far and few, 67 3a and near unite, 466b as angels ken, 34ib as coin would stretch, 37b be it from God, i6a

brother
calls

f.

off,

26b

764b

with Bible, &$ob with danger, 6g5b Familiarize yourselves with chains,
too early
f.

Famoused, painful warrior fight, 2gib


Fan,
brain

f.

for

coming f., g6ga cry to Lochow, 5213 do not peer too f., 7ga do not set eyes on things
79*
fair

f.

off,

him with

lady's

f.,

and

softly

goes

f.,

1653

23ga
cool gales f. the glade, 40 2 b Fanatic can't change mind, 9253 does what Lord wud do, 8gia Fanatical, my f. will power, ioi2a Fanaticism efforts, redoubling

6 3 6a
Familiarly, if
Families,
first f.

one approaches

f.,

best-regulated f., in Virginia, 10423

67 ib
f.,

God
great

setteth
f.

the solitary in

igb
of yesterday, 3853
alike,

867a barbarism one step, 4373 Fancied, can it be f. that Deity,


to

far ahead, 5i5b hour and sweet, giga forward since we have come so f., 2igb from fiery noon, 5843 from madding crowd, 44ob from old folks at home,
fierce

from the sun, 44 ib

7$2b 8g7b lie together, io8ob rooks in f. go, 784b


I hate you,

happy

f.

how
Fancies, high reason of f., 33gb host of furious f., io86a
lay earthly
f.

green

hill f.
f.

away, 684b candle throws

beams,

335b
ill news travels f., i37a in pillared dark, g28b in western brookland, 853a not too amorous of f., gi5a not too f. from yew, ioo6b

down, 65 ib

the f. of fame, 526b Family, character of f., iogia children of one f ., $g6b
all

our

f.

are

more giddy, 2523


f., 57ga dangerous than
f.,

proud and
9i3b

full of

realities less

church and private school, 7i7b father of a f., i4ob greatest thing in f. life, ggoa happier for his presence, 8253 history begins with me, g6a holding the ropes, 74ab I am part of my f,, g86b is not in residence, i53b
join the
f.,

Fanciful, no test which

is

not

f.,

82b
Fancy,
ever let f. roam, excellent f., 26sb from flower bell, 6653 full of shapes is f., 251 a

58^

hills and f. away, 3843 on ringing plains of Troy, 646b one near one too f., 664a over hills and f. away, 40 ib,

o'er

hopeless
is

gseSa

mode
f.

f. feigned, 648b of memory, 52ga

nobody not in f., 5j3b of rare long-stemmed


98 5 a

flowers,

party tribe or clan,

nooa

refuse to help f., 8gob relationship, Ssob represents one aspect, 85ob root of the state, ggb servant of scattered f., 7523

8s2b motives of more f., 2703 my f. flies, 447b no time for f. dans, not expressed in f., 258!)

keep

free,

peace to him that is f. off, s^b pushed just so f., 8g$b slight what's near by aiming f., 4a so f. only should we hate, 8ia so f. trust thee Kate, 23ga so near yet so f., 651 a
ioz$b
those f. whistles
off are attracted, 723
f.

now

f.

passes by, 852!)


f.,

why

sweet and bitter

25ob

thou so me, i7b


art

and wee, 10303 f from helping


.

stamped
g$6a

character

on

child,

go is f. bred, 233b whispers of f., 428a work of brain and

when

to rest, g4ga

where

f.,

376b

Far East, those who brought war to F., g8ab Farce is played, i82a Farced title 'fore king, 244b

1319

Fardels
Fardels, who would f. bear, 26*a Fare, bread and Gospel good f.,

INDEX
Farmhouse, stop without f. near, gs7b Farms, houses and f. pillaged, 461 a
Fast, spare F.,

36b
delicate
f.

335b stumble that run they follow, 26sa

f.,

224b

in another's house,

forward, io6a

forward voyagers, ioo6b hard very hard is my f., 4oia I have eaten traveler's f., 38ob
last

what spires f., 8533 Farmyard, cock louder in own 678b Far-off curfew sound, 335b
divine event, 651 a old unhappy f. things, spies a f. shore, 2i6a touch of greatness, 653b

what

f.

thick and f. came at last, 745b thine arrows stick f. in me, i8b wit speeds too f., 22 ib

Fasted forty days and nights, jgb Fasten hands upon their hearts,

51 sa

854*
Fastened
to

of

Romans

f.

thee well,

like

my

peers, 666b

miles on foot to f., g27b thee well if forever, 5jga

Farquhar, Peyton 7gib Far-reaching ancestry, 721 a

F.

was dead,

as a nail, 3ib me flesh, 8o2b dying animal, 88sa Venus f. to prey, 378b

him

Faster

when you
ill f.

receive

f.,

74a

the land, 44ga Fares, Farewell all joys, io86a


also called F., 73 ib

Farrier, Felix Randal the f., 8osa Far-stretched, all the f. greatness,

and and more

f.

fly
f.,

shuttles,

78gb

fast,

66 ib

beat to follow
faster,

287b

i99t

Farther
off

away

on

either

t ^ hand,

745a

and then
bid

forever, 4943, f . to every fear, 3g7a

i023a

content, 2753 dear paintings, 328b distracting town f,, 405b fair cruelty, 25 ib forever f. Cassius, 256a

Farthing, do not care a

from heaven, 5g2a Farthest Thule, i i7a, 4igb way home's the f. way, 32 ib
f.

candle,

f., 64$a speed far f. than light, travel f. than stagecoach, walk a little f., 744b world would go round f., Fastest, travels f alone, 87&a Fastidious, a few f. people,
.

followed fast and

gi7b 45ob 74gb


&78a
f.,

hold
ii5b

f.

candle

to

sun,
f.,

goes out sighing, 26ga


hail

two sparrows sold for


Farthings, Latin

3i2a 4**
three

most

f. critics,

Fastidiousness,

5g5a unconscious
f.,

and

f.

my

brother,

word

for

gg6a
Fasting, lives

hope, 345a

hope bade world f., 67a Horace whom I hated, 557a


king, 227b Leicester Square, g34a lobster-nights f ., 405b Monsieur Traveler, 2soa Morning Star, i loa

f., 22ib Fas est et ab hoste doceri, i2ga Fascinate, blandishments not f.

on hope die
f.,

422a

thank heaven

25oa
f.

us,

475a

Fascination frantic, 768b grace force f., 7oia,b of war regarded as wicked, 8sga of what's difficult, 88ia

easy, i4sb Fat, all of us are f., 746a and bean-fed horse, 22ga

when

full

talk of

and greasy citizens, *47b and sleek a true hog,


black bucks, g52b

i2$a
fair,

mute

f.,

7041
devocioun,

Fashion as we

feel,

g66b

Bobby

Shaftoe's

f.

and

my bok and my
neighing steed, 275a
Othello's

occupation's

gone,

birth intellect, 72 la bravery never out of f., 661 a Bristol f., 678a drug it's f. to abuse, 76ga faithful in my f., 8goa 62b glass of f. mold of form,

iog8a butter only make us f., io26b contentions, 34oa duller than f weed, 25gb eat the f. of the land, 7b
.

fair

and
f.

forty,
f.

476a
j

plumed

troop, 2753

high

Roman

f.,

z88b

feast of

things, sib
_

remorse, 3453

renowned Eretria, gab rewards and fairies, gi5b


to the sweet f., *66a the tranquil mind, 27$a thou art too dear, 2gsa thou child of my right hand,

like rusty mail, 268b literature out of life, 7723 never in f. for sake of it,

the ancient geese are getting f.,


feed

8ogb

if is

to

be

f.

be

hated,

*3gb
iog2b

sweets

of these times, 248a of this world passeth, 52a out of world out of f., 3g2b refinement rather than f., 655b

in the

fire,

i8b
eat

Jack Sprat Jeshurun waxed


king's eye

no
f.,

f.,

lob
f.,

made

horse

i37a

shipshape and
to all my greatness, 2g8b to Lochaber, 4oob to the Highlands, 4Q4b Farewells, as many f. as
f.,

Bristol

f.,

678a

stars,

everlasting

f.,

52a
father's
f.,

should be sudden, Far-flung battle line,

Farm,

best

business

65 8b crouched on hillside, logob keep 'em down on f., gggb

snug

little

f.

the world,

5333

Farmer

village and f., 624a in the dell, iog7b

sowing the corn, iog8b Farmer's boy, io87a daughter hath soft brown hair, 74ob on f. land may fall, 8o8b wife, iog2b Farmers, ah too fortunate f., 1173 embattled f., 6oga founders of civilization, 5483 gentlemen f., 56 ib mechanics and laborers, soga pray that summers be wet, n7a Farmhand, apple- faced f., logga

766b vegetable wears faith as f. of hat, 245b wears out more apparel, 246b worn-out poetical f., ioo$a Fashionable, other f. topics, 448a supersede f. novel, 5g6a time like f. host, 268b Fashioned first plowshare, 677a gods f. by men, 867b Providence f. us holler, 6gsa so slenderly, 5g2b Fashion's brightest arts, 4503 word is out, 884b Fashions in proud Italy, 226b old f. please best, 2iga Fast and furious, 4g6a bind fast find, i8ab

men about me
more
42oa
f.

laugh and grow

f.,

247a
f.,

that are

253b

than

bard

beseems,

of others' works, 3ioa oily man of God, 42oa

one

is

f.

and grows

old,

23ga

resolved to grow f., 4763 Seymour's F. Lady, io78a

sharp names never f., io4ib should himself be f., 433 take f. with lean, 672a thin man in every f. one, 1053* 'twas a f. oyster, 41 sa

Venus grown f., 55ib whale f. of postwar London,


white woman, ggib

645b 276b drop faster and more f., 66 ib followed f. and faster, 64ga hit f. hit often, g68a how f. shadows fall, 90 ib ill weed groweth f,, i83b men die f. enough, 38sa money go out so f., 1051 a now he is dead should I f., i2b or come he f., 5iga
f.,

driveth

onward

tears as

f.,

who drives f. oxen, Fatal and perfidious bark, 338b as it is cowardly, 7osb asterisk of death, 6*4b
bellman, 28ga circumference, 748b complaint, io47b

dominant X, g56b entrance of Duncan, 28ib


facility of octosyllabic, futility of fact, 7ggb

558b

1320

INDEX
Fatal gift of beauty, 55 shadows walk by us, to everyone save genius, to have no will to win,
troika dashes on, 708 b vision, s8$a.

Father's
Father,

g6oa 9595

Fate, thy f. Heraclitus, io4b torrent of his f., 4*7a voice of f., 4g8a

name

called the everlast-

yes I am f. man, 66oa Fate, all our children's f., assistance from f. essential, $7ga binding Nature fast in f., 41 2b
bitter it is in F.,

Waterloo, 556a

why know
wisest ask

what be maiden's f., 5183 what f. or gods give, 871 a what f. predestined, 5<>4b
their f ., 43gb no more of

f., 6g4a written a tragedy, g^ga Fated, though f. not to die, 3703 Fateful lightning, 6gob

cannot

harm me, 52$b


all f.,

9475

certain of his f., 274a chooses our relatives, 468a

Fate's, jest of F. contriving, 4023 Fates have given a patient soul,

commands

64b impose that men abide, ai6a


masters of their
f.,

ing F., 313 not God for f. if not Church for mother, i44a of a family, i4ob of all in every age, 41 ab of English criticism, 4*8b of Jealousy, 4$8a of lights, 56a of mankind, 6*6b of many nations, )a of such as dwell in tents, 6a of such as handle harp, 6b
of today's guilt, io56a of Waters unvexed to sea, 638b of your country, 4<5ob old f. antic the law, 2tfb old f. old artificer, g68b old F. William, 5310, 74 3 b

it f., 8ggb determines or indicates f., 68sa did f. begin weaving, 774b eagle's f. and mine are one, 773 too much, gtjsb fears his f.

complex f. 7g8a coughed and called

giga being American,

53b

fixed f. free will, 344a forced by f., 371 a foulness of their f., ggsb

molding mighty f., 8gga not most unenviable of f., gs2a of dread death, 64b aing our own f., 7g3a Abraham, 6s6b alone is God, 544a and I went to camp, logoa and mither gae mad, 4g4b answered never word, 621 a

omnipotent
der, 66a

F.

with his thundivide


f.

pathos

which

from

gave his sad lucidity, 71 ia gave whate'er denied, 6g4a had imagination about, gs8a hanging breathless on f., 6a*b has cursed you, 841 heart for any f., 62ob heart for every f., 55gb human reason is f., ggya
I feel my I thy f.
is
f.,

denieth the F., 573 baptizing in name of F., 45*


antichrist

son, io27a please world and f., 35ga prince subject F. Son, 307b

rather have turnip than


religion,

f.,

42ga
slept,

become f. not hard, 742b bosom of his F., 44ia Brown, giga Burglar Banker F., 74a buy cemetery plot, gssb
called
calls

8g4b resembled my
ruffian,

f.

as

he

Scylla

23gb your f., 234a

brother's

me

io6sa
32 la

chiefly

it

shall overtake, the handspike, 6g7b is hour of f., 748b


f.,

known by

f. dad, 2$6a William, 82ob rod, 6g6a

child f. of man, sub cold mad f., g68b

dear
io$b

f.

jeers at

come home, 747b

smile at his f., i isa sold me while yet tongue, Son and Holy Ghost, 45^ 377b struck f. when son swore, 3i2a surely dwells loving F., 4g7a Tiber, sg6a
to corruption

thou art

lead

me

g62b Zeus
f.,

my

f.,

and
8i6a

F.,

master of master of

65 3 a, ioi4b
f.,

my

beyond clouds, 88 ib men cannot suspend f., 3&5b milder f. than tyranny, 78b my f. cries out, 25gb my life my f., 6^zb no armor against f. $27b no f. misunderstand me, ga6b no one so accursed by f., 62 ib nobly born must nobly meet f.,
f.
t

meet

deny thy f., sstgb eternal F. strong to save, 7a6a far greater than his f., G^b foolish son calamity of f., 25a for hoarding went to hell, 2i5b
forgive my injuries, io76b forgive them, 47b fathom five thy f. lies,

15* took second place, 8$4b true-begotten f., 232b used to say, gg6a was a butcher, $65a watched across gulf of years,

full

2g6b gave f. forty-one, noia George said his f., 4gga ghost of Hamlet's f., 861 a

which art in heaven, 4ob who art in heaven, 4ob


will of my F., 41 b wise f. that knows child, 2$2b wise son maketh a glad f., 24a wish f. to thought, 242b withered when my f. died, 26sa without f. bred, 335b you think your f. does not, 84a your f. the devil, 48b Fathered, so f. and so husbanded,

8sb
not

decide

single

human

f.,

losga
of all extremes, 4o6a of architect, 478a of empires, 481 a of nation in own power, sg7a of nation riding, 6243
truths, 7?5b of unborn millions, 461 a on what seas thy f., 868b
of

your F. in heaven, 4oa glory be to the F., sgb God an exalted f., S^gb greatness of name in f., 304a
glorify

happy
2i6a

to be

f.

to

many

sons,

hard to be a

f.,

742b
Fatherland, die for friends or I22b
f.,

hath, chastised you, iga

new

proud captain of thine own


ii6a Providence
rave
will

f.,

and

f.,

no more

344a

'gainst

f.,

77ob

read book of f ., 242a reason is f., g37a

seemed to wind him up, sits on dark battlements, slave to f., 3o8a star of f. declined, 55ga stars of thy f., 4g8a than stronger anything, 84a struggling in storms of f.,

hath the rain a f., i6a have we not all one f., g6a held out golden scales, 64b honor thy f. and thy mother, ga I cannot tell lie, 462a I had it from my f., 2g8a in my youth said f., 743b in Thy gracious keeping, 727a into thy hands, 47b liar and f. of it, 48b
lived his soul, logib mad feary f., g6ga man shall leave f. and mother,

everything belongs

to

f.,

German
fear
f.

4g6b

no

F., sogb be thine, 6gga


i

Ilium,

i8a

Fatherless, judge the f., 3oa F. business, Father's, about

my

46a daughters of

my f. house, 252b defiled his f. grave, i*4b desire f. death, 78b


house not house
dise,

of

merchan-

5b

more than hundred schoolmasters,

325a
103 ib

summons monarchs obey, take a bond of f., aSsb


take F.

moved through dooms,


6ga

by throat, 742a

thy

f.

and mine

my f feeds flocks, my f. wept, 48gb my God my F.


.

445a

48a my house, 4ga joy mother's pride, 52ob lean in joy upon f. knee, 487 a looked into f. heart, io4gb made chimney in my f. house,
in
f.

2150

and Friend,

porter of

f.

lodge, 736a

sealed,

64ga

374b

sword girded on,

54a

Fathers
Father's, without . word, 5741 Fathers, ashes of his f., 5963 brought forth nation, 6393 desire not merely what f. had,
o,8a

INDEX
Fault not in our
stars,

5ga of penetrating wit, 356b of the Dutch, 5073 of wit to go beyond mark, 356b
f.,

u$$b

happy

faith of our f., 6773 Franklin one of founding f., 997* get sons your f. got, 8521 God of f. known of old, 8753 good mothers and f., 10535 have eaten as our grape, 340 gr

one

f . at first, $22b he has no f., i4ia only f. that pernaps Lord Byron's f., 8i2b monstrous, 25oa seeming subordinate who never finds f.,

Fsvor with God and man, 46b Favored, youth rarely f., 755b Favorite h3s no friend, 43gb man f. of mother, 8345 physician hath f. disease, 4245 that f. subject myself, 468b
Favorites, all kings

and

their

f.,

heaven gives its f., 1023 Way has no f., 753


Favoritism
in public life, Favors, error to expect f.,
felt all its
f.,

8i3b
talk

8433
461 b

and find

f.,

1943

iniquity of the dren, ga

f.

upon

the chil-

land where f. died, 6270 lie with my f., 70 our f. were Englishmen, 3193 provoke not your children, 545
scenes f. loved, 10533 sins of f. upon children,

593 through my weariness and f., g27b without f. or stain, 8oia worse by excuse, 2373
f.,

4373

fortune

f.

the brave, 1093,

Fault-finding,
effective

fact-finding

more

than

Faultily faultless,

gi$b 6523
f.,

86a
65a

sojourner as
sons
similar

all

my

f.

were, iga
f.,

to

their

teeth, 1042 a spake the same, 6gsa talking to you mothers and

sowed dragon's

f.,

972b
that begat us, s8b victory hundred f., 10533

f., 6523 monster world ne'er saw, ssob piece to see, 4033 to a fault, 6673 Faults, all his f. observed, 2563 all men make f., 2g2a bear with all the f. of man,

Faultless, faultily

hangs on princes' f., ag8b lively sense of future f., 3563 nor for her f. call, 40 2 b not by accepting f., goa not won by trifling f., 543b rhyme into ladies' f., 2453 rubs enhance value of f., 4483 shower f. alike, Bogb Fawn, fickle as f., 588b to f. to crouch to wait, 20 la
twilight timid f., 8g3b Fawning greyhound did proffer,

ugb

jooa
best men molded of f., 272a cleanse me from secret f., i7b do not fear to abandon f., 7ia greatest of f. to be conscious of

2$8b
f., 2633 F3wns, when lion f. upon lamb, 2i6b Fe fi fo fum, iog8a Fear, act of f., 2583 actions ascribed to f., 8o4b afraid of f., 5063 ag3inst f. our bresst steel, 7iib 3ll f. death, Sob all-powerful should f. every-

worshiped stocks and stones, 34ia your f. where are they, g6a Fathers-forth whose beauty past change, 8033 Fathom, cannot f. their depths, 8o6b full f. five, sgeb line could never touch, 2$8b Fathomed, beauty not been f., 7o8a Fathomless universe, 7023 Fathoms down f. down, 6983 down in f. many, 76sb fifty f. deep, io87b Fatigue of judging for themselves, 48ib of supporting freedom, 467a without f. of traveling, ig6a Fatiguing as uncompleted task,
Falling, lion and f. together, gia Fatness of these pursy times, s64b

publican, 2323 thrift may follow

none, i4ia

no f. of our own, 355a has not strength to prevent, 448b lie gently on him, 2993 love to f. always blind, 488a loves him better for f., 448b man must have f., i33b not for thy f. but mine, 557a not free from f., 4o4a of those around me, gSgb persuade ourselves we have no
if it

thing, 33 ib

and bloodshed, 5153 and danger of violent death,


3183

and

great f., 3563 pleasure in f. of others, 3553 some f. men readily admit,

arming me from
as

angels

distrust the people, f. to tread, 4043


f.,

47 3b

6855
darkness,

children

f.

in
at

i38b
to
f.

ii3b
little

blind, 387a
f.,

Fatted

calf,

473

Fattenin' hogs ain't in luck, 8143


Fatter, valley sheep f., ineffectual Fatuous

552b
yesterdays,

8i6a sunbeams, ios8b


Fatuus, ignis f. of mind, gSab Faucet, writing f. upstairs, ggoa Fauld, when sheep are in the f.,

2673 who covers f., 277a with all her f., 4563 with all thy f. I love thee, 4563 Faustine, your doom F., 7740 Faustus must be damned, 2i3b Faut, il f. cultiver notre jardin, 417*
Faute, pire qu'un crime c'est une
f.,

to scan, 44gb vile ill-favored

499b
f.,

Favor, flattery in return for

my cup, 5253 be just and f. not, 2993 be not afraid of sudden f., 23b better is little with the f. of the Lord, 24b bid farewell to every f., 3973 birds of prey, 27ob boys that f. no noise, 45ob by beauty and by f., sogb by day and night, 108 la came upon me, i4b cannot be without hope, 37 3 b concessions of f .,
as

at

heart

479b Faulkner
Fault, all

sole
f.

owner, loggb who hath no f., 65gb

5o6b found f. in thy from Fortune


i25b

conquer
sight, 73 easier to

f.

45pb beginning of wis-

dom, 9133
get,

by her
ii4b

f.

dropped
f.

like flower,
act,
f.,

condemn
every

and not
has
f.,

man

his

27ob sgoa

in that same way grant increased in f., 46b


is

f.,

io6b

deceitful, 273
f.

faultless to

6673

look with
1173

on bold beginning,
s67b law right nee
f., 6i7b 9273

feed on for f. not mine, 56sb fellow f. came to match, 2503 fundamental f. of female, 5643 glorious f. of angels, 4o6a

courage resistance to f., 7623 death as children f. dark, 2o8a death feel fog, 666b deep as marrow, 1081 a do not f. to abandon faults, 713 doth Job f. God for nought,

deceit, obedience to
f.

men

engender
f.,

thing

feared,

no4b

grows two thereby, g22b hide the f. I see, 4i2b if f. only on one side, $56b if sack and sugar be f., sggb just hint a f., 4113

render praise and


those

who

f.

fire,

48gb extreme f. neither fight nor fly, 2203 fain climb yet f. to fall, igga
every
cry
f.,

infant's

of

to rich, 351 a to this f. she truths in and

fsrewell

f.,

3453

must come,
out of
f.,

2 66 a

Fatherland
feel

knows how to confess no f. or flaw, 767a

9263

fate in

no f. what

thine,
I

6gga cannot f.,

f.,

42 2 a

well bestowed, gg5b when f, of gods was equal, 86b

10653 for f. very stones prate, 2833

1322

INDEX
Fear foundation of governments,

Feast
Feareth,
Fearful,

freedom from f., 97ga, 9740 frightened out of f., *88a from hope and f set free, 775a God and keep his command.

Fesr of the Lord is beginning of wisdom, 2ib of the Lord is wisdom, i5b of weakness, g88a only thing to f. is f., 9713 p3le hungry-looking men, ii2b
pale soul

woman
come

that

f.

the Lord,
f.

forth thou

man,

2253
concatenation of circumstances,

God and take own part, 601 a God honor the king, 560 God save her f. you not, 8$2a Greeks even when they bring n8a gifts,
hair stand

ments, 2ga

consumed by

f.,

io8ib
out f., 573 perfect love C3steth pine with f. 3nd sorrow, 2013
possess them not with f., 2453 3nd starvation, protect from f.

frame thy f, symmetry, goodness never f., 27 ib

48g a

how

f.

and

dizzy,

27ga

innocence, 5i2a lifting up a f. eye, 2iob not a more f. wildfowl,


odds, 5963

23oa

up

in panic

f.,

833

972a

hate is a f., 1034** hate not f. not, ios4b I am not in perfect mind, 2803 I cannot taint with f., 28sb I will f. no evil, i8a

punishment increases f., 8osb put f. out of heart, 8g6b noob quite unaccustomed to f.,
repentance
is f.

of consequence,

saw a thousand f. wracks, 2173 snatch a f. joy, 43ga summons, 2573 thing see soul take wing, 5593
lead people into war, 8 42 a done, 7o2a why are ye f., 4ib
to trip is

imagining some

f.,

2gob

in handful of dust, loosb is affront, 4ooa


is rot,
is

shuddering ousy, 2ssb


so
artless

f.

green-eyed jealf.

after

lost,

1733

Fearfully and wonderfully made,

io34b
31 aa
f.,

sharp-sighted, ig4b keeps men in obedience,


let

source of cruelty, 9133 source of superstition, 9133 spirit of f., 55b


f

them hate

so long they

iogb
life f.
littlest

fears, 878b doubts are f., 2633 of f., io42b loneliness look f. in the face, 98 ib

among

82ob f. str3nge snd speechless strange th3t men f., 254b with th3t reigns tyrants, 6223 thee ancient Mariner, 5253 theoretic snd visionary f., 4723 therefore will we not f., 193
they
C3ll

23a o'ertrip the dew, 235a Fearing, respect strength without f., 47 i*> stood there f., 6433
to attempt, 2703 to be spilt, 2653 Fearless, foe with

f.

eyes,

8653

for

unknown

shores,

7o2b

love

and
life,

f.

hardly

together,

courage, 9073

i77a love f.

thief

gi33
f.,

made without mean actions

i6b
to
f.

doth f. each bush, 2i6b thing I most f. is f., i8gb thou sh3lt f. waking, 774b
thy nature, 28 ib thy skinny hand, 5253 to sppesr weak, 3653 to be we know not what, 3673 to f. worst cures worse, 268b
to

ib Fearlessly, others front it f., 71 Fears a painted devil, 2&3b bondage of irrational f., 832b dishonor worse than death,

ascribed

122b

f.,

do make us

traitors,

8o4b mercy toward them that 2ia

28gb

him,

errors agonies and f 7583 faith triumphant o'er f.,

mitigated by reason, 10153 more f. than facts warrant, 1020b my heart shall not f., i8a natural f. increased with tales,

him
833

in

f.

everything rustles,

2o8a never f. naught's to dread, Ssgb never f. to negotiate, 10733 never negotiate out of f.,

to live or die, 6o3b to prevent war not f. it, 5313 to speak for fallen, 6gib to whom f. due, sib trembled with f. 3t frown, 6903

622b from sudden f., 5593 his fate too much, 353b hopes and f. of all years, 7553 humanity with all f., 622b

grown

humble cares delicate f., I had no human f., 5113

51 ib

true veins

nobility

exempt from
our
f.,

f.,

less than imaginings, 28 ib life fear among f., 878b miserable he who fears death,

2153

no f. stand up to hunger, 84 no fall, s66a no more heat o the sun, 291 a no need of f., gg2a none has merited my f., ggob not I bring good tidings, 46a
f

ioo4b W3lk in f. and dresd, 525b of out snother one watch not
betrayed

we f. in the light, ii3b we must get rid of


wearing with no
f.,

f.,

5773

not lest existence, 6303 not these well-fed long-haired

8ggb

men
not not

f.,

mb

what is too strange, io7gb what others do from f. of law,


97a

thou child infirm, 6osb to touch the best, 19

nothing terrible except f. itself, 2o7b ib nothing to be feared as f., 68 nothing you carry Caesar, nab O word of f., 222b of Acheron be sent packing,

wh3t we f. of where 3ngels

n$b
of censure, g88a of change, 342b of controversy, io64a more dread of death

they f. they hate, 1073 de3th's call, 7003 S3lvation with f., world too beautiful, 10233 28 ib yet do I f. thy nature, Feared, better to be loved than f

whom whom
why

shsll I

f.,

de3th, 27ib f. to tread, 4043 i8a

f.

work out

3213 more pangs and f., 2g8b not mine own f., 293b past regrets future f., 6303 without f., 2083 prosperity not saucy doubts and f., 284b tenderness its joys and f., 5142 that I may cease to be, 5813 tie up thy f., 323b to speak of Ninety-eight, 7203 trembling cold in ghastly f., 4 88a when little f. grow great, 2633 Feary, mad f. father, g6ga Feast, ba're imsgination of f,, 2263 beginning of a f., 24ob Belshazzar made a great f., 353 continual f., 24b despair not f. on thee, 8osb dressed as going to a f., 302-b

enough
than

as

good

as

f.,

i86a

death, 1263

of having to cry, 46oa of hell's a hangman's

whip

3*23
of kings, 234b of little men, 72ga of some divine powers,

3123

of suffering injustice, 355a of the Lord, 31 a

by their breed, 226b fear engender thing f., no4b just as I f., 672b no danger knew no sin, 3703 nothing to be f, 3S fesr, 68 ib one that f. God, 143 ssfer to be f. tfmn loved, 1773 f twenty times Peter ., 5ogb witches, 832b Fe3rest nor se3 rising, 801 3 why f. thou outwsrd foe, 10843

for eyes, 59 ib 222b great f. of languages, is made for laughter, 28b


is set, 524b movable f., io45b nourisher in life's of Crispian, 2453

f.,

283b

of fat things, 3ib of joy a dish of pain, of nectared sweets, 3373 of reason flow pf soul,

2o4b
4 lll[>

Feast
Feast of Stephen, 6875 of wines on the lees, $ib outcast from life's f ., g68a

INDEX
Fed, fish that hath
f.

of worm,
f.

pomp and
riseth

f. and revelry, 335a from f. with keen appetite, 232b sat at good man's f., 24$b small cheer makes merry f.,

grown by what it look up and are not f., sjSb machine f. with flesh and oil,
9^3a man's resinous heart f., SSgb of dainties bred of a book, 22 ib on fullness of death, 774a on honeydew hath f., 54a purely upon ale, 3Q7b those former bounty f., 37 ib to be happy be well f., g6o washed dressed warmed f., g47* work and house be f., 7043 Federal, not approve of f. system,

on, 257 b

Feel fog in throat, 666b great forces behind detail, 787b happier in passion we f., 3563

heavy as yonder stone, hell within myself, 33oa her finger light, 7i4a

g68b

how
I

2i8a
to spleen a to the Lord,
.

grateful

f.,

5i6b

8b

what f toward, z66b when f finished, 8goa when I make a f., 2ioa Feasting, good dinner and f., 375b house of f., a8a if f. rise, 748b Feasts, movable f., 50a shown in courts at f., 337b Feat of Tell the archer, 4g8b Feather, a wit's a f., 4ogb wafted downward, 6s ib as
is
.
.

io2ab a man, 285b in wintry age f. no chill, 45ga am in torment, ii5a it and it cannot utter it, io4gb it so like myself, io68b
swift
secretly,

how
it

must

f.

as

let

f. your pulse, 2i8b doing for babies, star, 755a like thirty cents, 886b

me

like
like

morning

our F. Union, sosa Federalism practice not principle,

might free on a raft, more to do than f., 534a

761 a

my my

fate,

io65a

we are all F., 47** Federation of the world, 647b Fee bestow upon foul disease,
Federalists,

heart new opened, *g8b new wind blew they not f.,

birds of a f., 31 ib for each wind, 2gsa


his own f. on dart, 55jja in hand better than bird in air,

*77 a cure complete he seeks f., Sssoa doctor for nauseous draught,

g44h not f. the crowd, 4s8b now does he f. his title, 286a old as yonder elm, g68b
only f. farewell, 554b paint best who f. most, 4O5b passions we f. expand time,

1373
in his cap, 4g8a

372a gorgeous east

m
.

f.,

set life at pin's

f.,

5120 asgb

never moults f., 66gb pluck out flying f., 774b pun pistol not f., 5s6a sharpened f., 6g8a stuck f. hi hat, logoa tomorrow f. duster, gi5a whence pen was shaped, 5i7a Featherbed, despotism to liberty in f., 47 ib Feathered, divide into featherless

and

f .,

g6b

his nest well, 3i4a tarred f. carried in cart, 6a6a

Feeble earthworm, 364a engines of despotism, 473b expletives f. aid join, 4osa help f. up, sgoa if Virtue f. were, 3383 most forcible F., 242* religion of f. minds, 454b to quote argues f. industry, 88b Feebler, nothing f. than a man, 66b Feed among the lilies, 2gb brain with better things, gi8b
cloy appetites they cow and bear shall
fat
f.,

not f. how beautiful, 5273 slime of wet nest, loGsa


see

go7b

speak what we f., 2800 steady candle flame, 664b


sweets I know charms I f., 48$a thee again old sea, 6955 thing that could not f., 51 la those who would make us f.,

456a
thy finger and find thee, 8o2b tragedy to those that f., 442b we are greater, 5i7a what we f. indeed, 7i6a

zfyb
3ia

Featherless, divide into f. and feathered, g6b Feathers, beat f . flat as pancakes,

with eagle's plumes, 76b

f.,

3!4a brain of f., 4i3b cover thee with

the grudge, S3aa gave thee life did thee f., 486b He that doth ravens f., 47b him with bread of affliction,

ancient

i3b
his
f.,

what we say and f., 7i6a what we think we f., 7i6a what wretches feel, 278b who will make us f., 7iib Feeling, a f. and a love, 5093 apprehend by f. as by intellect,
935 a
as old as he's
f.,

aob
f.,

crow
field

beautified
of
f.

with

our

2o6a
for strife of love,

his flock like a shepherd, 3*b his sacred flame, 526b men in exile f. on dreams, 7ga nor f. the swine, iog5b

72$a
of
superiority,

blue, 84sa

is8b
shall cover thee with his ., 20b not only fine f. make fine birds, 76a owl for all f., 58 ib plumes her f., 337a thing with f., 735a twitter and f. sleek, 57ga with our own f., 76b Featly, foot it f ., sg6a Feats, 'twas one of my f., 56ab Feature, haint one agreeable f.,

he

on Death, 2g4b on for fault not mine, 56ab on her damask cheek, 25*b on hope, 201 a sleep and f., 264b

comfortable 9 6ob
f.

f.

in silence, gg6b deepest development of f. in language,

worm

them with wormwood, 34a this mind of ours, 5o8b a thy harm dost f., 1084 upon strawberries, logsb Caesar meat what f., 253b upon
shall
f.

disputation, 2ggb fellow f., 3ioa for single good

action,
to

4?8a

formal
gives

f.

comes, 73$b
f.

greater

the worse,

226a
f. duty done, y6ga high mountains a f., 556b

sweetly, 150, 3oga

gratifying

distinguished him, 7972 show virtue her own f., a6ab Features, homely f. to keep home,
f.

one

you cannot f. capons so, 263* Feeds, Death that f. on men, 2g4b mock meat it f on, 274a my father f. flocks, 445a on books alone, 7goa three, 6g2b
.

his cold strength, gg4b imprecision of f., loosb

makes us eloquent, i^6a no f. not in every heart, 7*3b no f. of his business, a65b
not always everything, 7oga

357^

human

f.

composed

of

ten

who
Feel

upon burrs

of life, s8oa gives himself f. three,

6g2b

parts, i32b of clerical cut, ioo4a paint man as well as f., 754b February, excepting F. alone, i87a Fecit, homo f., io7gb Fed, bite hand that f., 4553 dead who f. the guns, ggsb

amid city's jar, 7iia and know we are eternal, 374b as if top of head off, 7ggb

we were free, 7gtja beauty as we f ., 867a turns bitter change, by can Sporus f., 41 ib fashion as we f., g66b
as if

and longing, 62 ib disdained, 572b the f., 493 b petrifies profound or vehement, 52ga push of cosmos, 7g$a consciousreligious f. part of
of

sadness
f.

one

falsely

344*

ness,

7055

religious f. toward life, 8g8b sensible to f. as to sight, 28ja

1324

INDEX
Feeling, sentimentality failure of
Feet, regards what his f., 1073
rising
is

Fellowship
before
Fell, mightiest Julius
.,

56b

inheritance, 776b the East's gift, 6&4b transmission of highart Feelings,


taste
f.

and

falling,

ioo5a

est f., 732b lets f . run, 597b

roll in ecstasy at your f., g8ob Scots lords at his f., io87b shalt thou trample under f.,

my f. of hair, 286b of dark not day, 8043 out over pigs, 975a
scales f .

from

eyes, 4gfb

2ob
679a
silver-sandaled f., 8$8b six f. of land, 7$2b splendor and speed of f., 772b standing with reluctant f., 6s ib stretches out f. and dies, io75a teach f. a measure, 774b to the lame, isb tremble under her f., 652b trod under by hurrying f., 88gb

not figures on
of

dial,

men

in solitude, 794b

opinion determined by f., 7osb overflow of powerful f., 51 ib permanently in race, 7i2a some f. to mortals given, 52oa trampling on f., io4ia Feels, heroism f. never reasons,

f. by wayside, 42b sergeant death, s66b shake my f. purpose, s8sa some f. into good ground, 42b that f. with Lucifer, spirits

seeds

213*
the wall f. there he

f.

down flat, na down dead,

na

6o7a imagine how it f., goaa with great sensibility, 43oa ne'er f. retiring ebb, 27sa never f. wanton stings, ayoa Fees, contrive our f. to pilfer, gia flowing f., 34oa Feet, able to draw with their f.,
it

unstable, 952

wash f. in soda water, ioo2b what flowers at my f., 582b


f. shine along sea, 773b with goat f. dance antic hay, 212b with twain he covered his f.,

wind's

they always f ., ggsa thy shadow Cynara, 88gb thy tempests f. all night, 323b Time's f hand, sgab to earth knew not where, 6psa upon his brother Benjamin's neck, 7b upon knees blessed God, $i8b3 l 9a when stars shot and f., gaga
.

7ob and did those f ., 49ob and his f. not be burned, 2$b
are always in water, 49 ib at her f. he bowed, i la at the f. of Gamaliel, sob

beneath her petticoat, 35ob cadence of consenting f., io2gb cat would not wet f., i84a chase hours with flying f., 5$6a dang of hurrying f., 674a die on f. not live on knees,
943*. 973*

3ob with your shoes on your f., 8b Feetur, haint one agreeable f., 693* Feign thing or fynde wordes new, i67a Feigned an angry look, 3833 by f. deaths to die, 305^ hopeless fancy f., 648b
necessities, 32 8a

Felled,
Feller,

hand

that signed
f.

f.

city,

loyoa

do unto other
city
f.,

fust, 811 a

met a

noja
845a
Bill,

sweetest
Fellers call

little f.,

82 la Fellow, careless lying f ., 9535 covetous sordid f., 41 sa

me

damned

in fair wife. 272a

Feigning lady by
Felicior, sed tu Felicities, dose
f. f

Bazille,

107 8b

nosa drde of

f.,

47aa

die washup, goga dreams under your f., 88ob dust of your f., 42 a earth my f. know, gSGb at his f. as dead, 57b fell fog comes on cat f., 948a four white f. go without him,
f.

over

to

man's f., ioi7b poet with so many


of
all

dies an honest f., gi2b do unto other f. fust, 8na dockyard f., 74gb every sword against his f., isa fault came to match, *5oa
feeling, jioa folly has not
f.,

f.,

5o8b

Felicitous

phenomenon, 9973

852b
f.,

Felidtously, whatever is f. expressed, 50 ib Felidty, absent thee from f., 266b and flower of wickedness, 6673

good hay hath no


hail
f.

agoa

well met, 391 a


f.

has

this

no

feeling,

265b

noib
get up on f. and fly, io75a grown-up people's f., 823a heaven under our f., 68gb heavy but on I go, 844b

human

green

f.,

58oa

have such a f. whipped, 26*b he was a good f., i66b


hook-nosed
I shot his
f.,

f.,

4gb

f.

of

Rome, 242b

or doom, 7393
perfect bliss and sole f., 2i2a possession without obligation,

23 ib

laughing

f.

rover, 947a

Hun

at throat or

f.,

9243
f.,

if it is well with your in ancient time, 4gob

i23b

keep thou my f., 597b lamp by which f. guided, 4653 lamp unto my f., 22a leave but not hearts, 63$b like unto fine brass, 57 b liked getting f wet, 887b little snow-white f., &7ga making a tinkling with their f., *ob million marching f., io6gb more be laid at your f., 77 5b more instant than F., 8s6b move with leaden f ., 77 ib
.

we make or find, 428a what more f. to creature, 201 a Felix culpa, sga qui potuit cognoscere causas, ii7a Fell, all of us f. down, 255b
among
thieves,

love my f. creatures, 768a loves his f. men, 55 ib make f. creatures happy, 46yb met a city f., noga my f. man my brother, 7o6b no f. in firmament, 254-b of infinite jest, 26sb robustious periwig-pated f ., *6ab
savage-creating f., gaa sweetest little f., 845a

46b

at his feet as dead, 57b at one f. swoop, 285b bolt of Cupid f., 22gb by that sin f. the angels, 2gga

touchy

testy

pleasant

f.,

3943

dutch of circumstance, 8i6a epitaph of those who f., g24a fiend f. from heaven, i52a
from morn
heart
f.

travelers of revolution, want of it the f., 4ogb with best king, i66b

957b

Fellowman,

assist

reduced

f.,

issb

to

noon he
255b

f.,

34ja

my f are cold, io3b nearer than hands f ., 6545 neither ground for f., 7O2b
.

Great Caesar

f.,

dead, losoa

nimble f. dance on air, 841 a of clay, 35a of day and of night, 7yab of him that bringeth good tiold shoes easiest for f., aoyb over whose acres blessed f.,
dings, 33a

help me when I f ., 546a house f. not, 4ib I f. as a dead body, if angels f,, 4o8a

Fellow's got to swing, 84ob wise enough to play fool, 252b Fellows call me Bill, 82 la club assembly of good f., 4*7 good f. get together, 868b it hurts to think, 853b

i6oa

lewd

f.,

5oa
f.

man knows
23ia

in himself, goSa
f.,

in fire burned to ashes, gsob in the great victory, 5323 it f. it burst it shook land, g67b lash magic creature till it f.,
7388like a stick, like autumn fruit,

Nature hath framed strange


of infinite tongue, 245a some are fine f., 7goa

giga patter of little f., 6ssb pleasures lie about f., 5iib
f.,

237b palms before

such
Fellows',

f.

as

I
f.

my

4^b

other

crawling, *62a brindled hair,

367b

823b
Fellowship divine, s8ob dues of f., 6i8b

pretty

f.

like snails,

love thee Doctor F., 386b men f. out knew not why, 35 ib

1325

Fellowship
Fellowship, neither honesty nor

INDEX
Fermi, work by F, and Srilard,
Fern, grasshoppers under f., 454* in f., io46b pastures deep sparkle out among f., 6s2a Ferns, sucking green from f.,

Few, honored by the

f.,

6g4a
3713

2383 good right hands of f., 5$b such a f. of good knights, i75b
f.,

95ob

how
if

f.

know own good,


f.,

with essence, 5800 Fellow-valet, valet will appreciate


f
,

99b
f.

lO22b
loose,

73ga immortal names, 5655 in hands not of f. but many, 8gb in science the f. dictate, 60 ib
join
f. if

bees are

Felon, lets greater

7gia

Ferocity, courage without

f.,

554b

any, g28a
to
f.,

ib Felony to buy stove polish, 89 to drink small beer, 2153


Felt, darkness which may be him like thunder's roll,
f.,

malicious

f.,

g52b

know how

Fertile hypothesis, 10713

laborers are

8a

?iia
3463

how awful goodness


I

is,

like

watcher of
never
f.

skies,

57gb

in the blood, 5093


jests that

wound, ssjb

through 3 6*b touch scarcely f. or seen, 4142 world go by, 7$4b Felt-life in work of art, 7gga Female, child of Eve a f., 22 ib elegance of f. friendship, 4283 God gave man f. companion, 9096 has no sense of justice, 5643
her f. errors fall, 4043 knee not entertainment, 9i5a male and f. created he, 53 no hundred percent f., loua of sex it seems, 34gb of the species, 8??a shapes are complicators, 75ib
if

really f., io44b like planets fallen on me, 985 a ne'er saw I never f., 5iaa never deeply f. nor willed, 7isa never f. witchery of sky, 5ogb all this fleshly dress,

knowing what

power, g78b ground, 523b soil of vanity, g3ob soul infinitely f., 8673 to be so f., io52a unexpected f. phenomena, 674b Fertilize Jordan plain, g45* Fervent, effectual f. prayer, 56b

metaphor
miles of

f.

f.

'be old, 356b 42a 283 let thy words be f., many exploited by f., 10273 men of f. words best, 244a much in f. words, s8b my wants are f., 634a part where many meet, 5383 privileged f., g7ia small country with f. people,

Fervet opus, n7b Fervor with measure, 7963 Fester, lilies th3t f., 2933
Festins lente, i24b Festively she puts forth, 5i5b

753
so much owed to so sold the many on the some f. books to be
f.,

92 ib

f.,

io3ib chewed,

2ogb
that the the
f.

Fetch one if goes astray, 7403 pail of water, iog4* poor dog a bone, 10963 the Age of Gold, 3341 Fetched, wide compass round f., 6673 Fetching it with full hands, 7003
Fetter
in

f.

f.

the world, 21 la the many, 484b despoilers of the many,


is

all

and

sh3ckles

of

historian,
race,

to

3323
Fettered,

poetry

f.

fetters

the notes are f., 486b there be that find, 41 b thousand battered books, g88b to f. men comes excellence, 772 very f. to love siob none or f., yellow leaves or

4gia to her eye, 358b


Fetters, leaving the f. to me, no f. in Bay State, 625b poetry fettered f. race,
servile
f.

733b
49 ia

Fewest, having f. wants, 8yb vast smile, Fezziwig, Mrs. F. one


F.F.V.'s, counting F., 10423 Fiat iustitia pereat mundus,
justitia

subtle

and profound

t,

73b

reason Milton wrote in t, 4870


Fettle

i86a

warriors, 41 7b

Females most dangerous when they appear to retreat, 946b Femina, varium et mutabile f.,

what f. heart gold woman, 75ob

b despise, 439

breaks, io8gb for great gray drayhorse,

et

ruant

coeli,

33ob
f.,

lux, 53
Fi3ts, old

precedents and

new

Feudalism, contradiction between f. and masses, io27b


Feuds, forget all f., 5g6b rent with civil f., 547 Fever called living, 644*

10133
Fib, destroy f. or sophistry, 4iob Fiber, show food in minutest f.,

n8b
Feminine, eternal f. draws us on. 478b gender of vessels, 954* Italian for converse with f. sex.
research into f. soul, 8353 sea not f., gssb

52 gb
Fibers,

m3de
I'll

of multitude of

f.,

famine and
is

-war,

8i7b
Fibs, Fickle
tell

Nature's instrument, 364b


terrible

you no

f.,

45 ob

life's fitful f.,

most

284b enemy, 8i7b

3nd restless as fawn, 588b and wavering told, 7543

gender, 4763 soul a queen, 867a Femme, cherchez la f., 598b Femmes, 1'enfer des f., 359* Fen of stagnant waters, 5i2b Fence, don't take f. down, 91 ga only f. against the world, 3733 reason why f. put up, 919* seas for f. impregnable, 2i6a
f.

she's of

of chills and f. died, ioogb of life over, 5g8a of temptation, ioi8a of the bone, ioo2a passion a f. in mind, 3813
f. trees, 8763 f. fret, 582b f., bent wintry by io;oa youth Feverish preoccupation with riches, g62a selfish little clod, 836b Fevers, this f. me, 10543 Fever-trees, set about with f.,

msn

f.

whatever

subject, i8gb freckled, is f.

8033

woman

set

sbout with

weariness

Fickleness of women 266b Fico, a f. for the phrase, Fiction, by fairy f. dressed, 4423 final belief in f., 956a

always a

f.

thing, ii8b I love, 8soa

I'm selling short, io75b lags after truth, 452b

taught

Tom
Fences,

dazzling f., 337b board f., 759 a thirty yards of surveyed the f., 7592

her

a poetry supreme f., 955 * a tongue to deal in f., 40 than f., truth stranger

5023

Fenced in piece of land, 435b

Few admired by own


igob

8763

domestics,

writers of popular f., 8ssb Fictions only and false hair, 3233 supreme f. of life, g57a Fiddle, cat and de-dee, 674a
f.,

iog4
this
f.,

come

to look after

f.,

722b good f. good neighbors, 9263 mend f., 722b


f., 10473 there by starlit f., 8535 Fenlands, in Liverpool Street f., 95 ib

are chosen, 43*) business in hands of 3

f.,

but

how

splendid
f.

stars,

7573 g8oa

important beyond
master's lost
f.

ggea

stick,

iog2a

social

companions ness, 773


lie

in serious busi-

condemn men
could

because

f.,

843

know when Lucy


f.,

ceased,

Fens,
Ferlie

mountains moors

Fere libenter homines,

ma

f.,

goga

5iob
err grossly as the far and f., 67 3a

Dooney, 88ob robes riche or f., i66b we know is diddle, 776b 6b Fiddle-de-dee, French for f., 74 Fiddler, in came a f., 67ob
play on
f.

in

368b
voice,

st3tesman

and buffoon, and


f.,

3o8b

he spied wi' hise'e, io88a Ferment, space in which soul in


f,,

give

but
f.,

f.

thy

258b

5803

happy

245*

Fiddlers three, iog2b Fiddles, change seats notes viola f. bass,

""*

1326

INDEX
Fide, Punica
.,

Fight
Fifteen wild Decembers, Fifth column, gg5b

n6a
with

Fields of air, 45gb

f. deepening Fidelity, friends, 36*3 f . of man, 642!) gossamer

think of
Fidget,

f.

not husbands, 9675

no

f.

and no reformer,

86oa Fidus Achates,

of corn where Troy was, i8b of immortality, 571 a once tall with wheat, io46b out in f. with God, noib out of olde f. newe corn, 1643 plows in the f., 9853

no place for f. wheel, of November, 10873


dose drama, 4003 smote him under the f.
shall

1573

uga

Fie fie upon her, 26ga fob and fum, 2792 my lord fie, *86a

upon
Field,
as

this quiet life, 2 39 a

by flood and 272b a flower of the f., 2ia betokened tempest to f., 22oa
accidents
field,

encompass me, $gzb potters' f. of continents,. 6973 unshorn f boundless, 5740 valleys groves hills f., 2123 walk through f. in gloves, 99 ib Fiend behind the fiend, 1068 a
poetic
.

f.

consider

lilies

of

f.,

41 a

f., 4jia crop of corn a f. of tares, 204b dedicate portion of f., 63ga

cow a good animal in

from heaven, 15*3 foul F. Apollyon, sfab frightful f., 5 25b like a f . in a cloud, 4863, 48gb long spoon eat with f., i68bfell

dignity in tilling

f.,

Esau was a
f.,

man of the f., 7a goodliness as the flower of the


3*t>
f.

8383

i6ga lubber f., 3353 marble-hearted

f.,

2775

Goya
green

of the bare or tree, g6jb


f.

f.,

10833

hath eyen wode eres, i6ya heaping f. and highway, 6ggb f. artillery, g5?a hill or f. or river, 648b his arms, 2053 in league with stones of f., i4b lay f. to f., gob little f. well tilled, 42 ib man for the f., 64ga not a f. but a cause, 4673 not wholly reap corners of f.,
hi-hi-yee for

happy

mossy cavern, 58jb

so spake the F., 3453 swung the f., 73ob Fiendishness of business competition, 991 a Fiends, juggling f., 2&7a that plague thee thus, 524b Fierce agonizing meek, go7a and accustomed to woods, i77b bowels of f. fire, 10753 change of f extremes, 3443
.

of human conflict, 92 ib of ripe corn, looib


potter's
f.,

9b

44b
f., 482 b importunate chink,

Prussia hurried to the

ring with 4543-b

roamed

from

f.

to

f.,

shepherds

abiding

in

f.,

4863 463 si8a

composition and f. quality, 2773 contending nations know, 3943 extremes by change more f., S44a far f. hour, gig3 four champions f. strive, 3443 fur soft to face, 10795 generous true and f., 9203 grew more f. and wild, 323b light beats on throne, 6533 lion not so f. as they paint him, 324b liveth not in f. desire, 5i8b look not so f. on me, 2i$b more f. and inexorable far,

rib, iab Symphony, Beethoven's F. sublime noise, 95ib Fifths, three f. genius, 6g2b Fifties, tranquilized F., 10763 Fifty, at f. chides delay, 3993 corpulent man of f., 5513 different sharps flats, 662b dread f. above more than f. below, g27b forty till f. stoic or satyr, 8316 here's to the widow of f., 48 ib million Frenchmen, 11033 north forty west, 8763 not care to live after f., 891 a only leaves me f. more, 852b score strong, 6623 springs little room, 852b wise at f., 324b years of Europe, 647b Fifty-four forty or fight, 6oob Fifty-fourth, Negroes of the F., 795b T> Regiment, 75 ib Fifty-three, we have sighted f., 654b Fig bear fruit then ripen, i38a call f. a f., io2b

Fifth

every man under his f. tree, 133 for care fig for woe, i82a for him who frets, 86ga land of vines and f, trees, loa

sewed

f.

leaves

together,

5b

225b

sickle in fruitful f., 488a six Richmonds in the f.,

no beast
2i6b
safer

so

f.

but knows
f.,

pity,

be in the f., $4ob strewn with dank drifts, 7153


so

truth

meek than

666b

thy beauty's

f.,

29 ib
f.,

viewed in her

fair face's
f.

2203
3423

what though

be

lost,

spirit f., 5703 though little she is f., 2303 wars and faithful loves, 2003 wretchedness th3t glory brings,

Fields above the sea, noib as long as f. green, 57 ib babbled of green f., 243b battle won on playing f., 5063 boundary of f., 4b carrying you into f. of light,

Fight against his brother, 31 b aloud very brave, 734b and conquer again, 4393 and not heed wounds, i8ob back from eyes tears, loioa b3ffled to f. better, 668b beyond your strength, 643 cannot f. future, 63 ib cleanly then, io34b don't want to f., 7273 Duke great f. did win, 5323 end crowns us not L, 3203 end of f . tombstone white, 72b extreme fear neither f. nor fly, 22oa fall out and chide and f., ggGb
within me for lost causes, ioo8a for one's country, 63b
fire

2gob
Fierceness, swalloweth the

fifty-four forty or

f.,

6oob
f.,

ground

and

ice

8533

with
Fiercer,
Fiercest,

f.

now

rage, lOb by despair, 3433 strongest and f. spirit,


f.

and

for

the religion of God,

1493

of battled f., 5203 burn, 7g6b earth's green f., 676b English f. upland dim, fanged with flints, io5ob

dream
dry
f.

7Mb
921 a

fight

in

f.

and

streets,

343a Fiery, bathe in f. floods, 27 ib far from f. noon, 5$4a furnace, 353 mind very f. particle, s6ib soul, 3683 Fiery-footed steeds, 2253 Fife, clamor of f. and drum, 728b
ear-piercing f., 2753 elephant practiced on f., 7473 fill the f., 455b Thane of F. had a wife, 286a

flowering of His f., 6543 flowerless f. of heaven, gone into the f., 57 $a

77sb

happy autumn f., 648b have eyes woods have ears, 1673 hunt in f. for health, 37 ib
in Flanders f., giab in those holy f., 237b little tyrant of his f., nature gave f. art built

fought a good f., 55b fought the better f., 346b gods f. against necessity, 68b gone to f. French, 5003 good f. of faith, 55b graceless zealots f., 4pgb growl and f., 3963 harder matter to f., 654b her till she sinks, 545b I give the f. up, 66 ib if all means permitted to f.
evil,

10113

wry-necked
Fifes,

.,

2$2b
f.

drums and
maiden

sweetly play,

8oga
Fifteen,

if life not real f ., 794a in fields and streets, 9213 in France and on seas, it

921 a

of

bashful

f.,

out on

this line,

7i7a

44ob
cities,

48ib

like devils, 2443

men on Dead Man's


822b minutes of
hell,

Chest,

love 38

2ogb

no

much 3S good f., 97ob man who runs may f. again,


ioab

f.

of amaranth, 5$6b

8o8b

1327

Fight
Fight, mental
f.,

INDEX
4gob
f.

Figure, his

f.

is

handsome, 78oa

Filth,

hunger

f.

and ignorance,
so
is
f.,

never

rise

no one
17 ib

again, loga conquers who doesn't f.,


to
f.,

to

human
8 9 8b

f.

interests

me
aysb

most,

ioi4b
identical Filths savor
Filthy,
let

and

95 ib

make me

a fixed

f.,

but themselves, 2793


f. air,

not not not not

enough

95gb

of a nut, 737b

fog and
f.

281 a

law nor duty bade f., 88 ib to strong the f., Szyb wear best trousers to f.,

not yet begun to f,, 4?6a nothing sure in sea f., 4Q2a on beaches fields streets, 921 a on merry men all, icSyb opinions not survive without f., 937* our country s battles, i looa painful warrior famoused for f.,
f

makes, gsgb quaint great f ., 95ga same for love, gagb Figures, other f. merely projections, 10073 pedantical, 22sb

poem

him be
55a

still,

s8b
as
f.

lucre,

righteousnesses

are

rags,

33b
so
f.

nobody touched, $97a


f.

tobacco

weed, 484a
64ga

universe in geometrical f., 2 nb Filament, one living f., 45gb


Filches

Fin, gold f. in porphyry, Final belief in fiction, gs6a

my good name, 74a File, black rank and f., 752 a marching in endless f., 6o$b years go by in single f., ggob
Files,

cause produces motion, 97 b f. dire dimension of thing,

io66b
face of love, io8oa form of love forgiveness, io24b growth evergreen, i057b harbor, 6g7b judged in light of f. issue, gga
resting place, Sgga

2gib
perish in the
rise
i.,

6ayb

and

f.

again,

beauteous f., 3633 foremost f of time, 647b on Parade, Syga


.

the good fight, 55b those I f. I do not hate, 88 ib through perilous f., 541 a till conquered what causes war,
last

Filial, lively sense

of f. duty, 470 piety is the root of man, 5513 reverence by quoter, 86oa

youth should be
Filipinos,

f.,

Czechs

7ia Greeks

Ruin fiercely drives, sggb word in reality, io82b


Finale of seem, 955a Financial panics, io6sb stranger in f. straits, 88b

or

F.,

ioo8a to keep to maintain freedom, 97$a too proud to f., 84ib Ulster will f., 8isb

2143. gasp, something alive,

Fill all penuries, goSb all the glasses there,

357b

at beginning of cask take your


f., 67b cup that clears, 6$oa high the bowl with Samian wine, 56ia his belly with east wind, 5a Ithaca full of moths, 28gb jug he had gone far to f., gooa me from crown to toe, 28 ib mouths with hollow phrase,

undivulged pretense I f., 2&4a wants us to f. fair, 98 la we f. not to enslave, 4o"7a we must f ., 465a when f. begins within, 665a when sure of winning, wherever I must, ioi6a wrong to f., 9020 youth f. and die, 951 a Fighter, am I no a bonny f., . and keen guest, 24ob dull that means to have been a f.,
478a
Fighters, free f. free lovers, 8gsb Fightin', first-class f. man, 8733 like sojers when not f., io8ob

Find at end of perfect day, 862b beautiful human soul, 475a but seldom use them, 6o6b by searching f. out God, 153 chance to f. yourself, 84gb directions out, 26ob faithful friends hard to f., 3093 fast bind fast f., i8ab

899*
stag drunk his
f.,

52oa
f.,

runnin' away and f., 89 ib show you're up to f., Sgsb Fighting, bellyful of f., 2gob faiths, 788a first-class f. man, 87 3 a for the crown, logab

4s6b whole blamed paper, 8i4b woods f. up with snow, g2?b world with fools, 7o6b Filled, because 'tis f. with fire, 488b body f. and vacant mind, 244b did eat and were f., 42b
with evil, 8oa house well f., 42 ib f. with dust, rosebuds f. with snow, gooa sails f. streamers waving, 34gb source that keeps it f., 7$ob the hungry, 46a they shall be f., 4oa thicket with honeyed song, gia waterpot is f. by waterdrops, 8oa with ends of worms, io25a with Holy Ghost, 496 Fillet, solemn f., 6o4a
fool
is f.

the fife, 455b void world never

we make or f., felicity few there be that f., 4ib go and f. it, 876a happiness she does not f., happy could he f. it, hard to f. one just suited, he f you sleeping, 45b he it found shall f., 884b he that loseth life shall 42a his mouth a rein, 774b in his own eye, io4ob in His ways f. Him not, like again, 5iga
.

428a

427b
32 5b

5j8a

f.

it,

6542

little

to perceive, 5i7b
f.
it,

little

love

God and

devil

f.,

7o8a

mouth

look for truth not f. way, io86b me the men who

4j6b

care,
f.

in forefront of the Greeks,


life's f. line, like soldiers

?ob

moral

if

you can
I

it,

gaoa

much sought
g5oa next morning
else,

could

74ia 744a not f.,

no
not

f.
f.

when not f., io8ob wave of future, io6ib

starry-eyed liberal, loiob races don't die out, 8iob

runnin' away and f., 89 ib show you're up to f., 6g$b speech mightier than f., ga still still destroying, 37 ib
T&ne'raire, 86sb that I recover, gg6b what are we f. for, ggga
Fights,

was someone 5oob f. but love me none out, ig8b our agony will f. Thee, io68a
it

ourselves

dishonorable graves,

Filleth, foul bird that

f.

own

nest,

i76a
Filling,
er,

world worth f. for, 10453 he that f. and runs away,


ioja
historical,

two buckets
228a
giving
f.

f.

one anoth85ib

Fillip,

to passage,

tea
,

f.,

766b 872b
of prophet better than
f., f.,

Fills,

grief f. child, 2$6b


.

room

of

absent

in

name
life

5430
s87a

he f he bounds, 4o8b shadows and windy places, 772b


white rustling
Filly,
sail,

of thistles, 65gb
Figurative, figure not f., s85b Figure, baby f. of giant mass,

55 la
foal,
f.,

likeness

of
f.

f.

Film, balanced

with

s68a but not figurative, 585b

thought beneath slight Filtered, opinion truth

f.,

f.,

22ga 73ga 734b 6sga

253b out be damned dear boys, 8743 out cause of this effect, 26ob out moonshine, agoa out of good f. evil, 342a out where enemy is, 7 17 a place where men pray, giga raise stone and f. me, 827b right road, io56a safe bind safe f., i8ab search will f. it out, 32ob seek all day ere you f. them, 23ib seek and ye shall f., 41 a seeking shall f. Him, 664b so much of goodness, 78gb so much of sin, 7&gb

1328

INDEX
Find, sure to
f.

Fire
Fire,

use for

it,

Finger, feel her


feel

5**a
sure your you out, loa tale in everything, s6o8b
f.

sin will

talk and f. fault, 1943 the mind's construction, 28 ib thee sitting careless, 5843 there is enough, g46a thy body by wall, 7153 to f. man to benefit kingdom,

f. light, 7i4a thy f. and find thee, 8oab God's f. touched, 6sob goodness in little f., ggob his slow and moving f., a75b in every pie, ig4b let our f. ache, ig5b moving f. writes 6gob moving only little f., 7g2b my ring encompasseth thy f.,

books not killed by

f.,

2i6b

books you may carry to f., 4293 bound upon wheel of ., 2803 bowels of fierce f ., 10753 burn caldron bubble, 2853 burnt child f. dreadeth, i84b burnt f. of thine eyes, 4893 bush burned with f., 83 can a man take f in his bosom,
.

99 to strive seek f ., 6473 touch and do not f. it, 743 trout in milk, 68sa turn to pleasure all they f., 4i8b two better hemispheres, $o4b vain my weary search to f.,

babe, 2853 f., 2633 points to heaven, 5i6b struck f. on the place, 711 a that turns the dial gS^a this is the f of God, 8a thou'lt cut thy f. niggard, 1043 Fingering slave, 51 la
birth-strangled
f.

of

23

pipe for fortune's


silent

Carib f., 10433 chains and penal f., 34ib chariot of f., 4gob clear f. clean hearth, 5353

consumed by
10073

either

f.

or

f.,

448a
virtue

Fingers,

five

possession

would

sovereign
lick

f.,

not

io7oa
f.,

ill

show, 246b

cook 225b
as

cannot

own

desth of W3ter and f., ioo6b dives on you in f., 10753 don't f. unless fired upon, 4553
until you see whites of 446b doubt thou stars are f., 26ob drunk with f., 4973 dying in the grate, 7303 element of f. put out, 307b every time she shouted F., go2b
f.

don't

we

profit

by

losing

prayers,

just

287b

made
on

my

f.

on

eyes

keys,

g55b

what gives life value, 10563 what we are seeking, lozgb


where last rose lingers, where seek is f., 444a you shall f. me grave man, 2253 yourselves f blessing, 68fb Findeth end in garden, 40 he that f his life, 423 Finding smoother pebble, gygb withhold f. or conjecture, 478b
.
.

mb

Finds, alters

when

it

alteration

f.,

paddling palms and pinching f., 2g5a trailing f. wet, 7i2a twirled f. madly, 673b wandered idly, 7250 weary and worn, sg2b will forget green thumbs, io7oa with forced f. rude, 338a Fingers', smile upon f. ends, 243b two f. breadth of damnation,
69 a
Fingertips, through hair

before forks ggob make music, g55b keys

excluding the f. if I can, igob falsely shouting f. in theater 7883 faster and not give up ship,
fat
fell
fills
is

in the f., i82b in f burned to ashes, g$ob


.

2943 he can bear anything, lo^gb mark archer little meant, gsob

and

f.,

looia
Finis

pang

as great,

2713

bonus totum bonum, iS^b

sixpence in her shoe, $i5b tongues in trees, 247b too late men betray, 448b

coronat opus, i5ob


Finish, give tools f. job, g22a nice guys f. last, io5ga strive on to f., 64ob whether sufficient to f., 473

young keeps young, 3513 Fine camlet cloak, 3753 eye in f. frenzy rolling,
first
f.

careless
f.

grave's
issues,

rapture, private place,

ggob 6633 3603

which
Finished
it is f .,

is

almost

art,

844a
she,

by such a
4gb

2363

27oa Italian hand, 1057 a on white horse, logsa lady make face of heaven so f., 2253 makes the action f., 3243 music highest of f. arts, 7o6a not only f. feathers make f. birds, 76a passage particularly f., 43 ib poetry less subtle and f., 4oa puss-gentleman, 457a put too f. a point, ig7b that f. madness, 2iib thing needs laboring, 88 1 a
too f . point

my course, 55b New England a f. place, 10383 our hand f. it, i2gb
when
feast

with f. 6osb f. out, 8s7b even to f., igob right fretted with golden f. 2613 glow from that f., 10733 shines like f., 7ga gold grass like green f., losgb great ball of f., ioo8b heap coals of f., 263 hearts touched with f., 786b heretic that makes the f., 2953 hide f. but w'at do wid smoke, 8i 4 a hold f. in his hand, 2263 house on f. children burn, 10933
f

blue

urn

fling fagot not let

follow

Finisher,
faith,

f., 8goa author and

f.

of our

563 ourselves author and f., 6353 cannot Finite, bury infinite under
f.,

5?6a

his pistol misses f., 45ib in asshen olde is f. yreke, i67b in each eye, 4103 in mind ever burning, ig8b in the f. of spring, 6293 into eternal darkness 1. and ice,
if

hearts that yearn, 6643 minds are f., 86ib things reveal infinitude, io65b

i59b
is test

of gold, i^ob

on

it,

6723

wind blowing new direction,


9 85 b eat crazy salad, 88sb words butter no parsnips, 521 a Finely, spirits not f. touched, 2703 Finemque tenere, 7i6a Finer than staple of his argument, 2223 Finery, dressed out in all her f., 45ob Fine's, still the f. the crown, 2703 Finest hour, 92 ib spectacles in nature, 422b thing in London bobby, gogb woman in nature, ggsb Finger, ambitious f., 2Q7b

women

Finitude overcome, 8673 Finn again, g6ga Finned cars nose forward, 10773 Finnigin, gone agin F., 8g7b Fir, in f. tar is, iog7a sandbank under big f., 88yb trees dark and high, 5923 Fire and brimstone, 75gb and ice within me fight, 8533 and rose are one, 10073 and water, 2673 answers f ., 2443 appeared a chariot of f., ijb as kingfishers catch f., 8ojb basks at the f., 3353 because 'tis filled with f., 488b beside the f. bending, i87b
best of servants, 577b

f., 10073 f. befriend thee, 32ob lips touch sacred f., go6b liquid f., 501 a little f, quickly trodden out,2i6a Lord W3S not in the f., i$b maketh ministers flame of f.,

knot of

like sparks of

55*>

melt in her own f., 2643 Milton Proteus of f., 52gb most tolerable third party, 6823 motion of hidden f., 5183 Mrs. Bennet stirring f., 5333 muse of f ., 242b

my heart consumed in f., 1533 Negro past of f., 10813 neither wrath of love nor f.,
1293

blood and

f.,

8373

next time,

loia

1329

Fire
Fire,

INDEX
Fire-breathing
107 6a

no f. without smoke, i85a not . nor stars, $4b not fantasy's hot f., i8b not long life by f ., 86oa not resolution to f. it, 4$oa now stir the f., 4583 of life, 5j6b
of

Catholic

C.O.,

First, after

f.

death no other,
f.,

10703
after last returns

my

loins,

io46a

of soul kindled, 66gb of the heart, gg8b

Fired another Troy, 37 ib don't fire unless f. upon, 4553 Ephesian dome, 3313 shot heard round world, 6033 that house reject him, 4iob Firefly wakens, 64ga Fire-folk sitting in the air, 8033 Firelit, think of f. homes, ggsb
Fire-red cherubin's face, i67a
Fire's,

6673
wall,

Amendment has
ggia

erected

among

of the mind, gg8b old and nodding by f., Sygb one f. burns out another's, 2233 out of frying pan into f., 1443 overcome heresy with f., 1793 pain like lost f., io66a pale his uneffectual f., s6oa pillar of f., 8b pull chestnuts out of f., jBob,
9*tf>

class citizens, 10253 as a wit if not f., 4513 best country is at home, 447b between acting and f. motion,

and and second

equals, 15 ib great commandment, ioi5b

Fires,

revealed by
sacred sea or
set
f.
f.,

f.,

523

run through

f, and water, 2673 of liberty, 46ib

2573

set set
set

around kitchen f., 8iga by f. and spin, 1094* f. to Thames, 442b house on f. to roast
f.

eggs,

2oga shadows which

throws, g4b

shall try man's work, 52a silent language of star,

lona
burns,

beside lonely f., 7263 smell f. whose gown


sit

3243

by your own f., ig$b howsoe'er defended, 622b with sorrow, 5733 f. sit by Firesides, protect health homes f., 82 la Firewood ironware, g4?b whites of Firing, no f. till you see king

wore f. center, io67b death f. danced, 5253 fuel to maintain his f., 3273 hollow f. burn to black, S$$b keep home f. burning, gi)a late when the f. out 8233 live their wonted f., 44ia no other can, io4ob roars and shakes his f., 48;b show remnant of their f., 377a that scorch, 626b thought-executing f., 2783 true genius kindles, 4iob veils her sacred f ., 4143 violent f. soon burn out, 226b wine inspires and f. us, 40 ib Fireside great opiate, 55 ib

254*

blow half

battle,

4sob

came the seen, g8ga cannot be f. in everything, 763


cast a stone, 48b chance to build

Great Society,

10643

comes

f.

eats

f.,

1573
f.

evening and morning were day, 53 families in Virginia, 10423 fine careless rapture, 6633 for which f. made, 666a
get there
f.,

7ogb
2ogb 4g8a

God

f.

golden

planted garden, time of f. love,

good die

no

f.

some

say world soul of f. 4273


r

end in

f.,

9273

eyes, 435a Firkin, meal in

f.,

6o5b
us,

spark o Nature's f., 4gja sparkle right Promethean f., 2223 speech a burning f., 7733 spirit all compact of f., 2igb stand by the f. and stink, 277b stood against my f. s8oa

Finn against the crowd, 64gb although he seems f. to


ioo2a

f., 5163 Great F. Cause, 45gb guarantee of F. Amendment, 99 lb him f. last midst, 3463 hundred days, 10733 I am for F. Amendment, ggib in hearts of countrymen, 4863 in the f . of moon, io65b in the very f. line, 4513 in war first in pesce, 4863 is deep love, 753 last everlasting day, sosb

and

stable earth, 3iga

last shall

Catullus

be

resolved

and

f.,

last

n4b
f. cloud, 4o6b from f. base, 5203 ground of result, gigb

loved at
in

choose a

be f., 43b was like the f., 102 sb f. sight, 2i2b man among these than second

sulphureous

f.,

sun mere

f.,

10853 io8oa

fly

Rome, 1123
said

man who men


f.

This

is

mine,

tend wounded under f., 8733 that in heart resides, ?iia that once was gold, g8sa thorough flood thorough f., 2293 those who favor f . g27a three removes as bad as f., 4223 through f. and through water, igb time the f. in which we burn,
io6ga

how

my

take hold, loob nerves never tremble, f.


f.

2853
priests stood f. on dry ground, office boy to attorney's f., 766a

subjects afterward, 68ob moment of atomic age, io6gb f. or last, 6785 it for pay

seed de

f.

en

last,

io3ga
whole,

lob

seems
of watery
shall

to

comprehend
43^

tongued with ioo6b


tree
is

f.

beyond

living,

tongues of f ., 4gb
true
f., ggb durable in as flames turning

cast into

main, 2g2b stands guard along Rhine, 6gga the f. are near to virtue, 723 too f a heart, 4o6a zealous beneficent f., 7i5b Firmament, brave overhanging f. 26ia Christ's blood streams in f,, 2i3b
soil
.
f

win

be

last,
f.

shoot
step
is

inquire

afterwards,

io26b
hardest, 41 8b

sweet sleep of night, 57oa that ever burst, 524b found famous country, that

1022b
the f. and the last, 58b there is no last or f., 66 ib thing let's kill lawyers, 2153 2iib things the f. poets had, thy f. love, 57b true gentleman, 3023
try

love

f.,

f.,

turns

uneasily two irons in the

from
f.,

f.,

ig8b 9553 io4ob

curses of the
fall

3733 to base earth from


f.,

f.,

2*73

$i6a

view what
virtue

f. war near, aiob more than water or f.

72b
water and
f.

rot,

ioo6b

no fellow in f., 254b now glowed the f., planets and the f. 307 showeth his handiwork, i7b spacious f. on high, ggga Firmer, tired ox treads with
step, i46a Finn-footed by

to

m3ke

it

f.

rate,

78?b

f.

what hand dare seize f., 4893 what of faith and f., 7843

sea
f.,

unchanging,

when ready

Gridley, 77 ib whether in sea or f., 2573

594*
Firmness, awed by

goa

pass through grass, 9693 practice to deceive, 5igb women and children f., ioggb writers are first, g8gb tested to old age, 7100

we we

youth

which seems extinguished, 33 ib while I was musing the f.


burned, i8b

in the right, 64ob Firm-set earth, 2833 Firs, pointed f. darkly


First,

zeus f. cause, 78b Firstborn, brought cloaked,


f.

forth

f.

son,

463
offspring

youth of England on
Firebell, like Firebrand to
f.

f.,

243b

in the night, 4733 smoke, i72a

8i6b absurd
io68b

is

the

truth,

smite

all

of he3ven the f ., 8b

f.,

344

First-class fightin'

man, 8733

1330

INDEX
First-class

Flame
I

laundry, 8g8a

Fishing, time
a-f. in,

is

stream

go
f.

First-frosted September, 9863 Firstfruits of them that slept, 533


Firstling of the infant year, 3273 First-rate, test of f. intelligence,

6833

Fishlike,

sncient

snd

smell,

2973 8853 Fishmonger, you are a


f.,

flash

10365
Fish,
all
f.

f.,

that cometh to net,

Fist,

feel
f.,

3rmy
5063

in

my

f.,

26ob 4973
$5ib

Fixed as an aim or butt, 2433 Everlasting had not f., 257b eyes f. above sullen shields, 9 9 2a fate free will, 3443 give name to every f. star, 221 a
great gulf f., 473 like a plant, 4093 make me a f. figure, S75b objects f. and dead, 5293 of old founded strong, 8532 sentinels almost receive, 2443 star in constitutional constellation
still

i84b

iron

and guests in three days, io$b army is like f., loayb


biggest f. got away, 8203 cars nose forward like f., 10773 cat would eat f., i84a catched f. and talked, 76ia disputants put me in mind of skuttle f., 3953 dominion over f. of the sea, 53 eat f. that fed of worm, *64b
fiddle de-dee, 674a flesh or fowl, 88ab in troubled waters, 386a in water lives the f ., 3J>4b
it's

instead of stick, Fisted canvas, 8433 Fit, be f. for work, 6g8b bed for this huge birth, content -with fortunes f., dish f. for gods, 254b for business entrusted
f.

with

35.^ 2783
with,

counsels f., 3683 for public authority, 823 for the kingdom of God, 46b for treasons stratagems, 2$5b instruments of ill, 4o4b
life never seems to f,, io4ob night for man or beast, gsib not f. that men be compared with gods, n 5a not f. that you sit here longer,

3 86b for crooked

thy soul the


Fizz,

102lb stood f. to hear, 3473 f. foot, 3063

f., 424b blood f. like wine, 9463 moral Flabbiness, f., 79 2b Flabby bold lobotomized, 10763 Flaccid, contemplate my f. shape,

wedding day

10323
Fl3g,

no f. ye're buying, 5*ob Jonah was in the belly of the


f.,

American f. floats, 45ib Barbara Frietchie never waved,


beneath starry f 7<D4b blood-red f ahead, 9583 braved a thousand years,
.

35
f.,

kettle of

767b
thee, 43

leap

up before

swam, 673b Martin Barton and F,, 972b nerves, io65a never lost little f., 82oa no more land say f., gggb nor flesh nor good red herring, i8sb not a table ., goib not with melancholy bait, 23ib one f. ball, 72ob out of water, 38oa
little f .

3283 only the

f survive, g32b public trusts in hands


.

of

f.,

companionship
death's pale
f.,

and
2250

country

to one neutral thing both sexes


f.,

3051
f.

embodiment
for,

of

history,

&4ib

which ordinary men

2773

why

then

I'll f.
f.

you, 2043

Fitful, life's

fever,

284b

floats free and guarded, 89 ib goes by, 8313 haul up the f., io6gb

poets like stinking f., 53 ib ruling like cooking small f ., 74b say they have stream, Q93b
sensible
this
f.

tracing of portal, 955^ Fitness, eternal f. of things, 424b Fits dull fighter, 24ob periodical f. of morality, 5953 shoe f. one pinches another,

in
is

government and

truths,

6 74 b
passing by, 866a

f.
f.

teaching a

swims down, 846b to swim, 15 ib


f.

think

by
thief,

f.

and
f.,

starts,

8543

'twas sad by

44$b

will bite, 2463

your
thou,

2723

thou

deboshed
f.

2973

we

are

and meat, 8893


f.,

Fitted, best f. to command, Gggb him to a T, i8ia

whale not table

90 ib
to
f.,

what

cat's

averse

43Qb
I
f.,

in thy lips, 2$b nothing he not

f.

to bear,

i42b

meteor f. of England, 537b not f. only but nation, 6?4b not f. or fail, 9213 not kiss your f.ing f., 10313 obey l3ws respect f., Bgtfo of m3n naturalized, 8*ib one f. land heart hand, 6333 passing by, 8663 ., 832b pledge allegiance to rally round f. boys, 7o4b
represents experiences, 841 b spare country's f,, 6s6b special f. or ship signal, 702b that makes you free, 7483 there I find f. of England,

when you

tadpole and

848b with f. questing snail, io66b with worm that eat king, 264b Fishbone in city's throat, io77a Fished by obstinate isles, 9883 Fisher, Kitty F. found it, 10973 Fisherman's, well for f. boy, 6483 Fishermen that walk upon the beach, 27gb Fishers of men, 3gb of son?, 8463 Fishes, five loaves and two f., 42b flyin' f. play, 87$b in other men's ditches, iog7b marvel how f. live in sea, agob men lived like f., zgob shall declare unto thee, 153 stone-deaf f., io64b talk like whales, 45 ib thousand men that f. gnaw, 2173 waiting for invasion so are f., 922a welcomes little f. in, 7433 ., Fishified, flesh how art thou 224b Fishing, east wind never blow when he goes 3-f., 325b gone 3-f., 3251* mountaineering antiquities, 8i8a

in arts, 22 ib Fitter being sane than mad, 666b love for me, 3053

well

f.

young men
Fittest,

f. to invent, 2093 survival of f., 627^6283,

7o6b, 7573 Fitting and proper

54b
we do
this,

there

is

national

f.,

6sgb

6393
for princess descended of kings,

things f. stands for, 841 b to April's breeze, 6033

2893
Fitzgerald, for this F. died, 8813 strung on English thread, 6g4b

Five

and country
much, 7b

senses,
f.

Benjamin's mess was


chose
full

10703 times as

was still there, 5413 Flagon, out of English f., 9193 Flagons, stay me with f., 293 Flagpole, old f. still stands, 9593 Flagrant cases of wrongdoing.
8483

him

f.

smooth
f.,

stones, i2a

cry of critic for

fathom

f.,

7543 2g6b

and f. things, 354b Flagrante delicto, 1506


fair

kings did king to death, 10703 reasons we should drink, 3823 sons who died gloriously, 6403 sovereign fingers, 10703 things observe with C3re, 8i2b were wise five foolish, 443 Five-cent, good f. cigsr, 8293 good f. nickel, 8293 Five-pound note, 6733 Fix eyes on gre3tness of Athens,

Flags, battle f. furled, 647b raise glorious f. again, 9203 stiff f. straining, gi8b Flagstones, a little farther only .,

903 in such f. be looking for 3ngry

fertile,
f.,

10523

io8ib

92ob ., Flail, rain with silver 9913 Flame, adding fuel to the flame, oa 35 as parallax a f., 7383 both moth' and f., io66a cord or axe or f., 6563 courses beneath my skin, 6gb draft fluttered f., 10183 dragonflies draw f., 8o3b

Flame
Flame,
feel
f.,

INDEX
spark
of
f .,

that

an-

Flashes,

occasional
m

f.

of

silence,

cient

n8b

5 23a

Flaws, heart break into Flax, smoking f. shall

f.,

2783

he not
f.

feel steady

candle

664b
spark,

of merriment,

,,

quench, 33a
Flayed,
Flea,

belted

fury slinging f., 6soa "' reat f. follows little i6ib

hard gemlike
idealism

f.,

78ia

Flashing eyes, 5243 Flat as pancakes, 31421 blasphemy, 2713 committed, burglary as ever
a

you and

you,

happy bounding in mine ear, 181 a


though he
kill

f.,

9993

fanned into f., 8333 of f., Jabberwock with eyes

246b
churches in
f.

naturalists observe f ., 3903

countries,

siob
602b

maketh

ministers

f.

of

fire,

he whose soul is f., io23a hev it plain and flat, how weary stale f ., 257b
I

miserable mortals

f.

with

life,

in

their map lie f., 3<>8a f. sea sunk, 33?a


face, io33b fair or f.,

Fleas good for dog, 8na let you alone, 10482 riseth with f., 324b smaller f. on him prey, that tease in Pyrenees,
Fled, across as if earth's foundations

none, 3o8b

sgoa 9023

my

f to qualify, 293b nor public f. nor private, 4143 in souls, 785b freedom of old f. my wife, io76b
.

on your
strike
f.

patn more
the wall

82?b

thick rotundity, 2783


fell

which has f., 703 margent of world f ., 8s6b that soul were f., 54ib
life
f.,

down

f.,

na

of ancient recognize signals

f.,

with broad

f.

nails,

g6b

from
ghost
I
is

this vile world,


f.

i6ib
sacred f., 526b shirt of f., ioo7a thin smoke without f., 7843 tongues of f. infolded, 10073 vital spark of heavenly f., 44a f., 103 ib water most

Flathouse, linger on f. roof, 10693 f., Flats, fifty different sharps

from grasp, u8b


the
f.,

854a 2926
856!)

Him down
waked she
f.

nights,

662b
Flatten, hide sure to f. 'em, goib Flatter, averse to f. or offend,

341^

that music, 5833


to beasts,

judgment

255b
f.,

encourage wise man that kindled f., 95*b of subtle f., 3163 full words Flame-colored, hot wench in f.
taffeta, 237b Flamed, scarlet lily
f.,

more we love less we f., 36ia Neptune for his trident, *8gb
not
t.

soul has f., 625b to boon southern

country

me

at all, 3283

visionary gleam, 5i*b

Flattered,

being

then

most

f.,

86oa
f.,

himself

on being without
8023

preju-

Flamens, here Flames, Aetna's

lies
f.,

two

326b

dices,

whence all but he f., 5743 with a Christian, a^^a Flee as a bird, i7a from me that did me seek, i86b

ioB&

into virtue,

6na

arrow falls in f., 7893 have spread over globe, 47 3 b in forehead of sky, 33ga in present light f., 9233 must waste away, 32?a
paly
f.,

rank breath, 556b upon understandings, 4i5b risk can Flatterer everything, 3913 of all tame a f., soab scoundrel hypocrite f., 49 ia
not
f.

its

2443.

rich f. and hired tears, 33ob rolled on, 574a turning as f. in fire, 9553 went by her like thin f., 731 a

Flatterers, self-love
tell

by

f.

besieged,

4na
355 a

from reality, 978b from those who f no glory, 643 from wrath to come, 3gb let sound of it f., 466b resist devil and he will f., 56b shadows f. away, sgb sorrow and sighing shall f.
.

f., greatest solitude hath no f., 557 a

of

away, 323
to f . vice
is

beginning of
I
f.

virtue,

whatever

f.

upon

Flaming

bounds time, 44ib

night, SSsb of place and

hurled headlong f. ruddy limbs f . hair, ... some old desire, io4ob sword which turned, 6a

254^ him Flattereth, meddle not with that f., 25b Flattering mighty gold, sosa now with f. tongue, 8833 some with f word, S4ob
f.,
.

him he

hates

1233 whither

shall
f.

from thy
pur-

presence, 2$a

wicked

when no man

unction, 2643
Flatters,

sueth, 26b Fleece white as snow, 56sb white but 'tis too cold,
Fleecy,

thou f. minister, 276a youth, 264a Flanders, armies swore in


in F. fields, gi2b received our yoke,

F.,

4383

33a
make
looia

Flattery art not submit to f., 5o6b oneself against

everyone that f., 3093 Fortune f. to betray, i25b f. us, io57a what to less wolf hates when it f., i47 a and falsehood, 109 ib

stooping through doud, 335b _ ._ Fleeing, such swift f .,


',

2oob a f.

Flees,

who
all

f.

will

fight
f.

again,

102b
Fleet,

in

Downs

moored,

guarding

f.,

401 a

Flank golden, io22b Flanks, silken f., 58sb


nor Flannel, neither eat it
.,

away with wings, 5593


dull in F. Street, 534b in my arms, 542a as seasons f., 2i4b joys abound so f., 77 ib light itself not

imitation sincerest f ., in return for favor, 5o6b


lost

545 a

on

poet's ear,
f.,

5i8b by
f. f

wear -white

f,

trousers,

love of

Flanneled fools at wicket, 875b ia Flap bug with gilded wings, 41 swallowed easier Flap-dragon, 222b than f.,
Flaps glad green leaves, 784b Flare, quick to f up, 6sb Flash, crawl f. or thunder
.

proud
sincere

395 b taken in

374*

f.,

46ob

mighty f. of Wren, giia O thou most f ., 772b


of life like tree leaves, gib of stars anchored, g8oa other passions f. to air, 2330 power of British f., gi&>
retiring

soothe ear of death, 44ob to name coward, 5o8b

woman
Flaubert,

Flattery's the
in,

gained by f., 4*6a food of fools, 3893


true Penelope was F.,

toward

Japanese

t.

10713
fishlike, 88sa mirth like f. of lightning,

9 88a

3Q4b

of color beneath sky, 866a of light cut across sky, io6gb remembrance, unforeseen of

Sqga

one

f.

of
f.,

it

within tavern, 6sob

quean, extravagant Flaunting 48ib Flaunts own outcast state, 10543 Flavor absorbed remains, 542b subtle f. of old socks, 8313 a . youf. everything, 5*3 Flaw, conceal f. world will imagine worst, 1353

9 68a say to the

f., 49* a such sweet things f., 775 a the time carelessly, 47 a though time be f., 744b

Fleetest,

fairest

things

f.

end,

Fleeth as a shadow, 153

956b sharp Flashed the living lightning, 404b Flashes, brightest f. of thought,

i2oa no kind of fault or "


f.,

man without a

time Fleeting, art long call the f . breath, 44ob


fable

f.,

0200
S2ob

f.,

7673

what

soul without f .,

song or ghost fled like

f.

shade,

f.

dream, ii8b

1332

INDEX
Fleeting,

Flood
Flight, troika
f.

how

the estate of

man, 1422 ornament life in f. way, 4g8b renown is f. and frail, nsb
12 ib years slip by, thousand Fleets, ten
f.

Fleshed fair erected, io68a maiden sword, 241 a


Fleshless,
icx>5a

to destruction,

7o8b
nor
f.,

neither
all

flesh
f.

Flights

and perchings, 7gsa


f.

four
this
dress,

Thursday, gioa

Fleshly,

36ab

sweep,

lusts,

56b

Flere, si vis me f., 45^a Flesh, a little f. little breath, alive and in the f. g all f. is as grass, 56b
all f . is grass,

557b

school of poetry, 786a Fleshpots, sat by the f., 8b Fleshy, turbulent f. sensual, 7003 Flew, arrows f. like hail, ggob bird to others f., gi8b

f. Sunday baths, of angels sing thee, 266b of enthusiasm, 462b

grand

9563

Flinders,

little

Polly

F.,

iog$b

sab
iga

down
o'er

and blood

so cheap, 5gsb
.,

me and my
happy

yelled at craft, 10512 deary, 4953

Fling away ambition, 2gga garment of repentance f., 6*ga open little doors, ioS$b stone giant dies, 4i8b us handful of stars, g8gb

brought him bread and f., 1843 collop cut of own


contact
possible
to
f.,

screaming over gulf, 6g7b white foam f., 524b


Flexibility,

Flinging pot of paint at public,

754a
f.,

looga

gracious

of every living thing fair and unpolluted fastened me f., 8osb fish f or fowl, 882b
.

all f.,
f.,

6b

*66a

7i6b whalebone of
Flicker,

Flings, bubbling Flint, everlasting


Flints,
fields

venom
f.,

f.,

5553
291 a
f,,

224b
f.,

958b
of greatness
f.,

weariness snore

upon
thee

moment
in

fanged

with
f.

looia
Flickered,

fish

nor

f.

nor good red herof

past our light

f.,

Flippant,

behold

vain,

from

ring, i8gb deceits

$2sa
the
f.,

579 a
Flirt,
f.,

fob

gross f. sinks downward, hair of my f. stood up, 140 how art thou fishified, 224b howl for f. of man, io8jb

28b

dove with f. tongue, ioo6b with f. lamp, g22a history Flies, ain't no f. on me, 821 a as f. to wanton boys, 2?ga
Flickering,

money won't surrender to


8g2b
significant

Flirtation,

word

.,

4i6a
Flit,

across narrow beach

we

f.,

in in

g55b God, i$> increases but not wisdom, Sob is sad alas, vgya is weak, 44b laughing f. of girls, loygb
f.

beauty
f.

immortal,
I

bees

for

f.

hornets

for bees,

75 8b

my

shall

see

179* bird f. out, io66b


care f. when I pursue, i88b dose mouth catches no f., igsa flies on plane tree, io75b follow shadow it f. you, josa

on wings of borrowed wit, 3i8b by on leathern wing, 443b Flitter dip and soar, 1079 a Flitting, no eagerness for f., 588b Raven never f ., 643a
Flits

little

f. little breath, i4ib lusteth against Spirit, sgb make not provision for maketh f . his arm, 34a man of f. and blood,

Float,

how
web

sweetly did
f., io87a wide, 646a

they

.,

from
.,

particulars

to

axioms,

337*
iron in water

5ib

86gb marriage makes one f., 39 ib ioo2a and f. blood, merely more f than another man, 24oa much study is weariness of the
.

2O7a happiness too swiftly f., 43gb hope f. with swallow's wings,

Floated,

f.

2i7b
in night in howling storm, 4893 kisses joy as it f., 488b laws catch small f., 388b like bolt running, 108 la

f.,

sga
live,
f.

must

igb neither f. nor fleshless, 10053 of flesh bone of bone, 348a

my
of

668a longeth for

my
thee,

fancy

f.,

on summer

eves,

447b s82b

Floating bulwark of our island, 444b hair, 524a ice mast-high came f. by, 524b like vapor on air, 78a many bells down, 103 ib on the floor, 64ga over Harvard Square, 1042 a

preserved in amber, i3$a

rumor
see

f .,

n8b

spar to men that sink, io24a Floats above wrecks of time, 77ga

my
f.

flesh,

5b
7$6a
to
f.

where

it f.,

of thy flesh, ig$b

shoot folly as

it f.,

2igb 4o?b
bo-tree, ease,

on

siroccos crawl,

present joys blood, syob


rise

more
to

and

thought through

f.

to

10655
7

air

with

no bubble f. longer, 8i8b on high o'er vales, 5143 on river of thoughts, 62 ib though unseen among us, 568a
Flock, birds of a feather
er, 3
f.

io65a sensible affections of f., 33oa set today on f. of hare, io83b sinful desires of the f., 6ia
f.

from

spirit,

soul horrified by f., 74?b strong as f. and blood, swift red f., io43b take off my f., 523a that f. is heir to, 26ib

5isb

their f. shall ye not eat, gb these set our f. upright, 3073 they shall be one f ., 5b this f. of mine might be, 77 sb this too solid f ., 25

time's f., 2gob unto you at last she f., 3 verse find who sermon f., 3 who f. can fight anew, io2b wings of Time grief f., 35gb worms and flowers, 3g6b Flieth, arrow that f. by day, 2ob f., Flight, beetle wheels droning 44oa cannot control the f., 35ga fellow of selfsame f., 23ib flown his doistered f., 2845 from afar to view f., s87a his wild airy f ., 34gb
joys soonest take
f.,

nb
f.

togeth-

keeping

like a shepherd, feed his watch over their .,

J2b

shun the polluted


silent
f.

f.,

ggoa
their

in fold, 58 ib

Flocks,
f.,

bad herdsmen ruin


66b

thorn in

top

s8sa

f.,

53b

unmysterious f., i038a wants to make f. creep, 66ga watching for riches consumeth f., 38b way of all f., 3i4b we are one f., 348a we wrestle not against f.,
wilderness of

human
f .,

f.,

Word was made


world-wearied
Flesh-colored
dies,
f.,

48a

fruit

225 of

my

bran

775b

never-ending f. of days, 3 not attained by sudden f., 6 put old cares to f., 758a puts all pomp to f., 405^ puts stars to f., 62ga soul of youth taken f., g struggle and f., 7153 sun scattered into f,, 62ga swift be thy f., 572b through sky thy certain f ., 574^ time and world in f., 88oa time arrest f ., 5655 time in your f ., 742b

or herds or human face, 344** while shepherds watched ., 384a never Flogged, man never taught, ioaa she f. herself, 6s*a Flood, accidents by f. and field,
.

battening our f ., 338a casual f. of pigeons, gssa her f. are thoughts, 8i2a my father feeds f ., 445a

arched the
2oa
decay no enchafed

f ., 6033 earnest them away as with


f.,

a.

f.,

88oa

f.,

27sa

the ., 3713 giant race before half our sailors swallowed in .,

2i6b

Flood
Flood, in
sippi,

INDEX
time your Missis9425
.

land of mountain and f., 5193 Milton Proteus of f., 5agb

banners f. the sky, 28 la 'em and scout 'em, 2973 thing to f., 82?a Flouted policy of United Nations,
Flout,

Flower
say

safety,
it

2393

or

seize the f.,

shaken 4Q$b
f.

leaf,

9443

summer with
summer's
2gsa
f.

Mr. F. since you propose


gooa of mortal ills, 1790 of remembrance, 98 $b
roll full
f.

it,

9843 Flow, all gooa

to

bee, 5743 summer sweet,

and

pleasant

fruits

do

f.,

that smiles today, $2ob

to better days, g* ib
F.,

taken at the f., 2563 ten years before the

thorough

f.

thorough

fire,

35gb 2ga

torn naiad from f., 64 ib Flooding in the main, 688b Floods, bathe in fiery f., 27 ib he hath established it upon the f., i8a neither can f. drown it, 303
passions like f. and streams, igga rimless f., 104 3 a that are deepest, io86b
Floor, along gusty
f.,

ceaseless ebb and f., Saga ebb and f. by the moon, 28ob from discord f ., 3g4a from little fountains f., $o7a from my lips would f., 57ob from whom all blessings f.,

thou tree

f.,

767a
fuse
drives
f.,

through

green

io7oa torch of a f., g86a transmute to f. and leaf, 7653 victory bright- colored f., gigb

377b
gently sweet Aftpn, 4gsa how well soe'er it f., 41 ia
I

within did

f.,

its

one will

f.,

378a io4gb

of soul, 41 ib
I f. like thee, 357a seawards f., 7iob soft luxurious f., 597b streams f. with ambrosia, iSsa water will f, indifferently, loob

oh could
salt tides

wearing learning like f., 6513 weed f. in disguise, 6ioa white f. blameless life, 652!} winds creep from f. to f., 5683 without fragrance, &7ga you are like f., 588a Floweret, meanest f. of vale,
44ia Flowering in lonely word, of His fields, 654a
of republic of

654b

58sa

barroom f., 797b careless on granary f., 5&4a cleaned windows swept f., 766a common sense on ground f., 6 3 4b curled up on f., 77oa
echoes
fell

man, io4ga

with tears of gold, 487a words to say it f., 377a


Flower, as a f. of the field, 2ia battle is burning f ., ggsa

wantons through f . thorn, 4943 Flowerless fields of heaven, 772b Flowerlike, love is f ., 527b Flowers, all f. sprang up to see,
7 5 8a
all its all

bloom another
brief as

down creaking f., lossa upon sanded f., 55gb


f.,

forest's ferny f., gi4b front of this small

$54b

nicely sanded

f.,

45oa

of heaven, 909 a of heaven is inlaid, 2$5b

puncheon
76ia

f.

in

summertime,

reorganized upon f., looaa scratching at f ., 8sgb shadow on the f ., 64$a


starry f., 488b sunk beneath watery f., 3gga two jars on f. of Zeus, 6sa up though the f., 53ib wrought ghost upon f., 6425 Floors, dead footsteps on old f., 8ggb

year, s8oa f. falling, loiia can read us lectures, gSga canst not stir f ., 8s6b crimson-tipped f., 4gga culture in finest f., 86ib displayed doth fall, 2$za. enjoys air it breathes, 5o8b fadeth, sab fancy from f. bell, 6653 first f . of wilderness, 566a from every opening f., 3g6b full many a f., 44ob

twined f., 5843 f were mine, 642a alphabet of f., 307 a and fruits of love, 563a
the
.

and that

f.

gynnen

sprynge,

i65b appear on the earth, 2gb April showers May f., i88a
are lovely, 527b as in causes sleep, 327 a begotten, 773a blue in sweetest f., 58ob buds of barren f ., 77$a

glory in the f., s^a glory of man as f of grass, s6b goodliness as the f. of the field,
.

choke them amid


cover with leaves

f.,

1143
f.,

and
f .,

3153

32b

deck with fragrant


fairy fruits

6253

he cometh forth like a f., 153 he who gives passion f., g44b
heaven in wild f., 4goa in crannied wall, 6545 in the f. of their age, lib like petal of f ., 6s3a little f. if I understand, 654b
little

and f., 642a flies worms and f., 3965 foam of f., 773b
for

of silent seas, looia Mopsy Cottontail Flora and country green, Flores in the Azores, 654b Flotilla, where old f. lay,

thee

earth puts
f.

forth

f.,

Peter,

ii2b
fragrant
or poisonous,

10283

58*a

western

f.,

22gb
1763

Flourish,

873b Floundered enjoyed suffered, 8oa almond tree shall f., aga first onion f. there, 8243 may f. or may fade, 44ga
only for a moment, 67a nations are destroyed or f., 4gia
f.

London f. of cides all, look like innocent f., 28aa loved tree or f., 5433
lovelier
f.

fruits and many birds, 1723 fruits f. leaves branches, 8o8a fruits outdo what f. promised,

204a
glass f . at

Harvard, 9963
. grew, 7gob blossom, io27b

on

earth,
f.
f.,

5iob
free,

hollows

where
f.

men

lovely

little

is

5i7b

hundred
in

maiden in her

645a

poetry painting music f., 4gia righteous shall f ., sob set on youth, sgsb those which most admirably f.,

masterpiece appear as f., 754a meadow f. bloom unfold, 5i7b meanest f. that blows, 5i4a moon like a f., 48*] a. my love dropped like a f., ii4b

knew

garden meat in hall, i6sb stars f birds, goga


.

leaves and f. in sun, 881 a love I most f. white and rede, i6 5b


f. that fade, 801 a lulled in these f., 22gb made of earthly f., 627b

loved

93a
sleeps in dust, 32?b where you turn eyes, 4oab Flourished, bloody treason f.,

when he

my f. sae early, 4gsa of all his race, 5o8a of kings and knights destroyed, !75 b of knyghthod and of fredom f.,
nipped
i6gb of wickedness, 667a of wyfly pacience, i68b on the ground the purple

May

full of

f., f.,

no hothouse

2iob g7ga

Flourishes gold f .,
Flourishes, society tion f., giib

. g.ij6b

where modera-

Flourisheth and multiplieth fruit,

f.,

4b
as flower of the field, sia

6gb
or wearing-stone,

g7a

in the morning it f., 2oa Flourishing like a green bay tree, i8b of the arts, io27b

prized

f. perfumes bower, 52 ib beyond sculptured f., 574b prove a beauteous f., 224a

orange

nosegay of culled f., igib o'er f . venom flings, 555a of all hue, 3453 of friendship faded, of June together, 741 a of forest a' wide away, 446b of forest withered, 437a on chaliced f. that lies, 2gob painted in Paris with play with
tints,
f.

861 a in hair, 827b and smile, 24jb f.

INDEX
Flowers,

Foe
Fly

rare

long-stemmed

f.,

Fluttered, draft

f.

flame, ioi8a

985*
say it with f., gi2b scent of f. does not

pinnace like
that grow, 62ob

f . bird,

upon
i7a

the wings of the wind,

654b

reaps f .

go against

wind, 8oa

round the lamp, 747a your Volscians, 2goa Fluttering empty sleeves, g56a
ghost fled like sets my heart to
Flutterings, yellow
f.
f., f.,

breeze,

n8b

way I f. is hell, 345a when me they f., 6043 which way shall I f., 345 a
white
sails
f.

gg6a shut of evening L, 3470 slowly advancing, 9853 soonest awake to f., 5410 summer with f. that fell, 7733 sweetest f. in forest, sooa
that

shown

glass f .,

seaward,

ioo4a

6gb
57ga

Flux, all is f., 77a of the senses, 528a Fluxions, what are these
Fly, a
all

willingly as kill a f., 2iga wings to f. back again, gooa wishes soon as granted f., 5i8b
f.,

gogb

bloom in

spring,

7680

like thee, 48ga Aesop's f., 57 5 b


f.

through grass, i56a to strew Thy way, $zsib touch a hundred f., 10233 trees f. watercraft, 7030 vernal f., ssga what f. are at feet, 582b where'er you tread f. rise, 4o2b Winter's head with ., 354a wither at north wind, 5743 withered while I spent my days,

things

on earth
f.

as arrows f. to as the sparks

f., 632b one mark, 2433 upward, i4b

with arms outstretched would f., 26ga with twain he did f., 3ob your Mississippi hi f. time, 942b
Flyin' fishes play, B'j^b Flying, banner torn but f., 5573 care follows me f., i88b chariot through air, 45gb

away breath, 252a away home, logga away Jack, iog8b


beasts
f.

Dutchman, 8o6b
looa
f.,

to

wilderness,

bumblebee cannot

io62a

i5b
withering of withered f., ioo6b Flowery, at her f . work doth sing,

creep

336*
crops f food, 4o8a meads in May, gi8b
.

tale

more
.

sweetly, 5833
itself
f.

walk f way, 767a


Floweth,
377 b

f., 85ga io6ga encountering a f., 73&b extreme fear neither fight nor f., 22oa forgotten as a dream, 3973 from not hate mankind, 556b

swim or f., 377a do not want to be

busy curious thirsty f., but little way to f., 6293

4i8b

Sysb hoping lingering f ., 4043 'em f., 10373 keep pluck out f. feather, 774b seaward f., 10043
f. never to return, ii7b trapeze, 7803 white birds f. after, g47a wild echoes f., 648!* Flywheel, enormous f. of society, 72gb Foal, likeness of filly f., 22ga poor little f., 523b Foam bell no consequence, 7i3b born and die like f., 1563

fishes play,

time

down Death,

sea

in

veins,

Flowing cups pass swiftly round,


earth's
fees,

sweet

f.

breast,

9923

get up on feet and f., 10753 ghosts of defunct bodies f,, 352a gilded f. does lecher, 27gb great shuttles, 7&gb human race born to f. upward,
I f. or I can run, 3g7b I said the f., loggb in greatness of God, 7g6b joys as dreams f., 10853 land can't f. away, 6yga laughed at for exclaiming, 575b-

34oa

land f . with milk

and honey, 8a
652 a

i6ia can

copulate in f., 8853 cruel crawling f 6gob like f. on river, 5203


of flowers, 77sb opening on the f., 5833 poetry new as f., 6o4b too full for sound f., 6553 weeds and f ., 6osa

robes loosely f ., 3O2b

with birds, io66a Flown, black bat night

f.,

his cloistered flight, 284b riches f. to heaven, 4b

white

f.

with insolence and wine, g42b Flows along forever, 8233 as water f. downwards, looa
forever to

576a
let

methinks

unknown sea, 76gb how sweetly f., 321 a

425b like eagle wings of wren, 78ga little birds f ., 673b


f.,

me

Foaming
to

flew, 524b lips of inebriated virtue,

Thy bosom
f.,

little

birds that

3g8a
love,

thence f. all that charms, 5273 time staunchless f., 10323 Fluctuat nee mergitur, i5ob Fluctuations of passions, 46sb Fluent men of place and conse-

little f., love f.

48ga

make fur

away from
f .,

gooa

352b
for noise of a
f.,

my

words

f . up, 264a

neglect

God

quence, 8993 Fluidity of self-revelation,


solid for
f.,

8ooa

gsoa
f.

Flumina,

altissima

minimo
f.,

3o8b no longer wings to f., ioo3b on bat's back I do f., 2g7b rode upon a cherub and did f.,
i?a

776a out their own shame, 57 a Foams, my sad heart f. at stern, 82gb Focis pro aris atque f., n6a Fodder's in the shock, 8igb Foe, angry with my f., 48gb at another gate let in the f., 349b avowed erect manly f., 5o6b
call

no man

f.,

1021 a

sono, igga

Flung, doors are widely


roses roses riotously,

io64b

8goa ggsa Flunked, never f never lied, 778b Flush as May, 2643 Flushing his brow, 58 ib distraction music of f., Flute, loo^b soft complaining f., 3703 stem is the f., 10503 violin bassoon, 65 2b Flutes, broken f of Arcady, 8ggb" dance to f., 841 a Dorian mood of f., 342b music of f. of Greece, 77sb sound of lyres and f., 781 a tune of f. kept stroke, 287b
us on

windy

hill,
.

seem to f. it, 3033 shoo f., 7553 soon cut off and we f. away, 2ob spider to f., sgsa stars that sweep turn f., 87 ib stir her lawn canapie, ig3a that sips treacle, 4023 then f. betimes, 3273 this rock shall f., 52oa
those that
f.

comes with fearless eyes, 8653 fearest thou outward f., io84a foils f. by effusion of ink, 444b friend or f. spread lies, 7 gib

grim Death

f., 5033 my son and f., 3443 for f., ag8a not furnace heat idleness sorrow friend f., io2ga

friend to her

last

armed

f.

make one worthy man


meet insulting met dearest
258a never made a
f ., 48 2 b
f.

expires,

565b
f.,

411 a

in

heaven,

may

fight again,

f .,

653b

1033 thrain lobsters to f., 8gia Timothy learned sin to

of favoritism, 843a officious fool worse


f.,

than

f.,

505*>

io8ga
to her, 648b to one mark, 2433 to others we know not of,

Olympian a difficult f., our quarrel with f., gi2b


scratch lover find f., 10293 sheer into heart of f.,

62b

Flutter like the linnet, io83b Fluttered and failed for breath,

overcome but half his f., 342b perhaps a jealous f., 5713
358b 744a
prove our

262a
to

war and arms

f.,
f.,

7i2b

up above world you

someday

to

f.,

81 a

Foe
Foe, sternest knight to t, lySa

INDEX
Folk, facts put before ordinary
f-.

Following the master


the roe, 4g4b

artist,

loooa

support friend oppose f., 10730 the f. they come, 5563 thou that seemest f., 1790 timorous f., 411 a
tyrants
fall

yonge fresshe f., i65b Folks go to church when got to,


76ia never understand
f.

979

Follows but for form, 277b


care
f.

me

flying,

i88b

in
f.

every

f.,

4g6a

they hate,

unrelenting

to love, 42oa

6g3b
right to censuah, 91 ib swift journeyings, 1049 a queerest f. of all, 8595

without hate, 7470 wolf that's f. to

men,

Foeman
7660

bares

steel

31 sa tarantara,

no on

in his works, gg7b in His train, 54gb a little f. desirable, Folly, according to his f., 844a

God

19 ia

Foeman's, beneath

f.

frown, 6563

Foemen worthy
Foes,

ah

my
down

.,

ioa

of steel, saoa
f.,

against other f., 424b there's where old f. stay, 727b unhappy f. on shore now, 5i7b
rail

alone stays fugue of Youth, i76b answer a fool according to his f., 26a brave man's f. life's wisdom,
L

beat

baffling

71 ib

Folks', Follies

lazy

f.

stummucks,
of

8143

and misfortunes

man-

judge man by f., 8433 king to slay f., 7sjb learning's barbarous f ., 4*6b

fools or f., 41 aa his courage f. proclaim, inveterate f. saluted, g6gb

kind, 465b

call it

$68b

and wickedness, io5ga


cease with youth, 425b hold earth from heaven, 7gob

cannot

of F., 335b madness f., 5oob remedy f. of people,

Catullus

man
not our

that
f.,

makes
3Q8b

character

makes

perished by their own f., 653 that themselves commit, 2333 vices and f. of humankind,

of town crept slowly, 4500

you should

cease
sin,

f.,

ii4b
centuries of

noise

663b

know friends from f., 681 a f. press on, i58b so far only hate our f., 8ia thrice he routed f., 37 ib what their f. liked was done,
io6ob

SQib woes because of their own


65 a

every f. but vanity, 4363 fool returneth to his f., 26a forts of f., 7153

f.,

from

f.

to defeat,

10803

will provide with arms, n8a Foetus, irresponsible f., looib

Fog and
feel

filtny air, *8ia


feet,
f .,

betwixt us and sun, 8355

comes on cat
f.

g48a

in throat, 666b

gleams through

4j8b
parts,

London London
patience

f.

thirty

particular

f.,

8642 672a
f.,

Follow a shadow, 3033 admire virtue f. not her lore, 348b after peace, sib and will not see its back, 74a as night the day, 2593 beat to f. faster, s87b copied all they could f., 874a deception of thrush, 10053 do not f. in footsteps, $8ob drops sliding from oar, io65a even if disobedient I shall f.,
i03b goodness and mercy shall f me, i8a
.

f. stays, 6o3b worth pay, 886a good has not fellow, 85 2b Heaven itself we seek in our

genius goes
f.

f.,

i2ob
in all of every age, 3773 joys to this 3re 1, sioa
lovely

woman

stoops to

f.,

448b,
f.,

everywhere

like

1002b nights wherein you spend 3i3b noise of f., 335b not presumptuous f., 76gb of being comforted, 88ob
one's

wisdom another's
f.

f.,

woodthrush singing through


10043
Fogs, his

f.,

grasp subject words will

f.,

Foh a
fie
f.

rising f. prevail, fico for the phrase,

3693

him
I
if
f.

that sets thee right,

1073 i42b

profit

by rememberest

of others, issa

not

slightest

f.,

s66b
f.,

and fum, syga Foibles, half our misery from


Foiled, after thousand victories

but myself, 272a thou f. thy star, i6ob

king, 6533

reveals to man own f., 10393 rid of f. beginning of wisdom,


f.,

f.,

*9ib
Foils foe

knowledge like star, 646!) lamb will never cease to 2i6b


lead
let

1233 shakes rooted


shielding

f.

from

of age, 377b effects of f.,

by effusion of

ink,

of

others

444b
Fold, all driven into same f., is ib as I guard o'er the f., 4870 climb into the f., 33&b flock in wooly f., 58 ib hands and wait, 77ob
fast f. thy child, So^b sheep not of this L, 48b to f., 854a sheep star that bids shepherd f., 3s6b tents like Arabs, 622a walking round the f., 487a when sheep are in the f., 47gb wolf in f. sad thing, u6b Folded glory of wings, 10323

me

who loves country f., 62oa loves me let him f. me, i62b me fishers of men, 3gb
let

no way, 37ga

7o6b
shoot
f.

as it flies, 407 b
f.,

stoops to

ioo2b

dead bury dead, 4ib


to
f.,

nature, 7i6b

to be wise, 43gb to the world, g87b uses f. like stalking-horse,

home

nor path

72b

so fast they f., 2651 who f., 9873 spirit of men still changes of the moon, 274b the gleam, 6553 the king, 6533 things which make for peace,

5ib
thrift

may

f.

fawning, 263a

in flowerless fields, 7726 lord of f. arms, 22 ib

smoothed work and f. it, 6$4b Folding of the Apennine, 7i4b of the hands to sleep, 2$b Folds, lull distant f., 44oa of bright girdle furled, 7i4b rippling in breeze, 65gb wings and is rocked to sleep,
6 9 6a
Foliage, children in f., 10053 trees never lose their f., i73a Folio, whole volumes in f., 22 ib Folk dance like wave of sea, 88ob

us disquietly to graves, 2773 well in order, 7oib what is right he will f., 7ib

your spirit, 244a Followed fast and


first f. it

faster,

6433

hymselve, i66b

him honored him, 662b

me

since

black

womb

held,

io6ga
Followeth,
in
f.

Following fallen

mercenary calling, 854a he that f. me, star, gi8b

48b

him

I follow myself, 27 2a

plow along mountainside, 5iib return from f. after thee, nb

without f., f., 6s7b f., 7b Folly's all they taught me, 542b at full length, 40oa Fond, ae f kiss, 4943 and way Ward thoughts, 5iob foolish f. old man, 28oa got cat f. of chat, 8323 lover, 35oa memory thou f. deceiver, 4473 more f. than mistress, 405b nor too f. of fame, 4043 prove so f., 2goa those that covet with gain f., 22oa f. to rule alone, 4iob top trivial f. records, 2603 Fonder, absence makes heart grow f., isSa, 5 88a Fondest hope decay, 5433 Fondness, habitual hatred or f., 46ib
lives

who

wickedness or

wisdom

excelled!

1336

INDEX
Fons Bandusiae splendidior vitro,
122 a
Font, porphyry f., 64ga Food as luscious as locusts, 2733

Fools
Foolish, forgive f. ways, 626b frantic boast f. word, 87sb gets f. or wife does, 8gib

Fool

lies

here,

life time's f.,

24ob

love's

beef Englishman's f., 3g2a chickens quit quarreling over


their f ., 483* craving for crops the flowery f., 4o8a

f.,

fame for worms, 42 ib


f.

dead

men

eat,

7&2b

not time's f., 2Q4a lunatic lean-witted f., 2273 may prove self a f., 6i4b may talk wise man speaks, 3043 may wys-man ofte gide, i64b me to top of my bent, 26gb merciful to me a f., 7 gob met a f. in the forest, 2483 more hope of a f., 263

God hath
heaven
5<>5b

chosen

f.

save

from

things, 5ib f. friend,

hold that mortal f., 8sb I being young and f.,


*34b kind and

87gb
f.,

idleness best thing to ruin


f.

comrade, 854b

eathereth her

f.

in the harvest,

more knave than


f.,

2 3b homely was their f., $S$b music f. of love, 251 a is inadequate, g82b many companions for f. and drink, 773 moody f. of love, 288a music f. of love, 2513
if

f., 1950, 2i2b 2483 motley multitude choose by show, 2333 my poor f. is hanged, 2 Sob nature makes f. she means it,

lean and f. knight, gi8b learned fool more f., 5623

man who

trusts

woman, n8b

no

f.

nor yet

like old f., i84b f. to fame, 4iob

now and

near tables wanted f., so8b nothing to eat but f., 8453
of fancy, 25ob of fools, 38ga of love, 251 a
poets'
f.

my

life

my

joy

my

f.,

igsb

then right, 4573


shall
f.,

never said a f. thing, 3823 old and f. king, 27b passionate man, 884b penny wise pound f., 3ioa people without understanding, 34*
questions of people,

f.

go

mad,

2783

8na

officious

5<>5b
is

seem

old doting f., 1373 old man who will not laugh
f.,

867b

seeking

love and fame, the f. he eats,

6gb 2483

struggle for f., sweet f. of knowledge, 2osb to one poison to others, 1143 Tom's f. for seven year, 278b
too fine for angels, 38 ib

628a

once harm done even f. under* stands, 643 one draught above heat makes him f., 25 ib
patriot a
f.

f. among wise, igSa son is calamity of his father, 25a son the heaviness of his mother, 24a studied in my f. youth, 171*

pious f. play the Roman

in every age, 41 ib that raised it, 3313


f.,

thing but a toy, 253a thing well done, 43 ib things to confound wise, 5ib to make long prologue, 393
too f. for tear, 526b transmitter of f. face, 41 ga
virgins,

2873

pure

f.,

676b
f.

Fool all people all the time, 6413 almost at times the f., looia Americano, 10573 and his money, 10853 answer a f. according to his folly, 26a at forty fool indeed, sg8b at his end shall be a f., 34b better to be f. than dead, 822b brains to make f. of self, 822b busy old f. unruly Sun, 3053 called her his lady fair, 8753 cannot be stille, i64b clever woman manage f., 8723
describe
f.

rather have

make me merry,

44*
4333

2503
relenting
f.,

when he had not


.

2i7b

his life long, 4823 remains resolved to live a f., 3163 returneth to his folly, 2<3a muse to me, sogb said
f.

pen, whistling of a name, 3583 wise f so am I, 8463 with f. play the fool,

102 a

women

f.

to
f.,

match men, 68gb


87gb
f.,

my

young and

smarts so

serviceable, 8443 little as

Foolishness, not fools but


f.,

3163

4iob

some people

by

self-inspection,

8?ob
don't make f . of me, s88b dullness of f. whetstone of wits,

all the time, 641 a strumpet's f., 287a a f., 3gga himself suspects talk seme to a f., 853 the more f. I, 2483 there was made his prayer, 875a think he is wise, 2560 thinks himself wise is great f.,

of yesterday, 8173 Fool's bolt soon shot, i84b errand, 437b

mouth is his destruction, 25a paradise, 6o6a, io&4a Fools, a little wise best f. be, 305a admire men of sense approve,
4osb amongst
are
f.

a judge, i36a

enough to expunge, 433* every f. will be meddling, 253 every inch not f. is rogue, 36ga gilded f., spib

greatest f. is man, 3773 and nygard, gret f. bo the riche

happy he knows no more, 4oga


feathered Jiis nest, 3143 haste of f. slowest thing, 3803 hath said in his heart, iya he that trusteth in his own heart is a f., 26b he's a muddled f., ig6a hold tongue and pass for sage,
has

4183 night thy soul, 46b though he be a f., 3753 to fame, 4iob uttereth all his mind, 26b way of a f., 243 when he holdeth his peace, 253 when we play the f,, 536b wise enough to play f., 252b wise man dieth as the f., 2?b wise man knows himself f.,
this

my

theme, 554b

be thankful for ., 7633 but f. caught it, 88ib by follies they perished the

f.,

6sa by heavenly compulsion, 37 7 a children and f. cannot lie, i84b children and f. want everything, 376a crabbed as dull
f. suppose, 3371 discourse of f. is irksome, 38b do not imitate successes, 107 a

1273

how
I
I

ill

white hairs become


f.,

f.,

am

fortune's

2253

in four letters,
is filled is

have played the f., 123 ^Gob

invented kissing, 3gob

25ob f. in Christendom, 2023 with f. no companionship, Sob with f. strikers right or wrong, 953* with foolish play the f., 1023 with judges, 1363 Fooled with hope, 367b Foolery governs world, 3173 that wise men have, 247a walk about like sun, 2$2b Fool-gudgeon opinion, 23 ib Fooling, adapted to my f., g2gb
wisest

do not know how much more


half than whole, 67b dreading e'en f., 41 la
fill

is

world with

f .,

7o6b

flanneled f. at wicket, 875b food of f., 3893 God protects f. and United
States,

no2b

great stage of f., 28oa greatest f. most satisfied, 377a

have always mocked wise, i56b hundred f. not make wise man,
101 ib
I
I know, 3053 losga in all tongues called f., 25ob in idle wishes f. stay, 4833
f.

with evil, 8oa he only f. in world, 666b laughter of the f., 28a
learned
let
f.

Foolish, an'

f.

notion,

and

more
f.,

foolish,

3623

me

play the

231 a

fame, 38 consistency, 6o6a fond old man, 2803 fool calls you f., 853
false as

am

two

illusion of

f.,

Fools
Fools in town on our side, 761 b ib laugh at men of sense, 38 learn in no other, 422a
leaves
let
let
f.
f.

INDEX
Foot, pretty
f.

gift of nature,
f.,

Force and beauty of process,

478a
print of

8oob

naked
f.

$&
f.,

and oppression made wrecks,


8g6b
citizens to

'em

still

two

f.,

sgib

proud

of

conqueror,

4ogb use talents, 2513


contest,
.

put forward best

23?a

lighted

way

to dusty death,

rest for the sole of her t ., 6b so light a f., 224b

confess faith, 102 ib conservation of f., 7ogb constant f. for muddlement,

286b
like you, 4133 make a mock at sin, 243

stamped

f. and cried, 735b suffer thy f. to be moved, 223 the fixed f., 3o6a soul thy

799 b elemental f. freed, ioo8b evolution not a f., 77gb

make such vain keeping, 3153


millions mostly
.,

to

gallows

f.

and

after,

57a

wear steps

more f. than wise, io86a no more I'll tease, 405b


not f. but foolishness, 3163 of fortune, 2gob of nature, 2592 old men know young men
or foes, 4123 Paradise of F., 3440

who

of his door, deft Devil's f., 304!?


f.

8773 37b
eye,

from which sun draws power,


g82b
goodwill mightiest
f.,

8oga

wishing his
2i6a

equal with

government

is f.,

748b

worth on
f.,

f.,

6gaa

Foot-and-a-half-long words, 1243 Footfalls echo in memory, ioo4b Footing, 'twixt his stretched f.,

grace f. fascination, 701 a, b had not f. to shape, 6543 has no place for skill, 86b

impostor employs f., logaa in nature not increased, 7ogb


interfere 68 4 a

268a

by

f.

with slaveholder,
full
result,

poems made by
play
the
f.

f. like me, ggaa with time, 24sa f. decoyed, 37gb poor pride vice of f., 402b ob print it and shame f., 41 rush in, 4043 scarecrows of f., 7253 so deep-contempl3tive, 248b some made coxcombs nature

man, young Foot-in-the-grave 7&7 a Footman, eternal F. snicker, looia


Footnotes,
half

joint

f.

and
f.

4032

knowing

of words, 73a
f.,

words

need

f.,

knowledge more than

2o6b

meant

f.,

4oab

suckle f., 273b suffer f. gladly, 53b tedious old f., 26ob that crowd thee so, 3583 the stop to busy f., 3623 too green 3nd only good for

gi8a Footpath, jog on the f. way, 2gsb Footprint is our own, g67a on shores of unknown, g67a saw His f. in sod, 86oa Zuleika looking for man's f., gioa of time, Footprints in the sands 62ob of gigantic hound, 85oa f. gleams, Footstep, where thy 6423
Footsteps,

language into meaning, looyb love f., 8g7a material moral spiritual f., 8633 moment to its crisis, looia no f. however great, 575a no motion has she no f., 5113 not by f. or violence, 46sb not remedy, 6583 of heaven-bred poesy, 221 a of his own merit, 2gjb of righteousness, 8g7a of temporal power, 234b
oppressor to commit brutality openly, 10833
or fraud, 7503 overthrow by f., 864b paralyzed f., 1003 a

f.,

dead
f.

remembered

f.,

756

8ggb
f.

we

f.

what what

of nature, 25ga call nature, 6673 f. these mortals be, i2gb,


to scoff,

distant

echo, 622a
f.

do not follow in

home

his

38ob turned, 5i8b


f.,

who came wise men


wish
worcls
to

44gb
f.,

profit

more from

appear wise

among
f.,

f.,

1363
3re

young men think old men


2053 Fools' experiments, 628b outweighs all the f., 6653 Foos, my f. won't moos,
Foot, accent
of

money

of

3i7b
f.,

f. in the sea, 4$6b plants his trod in f. of calf, 846a as f., 888b earth Footstool, earth is his f., 4ob God's f. may be throne, gasb my f. earth, 4o8a of Virgin's Son, goga excellent f. of the world,

passion

spent

novel

f.,

6473

Foppery, 277a
Fops,

produce according to f., 6873 proportional to motive f., 37b secret f. driving me, 6323 some patient f., 64gb soul f., 8g7a spiritual f. stronger, 6ogb surely not left vain, 7153^)

whole tribe of Forbade me to put off


364*
to

f.,

277a
hat,

my

coming

.,

g68b 73ga
.,

wade

through

slaughter,

and f., 101 ib that through green fuse, 10702 them in spite of Nature, sssb them to write, 35 2b too revolutionary for old ideas,
terror

and hand go

cold, i88b beat earth with unfettered 1213 beggar on f., 8853 better f. before, 2373 cannot put shoe on every i26b

f.,

Chancellor's

f.,

crow

to sole of
f.

f.,

3173 2463

44ob Forbear and persevere, 8253 be not too bold, 20ob cruel mother, i22b scarce f. to cheer, 5g6b to judge, 2153 to dig dust enclosed here, sggb Forbearance ceases to be virtue,
452a
f., 46sb 47& God, 4653 Almighty it sea gods, 6g5b them not, 45b Forbidden by Constitution, 4853

g8ab
U.S. greatest potential
life,
f.,

8633
his

uncomprehended which was

7323 use of f. but temporary, 45b when one by f. subdues, ggb who overcomes by f., 342b wins easiest victory, loiib without wisdom falls of own
weight, i22a world f. not presence, g57b Forced by fate, 3713 gait of shuffling nag, 23gb praise on our part, 662b the sound is f., 486b to surrender truth, 32gb wedlock f. a hell, 2i4b Forces, avoid perils by united f., 374 a by which nature animated, 4793 deliberative f., Sgab determination of f., 723a don't oppose f. use them, 10343 economic political racial f., goia

dash thy

against a stone, sob

practice Christian

for foot, ga from the f. Hercules,

Forbid,

God

f.,

86b

it

her her

it featly,

26ga light, 5813 2g6a less prompt, 7143 miles on f. to fare, g2?b my f. on my native heath, 5213 no f. of unfamiliar men, 7143 no f. slide, 1 1033 noiseless f. of time, 2703 of hand of f. of lip, 2gsb one f. already in grave, 1373 one f. in sea one on shore, 2463 one white f. try him, noib
f.

f . speaks,

was

not

permitted, 4g8a whose mortal taste, 34 ib wanted -apple because f., 7623
f. is

tree

Forbids, my mind f. to crave, igaa rich as well as poor, 8o2a Force, abandonment of f., g74b acceleration proportional to applied f., 37gb Allied Expeditionary F.,

ioi6b

1338

INDEX
Forces, feel
f.

Forgive
oratory,

in the difficult are friendly

imagination 957 b impressed upon

behind detail, one of f. of nature,


it,

Forensic,

aim

of

f.

ma

'

37gb
f.,

Forepangs, pangs schooled at f., 8o4a Foresaw, sees what he f., 5153 Foreseeing, no soul f., 7843
Forest, beasts forth, 2ib

o8b
man who
opportunity, 484* are one team, io25b military f. natural and moral f., 7ioa one to repeat no, 8o6b our f. on Philippine soil, gsga
f.

of

the

f.

creep

orget green thumbs, io7oa how long wilt thou f. me, i?a I never f. a face, io35a if I f. thee O Jerusalem, 22b in nighttime not f., 775a knew we should both f., 775a lest we f., 875b
love
to

beautiful changes as birds silent in f., 47ga

f.,

io78b
4623 95ga mine,

friends

and brethren,

cannot see

f.

for

trees,
f.,

of politics struggle

f.,

77?b

cutting through the every beast of the f.

my own name, igsa my prince you'd soon


never never
f.
f.

f.,

3g3b

is

he

is

President, g8$a.

spiritual f., 8s4b these f. met master, which theaten soul,

horror of moment,

g?ib g6gb

flowers of the f., 4373, 446b gentle cousin of f. green, s8ob


lyre even as
f. is,

Forcible,

how

f.

are right words,

make
met

56gb
f.

hills

and
in
f.

most

f.

Feeble, 242a

fool

dance, 5053 the L, 48a

745* never f. it is a constitution, 48 5 b never f. nobler things, goob never f. what they did, 6sga

we must, ssob Ford you were kind man, io75b Fordoes, makes me or f. me quite,
Forcibly if

primeval, 6ssa
vast wastes of

new-made honor doth

verdure,

7ob

27&a Forearmed,

Foresters, Diana's f., 237b Forest's ferny floor, gi4b

forewarned
f,

Forecast, others

f., ig6a the rising stars,

Forests are rended, 5?ob

f. men's names, 2363 nor f. sunrise never failed, 758b nor worms f., 67ob not to do good and communi-

helmets
in

gleamed

in

f.,

yaob

uga
Foredoomed father's soul
4ioa
Forefathers,
to cross,
f.,

the f. of the night, 48ga Pelion with its leafy f., 66a Foretold that danger lurks within,

cate, 56a not yet tried intent, i86b

politician

knows what

to

f.,

779 b
source that keeps it filled, 7 sob that I remember, 774b the best sometimes f,, $73b the he and she, 3o$a thyself to marble, 3355 till future dares f. past, 571 a to take pleasure, yj$b what I have been, 227b

contemplate our

2i6a
Forever, ae farewell and then
f.,

had no books but score, 2i5b met the boat, g54a rude f of hamlet, 44oa think of your f., 5osb
.

444a

494 a

and a day, 25oa


corner of field f England, 9943 diamond lasts f., loaya fare thee well, 55ga farewell Cassius, 2563 Fortune wilt thou prove, 42oa
.

Forefinger, agate

on

f.

of alder-

man, 223a
of all time,

648a

when image

is

effaced,

gsb
f,,

Forefront, fighting in f. of the Greeks, 7ob set Uriah in f. of battle, isb Forego, propensity to f., 7g2a

good

jest

f.,

his time is I go on f.,


life

238b f., 3583 6522

womb shall f. him, i5b women and elephants never

death
goes on

and
f.,

that

f.,

691 a

Foregoing, youth forgone Foregone conclusion, 275a

f.,

g5&b

life

io*3a

youth f. foregoing, 95&b Forehead, Death's fearful


of every traitor, 74ga of frowning skies, igsa of humanity, 58ob
of the

f.,

7goa

may be f., 594b never, 6ssa piping songs, 58sa


same yesterday today and
stranger
f.,

years of gold, 8i3b Forgetful, blessed are f., 8o5b of his horsemanship, 64a Forgetfulness, not in entire if.,
of affliction, g8a of all ills, 653

right

morning sky, 33ga in middle of her f., 6253


to

Foreheads villainous low, 2g?b Foreign aid of ornament, 41 gb

apprenticehood

f.

passages,

avoid f. collision, 538b boys not sent into f. wars, g72b by f. hands eyes dosed, 4o6a corner of f field, gg4a disposed of f. enemies, 953 gear of f. dead men, ioo6a with f. nations, intercourse
.

alone, io4gb not be ours f., 3O2b live f., 4353 Forevermore, adieu f,, 4g4a glory gone f., 625b Forewarned forearmed, ig6a Forfeit, all souls -were f., 27ob confidence of citizens, 641 a fair renown, 5iga to a confined doom, 29$b Forgave, coward never f., 437a hugged offender f. offense,

and

time

will

would you

space engenders f., 937a steep senses in f., 2422. to dumb f. a prey, 441 a Forget-me-not bluebell and violet,

Forget-me-nots of angels, 6*2a Forgets dying bird, 4$7b heart that loved never f., 542a man f. to live, 38 ib Forgetting, if f. could be willed,
sleep and a f., Sijb those things behind, 54a valley more and more f., 73ob world f. by world forgot, 4osb Forgive, as we f. our debtors, 4ob as we f. those who trespass, 4ob being with the right to f., 7083

took kindness f. theft, 6671 Forge in smithy of soul, g68b


practice

levy,

284b

and 'thought
f.,

f.

art,

nations

policies relations policy,

and the next age, 2ogb based on myths, io55b


loiga
at

uya
random grim
Forges,

8o3b

Forged, chain I

things

f.

or

things

home,

what
all

f. in life, 67ob his breast f., *8gb

blindness we may f., 8gga children f. parents, 8jga


close eyes to f., 865a cursed be tribe if I
f,,

Forget
country, 426a wandering on f. strand, 5i8b Foreigner, no f. do business here,
troop in

feuds, ggSb

my

and and and

forgive, 1950, a8oa if thou wilt f., 73gb

*3*a

Father

f.

them, 47 b
f,,

smile, 74oa

i72b
Foreigners,
all

because

we

must, 7i2b

forget give thanks

and

ig$b, s8oa

equal

except

f.,

635*
spell

better

than

pronounce,

best to f., 668a better by far f. and smile, 74oa better to f., 6ooa

God
good
I
if if if
f.

f.

and f., 776a you but I never, i8ga


f.,

to

668a

hero, io78b

759 a

courage to
dissolve

f.,

Foreknowledge absolute, 344a of death, 77sa


Forelock,

and

f,,

726a 582b

don't

f.

Virginia, 72ftb

they dare not

by
files

f,

Foremost

take time, 20 ib of time, 647b

dream that

I f ., 7740 gods are old, 8i3b

you you f. me, 48gb death knew how to f., ii7b f., 7o8a to you f, people you belong them, io47b

1339

Forgive
Forgive, know everything everything, 502b
f.

INDEX
Forked mountain or blue promontory, *88b poor bare f. animal, 2?8b
torch of a flower, g86a

Formidable, makes small numberi


tendency to lapidary style, 6073 queer and incomplete, 8700 ruin of oblivion, 2693

lambs not

man Who
4843

f., frjob forces opportunity,

formless

injuries, 10760 mercy to ., 3703 much to hate much to

me my

Forks and hope, 747* fingers made before f., Forlorn, faery lands f., 5833
glimpses

39 ob

Lord

my

little

gsab jokes, g2ga


f.,

make me

less f.,

5150

only brave

know how

to

f.,

437 a

hie jacet, 5 lib Stygian cave f., 334^

Forms all produced by laws, 6283 and styles develop freely, 10283 by f. unseen dirge sung, 4433
differ in external f., 4313 evil has infinite f., 363b

our foolish ways, 626b public seldom f. twice, 46gb some sinner, gr6ob them as a Christian, 533b those I have injured, 10760 those who bore us, 3563 Thy great big one on me, g2ga to f divine, 4osb us all our trespasses little crea.

Form and

pressure, 26sa all-form only rational f., 3rt nothing without f., as goldsmiths make, 8833

7953 7093

for

f.

more

of government, 4ogb real than living,

5693

before he3ven 3nd earth h3d taken r., noa bodily f. from natural thing,

of things unknown, 2gob their colors and their f., truth in different f., 74 ib

5093

8833

charming

f.

of government, 94b

8303 Formula for making ends meet, g66b


f.,

waves with purple

tures, 974!)

us our debts, 40^ us our trespasses, 4ob 28oa Forgiven and forgotten, her sins are 1, 46
Forgiveness, after
f.,

f., 795* combination and f. indeed, 2643 divine, 5363 each carries own life f., 9350 each of like f. from everlasting,

collective unit

for morale is patriotism, 9593 in same f. largest and lightest,

479 a
of

that

particular

emotion,

knowledge what

looib

earth was w'ihout


essential thing in

f., 2803 awkwardness has no f., 6o8b final form of love, 1024^ of sins, 6oa saved by f., io24b to injured does belong, 1300 f. 1059^ all, Forgiving, enemy be f., Forgot, auld acquaintance

ask of thee

53 9573 ever follows function, 8383


f.,
f.,

finding what

f.

to

do without,

Formulas, dear myself of f., 576b Formulations, f., inadequate io26b Fornication but in another country, sisb Forsake, do not f. me in my end,

494b

follows but for f., 277b follows function, 8s8a free f. not assure freedom, 9573 free in whatever f. used, 9573 freedom reg3rdless of f., 9573

by the world

f .,

4o5b

from

assassin, g48b copperheads and cry of gulls, 10033 Father Son are things f., so7b for which he totted, 2gib foundations we f., ioo6b much Cynara, 8goa proposed as things f ., 4P4** time h3th f. itself, 268b to wind clock, 437 a

human

was Britain's glory, 7263 world was all f., 551*


Forgotten aim, 8673

my door, 643* thought or f ., 5683 in f. in moving, 261 a is the cage, 7823 Love the human f. divine, 487* matter indifferent to f., 3293 mold of f., 262b of popul3r government, 48ob outward f., 52gb perfection of proportion season f., 26yb of f., io6sb quiet at heart shape without f., 10033 soul is f. and doth body make,
off

374b her Cyprian groves, 3711 let the wicked f. his way, 33b me like memory lost, 5733 me not when my strength faileth, igb not an old friend, s7b their temples dim, 3343 Forsaken beliefs, 7i3b
courts pale pavilions, io47b have not seen the righteous
f.,

i8b

my God why
170,
.

hast thou

f.

me,

453

old f bough, 634b town like place f., 375b


Forsakers, world losers
f.,

and world

au

as a dead man as a fire, 9823 as flower is f .,

have done for him, 3783 out of mind, i8a 9823

20 ib
spots of diamond terror the human
f.,
f.

458b
divine, 48gb cut, 24ga

8073 Forsaking all others, 6ia Forsan et haec olim meminisse iuvabit,

H7b
et

Formal,

beard

of

f.

Forsitan
istis,

nomen

miscebitur

door, 10223
eagle
f.,

feeling comes, 735b

i28b
F.,

952b

Formalism hallmark of national


7633 Formed but one such man, 5593 converse, 4103 by thy for ruin of our sex, 443b his hands f. the dry land, 2ia D if you hsve f. a circle, 49 man was f. for society, 444^
f.

even by God, 66 ib everything learned, no4b fly f. as a dream, 3973 for want of writers, i22b forgiven and f ., 2803 glimpses of f dreams, 644!
.

culture, 9603 Formalities, get

right,

Forspent, clean f., 7g6b Forster, old lady quoted by io6ia

Forswear,

if

transgress

and

f.,

88b Forsworn, that so sweetly were


27 ib
Fort, hold
f.

f.,

am

coming, 7053,

grief
I

7731 f 2873 I have f your name, 775b if you would not be f., 421
f.,

am

all

.,

moment
4693

when

friendship

f,

Forted residence, 2723 Fortescue, Charles Augustus

F.,

is

man

of

evil repute,

33

learned

nothing
.,

f.

nothing

of of various stuff, 4gsa

joy and mirth, 4gob

4843
let it

be f

9823
m

man, 7853,

memory

970!) of them

is

f.,

28b

or ever thou hadst f, the earth 2oa scarcely f. or molded, 5623 Former, get rid of f. be3r latter
42 *b

go2b Forth to the wilderness, 947!) Forties, in f. know won't save


10373

us,

mornings, io7ob not f. inside of church, 2403 nothing new except f., icgob old times not f., 6783 pain glad to be f., 994& undeservedly f., 1061 a volume of f . lore, 642b
wars, 10053

and f rain, 35b no remembrance of


latter
.

the d3ngerous 3ges, io22a Fortieth, laugh never granted before f. day, 1323 Fortifies my soul to know, 688b

f.

things

Fortify thy

n3me

against old age,

2iia

one

jot of

f.

love retain, 21 ib

Fortitude, all

man

has of

f.,

8253

you have

f.

my

kisses,

people, 8g4b things grow old, 32ob thy f. light restore^ 2763 Formez vos bataillons, 499 a

and delicacy, 8253 and perseverance, 444* great f. of mind, 42gb what f. soul contains, 7393

1340

INDEX
Fortnight, to

Foul
Forty,
f.

be hanged

in a

f.,

Fortune melted

to water, 3793
f.,

432 a
Fortress built
self,

method of making
by Nature for her-

442a

years,

wander in the wilderness gb

226b
refuge and

most dejected thing of f., 2793 not satisfied with one calamity,
i25b out of suits with f., 24ya outrageous f., s6ib painted blind with muffler, soga popular when F. on our side, i25b prey at f., 274b ready for F. as she wills, i6ob rob lady of f. by marriage, 424b
seize
shifts

less

he is my house is as ., ig8a threatened, sggb

my

f.,

2ob

i2b our God, i7gb i7gb Forts of folly, 7153 Fortuitous circumstances, 5213 Fortunatam natam me console

Lord is mighty

my
f.

f.,

is

whacks, iioia winters besiege brow, 29 ib work of men above f., 8i7b years on, 76sa Forty-nine, blush fixed at f., 87 ib Forty-odd, at f. befell, sgib Forty-second, gang at F. Street,

thou art

my

f.,

944*

Forum, eloquence in f., 683a Forward and frolic glee, 5*oa ever f. but slowly, 4$gb
voyagers, ioo6b Germany in the world f., 8153 if true a big step f. f lona life lived f., 6763 look f. not back, 7i8a look f. to posterity, 454a
f.

Romam, nib
ly
f.,

Fortunate, fair maidens

common-

good

f.,

47a
test

fare fare

f.,

io6a

2O3a

of F.

friends,

nib

farmers,
first

n7a
f.

shows herself more kind, 2g4b


4173
self,
f.

king

soldier,

sick in

man takes measure of more desirable than


1153.

s64b
hour,

i republic be more f ., iosa who is f learn pain, 4g8b


.

f., 277 a smiling of F. beguiling, 4g6b sustain good f., 3553 though blind not invisible, 2oga tire out hostile f., 661 a to be well-favored gift of .,

youth
1023.

to

have found Homer,


men's
eyes,

246b
to f. and fame unknown, 441 a to make f. fate is essential, 37 9 a

nothing to look f to, ga6a put f. best foot, 237a since we have come so Car, sigb some a f. motion love, gGzb
.

Fortune

and

2gib

arbiter of everyone's f., brings in some boats, 291 a carry Caesar and his f.,

n6a

mb
538b
f.,

too

wooed

is

farther off, i86a

tugged with

f.,

2&4b

sons of France, 4gga the Light Brigade, 65*a those behind cried F., $g6a Forwards, life lived f., 676a Foster child of silence, 58 3a

charge

f.

with

partiality,

diligence *97 a distinction of birth or f., 5O4b each day that F. grants, 121 a every man architect of his f.,

mother of good

vicissitudes of f., 466a when F. means most good, 236b F. wishes to destroy, 86a will send it, so2a

went to Gloucester, 10973 Fostered alike by beauty and fear,

whom

59b
Foster-nurse of nature
is

repose,

wilt thou prove, Fortune's buffets

4oa
and
rewards,

Fetching

him

to

his

own,

u6a
excessive
face is

good
f.,

f.,

728b
to
get,

my

favor

from F.

iog$a. easier

i25b favored

F. fool, 225a not now in f. power, pipe for f . finger, 26sa wayward tyranny, 81 a

am

26sa
3$2b

Fou

for weeks thegither, wasna f., 4gsb Fought a good fight, ssb

against prejudice, g8gb and bled in freedom's

cause,

him

in

moment

of

death, i4ob
favors the brave, ioga,
fickle gipsy, 6oob flatters to betray,

Fortunes, build up great f., 78ob dedicate lives and f., 842 a

5o8a battle not even

f.,

iO3ga

ngb

i2$b
F. crush-

fools of

f,,

agob

friend supports
es,

whom

i34a
f.

good

elevate

petty

minds,

f. is god among men, 7ga good f. may be short-lived, 3i8b good f. to be born human, 37ga good f. to be ladies, 76oa good night, 277b

dubious f., 7gsb hazard of new f., as6a make content with f. fit, 2783 mar your f., 276b parcel of their f ., s88a pledge our lives our f., 471 a sacrificed lives and f., 8gsb seek f. further than home, 2iga that I have passed, 2725
try f
f.,
.

battles o'er again, 37 ib Bear before, 7*7a better to have f. and lost, 6503

by mothers of men, 7goa


dogs killed cats, 662b each other for, 532a for life, io67b glad I f. agin her, 77ab lie f. with outright, 654b like pagan, gosa man who never f. pilfers, gia Michael and angels f., $8a nobly f. and bravely, 992 a spirit that f. in heaven, 34ja
stars f. against Sisera, street by street, g2ib

to last

man,

24b
at
f.,

Fortuneteller,

threadbare juggler

2i8b

Forty, alone

and merry

66ob

great

f.

great slavery, i3ia

at f . reforms plan, sgga cannot live on f. pound, 322b

ua

grow out at heels, 277b has acquired him, ioib he has not acquired a
helps the brave, ioga hostages to f., 2o8a I myself good f., 701 a
if

f.,

io4b

centuries look down, 504a days and forty nights, 6b difference of f. thousand men,

5o6a
days and f. nights, 3gb f., 4?6a fifty north f. west, 8763 fool at f. fool indeed, 3g8b
fasted
f.

fat fair

and

farmers

knew own

f.,

ii7a
f.,

the better fight, 346b they that f. for England, gi8b under whose colors he f. so long, 2s8a witness that I have f., 3663 work they who f. advanced,

in disgrace with f., 2gib in home of man without

66a-b in west build f., $58b insults of F., 424b

I am f., io76a look young till

f.,

476a

judge
leads
like

f., 355b 2563 broken, i25b like the market, 2oga made f. send for friends, g2a

men by good
to
f.,

million reasons for failure, 875b Moses was there f. days, gb nor rich at f,, 324b

on

pounds a
rather

year, 44gb
f.

glass

easily

than

shillings,
f.

266b

round earth in

minutes, 22gb

man in possession of f., 5333 man whom F. scratched, 27oa man's f. in own hand, 2oga may turn by f. from weaker,

singing seamen, g6ib stripes save one, ssb thousand brothers, 266a thousand men, logab
till

6sga Foul and pestilent, 261 a and ugly mists, *38a as Vulcan's stithy, 263a bar f. storm out, 88ga bird that filleth own nest, 1763 blood nipped and ways be f., 222b contagion spread, 33&b deed which she plotted, 66a deeds will rise, 2$8a
fair fair
is f. and f. is fair, 281 a means or f., g7ib bestow upon f. disease, 2773

fifty

stoic

or

satyr,

8315

fee

understand

life at

f.,

86gb

fiend Apollyon, 36sb

341

FouZ
Foul, from
f.

INDEX
to fair,

aiob

goat-head, 8853
I doubt some f. play, 2583 limbecks f. as hell, 2943 pearl in your f. oyster* 25ob play, 258a shapes of f. disease, 651 a so f. and fair a day, aSia Fouler, death aims with spite, 32 ib Foulest crime in history, 7023 Foulness of their fate, ggab Found, came to ask what he had *., 53*a common daylight sweet, Sija crooked sixpence, iog6b death in life, 5303 dove f. no rest, 6b
.

Foundations, earth's f. fled, 8543 earth's f. stand, 8553 loosen old f., g48b marred f. we forgot, ioo6b of states laws and arms, 1773 order our f ., 58gb when I laid f. of earth, i6a Founded, earth and heaven f. strong, 8533 government f. on compromise, 453 a he hath f. it upon the seas, i8a principle on which society not
f .,

Fourfold, threefold f. tomb, 3192 Four-in-hand, fiery f., 5303 Fours, crawling on all f., 4175 Fourscore and seven years ago
6392.
if

and upward, 2803 by reason of strength they be


f .,

aob
f.

wind him up for


3 67 b

years,

Foursquare in hand and foot, 7ob to winds that blew, 65 ib Fourteen


Fourteenth

hundred

years

ago

438b
f.,

nailed, 237b

477b upon a rock, 4ib Founder, supinely enjoyed


securely
f.,

Amendment

not enact

gifts

of

Fourth

empire 445^

for

raising

customers,

true

466a of f.

Spencer, 7875 estate, 5763, 5770, 66oa generation of them that hate

civil

society.

435b
f.

me, ga
safe

favor in thy sight, 7a fresh rhodora, 6oab

Foundest me poor, 45ob Founding, Franklin one of thers, 997a


since

and sane

F.,

fa-

this is the F.,

88yb 4743
f.

Fowl, dominion over


5a elegant
f.,

of the

air,

fun where I f. it, 8753 has f. out thy bed, 48 9 a hast thou f. me O mine enemy,
i3b her first and best, 8743 Him in shining of stars, 654a I could extinguish hope, 8303 I have f. it, io5a I oft f. both, 23 ib in heart of friend, 6223 in that town dog was f., 448b in whose hand the cup is f ., 7b it is f. again, 8303 left unstained what f., 57gb looked inwards f. Nature, 3673 lost time never f., 4223 man who has f. himself out,

of the city, i4gb Fount Bandusian more sparkling the


f.

than
still

glass,

ma

6733

of joy's delicious springs, 5553 from the f., 553

fish flesh or f., 88ab Fowler, snare of the f., aob Fowls, May comen I here f. synge,

Fountain and a shrine, 6423 back to burning f., 572a choke dark f. ere flows, s66b choke f. of industry, 548a dying of thirst by the f., i7ob even f. have rest, 684!)

i65b
of the air shall tell, i5a of the air sow not, 413 small f. flew screaming,

dgyb

Fox, Aesop's

from
like

f.

wells

up
f.,

bitter

taste,

ii4a

bubble on

uoa

f., giob be f. to recognize traps, lyyb Brer F. he lay low, 8143 false as f. to lamb, a68b from lair in morning, 5786

8583

much f. I could not one man among a


283 out the remedy, 27ob promptly f. out, 9773
rebellion in

bind, 9503 thousand,

of sweet tears, 5110 pitcher broken at the f., aga returns again to f., 6s*b rise like f . for me, 6543 that which f. sends forth, 62 2b the f. overflows, 487^ tormenting image in f., 6g6a troubled like f. stirred, s6ga

has

many
f.

tricks,

68a

knows many

may

things, 68 a build on hearthstone,

goga
prince imitate f. and lion, i77b prince must know how to play f., 1360 quick brown f., 11013 says they are not ripe, 75b
to

woman moved
f.
it,

like

f.

troubled,

way he

refinement

Rome
sense

f. at home, city of bricks, 1240

24ob 4gib

2igb
Fountain's silvery column, 56b Fountains, Afric's sunny f., 54gb fraught with tears, so4a from old f. new judgment, 8323

wear

arctic

f.,

9973
f.,

beneath rarely f., 4033 sheep which was lost, 47a sought but f. him not, sgb
f.

trusted like him, 1081 a wings Foxes have holes, 41 b


lift

treason

24ob

honored among
little
f.

f.,

io7ob

struggle to

Roman

state,

H7b

streams from

that famous country, lossb the root of the matter is f., isb

have mud, 2g2a little f., 5o7a under f. and graves, io86b
silver
f.

thing to love, gi8a things much as always tree of deepest root is

f., f.,

91 la

Fountainside, die of thirst at f., io8oa Four, age best in f. things, 2oyb

vines, agb Foxey, 6703 Foxholes, no atheists in f., 10533 no white or colored signs in f.,

that

spoil

maxim with

F.,

io74a
Fox's, patch lion's skin

with

f.,

468b

unmysterious

flesh,
t

10383
f.

was lost and is f. 473 weighed in the balances and


wanting, 353

when

f.

make

note, 67 la
f.,

where shall wisdom be where word be f., lopgb

i$b
f.,

10940 angels to my bed, 3573 doors were five, losgb ducks on a pond, 7293 freedoms, 97 ab grant that twice two not 688a
tailors,

and twenty

i36b Frabjous day, 7453 Fractions, happiness


53<>a

made

of

f.,

there are
f.,

no

f.,

10343
vitality,

Fragile

but with more

who

loveliness within
I

hath

305 a

woman have

not

f.,

283

worship he f. in use, gsb you as a morsel, s88a Foundation, fear f. of governments, 46gb
for
is

10323 intimate quality of the F., g76b lean hounds, 10303 not f. friends in world, 363b Point F. program, g83b snakes gliding, 6o4&
f.,

hands are

dewdrop on perilous way, 57gb profound and f. lips, 1031 a


Fragment, ship f. detached, 8431 Fragmentary blue, 9273 Fragments, broken dishonored f., 547a death tramples it to f., 5723 gather up f., 4&b live in f. no longer, 95 ib of the f. twelve baskets, 42b of the world seek each other, g6sa shored against ruins, 10033 Fragrance, as metal keeps f., 9303 fresh without f., 9903 J3r will keep f., 542b

spend in prayer, ig8b


things better without, 10293 things which I know not, 26b things wiser to know, 10293

rehabilitation

of

nation,

? o u love, io8ab
f.,

95b

laid in youth, 8sob

new government laying


no sure
of

47ob

two and two make undergraduates right 9150


venerate
f.

f.,

7543

number,

f. on blood, 2373 constitutional government,

8653

characters, 46gb f., 7623 winds of the heaven, 363

when angry count

1342

INDEX
Fragrance,

Free
Free, because equally t absolutely equal, 980 born f., 34ia, 10155 born f. and equal, 4706

no spicy f. while they grow, 2o8a flower without f., 8793 perfect tobacco's f. greet, io8oa air so f., 1723 Fragrant, bodice, 5823 flowers or poisonous, 10283 in your f. bosom dies, 3273 most f. when crushed, 2083
f.

France, not F. without greatness, ioi6a

one illusion F., g76b order matter better in F., 4383 Puritan born in F., 726b respect for art in F,, 788b save squadron honor F., 667b
shall F.

but

was

f.

born, 5ob

colonies are

and ought

to

be

f .,

remain here, 721 a

thousand posies, 2i2b Frail gaunt and small, 78gb inhabits our f. blood, 2533 may be f. its roof shake, 426b renown is fleeting and f., ii5b so f. a thing man, io8gb that I may know how f. I am,
i8b
Frailties

son of F. lack statue, 8953 toward F. journeyed, 5883 worst moment in history of F., ioi6a Francesca di Rimini miminy pirniny, 767a Frank, friendly and
f.,

communication in f. society, g84b days have been wondrous f.,


39&a
destiny
alike
for
f.

and

en-

6583

hospitality cordial and f., gigb if heart just f. kindly, 361 a to all beside, 4p6b

mortality trust, 2ioa from dread abode, 441 a last day, Frailty, in f. consider
to
f.

8ib

Frankie and Johnny, noib Frankincense, gold and f., sgb Franklin, before F. took hint, 93 oa

981 a encounter, 34ob evening calm and f., 5123 exercise of religion, 465^ 474b
fain have her
feel as if fight to
f.,
f., 7300 795a country f., fighters free lovers, Sggb

slaved, 7ga die to make men f., 6gob died to make verse f.,

set
f.

4673

more
2403

flesh

therefore

more

f.,

Benjamin

F. Printer, 42 la-

noblest f. of mind, 3803 of the mind, ggsa tempt f. of our powers, 26ga
thy

name

is

woman, 257b
f.

Frame, all go23


beats

human
f.

requires,
pleases,
f.,

one of founding fathers, 99 7 a Franklin's quiet memory, 5633 Frantic among thy servants, 37b boast foolish word, 875b fascination f., 768b lover all as f., 2 gob
with
f.

fixed fate flag that

will,

3443
f.,

makes you

748a

for irreligion, 10223 for religion, 10223 form not assure freedom, 957 a frae monie a blunder f. us,

493*

pain, 486b

into

he

35 ib

when

religion

heavens a shining

3g$a
f.,

I f. no hypotheses, 37gb mind mingles with whole

Frantic-mad rest, 294b


Fraternity,

6g6a with evermore


f.,

unf.,

liberty

equality

iiga nor that his


of of

f.

was

dust,

7g8b

adamant, 427 a Nature break, 3933 out of three sounds f. star,


66 5 b mortal quit this
stirs this
f.,

11050 of henpecked, 3953 of strangers, 5ggb or death, 46ga


Fraternize,

freedmen not really f., gg8a from all meaning, 369 a from hope and fear set f., 775a from overemphasis, io62a from rifle bullets f., 9583 from troublous sights f., 8gob
furrows followed f., 524b God wills us f ., 468b

beckon

you

to

f.,

government f. to people, gSob government which kept us .,


472a habit shackle for f ., 7923 hair as f., 3o2b half slave half f., 6355 healthy f. world before

mortal

f.,

4043 526b
3703

this
this

goodly

f. earth, 261 a universal f. began,

thy fearful symmetry, 48ga universal f. without mind, 2o8b

Framed her

last best

work, 4g5a

Nature hath 2313


nature that
to

in prodigality of nature, 2173 f. strange fellows,


f.

us,

speech finely f .,
Framers,

make women wisdom of

2i2a 393 false, 2733


f.

of treaty,

87ob
Francois, je parle
f. aux homines, i6gb France a person, 5goa best colony of F., 72 ib breasts that feed F., 2o6a burden of F., ioi6a

io6ob Fraud, force or f., 7503 pious f., 467b Frauds, people's little f., 8783 pious f. of friendship, 4S4b Fraught, swell bosom with thy f., *75 a Fray, all our great f. forgiven, 28oa back from the dread f., 633 latter end of f., 240b Frayd, more f. than hurt, 1833 Frayed, poor wings so f., 7763 Freak, wanton, f ., 57ga Freakish youth, 458* Freckled, whatever is fickle, f., 8033
Freckles, love curiosity
f.

me,

525a himself from God not


f.,

7oia her looks were

f.,

6oaa

his half-regained Eurydice, 3353

holiday-rejoicing spirit, 535^ hungry man not f ., 10480 if there be name more f., 4osb if we wish to be f., 4653
in historical sense not f., 73* a in my soul am f., 3593 in whatever form used,
institutions, g5gb Jesu set me f., ig2b keep fancy f ., 852b land in beloved home, land of the f., 541 a, 10150

9573

doubt,

10293
Frederick, spires of F. stand, 626a without tyranny, 747b Free active individuals, 7133 agent thou wast before, i42b

conquered for
fair
fall

civilization,

72ob
21 la

leaves soul
let let

f.

a
f.,

little,

stood
F

wind

for

F.,

of F. ioi6a fight in F. and on seas, 92 la forward sons of F., 4gga get out of F. quickly, 4g8b

alchemized

and

f.

of

space,

me gang me have

6653 4633
99 gb

5223
f.

country,
f.,
f.,

58ob
all

all

men born f., 341 a men should be

hair shining and love Virtue she alone is


live
f.,

337b

64ob

has more need of me, 5043 has not lost the war, ioi6a is invaded, 5043 Ring of F. went up hill, logsb labor of F. poured earnings into Versailles, 721 a landing on coast of F., ioi6b let sword of F. fall, ioi6a

and easy on raft, 761 a and independent states, 46ob,


46jb

lovely little flower is f., 5i7b maids that weave thread, 2523

majestic f., 5i2b man abide with

honor,

681 a

and

loyal subjects, iogoa

artless
sess,

and
1733

f.

with

all

they pos-

mother of arts, i87b nearer is to F., 744b never go to F., 5g2a no F. without sword,

as Nature first made man, 367a as the breeze, 5i8a as the road, 3233 assure freedom to f., 6$8b bards of meter f., g62b

man is born f., 435b man is created f., 497b me from this turbulent priest, ^S men by nature equally f., 445b men citizens of Berlin, 10743
mother of the
f.,

much bound

86aa could

not

.,

ioi6a

beautiful

and

f.

is

life,

5693

Free
Free,

INDEX
my
lines

and

life

are

f.,

Free,

323* nation ignorant and f., 4733 nations and f. men. io74a neither bond nor f., 546 no one f. till all f., 7063 not all f. who scorn chains, 455* not from faults, 4o4a and nothing-withholding 796b only educated are f., i$8b
.

woods more 247b

f.

from

peril,

Freedom,
liberal
f.,

let

f. ring, institutions

enemies of

world, 10563 yearning to breathe f., 8173 Freed, elemental force f., ioo8b much I f. returned to me, 9503

8063

liberty f. enfranchisement, 2553 light in which f. lives, i048b lose f. if vslue more

no man's pie
297b

something

f.

from

his finger,
free,

love
really
f.

93** not
to

f.

but

license,

Freedmen not
f.,

9983

mesns

3413

enable

open mind f. discussion, gizb open-minded adjustment, 842b play of mind a pleasure, yi^b
political discussion,

Freedom, abridging 474b abridgment of f., 48ob all who love f., ioi6b 3lt3r of f., 64ob

of speech,

new

press,

g84b

865a

and constraint, 10483 and democracy as and not

principles,

press good or bad, io68b

press necessity, loijb principle of f. thought, 7893 of f. constitution principles


lost,

servitude, 4533

4&5b

private enterprise, gyaa protection of f. speech, 7883 pure in life f. from sin, 121 a reason left f. to combat, 4723 responsibilities because f., 10263

Russian speech, 688a Russian f. tongue ioi4b search for truth, 64b
set bodily
f.

forever,

assure f. to the free, 6g8b based on courage, 9163 battle cry of f., 7o4b Bill of Rights guarantee of f., 98 3b born to f., 9733 cannot surrender L, loaob cause of f. cause of God, 4ggb celebration of f., io72b chance to be better, 10693 clothe Greece in f., 7ob
cultural
f.,

men, 34ia not metaphysical power, ios8b not safety but opportunity 9840 not trifled with, io2ob obedience bane of f., 5683 obtained with price, loisb of expression matrix, 9033
of knyghthod and of of the mind, loitjb of my mind, 3370 of navigation, 8425 of person, 4723 of press bulwsrk of
f.

birth of f., 6393 none love f. but good

flour,

liberty,

4463
of of of of of of
of

press

has

suffered
person,

most,

io68b
press religion religion, 4723

94 ib

4723

from surroundings,

937*
set my poor heart f., 27 ib should himself be f ., 43jb

society,
soil free

io72b

men, loggb

solitude unsponsored f., 9553 soul in prison I am not f., 83 ib speech in repulsive form, 9243

speech press assembly, 8640-8653 spontaneous cooperation of f. people, 842b suppression of f. speech, 832b
take

away our

f.

will

and

glory,

i77b
that moment they are f., 457b the human will, 4i2b thenceforward and forever f.,

deny f. to others, 636b deny participation of f., 4533 drawing f. and peace, 5633 earns f. and existence, 47 8 b economic f., 94 ib equality justice, 8gsb fight for f. and truth, 72gb fight to maintain f., 9733 fills space 'twixt m3rsh, 7g6b flame of f. in souls, 78sb for land of f. do not give damn, 772b for something, g84b for thought we hate, 7893 free form not assure f., 9573 without f. b3d, free press
io68b- 10693

of of of

speech and conscience, 7633 speech and expression, 9725 speech may be taken, 461 a speech means, 99 ib the soul, 3593 thought, 4443 worship, 9733
is f.,

on mountains
936b
political
f.,

4986

only to limits of consciousness,


94 ib business of govern-

political

f.

from

6383 think they ought to be f., 4523 thou art f., 7iob thought, 7893 thought is f., 297 a thus so cleanly I myself can f., 2iia till thou at length art f., to choose government, 10253

every io3ob

B.V.D.

f.

ring,

from fear, 9733, 974b from mountain height, 578b from prejudice, 7i6b from something not enough, 9 84b from want, 9733, 974b generous with our f., 10253
greater greatest champion of f., g24b greatest gift f. of will, i6ib gret press's f., 6933 has a thousand charms, 456b having my f. boast of nothing,
f.

ment, 97ia-b f. for themselves, preserved 997 b reap blessings of f., 4673 regardless of form, 9573 religious f., 94 ib Revolution not to obtain f,,
997 b rhymes suggest wildest
f.,

6o4b

secret of f. a brave heart, goa secret of happiness, 903


shall
so

seven-pillared house, ioo8b awhile repair, 4433


fell,
f.,
f.,

for average

man, 9713

shrieked as Kosciusko
celestial

4723 473b trade unpopular, 594b trade in ideas, 7883


f,, 48b unreproved pleasures f., 3$4b valiant man and f., 6513 walk f., 7o2b was he f. was he happy, io6ob we must be f. or die, 51 2b we were born f., ioi5b we will die f. men, 475a when actions are from personality, 8493 when evils most f., 254b

to go very slow, 9303 to regulate industry, to think speak write,

article

as

spirit

of

truth

and
f.,

537b 4673 7293

striking

blow for

ggsb

trade not a principle, truth shall make you

6nb

system based on courage, 91 6a take back f. thou cravest, 73^


to speak, to think,

2263
history progress of f., 5o7b hunted round the globe, 466b

idea of
if
f.

fail,

if f. fall,
if

love, ss8b in highest position least f., H5b in that f. bold, 5i7b

657b 6043 877b have f. in


f.,

6g2b 6g2b worship God, 57 3b unchartered f. tires, 5*4b values anything more than
to
f.

f.,

my

wealth and
Goa with gre3t without f.
10693

reign,
is

whose service

perfect

f.,

indispensable

condition

of

f.,

sum obtained
press

f.,

903*
indivisible word, 10253

bad,

5ob io68b-

will

and that
all

sort

of

thing,
f.,

77 8b

infringement of
is is

human

f.,

4g6b

wish

men

everywhere

a breakfastfood, 10313 3 noble thing, i6ja

6383

Isw

can

only

bring

f.,

4793

yet F. yet thy Freedom's, bled in holy light, 67b Freedoms, four f.,

banner,
f.

5573 cause, 5083

INDEX
Freedoms, insensible to Constitution, gSya
Freely,
f.,
f.

Friend
Friend, sscend prosperity not

of

different schools contend

Frenchmen, did march three F., 2443 Englishman beat three F., 3953
11033 mankind including F., 9765 Frenzied drum, 8823 rush of our lawlessness, yoSb
fifty

meet
at least

f.,

7633
f. left,

give, lives at ease that f. lives, offer itself to you, g8ob

io28a 423

million

F.,

1633
f.,

6403 or doom, be 3 f. of man, 8463 best mirror an old f.,

one

awsit

felicity

7sga

possession

prevents

living
love,

9 J 3a
serve because

Freeman butters Stubbs, noia

346b 6i4a what's for dear too given f., a *95 ye have received, 423

we

Frenzy, demoniac f., 3483 eye in fine f. rolling,

f.

show

f.

your worst

trait,

*3ob not shaken from resolve by f., isib


of

324b bosom f. of sun, 5843 bring death to 3 f., 82a cannot be known, 383 choose author as choose f., 374b death of f. make man look sad,

contending for liberty, 46ob46ia no f. taken except by legal judgment, i57b Freemen, Americans f. or slaves, 46ia nation of f., 6353

his fellow citizens, 12 ib122E old man's f., 8&5a Frequent, eagerly f. doctor, 6303 more f. use of any organ, 4753 practicer of angling, 3263 Frere, mon semblable mon f.
f

7o6b
sois mon f. ou je te tue, 4693 Fresh as a bridegroom, 2383 as a lark, 5isb

who
Freer,

rules o'er

f.,

43$b
speech
f.,

as

month

of

nowhere

May, 1663

is

g243

as paint,

Frees her slave again, io8gb one word f. us, 833


Freeze,

68yb complexion and heart together,

230^2313 defend your departed f., do a f. service, 8ia dog the firmest f., 554b down inside me, 6403 every man will be thy f. f forsake not old f., $7b favorite has no f., 4jgb forsake not old f., 37b found song in heart of f., from morn to night my f., good f. for Jesus' sake, good wine a f. or being
3823 grant f.
in

3711

3093

6223 73gb 2ggb


dry,

my

retreat,

4573

thy

mountaintops that young blood, 25gb


fear
f.

f.,

2983

with

love

fry,

lo&sb

Freezes, till hell f. over, no4b f. handler, g48a Freight, nation's to groove, 73gb

Freiheit,

proportioned nur der verdient sich

F.,

478b Fremont, free speech F., loggb French and German blood spilled,
979 b
believe only in F. culture, 8o6a F. novel in language, best

dews of night, 3383 from brawling courts, 6sob heavens f. and strong, 5i4b how quick and f. art thou, 2513 makes not f. again, 3133 perfection in beloved, ssob sae f. and fair, 494a streams meet in salt sea, 2433 suspicions, 274b transfigurings of blue, 9563 waste not f. tears, 8sb

greatest American f., g24b guide philosopher and f., 4ioa, g6ab had brother who had f., g&gb had not f. nor toy, 6943 happy house shelters f., 6o6b heaven save from foolish f.,

welcome

faire

f.

May, 1673

honor f. who prospered, 78b house to lodge f., 41 ib was angry with my f., 4&gb idleness sorrow f. foe, 10298 if I had a f. that loved her.
2733 thou wouldest get a
f., f.,

loysb few obscure writers in F., 846b for converse with friends, 435a for fiddle-de-dee, 746b for suppressing one, 7133 gone no one to understand, gi6a gone to fight the F., 5003 hinges in F. conversation, 43&b I speak F. to men, i6gb new F. books, 6653 not too F. F. bean, 766b of Parys to hir unknowe, i66a
only accidentally F., 4i4b or Turk or Proosian, 766a phrase for hotel guests, 8g5b presented by F. government,

without fragrance, ggoa

woods and pastures new, 33ga world as f. as at first day, 7245


Freshest blue, gs6a Freshness, glory and
f.

if

37b
io5b

imperial

736b
.

of

dream, 5133

poem
Fret, I

forever keep f., gso3 should worry and f., 9463 living we f., 668a

in need friend indeed, in need nor bottle, 6713 in power friend lost, 776b indeed help in need, goga is a second self, nib is medicine of life, 37b

nuns

f. not, 5153 of existence, io47b

p3ss3ge through it, 333b thy soul with crosses, 201 a' weariness fever f., 82b
Fretful, quills

upon

f.

porpentine,
beast,

*59b
Frets

doubt maw-crammed
6&6a

864a Revolution began at top, 7213 Revolution ushered in equality, 10143 soldier carries marshal's baton, 5053 spake ful faire and fetisly, i66a speak F. when can't think of English, 745b sprightliness of F., 435a stormed Ratisbon, 66sa
struggle

86ga his hour, f. f. that cares me, Fretted,


f.,

fig for him struts and

who

is strong defense, gyb keep thy f. under own key, 26gb keep tonge and keep f., i6gb knolling departing f., 24ib left exposed a f., 7373 little f. of all world, 875b loan loses itself and f., 258b long sought with difficulty kept, 1453

286b

noia
3683

lost every other f., 6403 lost more than a f., 98 ib lost

the

pygmy body

to decay,

vault, 4403

no f., 4073 makes no f. never made

foe,

with golden fire, 261 a Freud, ideas of F., 86ib Freude, Kraft durch F.,

ioi7b

masterpiece of nature, 6o6b may you go safe my f.,

of

F.

soldiers.

73ib

tell you what it is, loi^b to F. empire of land, 5003 what is not dear is not F., 48ab word impossible not F., 5043 Frenchman, embrace Pole as F.,

Friar of orders gray, 2igb, io84b there was wantowne and merye, i66a Fri3rs, clouds like f., 62ob Fribble and less than man of reason, 9573 Fribsbi, fatal

my f. judge not me, ig7b my God my Father and

F.,

man Madame
F.

F.,

66oa
Friday, call
this

'neath every one a f., 6g4b ne'er said till f. dead, 8ogb never find a f., 882b never known till need, i84b never want f. in need, 6713

igia
first

good,

loosb

man

then a

F., 41 4b

my man
worse on
4333

F.,
F.,

s85b
iog6a
f.,

new new

f.

fit
Is

f.

to as

make old, 8i6b new wine, 37b


8253

I praise the F.,

4573
talking,

in Academy, 43b must be always

Friday's child, iog6a Friend, all he wished a

4413

no f. in misery, goga no f. like sister, 7403 no man useless who has

f,,

Friend
Friend, nor
f. to know me, 84a not a f. to dose eyes, 37 ib not ashamed to defend a f., g8a of every country but own, 5o6b

INDEX
Friend's,

bear his

f.

infirmities,

of

friendless

name

the

.,

433 b

of

my better days, 5&5a of Pleasure, 44gb


one chained f,, 571 a one f. in lifetime much, 7773 one f. leads to another, 9453 or foe spread lies, 7gib peck of salt with f., ig4a person with whom sincere, 6o6b poesy should be f., 58oa save me from candid f., 5073
say Welcome f., 3543 sharpeneth countenance of his f., *6b should bear friend's infirmities,

debauch f. wife genteelly. 43 lb Friends absent speak, 3073 adieu kind f., nooa adversity tries f., i8?a a age leaves f. and wine. 543 ah my foes oh my f., io2ga all thy f. lapped in lead, goga amuse f. annoy enemies, 8g4a and now kind f., 8iza
are exultations, 5i2b

56a

Friends not equal to yourself, 714 not go where f. perished, 7536 obsequiousness begets f., io8a of my youth where arc they,
of today, ga

old old old old

f. f.

always best, 8i6b


are best, 2075 times manners, 45ob

f.

be warned by me, gpsa become bitter enemies, gioa behave as we wish f to behave,
.

97 a better

256a
single soul in two bodies, 97a so great poet so good f.,

f. not be knowing, ioagb book f. talk to me, gs8b born not made, 7760 call that backing your f., *gga deepening fidelity with f., 3632 defend me from f., 5073 depart, 58?b

f. to trust, 2O7b ornament of house f,, 6oga ought to forgive our f., so7b part of self, 7ggb part when f. dear, 4703 people people have for f., 8sgb power in hands of f., 777b prosperity makes f., 1273 Romans countrymen, 255a

Scots

f.

second

to England, 2053 f., glass for

my

gg4b

37 ib soul of

distresses of
f.

our

f.,

gs6b
f.,

we've
f.

made,

86ab

statesman yet stoop to become f., 8y8b support f. oppose foe, io7*b supports whom Fortune crushes, 134*
to truth, 407*

do with enemies
47ob
faithful

f.

as books, 6o6b in war in peace

f.

hard to find, goga


f.,

secure f. by doing favors, goa secure you count many f., i2ga see f. and read books, 41 la servant of parted f., 7523 share all things, g2b shifts of fortune test f., nib soul remembering my good f.,

falling out of faithful

io8a

suspicious f., 41 la that sticketh closer

than
f.,

and many books, gs?b for when we awaken, g28b forget love to f. and brethren,
few
f.

2273 spare to us our


state

f.,

not 68ia

know

f.

8253 from

foes,

think
this

brother, 25a on thee

g6a

strive

dear

sga

forsake

me
for
f.

like

memory, 5733
with
f.,

is my f., sgb thou not my f., 60 ib time a kind f., g8*a to get news to you, 76^ to nave f. be one, 6o6b to her foe, 5033 to human race, 846a

French
435a golden

converse

had, 85gb good book best of f ., 6s8a has thousand f. not friend to
I

mightily eat as f., 2iga those f. thou hast, 258b three f. hardly possible, 7773 three faithful f., 42 ib thrice blessed are f., g42b thrust away by his f., g8a to congratulate made haste,
to

never old, aggb to to public amusements, 4gia travel with f. and song, g45*
fair
f.

me

have have

spare, i48b all in common,


it I

gsb do wrong, 88sb

36gb have advanced

f.,

71 ib

he cast off his f., 451 a he that repeateth a matter separateth f., 253 held up of his f., g8a his truth proclaim, g68b

trencher f,, 2gob troops of f., 286a two f. in lifetime many, 7773
tyranny's disease to trust

treat

f.

as if
f.

he might become
bestrad
horse,

no

f.,

enemy, ia6a
truest

that
f.,

warm

i75b

up up my
68*a

soga

honor truth above humblest f., 5i7b


f.,

f.,

g?b

weak man

better

enemy than
f.,

I
if

had old and young, 75gb

goob whose face never change, 8o?a a f., sometimes wildly striking 322b without treachery, 74?b worst f. and enemy Death, gg4a worth loving, 8oga unburied bodies of Friendless

well-chosen

book or

your f. are sore, 412* in thirties want f., iog7a


joy to their
just
f.
f.,

65b

with f. I make, io2gb we are not enemies but f., 6s7b we choose our f., 468a we love so dear, 75*b wealth maketh many f., 253 were poor but honest, 26gb what became of f. I loved so,

and brave enemies, 47*b

men, gi5a of every f. name friend, 4ggb


omnipotent but
Friendliness,
love,
f.,

s6ga
f.

herein

hardiness
f.,

174^1753
than

more

common

801 a

of British Empire, gigb Friendly and charming relationship, i7gb

and frank, 658a


bust, ioo2a

cow red and white, 82 gb hath friends must show himself


f.,

253
f.

in difficult are

forces,

g$8b
8gb

mingles with

open
social

and

f.

bowl, 41 ib in private,

f. honest man, 4gga universe not hostile nor f., g52b

keep f. with himself, 825a keep f. without capitulation, 825a kindred days, 6oga laugh at your f., 4i2a for f., 4ga lay down life leave f. and go, 8sgb little f. wrong, 78ob live without f., 74ib look with love as f ., g?sa made fortune send for f., g2a make your world, 7g4b makes f. without trying, gi4a man that hath f., 2$a misfortune of our f., gs6b misfortune shows f., gga multitude of f., go2a nature teaches beasts to know f., a8gb nearest f. can go, g26a never f. with roses, 774a no one would choose to live without f., g8a not be four f. in world, g6gb

who go with the who plow sea, 766b who set forth at
win

wind,

1583

side, ?i5b wife and children afraid, 3303 and influence people, f. loooa wise .never without f., logga without three good f., 24gb

women

wounded

find few f., 434a in house of my

f.,

363

wretched have no f., g67b a you and I long f., 4*3 demands your Friendship, author
f.,

536*

boughten f., g28b commerce between equals, 448c


constant save in love, 245 crown is love and f ., 58ob distance endears f., 588a 8a 'elegance of female f., 42 essential for happiness, 8i8b faded, g^b

from wine sudden f., 40 ib hardly ever brings money,

533!:

1346

INDEX
Friendship, herein
f.

Fruitful
Frowned,
fair Science
f.

cowardice

Frivolous
ness,

work
50 ib
stale

of polished idle-

not, 441 a

murder, i75a
holy passion
in
in
37<5a
f. f.

'rowning,

behind

f.

providence,

of

f.,

appearance

at

762a with me,


.

Frizzled

Fro, going to

and small, 10763 and f. on the earth, run


f.,

forehead of

f. skies,

igsa

but
false,

faithless

haven, 8ia

many
reel to

shall

to

and

f.,

353

in

3680
asked
for

and

2ib
f.,

is the strongest, 8o4b keep f. in repair, 4joa

Frocks and curls, 7373 Frog, better 'n any other


eye
of

last

lifetime

unless

newt toe of

f.,

758b 2853

Frowns fairer than smiles, s86b o'er wide Rhine, 556b sits on battlements and f., 501 a Frowsy couch in sorrow steep, 4g6b
Froze genial current, 44ob me to hear such talk, 761 a or snew, g7oa Frozen as charity, 533a carcass of leopard, io45 a children walk on f, toes, gooa corpse was he, 621 a

money, ?6aa let f. die, 433 like and dislike same things
f.,

is

1150

public like a f., 7353 leaping in, 38ob to be a f., io4a oh on log expiring f., 66ga

how

love liberty, love f. charity, adga love without wings, 554*

and

57b

outjump any
thus use your

f.,

758b

f.,

36b
go, iog2b

would a-wooing

moment when

f.

formed, 4oga
life,

needs no reason, 7oa needs parallelism of of the many, 7541 offer a man f., 83 ib

777a

only solitary

know

joys

of

f.,

Frogs die in earnest, 1046 drone their lament, ii7a eat butterflies, gssb in the marsh mud, i i7a Frog-spawn of ditch, 884a Frolic architecture of snow, 6o2b

58ib milk comes 222b


grass,

f.

home

in

pail,

music, 478 a
toes,

gooa
f.

torrid or

zone, 3273

Q4a
out
of
f. f-

cheat

others,

go8a

forward and wine, 32ob


Front,
all

f . glee,

52oa
f. f

up in horn, 468a when we are f. within, 7153


tunes
f.

8ib sets f. above public welfare, sheltering tree, 527b sounds too cold, 543*
swear on eternal f., 36 ib that can cease never real, i45a time strengthens f., 38 ib true f. never serene, sGsa two chairs for f., 68sb wing of f. never moults, 66gb with a man, looa where f. a little
truer,

8a peace and honest f., 47 of f. f 44b pious frauds f. books, 4igb rural quiet sacrifices of f., go4a

paltry

of

man, 64ab

Western quiet on

which thy f. bosom bears, 27 ib wind off f peak, g28a


.

cannon in f., 652a of Jove himself, 264a of this small floor, 354b
only essential facts, 683a
others
see
f.

io6a Fructify in lives of others, Frugal, how f. the chariot, 738a

mind, 45?b
swain, 445* wise and f. government, 47 2a and f., 7l?b Frugality, industry

f. it

fearlessly,

7iib

battle lower, 4g6a smoothed his wrinkled f., 2i6b Frontier from Atlantic to Pacific,
o'

second
Fruit,

is f.,

7ga
as
f.

bound

gsob
grave far away, 86sa New F., io72a no defensible f., io67b of my Person goes, io6ob
science endless
Frontiers,

bringeth forth his i6b

to tree, 7i8b f. in season,

42b f., ios4b cease from yielding f,, 34b


f.,

brought forth

cankers root and

earth
f.,

bringeth

forth
f.,

f.,

45 a

Friendship's,

gi4a

ioi5a aggression outside


f.,

fell like

autumn

367b
the
soul,
f.

forth

laws, 4055 won Friendships, for f.


true
f.

974b

reaching to plucked, 347b


like
f.

she

by awards
f.,

not real, i77a

true f. march, io7ib wherever man fronts


Frost,

hang
fact,

my
4b

2gia
pre-

68 ib

his

f. is

sweet,
f.,

from bad beginning great


109 a

invalidated by marriage, 7563 a keep f. in repair, 43 Frietchie, flag Barbara F. never

waved, ioi7b
Frieze,

no jutty

f.

buttress, z8aa

Frigate,

Fright,

no power

f.

like

book,
f.

738a
lust,

of
I

and
f.

io34b
Frighted,

sleep

have

thee,

curdled by f. from snow, 2goa daily more keen, ioi4b fell death's untimely f., 495 a is on the punkin, Sigh it was not f., 7s6a itself doth burn, s64a love in the f., io7oa not night kills but f., 86gb performs secret ministry, 526a of youth a f. of cares,

husbandman waiteth
I

for

56b bore was sun, i37b


f.,

cious

luscious piece of

10438

man
no
of of of of of of of of

stole the
f.,

f.,

322b

multiplieth

4b

f. but untimely grave, 327a action not be motive, io6a her hands, 27 a loyal nature, 6g3b

242a the reign of Chaos, 342b f. girl, Frightened, crept like


f.

prime 2o4b six weeks to

my branches, 77b sense beneath, 4osa


Spirit,

f.,

won't last, 86ga don't be little mouse under chair, iog6a Miss Muffet away, iog6b need to be thoroughly f., loagb out of fear, 288a
it

snow congealed with biting


65b
third

snapping of

f,,

ioi8a ioi4b
f.

that

53b forbidden

tree,

341 b
f.,

thy womb, 45b the plant vineyards and eat


f. of memory, reach ripest f. of all, 2i2a restore with cordial f.,

comes a f., 2g8b was specter-gray, 783b which binds so dear head, 5713
day
Frosts are slain, 773a
Frosty, blessings

33b plucking

844b

to death, 611 a Frightful fiend,


vice a

on your

f.

pow

ripest

f.

first falls,

monster of
the
isle,
f.,

f.

mien, 4oga

Frights, it f. Fringe, lunatic

848b
thine
eye

Fringed curtains of 2g6b Frisk i' the sun, 2953


Frisson nouveau, $gga
Fritter

my

wig, 746b

Frittered

away by detail, Frittering away his age, 52 sa Fritz, were yourself alive good
6sia
Frivolity,

494b but kindly, 48a Caucasus, 226a Eskimo, 823b wind made moan, 74oa Froth of falsehood, 776a hopping through f Frothing, waves, 745b Froward, life like a f. child, 366b Frown, trembled with fear at f.
6goa Frowned,
critic

that can fall

32 3a 227a without shaking,

4i4a
to

me that thy seasons bring, i42a tree bringeth not forth f., 3gb
known by
whose
f.
f., 42b threw death,

tree tree

F.

how

precious

is

f.,

dismal tidings

you have when he

f.,
f.,

517 449 b

3o8a unheard of, 8gga weakest f. drops earliest, Fruited, above f. plain, 84ga Fruitful, be f. and multiply, 5 error full of seeds, 8i4b

Fruitful
Fruitful of golden deeds, 344b sickle in f field, 488a vineyard in a very f. hill, 3ob
.

INDEX
Full, isle
little
is f. of noises, 2g?a knowest that hast not tried, 201 a man that hath quiver f., 2b meridian of my glory, 2g8a moon throw shadow, 8sa

Fund of good sense, iogia Fundamental human rights,


principle of constitution, 444^ principles of equity, gub strength of economy, gsob conditions Fundamentally,

was she not

f.,

1360

Fruition, prospects

more

than i., iob sweet f. of earthly crown, 2i2a Fruitless, cold f. moon, 3280 weak and f words, 6403 wishes, gSgb
.

pleasing

Fruits,

all

pleasant
f.

f.

do flow,

3Ooa

by Dead Sea

their

know them, 4ib


54^b
f.,

f .,

night f. of ugly sights, 2 not the f. four seasons, o' beans and benevolence, 6na milk of human kindness, o' 28ib of artless jealousy, 26sa of direst cruelty, 28 ib of few days and f. of trouble,
of of of of of of

sound, g$ob Funeral baked meats, 258a done and disbanded, io6gb grieve at f., ?62a into silent f., 10055

descendants shall gather your

n6b
eat his pleasant f ., agb fairy f . and flowers, 64aa flowers f. and many birds, 1723 here are f. flowers leaves, 8o8a

judge but by
kindly
f.

f.,

562b
6ob

i5a grace and truth, 48a high sentence, looia number of things, 823b quarrels as egg of meat, 224b shapes is fancy, 251 a smiles in early days, gsa

marches to grave, 62ob mirth in f., 257a misbehaved once at f., 5340 no f. gloom when I am gone,
io6b nobody's f., 10055 not a f. note, 566b not celebrate f. with weepine. P & io6b
past like f. gone by, 8i5b present at your f., io32b Funerals, cowards' f., io3a Fungus crop of sentiment, 77 ib Funny, as f. as I can, 6333 if happening to somebody else,
Fur, fierce
f.

no

f.

no

of the earth, flowers, 59*a

of life and beauty, 488b of love gone, 5633 outdo what flowers promised,

of of of of of

sound and fury, 286b of May, 24oa spirit as month strange oaths, 24ga
wiles full of guile, gia wise saws, 24ga
f.

2o4a
Fruit-tree, tips

reading maketh a

man, 2ogb
soft to face,

with

silver

f.

tops,

224a

sea is not f., 273 sea of faith at f., 7i4b

make

io7gb

f. fly,
f.

352b

Frumious Bandersnatch, 745* Frustrate ghost, 66sa not f. of his hope, 33gb Fry in own grece, i68a me or fritter my wig, 746b with fear freeze love f., io8sb f. pan into fire, Frying, out of i44a notions old f., 6g4b call Fudge, two fifths sheer f., 6gab and F., Fudges, merits of Bells 595 Fuel, adding f. to the flame, ssoa to maintain his fires, 3273 Fugit inreparabile tempus, ii7b
Fugitive

speed ahead, 5g7b

oh my

and whiskers, 743b

supped f. with horrors, 286b that your joy may be f., 49 a to be empty is to be f., 74a too f. for sound or foam, 655a wasna f but had plenty, 4gsb wheel is come r. circle, 28ob woods are f. of them, logga youth f. of grace, 7ioa youth full of pleasance, io84a
.

side inside, 9 07 a Furey, churchyard where Michael F. buried, g68a I Furies, acknowledge the F.,

go5b
Furious anger, g8a fancies, io86a
fast

and

f.,

46a
fear,

Full-blown rose, 58 ib
Full -dazzling,
all

his
f.

beams

f.,

his Scotch soul f., 97 3b in party f. to power, 38gb to be frightened out of

7oib
Fullness, earth

288a

and

thereof, i8a,

vast

52a
of all things, 6gb of perfection in him, 2g6a Full -rigged ship, iioaa Full-throated ease, 5823 Full-voiced choir below, 336a

ocean, 3iga winter blowing, ioogb


f.

and

and
f.,

cloistered

virtue,

winter's rages, 2gia

34oa
fancies

wise amazed temperate


Furiously, Jehu driveth Furled, battle flags were

f.,

668a
of

f., f.,

from

averages, receive the f., 466b shalt thou be, 6a what was so f. f 5i3b

law

io8ob

2843 ifi 64?b

Fugue,

folly

alone

stays

f.

of

youth, i76b

Fugues, prophesying like writing f., g6oa Fiihrer is always right, io2o,b Fulfill desires of thy servants, 6ob not to destroy but f., 4oa

gib Fulfilled, in heaven hope till all be f., 4oa


lusts,

to

f.

f.,

722 b

f. of law, 5ib Fulfillment, all men's plans to f.,

Fulfilling, love is

8gga with the sheets, 243b exhales rheum, io8sb of poppies, s84a Fun, allowed himself f. and relaxation, 86b and mirth, 4g6a animal dead what f., gi5a has the mostest f., 8iga more f. to be with, io52a more f. when cabin boy, 981 a nothing more f. than a man,

news f., io2ob foh and f ., 27ga Fum, Fumble and fill mouths,
Fully, report
fie

Fume

bright girdle f., 7Hb Furlongs, thousand f. of sea, 2g6a Furls sails lays him to rest, 6g6a Furnace, burning fiery f., 35a feet as if burned in a f., 575 heat not f. for foe, 2983 in what f thy brain, 48ga
.

lover sighing like f., 24ga of affliction, 35 ib

Furnaces, your worship

is

your

f.,

gi7b
Furnish forth marriage tables, 258a you with argument and intellects, 448a Furnished, live in f. souls, 10305

64b
bring all his words to f., 64b give each moment f., Q37b Fulfills, God f. in many ways, 654a great Nature's plan, 4Q3a Full, age f of care, io84a all his beams f. dazzling, 70 ib bloody f. of blame, 2g4a cause of weeping, 278a David died f. of days, 143
.

painting just for f., taken f. where found to match sorrow, 75 ib

me from mine own


it,

library,

75a

2g6a thousand

f.

rooms, looib

what
joy

jolly f .,

86ob
f.,

Function,

form follows
f.

838a
1071 a
102 ib

and
f.,
f.

of

poetry,

earth earth
hell
I
f.

is
is

f. f.

of his glory, of thy riches,

sob aib

83$a government, of citizen, io2ib-ioaaa retain ability to f., i036b to live is to f., 78ga Functional capacity, 475a
judicial

not

of

Furnishes oil for own wheels, 457 a Furniture for man's upper chamber, 634b no f. charming as books, 52b science first-rate f., 634b Furred, robes and f. gowns, 27Qb Furrow, half-reaped f., 5843

fathom

five,

2g6b

am

f.

of good intentions, i54b of matter, i6a

Functions, man in divers f., 2433 that poison their lives, g25b which resist death,

Furrowed face, 68ob Furrows followed free, 524b smite sounding f., 64<5b
Furs to touch,

1348

INDEX
Furside is outside, goya Further, hitherto shalt thou but no f., i6a

Gdley
Jain timely inn, a84b to die is g., 543, 933 to find beautiful soul, 4753 voyage not for g. honor wealth,

come

nearer to church f. from God, i8sa Fury, allaying their f., ag6b blind F. with abhorred shears,
civil

Future, no way of judging f., 4653 not think about f., Sgsa f. Vigor, Ssoa of human race, g4?a optimistic f. of mankind, 8343 philosophy triumphs over f.

Gained,
as g.,

boisterously
all

maintained

cunning old

grew high, 35 ib 743b full of sound and f., a86b in your words, 275b
f.

33 8b

evils,

355a
sees,

first

Present Past F.

488b

F.,

provide for

f.

better than past,

goia put f. in debt, gs4b


scaffold sways f., 692 a security for the f., 426a security of f., 741*

like

woman
f.,
f.

scorned, sgaa

limitless

ioi6a
f.

ne'er spend

on

child,

2i6b

he wished, 4413 65ob no friend, 4>7a something g. for universe, 7943 this by philosophy, 97a whatever he may have g., 72b who g. by it, i iob Gaining, something g. on you,

236b from heaven

how

little g.,

no

title

lost

no

like

woman

searching,

serve the

f.

io53a of disappointed woman, of patient man, g68b provides arms, i i7b

something
sgaa

hour, 5i7a everyone

reaches,

10483 Gains, do not seek evil g., 67b evil g. equivalent of disaster,
g. make heavy purses, 2053 no g. without pains, 10483 spirit th3t g. victory, 9873 Gait, excessive laughter and g., 38a forced g. of shuffling nag, 23gb Gaiters, gas and g., 66gb

with f., 744a Queen crimson slinging flame, 65oa than afterthoughts, stronger

84b in my f., ggb trample them white sound to ., io72a whole f. and might of enemy, g2ia Fuse, through green f. drives flower, 10703
Fussy,

f., g4ob dares forget past, 571 a time f. in time past, ioo4b transforms self in us, g38b trust no f ., 62ob wave of f. is coming, 1061 b wave of f. not conquest, io73b wings of the f., gg4b Future-directed society, losga

spend
till

rest of lives in

f.

light

Future's,

heaven

and
casts

f.

sakes,

Gal,

every

g.

born into world,


g.,

g28b
Futurity, shadows f. ent, 57sa Fuzzy-Wuzzy, 'ere's 87sa

on

presF.,

Gale

and

more than

876b

nobody

call

me

f.

man,

gGgb
Fust in us unused, a64b Fustest, git thar f. with mostest,
Fustian's so sublimely bad, 41 ob Fustilarian, you rampallian you
f.,

to

you

catch the driving g., 4ogb no g. that blew, 7923 note that swells g., 441 a of life blew high, 8533

partake

G
G, belong to company G, Gab, gift of g., 5$7b

g., 4ioa sun and summer g., 44 ib that sweeps from north, 4653
f

Futile

242a decalogue of mode,


fatal
f.

Futility,

of

fact,

84ga 7ggb

75^

yell for yell to g. 8433 Galen, more than G. cured, 324b withstand love's shock, says

ioia utility of f., Future a mince pie, io46a

Gabble,
f.,

geese

g.

everywhere,

945*
Galeotto was the book, i6oa
Galere,
3 6ib

8ga g4ob of man, mind in 84gb f. all America was past not f., 97&a American science thing of f.,
all

aid to interpretation of

concerned

about

f.,

8l 5 a as past

been into

would be present, 47gb f. and it works, 887b


f.,

cannot fight f., 63 ib democracy shuts past opens

dipped into the

f.,

discoveries in decimals, 827a divine sign indicates f., 87b education will determine f. life,
043.

enemies of

f.,

loiyb

giggle g. gobble git, 872b Gaberdine, Jewish g., 2323 Gabriel who bares his horns, io68b Gadding vine, 3383 Gadire, bound for Javan or G., 349b Gaels of Ireland, gi8a Gage, one for all we g., 22oa Gai, toujours g., g46a Gaiety before death, 10420-10433 courage g. and quiet mind, 8253 eclipsed g. of nations, 4a8b Gain advantage on kingdom of shore, 2g2b better to incur loss than g.

dans la

g.

d'un
faire

Turc,

que diable

allait-il

dans

cette g., 36 ib

Gales, cool g. fan the glade, 4o2b set of sails not g., 8255 Galilean, pale G., 7743 Pilot of the G. lake, 338b have conquered G., i44b you Galilee, Sea of G. and Dead Sea,

945*

wave rolls nightly on deep 558b

G.,

enters into us, 93&b faith in f. of mankind, io82b find we have lost f., 92 la flight of f. days, 343^ great f. for America, io74b hope to world for f., 637a hopes of the f., 92 3b

every joy is g., 66ib every way makes my g., 2763 guile and lust of g., 4oa is gain however small, 66 ib
of ground, 264b little patch madness of many for g. of few,

Galileo with his woes, 557a Gall, bear bonds that g., 774b enough in thy ink, 2533 I am g. I am heartburn, 8040 lack g., 26ib of bitterness, 4gb take my milk for g., 282a water of g. to drink, 34a Gallant, in g. trim vessel goes,

44ib
old soldier, 6ooa Gallanter I know, 734b Gallantly streaming, 541 a to Gallantry, conscience no more do with g., 48 ia what men call g., 6oa Galled, let g. jade wince, 26$b Galleon, moon ghostly g., 96 ib Galleons of Carib fire, io43a Gallery of works turned to wall,

imagining

f.

years come, 882a

in f. light will shine, 923a-b 82a in your hands rests f., instruct as to f ., 586a
lays
lies

man who in view my good vain hope


necessity

of of

g.,

723
2<

g.,

down law of today, 8040 with wise political leaders, 972a like unwelcome guest, 8i5b
lively sense of f. favors, loses past and dead for f.,

glorious g., painful inch to g., 688b serves and seeks for g.,

to

277b

set down as g. each day, i2ia spent in conquest of Jerusalem,

meet f. without fear, 62 la most in league with f., 72gb never plan f. by past, 454b

ib strength by experience, 98 the whole world, 433 those that covet with g. fond,

724a

what the
that
g.,

devil

do you do in

36 ib

22oa

Galley, Cervantes

on

g.,

gi8b

1349

Galley
Galley,

INDEX
g.

on board a Turk's

36ib
slave to rjen, 5900

what doing in that g., Galleys, over sea g. went, 66 ib Gallia est omnis divisa in partes tres, lisa
Galling,

Gane, nane sail ken where he g., io88b Gang aft a-gley, 4g2b before we g. awa', go3a grisly g., 923a
tell

is

Garden, this 10585


tree

g. city

and

myself,

growing in g., 4b tree of life in midst of the e *'


5b
turn

g.

at
in

Forty-second Street,
nerves

her

out

of

g.,

bowed with

g.

crown,

944* Ganglion 7873

voice of

Lord God walking


.

43 i a
in

of

society,

g- 5b

life thou art g. load, 4930 Gallon, pint of sweat save g. of blood, gSyb Gallons, five hundred g. of rum,

Gangrene in mildewed
Gangs,
don't join
g.,

silo,

g4ob
g.,

we must cultivate our g., 4^a who loves a g., 458a, 5gob
Gardener
64sa

too

many

Adam and
a
g.,

his

wife,

Gangsters, Nazi

g22b

Adam was
lie

868b Gallop and gallop about, Sgga apace fiery-footed steeds, 2253 beggar will ride a g., 2i5b false g. of verses, 84gb go sir g., 504a Pegasus to death, 41 aa why does he g. and g., Szja Galloped, I g. Dirck g., 66sa
Gallops,

215^ 8y7b

Gangway
Gaol,
all

will stop, loib for de Lawd, 10153

Gardener's, half proper

we know who

in

g.,

84ia

Gap appeared
76a
fill

in the mountain,

g. of

a generation, g2oa

g. work, 877b Gardeners ditchers and gravemakers, 2655 gardens were before g., sogb our wills are g., 2733 Gardening, what man needs in g.,

who Time

g.

withal,

great g. of time, eyes g., io ape, craters of Gapes for drink again, 357b
this

my

Garden's, river at my g. end, 41 ib Gardens are not made, 877a

5oa
Gallows, complexion is perfect g., 2g6a covered Europe with g., g4b die on g. or of pox, 447 a hanged Haman on the g., i4a
to g. foot and after, 877a under the g. tree, jjiga Galls, canker g. infants of spring,

258a
his kibe, 265b Gallup Poll fling pulse, g23a Galoot's, till last g. ashore, 77&b Gals, g. act so or so, 6i8a

Gaping, love not a g. pig, 2343 Garb, jester's motley g., g45b words in reason's g., 343b Garbage, prey on g., 25gb Garbled, speeches g,, 8gsa Garcia, message to G., S^a Garde, la G. meurt mais ne se rend pas, 5083 Garden, blow upon my g., 2gb cherubims east of the g., 6a

Babylon's

g.,

iio2b

8?ga Hanging G. dream, 933b imaginary g. with real toads, 996* not God in g., 7$4a our bodies are our g., 273a
salley g.,

down by

seeing g. in spring, g6ga these g. of desert, 5746

come

into g. Maud, 652a cultivate our g., 4i7a

why

Galumphing back, 745a


Gamaliel, at feet of G., sob Gambol, Christmas g., 5igb

Gambols, your g. your songs, 265b Game, back of bar in solo g., g$3a
gunless
g.,

earthly ball a peopled g,, England is a g., 877a fairies at bottom of g., findeth end in g., 4b flowers in g. meat in hall, full of weeds, logsa ghost of g. fronts sea,

477b
g42a i65b
7763

trim g., 335b were before gardeners, 2ogb Garfield, James G. sat on other, 74ia Gargantua, of G. the laughter,
1043-b

Garish, day's g. eye, ss6a

how you

in the g. in which

846a played g., g6ib to win, ios5b

God first planted g., zogb God once loved g., gSga God the first g. made, how does g. grow, logsb
hyacinth
g.

pay no worship to g. sun, Garland and singing robes, green willow my g., i8aa race where immortal g., withered is the g. of war,
Garlands, bring me, 703 dead, 543a
flanks with
g.,

22$a 3390
j4oa 288b
g,

3583

flowering

to

my name
8soa
I've

was, 9853

wears, 62Qb

is afoot, 244a, is done I've


is

won

won, 5253

up, 2gia
pleasure of
g., fi^a.

little

I know little g. close, 753a in her face, 3ooa in this delightful g. grows, 20oa into the rose g., ioo4b

583b

gather

no

g. there, 52ob g. for imitators, 4g8a

Garlic
eat

lost

or

won

g.,

597a

lean on g. urn, looib


let

and sapphires in mud,


no

love g. beyond prize, 865a play up and play g., 86sb played the g., 9610 poetry mug's g., 1008 a rigor of the g., 535a royal g. of goose, 45oa rules of g. laws of nature, 724b science not g., losoa start g. on lone heaths, 53gb that must be played, 8ggb never means anything, that
truth the g. of few, jggb war's a g., 4s8b

my

beloved come into his

g.,

sgb lodge in a

g. of cucumbers, 3oa,

God planted lovesome thing, 7s4a maid in g., 10940


Lord

g.,

5b

was empires, 56ja


whatever the
g.,

g., 84oa 7g8a 887b never make me famous, 10523 no g. complete without toad, 733D of cucumbers, 3oa, 784b

man and woman


Mr. McGregor's

in

mind attached

like g.,
g.,

68oa
g.

woman

is

his g., 64ga

Gamefish, only stream, 846b

swims

up-

Game's afoot, 2442, 8503 Games, shows g. sports guns, 463b


sinful
g.,

77oa

victor

in

Olympic

g.

or

an-

show me your g., ig6b small house and large g., 357b snake stood up for evil in G.,

of girls, 6sb of Shuteye Town, 8sob over grass in West g., g88a piece of land with a g., isoa rosebud g. of girls, 652b she went into the g., 442b

nouncer, 78a

Gammon and

spinach, 67 ib, logsb Gander, goosey g., iog4b

J27a Eer

them and grow g 2i4b


k

they'll

over-

onions nor g., 23ob wel loved he g. oynons lekes, i67a Garment, hardship our g., 92 ib left his g. in her hand, 7b life g. we alter, io4ob morality as g., g76a of praise, 33b of repentance fling, 62ga she caught him by his g., 7h Garments in always patchez, io5ib blood sprinkled upon g., 33b of gladness, g6b part my g, among them, i7b purses proud g. poor, aigb stuffs out vacant g., 2360 with g., 86b takes off respect trailing g. of Night, 620b Garnish, eye of heaven to g., 2373 Garret, living in a g., 44ab speech I wrote in a g., 426a Garrick, here lies David G., 451 a Garrick's a salad, 451 a Garrulous geese, io46b old men g. by nature, nza

1350

INDEX
Garter,

General
Gay gilded
scenes,

Cluett

Shirt

Boston G.,

losob
familiar as his g., 243* Garters, scarfs g. gold, 409* and G., 442b Garyalies, Joblillies

Gas and gaiters, 66gb destroys township with poison


expedient
as

lighting

by

g.,

Gather, descendants shall g. your fruits, ii6b everything into sacrifice, 10563 fast I g. bit by bit, 758b garlands there, 52ob honey all the day, 3g6b ill habits g. by degrees, 3723 knoweth not who shall g, them, iga
let

ggzb
quickly

goodnight and away, 8830

turn

in halls in g. attire, 5i8b life earnest art g., 4g8a


life over life was g., 82gb Lothario, 3g6a motes that people sunbeams,

6sib leaks twenty parts, 8643 or steam or table turning, 707b smells awful, 102 9 a Gascon wine, 66ob Gascoyne, Cadets of G., 8g6a Gaseous Vertebra ta, g6ia Gasp and stretch eyes, goaa
at the last g., 3ga fight till last g., 2i4a last g. of love's latest breath,

me

me

into

g. after the reapers, artifice of eternity,

nb

nineties not really g., 9433

poet could not but be


steer

g. r

8833
rose whilst prime, 2ooa roses of life today, i88a sh3lt not g. every grape, gb sh3lt not g. the gleanings, gb tears g. to the eyes, 648b the lambs with his arm, $2b

from grave to g. t 4ioa wit and g. rhetoric, 3$yb would not if I could be g., soob Gayer than a greeting, 1030 a
Gaza, eyeless in G., $4ga Gaze, glass wherein we
g.,

an b
Quintilian stare Gate, at one g. to

and

themselves together, 2ib time to g. stones together, 27b up the fragments, 480
we'll g.

on so fondly, 5423 show and g. o' the time, 2873


spindrift g., io4sb while they g., 44ib universe open to our g., 2iib we all g. at stars, 1073 Gazed on face of Agamemnon,

7743

g.,

34ob

and

make

go, 5O7b

tremble

defense,

ye rosebuds, g2ob

349*
g. of breath, 7743 drops on g. hang in row,' 784b here at g. alone, 652a

by the

Hun

877b knock once at every

is

at g.,

g.,

matters not how strait g., no latch for golden g., of horn and of ivory, 673, uga of subtle and profound female,

lark at heaven's g. sings, leant upon coppice g.,

748b 2gob 783b 8i6a 8143

Gathered, all safely g. in, 655b cannot be g. up again, i2b into Armageddon, s8b Medea g. enchanted herbs, 2353 nations g. before him, 443 to thy heart, 8123 together in my name, 433 together in thy name, 6ob Gatherer of other men's stuff, igib Gathereth her food in the harvest, 23b Gathering brows like storm, 4gsb Gathers, one that g. samphire,

7i8b
still

they

g.,

4503

Gazelle, nursed dear g., 5433 Gazer see with mortal eyes,

Gazes on the ground, 8260 Gazing rustics ranged around, 45oa Geant, ailes de g. 1'empechent, 7o7a Gear, disburdened of my g.,
.

73&
pale Anguish keeps g., passionflower at g., 65 2b ponderous g. of west, 7g6b poor man at g., 684b spears of little g., g68a starved at master's g., 4goa strait is the g., 4ib this is the g. of heaven, we pass the g., 8goa who waits at g., io6sa wide is the g., 4ib
841 a

Gat-toothed

rolling stone g. no moss, I was, i68a

1263

Greek to me, 2543 foreign dead men, Gee, by jingo by g., 1031 a
is

of

ioo6a

Geese,

all

his g. are swans,

44zb

7a

willow cabin at your g., 25 ib Gatekeepers shoveling snow, 10203 Gatepost, you me and g., 667b Gates, at heaven's g. claps wings,

igitur, isob Gaudiness of poetry, g57a Gaudy blabbing and remorseful day, 2153 day denies, 558b neat not g., 534b night, 2883 rich not g., 258b

Gaudeamus

all our g. are swans, 3113 are getting fat, iog8b are swans and swans geese, 7153 gabble everywhere she goes,
g., io46b snow cloud, ioogb than swans, io86a g. riches made wings like g., 4b swans of others are g., 442b was it for this wild g. spread

io42b garrulous

lazy g. like

more

Gaul
to

2osa Chicago at northwest g., 8g8b dreams have two g., 673 enter into his g. with thanksgiving, 2ia hateful as g. of Hades, 6gb heaven g. not so arched, 3153 her own works praise her in the g., 27*

divided into three parts, 1123 G. to Greece, 4573 Gaunt, city of G., io88a Gauntlet of mobs, 6oga with gift in 't, 6i8b Gave bodies to commonwealth,

wing, 88 la

Gehenna,

down

to

G.

up

to

throne, 87 aa
Geist, der G. der
stets verneint,

goa
his honors to the world, sgga me for my pains, 272b

478b
Gelded, delicately g., losob G61ert, faithful G. roam, 5o8a Gem, best g. on her zone, 6oaa
of all joy, 1763 of purest ray serene, 44ob song considered perfect g., 74ob

more she

g.

awey the more she

husband is known in the g., 273 lift up your heads O ye g., i8a lion on old stone g., 645a of dark Death stand wide, i i8b
of hell shall not prevail, 433 of Hercules, 7goa of horn and of ivory, 67a, iiga

open ye everlasting open ye the g., 3ib


railway termini

g.,

3473

hadde, 1643 only begotten Son, 483 proof through the night, 5413 she g. me of the tree, 6a the Lord g., 143 thee clothing of delight, 486b thee life bid thee feed, 486b to misery all he had, 441 a up the ghost, 47b what chance shall not control, 7113

thou bonny g., 4gga Gemlike, hard g. flame, 781 a

Gems

of heaven starry train, 345b and rare were g., 54 ib Gender, feminine g. of vessels, rich

954*

g, to glorious,

what other women


shut g. of mercy, 44ob sprouting at area g., looib to temple of science, 8473 unbarred the g. of light, 346b Gateways of the stars, 856b Gath, tell it not in G., i2a
Gavest,

woman whom

gave,

884b
g.,

thou

6a

4763 General built in public opinion, 979D


caviar to the
g.,

she's of feminine g.,

261 a

Gawd,

bein' G. ain't bed of roses,

10153
livin'

Gay,

G. that made you, 8733 bedecked ornate and g.,

ceremony, 244b doctor kills more than g., 3823 drink to g. joy of table, 2853 good is plea of scoundrel, 4gia
impossible to remove
g.,

349*>

Gather and squander,

deceiver, 4ggb

knowledges

idiots possess,

g7gb 4gob

1351

General
General mess of imprecision, loosb model of modern major

INDEX
Generous,
g.,

starves

her

g.

birth,

true and fierce, gaoa

766b
figures principle gives promote g. welfare, 4743 with concrete, 520^1 Generalities, glittering g.,

moves

on map, 8^4a no help, 5075

way plain peaceful wisdom is g., loia

g.,

6a8b

Genius, substitute for g., 4565 talent recognizes g., Ssoa taste is feminine of g., 6313 thine own g. gave blow, 5553

Thoreau's
three

g.,

79821

with our freedom, lossa


Genevieve, sweet G., 7783 courteous intellectual, Genial

fifths of him g., 6gsb towering g. disdains path, 6353

vessel of

my
g.

g.
if

now
no

hoists

sails,

5gia
current of

i6ob

Generality,

vague

g.

lifesaver,

my

soul,

886b
Generalizations,

misleading
is

g.,

Geniality, prefer g. 8 5 ib
Ge*nie, le g. n'est

44ob to grammar,

what use

focus, (k>7b

ioa6b
Generalize, to g.
to

qu'une grande

be

idiot,
in,

aptitude, 423b

49ob
Generally,
I
g.

had

to give

Genius, American g., io63b and mortal instruments,


aptitude for patience, 423^ bane of all g., 568a

S54a

Generals, before g. with aplomb, 73 a have died of gout, $64b haven't all been g., 76oa
I

g. calls, 6o6a without training, 656b word-coining g., 9753 work out own salvation, 5&5a shortest Geniuses biographies, 6o8a Genji, The Tale of G., 455b Genteel, Shabby G., i loob

when my

will live

own thought g. 6oiyb beyond g. of sea, gsGa books legacies g. leaves, 394b
believe
f

Genteelly, cheat at cards g., 43 ib debauch friend's wife g., 43 ib

Gentian,

reach

me

g.,

g86a

do not envy

g.,

701 a

capacity

for

getting

into

Ireland gives England g., 731 a victories of mighty g., 701 a Generation, an evil g., 46b another g. cometh, 2?a
at ease in

trouble, 756b

own

g.,

7&6a

beat

g.,

io8ob

best minds of my g., 108 ib can't wait another g.. loigb effectiveness of a g., 978a honor or dishonor to last g.,

capacity for taking pains, 7708 for taking trouble, capacity 4*4a, 578a, 7 5 6b to see, g8gb capacity civic g. of people, 795b crooked roads are of g., 487*>

Gentile, judges neither Jew nor G., 9673 might of the G., 55ga GentUes, light to lighten G., 46a Gentility, cottage of g., 533a

Genfle,

ah by

does what

it

must, 74ib

doing

impossible is g., eccentricities of g., 66ga


g.

?o6b
such,

6586 improvements by
lost g.,

Edmund whose
g.,

was

459b

45 *a
fatal

new

n6b

g.

933a descends from heaven,

to everyone save g.,

g6oa

fires true g. kindles,

4iob

a very g. beast, 230b dames, 4950 g. decay, s67a carry g. peace, 2gga come g. Spring, 4igb do not go g., io7ob don't be g, to your wife, 66a droppeth as g. rain, 234b from mouth flow g. words, 673 go please the g. and good, i6sb
g.

gives g. better discerning, 45ob

his life

was

g.,

56b

new g. of Americans, io7b new g. of leadership, io7za of men like leaves, 6$a
of vipers, ggb one g. passeth away, 27a pathological g., 7iob shorn by war, gaoa stubborn and rebellious g., aoa third and fourth g. of them

goes folly stays, 6ogb guiding g. of management, 9313 hand in hand, 6g5b imaginative g. of west, 73b investment of g. pays, 77ob is not immortal, 478a
is

meek and mild, 4&5b knight pricking on plain, 2ooa


Jesus
lie lightly g. earth,

3i6b
524a

limbs
love

did

she

undress,

is g.,

i7ob

of

no country, 456a
power man
g.,
is,

mind by gentle deeds, more nearly kind and g., iO38b


of

soob

is
is

patience, 4z$b that in whose


this

manners

our

g., 36gb g. senses, 28sa

that hate me, ga


this g. of Americans, g7ib trees to benefit another g., io7b vices of our g., 677a wiser in their g., 47*
is

American
of

lost

man man

g.

independence,

of g. of g.

had to pay, giob makes no mistakes,

plain just resolute, 702a reader, 5o8b sensitive mind, 88aa sign to know g. blood,
sleep sleep
it is

wrongdoing of one g., 6i4b younger g. knocking at door, 7290 Generations, converse with men of unseen g., i6ab dying g., 882b feast throughout your g., 8b honored in their g., sj8b hungry g., 5833 minds of different g., gStya
of honest ancestry, io2?a

g68b

a g.

thing,

soib 525b

g. sleep,

24a

man of g. ruined by himself, 43a men of g. not excel, 540*


must be born, 371 a
ninety-nine tion, 8

nb

percent

perspira-

our dwelling place in


save succeeding
g.,

all g.,

aoa

no4a

shall call me blessed, 45b three g. of imbeciles, 7880three g. shirtsleeves to shirt-

touch of madg. without ness, igob no taste for weaving sand, 6ioa obedience bane of g., 568a of Constitution, 426b of leader, ioi3a one percent inspiration, 8iib parting g. with sighing sent,

no

334a

757b truth endureth to unborn g., g7ob


sleeves,

all

g.,

2ia

Generosity, calls his extravagance

g-,448b
of soul, 73a Generous, be just before you're g* 48 ib because of frugality, 751 in peace just and g., 564a most vain most g., 8i5b nature take own way, 452b

unhabitual way, 793 b of men g., ios6b picking please the talenteang, io3ib poverty stepmother of g., 68sa prayed to g. of the place, uga raise the g., 4e>4b
perceiving in
since

when g. respectable, 6i8b hundred single g. equivalent to mediocrities, 77oa


and crooked
g.,

dooth gentil dedis, i68b though g. yet not dull, 357a trust thee g. Kate, 23ga voice was g. and low, s8ob wind does move, 488a with these butchers, 25sa world kills the g., jo44a Gentle-hearted, terming me g. in print, 534a Gentleman, ancestors of honorable g., 61 ib and scholar, 4933 be g. be idle, 205a devil is a g., 2?8b first true g., 3023 God send every g., io88b a grand old name of g., 651 he's a g. look at boots, 8s7b in the parlor, 5sgb never inflicts pain, 5g8a no lady ever a g., 95oa not in your books, 245b officer and g., 872b on whom I built trust, 28 ib once g. always g., 672a
that

slim

7g8a

prince of darkness a

g.,

S7 8

solitude to g. stern friend, 6o8a

showed him

g. an' scholar,

493 a

1352

INDEX
Gentleman, smooth-faced modity, 2363 so stout a g., 2413
g.

Ghost
g.,

Com-

Geography, desert idle in our


io6ga

take hym for grettest g., i68b tea g. at least, giga that loves to hear himself talk,

224b
very nice
g.,

that my sons study g., 4633 Geometric, he by g. scale, 3523 Geometrical, increases in g. ratio, 5023 mind, 3853

1081 a
g.,

who was then a


word of
g.

10843

and Christian,

*95 a writes well for a g., 3973 Gentleman-like, lovely g.

man,

Gentlemen and seamen


born to purple, 10263 cooks are g., siob between distinctions

22ga

in navy,

universe in g. figures, 21 ib Geometrician, grammarian rhetorician g., igga Geometry, geometrical mind not bound to g., 3853 no royal road to g., lojb of artist's own, 7gga shaped by hand of g., 3853 George, England and Saint G.,

Germany's, Rhine G. river, 5035 Germens, all g. spill at once, 2783 Gertrude always right, 10453 Gesang, Wein Weib und G., 4823 Gesture, distorting my g., io6ga each g, a commitment, io5b without motion, 10033 Gestures, get at thing without g.,

Get and beget, 8173


at

enemy
7173

as

soon

as

you can,
gs6b gg?a
out,

at thing without gestures, desire to g. on in world, easier stay out than g.

762b

244a
g.

and

common

people, loia

dust was g. and ladies, 7g6b farmers, 56ib

King G. upon throne, 5001 said his father, 4gga Saint G. for England, giga Saint G. that swinged dragon,
for

from where you are not, 10055 men g. and give, 4773 men take best they can g., 432b money still get money, 1233
out of kitchen, 98 ga that I wear, 24gb the trick, 7623 thee behind me, 433 thee glass eyes, 27gb thee to a nunnery, 26*3 there first with most, 7ogb time to g., 27b understanding, 2$b up begin again, 6643 up sweet slug-a-bed, 320b wh3t you W3nt, 8783 whole world out of bed, g473 with child m3ndrake root, o4b
writing, gg73

2363
the First vile, gg4a the Second viler, gj4a

God Almighty's g., s68b God rest you merry g.,


great-hearted g., lays eggs for g., iog6b like Cerberus three may cry Peace, 465*

xogga

66aa

g.,

481 a

the Third honest dullard, 82ga the Third ought never to have occurred, g$43 the Third profit by example,

no anaent

not to forget we are of England, gaSb of old regime, g84b of the shade, 237b prefer blondes, 10273

g.,

265b

g.,

452*

when G.
isaa

the Third was king,

unhand me g., 25gb were not seamen, 5g7a


what
is

rankers, 87gb scholars and g., 5ioa three jolly g., gi4b two g. rolled into one, unafraid, 8733

without money G., io8gb Georgeade summer drink, 886a George's, St. G. Hanover Square, 756a God be praised G. Georges,

4ggb

it

the

who wrote with

g. wish, ease, 4i2a

4653

ended, gg4a Georgia booze mighty fine, io4ia hell's broke loose in G., io4ib marching through G., 748a Germ of all virtue, 6gib German, achieved as G. soldier,
ioi2a
dictator,

you g. no more of me, 2113 you the sons your fathers got,
8523

you

to

my

lady's
g.

chamber, 26sb

you've got to
Gets,

up, gggb

Gethsemane had one, 8g8a

Dead Sea

Galilee

whose hair gray, g4ga Gentleness, angling produce


S26a
fruit of Spirit is g.,
let

gaob

him

g. to keep, g. to give, g45a to rest, 244b


g.,

g45a

g.,

dives into sentence, 76 ib

g.

my

strong

5gb enforcement

Fatherland, 5ogb for converse with enemies, 4353 French and G. blood spilled,

pleased with what he them that has g., 8113

2483

up by

bell,

75gb

be, 248b man of g., lyga survives, 10823 Gentler, still g.

sister

woman,

Gentlier

Gently,

on do

spirit lies,

645b

my

spiriting g., 2g6a

faults lie g.
o'er

on him, 2gga

flow g. sweet Afton, 4g$a perfumed sea, 64 ib replacing in oblivion, 7gga roar you g. as sucking dove,

22ga
scan brother man, smiling jaws, 7433 speak g. she can hear, thou and nature so g.

979 I speak G. to my horse, i6$b if G. people despair, ioi2b not even G. culture, 8o6b proud G. army, g24a statecraft, 677b sturdiness of G. tongue, 43$a to be G. means, 6v6b unity of G. nation, 10123 wherever G. tongue heard, 5o$b done have German-Americans, with G., 82 ib Germans and women have no
depths, 8o6b are like women, 8o6b beastly to the G., 10433
fear

Getting 3long with women, 4773 and spending, 5155


better 3nd better, 844b Gospel of G. On, 8363 not g. what one wants, 8ggb on in world, giga on together, g66b out of world known before, 913* prevent lower from g. more, g8a to heaven at l3st, 7355 wh3t one wants, 8$gb with all thy g. get under-

SgSb
part,

God

nothing

else,

677b

28ga time laid hand use all g., 2$2b

Lord bomb

G., io5ga

g.,

624a

Genuine
36ga

night

admits

no

ray,

to G, the air, 50oa Germany, aggression of G., 10123 authoritarian G., io$5b

standing, 2gb youth is the time of g., 35 ib Gettysburg can't understand it, loggb pile high at G., Q48a Gewesen, wie es eigentlich g.,

substantial and g. virtue, 47 la wisdom never dear if g., 658b Genus, hoc g. omne, i2oa
irri labile vatum, i24a Geographers crowd edges of maps,

1363 Geographical

boundaries or

dis-

tinctions of race, 7o5b coherent g. unit, logSb

up, gg5a in the world forward, Sisa a nation, 5goa preeminence in G., loiib Prussia part of G., g86b put G. in saddle, 677b ruins culture, 8o6b the cause of Hitler, ggga world power or not at 10123
is

England down G.

5863 Ghastly crew, 52 sb dew, 647a grim sncient Raven, 6433 long 3nd g. kitchen, 6753 night full of g. dre3ms, trembling cold in g. fe3rs, turned face with g. pang, Ghost, beckoning g., 4osb before not g. of shores,

2173 4883 5253 7903


663

all,

come back again, io4gb embrace my mother's

g.,

Short
ihost escapes from vanquished pyre, u8a
frustrate g., 66sa

INDEX
Gibes,

where be your

g.
g.,

now,
252 a

Gifts,

gods do not give


65 b

all

men
3oob
1593
g.,

g.,

Giddy, fancies are more

guessed, 8o3b

he gave up g., 4?b hollow g., 7i5a lost and by wind grieved
10490

g.,

habitation g. and unsure, *4*a I am g., 268a thinks world turns round, sigb Giddy-paced, brisk and g. times,

liberality in g., 38 ib more of his grace than g., lady's admirable g.,

my

no hard

g.,

make

g. of

him

that lets me,


g.,

Gideon Bibles only in bedrooms,


ioi8a

man giveth up the may spaniel it, 9945 of deceased Roman

*59 b

153

Empire, 3i8a of garden fronts sea, 776a of Hamlet's father, 86 la


of sleighbells, gs6b of snow, 926b please

sword of Lord and of G., na Gie me ae spark, 49$a Gift, beauty the g. of God, g?a
crave of thee
g.,

people I $64b presented unto him g., 3gb rarer g. than gold, gg4a
rich g. wax poor, s62a riches to make g. to

gg4b cannot win with

friends,
g.,

85a
seven hundred pounds goot

death

g. to life,

557 a ios6b

every good g.

and perfect

g.,

56a
fatal g. of beauty, 557a feeling the East's g., 664b

my

g.,

g6ob

some old

lover's g.,

thrice the g. fled,

n8b

go6b

gauntlet with g., 6i8b given for naught priceless

g.,

vex not his g., s8ob what beckoning g., 4<>5b

wrought
your

g.

upon

floor,

64ab

72ib God's to God, io56b great love goes with


greatest
g.
g.

little

g.,

walk, 66sb Gnostics, ghoulies and g., iog8b Ghostlier demarcations, g5$a Ghostlike, haunt g. the spot, 6i4a Ghostly, brain's old g. house, lossa galleon, 96 ib Ghosts, driven like g., 5<5gb from enchanter fleeing, 56gb haunted by g. deposed, asyb knight of g. and shadows, io86a of defunct bodies fly, 35sa of departed quantities, $ggb true love is like g., 355a walked, io33b

g. will

freedom

of

will,

i6ib
to know it, hearts not had as g., 88sb of heavenly g. poesy, 36gb heaven's last best g., 346a

have the

248b

it is

immortality not g., 8g8b a god who gave you this

love g. of tale, 74sa fairy manner of giving worth ib than g., 33

more

266b shining g., 6o3b spend not then his g. in vain, 302b thank Thee for g. of Thine, 7*oa two jars of the g. he gives, 6sa Gig, crew of captain's g., )65b Gigantic hound, 8soa press restless g., g84b speckled g. flowers, g8sa willful young, 8g8b Gigantically down, 6423, io43b Giggle gabble gobble git, 87 2b ha'd to g. w'en nuffin' in pot, giib Gild refined gold, 2s6b Gilded and sticky, ggob bit of wood g., 5o4a bricks, g45b cage, gosa
car of day, 3|j6b
eaves,

6480
g.

we are all g., 7sgb Ghoul-haunted woodland of Weir, 643b Ghoulies and ghosties, iog8b
G.I. Joe,

never look g. horse in mouth, i46a not so much nature of g., 822b of excellence to few men, 77a of God eternal life, 51* of laughter, __
of martyrdom, of sleep, 8i6a of the gab, 567b of unaffected conversation, 593a only g. portion of thyself, 6o7b pretty foot g. of nature, 478a reason God's crowning g., 82a skilled poet through natural g.,
t in i spirit

flap

bug with

wings, 41 la

fly does lecher, fool, 30 ib

27gb

nosh
dies,

Giant, as when a g. Atlas upholds, 84b

27 la

gay g. scenes, sgab hearse, loogb laugh at g. butterflies, aSoa not marble nor g. monuments, sgaa vessel goes, 44ib
Gilding, stripped of lettering
g.,

baby figure of g. mass, s68a branches tossed, 573b Despair, 36sb dwarf on shoulders of g., 3ioa
fling stone g. dies,

and

42ia-b
eternal

Gilds,

summer

g. them,

5 6ob
love g. the scene, 481 a Gilead, no balm in G., 343 Gills, soul swims without g., g43b Gilpin long live he, 457b Gilt, dust that is a little g., s6ga more laud than g. o'erdusted,

4i8b
into

making
gfab

G.

hit

double,

which
g.

g. offered,

82b

my

g. goes

with me, 6o6a

tablet
terrible

a
g.

of

memory,

race before the flood, 371 a tyrannous to use it like g., 27ob wings prevent walking, 7o7a Giant-dwarf, g., senior-junior 22lb Giant's robe, a86a strength, 27ob Giants in the earth, 6b

lifted

95b from hearts,

7o8b though small is precious, 6sb time with g. of tears, 773a


to

26ga
surcingles,

7$8b
io5za

be well-favored g. of tune, *46b true love's the g., 5i8b

for-

Gimble, gyre and g., 74sa Gin, perhaps it's the g.,

union

of

g.

and

vermouth,
g.

pygmies

on

shoulders

of

g.,

i34a standing upon shoulders of

g.,

various g. to each, 62 $a what does g. mean, io56 without giver bare, 6g2b woman's g. to rain shower,

Ginger, board money in 753 hot i' the mouth, 252a

jar,

379D
strength of the ancient g., 66a wage war like physical g., io24b Gib, melancholy as g. cat, 2$7b

2iga

g8a your g. survived all, io6oa Gifted, poetically g., 7iga


g.,

word better than

nutmegs 2a Gingham,
8sob
4g$a me,

g.

cinnamon
of g.

cloves,
calico,

bits

and

Gibber, squeak and g., S56b Gibbets, better schoolrooms than g., 686a keep lifted hand in awe, $g8b Gibbon, eh Mr. G., 47oa Gibe, call it humor when they g.,

Giftie, some Gifts, adore

power

g. gie us,

dog went Bowwow, 82ob


Gins, snares traps g, pitfalls, 6sgb

my

g. instead of

33 D
benefit in g. of bad man, 84a cluster of g. experience, 7g8b

Gipsy, fortune fickle g., 6oob in Giraffe queer gracefulness,

39a
of European scholars, g$ga Gibeon, sun stand still upon G., a

founder, 4<56a fairy g. fading away, 542 a fear Greeks even when they bring g., n8a glorious g. of the gods, 62b

enjoyed

g.

of

g85a Gird on sword

O man, 801 a up thy loins like a man, Girded, father's sword g. on, he g. up his loins, 136
let loins

i6a

54a

be

g.,

47a

INDEX
Girded, with your loins g., 8b Girdeth, him that g. on his harness, i3b Girdle, bright g. furled, 7i4& helps with g., 10523 loosened the embroidered g.,

Given
Give,

Give bouquets while I'm living, 94Qa can't g. word of honor g. promise, g67b cheek a little red, 4o6b

countries g. themselves to you,

64a round 3bout earth, 22gb round about world, 2ob


Girdled,
Girl

walls

and

towers

g.

round, 523b

Burma

bean from boy bean, 10523 g. a-settin', &73b


frightened
g.,

g85a country to Indians, io42a cried G. me, 735b crowns pounds guineas, $52b Dayrolles a chair, 4i6b delight and hurt not, 2973 enemies means of our destruction,

more blessed to g., 503 mother g. me sun, 72gb my regards to Broadway, 9443 name to every fixed star, 221 a never g. all heart, 88ob no more g. the people straw, 8a no more to every guest, 3903 not a windy night rainy morrow, 2gsa not what we g. but share, 6gsb of possessions is little, 9763 of yourself truly g., 9763 one life for each to g., peace I g. unto you, 493 place to better men, 3283 praise to g., 303b reason on compulsion, 2393 sorrow words, *85b
thee peace, gb them meat in due season, sib these delights if thou canst g.,

crept like

838b

6s4b green g., 2593 heaven protect working I left behind me, icgoa I like to see, losga little g. by d3y, g4*a
fnir little g.,

every
g.,

man

76b
thy ear, 258b ale, 244a

fame for pot of


8453

freely received freely g., 42a great meals of beef, 2443 hand and heart, 547a

on steamship, 10273 needs good p3rents, g843 won't nice g. give an inch, 1353 not a g. goes walking, g66b soft f3ce of 3 g., 823 speak like 3 green g., 25ga Spe3rmint G., losob sweet g. grsdustes, 6483
looks well
sweetest g. I know, gs4a teach orphan g. to sew, 6453 then spoke I to my g., 3203

has nothing g. nothing, iO56b hautboys breath he comes, 371 a haves of g., 103 ib

him a little earth, 2gga him death by inches, sgoa


I

his angels charge, 2ob generally had to g. in,

5o4b
eyes,

I will g.
I

you

rest,

42a

will not g. sleep to

mine

if

22b you can


life

g.

that

you're
g.,

writer, io44b

there little g. don't cry, 8ig3 there was a little g., 6253

in
it

did

harbor

3033

an understanding, 2583
you
g.,

unlessoned g. unschooled, 2343 walking in Cotswold lanes, g66b

gets to g., 945 a kiss better than


it

2693

wink at homely g., g6ob Girlish glee, 7683 kughter, 8493 Girls, all g. he can please, 7803 boys snd g. level with men,
288b
boys and g. together, 86ab dancing wonderful for g., ioi7b dust W3S lads and g., 736b garden of g., 65b gayest of gay g., s88b golden lads and g., 2913 hear wh3t servsnt g. ssid,
9 o8b in g. 3g3in courted, io86b laughing flesh of g., io7gb
little g.

man pipe he can smoke, 75gb me a dozen infants, g4ga me a kiss, 3203 me a look, 302b me ae spark, 4g3a me a thousand kisses, ii4b me a torch, g86a me again my hollow tree, 41 ib me an ounce of civet, 27gb me another horse, zi^jb me back my heart, 5553 me back my legions, i24b me but that, ig4b me but what this riband

made

of,

iog6b

of all g. so smart, 4oob turn wives, io8ib what shall I do for pretty

g.,

8853

me excess of it, 2513 me good digestion Lord, g46a me hand that is honest, 5i8a me handfuls of lilies, iiga me health and a day, 6053 me home where buffalo roam,
8o8a

bound, 332b

I g., 1923 throne would be easy, ggb thy thoughts no tongue, 258b thy worst of thoughts, 2743 to a thief, 10673 to get esteem, 44?b to spend to g. to want, soia to the poor, 433 two daughters crying g. g., 26b up verse my boy, g88b us a song to cheer, 7 us endless sky, 10723 us grace and strength, 8253 us luxuries, 6343 us our daily bresd, 4ob us rest or de3th, 645b us serenity, 10243 us taste of your quality, 2613 us the tools, 9223 warning to world, 2g2b we receive but wh3t we g., 5273 wh3t we g. 3nd preserve, 6s8b what you command, 1473 what you have, 62 ab when I g. I g, myself, 7oob women all take no g., g^sb world assurance of 3 man, 2643 world the lie, igg3 you some violets, 2653 your heart to hawks, ggsa Given, as if checks g., 7376

335a they beg

ask and it shall be g., brother dust to eat, 8g8b

41 a

which

g.

hath

merriest

eye,

for naught priceless gift, 72 ib gladly not to be st3nding here,

who wear glasses, 10293 with g. be handy, logoa wretched un-idea'd g., 4sgb
for onset, 734b Girt, just g. Git th3r fustest with mostest,
Gitciie
Gits,

me John Baptist's head, 42b me liberty or death, 465b me liberty to know, 34ob me more love or more disdain,

God

io63b has

g.

you one

face,

s62b

me

Gumee, shores of G., 6233 them that has g., 8iia

Give a little love to child, 6g8b a man enough rope, i8ib a new commandment, 4ga all I can g. you I g., 775b all that a man hath will he g., i4a all thou canst, 5i7a all to love, 6033 an inch take an ell, i85b and not count cost, i8ob ask only what they can g., 886b author's skill to g., 866b

me my scallop shell, 1993 me ocular proof, 2753 me quoth I, 281 a me splendid silent sun, me that man, 2633 me the daggers, 283b me thus daily bread, g45b me to drink mandragora, me today take tomorrow, me truth, 6843 me Vesuvius' crater, 69*3 me where to stand, 1053 me 'your answer do, 885b me your hand, 2i8b me your tired your poor,
meanest
flower

3*7 a

h3st thou g. the horse strength, i6a heart change of mood, 9273 he3ven alone g. awsy, 6g2a his heart to cause, gg4b
I

have

g.

suck and know, 2&2b

70 ib

in vain in V3in, 6535

more

g. less

work, 7320
it

much
not
2873 i4gb

g.

much
g.

have
g.

required, 473 for monkeys,


required,
g.

nothing 424a
of thine

nothing

own h3ve we

thee,

can
477a

g.,

8173 5143

back

lost delight,

758a

men

get

and

g.,

i4a our he3rts 3W3y, sisb pay for what gods g., take what is ., g$oa thee till break of dsy, them the slip, s86b

giob
488b

1355

Given
Given, thou hast g.

INDEX
him
his
g.

Glad, sad

g. brother's

name,

Glass, grief

heart's desire, 17 b too dear for what's

7763
freely,
g.,

show ourselves g., 5gb some have what others would


be g. of, 424b be of use, looia sleep with Aphrodite, 663 when they said unto me, 223 while he lives be g., 774b wine th3t raaketh g. the heart, 2ib
to to

unto everyone that hath be 44*

with g. that ran, 773* hate you through g., 10363 house is g., 3245 house of German statecraft
if

what scanted in hair


2i8a

g. in wit,

your windows

made mouths

g.,

in

who has
youth
gift to

g.

me whom
g.,

42 ib a g.,

this sweet,

8g8b

obscured or broken, io8oa

2783

Giver, cheerful

was 53b

g.,

5113

without g. bare, 6g2b keep modest as g., 8053 of sustenance, gb Givers, when g. prove unkind, 2623 Gives a child a treat, 9473 blesseth him that g., 234b but for another g. ease, 48ga

wise son maketh a

g. father,

of brandy and water, 5oob of fashion mold of form, 26ab of years is brittle, 7743

pride

is

his

own

g.,

2683

with

you

all heart, 21 la like adverbs, 8ooa

my

satire a sort of g., 388b see through g. darkly,

2b

but greater feeling to worse,


2263 doubly benefits
1253
she needs, 874b from sense of duty, 6g2b
'er all

who

g. quickly,

Gladdening west, 8gga Gladdest thing under sun, Glade, bee-loud g., 87gb cool gales fan the g., crown the W3tery g., 43g3 points to yonder g., 4063 Gladiators, if only g. died, Gladly, be your wife g.,

shown

g. flowers,

gg6a
tie

10233

stand before loiob

g.

my

tie,

402b

harness bells a shake, gayb he that lends g., 3253 heart and soul away, 8$2b himself with alms, 6gab lovely light, 10233 new meaning, ggga no man a sinecure, g88b only worthless gold, 6g2b secure whate'er he g., 427a

beyond any experience, die, 823b died g. with all you knew,
io78b
lerne

g45& 673b 10313

Time
to

swift sandy g., 30 ib thou art thy mother's g., thou canst not tame, g22b

2gib

turn

Venus

turn

down empty

his g., 30 ib consecrates g., 10863

up

g.,

6313

and glsdly

teche, i66b

Venus take my votive g., 3883 wherein noble youth dress, 2423 whose house is g., 324b
Glass-bottomed, through sewer in
g. boat, g4ia Glasses, fill all the g. there,

suffer fools g.,

53b

somewhere back thoughts, gg4a


sternest good-night, 28gb the more he g, to others,

Gl3dness, begin in g., 5iib garments of g., 3&b notes of g., 537b of the he3rt, s8b serve the Lord with g., 213 teach me half g., 57ob wealth small aid for daily g.,

357b loaga tempests, 557b Shakespeare and the musical g., *'
girls

who wear

g. f

itself in

448a^
stand to g. ready, 7igb Glass's, over g. edge dinner done,

75b

thoughts nature g. W3y to, 2833 to airy nothing, 23ob truth to summer's lie, 10323 twice who gives promptly, 1503 Giveth his beloved sleep, 22b land the Lord g. thee, ga
life

853

Gladsome
ig8a

light of jurisprudence,

664b
Glassy cool translucent wave, 337b
his g. essence, 2713 Glaze, gloat on g. and mark, 8o4b

man

and breath, 503 g. up the ghost, 153

not as world g., 4ga unto the poor, 26b


Giving, brief as the g. bre3th, 10113 enemies the slip, 437b heart to dog to tear, 8773 in g. we receive, i57b

most g. thing in world, &57b Glamis hath murdered sleep, st8$b thou art and Cawdor, 28 ib Glamour in winning presidential elections, g8$b moment of romance of g., 8433 of childish days, gfyb Glance from heaven to earth,
glum, 76ga
matron's g. reprove, 44ga O brightening g., S8$b of the Lord, 5593 ten thousand saw I at a

Glazed with rainwater, gyga

upon the g. shelves, looib Gleam, alabaster cities g., 8493 bright g. of noble deeds, 7gb
Glazen,
fled visionary g.,

s^b
57 ib
sight,

follow the g., 6553 of her own dying smile,

Gleamed
Gleaming, 447*
g.,

upon my
like g.

5143
light,

taper's

know nothing

of g., 85ob

manner of g. worth more, 33 ib more g. less buying, Qi4a


not in g. vein today, 2i?b stealing and g. odor, 2513 Gizzard, something in her
Glacier

without

g.

my

way,

7363

g.,

Glances, gray eye g., 642a Glancing, upward g. of eye, 5183 Gl3re, moths C3Ught by g., 5553
rockets' red g., 5413 sunburnt by g. of

knocks

in

twilight's last g., 54ob Gleams, light g. an instant, gogb of remoter world, 5683 on whom pale moon g., 8073 through fog, 43&b thy footstep g., 6423 untraveled world, 646b Glean, let me g. after the reapers,

cupboard,

woman, 10435
Glad did
I

Glareth, not

all

6i8b life, gold that glareth,


great
oath,

nb

live gladly die,

82gb

diviner's theme, s68b green leaves like wings, 784b heart too soon g., 66za I fought agin her, 772b kindness, 88ab
let

'550 Glasgerion io88a


Glass

swore

not g. thy vineyard, gb my teeming brain, 5813 Gleaning of gr3pes of Ephraim,


shalt

Gleaned

na

us

live
g.

and be
of

make

heart

g., 151 a childhood,

7803 me with soft black eye, 5433 moments of g. grace, Sygb never g. confident morning, 662b New Year, 6453 not born before tea, 52 3b of other men's good, 24gb Olaf g. and big, 10313 pain g. to be forgotten, gg4b

abraded by beach, 72 ib break bloody g., 10623 cool as g., ggoa dome of m3ny-colored g., 5723 drink not the third g., 322b excuse for the g., 48 ib 10623 falling hour by hour, fill every g., 4010 first g. for myself, 3g4b Fortune like g. e3sily broken, i25b fount more sparkling than g., 1223
get thee g. eyes, green g. beads, g

Gleanings, shalt not gather the


Glee, birds mad with counterfeited g., 44gb

g.,

Qb

g.,

7583

forward and frolic g., 5203 girlish g., 7683 mutual g., io43b piping songs of pleasant
Glen,

g.,

the rushy g., 72ga Glenartney's, lone G. hazel shade,

down

5203 Glens, gray and wintry g., goga Glib about eternal things, io66a 3nd oily art, 2773

1356

INDEX
Glide,

Glory
g.,

in

sunny beams did

g.,

Glooms, beetle
8193

booms adown

Glory and shame of


364*

universe,

4863

3603 gyga Glideth at own sweet will, 5123 Gliding, snakes g. up hollow,
g.,

7433 haven g., 425 b into soul boughs does


leisurely safe into
g.,

we

Splendors and G., 57 ib welcome kindred g., 4igb

Gloomy calm
4 3 ia deep and
g.

of

idle

vacancy,

and the dream, 5i3b be the perfect one, 736b be to the Father, sgb
belongs to our ancestors, 1372 cataract leaps in g., 648b

to

wind

tossing

water,

6o4b Glimmer, 879b

wood, 5093 shadowed tower, 8s5b view of future, 9423


Gloria in excelsis Deo, 593 mundi, 1703 Gloriam, ad maiorem Dei g., i86a Gloried and drank deep, 62gb Glories, conquests g. triumphs spoils, 2553 heaven's g. shine, 68sb like glowworms, 3153 my g. and state depose, 2283 of our blood and state, g27b some Saian g. in shield, 68a Glorified pawnbrokers, 848b Glorify Father in heaven, 4oa what else is damned, 41 ga Glorious, acclaim your g. name, 10313 blood-red, 663a builds g. temples, 6g2b by my sword, 35 sb circumstance of g. war, 2753 crowded hour of g. life, 455b crowded with g. action, 5223 deaths g. in thy defense, 3933 fault of angels, 4o6a full many a g. morning, 2923 gifts of the gods, Gab heaven's g. sun, 221 a honorable and g., 461 a hours even in poorhouse, 6843 how g. and painful, 6573 in arms, 22 ib institution, 453b king's daughter all g. within,

crown of g., 573 day of g. has come, 4gga


days of youth days of g., 56sb departed from Israel, 6255 desire for g. clings, 1403
desirous
of

midnight's

all

g.,

of twilight, 662b

on my mind, 537b Glimmering, gone g., 555b hold g. tapers to sun,

honor

and

g.,

3123

incarnations of hopes, 57 ib mere g. and decays, s6ga now fades g. landscape, 44oa river lake g. pool, 72ob twilight g. by, 8g3b
weirs, 8g3b Glimmers, holy io28b
g.

of

goodbyes,

polish until g., 8i4b Glimpse, nor g. divine, 4143 same old g. of Paradise, 855b Glimpses, heaven gives g., g2?b make me less forlorn, 5isb of forgotten dreams, 644b only to those, g27b
revisitest g. of the moon, 2593 thousand g. wins, 7iib

374a-b die in g. never old, 8533 doesn't mean argument, 746b drowned g. in cup, 630b excess of g. obscured, 342b folded g. of wings, 10323 for country's g. fast, 5iga forgot was Britain's g., 7263 from gray hairs gone, 625b from the earth, 5133 full meridian of my g., 2983 glorious had no g., 10443 go where g. waits thee, 54 ib guards bivouac of dead,

heavens declare the


i7a-b

g. of

God,

Glint, bearings g., io4sb

hoary head a crown of g., 24b Homer herald of your g., 1023 hope of g., 6ob
horse-sense
in

in g. old gold, gi8b Glisten, all silence and g., Glister me forward, io64b
Glisters,

pomp and

g.,

6933

Glistering grief, 2g8a that g. all

hymns to g. of life, gg8b in hevin' nothin' o' the sort,


6gsa
in His bosom, 6gob in one day fill stage, 32 2a in the flower, 5143

not

gold,

i56a Glittered

when he

walked, gooa

Glittering eye, 5240 a generalities, 591 g. bride, 5i6a society Glitters, all that g. is not gold,

my

made
make

g.

summer by sun
and

of

Gloamin', roamin' in the

g.,

go33

York, 2i6b thee g. by


city g.

my

pen, 35jb
great,

Gloaming, shuddering in light, 764b

g.

making

77b

snow had begun in g., Gggb Gloat on glaze and mark, 8o4b
Global thinking, io5gb Globaloney, io5$b Globe, country spread over half
g.,

mirror, 557b mission of trade unions, 82 la morning for America, 444* most g. city of God, 1473

most

632b

g. to victors, gob necessity to g. gain, 5i5a railway termini gates to


g.,

departed from Israel, 122 in their shame, 54b jest and riddle of world, 4093 King of g. shall come in, i8a land of hope and g., 8623 left him alone with g., 566b like a circle in water, 2143 like a shooting star, 2273 long hair g. to woman, 523 love of g. most ardent, sgsb Memnonium in all its g., 543b mine the travaille thyn the g.,
is is

g.,

distracted g., 26oa doubled g. of dead, 10703

flames

have

spread

over

g.,

473 b

95 lb right hand is become shadow of g. name, i34a song of old, 657b

8b

i67b my gown of g., igga nothing so expensive

as g.,

what joy and

g.

522b must be,

freedom hunted round the 466b great g. itself, 2g7b power dotted over g., 547b
sop of
Gloire,
all

g.,

this

le jour

de

solid g., 268a g. est arrive\


g.

499 a Gloom, chase

my

away, soob

stirring sight, 8523 sun in heaven, 5?6b sunshine a g. birth, 5133 Tarn was g., 495 b the g. Ninety-two, 464b the more g. the triumph, 466b thing to be pirate king, 766b things had no glory, io44a

of Christian religion, i7ab of coming of Lord, 6gob of everything, io4<5b of his country, 546b of Him who moves everything,
of of of of of of

convent's solitary g., 4osb counterfeit a g., 335b

things of thee are spoken, 446a war's g. art, 3g8b

i6ib honors beauties wits, Lord shone, 46a old story is forever, rulers or races, g4gb
the Lord
is

$o$b
iigb

deep

thicket's g.,

477a

Gloriously drunk, 458b

encircling g., sg7b in g. black-purple, gi8b moral g. of world, 6igb no funeral g. when I am gone,

he hath triumphed

io6b nor g. of night, 873 and eclipse, of earthquake 5 68b sullen sunny light g., 59$a tempted her out of g.

perjured, succeeded, io4gb Glory, a light a g., 5273 all-cloudless g., 56 ib

ma

g.,

8b

33b their times, 38b of thy people Israel, 463 of war moonshine, 7053 of winning were she won, 73ob of woman who occasions least
talk,

risen,

and blue air, 6i8b and danger alike, 8gb and freshness of a dream, 5133 and grief agree not, 6g8a and nothing of a name, 5593

goa

of world displayed, 88gb

Old G., 6oib Old G. on broomstick, 8643 one star differeth in g., 533

Glory
Glory or grave, 5383 path of duty way to paths of g., 44oa

INDEX
Glow, sunset
g.,
g.,

65 ib

thoughts that

8ogb g., 7203


the

Go from me, 6i8a


from strength
gentle
into
to strength, 203

Glowed, now
world,
345

g.

firmament,
g.,

that

good night,

pomp and
sgBb

g.
g.,

of

this

io7ob

power and

47b
of

Glowered, as Glowing axle

Tammie
doth

allay,

49&a 336b

precious forever, 855 pride of peacock g.

God,

pursuit of human g., 3273 race of g. run, 34913 rainbow's g. is shed, 57ab search their own g., 26a set stars of g. there, 578b

4870

chase g. hours, 5563 embers through the room, $35b green g., 10543 Glows, gold orange g., 4773 in every heart, sg8b intense atom g., 57 ib Glowworm, eyes the g. lend thee,

hand in hand we'll g., 4g4b hang yourselves critics, i8ib home and get sleep, 8973

home
I

in dark, 864b can scorn and let her

g.,

3i8b
I g.,

I die as often as

from thee

35 D
I g. on forever, 6523 I g. to prepare a place, I will arise and g. now,
if

shone around, 3842 shows the way, j84b sing tongue the Savior's g., 1583 sittest throned in g., 743a Solomon in all his g., 4ia sudden g. maketh laughter,

32ob shows matin

to

be near, 2603

Glowworms, glories like g., 3153 Glue and lime of love, 3190
Glued, student
g.

g. high use own legs, 8053 in pesce, 1523 into it baldheaded, 6933

493 87gb

to

desk,

721 a

7693 5843 Gluts twice ten thousand caverns,


g.,

Glum, glance

Glut sorrow on

rose,

into it yourself, 4gob into night g. one and all, 8i6a into the house of the Lord, sab
it

alone, 68oa
g.,

summers

in a sea of g., swiftly passes g. of world, 1703 take away our free will and g.,

579 b Glutton, drunkard

and

g.

shall

i77b
that bright tragic thing, 7393 that was Greece, 64ib, 9253 they to g. ride therein, 381 a thine is the g., 4ob
goin' ware g. waits, 6933 time's g. calm contending kings,
this

come to poverty, 263 Gluttonous, behold a man g., 42a Glynn, marshes of G., 7g6b Gnarling sorrow hath less power, 226a
weeping and g. of 4ib what g. is not a comfort, 3o8b Gnat, strain at g., 4$b Gnats, small g. mourn, 5843 Gnaw, thousand men that fishes
Gnashing,
teeth,
g.,

know where'er I g., 5133 learn to creep ere learn to 1843 leave friends and g., 8$3b
let let

my

people

g.,

8a

us g. then, looob let world g., 1823


like
little

wind I bok

g., 6303 litel

myn

tragedye,

aaob
to God for dappled things, 8033 to God in highest, 46a, 593 to newborn King, 4250 to some extent already, 1733 to the greater g. of God, i86a trailing clouds of g., sigb

i65b little book, g62b long way to g., 934a love without the help,

4gob

2173

Gnawing, like what g. of 3o8b

of mouse, 10233 worm not tickling,


g.

make

lovely rose, 332b, g62b it g. by sitting in row, 5 5* mark him well, 5i8b
g.,

trembles

before your g., 8*b triumph without g., 33 ib 'twas my one g., 737!)
2 sob

Go

uncertain g. of April day, vain pomp and g., 6ia visions of g., 44sa

walked in g. and joy, 5iib walking in an air of g., s6sb we lie in unaging g., 7ob what price g., gggb who is this King of g., i8a wonder and g. of universe, 68a words such as g. obscene, 10443 works for g. misses goal, S$$b
wretchedness
that
g.

a- angling, 32 6b about woodlands I g., 852b a-fishing, 6833 a-hunting we will g., 4243 all right then I'll g. to hell, 76ib alone come back with throops,

men may come and


miles
to
g.

6523
sleep,

before

my

love,

664b

needs g.

whom

devil drive, 1853

8gib

no g. my honey love, 10623 no more a- roving, 55gb nor sit nor stand but g., 666a
not for every grief to physician,

and and and and and and

brings,
g.,

go4b 460 thou goest, 161 a look behind Ranges, 8763 sin no more, 48b the Lord be with thee, i2a as cooks g. she went, $o$b

catch a falling star,


likewise,

do thou

3*4b
not not not not not
off
g.

listen as

where friends perished,

753b
into every way, 37b
like

you

2gob probably 503

take

away

Glory's small change, 5g8b Gloss, all the g. of art, 4503 Glossy, not for fine g. surface,

at once, 2853 back to great sweet mother, 7743 burrow underground, ggoa but one to bid him g., io86b

quarry slave, 574b to Lethe, 5843 try to g. 3t all, 9263

448a
Gloucester,

by go by, 2043 by way wherein

no

ecstasy,

Doctor

Foster

went
can't g. right like that, 5053 clear as you g., 7653 come and trip it 3s you g., 334b Death makes arrest we g., g47b don't want to g. no furder,

to G., 10973 Glove, hand in g., 391 a iron hand in velvet g., O that I were a g., 23b

with you where you want to i65b once let ripe moment g., 488b one by one phantoms g., 8ggb out see Nature's riches, 3403 out to swim, 1 1033 over rolling waters g., 6483 poor devil, 437b presently they g. 3way, 942b
g.,

i86a

reason
season

why

it's

no
and

g.,

io68a

round about Peer, 7293


to come second best to g.
g., 4120 back quickly,

Gloves, cat in g. catches

no mice,
silk

422a not make revolution with

6 9 2b

walk through fields in g., 99 ib Glow from that fire, 10733


has

warmed

the

world,

98 ib

like pearls snowflakes g., 9583 neon g. of age of comfort, gggb

down again to the depths, 2ib down Death, go7a down to Kew, 96 ib down to the sea in ships, 2ib dressed up nowhere to g., 8g6b easy to g. down into Hell, n8b feet heavy but on I g., 844b
find out be damned, 8743 for refuge to Buddha, Sob

shall I bid her g., io84b side that I must g. withal, 2s6b since I needs must die, igga
sir gallop,

5043

softly all

my

years,

32b

Soul the body's quest, igga


sweetest love I do not g., 3053 tedious as g. o'er, 2853 tell the Spartans, 7ob tell those who sent you, 47gb they all g. into dark, loosb

noon a purple

g.,

87gb
g.,

phosphorescent jewel gives 99*b samovars' roses g., 10203


star captains g.,

g8oa

7123 open sky, 5743 forward give us victories, 638b


forth under

for they call you,

135 8

INDEX
Go, they'd immediately g. out, 4903 time stays we g., 7823 to bed by day, 8233 to encounter reslity, 968b to g. beyond is wrong, 723 to grandfather's house we g.,
Goats, lecherous
g.,

God
God, Cabots walk with G., 8583 cast all cares on G., 6543
caught his eye, io4ob cause of freedom cause of G.,

3083

Gobble, giggle gabble g. git, 8?2b Y Gobble-uns 3t gits you, 8193


Goblet, upon first g., 5993 Goblin, hag and hungry g., io8sb Goblins 'at gits you, 8193 sprites and g., 2953 God, a G. ready to pardon, 143 abandoned these defended, 854b accept him, 65ib act as if G. exist, 8695 act as if there were G., 7953 act of G., 6793 act of G. defined, 10173 afraid to look upon G., 8a
all

to^ss
to to to to to
it it

g48b with delight, 2883 sheep of Israel, play with poor, 8783 pot, 45 ib
lost

O jszzmen,

423

499b caused a deep sleep, 5b changes ana man and form, 775 charged with grandeur of G., 8033 chide G. for countenance, 2503 chosen people of G., 4713 circumvent G., 26sb
city of G., 1473

to the 3nt,
travel to g.,

asb
g.,

to the bishop they

5323

8223
as

all service

up and down 9b

a talebearer,

mercy unjust, 3993 same with G., 66 ib Almighty has hung sign, 548b

is

God

waiting for you g., 876b we know not where, 2713 we sh3ll g. on to end,
we'll g3ther

9213

3nd

g.,

5o7b

54ib where money is, 654b where we will on surface, 68 ib who will g. for us, 3ob wicked from out thee g., 3583 will not let thee g., 7b with anyone to death, 9263 with drift of things, g25b with me like good angels, 2983 with night will g., 4863
with

west young msn, 678b when h3lf-gods g., 6033 where glory waits thee,

Almighty's gentlemen, 368b alone knows, 7703 and attributes eternal, 3733 and devil fighting, 7083 3nd history remember, 10203 and I knew once, 7703 and man decree, 8543

closer walk with G., 4s6b comes as sun at noon, 3o8b comes G. behind them, 666b committed themselves to G., 3i8b

conscience a g. to all mortals, 1033 corage G. mend al, ya^b could have made 3 better berry,

3263
cre3ted created

he3ven 3nd earth, 53

and politicians, 10193 and sinners reconciled, 4255 and your native land, 5656
announced
angler now with G., 3263 angry G., 10753 selves from a

woman and boredom

ceased, 8o6a curse G. 3nd die, 143 darkness of G., ioo5b dazzled by ways of
g.,

G.,

Q52b

show

of

inconvenience,

979 a with thee to

g. is to st3y,
g.,

348b

women come and


would

looob

world thinks G., ioi7b not g. without


574a
write it before them, 323 ye and teach, 453 ye into all the world, 45b year going let him g.

word,

answers sharp, 6i8b appeal to 3rms and G., 4653 as G. gives us to see right, 64ob as if G. wrote bill, 6o3b as revested to vicsrs, 10583 asking G. to stretch hand, 9093 assumes the G., 3713 atheist h3lf believes G., 3993 attribute to G. himself, 234b autograph of G., 7903 backed with G. and seas, 2i6a

dear G. the very houses, 5123 dear G. who loveth us, 5263 dear to G. famous to all ages,
3403 death not originate in G., 7093 death of one g. death of all.

956b

deem

decides he is not G., 787b himself g. or beast, 4o8b defend the right, 2i4b

didn't want to sign, 8023 died before g. of love was born,

did G. care, 735^

6513

be merciful, 473 be praised Georges ended, 9343 be still and know that I 3m G.,
193

3o6b
discussing duty to G., 7oob doorway to get in g., 6gab doth G. exact day labor, 3413 draw line where G. has not,

you may call it madness, Goa wheer munny is, 654!) Goads them on behind, Sygb
words of wise 3re as Goal, do not turn back at
g.
g.,

i26b

good

final g. of

ill,

650!}
g.,

T3ve not its g., 62ob independence no conscious


is

be th3nked, 665b, 9943 be thanked for books, 544b be3uty the gift of G., 973 becsme m3n devil woman, 5g8b beggar before door of G., 7343 behold your G., 32b bein' G. 3in't bed of roses,
10153 being with thee, 5123
believe in G. 3nd angels, 778b believe in one G. 3nd no more,

dwells there among men, 1703 earth, echo of voice of G., 8igb ef you want to take in G., 6933 effect whose cause is G., 4593 either a beast or a g., 983 electrical of G., 10093 display

living in agreement with nature,

logb
6933

enter into

Enoch walked with G., 6b kingdom of G., 4gb

not g. that matters, 8513 pint people to the g., progress our g., 58gb
rider determining g., 8343 riders not stop 3t g., 7893 stands up, 8533

believes
bless

he

eats G.,

438b

bequeath
6803
bless bless bless bless bless

my

soul to G., aogb

man who

invented sleep,

the sky, 11033 this my pilgrimage and works for glory misses

g.,

g.,

g66b 33b

Prince of W3les, 58gb the Pretender, 4i4b us every one, 6713


you, iog8b

equsi to g. sitting opposite you, 1153 erects house of prayer, 3853 eternal G. is thy refuge, lob every g. set his seal, 2643 every man G. or Devil, 368b evidence for G. in inner experiences, 7953 except for G. our only lord, 8113 face of G. shine through, 10233 far be it from G., i6a farther from G. nearer dust,

Goals, muddied oafs at g., B^b Goat, lust of g. bounty of God,

487b

milked g. instead of cow, 10993 splsshing with hoofs of g., 6193 with g. feet dsnce 3nuc h3y,
212b with tangled hair, 5053 you bring the g., Ggb Go3t-he3d, foul g., 8853 Costs, divideth sheep from e3t ivy, 10973

my de3r, 4343 and 3ngels, 778b G. soul, 4o8b Nature body brooding on G., 10663 built G. 3 church, 4573 bush sfire with G., 6193 but for grace of G., i86b by G. Mr. Chairman, 445b by G. she'd better, 6s6b by grace of G. our forces in
you
b'lieve in G.

favor
fear

g.,

443

Philippines, 9593

with G. and man, 46b G. and keep commandments, 293 fear G. and take own part, 60 1 a fear G. honor the king, s6b fear G. nothing else, 677b fell upon knees and blessed G.,
3i8b-3iga

Cabots

talk

only

to

G.,

8583

God
God, fight for the religion of
G., i4ga

INDEX
God, heirs of
help
us
G., 513

we knew worst

too

finding
first

man

not

sufficiently

God, keeps thee from G., kissing carrion, 26ob know what G. and man

is,

alone, 9090

for G. sake hold your tongue,

planted garden, 2ogb

305*
for Harry, 2443 for us all, 1856 forbid, 475

helping her, 8423 helps them that help selves, 42 ib herdsman goads, &7gb himself can't kill words, i23b himself from G. not free, 6023
himself
scarce

know ye
213

that the

Lord he

6545
is

G.,

knowledge makes g. of me, 5 84b knows which G. G. recognizes,


10583
label men for G., 8566 law of G. law of good, 7093 laws of G. laws of man, 8543 laws of nature and nature's G.,
lay me ahold G., 7g6b

seemed

to

be,

forbid it Almighty G., forgive you but I never, forgotten all I have done, forgotten even by G., 66ib formed matter, 37gb freedom to worship G., from the machine, ioab from whom blessings flow, fulfills in many ways, 6542. gave loaf to bird, 736!}

4653
i8ga

3783

F3ther and his G., 44 1 a homely verse to G. dear, 8873 honest G. noblest work, 7493
his

5263

47ob

honest

msn

noblest

work of

G.,

on greatness

of

57gb
37;b

4ogb, 4g2b I am a g., 568b


I I

gave Noah rainbow sign, noia gave the increase, 523 gift is God's to G., ios6b give him blood to drink, 6i4b give joy of knowing, gs8b give them wisdom, 25 ib give us men, 6gob
give us serenity, 10243 giver of breath and bread, 8o2b gives us love, 646a giveth both mouth and meat,

I I

am 3m am

3 jealous G., ga 3 worm 3 g., 47oa

like G., s64b bless G. in libraries,

444b

me on anvil O G., g48b be with donkeys, 10793 not G. speak with us, ga let us worship G., 4gsb of ease not for a g., life
lay
let
let
it

I
I
I
if if
if

treated

him G. cured him,


light

who saw
wretch

face

of

G.,

2133
G.,

light
live live
lives
livin'

wrestling

with

is shadow of G., 3313 prime work of G., s44b innocently G. here, 4253

if

G. be for us, 513 G. did not exist, 4183 G. lets them down, loizb G. were not necessary, 366b

out lifetime of G., 6g6a not without me, 3640 G. that made you, 8733

living working still, 675b looks after fools, 11020

if it

1833 glory to G., 46a, sga gods fade G. abides, 785^ goes up to G. in vain, 8873 good fortune is g. among men,
1 G. prepare me, 3763 o good?

if this

if triangles if you if
I'll

be of G., 4gb were enough, 8$4b had g., 4i4b

want

to take in G.,

933

You wish for our love, 8gb leap up to my G., 2i3b


apprehension like a g., 2613 7oob G. dazzling darkness, G. is our trust, 5413 hand of G. I stand, mercy lend grace, 6463 the image of G., 6b
faces I see G.,

you, grace is given of G., 688a grace of G. in courtesy, go2a grant you find one face, 691 a

good-bye

G.

bless

82oa

4i7b granted grants liberty, 548a great democratic G., 6g6b great G. I ask thee, 68ob great G. I'd rather be, 5155 great G. our King, 62?b great g. Pan, 6iga great G. to thee we tend, 1483 greater than G. cannot be conit,

in in in in in in in in in in

Lord Lord Lord Lord Lord Lord Lord Lord Lord

G. Almighty, 54gb G. formed man, 53 G. is subtle, 9513 G. made them all, 6846 G. of Hosts, 875b G. planted a garden, 5b G. send high wave, goga G. walking in garden, 5b G. we paid in full, 8753

love I dare say, 756!) love of G. had blessed,


loves idle rainbow,

55 ib

go6a

three Persons, 54gb works 3nd in word,

397b
G.,
G.,

loveth cheerful giver, 53b lust of gost bounty of G., made high or lowly, 684b

youth remembered
to

my y
is

made him
man, agib

let

him

pass

for

inclines

think there

688b
incomprehensibility of G., 5gi3
insult to G., 662b invite G. and his
is is is is
is

ceived, i54a greatness of G., 7g6b ha' mercy on such as we, had I but studied, 171 a

angels, goSb

made integers, 7203 made the country, 457b made the world, 503 make me strong, iiogb make straight a highway
our G., 32b

for

&73b

3 verb, 10343 an exalted father, S^b an "in order to," 8703

makes sech nights, 6933 man appoints G. disappoints,


4123 8o5b

handiwork you give G., 8a6b Hannah G. and me, 74gb


happiness not gift of G. 9583 has a few of us, 666a has brought us this peace, n6a has given you one face, 262b has written all the books, 7s6b hates bray of bragging, 8ib hath, chosen foolish things, 5ib

is
is
is

is
is

is
is
is

not voice of G., blunder of man, here, 4253 in hesven, 283 in me or does not exist, light, 573 love, 573 man blunder of G.,
is

and and
G.

all well, 6s>6b

gs7b

man man man man man man


man

i7ob
fallen g., g. in ruins, in bush G.

meet, 6osa proposes G. disposes, 1703

sent from G., 483 with G. always in majori-

hath hath hath hath

given liberty, 47gb made man upright, s8a made them so, 3963 not given spirit of fear,

is is

8o5b no respecter of persons, 503 not a "because," 8703

is
is

not a man, loa not mocked, 543


their belly,

hath not one G. created us, $6a hath numbered thy kingdom,
hath hath have have have
said there
is

no

G.,

173

sifted a nation, 372 b

mercy on America, go^b mercy on shiner, loogb mercy on such as we, 87 sb

he for G. only, 3453 heart within G. o'erhead, 62ob

our refuge and strength, iga 54b is they are, 666a isn't G. upon ocean, 67gb it is 3 g. who gsve you this gift, 62b it is fearful thing, 5593 it's 3 nuisance G. said, gi6a it's not G. I don't 3ccept, 7083 jealous G., ga just are the ways of G., 3493
is

i86b with G. strive, 557a man's word G. in man, 6533 many afraid of G M 7103 marble leaped to life g., 5663 Masai House of G., 10453 men G. made mad, gi8a
ty,

Mencken Nathan and


mighty
fortress is

our

G., g66a G., i7gb

mills of G. grind slowly, 3293 mistake young man for g., g6oa

monopoly of

G., 68sjb
city of G., 1473 face of the waters,

most glorious

moved upon
5*

moves in mysterious W3y, 456b my G. and King,

INDEX
God,

God
God send
io88b every gentleman, sends meat Devil sends cooks,
servant of G. well done, 346b servant of living G., 444b served my G. with half the zeal,
service greater than the g., *68a sets nothing but riddles, yoSa setteth the solitary in families,

my
7

G. Father and Friend,

my
my my

G. have mercy, igib G. look not so fierce, 2130 G. why hast thou forsaken
soui
mil.*'.'*"-1
-

God, on right hand of G., 6oa on seventh day G. ended his work, $a

on on

nrv

tor

\?*f

nakedness 4

of

woman work

ig of

side of best digestion, g46a side of big squadrons, 35?a once loved a garden, g6ga one G. even the Father, 544a

2gga

name name

of G. upon lips, 436a called the mighty G., Nature and Nature's G., 3970 is the art of G., 3*9^

one g. greatest among gods, ?ob one G. law element, 65 la one G. one principle of being,
i42b

3^

igb
shall any teach G., i5b shall smite thee, sob shall wipe away tears, 58b she for G. hi him, 345a

nature Nature's G., 397b, 4ioa nearer my G. to thee, 6isb further from nearer to church
ne'er said G. be praised, 617!) of G., 7900 nest on greatness made work for man to

one nation under G., 832b one that feared G., i4a lookers-on, only G. and angels
only G. can make tree, gg2a 62a only G. had for asking, which is which, only knows
or Mother Goose, 844b others call it G., 667a our help in ages past, 396!) out in fields with G., iioib ^ t" out of me G. and man, 77 owe G. a death, 242b
pairs

never

mend,

37 2a

shed grace on thee, 84ga shield us, sgoa sigh in heart, 8sob smiled again, go6b so commanded, 34?b so loved the world, 48a so near G. to man, 6o3b

never spoke with G., 737 next to of course g., 10300 Mother, no G. and Mary His

noG?. but He most


i4ga

merciful,

no e. higher than truth, 8g7b So g stronger than death, 774b no g. wrong worm, 603!) no man hath seen G., 48a no more Aurora Leighs thank
G., 63ia

off like with like, 66b to G., ?o5b patriarch obedient G. passeth under peace of standing, 54b blessedness vision of G., perfect

some lesser g. made world, 6$4a something known only to G. 9 fi 3b sometimes wish G. back, 866a Son of G. goes forth, 54ga Son of the living G., 43 a sons of G. shouted for joy, i6a
,

sons of the living G., 35a souls are in the hand of G., 36b

plays

dice

with
to

no nearer to G., ioo4b no society bring kingdom


nobleft

pleased death, 3iga


of G.,

G.

visit

world, us

950!

with

poor dear

work

of G., 4ogb, 49*^


of G.,

none but G. is near, 5 i8a none other but the house

G., io37b poverty in hand of G., 4b 662a praise G. sang Theocrite, presume not G. to scan, 4o8b

of G., pride of peacock glory

nor what G. blessed accursed,


66*73.

pseudonym
purlieu

of G., 8o2a

mounting up to G., 7313 speed the mark, 6oab Spirit of G. descending, 3gb return unto G. 2ga spirit shall G. within shadow, standeth 6g2a stands winding horn, 88oa i stay with me G., io3b stepped out on space, go6b stern daughter of voice of G.,
souls
r

not alone G. is within, 138:1 not G. for father if not Church for mother, i44a not G. he'll catch, io54a not G. in gardens, 734a not G. of dead, 4?b not pay Saturdays, 667b not serve G. if devil bid, 2 7 2a not to get near G., 8ogb not willing to do everything,
not worshiped by herd, 947 than nothing not G. greater

of g. of love, 3o6b ib put G. in his statements, 70 8a put hand to ark of G., 45 in world, G. reason in man like 8b i 5

rebellion obedience to G., 10900 ia reflect that G. is just, 47 a register of G., 331 lives, 741 a reigns government render unto G., 43b
rest

strong brown g., and Justice, 1553 subject to G. take in G., 6g3a tempers wind, i88b, 438b temple of G. is holy, 52a

ioo6a

rib

you merry, logga which Lord G. had taken,


fat oily

thank G. for peace, 91 4a thank G. for tea, 52$b thank G. I have done duty, 49 2b the Father a school divine, 412*
the

Father

in

second

place,

round

man

of G.,

4*a

sacrifice

to G. of devil's leav-

7oob now G. alone knows, 7?oa O dog my G., io68a O G. O Montreal, 755b O G. that bread so dear, 592b O G. that it were possible, 30 ib
self,

O Lamb of G., O sole G., 4a

5ga

to more obligeth no man ability, i49a of battles, 245a of Clotilda grant victory, of fathers known of old, of God, 6oa of Life Creator, g62a of music out of doors,

than

i47b 875a

said I am tired, 6o3a said Let Newton be, 41 ab said Let there be light, 5a said Let us make man, sa saint if G. does not exist, io68b save the king, i2a, 40 la save the king say amen, 228a save the mark, 238b save the people, 545 a Ancient Manner, thee save

iimv"., 3582 first gaiux.** LUC I11L the garden made, the herdsman goads, 87gb G., resembles 493* the most the unknown g., 5oa the word spake it, i8ga these old men, 83b be called children o they shall

G., 4oa

they shall see G., 4<>a think himself act of G., 6791 think not G. at all, 34ga think public opinion voice c G., 764a 8 this is the finger of G.,
this

saw that
say
first

it

was good, sa
of

nation under G., 6sga

8sob

of my idolatry, *24a of Nature, 323b of Nature placed

G. above, is no G., 43 6a says there Scourge of G., 2i2a


sea of infinite substance, secluded from sight of G., see G. made and eaten,

this thing is G., 775b those G. loves do not live Ion)

io2a those whom G. hath joined


gether, 6ib thou art the

t<

in

power,

46 5 a of such

is

kingdom

of G., 45b

of the Congo, gssa of truth, lob

seen G. face to face, 7b sees G. in clouds, 4o8a


self-reliance
is

reliance

on

G.,

Omega,

6o8a

Son of G., 4s thought and thought, go6b three-personed G., so8a to G through darkness up 6506
-

1361

God
God, through
life

INDEX
looked on G.,

God, word of our G.


3*b

shall stand,

God's, gift
gifts

is

G. to God,
Seat, 87 a b

thy
'tis

throws himself on G., 664b G. shall be my G., nb G. gives skill, 68ga to the grester glory of G., i86a too full of G. to speak, 87ga took day to search for G., 86oa toward G. and toward Satan,
trust in G. hope for best, 52 ab trust in G. keep powder dry,
as old as G., 7373 two halves of G., sg8b unchanging law of G.,

Word was with G., 47b worketh in you, 543 world of nature and G., io77b world's G. is treacherous, gg4b worship G. in own way, 9733 would G. this flesh might be,
773b

put dreams to shame, 61 8b

great

Judgment
folks
is

greatness flowed, 6i7b greenwood chapel, gsga

hand

over to G.

mercy,

heaven

G. throne, 4ob

would have three sides, 4i4b wove web of loveliness, gi7b wrath of G., 6gob wrath of lion wisdom of G.,
487b wrote loveliest poem, 9423 wrote of angels and G. f 487b yearning like g., 58 ib your
false g.

6575
liv-

unless G. does that beating ing thinking, 6gyb

dim rememoring,

unutterable sigh, 8sob up to Nature's G., 4ioa very G. of very G., 6oa voice of people is voice of G., i5ab walk humbly with thy G., jsb wants nothing of a g. but eternity, 2goa war blood-swollen g., go4b was it G. was it man, was the holy Lamb of G., 49ob ways of G. justifiable, 34ga ways of G. to man, 4O7b ways of G. to men, 341 b were I Lord G., iiO5a what G. hath joined, 43* what hath G. wrought, loa

loioa

Goddamm, Ihude

your G. is one G., 149 a Zion city of our G., 446a sing G., g87b
g.

help and their valor, 5045 here is G. plenty, 3723 I'm under G. 3rrest, 38 ib in his heaven, 66 ib issue is in G. hands, 793 justify G. ways to man, 85jb last Put out the light, 9*83 light G. eldest daughter, 333b man's bedevilment and G., 8543 mill grinds slow, 325a mouth knows not falsehood,78b my spirit in G. hand, g64b not G. not beasts', 6663

Goddamned, similar
monest

phrases,

imnedest, seevility of comg. kind, i looa Goddess, bitch g. Success, 7gsb consult concerning great g.,

one on G. side majority, 6593 preaching of G. sacred Word, 53 reason G. crowning gift, 823 skirts, 6623 spies, 2803
sure they know G. will, io4ib things which are G., 4gb thy country's thy G. and
truth's,

5 o6b

Demeter or Earth, 853


excellently bright, 3023 mistake young woman for g., g6oa moves a g., 405a night sable g., 3gga of Grecian woes O g. sing, 4053

2993

true princes of empire, 6g6b voice of G. creatures, 6410 ways to man, 85 $b we are in G. hand, 2443
will

be done, 468b

what I call G., 6673 what is G. everything, 8oa what kind of g. art thou, 244b what man not know of G.,
what we have
1044*
instead

of the silver lake, 337b pasteboard g. of hustings, gg4b to thy shrine we come, 4973 walk revealed her as true g.,

G. second mistake, 8o6a ye are G. husbandry, 523 Gods, all ages believed in g.,
935b
all

woman

men have need


would be
g.,

of

of

G.,

n8a
White
G., io34b write about it G.,
if

g.,

653

angels

4083

when G. sorts out weather, 8iga where end knows G., io5ob where G. built church, i>jgb who brought over ocean, giga who G. doth late and early

4i3b
g.

Goddesses, even

too should
g.,

be looking, 6sb
take hold ye gods and Godfathers of heaven's 221 a
6jjb

approve the depth, 5i6b are just, a8ob are on side of stronger, are we, 7iob
arrive, 6033 as flies to boys

1403

lights,

we

to g., 2793

who gave life gave liberty, 47ob who is able to prevail, $25b who is not we see, 776b who is our home, 5i$b who knows what I would,
io66b

pray, soob

as {jsychic factors,

God-given rights, 6i6a God-intoxicated man, 3733 Godless hell's delight, 86ob
Godlike, capability and g. reason,

aspiring to

be

g.,

gsgb 4o8a
6$b 5963 2903
g.,

believe in g. of state, 933 built against will of g,,

by
call

Nine
the

G.
g.

he
to

swore,
witness,

264b
erect,

3453
still,

who made him sees, 877b who made rich make poor, who made thee mighty, who make iron grow, 5osb

power in us
61 8b
to create,

yiob
g., 51

68oa

contend in vain, 4g8b convenient that there i28b

be

86aa

Godliness, cheerful

sb

darling of

men and

g.,

nab

whom we
whose

whole armor of G., 54*


see not
is,

776b,

why

St.

puppets are we, 66 ib Augustine thanked G.,

93 6a
will of G. prevail, 7163 will provide himself a lamb, 7a will put an end to these, n7b will save her, 8523 wills it, isob
wills us free, 468b winepress of wrath of G., 6gob wisheth none wreck, 3033 with G. nothing impossible, 45b

cleanliness next to g., 421 a Godly, old and g. and grave, 88oa thou art fair thou art g., 7733 Godmother, fairy g. in soul, 8573 God's above all, 27sb abusing of G. patience, 2673 acre, 62 ib

daughter of
dish

g., 645b fit for g., 254b do not give all men gifts, 6sb dwells with g. above, 268b even if g. should be looking,

allotment, 7833
arrest, 38 ib Caesar's self is G.,

354a

crucible,

87ob

65 b execute judgment against g. of Egypt, 8b fade ade God abides, fashioned by men, 867b fault of angels and 4063
'

dare ask just G., 64ob Devil is ever G. ape, i7gb

fight against necessity, forbid it sea g., 6955

do deed without G. knowledge,


79 a
earthly

with strongest battalions, 4353 with thousand voices praises G.,

power then

likest

G.,

34b
first

56b
with us, 39a without me 364b

ringer touched, 65ob creature light, 344b

forget g. are old, 8igb formed world at creation, 5373 glorious gifts of the g. 62b go in various disguises, 66b good g. how he will talk, 384b
f

G.

cannot

grant

me

this,

1153
g.,

live,

wonder what G. calls me, 8708 word of G. is quick, 55b

74b may be throne, g2$b for G. sake sit upon ground,


temples,
footstool

first

graven images of her

3ib
g.,

happy

who knows

rural

have neither age nor death, 833

1362

INDEX
Gods have their own
76b immortal
rules, isga that help themselves, help them
g. I

Gold
Gold, Age of G., 334a all g. goose could give, 76a-b all that glisters not g., 1563 i55 b all that glitters not g.,

Gods' capricious hand, 10573 custom to bring low greatness,

crave

no

pelf,

87a Godunov, Maria G. and son


soned, ,

poi-

almighty

g.,

3033
apes,

in likeness of men, 503 of g., 537* Japan homeland

kings it makes g., 2i?b knees of the g., 653 the g,, 6sb laughter among leave all else to the g., wheels, on 8710 little tin g. live with the g., i4b love rules the g., 820 dozens, i g. by

Goes down with great shout, 8273 from great deep he g., 6543 in and out with me, 8230
life g.

on
g.

forever, 10233

and frankincense, sgb and silver ivory and and silver light, 88ob and the lust, io3$b
ver, 263 bar of heaven, 7313

133

ma

mostly

up and down, giia

of apples of g. in pictures

sil-

much

making

may

g.

grant

you

stomach, 24gb naked to naked g., 884b Horn round oftenest goes circumspectly, 6gsb one but g. abreast, 268b rainbow comes and g., 5133
against

my

barbaric pearl and

6Kb men determine

see

how world

g.,

27gb

a g., 343 than be3uty provoketh sooner g., 24?b becomes her object, 242b blue and g. mistake, 734b

g. dispose, 31
g.,

ib

the further one g. the less one

bow

of burning

g.,

4gob

men

that strove with


g.

knows, 74b

646b might of minds of

where tooth point

g.,

87 ib

bright g. ring on wand, 54ib cabinet is formed of g., 49oa

slow but sure, 853 not changed, 653 g. the g., 653 are blaming mortals immost beautiful among the mortal g., Syb
nearest to
g.,

Goest, whither g. thou, 4ga whither thou g. I will go, lib with thee whithersoever thou

cemented with
122b

g.,

no2b

centuries roll back to age of g.,

8;b

no other
not
fit

g. before me, ga that men be compared

oeh forth and weepeth, 22b Goeth he g. after her straightway, 2sb wisdom never g. out, light from
man
2ib
g.

., g.,

lob

8s8b of g,, 8i2b doubly hammered g., 6g6b bramble dew, eyes of g. and

cross of g.,

do with barrel

with g., ii5 a not know much about g., ioo6a and not similar are immortal g. men, 633 O nights and suppers of g., i2oa of the Congo, gssa oft with g, doth diet, 335b

forth

unto his work,

on

to

Olympus abode
5

of the

g,,

fall, pride g. before whither it g., 48a Goethe has done pilgrimage, 7118 in Weimar sleeps, 7113 open thy G., 5763 what Herder taught to G., 7Sb Go-ethe, Shake Mulleary and G,,

meet the armed men, i6b 81 b a

fairy g., 2953 fin in porphyry font, 64ga fire is test of g., isob

flattering g., 3033 flourisher, g56b

flow

with tears of g., gateways of stsrs, 856b gild refined g., 236b gives worthless g., 6g2b and gleaming in purple

on

hills like

opinion

g. together, 645b that there are no g.,

8313
Gogol's Overcoat, 7o8b Going a journey, 53ga
all
all

qiob pay for what g. given, commodores, proud g. and of the g,, g6a right idea of g., ?gb search out purposes sent not corn, 28gb so many g. so many creeds, 8203 somewhere g. made you, gioa mortals, spun the thread for 64b

along, 735b surely g. somewhere, 7033 a-milking sir, logsa defense not in g. underground, 95 ia down the wind, 3753 endure their g. hence, 2803 from g. to and fro, 143 from rising of the sun unto g,
his g. forth

good as g., ,-_ of g., 10303 great horse hairy g. crown on, 'ead,

87 3a

hammered

g.,

8833

h3rps of g., 657b if g. ruste wh3t sh3l iren do,

i66b in glint old g., gi8b in itself useless, i78b in physic is 3 cordi3l, i66b into blue and g. into morning,

ib take good the g. provide, 37 take hold ye g. and goddesses,

down, aib-22a is from end of the


heaven, i?b
g. all along,

Q4O3
in swine's snout, jewel of g.
Isces ivory and g., g43 b leaves of finest g., 6g6b

243

6sb
temples of his
g.,

5g6a

I'm
^

that wanton in the air, 3585 themselves throw incense, a8ob thought otherwise, n8b

735b it's for babe I'm g., 7o8b without world know g.
doors, 74b

out-

locked

heart

in

case

o'

g.,

two

g. Persuasion sion, 78a

and Compul-

learn by g., 10653 at long and loath

utterance of early g., s84a victor had g. the vanquished

no matter where
order of your
g.,

had Cato, i$4a


visit

sins of fathers upon children, 86a voice of g. makes heaven drow-

what ailed us O g., 773b what fate or ff. give, 871 a what g. call dross, 6g4a what men or g. are these, 5833
whatever
g.

sy,

2223

iooga g,, it's g., io23b 2853 out to clean spring, g25b out with tide, 67 ib past me on street, 8233 out and coming preserve thy g. in, 223 without g. about, sage knows

10893 locks yellow 35 g., 55 a 6863 looking for g. 3nd silver, lust of g., 6513 man's the g. for 3ll that, 49 6a more to be desired than g,, i7b net of g., 10623

not

all

that shines as
g.,

g.,

i55 b

old man's

when favor of g. was equal, 86b who brook no worship, 8goa


whoever obeys the
g.,

may

be, 775a, 8i6a

74b speed theg. guest, 4ub sun knoweth his g. down, 2ib
the

gosa a orange glows, 477 for him, 6633 of g. path pa tines of bright g., 235b

way

of

all

the earth,

iia

6ab

to St. Ives, logsa to the fair, logsb

to shower of g., 57ob penetrable with g., 27gb plate sin poop was beaten g., 287b potable g., 3 llb purer than purest g., 3033 sn3tched, purse of g. -esolutely

whom the g. love, woman a dish


would draw would g. made
2503
ye shall

iosa

for g., a8ga like horses, 7ob g.


-thee

true order of g., gs a way of all flesh, 3i4b

when

they seem g. they come,

poetical,

be

as g.,

5b

him go, 6513 year is g. let 1180 Gold, accurst craving for g.,

778b

rarer gifts than g., gg4a realms of g., 57gb robe of g. and pearl, roofs of g., 243 a

244b

saint-seducing

g.,

2233

1363

Gold
Gold, scarfs garters
g.,

INDEX
4oga
Golden, nature with 9<>5 a
g. process,

shall shine like the g., 487!) shines like fire, 7ga
silver

shower of g., 576b and g. have


threads

ope their g. eyes, agob opes the iron shuts, 3$8b


pear, logsb

silver

none, 4gb g., 8153 singing g., 9823 so thin so pale yet g., 4830 steamers white and g., 876a that I never see, 8533 therefore lovede g. in special, i66b

among

thumb of g., i67a to airy thinness beat, 3063


trodden g., 3433 truth with g. she weighs, 4igb turning to g. all it touches, 730a wear the g. hat, 10363 were each wish mint of g., 5033 what female heart g. despise,

prime, 644b returns the G. Age, n6b rule is no golden rule, 8$6b rule to fit everybody, 7533 rule toward patients, 6i8a sands and crystal brooks, 3063 seven g. candlesticks, 57b
silence g.,

Gone, Othello's occupation's g., 2753 poets dead and g., $8$b romantic Ireland's dead and jr., 88ib room from which faith g., io54b sea discoverers to new worlds have g., 304b she's g. forever, 28ob soon as she was g. from me, 488a sweet cheat g., gi4b
these

576b

things
g.

are past

and

g.,

sleep with g. Aphrodite, 66a stretches out my g. wing, 4863 sun in g. cup, 884b

and forever, 5203 Thursday come and week g.,


3*5*
to her death, 5g2b under earth's lid, g88b
'

ii4b thou art

sun with g. ball, ggia time of first love, 4g8a


track, 9533 tree of life
is

green, 478b

while
g.,

she

comes

is it

g.,

what

439*1
is

g.

doing in holy place,

two g. hours, 586b Vanity, io8ga wear a g. sorrow, ag8a

wind passeth over


213

8g8b
it is

and

*33t>

what

what's become of g., 6653 wisdom never comes g., 7303 wonder that g. esteemed, i78b work transmutes humanity into
g-,

delight without g. Aphro-

dite,

68b

years of g. deeds, 653b years return, 57ob Goldengrove unleaving, Sogb

with all his rose, 6293 with the wind, 8903 yes thou art g., 7143 Gonfalon bubble, gGsb

Gongs rang loudly, g$$b strong g. groaning, gi8b

8i7b
g.,

8i3b crushed the Gold-bearing, g. Medes, 7ob Gold-crowned king, g8aa Golden age exists in imagination, 59&b age is before us, issb all in g. afternoon, 7433 Aphrodite, 66a, 68b apples of sun, 88oa
as they did in g. world, 2473 bindest in wreaths thy g. hair, isob

years of

10043 Golden-tongued apostle, 9053 Goldfinches one by one drop, 579* Goldfish in glass bowl, 9043 Gold-hatted high-bouncing lover, ios6b Goldsmith, here lies Nolly G., 439 poet naturalist historian, 4333 Goldsmiths, Grecian g. make,
g.,

Goldenrod, bent

women
75 ib

struck

like

g.,

10433

Good, a

little

fun and g. morrow,

3 little work and g. day, 75 ib a thing moderately g., abroad for g. of country, all g. men, iioob
all g. to

me

is lost,

3453
fair,

all

that's

g.

and

8833 Golf links


Golgotha, Gondola,
all all

bough, 8833 bought g. opinions, 28ab bowl be broken, aga care, 24ab chain from heaven, 6$b circle of g. year, 646a crown like a deep well, 2283 days fruitful of g. deeds, 344b deeds, 344^ 653b
door, 8173 every g. scale, 7433 father held out g. scales, 64b
fretted with g. fire, 2613 friends I had, 85 gb
gate, 8i4a

so near mill, g4ob called G., 453 swam in a g., 2503


lie

place

Gone agin Finnigin, 8g7b


are
g.,

5343

3nd never must return, 3383 and past help, 2953


3ye ages long ago, 5823 before to unknown shore, 534b before you know me g., 77 ib coon, 553b

Americans die go to Paris, amiable or sweet, 3483 ancient g. uncouth, 6g2a and bad angel, 3iob and bad of every land, 6793 and faithful servant, 443 and truth borrow, 6043 annoyance of g. example, 76ab any g. thing I can do, 5313 any g. thing out of Nazsreth, 483 apothecary, 27gb
of g. life, 10263 of the g., 2263 a g. harbor, 3i8b as g. almost kill man as g. book, 3403 as g. be out of world, sgab as g. in the dark, 3203 as g. luck would h3ve it, 2673
appreciation
in

desd and

apprehension
arrived

g.

down
f3r

Udy, 2653
of
eternity, silent land,

drain

away into

843 73gb

goose with g. eggs, 76b graduates in g. hair, 648a hair curl gracefully, 7*4b hanging in a g. chain, $443 her flank g. lossb host of g. daffodils, 5i4b hours on angel wings, 4953 in mercy of his means, loyob is the sand, 8232 Jerusalem the g., 687b

glimmering, 55sb good old cause g., 5123 lives though they are g., 8 5 b he has departed withdrawn g.
goodness
3way,

nob

as gold, Gyob as I can be, 8213 as seems beforeh3nd,

68gb
as
g.,

heaviness that's

g.,

2g7b
art g.,

ask not g. fortune, 7013

heavy change 3383

now thou

bad book
10323

as

much

labor

keep

g.

mean,

mb

here and there, 29$b heroic enterprise g., 4543 home art g., 2913 I am g. like the shadow, 2ib
I shall
I

bad himself thought nothing


7gib

g.,

be

g.,

g26b
2243

key, 336a lads and girls, 291 a lamps in a green light,


like

3603

untuned
2133

g. strings

women

thee g., not g., iog7a into world of light, 36ab


if she's

would have

indifferent, 3743, 4383 be g. and happy today, 52$b be g. be lonesome, 762b be g. sweet maid, 691 a be of g. cheer, 42b, 4ga becomes indistinguishable from
evil,

bad

iona

are,

like

locks to silver turned, 2o4b love in a g. bowl, 486b

line

is

snow on desert g., 6agb g. out through all the

mean, laib miller hath

g.

thumb, i67a

my

million g. birds, 8302 mind stoops not, 2333

and g,, 2733 life has g., io8ib not lost but gj. before, odds is g., 288b

earth, i7b mischief past

1303

bid me good m., 4703 book best of friends, 6583 book lifeblood of spirit, 3403

befriend themselves, 833 best is enemy of g., 4i7b best is g. enough, 477b better made by ill, 2083

1364

INDEX
Good boy

Good
Good, law commsnds that which is g., 462b law is g., 55 a Isw is good order, g8b a Isw of God Isw of g., 79 laws lead to better, 436* Isws where stste srmed, 177* leave while looking g., 10273 b lesves 3side g. snd bsd, 455
(

am

I,

10933

Good

fortune

is

god smong men,


be
short-lived,

into s g. Isnd, bringeth thee

793
fortune

msy

hut-not religious-good, 782b by evil snd g. report, 53b

by quiet nstures 882b

understood,

Friday g., ioo5b cannot come to g., 257b csptsm captive g. sttending
call this

fortune to be born humsn, 3793 fought a g. fight, 55b free press g. or bad, io68b friend for Jesus' sake, 2ggb full of g. nature as egg of meat,

3i8b

ill,

224b
general g.
is

left

country

for

country's

g.,

plea of scoundrel,
life is g.,

chsrm
cheer
chief g.

to
is

mske bsd
best

g.,

physician,

2723 ?gb

49 laof a g. consdence, gentle beast

994b

life

dear

is

snd msrket, 264b a smoke, 87 ib


of
g.

lifeof bsttleg., 8653 or g. place, io6ia


listener popular, 9413 literature must do g., 8553 live in world g. or bsd, obis

dub

assembly

fellows,

427 b commodity of g. names, 2383 common g. snd public authon-

that g. night, io7ob gentle into men's g., 24gb glad of other and g., go please the gentle

communicated more sbundant,

ty

9643

go with me like g. angels, 2983 God saw that it was g., 53 all men g. gods do not give
looks, 65b

1655

Lord ddiver us, 6ob, iog8b Lord is g., 2 is lose g. we oft might win, 2703

compsny good
constituted

discourse, 3263 for practice of g.,

corn

wood bosrds
no
g.

counselors Isck

crown
849a

with

to sell, 6053 dients, 2703 brotherhood,

day's work, 42 3b deed in naughty world, 235b deed to say well, 2983 demean selves as g. citizens,

gray head all knew, 65ib gods how he will talk, s84b great and joyous, 5693 grest msn inherits, 5273 ib great poet so g. friend, 37 half so g. a grace, 27<>b band thst msde you g., 27 ib hanging too g. for him, 3^5b

love as much as g. fight, g7ob love g. pursue the worst, iaga love sought is g., 252b loves what he is g. st, 3803 luck gsyest, 5&8b luck giddy msid, 5&8b luck in odd numbers, 267s-b 86a luxury wss doing g., 3 a maintain
g.

government,
too

45

mske

g.

thing
rise

common,
snd
g.,

happiness the only g., hard beginning g. ending, 1833 Hsroun Alraschid, 644b

749 b

msketh sun
4ob

on

evil

46ib deny us for our g., 287b and do g., i8b depart from evil a desires be for what is g., 7* a devil have sll g. tunes, 475 die esrly bad Iste, 38$b die first, 5163 wsit on sppetite, 284b
digestion

have no need of sdvocate, gob hay sweet hay, 2303 he our


g.

msn snd a just, 4?b man does not srgue,


man's fortune, 27?b msn's love, 2503 msn's sin, 4383 msn's tressure, 74b

753

will sever, 302b

he who would do g., 4gia hesrkeners seldom, hesr g., s86b hell full of g. intentions, i54b hell full of g. meanings, 324b hell paved with g. intentions,
help g.'wise great, 8833 highest g., nib, 1143 him thst bringeth g. tidings,

msny

g.

men

sre poor, 68b

msrrisge, gs8b Msster of All

G. Workmen,

dinner snd fessting, 375b

do sfter g. lesve evil, 1753 do sll the g. I can, 7683 do sll the g. you csn, 4213 do g. the right wsy, 77gb do g. to them thst hste you, 4ob doing g. one of professions Cull, 682b end of government to do g.,

hold fast that which is hold thou the g., fyob

g.,

55 a

meaning g. or bsd, s6ga meaning in saying he man, 2323 men and true, 24ob

is

a g.

honest painful sermon, 3753 how few know own g. 3713


r

how how
I I

enough

to

shed

Epicurus set 1143

blood, 847b forth highest g.,

errors of g. men, 3513 is g., 553 every cresture of God every evil has g., 6o6b every g. gift, 563 for everything in world g. something, 3693 a thou be evil my g., 345 evil which is permitted, 742b fair and learned and g. as she,
fair is

6653 shepherd, 480 hsve g. eye unde, 245b all g. people dever, 78sb if do I yield, *8ia if g. why if he had not been born, 44b
life,

sm

g. g.

snd how
msn's
the
g.

plessant, 22b

men desire the g., 983 men est that they may live, 87b men of g. will, 463, sgs, 10153 men of ill judgment ignore g.,
8ia
to do nothing, 454*> f ^ mingled ysrn g. and ill, 26gb moral what you feel g. after,

men

morrow

to

our wsking souls,


fsthers,

ill

in everything, 247 b in which mind st rest, ioib is good east to esst, 78gb come to it is not nor csnnot
jest forever,

wind blows no man i8 5 b

g.,

mothers and

__.

music
g.,

mouth-filling osth, 2403 a g. to melsncholy, 374 must assodate, 4523 of gsin, 2053 my g. vsin hope b my religion is to do g., 467

by nature g., 20 ib faith toward nations, 46ib familiar cresture, 2743 fell into g. ground, 4*b fellows get together, 868b
fences

'

23&b oke cannot be criticized, gi8b lesson, 875b oily g. udge men by g. fortune, 355b in head, 2973 Iceep g. tongue

nsme nsme nsme name


nsme

better thsn precious oint-

ment, 283
better thsn riches, 1253 in msn snd womsn, 2743 is rsther to be chosen,

mske good

neighbors,

King Arthur, 10983 King Chsrles's golden


iogoa King Wenceslss, 687b

dsys,

9263
fight of faith, 55b filches g. name, 274s finds g. in everything, 247 b five-cent cigar, 8293 for a msn thst he besr the

my

know g. ss g., 73 a know what were g.


knowing
g.

like predous ointment, 2o8a nsture in conversstion, 394b neighbor is grest blessing, 67b neighbor policy, 9713

to do,

23ib

snd

evil,

sb

neighbors, 1 1043 neither honesty nor g. fellowm ship, 2383 never b3d msn g. service, 45 3 b

yoke, 34b
for sore eyes, 3gob

lad of mettle a g. boy, 2393 of g., 7940 largest universe

1365

Good
Good, never done no
8 74b never
g.
g. to

INDEX
me,

Good pun may be


469*

admitted,

Good, to do g. and cate, 56a

to

communi-

to

bring bad news,

put on

g.

behavior, 56 ib

never

2883 g. war or bad peace, 422b news baits, $5oa news worthy of acceptation, 3 86b no evil can happen to g. man, 93 a no physician considers own g.,
93

quiet wise and g., 572b recognize g. but be barred, 7gb religion g. that teaches g., 46yb relinquish life for g. of country,
5<>4b

reputation valuable, 1253 return g. for evil, 3883 rewarded evil for g., 7b

too much of g. thing, ig4a traced lives of g. men, 5173 tree of knowledge of g. and
evil, 5 b

to forgive, 668a today better tomorrow, 6i6b too g. for any but anglers, $s6b too g. to be true, 3860

trust

that

somehow
g.

g.,

65ob
g.,

rewardeth

evil for g.,

253

two nations
unconscious

noble to be g., 6453 noble type of g., w^b not enough to do g., 77gb not enough to have g. mind, 3*7b not g. for swarm not g. for bee,

rich in g. works, right reader of g. poem, gsgb ripe and g. scholar, 2ggb sat at g. man's feast, 248b say not of Beauty she is g.,

5b

bad, 3603 the source of

universal

value

it

common g., g64a next to g. conscience,


g.,

g.

thirsted for, 5443

99oa
scent of g. goes against wind,

3*6b
vote and act to bring

i4b
not
g.

that

man

7Q4b

should

be

8oa
Scots lords, io87b second class of
intellect
g.,

alone,

5b

g. to be without temptations, 726b not love because g., 861 a not three g. men unhanged, 239a not to make world g., 681 a nothing either g. or bad, 26 IE nothing g. alone, 6osa makes complete nothing g. sense, io24b

not

want power, 568b war slays g. man always, 8ab wastes and withers there, 8413

i77b
see your g. works, 403 seize g. fortune, 4793 sense equally distributed, 327 a sense gift of Heaven, 4073 sense in country, 1091 a

we know

the g., 8^b week's labor, 3143

shall not see

seven hundred pounds g. gifts, 266b when g. cometh,


share the
g.

what do I care you are g., 7073 what a g. boy am I, 10933 what g. came of it, 5323 what g. can painting do, g4yb what g. from you has come,
5<>5b

whatsoever things are of g. report,

obstinacy in bad cause constancy in g., sagb of moral evil and of g., 5093 of subjects end of kings, gSsb oft interred with bones, 255b old age, 7a old Boston, 8583 old paths where is the g. way,

54b
e.,

34*
old times are gone, 5633 old times grand old times, 63$b old times when unhapry, no5b one g. custom corrupt, 6543 one g. knowledge, 8yb one g. turn deserves another,

man's smile, 44gb shepherd, 48b Sir Critic g. day, 67gb smell of old clothes, ggsb so absolutely g. is truth, 667b so much g. in worst of us, 78gb society good life, 9133 Soldier best novel, io75b some g. some so-so, 1353 some said It might do g., 365b so-so is g., 25ob
soul

when all men's g., 6463 when Fortune means most


2 3 6b

when g. men die, 8sb when she was g., 6253 when were g. in majority, 6843
whether benevolence g., 76b whether it be g. or evil, gga why g. words ne'er said, 8ogb wine a good creature, 3743 wine needs no bush, 1273 wiser being g. than bad, 666b without three g. friends, 24gb wits jump, 1973 woman if five thousand a year,
66oa words worth much, $24a work together for g., 513 world kills the g., 10443
write
g.

remembering

my

g.

Wo

friends, 2273 speed to your youthful valor,

ngb
spinning fates g. or evil, 7933 strong and of g. courage, lob strong thick stupefying, 664b
substantial world pure

only g. discerns g., 6iga only what is g. in man, 841 a or bad for humankind, 5153 or evil side, 69 ib orator a g. man skilled in
speaking, io7b

and

g.,

in dust, 178!)
it is

sum

our courtiers were

g., ggsb out of g. find evil, $42a overcome evil with g., 5ib

government, supremacy of g., 8673 sustain g. fortune, 3553


g.
g.,

of

4yaa

writing as g. as

dramatic,

yes to everything g.,


is

taste
g.,

and see that the Lord


i8b
to g. like water,

panics

produce
g.,

as

much

Good-bye

467a Parent of
partial

tendency
3463
universal g., 4o8b with one accord,

loob

and keep cold, brothers, 8433 can scarcely bid g., 5863

evil
all

people 447*
people's

nib

g.

the

highest law,

perseverance in g. cause, 4g7b philosophy a g. horse, 448b

play audience pleased, 9173 pleasure ease content, 4ogb poet's made as well as born,

that horn and every g., that might have been, the g. I do not, 513 the G. lies so near, 4793 the gods provide thee, them that call evil g., there is no man so g., they are g. they are bad, thing when an't woman's, things fruits of originality, things not had singly, 5363

882b 797 b

God
leave
it

bless you,

8203

them laughing when say


io44a
for
g.,

g- 944a
10303

like g. to statue,

37 ib

more than word


night
g.,

job
19 la

8463 66ga 6igb

84sb Piccadilly, 934a 60 ib world, proud reap sowing and so

g.,

75 ib

to all that, io34b to bar and moaning, 691 a

33b
portion of g. man's
possibilities
life,

5093
evil,

things strive to dwell, 2g6b things which belong to prosperity,

for

g.

and

2o8a

poverty parts g. company, 52 ib prospect of distant g., 37ob provoke to harm, 2723 public good, 15 ib public g. and private rights,

third glass for g. this world's g., 573

humor, 394b

Goodbyes, holy glimmers of g., i028b Goodest man ever you saw, 8igb Goodfellowship, nauseous sham
g.,

thought to aim at some g., Q7b time coming, 521 a, 6773 to be born on, 6943 to be merry and wise, i82a,

Good-humored stomach, i3ob Goodliest, Adam the g. man, 345*

among
Goodliness
field,

press of knights, 1763 is as the flower of the

48oa

32b

1366

INDEX
Goodly
2323
apple
rotten
at

Government
Got, they g. thing we ain't, io67a you've g. to get up, gggb

heart,

how g. are thy tents, loa I have a g. heritage, 173 outside falsehood hath, 2323
states
this g.

Goodwill, men of g., 463, 593, 10153 mightiest force, 8oga promoter of peace and g., 7533

Goth and Moor bequeathed

us,

and kingdoms, 57gb


frame earth, 2613 to our waking
souls,

men, 657b toward men, 4623 Goodwin, along with Captain

to

G.,

Good-morrow
3<>4b

to sorrow bade g., s8ob Good-natured woman, 534b Goodness and mercy shall follow me, i8a armed with power, io24b

believe source of g. is sky, 1733 crownest the year with thy g.,

iogoa Goose, all gold the g. could give, 76a-b cried in g. Alas, loogb eve?y g. a swan lad, 6gia hangs high, i looa lead a wild-g. chase, ig4b look, 286a
royal
steals

78ib Gotham, wise men of G., iog4a Gotham's three wise men, 5533 Gothic, more than G. ignorance,
our G. cathedrals, gg8a Gott all dings gommand,
meinself
pulls

81 la

und

G.,

mit me,

8na 8na

game

of

igb does not perish, 8sb dwells only upon g.,


felt

common from

g.,

45oa
g.,

Gottbetrunkener, ein G. Mensch, 37 3 a Gottingen, University of G., 5o6b

79 ia

Gouged,
10833

by

enemy's

beak

g.,

wild-g. chase, ig4b

how awful

g.

is,

with golden eggs, 76b Goosegirl ermined g. still, io42b


7*

Gourd, sugar in

Gout

kills

more

the g,, 10993 rich than poor,

find so much of g., fruit of Spirit is g.

Goosequill,

Corporation

of

G.,

3<*4b

66oa

how sad our Russia/ if g. lead him not, 323!


in things evil, 244b Infinite G. has wide arms, i6ia infinite power wisdom g., 3873 never fails, th3t investment

Goosey gander, io94b Goot, seven hundred pounds g. gifts, 266b Gopher, an ark of g, wood, 6b

King Gordian
knot

without g. or stone, 3673 Govern, angels to g., 472a another without consent, easy to g. not to enslave, every cook learn to g., how can tyrants safely g.,
legitimate right to

6353 54ob 9033 2i6a

he

will

unloose,

68 3 b

most
Gore, preserved his g. O, shedding seas of g., 56 ib

more

g. in little finger, sgob never fearful, 27 ib


g.,

76ga
want,
g.,

my

no g. dies, 575b no greatness where no powerful g. want, 568b


result of one's
tain-ted,

Gored by

climacteric

of

7323

makes
i8oa

difference

whose ox

own

merits, i54b

682b
all

mine own
Gorge, 234a

thanks for

thy
g.

g.,

6ob
conceited,

thoughts, 2g4a dire g. of salt sea

tide,

throw 3W3y 68gb


thy fatherly

on

g., 53 la least noise, $i7b with absolute passions sway, 366b no man g. another, 6353 not g. without criticism, ioi4a others first master himself, 3155 people difficult to g., 74b reflect how you are to g., 452a reigns but does not g., igab right of kings to g. wrong,

make

my

g. rises at it,

26sb
stars
g. our conditions, syllables g. the world, 3175

g.,

6oa
to
vile,

wisdom and

g.

27ga

Gorgeous 24oa

as

sun at midsummer,

27ga

Good-night, a little 75 ll> g-. and joy, 5023 Annette, 8223 dear heart, 8223 dear work g., 6s4b ensured release, 854b for the rest of us, 8gsa fortune g., 277 b g3y g. 3nd turn 3W3y, 883b gives sternest g., 28sb Mrs. Calabash, ios6b

warmth and

East in fee, 5iab East with richest hand,

those that think must

g.,

448a

3433

palaces, 2g7b so g. all London stared, 5973 thrice g. ceremony, 244b

to g. is to populate, giab tongues with difficulty, 37gb Governed, consent of the g., 47ob,
. grant of power from

Tragedy, 335b Jack, 66ia ted me, 652a


distinguishable

g.,

5313

make views effective, 10133 with how little wisdom world


from
g.,

my my

last g.,

3213
g.,

native land

5553

say not G., 4703 sweet ladies, 2653 sweet prince, 266b till it be morrow, 224b to all a g., 5413 to each a fair g., 5igb Goods, all his worldly g., 67 3b and services paid with g. and
services,

compel about

gi63 philosophy
ib of

to

inquire
g.,

g., 1 1

consumption 845b

valuable

distribution of g., g5oa got the g., 864b no man taketh g. with him, 33 not sh3red not goods, i76b set not heart upon g., 37b soul thou h3St much g., 46b

59 Gory, shake thy g. locks at me, 2853 welcome to your g. bed, 4g6a Goschen, I forgot G., 8isb Gosh, by g. by gum, io3ia Goshen, land of G., 7b Gospel, brown bread and the G., 386b go and preach g., 45b light first dawned, 43gb lineaments of G. books, gi4b not g. that thou speak, i84b of Getting On, 8363 true g. concerning wealth, 757b Gospels, perfection preached in G., ioi6a Gossamer fidelity of man, 642b Gossip, babbling g. of the air, 25 ib

g- 317* Governing governor, 54gb it well, 742a more important than winning,

10483

Government,

all

persons share in

an of g., io4ga at Washington lives, 74ia attachment to g., 4533-b attempting to make life livable, 788b bad g. becomes autocratic g.,
balance
of

natural

elements,

828b
basis of g. opinion, 4713

bearing

hating ill-natured

g.,

go4a

burdens of g., 6353 behave toward g. today, 681 a behind g. and people, belong to people, goia best g. people happy, 5g4b
British g. best model,

with

all

my

worldly

g.,

6ib

g., 863b Goodwill and complacency, 867b in peace g., 9253

you're the

in place of inquiry, gi2a is mischievous, 68a most knowing of persons, 1303 no g. ever dies away, 68a those who g. for us, go4a Gossipers and gossipees, 105 ib Gossip's, lurk I in g. bowl, 2293 Got the better of himself, ig7b

44b
713

by aristocracy, 848b by crony, 9313 by means of his virtue, by mob, 848b by plutocracy, 848b charming form of g., g4b
cheerfully support
g.,

77ia-b

1367

Government
Government, complain of tice of g., 5055
injus-

INDEX
Government
657b
of laws not men, 4635 of men and newspapers, 6s8b of others, 4723 of the sage, 73b old forms of g. oppressive, 7o6a a people not belong to g., 901 period of military g., 88ga
petition g. for redress, petticoat g., 549b play ignoble part, 788b
political

of

eternal

justice,

Governs,

foolery

g.

world,

l3W

conservative g. hypocrisy, 6iaa consists in taking money, 4iyb constitutional g., 8653, 88ga contrivance of wisdom, 454a controlled by minorities, 8633 decided over coffee, 4813 deliberative forces in g., Sjab draw me into pretensions, 7j>2b duty of g. to find remedies, 973 a to do good, 591 a end of
g.

like

which g. all law, a king, 436b opinion g. world, 84 ib


10893

3173 4543

Gowd, locked heart in

case o'

g.,

man's g. for a' that, 4963 Gower, O moral G., 1656

Gown, cap and

474b

g. atavistic, 845b chose wife as she wedding g., 448a ease heart like satin g., 10293

freedom business of
to

g.,

my

g. of glory, 1993

excel the bees for g., 1933 excess reproach to g., 381 a exigencies of g., 6783 for common benefit, 4463 for forms of g. contest, 4ogb form of g. never take root, 504a

97ia-b
political understanding g- 9830

run

g., 44gb smell fire whose g. burns, 3243 Gowns, furred g. hide all, S7gb

plucked his

forming a republic g., 485a founded on compromise, 4533 founded on dignity, io4sb free to choose g., io25a free to people, s8ob gives bigotry no sanction, 46ib good g. obtains, 72a happiness end of g., 46gb in carrying on your g., 72a in flag g. and truths, 674b in which all have part, 83 ib include all people, 6i6a
increase of his g., gia inflation weakens g., io6sb

teacher, omnipresent potent 8 33 a a poverty a reproach to g., 381 power in g, sovereign, 4853

power of making laws, 4853 problem for other governments,


10553 republican highest g., 7o6b republican model of g., 46ib responsive to people, 8653 resting on property, g4b result of shared experiences,

some in velvet g., 10983 Goya of the bare field, 10833 Grab bag at a fair, 5353 Grace a summer's queen, 52ob America not afraid of g., io74b an air and peculiar g., 3973 and music of her face, 358b and strength to forbear, 8253 beauty harmony g. melody,
7470 beauty without g., 6o8b but for g. of God, i86b comely g., 10863 custom of ssying g., 5353 does it with better g., fallen from g., 53b
force fascination, yoiajb full of g. and truth, 483

5o4a be upon his shoulder, 313 sharing privileges of g., 6353 sovereign control over g., 9723
shall

ssib

Soviet

g.

plus

electrification,

influenced by shopkeepers, 445 a


institute

new

g.,

47ob

involved in lives, goia is a trust, 5g8b


is is

force,

748b

organized opinion, 93 ib

it deserves,

48ab

kept sheep rather than undertaken g., 328a a legitimate object of g., 473 looked to g. for bread, 455a luxury of liberal g., 677b made for people, 547a maintain good g., 4853 maintain in emergencies, 64oa monarchy intelligible g., 7*6b more interested in g. than politics,

just obligations of g., 77ia keep g. from error, 10223

9030 spirit and form of popular g., 48ob spirit of country, 828a strong enough to protect, 9723 sum of good g., 4723 teaches by example, 8333 the less g. the better, 6o7b thing better than good g., 83 ib
this

God in mercy lend g., God shed g. on thee, gods do not give all men
of g., 65b half so good a
g.,

get wealth with g., 4123 given of God, 688a

6463 8493
gifts

Bible

for

g.

by people,

i6sb
this g. best hope, 4723 to first class share in g., vicissitudes of g., 46ab virtue of paper g., 45ab

4853

972b

necessary evil, 466b never take root, 5043

weary of existing g., 6373 which imprisons unjustly, 68ia which kept us free, 4723 why g. at all, 4853 will ever maintain good g., 4853 wise and frugal g., 4723
wise g. enforce conciliate, 4353 without king, 5913 without newspapers, 4713 Governments accountable, 10133 as city on hill, io72b climates councils g., 6463 dictatorships out of weak g.,
g., 4635 government problem for other
g.,

newspapers without

g.,

47ia
g.,

heaven such g. 2213 her strong toil of g., 28gb ideal g., 61 8b inward and spiritual g., 61 a let your speech be with g., 54b little g. my cause, S72b love brings bewitching g., 840 makes simplicity a g., goab me no grace, 2273 ministers of g. defend us, 2593 moments of clad g., 87gb more abounded, 500 more of his g. than gifts, 30ob never mind did mind his g.,

27ob did lend her,

no no no
no

administration
g.

injure
right,

3Hb
no spring beauty hath such
3073 not an Attic g., g88a not to the righteous g., of day that is dead, 6483 of God in courtesy, 9023
g.,

637b

by

divine

531 a

g. provides for termination,


g. stable in

6373
unstable world,

827b

9113

no necessary evils in g., $03b not at war with rights, 47 ib


not belong to God's g., 7oga not endure half slave, 63$b not function of g., io2ib not stronger than people, 1049 a not support people, 77 ib not to confer happiness, 544b not too strong for liberties, 64oa object of British g., 484b object of g. happiness, g4gb object of g. welfare, 848a of all the people, 6i6a
of

972a fear foundation of


10553

instituted
liberty
is

among men, 47ob


in moderate g., 4853

of Lord Jesus Christ, 53b power of g., 537b renown 3nd g. is dead, 2843 seated on this brow, 2643
silence

gives

proper

g.

to

never
5<>7b

learned

from

history,

women, 8ia
speech be alw3y with g., 54b spirit's vest3l g., 72 ib springtime damask g., io86b sweet attractive g., 3i4b, 345 a sweet cowslip's g., 4?6a tender g. of day dead, 6483 thanks for means of g., 6ob
to taste thereof, to win, 6o3b

by and for people,


6 5 7b, 8 95b

6393,

independence acknowledged, 4923 Governor, contempt for g. who is afraid, 8ib governing g., 54gb of New York not acrobat, gi6b of South Carolina said, 824b Governors, method of changing
g.,

whose

g44b
life,

10133
g.

unbought g. of
the mob, 4423

454 a

supreme

1368

INDEX
Grace under pressure, io44b while g. affordeth health, ig2a
to g. as horse to rider, i46b yield with g. to reason, g25b youth full of g., 701 a Graceful the small before danger,
will

Grass
g.

Grammar,

lesson

on

imperti-

nence, 72oa

Grammarian

nonsense and learning, 4505 prefer geniality to g., Ssib rhetorician geometrician, isga Grammaticam, rex et supra g.,
lis

Granting our wish one of Fate's jokes, 76b Grants, each day that Fortune g.,
isia Grape, a little more g., 5523 eaten a sour g., 34b first from out the purple g., 336b for one g. the vine destroy, 22oa joy's g., 5 84a peel me a g., iO2gb
rich g. juice of

io6sb
Gracefulness, vegetative g., g8sa Graceless, let g. zealots fight, 4ogb Graces, all other g. will follow,

Grammatici certant sub iudice


est,

i24a
g.,

Gramophone, puts record on


roosb

364* beauty or
lead

g.,

4isb
to

grave, 25 ib Loves, n4a his malice g., 536b pride envy lacking in artificial g.,

these

g.

mourn ye G. and
speech

Grampian, on the G. hills, 4453 Granary, sitting on g. floor, 5&4a Grand and comfortable, Stfb between G. Army and dominion,

good

sense,

ma

78ga

three sweet g., 536b Gracious, a God g. and merciful,

dropping petal Canyon, g46b

down
g.,

i46a shalt not gather every g., gb Grapes are sour, 75b gleaning of the g. of Ephraim,

G.

na

dumb

inscrutable

yi5a
look,

and be g. unto thee, gb and courteous to strangers, 2o8b


evening star, 676b God save our g.
king,

Ireland g. you old times, 6$3b

8 lib

of thorns, 653b of wrath not yielded all, gg8a where g. of wrath stored, 6gob Grapeshot, whiff of g., 577a

401 a

happy

g. flexibility,
all g.

heaven's

7i6b King, 657b


solace,

Panjandrum, 442b seek a g. perhaps, i82a style, 7i3a sweet song, 6gia they said it would be
this g.
'tis

Grapevine,

man

pullin'

de

g.,

828b
Grapple,
g.,

let

her and Falsehood

g.,

745b

how how

g.

dews of

8aoa

book the
'tis

universe, 2 lib

g. how benign, gioa keeping, 727a

g.

Grandam,

soul

solemn, 5645 of g. inhabit

Lord bomb Germans,


g. silence hail,

my

remembers
seasoned

me

28gb
g.

his

parts,

with g. voice, 233b so hallowed and so g., 2573 swear by thy g. self, 224a
this is

bird, 234a Grandchild heir of the first, 3043 Grandest lesson On sail on, 7goa of all sepulchers, goa Grandeur hear with disdainful
smile, 44oa indivisible, loisb
is

34ob them to thy soul, 58b Grappling in central blue, 64ya Grasp as much out of infinitude, 86ib it like a man of mettle, 4ooa mathematics eludes our g., 861 a reach should exceed g., 664b rubject words will follow, 1073
this sorry

scheme, 6311

our

g. will,
g.,

i78a

a dream, 4s8a

what dread g., 4893 what they do not know, loib Grasped mystery of atom, ios5b
Grasping, a really g. imagination, 797b-798a by g. at the shadow, 76a capable of earnest g., 58 ib Grasps in the comer, 26ga
skirts of chance,

Gradations, fixed

6g7b

Gradual

and silent encroachments, 48ob degradation of idea of liberty, io68b road to hell g., 104 2 a Gradually extricate babe from
fire,

of God, 8osa of the dooms, $8ob of these States religion,

6ggb
1443

remains without
size is

intensity, Scotia's g. springs, 4g2b

not

g.,

725a

65ob

6isb

so nigh g. to dust, Gogb that was Rome, 64 ib

let go earth, 1041 a Gradualness gradualness gradualness, 8i8b inevitability of g., 8573 Graduates, sweet girl g., 648a Graduation, handed skin at g.,

wonder g. woe, 6g7a Grandfather, ape for his g., 725b Grandfather's house, 5g8a remember g. name, io4ib
rule was safer, 6gjja how g. it had rung, 7gia Grandmother, ape as his g., 725b child of our g. Eve, 22 ib Grandsire cut in alabaster, sgia proverbed with g. phrase, 23a Grandsires', sires' age worse than

Grass, all flesh is as g., s6b all flesh is g., 3*b as soft as breast of doves, ggib

bank beyond, 72ga


below above vaulted sky, 5731 between wind and the g., ysa blade of g. is blade of g., 3113 blade's no easier than oak, 6g2b destroy blade of g., giyb dripping snow on g., ioogb
eateth g. as an ox, i6b eating g. like ox, 6053 elfin from green g., 64ib

Grandly,

Gradus ad Parnassum, 868b


Grail, chalice that is G., 6553 Grain, amber waves of g., 84ga cheeks of sorry g., 337b

Demeter gave nourishment of


of manhood, 34ga of mustard seed, 42b

Grange, moated g., 27 ib Granite into which it


ioo6a Grant before

reaches,

from heaps o couch g., 784a go to g., 3i3b gray-green sandy g., 878b
great g. plains, g4oa

reaps bearded

g.,

62ob
28ia 4goa 372b loob
g.,

we

say which g. will grow, see world in g. of sand, send g. into wilderness, spirits of land and g.,

conclude prayer,

green

g.

above me, 73gb

37ob
half g. what I wish, g?6b 1 may never prove so fond, 2goa

swallows
ii

skimmed
salt,

may gods

g.

you

all

things,

golden

grow from g. I love, 701 a grow in streets, 931 a grows on weirs, 87gb guests star-scattered on g., 631 a happy as g. was green, icv/ob
I am the g., g48a,b joys withered like g., 6oob kissed the lovely g., ggsa know g. beyond the door, 73ia like g. which groweth up, aoa like rain upon mown g. igbf

a g. of
little

i33a

me me

old man's frenzy, 8853


this last labor,

n6b

hearing g. grow, 68gb his days are as g., 2ia

Grains,

g. of sand, 7igb two g. of wheat in chaff, 23 ib

Grammar

Grainy wood, ggj


control even kings; 5

i$a gods g. of power from governed, 5313 that twice two not four, 688a us safe lodging;, 5g8a us will to fashion, g66b
youth's heritage, 666a

me

this, i

corrupted youth in erecting g. school, 2isb dictionary not has rule absur
I

Granted,
to

and

God

g.

it,

2oa

take Bill of Rights for

g.,

am

behold you again, 8240

grow at door, goga may must bend when wind blows,


g.

above

g.,

3623

Gran'ther's rule safer, Ggsa

1369

Gross
Grass, Nebuchadnezzar did eat

INDEX
Grave
Alice,

6ssb

Grave, road long and dusty to


g.,

nibbling inward, io3$b no less than stars, 7oob no more g. to cut away, g8gb over g. in West garden, g88a
paler than
g., 6gb people may eat g., 577a on g. alas, 9333 pigeons quick-mown, 8ogb

almost as go into g,, 3)6a a-moldering in the g., 755* and grass and bough, 78sb approach thy g., 574b bends to the g,, 44ga

822b

rotting g. ne'er get out, 4goa scalding g., goga secret as the g., 1973 secrets of the g., 781 a

between cradle

and

g.,

shown Longfellow's

g.,

gg6a

ioi7a botanize upon mother's

862b roots marsh


roots,

g. sends,

7g6b

small g. covers him, g8gb snake in the g., n6b

snow on

7243 soft hair of the g., 775b the in 514* g., splendor
g. again,

g., 5iia both astride a g., 3ogb buries empires in common g., 466a but she is in her g., 5 lob cheat g., 7gib clothing of g., goia come to thy g. in full age, i4b conclude on edge of g., 77^b

sinks without a g., 557b soldier's g. for thee best, 5633

something beyond the strewed thy g., 266a


these
lessons

g.,

i8a

on

thy

soul,

437 a
things

holy profane g. light, 3i8a this side of the g., 536b


this verse g. for

and

me, 823b

stoops not, 2203 through frozen g., 58 ib

cradle stands in the defiled his father's

g.,
.,

39 b

i4b

behind bush, 9693 tides of g., 773b tumbling in rings into g., 9063 two blades of g. grow, $8gb
through
g.

universal

beneficence

of

g.,

748b

vaulter in sunny g., what is the g., 7003 withereth flower fadeth, 32b withereth flower falleth, 5&b

55 ib

dig g. and let me he, 83b dread g. as little as bed, 37?b Duncan is in his g., *84b earth and g. and dust, iggb fall in g. like old dog, 10713 fine and private place, 36oa from cradle to g., s6ga

untimely g., 3273 unto a soul, 236b vortex of our g., io43a

where English oak, 76gb where is thy victory, 533 where Laura lay, igga with O'Leary in g., 88ib with sorrow to the g., 7b yew to deck my g., 486a

from from

g. to gay, to light, g.

4Ha
to
g.,

you
Zeus

shall find

me

g.

man, 225a
7gb 663b

frontier g, far,

377a 865a

grant
if

g. I

restraint,
it

Graved inside of
6aob

Italy,

wonderful

g.

on

breast,

7iga

funeral

marches

Grasses of forest's floor, gi4b

Grass-green turf, 2653 Grasshopper, ant and the g., 763 shall be a burden, 2ga ye can't catch, 8gaa Grasshoppers under fern, 454a
Grass-roots heroes, 74<>a Grass's, takes g. tone, 878b Grassy, tell the g. hollow, Grate, fire dying in g., 7303 Grated to dusty nothing, Grateful evening mild, 345 ever g. for the prize, 5083

ghost sitting crowned upon g., 3 i8a glory or g., ss8a 8i6a gone with old world to g., hides things beautiful, 568b humble g. adorned, 4o6a humors g. or mellow, jg4a hungry as the g., 4igb 57 sa I will pay you in g., with thee in g.,

were a g., 6iob Gravedigger, Gravel, mouth filled with g., 25b pick about g., 584b shadow over g, of drive, 9853
Grave-makers, gardeners ditchers

and

g., 2(>5b

s?68b

ignominy sleep 24ia

Grave-making, he sings at g., 265b Graven images of her gods, sib shalt not make any g. image, ga Grave's a fine and private place,
S6oa
Graves, cradles to g., 6gsb dishonorable g., 253b follow disquietly to g., green g. of sires, 565b hair of g., 7ooa
let's

in law's g, study six, ig8b in the cold g., 5gib in the dark and silent g., iggb is but a covered bridge, 624a

God is g. and knowing, I4ga mind by owing owes not, 3440


they are so g., 422b to spleen a g. feast, 5i6b
to those

2773

who

Gratiano, but

gossip for us, go4a as the world G.,

not such a quiet place, s6oa as the g., 3a jealousy is cruel keep dream or g, apart, 6i7b
is

its goal,

62ob

is

talk of g., 22?b

of Uttle magazines, 98 stood tenantless, 25&b

ia

of nothing, speaks infinite deal


Gratified, desire g. plants fruits
:

Kemmerich's g., io4ob lead but to g,, 44oa lead thee to thy g., 5153
lead these graces to g., learned secrets of g., 781 a
lessons
little

they have g. afar, gi8b under fountains and g,,

io86b

untimely
25 ib

g,,

458b
g.,

watch from their

662b

4885
lineaments of g. desire, 488b were g., 76b sorry if wishes to answer promptly, 76ob

on thy soul, 4g?a an obscure g., mummers, 4i$b


g.

227b

anothGraveyard, from one g. to er, loooa no g. grimness when I am gone,


1073 or colored in Graveyards, white
g->

with mediocrity, soib


_ Gratify some astonish rest, duty done feeling Gratifying
.

natural philosophy deep moral


g., 2ogb nature a g., 58ga no wisdom in the g., a8b none shed tear at g., goga not its goal, 62ob now with love now in colde

i74a

tilling Graving, France, 2o6a

and

g, test

J feed
f

Grating, nor harsh nor g. Gratitude, children's g. woman'! love, 884a deep debt of g. to Adam, 7623
desire for benefits, 35621 fruit of great cultivation, repays first installment,
shall

Gravity,

humor only

of

g.,

g.

O
of

i67b
g. I will

be thy destruction

out of his bed, 2 39 a settled g., 2gsa sometimes man of g., i7ga
Gravy, no g. no grub, ioogb 6lb person who disliked g., 3 Gray, aged and g. Maggie, 77ga all cats g. when candles out,
to practice g.,

483b

4ga
1311

7b

our

g.

soon
still

grows

sleep, old,

5o6b g?a

Mike O'Day, 11053 old and godly and g., 88oa on my g. as now my bed, 33ob
one foot already in the or satirical, 8g8a
g.,

small voice of g., 442 Gratuities and privileges, 5033 pensions and family g., 545^ is Gratuitous, g, everything
exercise every day, 7ga Grave, airs martial brisk or g
Alcestis

1373

i37b
g.,

our

lives
is

peace

marches to in g., 568b

62ob

amice

g,,

34ga

ransom them from the power o theg., 35b renowned be thy g,, sgia
rest

pompous

in the g., 331 a

and full of sleep, 87gb and melancholy waste, 574a and wintry glens, goga
beginning of years, 775b behind lay g, Azores, 7903 bluest of things g., 775a

from the

g.,

34 ib

profound as

g.,

7773

1370

INDEX
Gray, bring

Great
g.

down my

g. hairs,

but not with years, 559a Champion, 61 $b suit changing from brown g86b

7b

Great, because we have dreams, 10253

Great,

making city and g., 77b

glorious

Beginning produced emptiness,

noa

to g.,

Belshazzar

made a g. Birnam wood, 28sb

feast,

353

cheerless over hills of g., 626b cold g. stones O sea, 648a dawn breaking, 594b, 946b dawn of morning after, 886b

death's g. land, ggssa shame the g. head,

dogs earth

not

g.

but

rosy,

64b 668a

black piano appassionato, 9855 blew g. guns, 6723 book great evil, io4b bundle of grief, g4ga burden upon his back, $6$b Caesar fell, 255b

malefactors of g. wealth, 8483 man does not lose child's-heart, icoa man does not think beforehand, looa

man's memory, 263a

many

flannel suit, 10783 friar of orders g., 2igb, io84b hairs gone, 625b glory from g. ib good g. head all knew, 65

ceremony that 27ob


city

to g. ones 'longs,

small make a g., i6gb mast of some g. ammiral, 3423 matter or small, 37b meals of beef iron steel, 244a men are like torches, 674b

greatest

men and women,


small,

men men

7013

great g. drayhorse, Sojb great g. ships come in, gi4a habitant of castle g., 68sb hair sprent with g., 714* handful of g. ashes at rest, 7igb head grown g. in vain, 5723
iniquity, aggb locks left are g., 53 ib

compare g. things with n6a, 344a creatures g. and small,

long g. beard, 524b mist on sea's face, g46b

name was Dapple

G., io07b night is growing g., 7843 a g., 443 pilgrim g. and g., gi4a red spirit spirits sad last g. hairs, 5&ab sea long black land, 6633 set g. life, 646a spires of Oxford, g6ga spirit yearning, 646b still evening and twilight g.,

345b
theory is all g., 47&b where thy g. eye glances, wing upon every tide, 881 a

684b cry in Egypt, 8b customs curtsy to g. kings, 245b death, goga deeds wrought at great risks, 873 deep to great deep, 654a democratic God, 6g6b desire to bottle of hay, 23oa dissolved into something g., 939D do business in g. waters, 2ib do g. right little wrong, 234b duration of g. sentiments makes g. men, 8053 Elizabeth, 645b empire and little minds, 453b engaged in g. civil war, 6sga feast of languages, 222b fell g. oaks, 422a
finds

men light up their time, men make mistakes, 8155 men not scholars, 6343
names
no no no
as these, nooa nature's second course,

are not always wise, i6a contending with adversity, 3iia

Neptune's ocean wash, g. man born too soon, 8943 g. no small, 4o8b g. pleasure to bring death, 823 none unhappy but g., sg6a nose great man, 8gsb nothing g. accomplished without passion, 507!^ nothing g. created suddenly,
i38a nothing ioi6a
g.

without
as

gg.,

men,
227b 2gob

were old times, 6s3b


that
I

ones

eat

64a

pang as g., 271 a First Cause, 45gb


fortune great slavery, 131 a Gaels of Ireland, gi8a

withered cheek tresses g., 5183 world g. from thy breath, 774a call diGraybeards, love which g. vine, 2i6b Gray-eyed Athena, 653 Gray-fly winds her sultry horn,

globe

itself,

God our
god Pan,

sg7b King, 62)b 1370, 6193

Gray -green greasy Limpopo, 8763


stretch of grass, 878b

withers g., 878b Gray-haired Saturn, 584a Gray-headed, old and g. error, 330b Gray-hooded Even, g^Sb Graze, as long as stars g., n8a neither g. nor pierce, 275b Grazing, men like satyrs g., 2i2b
Grease, fry in
lust

gray ships come in, gi4a Limpopo, greasy gray-green 876a Gromboolian plain, 674a gulf fixed, 47* hand of God, 284a have seen the wicked in g. power, i8b he is a g. observer, 253b

only g. man write history, 84ob only g. men obscene, 8sob only g. poets can read g. poets, 6833 only know it shall be g., 868b Original proclaim, 3933 our hearts are g., 653a packs and sets of g. ones, 28oa patriot great man, 82 ib pay g. deal too dear, 2953
pearl of g. price, 42b persons great kindnesses, ig6b pith and moment, 2623 poet writes his time, ioo7b poetry result of national spirit,

up

little

ones,

hedgehog knows one


68a

g.

thing,

heir of fame, 334* help good wise g., 88 3a

own

g.,

i68a
g.,

horn spoon, 6gsa


horse of gold, 10303 how g. that darkness, 4ia
ice also g.
ill

melted him in own

i68a

human affections, 7i2a i2b prince and a g. man fallen, in prison lies, 3o6b prince quaint g. figure, 9533 redemption from above, 334* responsibility of g. states, g82a
primary
rightly to be g., s64b

poets great audiences, 7osb

servility slides

by on

g.,

wheel that squeaks gets Greased worm, io75a

io77a g., 6853

would

suffice,

47b Greasy, fat and g. citizens, gray-green g. Limpopo, 876a keel 222b doth Joan pot,
Great age begins anew, 57ob Amen, 726a

and mighty resolutions, and original writer, 5i6a and wide sea, sib

352b

can he rule the g., illusion, gi7a impotently g., 4053 in admiration as herself, aggb in g. hand of God I stand, 2848 interests at stake, g8b inwardly in secret g., 6943 is Diana, 5oa is glory of the woman, goa
is

9273 2Oob

rooted blossomer, 8835


rudely

rough diamond, 41 5b g., 4o8b

seekest thou g. things, 34b shade of that once g., 5i2b silence alone g., 58gb

apostle of Philistines, 7143 Architect of Universe mathematician,

942b

firs, 8i6b army artificer made my mate, 824b Babel, 458b ball of fire, ioo8b be g. be misunderstood, 6o6a

of pointed

well I am not leap in the dark, 3183 let us mock at g., 883a

truth, 36b, 7223.

know

g.,

65^

sleep out this g. gap, 2873 small and g. beasts, 2ib so clear in his g. office, 282b and friend, 37 ib so g. a poet so g. is his mercy, 2ia at here home, ioi3b society
society

on earth, 5ioa some are born g., 252b

live

lives

at level of g.

of

g.

men, 82ga
us,

men remind

souls

62ob
love goes here, io4a

song after death of singer, 7osb suffer in silence, 497b sphere thou movest in, 288b stage of fools, s8oa

1371

Great
Great star early drooped, 7oaa steamers white and gold, 8 sweet mother,
thereby the g. is achieved, 74a thine has g. hook nose, 491 a things are done, 4gob

INDEX
Greatest, politics g. adventure,

Greece saw Byron's struggle cease,

question ever debated, 4633 scandal waits on greatest state,

22ob
service or greatest

injury,

ggb

26a things both g. and small, things made of little, 666b those who were truly g., io67b

sooner fail than not *., $B$b tell aloud g. failing, 3890 vicissitude of things, 2ogb

though

fallen g.,

555b
heart,

thoughts come from

4$8b

thoughts good deeds, 67ga time a g. teacher, Q4ga to be a g. man, 77b to do thing that ends all other, 288b too g. for revenge, 741 a upward to G. Society, 10643 war and petty peace, 888a whales sailing by, 7iia whatever g. seemed little, 595b whatever little seemed g., 595a-b when little fears grow g., 26sa when nature removes g. man,

well-wrought urn becomes ashes, 3053 but was Great-grandfather waterman, 36sb Greathearted gentlemen, 66aa

g.

Stentor, 6sa Greatly falling with falling state,

405*
they shall be g. rewarded, 36b think or bravely die, 4o6a to find quarrel in straw, stQ^ Greatness, abuse of g., 254a all g. unconscious, 575b all the far-stretched g., iggb be not afraid of g., 25 2b

G. direful spring, to G., 457a Greed, entrenched g., 97 la no greater disaster than g., 74b satisfy your g., 875b Greedy hands, 6350 men hope of gain allured, 765b not for needy but g., g73b of filthy lucre, 55a the sinful and lewd, 10355 Greedy-gut, put on pot says G., iog4b Greek accent slanting -wrong, 684a all G. all Roman fame, 4iaa come in Latin or in G., jjsb he G. and Latin speaks, 35^ hungry little G., 1393 imagery of G. and Latin, 435a is like lace, 43$a islands over Harvard Square,
to to
-

Gaul

where love is g., s6$a White Way, 86ob who is from nature, 6o7b wide beautiful world, 7193 winds shorewards blow, ?iob wink of eternity, 1043 a with a g. sum, sob with child and longing for
prunes, 7ob with young, io88b Great Britain going to war, 8$2b Greater, Brutus makes mine g., 2g6a far g. than his father, 6$b ignorance g. dogmatism, 8i7a love false to object, losgb love hath no man, 493 man greater courtesy, 6535 more strong far g., 2Q4a none beneath sun, 876b nothing g. than self, yoob out of small beginnings g. things, 3iga prey upon less, 41 8b punishment g. than I can bear, 6a service g. than the god, s68a than God cannot be conceived,

boy my g., aSga changed to empty name, sgsb farewell to all my g., 2g8b far-off touch of g., 653b final proof of g., S^sb
eyes on g. of Athens, goa France not France without g., ioi6a gods' custom to bring low all things of g., 87a highest point of my g., sg8a honor and g. of his name, sggb instruments of European g.,
fix

1042 a learn G. as treat, g2oa literature superior to

Latin,

merest G. could that, 737a neither G. nor Jew, 54b small Latin and less G., gogb speak G. naturally as pigs
squeak, 35ib-352a thought and life, 728b me, 254a turn pages of G. models, i24b Greeks, fear G. even when they bring gifts, ii8a
to

4851 inward
is

g.,

24gb
a4ob
g. flicker,

a-ripening, 2g8b
itself,

had modesty we have cant, gsab had word for it, 991 a led us to where they worship,
1703

give sea deity, 6gsb

knows
no

moment

of

looia

g. where no simplicity, 7323 not size but quality, 755a

nurse into g., gsa of Athens, goa


of British nation, $g5a of God, 7g6b of name in the father, 3043 penalty for g., 8353 w: meet, political g. and wisdom

Norwegians or Filipinos, loisb seeking land of G., 477b when G. joined G., 3&4b Green, all a g. willow, iBaa,
2763
all

in g. went my love, 10303 thy g. braes, 4gsa and dying, io7ob and pleasant land, 4gob

among
and

yellow

melancholy,

252b

as emerald, 524b

154*

rough road leads to sense of g., 84ga some achieve g., 252b

g.,

1303

than mighty armies, sgSb than Solomon, 42b than we know, 5iya the g. the more humble, J7a thy necessity g. than mine, so4a to the g. glory of God, i86a
Greatest artist embodied g. ideas, 6 9 8a bears g. names, 34gb best personality, yoga

say this not g., 661 a within range of marshes, 7g6b won by men with courage, goa Grecian, as in earth G. vase, 9633 goldsmiths make, 88$a sighed soul toward G. tents, 235* Urn worth old ladies, 10403 woes O goddess sing, 4053 Greece, Athens the eye of G.,

who

empty

vessel

g.

sound,

2453

event in war, 900 fool is man, $7ya


griefs those

we

cause, 8ib

348b beauty not repeat G., (x>7a bulwark of G. famous Athens, 79b
city
is

happiness for g. numbers, 41 6b how much the g, event, 47 6b man ever seen, 45 ib

education

to

G.,

goa

city-states of G.,

io4ga

clothe G. in freedom, 7ob


fair

minds capable of g. vices, ffib my vision's g. enemy, 4913 not always most agreeable, 8a8a
of these is charity, sab pass days in that where skill
g.,

G. sad

relic,

sssb

glory that was G., 64 ib, $253. isles of G., 56ob


Italy

might
music
of

i27b penalty of evildoing, g6a

England did adorn, 37ob still be free, 56ob of flutes of G., 775b China and of G., 10543

82gb babbled of g. fields, 24sb banks of Shannon, 537b bay tree, i8b be the g. grass above me, 7ggb be turf above thee, 5653 beechen g., 5&2a blue gentle cousin of g., 58ob casque has outdone elegance, 98ga clear g. bell, 7o4a devouring g. azures, 82gb do these things in g. tree, 4?b drives my g. age, io7oa dry smooth-shaven g., 335b elfin from g. grass, 64ib England's mountains g., 4gob felicity, s8oa Flora and country g., 5&2a forget g. thumbs, io7oa girl, 2593 glass beads, gssb glowing young spring, 10543 golden lamps in g. light, 3603 golden tree of life is g., 478b

azures,

good

crier of g. grass like g. fire,

sauce,

181 a

1372

INDEX
Green graves of your sires, 565b Greta woods are g., $2ob
groves of the blest,

Grievous
Grief,

Green-robed senators, 5&4b


Greensleeves all Green -walled by land, 626a

most

idle has

most

g.,

my
hills

joy,

io84b

7gia

uga

of

Mary-

D grow the rashes O, 4g3 happy as grass was g., i07ob blue, hands 673a heads g. heard on the g., 487^
hill far

my my

Greenwood chapel, g5ga must to g. go, io84a


under the
Greet,
in
it

distracting g., 445a joy my g., of g. I died, io66a

mb

past
g.,

help should be

past

g.,

g. tree,

away, 684b
as
hills

immutable
872E

not so

g.,

me

gars

me

every
that

248a angle

3603
eye,

g., 4g5*>

with

sun

thine

in hamlets dances on g., 5i8b in judgment, 2&7b in thy g. lap, 44i*> isle in sea love, 642a

2g2a
offspring from camps, iO58a two solitudes g., 9385 Greeting, 'change one g. and part, 707b

pitched past pitch of g,, 8o4a plague of sighing and g., 2393 put in words g., t?4gb returns with revolving year,
sees into

bottom of my shame and g., go6a

g.,

2253

keep

memory

g.,

54ib

silent manliness of g.,

4sob

laid him on the g., io88b laurel g. for season, 774a lavender's g., iog7b leaf shall be g., 34& learn of g. world, g8ga

legend of g. chapels, io7ob lie down in g. pastures, i?b light, ioi7b little Johnny G., iog4a little vaulter, 55 ib making the g. one red, 28sb mantle of standing pool, 27&b

gayer than a g., lojoa Grenadier, British G., i looa she strode like g., 843b Grenadiers, captain of Hampshire g., 466a there journeyed two g., 5883 Grenville, Sir Richard G. lay,

smiling at g., 252b teaches to waver, 82a that does not speak, 28$b

think you can shut g. in, g7ga thus brief my love is g., lona to weather as to g., g7ga to weep make less depth of g.,
too great to banish, s88a of g. endured,

654b Greta woods are green, 52ob Grew, autumn that g. by reaping,
8ga
lean assailed seasons, 8ggb miles around wonder g., &52b still the wonder g., 4503 sweetest thing that ever g., 5iia three years she g., 5iob
together
like

torments

6o4b
322b

unmanly

married to g., s8ob Meander's margent memory be g., 257a

g.,

337a

g., 257b was ever g. like mine, weeps alone, 8g8a what greater g., 84a

of g. cheese, i8sb o'er g. cornfield did pass, 25ob old age, 367b on g. turf suck showers, 33ga

moon made

double

cherry,

restraint to g, for one so dear, i2ia wings of Time g. flies, 35gb

what

asoa

with

up

fostered

by

beauty,

5ogb

on ilka g. loaning, 446b on the echoing g., 486b


pastures, i7b remain g. forever, 4g8a or tree, g6sb sight of g. field silent tents of g., 625a

where one g. before, g8gb within this learned man, aijb Greyhound, fawning g. did proffer, 38b puppies, 6323

and shame bowed g. down, 33sa with glass that ran, 7733 worm canker and g., 56$a you must first reel g., 456a

Griefs, all
tautness,
g. .in slips,

my

g.

are gone, 2iob


joy,
g.,

Greyhound's
10773

gentle

drinking my g., 228a even his g. are a


great g.
fresh

66b 8sb

sing all a g. willow, 276a

dumb, i3ib
over

snow on g. grass, ioogb sod above, 822a soul bright invisible g., 68 ib speak like a g. girl, 25ga a g. bay spreading himself like tree, i8b io22b from ferns, sucking g. swell in havens dumb, 8o2b text old orator too g., 22oa thought in a g. shade, 36oa
through
thy
to
g.

Greyhounds, stand like 244a


Gridley, fire
Grief,

tears
g.,

old
g.,

griping
G., 77 ib

io84b

when ready
10853

he hath borne our

acquainted with g., age or g. or sickness, 3213


loss,

33a

aggravates
at

not

wanting to
g.,

call

dead

33a light g. loquacious, isib not but state my g., depose my 228a patch g. with proverbs, 24?a
private
g.,

back, g37b beguile you from

255b

64oa
57 ib

solitary g., 8 93 a

fuse drives

flower,
sea,

rays

in

great

g.

4a

too g.

what g. altar, 58^ and only good

but for g. as if not been, can honor take away g., can I see another's g., can take care of itself, develops mind, go8a
divine radiance, sgga

some

g.

are medicmable, 2900

24ob 4&7b 76sa

sufferest mortal g., 244b that harass distressed, 4*6b cause ourselves, 8ib Grievance, no g. redress by

we

mob

for fools,

75b

tossing g. water, g7ga

blue O, Ssoa
cover, 77ga

underwood and
water
spurted

through

hull,

82gb
wearin' o' the G., logob, logia

when when

all trees g.,

6gia
trees,

g.

back in
g.

8igb
87$b

with boughs, 827a


Greener,
cleaner
land,
laurel g. from brows, 65 ib Greenery yallery, 767a Greenest of things blue, 775a

drug which takes away g., 653 each substance of a g., 2273 fame can never heal, 674b everyone can master g., 246b fills room of absent child, 2g6b for every g. to physician, 324b forgotten, 77sa glistering g., 2g8a glory and g. agree not, 6g8a great as my g., 227b great bundle of g., g4ga hopeless g. passionless, 6i7b hurt pain or woe, io84a I am g., io8sa
in
is

law, 635a Grievances, clod of ailments and


g. lose force, redress of g., 474b

iogib

g., 45oa Grieve at funeral, 7623 die ere she shall g., gi8b his heart, a85b men are we and g., 5i2b not for what past, ipSsa not g, over inevitable, io6a one suffer than nation g., s68b woman to be overmastered,

repeat no

Green-eyed jealousy, ag3b monster, 27 4a Greenhouse, loves a g. too, 4583 Greenland's icy mountains, 54gb Greenly, we have done but g.,
26sa
Greenness,
clothe earth with
g., g.,

much wisdom
27b proud, 2$6a

is

much

g.,

Grieved, by wind g. ghost, io4gb Grieves, that which g. me more,


401 a Grieving,

itself

be mortal, 57 ib journeyman to g., 226a

Margaret

are

you

g.,

8o3b
Grievous

526a heart recovered

32 3b

joy misunderstood, 6iga makes owner stoop, 236a melts away, 323b mortals live in g.,

burden was thy birth,


is g.

2i7b
gossip
to bear, 68a

my

most

g. fault,

sga

Grievous
Grievous pleasure and pain, 774a

INDEX
Grog they dreamed they
lowed, 96 ib
swal61 a

remembrance of them
roar, 5 gob

is g.,

Grievously, sins most g. committed, 61 a

Groined aisles of Rome, 6o2a Gromboolian, great G. plain, 674a Groove, freight proportioned to
g- 739 Grooves, ringing
g.

met by Mr. G., 3958 Grim and ancient Raven, 6453 brow g. mouth prim, ioo4b
Griffith,

Ground, sorrow holy g., 841 a stand on own g., 67ga stand your g., 455a stood firm on dry g., lob stood like trees in g., 7O2b swalloweth g. with fierceness,
till

of

change,
opinion,
to

death, $i6a

Death my son and foe, g44a heaven not g., 668a hushed in g. repose, 44 ib
king's dog, 8jb

647b Gross and scope of 256b


flesh sinks

i6b thou return unto the

my

downward, 228b
g.

gratitude

among

people, 4293

shape towered up, 5ioa wolf with privy paw, gjjSb Grimace, accelerated g., g88a Grimaces called laughter, $i8a Grimm, Rousseau conceive how G., 593b Grimness, no graveyard g. when I am gone, lo^a Grim-visaged comfortless Despair,
439*>

to sink but light, 2203 population violent and g., 7253 scarce so g. as beetles, 27gb

not

g.

a bit of g., Tiddler's g., tract of inland g., i tread on classic g-,\__ vantage g. of truth"! i$a

own

g.,

6a

Tom

things rank and

g.,

2tfb g88b
it in,

willing to quit g., 468b Groundlings, split ears of g., sGsb Grounds, fight on landing g.,

two

g.

broken

statues,

gaia

Grossest superstitions, 6a8b Grossly, decay doth g. dose

Group action
of willful

in g. problems, 9154
like shady
g.,

235b
err as g. as the few, s68b Crossness, lost evil by losing g.,

men, 842a Grove, but cloud and


court
the
g.
g.,

war smoothed front, 2i6b Grin, all Nature wears one g., 424a bear and g., 7aab devil did g., 526b draws out coffin nail, 468b ending with the g., 744a how cheerfully seems to g., 74$a owned with a g., 533a remained after rest gone, 744a universal g., 424a Grind, ax to g., 5453 bones to make bread, 1098 a demd horrid g., 66gb exceeding small, $2ga faces of the poor, joa in mill of truism, 6o5b laws g. the poor, 448a mills of God g. slowly, 3293 souls in self-same mill, Soya with water that's past, 3243 Grinders cease, 28b Grinding, sound of the g. is low,
his

454a Grosvenor 76?a


Grotesque,
Grotius,

meadow
no quiet
shade
spicy

camp the
48aa

5i8b

and stream, 5iga

Gallery
so

young

man,
g.,

olive g. of

striking

and
as

Academe, 348b which g. of myrtles

made, goga
celebrities

such

G.,

g.

749

Grovel, mediocre

cinnamon tree, iO53a and you g., 4<5oa

Ground, acre of barren g., 2g6a all seated on the g., 3843 another man's g., 2673 army supported by aviation,
ioa6a as water spilt on the g,, i2b beat the g., 336b betwixt stirrup and g., ig7b
bit

Groveled here long enough, 7oab Groves are of laurel, 477a forsake her Cyprian g., 371 a God's first temples, 574b green g. of the blest, uga
o'er

of

shady g. they hover, 3153 Academe, i24a

of

Cain was
call it

g. to call tiller of g.,

own,
6a

733b

Grow,

valleys g. hills fields, 2i2a all things g. old, 97 a

holy g., 573b cannot dedicate this g., choose g. take thy rest, Christian g., 41 4a
color of g. in him, 827a crushed to g. diffuse

6gga

s^b

sweets,

2ga
Grinds, God's mill g. slow, 325a Grindstone, hold noses to g., i8sa Grinning, mock your own g., 26sb Grip, got a middlin' tight g.,

2o8a dark and bloody drops earliest to


exiled

g., 7O4b g., 2 34 a

consider lilies how they g., 41 a corn and taters g., 8a8b enter to g. in wisdom, 75 ib forever and forever, 648b from grass I love, 701 a grass will g. in streets, Q3ia green g. the rashes O, 4g$b hatched would g. mischievous,

asked how pearls did cannot g. by inch, 884b

g.,

gaoa

778b Griping io84b


Grisilda,

on g. in jeers, 7O7a fallen unto me in a fair g., 173 Fame's camping g., 7o4b fell into good g., 42b four thousand miles deep, 733b
gain
little

heads

g.

beneath

shoulders,

272b
in place of one, $8gb into likeness of bad learn but not wiser
liberties

men, g6a
g.,

griefs

heart
to

wound,
fynde
G.,

patch

of

g.,

24b

in

trust

gazes on the g., 826b grow on Irish g., logob

i68b
Grisly gang, g23a
Gristle, a people still in

hallowed
the
g.,

g.,

ioa6a

holy

452b
Grizzled, his beard was g., 2583 his hair just g., $67b Groan, condemned alike to g.,

439b hear each other g., s8ab of martyr's woe, 4903 scarcely howl or g., 746b sinks with bubbling g., 557b spirit fled with g., i igb weep no more nor g., 3133 Groaned, my mother g., 48gb Groaneth, whole creation g., 513
Groaning, strong gongs g., gi8b Groans, cackles g. and dies, 57 3b more loudly than empty stomach, 972b
g. of wounded, 75a sovereign of sighs and g., 22 ib Groceries, buying clothes and g.,

kings sat down upon the g., g8a look down to test g., 10561
lose g.

haunted holy g., 555b g. where they trod, 57 sb hunting g. for ambitions, io4ga in mill of conventional, 7g8a into the sea upon dry g., 8b

not made but g., 8igb like a cedar in Lebanon, 2ia like savages, 245a lopped tree may g. again, Sob love's mysteries in souls g., 3o6b makes not fresh nor g. again,

38a

won today, 7i2a massa's in cold g., 727b miles of fertile g., 52gb
more malign with bad
i6ib
seed,

lodging is on cold g., 401 a tail go to the g., i8ab neither g. for feet, 7O2b on g. between two stools, i82b on the g. the purple flower, 6gb

my my

shrieks

and

passion that left g., 66sb place whereon thou standest is holy g., 8a plat of rising g., 335b rage outside happy g., 7i4a

my wrath did g., 48gb oaks from acorns g., 1513, 5073 old along with me, 666a on Irish ground, icgob out at heels, 277b pastime and happiness g., 5i5b pinks that g., 27 ib poets by sufferings g., 35 3b riches g. in hell, 343a roses and white lilies g., 30oa ruin to make them g., 6i5a say which grain will g., 281 a she can hear daisies g., 8j8b so be it when I g. old, 51 ib
straight

in

strength

of

spirit,

948b

rope just above

g.,

g8ob

to what they seem, 447b trees g. up again quickly, trees that g. fair, 87 6b

8ob

INDEX
Grow, two blades of grass 38gb up with the country, 6785
vegetable
love g.
vaster,
g.,

Guiding
and comGuerre, magnifique mais pas la

Grumble, no use

to g.

plain, 8iga terrible g. rumble roar, 7i8b Grundy, afraid of Mrs. G., 7103

Growed, I 'spect I g., Gspb Groweth, like grass which g. up, aoa
sed,

Solomon G., 1096 a


tyranny of Mrs. G., 7o6a

a nom de g., 758b Guess each sweet, 582b


if

now who
shrewd

you can, 33 ib
holds thee, 6i8a
to do,
g.,

10833

what will Mrs. G. say, 5013 Grunt and sweat under weary
g., 8143 Gruntled, f3r from being g., g6sb Guanahani, called G. in Indians' tongue, 1723 Guarantee, Bill of Rights g. of freedom, 98 3b happiness only of dictators,

Growing and a becoming, 7163 close upon the g. boy, 51 $b darling I am g. old, 8153 loves life like him g. old, 833 old in drawing nothing, 4583 sorrow of day's g., 7515 tender and g. night, 7ooa toil of g. up, 883b
tree
g.

life, 2623 Gruntin', I'll do de

what man going

g. valuable, 1071 a

when
will

first

met did not


g.,

ioi7b 801 a

Guessed, ghost

know

if

8o$b haven't

g.,

876a

Guesses, secrets everybody g., 8363 Guessing penalized in schools,

10713
pleasure of poem g., 797a Guest, always welcome g., io8gb dear old Carian g., 7igb dull fighter and keen g., 24ob future unwelcome g., 8i5b
give love

when

ye're

sleeping,

5*ia

3963 Growled, cracked g. roared howled, 524b


fight,

Growl and

Growling, listen to it g,, io67b Grown, age g. so picked,

both by what

full g.,
it

10993 fed on, 2

no one g. success in war, 9253 of First Amendment, 99 ib of freedom, gSsb Guarantees, mutual g< of independence, 842b not worth paper, 6igb Guard, advanced g. of working
class, gosb along the Rhine, 6gga and keep them, 74*) as I g. o'er the fold, 487b calls not Thee to g., 875b careful silence, gsib changing g. at Buckingham Palace, g6gb don't call out National G., 9823 grow wesk keeping on g., 8o6b historians should be on g., io7b holy angels g. thy bed, sg6b marched in Mulligan G., 8093 our native seas, 537b ready to g. liberty, 5483 those I g. I do not love, 88 ib time every minute, gg7b who is to g. the guards, i$gb Guarded by neighborly respect,

no more
is

to every g., 3903

but a

g.,

make welcome

soob
the present
2.,

66b no g. welcome after three days,


iosb

diseases desperate g., from sudden fears, 5593

remembrance

of a g., 373

old in love, 49<>b sweets g. common, sgsb tarry until beards be g., that he is g. so great,

retire like g. sated, n$b retire like satisfied g., i2oa

i2b

people correct on fact, people's feet, 8233 Grows, each thing that in season g., 22ia everything that g., 29 ib fairer than at first, 2943
great love g. there,
g., 2i9 a immortal spirit

Grown-up nation, io55a

2633

home where small experience


g.,

in

this

delightful

5ioa garden

g,,

2Ooa
in single blessedness, marble wastes statue g.,
lives

228b
1783

virtue which requires to be

g.,

shakes parting g. by hand, 268 b soul g. of body, i4ia speed the going g., 41 ib speed the parting g., 4osb speeds parting g., 8833 this g. of summer, 2823 tie of host and g., 791 Wedding G. stood still, 524 welcome the coming g., 4o5b wrong to speed a g., 66b Guests are met feast set, 524b chronic hotel g., 8gsb fish and g. in three days, losb many g. had Cana, 8983 praise it not cooks, 2ioa star-scattered on grass, 631 a unbidden g. welcomest when
gone, 2143

no profit
2193

g.

where no pleasure,

nodding violet g., 22gb oak from acorn g., 5073 one is fat and g. old,
since

448a with ships, 332b Guardian angels sung 4203


conscience
g.

Guid
this strain,

to

be merry and
life,

wise,

4g6b
g.

Guidance, history provides


daily

in

nob

of

community

2393

rules,

9323

when

it

g.

and

smells,

303**

Naiad of strand, 5203 need a guardian, isgb


Guardians Guarding
of other's solitude, gsSb of the faith,
calls

up by degrees, $i6b weed that g. in every soil, 4533 what soon g. old, 973 when watered by blood, 4843
Growth,
children
of

Guide Arcturus with his sons, i6a be Thou our G., i loja by light of reason, 8333 custom g. of human life, 4$4b knowledge should be his g., g4a
light to g., 5i4b

looib
to

not

Thee

larger

g.,

Guards

plant of slow 4263 hidden every day g., 68gb evidence of life, 597b
final g. evergreen, ideas have rate

415 confidence

g.,

guard, 875b bivouac of dead, die never surrender, 5083 like wild beast g. wsy, Scylla g. right side, 2343

no
7o4b 48gb

myself with blue flower, g86a g. overseer or ruler, agb

io57b

moral
of

soil

of g., 75 6b for aesthetic g., 9183

underdeveloped areas, g82b self-help root of g., 6743 shadow kills the g., 3043 Grub, no gravy no g., icogb
Grubs, dirt or g. or worms, 4iob Grubstreet inhabited by writers,

75 sb Gudeman's, when our g. awa, 4643 Gudgeon-like minnow-like, g78b Gudgeons, swallow g. ere they're

the steep, 81 23 who is to gu3rd the g., and Gude nicht joy, 5023 Scots lords, io87b to be merry and wise,

them from

only g. conscience, 9223 original and end, i48a our wanderings to g., 7433 path motive g., i48a philosopher and friend, 4ioa,

isgb

philosophy the g. to life, nib private conscience for g., 37oa


Providence their g., 348!) science g. of action, 8oga to g. their chime, gdob women g. the plot, 481 a

Guenever
Guerdon, 33 8 b

cstch'd, 75b for whom I


tion, i75b fair g.

make mento find,

4270 Grudge, dare never g. throe, 666a feed fat the ancient g., 2323 potter bears g. against potter, 67b what they cannot enjoy, 76a Grudging worshipper of the gods,

we hope

last g. of death, ii5b Guerit, je le soignay Dieu le g.,

Guided, lamp by which feet g., 465a Guides, blind g., 4gb cannot master joke, 7593 choose ideals as g., 7333 hope which g. changeful mind, 8oa

me and

the bird, 661 a

i87b Guerre, dr61e de

g.,

g7gb

la g. trop grave, 7863

through sky thy flight, 574b us by vanities, looib Guiding, man's g. destiny, 77 b

Guile
Guile, full of wiles full of
g-,

INDEX
gia
g.,

Gun, went

keep thy
i8b

lips

from speaking

Gunga

packed with g., ggsb serpent whose g. deceived, 34 ib trade of blood and g., 56b void of envy g. lust, 42oa Gulled shore to dangerous sea, 233^
Guilt,
all

to C3rry 3 g., loggb Din, better man than I G., 8733 Gunless game, 8463

Habit of
of of

living,

3313

making history proof, 7503 moving little finger, 7gab


to

Gunpowder
575

printing

and

religion,

ordinary

order breeds h., 7773 actions ascribed


h., 8o4'b

Guns

affection
g.

and

g.,

nosb

punished on earth, 4773 by silence betrayed, gyob earth one stain of g., 6i$b image of war without g., sgya life without industry g., 6gga no greater g. than discontentment, 74b so full of jealousy is g., 2653
today's g., 10563

ran out at heels, 443* treason and plot, 10873 aren't lawful, io2ga begin to shoot, 8733 blew great g., 6723 boom far, gi8b o' g., 9813 chaps with couple dead who fed the g. ggsb shook our unawares g.
f

reap a
rules

h.,

noob

unreflecting herd, 5173 shackle for free, 7g2a takes place of happiness, sgjb
tyrannical h. of reading, 6<54b use doth breed a h., 221 a
will encroach,

5233
of
truth,

with

him

test

4833

great

what art can wash 448b what is our g., gg6b

g.

away,

your g. consists in this, $o5b Guiltier than him they try, ayob Guiltless of country's blood, 44ob

though

g.

must

suffer,

86a

7843 us powerful, i026b monstrous anger of g., iO28b or butter, 10403 shows games sports g,, 4630 vile g., 238b winds blew great g., 475 with drums and g. f loggb Gushed, love g. from my heart, 5*5 b Gustibus, de g. non disputandum,
coffins,

make

youth h. of hers, 8723 Habitable, look round the h. world, 3713 H3bit3nt of C3stle gray, 68sb Habit3tion, benevolence the tranquil h., looa eat of the h., 2323 giddy and unsure, 2423 local h. and name, agob of dragons, 323
Hsbit's,
to
evil

h. earliest wile,

Guilty, better ten g. escape, 444b better to risk saving g., 4*7a make g. of our disasters, 2773

1503 Gusts of clear-blowing west wind,

566b Hsbits, censuah oth3 folks about


h.,
ill

65b
Gusty, carpets along Guts in his head, 2683 iO2ob plain old-fashioned g., Guttas in saxa cadentis, 1133 Gutter, idealists W3lk into g., 8783 we all in the g., S$gb Guttering, lights g. low, Sssb
Guttersnipe, bloodthirsty
g., 9233 Guy, County G. hour is nigh, 52ib what g. inhabits poem, 1061 a

no

g.

man

escape, 7i7b

g. floor,

5823

of corruption and renounce defense, 2073

of dust and sin, 3243 splendor, 4583 started like a g. thing,

2573

suspicion haunts g. mind, si6b thing surprised, 5i$b

Guinea, 435b

first

g.

more

difficult,

3nd manners, 7213 gather by degrees, 3723 moral h. induced by public practices, is6b my other h. 3re good, 75ob of 3ge of 3tomic energy, 10273 of peace and patience, 3263 well pursued betimes, 475b whst h. lesd you, io8ib Habitual hatred or fondness, 46 ib
chsrscter h.
h.

gub

jingling of g., 6473 Guinea's, rank but g. stamp, 4963

Guineas, crowns pounds and 852b

g.,

Guys, nice g. finish Guzzling Jimmy, 661 a

last,

10593
g.,

Guinevere for whom I make mention, i75b Guise, mingled in exile g., io4^b
Guises,

Gymnasium, democracy
7033 Gypsy, sets
g.

life's

blood
old
g.

revealed

in

various
g.,

g.,

Time you
vagrant

86oa man, go6a


astir,

10583 Guitar, sang to small Gules, warm g., 5823 Gulf, bottomless g., 545b

6733

g4ob Gyre 3nd gimble in W3be, 7453 8823 ., turning in widening


g. life,

twisted Gyves, prisoner in his


to

g.,

what you make h. practice, i 8b 3 Hack, somebody to hew and h., 35 2b Hacking 3t branches of evil, 682b Hackles, henna h. halt, g55a Hackney, starved h. sonneteer, 403b Hackneyed phrases, 85 ib Hack-writers, what difference from
h.,

lie becomes h., 4713 nothing h. but indecision, 7933

famous island descending dark g., g2ob

224a

io7b
in quest to have,

upon

his wrist, 5g2a

Had having and


2g4b Hades, descent
h3teful
is

great g. fixed, 47* of mutual incomprehension,


of years, 10273 stream setting forever, 6g5a Versailles was a g., 721 a

to

H.

is

H
H3 ha
saith

as

ptes
6gb

of

same, 8oa H., G$b

relentless,

no man
quoth
he,

t3kes weslth to H., 773

yawning

g,,

6g7b

among

the trumpets H.,

Gulfs, Persian g., 6g4b will wash us down, 646b Gull, landless g., 6g6a

i6b

pass gates of Hades, 773 road to H. e3sy to travel, io4b sent to H. nwny vsliant souls,

Habess corpus, 1513


Hsberdssher to Mr. Spurgeon, 755b Hsbersham, hills of H., 7g6b Habit built obstruction, 8633 costly thy h., 2s8b discontinued l3bor h. lost, sggb easy to absndon, 5ggb fall into h. cesse to be, 86gb
fills

623

protection of

h.,

4723

Hag snd hungry

g6ga Gull's way and whale's way, g46b Gulls and deep sea swell, 10033 fax calls, g6ga Gum, by gosh by g., 10313 med'cinable g., 276b more for books than g., 8 Gummed with Arnstein's cement,
g.,

whish a

goblin, io85b Haggsrd, if I do prove her h., 274b Hagg3rds ride no more, 8563 Hags, secret bl3ck midnight h., 2853 Hail and farewell my brother,
115

10363

Gums, boneless g., sSab Gun, escape from rope and


4oib holy text of pike and
g.,

g.

up time, gp7b flywheel of society, 7g2b honor peereth in me3nest 2igb

h.,

3523

little man had little g., logyb named birds without g., 6033 no g. but I can spit, io6ob

is his nurse, 4983 not to be flung out window, 7623 nothing stronger than h., i28b

arrows flew like h., ggob Columbia, 5083 congenial horrors h., 41 gb divinest Melsncholy, 335b element of esrth, ggob to Emperor we who are about
die, 1413 fellow well met, 3gi3

holy light, 344b

1376

INDEX
Hail, let others h. rising sun, 439 a love-gift of fairy tale, 7453

Hdls
Half savage country, 9883 seas over, 3900 see with h. an eye, 1960 served God with h. the zeal, a *99 the bull he was, go6a the wit for half the beauty, 502b the world living in misery, gSsb their words need footnotes, gi8a they h. believe in it, 743 to rise and h. to fall, 4ooa truth blackest lie, 654b use h. talent, io4gb was not told me, 133 well begun is h. done, g8b who has begun has h. done,

Hair, soft brown h., soft h. of the grass, 77gb


soft-lifted,

Master, 44b rain snow h. drought, 76oa thou highly favored, 45b to the Chief, 5203 to thee blithe spirit, 57ob

584a stand up, 833

st3rs in h. seven, 7313 stroke his silver h.,

wedded

love,

3463

4873 subtle wreath of h., 3o6b sugar my h., 744b swerve a h. from truth, 268b
takes
h.

ye small sweet courtesies, 438b Hailed, so proudly we h., 54ob Hailstones on icebergs, 6gsb Haine, un peu de h., 75 ib
Hair, amber-dropping h., 337b Andrew with brindled h., 82 gb
as free,

tangles

right off bean, 10373 of Neaera's h., 3383


h.

through 10013
tips 3ll

and

fingertips,

over him, 1081 a to stand on end, 25gb

302b babies haven't h., 10173 beauty draws with single h., 4o4b bindest in wreaths thy golden h., laob blown h. sweet, loogb bracelet of bright h., $o6b

uncut h. of graves, 7003 vine Ie3ves in h., 72gb was long, 581 a way no wider than h., g44b weave sunlight in h., looib

i3 a
with but h. a heart, jaib Half -acre tombs, gosa Half -a -crown, help to h.,
Half-believers
of

what scanted

in h. given in wit,

brown
266b

h.

and

speaks

small,

brown

h. sprent

with gray, 7143

burned black with sun, io22b combing down yellow h., iog8a
cutting each other's h.,

2i8a with such h. too, 6653 Hairbreadth missings of happiness, 424b 'scapes, *72b Haircut and a shave, 10173
Hairs, bring down my gray h. glory from gray h. gone, now ill white h. become fool,

78ab

casual

creeds

7123
Half-dozen, dull academic h., gjyb six of one h. of other, 56^ Half-educated, unwashed and h.,

87ob
Half-gods, when h. go, 6033 Half-held, sea h. by night, 7003 Half-know, better know nothing

io25b

dark abundant h., 8goa difference matter of a h., 7gsb divide a h., 3523 draw you with single h., 3123 draws us with single h., 4<>4b
eccentric h.

242b
if h. be wires, 2g4b of your hesd numbered, or straws or dirt, 4iob sad last gray h., 5&2b stand on end, io34b superfluity sooner by white

423

on upper

lip,

lonb

than h., 68sb Half-known, horrors 697a

of

h.
h.

life,

Edith with golden h., 62gb fictions only and false h., 3233 graduates in golden h., girl 6483 with goat tangled h., 5053 goes with hide, 10103 golden h. curl gracefully, 724b gray but not with years, 5593 hank of h., 8753 has become very white, 743b his floating h., 5243 horrid image unfix h., 28 la hyacinth h., 64 ib Jeanie with light brown h., 727b lie tangled in her h., 358b lilac and brown h., loogb live h. shining and free, gggb long h. glory, 523 love knot in long black h., 96 ib Love with streaming h., 10383 lute strung with his h., 2223 make your h. curl, 768b most resplendent h., 5173 my fell of h., 286b ninth part of a h., 23gb not white h. that engenders wisdom, io2b of dog that bit us, i84b of my flesh stood up, i4b of yon gray head, 626b part my h. behind, looia
prison
for

backward Half-look, shoulder, ioo6b

over

h.,

23ib

those set our h. upright, 3073 Hairy gold crown on 'ead, 8733 spit brown get h. bresst, 947b
strength, 3353

Half-moon, yellow h. large low, 6633 Half -moon's vegetable eye, 10703 Half -pay for life, 56 ib Half -reaped furrow, 5843
Half-regained Eurydice, $$53.
Half-sleep, lulled into h., io65b Half-truths, all truths are h.,

Hsl,

'tis

my
it

vocation

H.,

2383

were bedime H. f 24ob days, gib expect h. days, 2143 Hale Father William, 53ib Half a drop 3h my Christ, 2i3b a league, 65 ib a life asunder, 744b a lo of, i84b
angel half bird, 6673 as old as Time, 5oob, 675b better be ignorant than know, i27a
better h., 2O3b brother of world, 67ga dead a living death, 3493 devil and half child, 875b

would Halcyon

86ib
old h. sheep, 5i6a h., 681 a one h. nature Half-world, dead, 2833 Haling out of heart old dismay. i078b Hall, bride paced into the h.,
Half-witted,

saw state was

o'er

h.

dazzlingly lighted h., 6753

Douglas in his

h.,

5igb

equality in servants' h., flowers in garden meat in h.,


i6fib
in.

grant what

h. or bower, 3$6b

how much more

g26b his Troy W3S burned, 2413


is

I wish,

Liberty

H^

my
th3n
1813,
o*

life

like

45ob music

h.,

h.

Fame when you

8785

whole, 67b how the other h.

'tis

lives,

Tom

croaks, looga merry in h., i88a bears logs into the h. F

3*5*
in love with death, 5&2b light half shade, 6463

222b
vasty h. of death, 7isb waiter roars through h., 7sob Hallmark of national culture,

color

of

h.,

8553

more

than

h.

h., 98 ib recover h. that grows bald, 2183

rain-drenched

people

right,

ruddy limbs flaming h., 488b sacred h. dissever, 4o4b save be way of smoothin' h.,
8923
scent of her h., io22b smooths h. kisses you, 588b smooths h. with automatic
so

my

life in Paris,

g$3b

not the h. that

made me,

933!)

hand, loosb charmingly curled, 691 a

of my own soul, i2ob of one order half 3nother, 352b one h. of the world, 533b overcome but h. his foe, owre to Aberdour, io87b part of blessed man, 2363

g6oa Halloo halloo loo loo, 278b Hallow, we cannot h,, Sgga words such as h. obscene, 10442 Hallowed be thy name, 4ob ground, 10263 quiets of past, 6943 relics should be hid, 3343
so h.

gardener's work, reveal half conceal, 64gb

proper

Halls,

and so gracious, in h. in gay attire,

557 a

5i8b

marble, s86b

Halls
Halls, my ho head h. g68b of fame, noib of hell, g8ga of Montezuma, i icoa pasteboard goddess of music h.,
f

INDEX
Han', prentice h. tried on man,

Hand, larger heart kindlier


6513

h.,

Hand

934b
Hallucinations of poets, g6ob Halo tip steelyards of skies, 84ab Halt and blind, 473 cells never h., g4yb henna hackles h., g5a

against every man, 7a against Heaven's h., 341 a and heart to this vote, 5473 as arrows in the h., aab

lay h. upon the ark, 4583 lays h. upon woman, 5083

automatic h., ioo2b beneath awful H. we hold, 8753 bird in h. worth two in bush,
137*
bite h. that fed, 4553 bless h. that gave blow, 3693 bloody and invisible h., s84b bondman in h. bears power,

her cheek upon her 223b leathern h., iO56b


leans
left

h.,

h.

know what

right
h.,

h.

doeth, 4ob
left his

garment in her
7183
to

7b

lend a
lends

h.,

how long
I
152!)

h. ye

between opinlittle

h.

honest

boldness,
h.,

ions, 133

102b
length of days in her right

pray you make a


h.

stay,

254a
at

2sa
h.,

no dishonor to

second

place, 11 a a Halted, army not h. by eloquence,

book in his h., 365^ books you hold in


Caesar's h., 6o4a

42ga

awe, 3g8b like base Indian, 276b


living

lifted h. in

from
all

677b
Halter, hope one will cut h., 333b threats of h., 4753
Halters, ill talking of h., igsa Halts, wanderer h. and hears,

heart, 10543 capped child of my right h., 3O2b childish h., io57b close h. out of love, 8053

withered

made
7b

h. to mouth, igsa to prosper in his h.,

Halves, two h. of God, sg8b Ham, Noah begat H., 6b Haman, they hanged H., 143 Hame, the kye's come h., 47gb to my ain countree, 551 a Hamelin town's in Brunswick,

cloud like a man's hand, igb cold h. of death, 24ia constable with lifted h., gosh death lays icy h. on kings, 327b died by 'the h. of the Lord, 8b do not saw air with h., s62b dry h. yellow cheek, 24 ib

662a Hamlet, Bacon not written H., 578a


I

each

2943 army hath a h., East with richest h., 3433


h.

dyer's h.,

236b
8773

either

am

rightly

clutch,

much

Prince H., looia Antony of H. most, 8i5b

not

rambles Lear rages, 884b rude forefathers of h. 44oa there struts H., 884b O H. what a falling-off, *$gb Hamlet's, ghost of H. father, 86ia Hamlets, in h. dances on green, 5i8b they have H. we Karamazovs, 7o8b Hammarskjold not live in vain,

encumbers with helping h., 4303 every man's h. against him, 73 eye see for h. not mind, 68 ib farther away on either h., 10233 fear thy skinny h., 5253 findeth to do, 28b
fine Italian h., 10573 foot and h. go cold, i88b for hand, ga from h. no worthy action, logoa gave unto his mighty h., 578b

man's fortune in own h., man's h, not able to taste, may turn from weaker h., medieval h., 7673 mortality's strong h., 2373 my spirit in God's h., my thoughtless h., 48ga my times are in thy h., nature's sweet cunning h., never had blister in h., no more than moist h., no rude h. deface it, sub nonchalance of h., 8823 not h. but understanding, not lift h. to help, 8833 of all that hate us, 463 of h. of foot of lip, sggb

2oga
2 sob

2g2b

3645
i8b

25ib
gia

9555

1955

of potter shake, 6305 Old Age and Experience h.


h.,

in

3?2b

h. easy shoe, 85gb orders in his h., go4b our h. finished it, iggb our times in his h., 666a

open

Hammer

i073b
along
'ard
'igh

road,

give me your h., 2i8b gods' capricious h., 10573 great h. of God, 2843

papers in each h., 4103 poverty in h. of God, 4b


prentice h. tried on put in his h. by the door, 2gb raised to shed blood, rash h. in evil hour,

man, 4ggb
hole of the

81 oa back of beating h., g66a iron when hot, i85b

into crowbar, g48b neither h. nor ax, 458b no sound of h., 458b of red and blue, 956b out solid piece of work, 787b what the h., 48ga when you are a h. strike, g24b

me

handle toward my h., 2833 having put h. to plow, 46b heart in h., 6583 heaving up my either h., 3213 her h. on her bosom, 2763 here's my h., 2973 his hat in his h., 42gb hold fire in his h., 2263 hold infinity in palm of h.,
poison in the h., 8oa your h. victorious, 85b a little from her h., 2243 hop hurts my h., 275b if thy right h. offend thee, 403 in every honest h. a whip, 275b

Hammered,
h.,

attacking and getting

8373 doubly h. gold, 6g6b fine h. steel of woe, 6g7a gold and gold enameling, 8833 Hammers, busy h. closing rivets, 2443 laughs at broken h., 948b no h. fell, 4s8b

hold

4083 347b 343b right h. forget her cunning, 22b right h. is become glorious, 8b right h. of God, 6oa scepter snatched with unruly h., 236b seen her wave h. 64sb shake of the h., looib shakes parting guest by h., 268b sheep of his h., 2ia shut when shouldest thou repay, 37b
red right
h.,

in glove, sgia in hand on

edge

of

sand,

slim h. so lovely, 981 a soft h. softer breast, 5813 souls of righteous in h.


3 6b stout of h., 5i8a

of

6733
in

God,

Hammock, Drake

he's in his h.,

me

86sb
they'll

lash

in

h.,

6g8a

Hampden, some village H., 44ob Hampering with ceremonies and


music, 101 a

in in in

hand Americans all, 46ob hand we'll go, 4g4b hand with wandering, 348b her left h. riches and honor,
233

in his h. are the deep places,

Hampshire, captain of H. grenadiers, 466a

2ia
in one h. a stone, io5b infection and h. of W3r, 226b iron h. in velvet glove, i86a kingdom of heaven is at h., $gb

out to receive, 37b sweet Roman h., 2533 sweeten this little h., 2863 sword sleep in my h., 4gob take h. part with laughter, 774b taking in h. a city, 77b
stretched

Hams, taking

h.

was
lies

stealing,

759 Hamstring, conceit a68a

in his h.,

thousand at thy right h., 2ob that held dagger struck, 97 2 b that I were glove upon that h.,
ten

kissing h.

may

feel

good, 10273

137 8

INDEX
Hand
that
is

Hang
Czar, h.

honest and hearty,

Handlebar moustaches on
10763

that made us is divine, 3933 that made you fair, 27 ib that rocks cradle, 6ggb rounded Peter's dome, that

5i8a

Handled,

vessels

oft

brightly

60 2 a
that signed the paper, io7oa there shall thy h. lead me, aga

things made by human h., g4oa this living h., 58 ib thou openest thine h., 233 three lilies in her h., 7313

shine, 2133 with a chain, 735b Handler, nation's freight h., 9483 Handles, everything has two h., 139* Handling, tuning lyre and h. harp, 77b

Hands, pale 8713 Pilate washed h., 44b plunge h. in water, losgb predatory human h., 85ib
h. I loved,

rarely escapes injuring

own

h. f

75*
restless violent h.,

8993

Handmaid, Nature's h.
philosophy h. to
riches
thrift

Art, 3673

right h. of fellowship, 53b rosy h. in steam, iO7ga savings in h. of one, 83 ib shake h. forever, 2 lib

religion, ao7a

good
h.
of

h. worst mistress,
enterprise, g76b estate of his h.,
heart,

something from our


soul soul

h.,

5173

thy h. great Anarch, 4i4a i8b thy h. presseth me sore, thy right h. shall hold me, 2$a

Handmaiden, low

clap h. and sing, 88gb in firm white h., gioa speak h. for me, 254b strength without h. to smite,

4893 time hath taming h., 597b Time's fell h., agab
till

some blind

h.,

45b Hands and eyes and

773*
557a temples made with h., soa that rod of empire, 44ob
that work on us, gs8b that wove shirt of flame, 10073 true faith ready h., 6gob

to execute, 4663, took his icy h., 67gb

and hearts, 2i6a and then take h., ag6a


are four, 10323 as bands, a8a bear thee up in their h., 2ob believe in fairies clap h., 858a blesseth with two happy h.,

touch of vanished h., 648a by sleight of h., 39 ib under whose cautious h., 7023
tricks

union

unfriendly to tyrants, 3623 Uzzah put forth his h., 4583 vacant heart h. eye, 521 a wash blood from my h., aSsb waved her lily h., 4oia we are in God's h., 244a what h. dare seize fire, 48ga what immortal h. or eye, 48ga what thy right h. doeth, 4ob whatsoever thou takest in h.,

20lb
blue, 6733

wave weak what

of h. and hearts, 356b h. for mute farewell, 704a h. mighty heart, 57 ib h. you would hold, 535b

by fairy h. knell rung, 4433 by foreign h. eyes closed, 4063


clasps

with

crooked

h.,

6513

whirling h. at noon, 105613 with Pilate wash your h., 22 8a work h. from day to day, 10623 wounds in thine h., 363

clean h. and pure heart, i8a come knit h., 336b

Handsaw, know hawk from


a6ia

h.,

37b with my h. on his head, 6i7b with your staff in your h., 8b withhold not thine h. in the evening, a8b work of thy h., 33b Handclasp's a little stronger, gi4a Handed in his checks, 76gb me my being's worth, 7393 Handel, not care candle for H.,
scarcely fit to hold candle, 4i5a

Handfasting, this

we

call h., 52 ib

Hand-flung spears, 6773 Handful o' things I know, 778b of divine inert, 6g6b of dust, looab of gray ashes, 7igb of meal in a barrel, i3a
of sand, io4oa of silver, 66ab of stars, g8gb

with quietness, 27b zodiac, io7oa Handfuls, give me h. of

lilies,

uga
Handicap, poverty 983*
is h.,

gSab-

Handiwork,

firmament

showeth

his h., i7b you give to God, 8a6b

Handkerchief, holding pocket h., 746a of the Lord, 7ooa Handle, grasp by blade or h., 6g4b jug without h., 673b knife for which h. missing, 47oa lie a h. fits all tools, 634a of big front door, 7663
right and wrong h. to everything, isga such as h. harp and organ, 6b touch not h. not, 54b

toward

my

hand, 2833

country defended by h., 65$b degenerate into h. like mine, 56ob diadems and fagots in h., 6o3b entergraft our h., 3o6b establish the work of our h., sob failing h., giab fasten h. upon hearts, 854a Father into thy h., 47b fetching with full h., 7ooa fold h. and wait, 77ob folding of the h. to sleep, 2gb fruit of her h., 273 greedy h., 635b had put instead, io6oa hath not a Jew h., assb his h. formed the dry land, sia hold much of heat, loogb horny h. of toil, 6gib idle h., 39 6b in h. not of few but many, 8gb in your h. rests future, 9823 into thy h. I commend my spirit, 47b invisible h. restore year, 9923 issue is in God's h., 7ga kills Scots washes his h., asga large and sinewy h., 62 la lay soul in her h., 6gga make pretense, 743a little h. little h. never made, sg6b made before knives, 3gob many h. make light work, 1853 musket molds in his h., 8aob my own fair h., s88b nearer than h. and feet, 6$4b nobody has such small h., io3ia not hearts, a75a not in h. of boys, ioa8b not without men's h., 68ga of Esau, 7a of memory weave, 778a of sisters Death and Night, 7oaa one thinks of all the h., looib oozing out at palm of h., 481 a

Handsome

kidnapped Europa, big-boned and hardy-h. 8033 his figure is h., 78oa house to lodge friend, 41 ib in three hundred pounds, 267a is that handsome does, 4483 Jesus a h. man, 10303 man but gay deceiver, 4ggb not h. at twenty, 324b others more h. by far, 9423 property, 73gb rather be h. than homely, 8iab some women h. without adornment, uia strong rich or wise, g24b ugly thinks herself h., 4i$b wee thing, 4953 with my mourning very h.

as bull that

ma

376a

Handsomely, have merit h. allowed, 4335 Handspike, fate is the h., 6g7b Handwriting on the wall, 10183 Handy, with girls be h., logoa Handy-dandy which is the justice,
27gb

Hang

calf's skin on limbs, 2363 clothes on hickory limb, no3a his title h. loose, s86a feel go h. yourselves critics, i8ib in their own straps, 2513
it

all

Robert Browning, g88b

my harp on willow- tree, noob not h. myself today, giga out our banners, 286b pearl in cowslip's ear, 22ga rope enough h. yourselves, i8ib she would h. on him, 257b sorrow, 2473
that

like icicle on beard, 252b loop to h. doubt on, 2753

them on horns
28gb

jurymen may dine, 404b of the moon,


in silent
icicles,

them up

5263

Hang
Hang
themselves in will cut halter, there like fruit
together

INDEX
hope one
gj^b

my

soul, 29 la

Happen, accidents which started to h. to somebody else, g46a cannot tell what will h., 863b
it

or

Happiness, health foundation of h., 6iga hope for h. beyond life, 467b
in hands of others, sggb in married estate, 33 sjb is of retired nature, 3g4a

hang

separately,

lies

can't h. here, g87a at last letting

it

h.,

up philosophy, 25a upon his penthouse


us

when

every

icicles

lid, 281 a mother's son, saga h. by the wall,

things you do not hope h., io6a we's nuts and things h., looga

ivrywhere exript where people,

8gib
jealous possessions of h., 8g7b keep h. in store for society

Happened, good book


history

h. to you,

222b
yellow leaves do h., *gb Hanged, house of a man h., igsa I'll be h., ss8b knows he is to be h., 432b
tell how it h., g86a nothing ever h. at all, 761 a what really h., io44b down put this could have h. once 666b what men believe h., ioi7a Happening, being and h., 1061 a funny if h. to somebody else, 954* Happens, future in us before it

g58a
liberty secret of h., lifetime of h. hell,
eyes,

8g2b 8s6b

longed

to

millstone

see him h., 90 ib h. about neck, 47a

look into h. through another's

25ob

poor fool is h., &8ob our harps upon willows, 2sb that horses not be stolen, $76b

my

made make
445

of minute fractions, Kgoa ourselves worthy of h

makes up in height, g28b


h., 5643 no h. perfect as martyr's, 86sb no h. where no wisdom, 8$b no man bear lifetime of h., 8g6b

they h.

Raman,

143.

mistaken path to

when

skies are h., lo^sa

Hangin' Danny Deever, Sfja men and women there, xogia Hanging and wiving by destiny,

around in world, gjoa around till you've caught on,


gsoa
breathless

on thy

fate,

62sb

Danny

Deever, 87 $a

Gardens were dream, g^b in a golden chain, $44a


likewise destiny, i8ab

men and women

there,

1091 a

not deserve h., igia too good for him, $6$b worst use for man, 301 a Hangman, if I were a h., 6iob Hangman's, fear of hell's a h. whip, 3 issa

nothing h. unless first a dream, g48b too much h., io3ga trouble h. to others, g46b trouble h. to you, g46a truth h. to idea, 7gsa unexpected always h., io6a whatever h. h. as it should, 1410 Happier air, 7i4b envy of less h. lands, 226b family h. for his presence, 825a I am h. than I know, 34ya in passion we feel, 356a people capable of being h., ioi4b remembering h. things, 6473 the one who goes is h., 7222
those
h.,

not in multitude of friends, 302a not suffer from scientific holiday, g66b

not write

down

h.,

8o2a

object of government h., g4gb of common man, g4gb of human race, 4535 of nobody but dictators, iO35b of peoples, 8o2a of society end of government,

who
56ga

feel

love most are

on earth no sure h., 2oob on terrestrial ball, pastime and our h.,
politics

Hangover became part of day,

Hangs

as

mute on Tara's

be dead, fogb Happiest conversation no competo

principles

art of human h., 87 la to effect h., 47ob

walls,

54ib blossom that h. on bough, sgyb bodiless as false dawn, io78b goose h. high, nooa he h. between in doubt, 4o8b head for shame, ysoa in clear green bell, 7043 in uncertain balance, 2o6a on Dian's temple, 2goa on princes' favors, 2g8b tail h, down behind, 8?4b
thereby h. a tale,
i8ib,

43 ib day happiest hour, 6413 heart that ever beat, 8133


tition,

produced by good tavern, 4323 pursuing and obtaining h., 4463 pursuit of h., 47ob, g7sa regret or secret h., 8i6b
religion assures final h., result h., 67 ib result of man's effort, gs8a

intellection, io7ga

84b

martini

one of h.

marriages,

10385
nations no history, 68gb of mortals, 41 ya time of New Year, 6453 treatise of natural education,

rhyming gives men h., 4i2b 'rob of illusion rob of h., 72gb search for human h., loigb secret of h. freedom, goa
she does not find, 4s7b of human h., g66a supreme h. of life, saga

436a

women have no
Happily,
plenty
to

2igb,

history, 68gb live on h.,

sum

248b

upon cheek of night, 2232 what h. in balance nowise

in

983* Happiness activity in accordance with excellence, g8a


avarice

talk h.,

825b

Hank

doubt, ioi4b of hair, &75a

and

h., 42 ib

tender h. betray, sisa that makes heart afraid, 5g2a the only good, 74gb
thirst after h., 436b to be dissolved into

Hannah,
iio2a

amount

to

H.

Cook,

God and me, 74gb


Hannibal
io6a
is

being's end and aim, 4ogb beneficial for body, go8a care of life and h., 472b ceases like dream, g28b

something

know how

at the gates, 1513 to win victory H.,

put H. in the scales, i^b Hanover, famous H. city, 66aa St. George's H. Square, 7563 Hans Breitman gife a barty,
72 3 b Hansom, helped
to

h.
to

outside,

Hap, from better h.


2iob

worse,

my hope my h. my love, iggb Ha'penny will do, iog8b


Hapless sons of clay, 627b Haply I think on thee,
2g2a

consume h., 836a counting upon h., 5845 depends less on exterior things, 4560 efforts to create h., g58a envy no man's h., 24gb eternal h. above in heaven, 53 every human seeking h., 888b freedom secret of h., goa friendship essential for h., 8i8b great task of h., 824a greatest degree of h., 446a
greatest h. for bers, 4i6b

great, gsgb to crave h. is revolt, 72ga-b too swiftly flies, 4sgb two foes of human h. f 5643

what right have we work out

to h., 72gb

wherein lies h., 58ob wine of rarest vintage,

8783

h. for selves, 544b Happy a health unto the h., 86ga a man as any in world, 3753

age

accident, 3143, g6oa when idle with

impunity,

55a
alchemy of mind, 4i8b and I wrote my h. songs, 486b as a lover, 5153 as grass was green, loyob as heart was long, io7ob

greatest

num-

habit takes place of h., $g$b hairbreadth missings of h., 424b

1380

INDEX
Happy
as
as

Hard
Happy who knows
rural gods,

we

82 $b kings, imagine, 355a

Happy man
full,

ask yourself whether h.

6igb
bliss,

autumn
be
20oa
best

fields,

and have

648b immortal

be good and h. today, 523b government desires to make people h., 5g4b blesseth with two h. hands,
20 ib

that hath his quiver 22b man who could search out causes, ii7a man who works ancestral acres, i2ob man's without a shirt, i8sa master of himself a h. man,

who

iiya-b
uses blessings with wisdom,

122b

whom
i2ia

unbroken bond

unites,

i22a

mindful of h. time in misery,


i6oa

world not making you h., SjBb world of h. days, 2173 yet h. pair, 345b Harangue, telling nothing in
great h., $6ia Harbinger, evening star love's h., 348a Harbingers are come, jgsjb to heaven, ssja Harbor, age the h. of all ills, 1046 arrived in a good h., giSb bar be moaning, 6gob

bounding

flea,

ggga

bread sauce of h. ending, 7gga breed of men, 226b bridegroom Hesper brings, 8543
call

moron, nogb Nature to explore, 4oga never was so h., logga

that

man

h.,

78b

Christmas to all, 541 a combination of circumstances, 52ia convents, 41 4a days that make us h., 94ya deep down, ioi4a description of h. state, 3733 duty of being h., 822b
earthlier

no lad so h. as I, 5375 no lot is altogether h., 121 b no man h. who does not think
so,

i26b

no man h. without hobby, 8i8a no one h. till all h., 7o6a


noble h.
old man,
pair,

human n6a

beings,

6g8b

even a

h.

is

rose

distilled,

228b
ending, 7gga English child, 546a
families alike,
fault,

345b people die whole, gg4b people whose annals blank, 578a persons with torn bodies h.,
9<>5a

732b

sga

few, 245a
field

mossy cavern, $B$b

fool h. he knows no more, 4oga for son whose father went to

2i5b good government when near made h., 72b


hell,

those

good-night
hail

air, 7$J3b

place green groves of blest, place to be h. here, 74gb place with me, 686a policeman's lot not h., ports and h. havens, 226a prologues to swelling act, prospects more pleasing fruition, i4ob rage outside h. ground, rarely find a h. life, i2oa
realize

uga
766b
281 a

cleared, 54b little h. is good, 8i6a final h., Sgyb I tarried not in any h., i7*b in life did h. give, joja looking over h. and city, g48a run into a safe h., 6ga ship comes into the h., giga ship of state safely to h., 8ib takes and gives something, 8i6a-

b whence unmoor no more, 6g7b Harbors I by sweating blood won,


i?4a

Hard

than
7i4a

as a piece of nether millstone, i6b

as nails, 66ga beginning good

ending,
these

i8$a
h.

cause

that

makes

Columbia h. land, 5o8a he of calm and h. nature, g$b he who has once been h., 78 ib he with such mother, 64gb
heart that sighed, 2iob

been happy, io68b remote from the h., io6oa


I'd

hearts, S7ga

high majestical, 56gb highways where I went, 853a horse to bear Antony, aSya hour wherein man might be h., 325b house shelters friend, 6o6b how h. he who crowns, 4493 how h. vestal's lot, 4osb how h. with either, 4O2a

rich h. in plenty, 4oga right happens to h. man, io66b ring h. bells, 651 a so h. as America, 467a that we are not over happy,

Christ ain't going to be too hard, 77b cursed h. reading, 48sa dealing teaches them suspect,

22b

26ia
the h. that have called thee
so,

doubtful dangerous times, 5753 for women to keep counsel,

the the the

man and h. he alone, man who void of care, man whose wish, 402a
and
love,

36gb
397 a

how we make
if

if

ourselves h., 4453 ever wife h. in man, 35 ib you want to be h. be, 684b

they h. are thing to be sons, si6a

332b

father

to

many

gemlike flame, 781 a heart of child, ggoa heroic for earth too h., 66sb hit h. fast often, g68a stairs, 162 a how h. the way up another's it is well I die h., 46sa
it shall go h., 2$$b keeps end from being h., gs8b latent value, 7ggb long boots h. boots, g48b no h. gifts, gg4b not think what is h. is impossible, i42b nothing's so h. but search will

illusion

which makes me

h.,

this h. country, 444a this the h. morn, 333b

462a
in in in
is

arms of chambermaid, 432b nothing else so h., 22?a

those early I, 362b those who plant cabbages, i8ia those whose walls already rise,

days when

work three things needed,


6 9 8b

n8a
though married, 866a to be h. is now, 74gb to be h. be well fed, g6ob to be h. make others so, 74gb to have been h. most unhappy,
time
148 a too h. tree, 58oa 'twere now to be most h., 27gb until dead not call man h., 6ga

he born and taught, *oob

Isles, 646b Jerusalem h. home, io8sb laugh before we are h., 38 ib let a lord once own the h. lines, 4030 let us be h. as we can, 4jga liking what they do, 4g8b little h. if say how much, 246a

find,

32ob

prove

him with
down
massy h.

h.

questions,

sloth finds
solid

pillow h., zgia


particles,

$7gb

little

needed to make h.

life,

i42b
lucid intervals

Warrior, 5isa warrior of politics, gi6b warrior sleeps, Q76a

things that are too h. for dice, 37 a things to bear, 722b this is my h. time, io64b
to to to to to

and h.

pauses,

2o7b

was he free was he h., io6ob where one is h. there's homeland, 15 ib

make earth h., 7igb make fellow creatures h., 467b make two lovers h., 4o7b

argue with belly, io7a be a father, 742b catch and conquer, 7$ob kick against pricks, 4gb

man be his dole, man happy dole,

i82b i8ab

where h. wing-beats are, 4g?a which of us h. in world, 66oa who hath this only, 68b

please everybody, ia7a very hard is my fare, 401 a was their lodging, $Z$b

who

in verse steer, 376b

way

of transgressors

is

h.,

a4a

1381

Hard
Hard, when h. up pawn intelligence, 10305 Hard-boiled as picnic egg, Hardened, he h. Pharaoh's heart, 8a Hardens and grows cold, io62a it h. a' within, 4gsb Harder, heart h. than stone, 67a nothing h. than indifference,
Hardest,
first

INDEX
Harm, none
shall h. Macbeth, 88$b nothing do much h., logga once h. has been done, 64a

Harp, one clear h., 649 b such as handle h., 6b that once through Tara's
54it>

halls

thy h. dost feed, io84a


to one harm to all, 753a whether benevolence good or h., 7*6b win us to our harm, 281 a Harmful, more h. than reasoned
errors,

thunder h. of pines, 74ob tuning lyre and handling

h,,

hundred years
4i8b

h.,

7asb

94ia
first step is h.,
is being taken in, y knife ill-used, 3g$a of all to close hand, 8o5a softest things overcome h., 74a-b Hard-favored rage, 84gb Hardihood, dauntless h., 7212

to

growth of art and science,


io28a

wild h. slung behind him, 54*3 Harper, as h. lays palm on harp r 624a wind grand old h., 74ob Harping, still h. on my daughter, a6ob
Harps, hanged h. upon willows 22b
of gold, 6s7b played before the Lord on h., i2b Harpsichord, old tune on h., g3ib Harris, words she spoke of Mrs H., 67ob Harrow house of dead, iO5gb rust to the h., gi4b toad beneath h., 87 ib up thy soul, 2$gb

Harmless

as doves, 4sa drudge, 42yb entertains the h. day, goob

endurance courage, 8g6a Hardiness, herein friendliness h. love, i74b-i75a Hardship, godlike h., 57gb

inoffensive aristocracy, 6s4b necessary cat, 2g4a pleasure, 4a8b Harmonies, tumult of mighty h.,

57oa

Harmonious
7i6b

and

humane

life,

meet any h., loyab morale not destroyed by 959* our garment, gs ib Hardships, to stars through

h.,

dulcet and h. breath, 2293 madness from my lips, 57ob Harmoniously confused, 405a Harmonizes natural and artificial,

Harrowing
Harry, cry

clods,

h.,

5*9 a

Harmony, absolute

unknown
Hardy
kiss

h.

we

suffered,
lion's

attention

like
h., tides

Hard-working ancestry, io27a


as

Nemean

nerve,

beauty between

is

deep 747b

h., 1055 a h.,


life,

for H., 244a Harry succeeds, 242b little touch of H., 244b
as

God

784a

226b
82ga 46ib

259*
breast, 6gsa

cultivate

and peace and


leaves,

h.,

me

disposed to h., 5353

H., 4gsb
lie

famous h. of
in

88oa

Thomas H.

Mellstock

now, 78gb Hardy-handsome, big-boned and h., 8osa Hare and tortoise, 75b hold with h. run with hound, iSgb limped trembling, 58 ib

for thee Universe, i42a from h. from heavenly h., 3703 hidden soul of h., 3353
I don't
is

King H., 2iia were swift to h., g87b H. with beaver on, 24oa young Harsh as truth, 6i5b berries h. and crude, 3383 cadence of a rugged line, g6gb ego serves three h. masters,
these

such

want

h.,

7o8a

in discord, lagb pure love, 2iia like h. in music, 5ioa


h.,

mad March

makes heaven drowsy with


222a

March H. went

of whom s$6a rouse lion than start h., a$8b on the a flesh of h., today
Harebells,

i76a on, y44a proverb goes,


h.,

more h.

834a in this h. world, 266b nor h. nor grating, sogb out of tune and h., 26sb philosophy not h., 3373 school in which nothing h., i48b words of Mercury are h., 2233
Harsher, qualify war in h. terms, 7o 5 a

in her bright eye, 358b


is h.,

music wherever there not understood, 4o8b of leaves, 88oa

3303

Harshly, strings untouched will h.


jar, 2133 Harshness is for good of boy, 37ga no h. gives offense, 4ogb Hart, as h. panteth after water

heath and h., 68$b Harebrained chatter, 61 $a Hares, little hunted h., go6a pull dead lions by beard, 2363 Hark ah the nightingale, 7iab deep sound strikes, ss6a don t ye hear it, 5i7b hark dogs do bark, iog7b hark my soul, 6?6b hark the lark, sgob the herald angels sing, 42$b to exiled son's appeal, 78ib
Harlot's cry, 4goa youthful h. curse, 48gb Harlots, ye h. sleep at ease, 405b Harm, content with my h,, 24gb didn't want to h. the man, io8ia do h. to other nations, 10503

of the whole universe, i78a order proportion, jsoa perceived h. of object, 5283 power of h., soga spirit and instinct in h., gs6b such h. in immortal souls,

*35b
too high a price for h., 7o8a touches of sweet h., 23$b

brooks, iga pants the h., 3843 be thou like to a young h., 303 lame man leap as an h., 323 ungalled play, sG^b
as

Harvard,

universal h., 7oga

noaa
fair H.,
h.,

always

tell

H.

man,

what becomes of h., 7083 Harms, beg often our own


287b

5663 Greek islands over H. Square,


10423 School, g67b my H., 6g6b Harvest, earth laughs with

do me no h., 5462 do not h. subtle wreath of 3o6b does h. to another, 67b

hair,

himself who does harm, 67b took not for thy h., 8s6b Harness, battle h., g24b die with h. on our back, 286b died in h., g24a gives h. bells shake, g27b him that girdeth on his h., i$b Harnessed, three together h., 55b Harnessing power of universe,

Law

whaleship

h.,
h.,
h.,

6iob
gathereth her food in the 23b God comes as sheaves in

home, 2s8a,
is

does h. to my wit, 2513 fate cannot h. me, 52 sb flea does all h. he can, $o8a

g82b Harold stands on place of skulls, 555b Haroun, good H. Alraschid, 644b Harp, as harper lays palm on h.,
624a

past,

34a

moon, 386a no h. but a thorn, gaga


of a quiet eye, 5iia reap the h. of your land, gb seedtime and h., 6b shalt not gather the gleanings

good provoke to h., 272a no h. in being wrong, g77a no h. in painting for fun, g47b no one h. man who does self no
wrong, i44b

hang h. on willow-tree, noob no h. like my own, 537b not on that string, 2i7b
once the h. of Innisfail, 537b

of h., gb
this

was

all

the h.

reaped,

6303

1382

INDEX
Harvest, time of h., loosa truly is plenteous, 4sa Harvests, countries made to bear
h.,

Haughty
Hate the
i$7a things we ought, g8a those I fight I do not h., 88 ib
tree,

g4oa
reaps, 5gob

wholesome h.

Harwich, steamer from H., 767b


Has, what man h. he's sure of, *97 a Hasard, coup de d6s n'abolira le h., 797 a Haste, always in h., 42ob away so soon, 3*ob brings failures, 87a eat it in h., 8b I said in my h., aaa

Hatchet, buried h., 8g5a 1 did it with my h,, 4623, 499 a Hatching vain empires, 3435 Hate, because we h. no people,
io25a chatter love and h., 7i5b cherish hearts that h, thee, 2gga common herd, 12 ib counsels not in such quality,

2330
creative h., gsgb

death h. and

hell,

gi8a

do good

to them that h. you, 4ob drum's discordant sound, 455b

make make make

in paying obligation, 35jjb in wicked h. no profit, i8aa h. better foot before, 237a h. my beloved, soa h. on decay, gg4b

dumpy woman,
each other so

little,

g6oa 846b

they fear they h., io7a they have injured they h., i3ob do why you h. the South, losgb you through the glass, ios6a Hated for my name's sake, 42 a
if

whom whom

time to h. f 270 to be unquiet at home, 3763 to leave world, 1045 a traitors and treason love, 37ob understand folks they h., Sggb war, 97 ib were why men breathe, 103 ib

to be fat be h., aggb

enough

religion to

make us

h.,

maketh waste, iSaa


married
in
h,

repent

at

lei-

sure, 3gib marry in h. repeat

at leisure,

949

more h. less speed, i24b mounting in hot h., 556a


to my setting, 2g8a of fool slowest thing, 38oa

now

thee Nymph, 334b this sweaty h., 256b while one with moderate h., 258a without h. but without rest, 479 a

him for a Christian, 2323 I don't h. it, loggb I h. and I love, 1153
Ih.
I h.

38ga envy calumny h. pain, 572a envy dared not h., 558b families I h. you, 8g7b fly from not h, mankind, 5g6b foe without h., 747b for arts, 4iob found only on stage, 26 la freedom for thought we h., 78ga gods h. the obvious, 623 hand of all that h. us, 463 herein h. virtue sin, i75a

past reason h., 2g4b the approximate, g$8a to be h. needs but be seen, 4oga

with hate found on stage, s6ia with scabby hatred, loSga Hateful as the gates of Hades, 6sb pride is h. before God, 38a second wife h. to children, 8$b
self is h.,

once loved h., giob Hate-hardened heart, gg6b Hater, very good h., 4aga Hates children can't be all bad,

woman

364a

God him
tell

h. bray of bragging, 8ib that would stretch him,

definitions, 61 la

a8ob

wooed in h. wed

at

leisure,

nobody, 3gob

him he
h.,

2iga Hasten, minutes h. to their end, 2g2b to be drunk, 3723 Hastening, to h. ills a prey, 44ga Hastens, midnight strikes and h., 8 54b
Hastily, well

I h. quotations, 6o4b I h. the day, sjoia I h. war, g7ib


I h. I I

thing he would not

h. flatterers, 254b
kill,

34a

no workman may work and h., i68b nothing can be done h. and
takes
h.

prudently, i26b Hasty, common sense view, 68 ib

marriage seldom proveth well, 2i6a orisons, iO28b pudding, 483a, logoa start awa sae h., 4g2b Hat, brass h., io33a cockle h. and staff, 2&5a his h. in his hand, 4gb lightly doffed h., 868a Lord forbade me to put off my h., 364a my h. upon my head, 42ga not worse for wear, 457b off with your h, 831 a on account of beaver h., 673b penny in old man's h., iog8b runcible h., 673a
stuck feather in h., logoa

h., 9273 305b g42a in h., 368b implacable inaccuracy, 757a ingratitude, 253a is a fear, io34b Juno's unrelenting h., 3713 let them h. so long they fear, iogb love and desire and h., 8goa

know enough
h.
all

ye

all,

3583
of

shall

women,

unhappy 7iab Hath, unto everyone that h., 443 Hating ill-natured gossip, 9043 Hatred comes from heart, $G$b envy h. and malice, 6ob
excites

immortal

h.,

h.

to

conceal

abuses,

for white

men, 108 la

habitual h. or fondness, 46ib hate Negro see h. in him, 8s8a hated with scabby h., loSga hatreds never cease by h., 8oa healthy h. of scoundrels, 578a intellectual h. worst, 88ab
love to h. turned, *jpsa must be preached, 6o6a of bourgeois beginning of wis-

love treason but h. traitor, i iaa loved him too much not to h.,

378a

mankind, 2gob matter whether

dom, 7ogb
you
to

h.

self,

much

995 a
to

h.

much

forgive,

of entrenched greed, g76a rage h. and murder, 1081 a renders votaries credulous, 43 6b
soul-destroying h., gsib
stalled ox and h. therewith, stirreth up strifes, 24a through h. borne apart,

my

verses,
I

24b 8gb

h., 276b naught no h. lost between us, 3143 no sport in h., 57 2b

did in

ultimum moriens of
ity,

respectabil-

634a wear the gold h., io36a wears faith as fashion of

h.,

nor love thy life nor h., 348a not fear not, io34b of hate, 644b of those below, 556b one and love other, 41 a one another and know it, 376a only those who h. Negro, 8283 owe no man h., 24gb
Persian luxury I h., rage and h. from Adam down,
scourge
smile
laid

truth begets h., io8a where h. let me sow love, i57a Hatreds never cease by hatred,

8oa
Hats, babies in silk h., ggga
off,

866a

ma

seraphs swing snowy h., 735a wat their h. aboon, io87b Hatter, can't take less said H.,

Hatched, count chickens before h, 75b don't count boobies until h.,
o'er
silent

744a Hatto in time of famine, 5$2a Haughtiness of soul, 3g$b


of the terrible, jib

upon

your

h.,

and

Haughty day, 6030


hatched
different,

68ga
eggs h., 333b would grow mischievous,

when

to those that h., 5$gb so far only should we h., 81 a something in this richness that
I h.,

Juno's unrelenting hate, nation proud in arms, spirit before a fall, 24b
vigilant resolute, 5g6a

3713 3363

54a

ggoa

1383

HauZ
Haul, cut hawsers h. out, up the flag, io6gb Hauling, crazy as h. timber into woods, laoa Haunch and hump is Obey, Haunches, sits on silent h., Haunt, breed and h., a8sa exempt from public h., 247b ghostlike the spot, 6i4a living -world you h., io8ib

INDEX
Hawks, such hounds such
h.,

io88b Hawsers, cut h. haul out, 7o2b unloose thy h. O mariner, 1053 Hawthorn in the dale, 3$4b Hawthorne, sedulous ape to H., 824a Hay, antic h., 2i2b\ bottle of h., 2303 came creaking to barn, 1075 a
cry

Head, from heels up to h., 8235 from the fair h. forever, 4o4b full of quarrels, 224b gently falling on thy h., 3g6b good gray h. all knew, 65 ib grown gray in vain, 572a
guts in his h., 2 68 a hairs of h. numbered, 42a heap coals of fire upon
h., 2 6a heart runs

his

murmurous
Haunted
air,

h.

of

flies,

was

still

More

h.,

821 a

so h. thy days, 58 ib

loiob

beneath waning moon h. 5235 by ghosts, 227b holy ground, 555b me like a passion, soga spring and dale, 3343 summer eves by h. stream, Haunts about thy shape, 33 busy h. of men, 574a me night and day, g8ib of coot and hern, 6523 suspicion h. guilty mind, si6b tempest laughs at archer, 7073 Hautboys, give h. breath he
Have,
comes, 371 a all I h. given all we h. and are,

good h. sweet h., 2$oa live on h., i io3b make h. when sun
i82b needle in
bottle
h.,

heaven to
shineth,
h.,

away with h., 5ooa weary h., 5g2b

of

ig6a

gosb sat on tuft of h., 5893 of world bundle h., 5&2b Haydn, some cry up H., 535b
Haystack, needle in h., ig6a

new-mown

under h.
Hazard,

art's

that h. all, sgga nice h. of doubtful hour, 24oa of concealing, 4gsb of new fortunes, 36a of the die, 2i8a of their lives, 847b

men

asleep, iog3b long h., gooa

her h. on her knee, 276a here rests his h., 44ia hers is the h., 781 a here rests his., 44ia hide h. under his wing, 10963 hit nail on h., i86a hoary h. a crown of glory, 24b if she'd but turn her h., 88ob imperfections on my h., 26oa in heart or in h,, 233b incessantly stand on h., 743b it shall bruise thy h., 6a Jezebel tired her h., i3b

John

Baptist's h., 42b keep good tongue in King Charles's h., 67 ib


lay sleeping h.

h.,

2973

by hoping more h. but


22oa

less,

Hazardous, smoking

may be

h.,

make you
i8ga

my

love,

shorter

by

io6oa the h.,

curtsied when you h., *g6a desire what we ought not to h.,

i26b
everything yet nothing, ioga House of H., 78ob in quest to h. extreme, sg4b little h. and seek no more, igsa more than thou showest, 277b not to h. is beginning of de-

i037a Haze, last communion in h., 7$4b that side of the h., 734b Hazel, lone Glenartney's h. shade,

man

52oa switch for discovery, 87ga Hazlitt, sedulous ape to H., 8243 He, cannot tell h. from she, ggga
for
is

God

only, 3453

my ho h. halls, g68b no bigger than his h., 27gb no roof to shroud his h., 3oib not sound the rest not well,
195

with the h., 6493 Medusa's h., io22a meet and not see its h., 743 my hat upon my h., 42ga

forget
risen,
is

the

h.

and

she,

305a

gooa these for yours, 854b I lack h., igaa they to h. and to hold, 6ia to h. to hold and let go, 871 a to h. what we would h., 2713 try to h. and use it, g8a what others would be glad of,

956b pay for all you


sire,

h.,

what we h. we prize where ask is h., 444a


h.,

H Dieu si j'eusse e*tudi6, 171 a Head, adjusts tumbled h., 738b and hoof of Law, 874b anointest my h. with oil, i8a apples on Newton's h., 9303 at his h. a grass-green turf,
2653 bare Ben Bulben's h., 88sa behold my h., jssb

5gb the Rock, lob poorest h. in England, was he and I was I, igoa

O
ji7b

not yet silvered, 4s8a


sacred h.

now wounded,

3333

off off

with her h., 7443 with his h., 2i7b, 3g2b

on horror's h. horrors, 2753 one small h. could carry, 4503 over h. and heels, n4b placed lock on shapely h., 7g7b
precious jewel in his h., 247b repose with heels higher than h., igib root of family is person of h., 99 b sacred h. of thine, 3g8b

not, 246b
faithless

Haven, in friendship but


8ia
in sunny Palestine, 9473 safe into h. glide, 4250

bending low, 727^


binds so dear a h., 571 a black wires grow on her
h.,

shake

under the hill, 648a Have-nots, haves and h., Havens, in h. dumb, 8oab ports and happy h., 226a

scratch h. with lightning, 7603 of his poor little h.,

294b
ig6b
blessings

Haves and have-nots, ig6b


of give, io3ib Having fewest wants, 8yb had h. and in quest to have,

upon the h. of the just, 24a bloody but unbowed, 8i6a bowed h. held breath, 7iia
h.

768b, shot it through the h., logyb show my h. to the people, 4g6b singe

my

white

h.,

278a

bowed comely
call

down,

35gb

*94b not a h. and resting, 7i6a nothing possessing all, 5gb Havoc, cry H., 2553 Hawk, know h. from handsaw, s6ia sooner kill man than h., gg4b

bullet through his h., gooa in thy death's h., 323b chills upon h. or heart, 8243 chop off her h., 74$b chop off your h., loggb crotchets in thy h., 267 a crown in my heart not on h.,
sole, 246a desolate and bowed h., 8goa dogs shame the gray h., 64b drunken dog ragged h., 5343 eat my h., 66ga erect beneath tragic years, 844b feel as if top of h. off, 73gb four angels round my h., 3573

slide into lover's h., giob so empty each h., 4563 so young body with so old
h., 62gb Son of man nowhere to lay 4ib sticking h. in moose, g6?b

h.,

234a some once lovely

h.,

2isb crown of h. to

which

h.

flies

higher

pitch,
at,

si4a

Hawked, by mousing owl h.


2843 Hawk's, inhuman as h. cry, the darling of his fere, Hawks, dark h. hear us, give your heart to h.,

stone of the corner, 22a with my exalted h., 120b stuff the h. with reading, 41 3b sudden if thing comes in his h.,
strike stars

2i6b
temperate

brain

than

full-

gg5a io4a g68b 9953

stuffed h., igoa that wears crown, 2423 this old gray h., 626b to contrive, 466a

1384

INDEX
Head, trickled through
turns
h.,

Heard
h.,

746b

his h., sasb up while rower breathes, io65a to lesson h., 45ga useful

no more

Health, in sickness and in innocence and h., 44ga look to your h., sa6b more important than

6ib

Hear in chamber above me, 6*3b


in my heart, 86oa incline thine ear and h., 3*b it in deep heart's core, 88oa

wealth,

very staid h., 234a when the h. aches, ig5b


is sick, soa with its h. went galumphing, 745* with outer your h. concerned weather, ga8a Headache, dismal h., 767b Headhunting not natural, g8ob

g8$a
perfect h. rare, 56sa protect h. homes firesides, 8aia public h. and morals, io6$a recover h. through content-

whole h.

not Duncan, sS$a. itOThyrsis, 7i4b it roar now, 5i7b lady sing in Welsh, asgb
it

let

him

h.,

4aa

ment, 88b
that mocks doctor's rules, 6a6a, their h. it might hurt, 4513 trusts in horse's h., a?ga

listen listen

to three Headings, good reduced

374b Headlong, hurled


h.,
life's

h.

flaming,

h. train,

7i4a with
straw,
h.,

Headpiece
Heads,
beast with

filled

unbought, 37 ib unto all nations, 6oa unto happy, 86ga wait on both, a84b while grace affordeth Healthful, sober h. with
356 b Healths, urge no
h.,

Lord h. me out, io66b Lord in the morning h., 3g6b loud alarum bells, 644a
Lovers' Litany, 87 ib me for my cause, 2$5a

and do not h. it, 74 and you shall h., 6a3b

mermaids singing, 3o4b


h.,

igaa

his wits,

beast

of

many
h.,

laja

4$oa

s8gb blood be on your h., soa of better h., gsgb brains day fate put h. together, ga8a diminished h., 344b
erect instead of

many

bowing

necks,

i46a green hands blue, 6733 grow beneath shoulders, yjaib heart better than h., 6oia heaven over our h., 683b touch heaven, hills whose h.

Healthy and wealthy and dead, i033b breath of morn, s84a dozen h. infants, g4ga free the world before me, 701 a sick danger for h., 8o5b wealthy wise, 42 ib

mind-forged manacles I h. t 48gb never merry when I h. sweet music, 2355 none h. beside the singer, 5$6b not my steps, 28sa now this, 33a now this foolish people, 343 old Triton, 5isb one to speak another h., 68 ib
other side, i47a quickness to h.

Heap

coals of fire, a6a dust h. called history, 8aoa


o' livin',

move

see,

868b

g6sb
4o6a

272b
houseless h., 278b land of broken h., gi8a lift up your h. ye gates, i8a

of broken images, looaa of dust alone remains, of loose sand, 88ga of stones not a house,

8agb

on more wood, $igb


struck
all

monster with uncounted 24ia not sit on others' h., 8o5a old men's h. bare, ioi7a
so little
so

h.,

worn out
scrap

of a h., 8ia before thrown

on

replication of your sounds, assa right way in the morning, 7ib rogues talk of court news, a8oa still stood fixed to h., 347a strike but h. me, 77b sudden cry of pain, g74b surly sullen bell, 2gab swift to h., 56a the latest Pole, looia

h.,

8s6b

many

tossing

for wit, 333b h. so many wits, ioga h. in sprightly dance,

no room

Heapeth, he h. up riches, iga Heaping field and highway, 6gsb Heaps of miser's treasure, 3373 Hear a little song, 477b
all

the word of the Lord, the words of the wise, thee and rejoice, 514* therefore h. now this, 33a those things ye h., 46b

34b 25b

5i4b two h. better than one, iSgb when trees bow h., 73gb Headstones, crooked crosses and h., g68a milestones into h., 6g4b Headstrong as an allegory, 48ob liberty lashed with woe, ai8a Heal blows of sound, 6333 grief fame never h., 674b physician h. thyself, 46b time to h., 7b wound h. by degrees, a?4a Healed of suffering by experiencing it, go8a writes of scars h., io36b Healing in his wings, $6a matter of time, 88b Wordsworth's h. power, 71 ib Heals, time h. all wounds, io8b
Health and a day, 6 05 a and intellect the two blessings, ioab

America

ye angels, 346b jsinging, 6ggb angels sing, 657^ at back from time to time
at

through midnight 48gb


thy
h.,

steets

h.,

shrill delight, j>7ob


h.,

time's to see

gfoa at some forgotten door, loaaa author has nothing to h., 7a6b be silent that you may h., 2553 bells I h., 7oaa bronze Negroes breathe, io76b by tale or history, aa8b can't h. with bawk of bats,
conclusion of
ter,

my

back

I always h.,

winged chariot, 36oa moves more than to aaob

us when we cry to Thee, 76a voice in every wind, 4sga voice of the Bard, 488b wagon soldiers shout, g52a whatsoever I shall see or h., 88a wooden dialogue and sound,

the whole mat-

aga

destroyer and preserver h., 56gb

did ye not h. it, 556a dust hear her and beat, each other groan, 58ab 'erse's legs, 6s4b
every child may joy to h., 486b falcon cannot h. falconer, 88aa far-off curfew sound, 33$b few love to h. sins they love,

and quiet breathing, s8oa and wealth missed me, 55 ib


best physic to preserve h., aoga

agob

blessing

money cannot buy,

326b by his h. sickness, 4873 double h. to thee, 55gb drink h. to Western world, go8b
foundation of happiness, 6133 heart's h. to be sick, loaab I swear by H., 88a in h. and mind's content, 3

grown-up people's feet, 8233 hate enough to h. your prayers, 7 6b have ears but h. not, aaa, 3
having ears h. not, 464b-46j heart h. her and beat,

a68a world applaud ghost, 7153 you this Triton, a8gb Heard, ain't h. nothing yet, ggaa bird at dawn, g74b by each let this be h., 84ob cannot be h. so high, 2?gb chimes at midnight, a4aa ears have h. Holy Word, 488b eye of man hath not h., 23oa have ye not h., 3ab heavens fill with shouting, 6473 her massive sandal, ioa4a his country's call, 875b I have h. the key turn, loosa I will be h., 6i5b in ancient days, 5833 it on the Aegean, 7^b father's Jonathan h. not his
oath, iaa

him

prate, 73 la
h.,

hungry stomach cannot


I h. I h., 65ab I h. you I will

35gb

laughing h. on hill, 487b long after h. no more, loud bassoon, 24b

5 1 3a

come,

man who

is

seen and h., 86gb

1385

Heard
Heard melodies are sweet, 5833 more he h. less he spoke, 8ioa
music h. so deeply, ioo6b music I h. with you, loiob
never h. so musical discord, 23oa nor ear h., 52a not regarded, 24oa of thee by hearing of the ear, i6b of wonderful one-boss shay, 6s4a of your paintings, 26ab old old men say, 881 a other side, 86a recede disappointed tide, 7$4b seldom h. discouraging word, 8o8a shot h. round the world, 6oga sing songs not h, before, 12 ib stood and h. steeple, &54a
sweetest song ever h., 5593

INDEX
Heart,

a man's

h.

deviseth

his

way, 24b absence makes h. grow fonder, i28a, 588a

abundance of the
all

h.,

42b

aflutter like washing, loGga

that mighty h., 5iaa all the h. soul senses,


all

Heart dispossessed had stopped 799* distrusting asks, 4503 do not submit in h., ggb don't let h. depend, 4g8b each cell holds h., io56b ease h. like satin gown, 10293
ease h. of love, 601 a East and West will

6653
h.,

thy h. open, 64ga altitude pressed world


of
h.

on

pinch

h.,

io23a
eat thy h., 201 a

amortization ios8a

and

soul,

and voice oppressed, 687b


apple rotten at the h., 232a apply h. to comprehension, 4b apply h. unto my knowledge,

25b
argues not mind, yiab as he thinketh in his h., awful warmth about h., batter my h., 3o8a
battlefield h. of

endure my h., 6?a even in laughter the h. is sorrowful, 24b every h. prepare room, 3973 excitement of h., 643b faint h. never won fair lady, ig6a, 768a false of h., 293b
falsehood of the h., 471 a fear at my h. as at cup, 5251 fed on truth, 52gb fell dead, io3oa felt along the h., 5093 find Calais lying in my h., i87b fire of the h., ggSb fire that in h. resides, 71 la followed all my days, o^b followed delight with h. unsatisfied,

the dead cry, io64b the mermaids singing, looia them cry the peacocks, 954b then is h. no more, a86b

man, 7o8a
h.,is

beating of because my

my own
h.

trumpet be h. on high, 3703


voice cry Sleep

no more,
h.

*8sb
voices

pure, begins to bleed, logaa benevolent and kind, 493b betray h. that loved her, 5ogb better than all heads, 601 a

of

children

on the
have
h.,

green, 48yb we should certainly

io6ob whether there be Holy Ghost, 5oa wise man say, &5sb wished she had not h. it, 2733
Hearers, convince h. of
tions, gsb not h. only, 56b

bind them h. and brow, 8o7a black spot in any h., 72ga blessed are the pure in h., 4oa blood around men's h., 8gb book and h. never part, 1089 a bread strengthens man's h.,
386a break into flaws, 27&a bring my aching h. to rest, noa broken and contrite h., igb broken h. lies here, 5g6b build on human h., 66 ib buildeth on vulgar h., 24aa burn at h. of living, io4oa burn within us; 47b bury h. at Wounded Knee, io4ib by sorrow of the h. the spirit is broken, 24b can push sea and land, losga candle of understanding in thine h., s6b captivate my h., loSgb caused the widow's h. to sing, i5b change of h., io5gb cheer poor man's h., 5igb chills upon head or h., 824a choke from pleasure, 10433 clean hands and a pure h., i8a comfort his sad h., 72 ib

i52b

fool hath said in his h., 173 for any fate, 6zob for every fate, 55gb for h. from itself kept, 77 ib for his hard h., 6a6a
tears, 5 ub fresh complexion and h., 295b full h. reveal, 527b gathered to thy h., 8i2a give a loving h. to thee, 3igb give lesson to head, 45ga

fountain of sweet

own

asser-

readers

and h.

like

my

books,

2ioa
too deep for his h., 451 a Hearest, why h. thou music sadly,

2gib Heareth not


thy servant

loud
h., i

winds,

5123
eye,

ib

Hearing ear
25*

and the seeing

give me back my h., 5553 give not your h. away, &52b give your h. to hawks, 9953 given h. change of mood, 9273 given h. to cause, gg4b gives h. and soul away, 8520 giving h. to dog to tear, 8773

glad with

all

my

h.,

2iia

grass grow, 68gb

heard of thee by h. of the ear,


i6b
intellect

gladness of the h., g8b glows in every h., 3g8b God sigh in h., &5ob

gained

h.,

8343

make

good night dear


grant 6sb
great
all

h.,

822a

passionate

my

h.,
h., h.,

22 ib

things your h. desires,

mentioned in your nor ear filled with

53$b 273

thoughts

come from
h.

h.,

of a voice, 697^ Hearken ere I die, 645a will not h. to voice of charmers,

438b
Greensleeves

my

of

gold,

igb

Hearkened, old men h. when he was young, i24b


to

command my h. and me, 3543 committed adultery in his h.,


4oa
congenial to

grieve his h., grown cold in vain, 5723 haling out of h. old dismay,

my commandments,

3|ja

Hearkeners seldom hear good, 386b Hears different drummer, 68sb ear of him that h., 222b him in the wind, 4o8a monarch h., 3713 neither h. nor sees, 5iia other mainly h. the No, 477b step to music he h., 68 sb sun which h. all things, 63a wanderer halts and h., 853b you nearby sweetly speaking,
Hearse, gilded h.,

my

h.,

45oa

io78b hands and eyes and

h.,

557 a

consume

my

h. away, 88$a

cruelty has human h., 48gb cry of Absence in h., 1009 a cutting the h, asunder, 9753 darling of my h., 4oob

counsel of thine own h., 38b courage of h., goaa create earth according to h., 4a in me a dean h., iga

happiest h. ever beat, 8 iga happiness makes h. afraid, 5923 happy as h. was long, io7ob happy the h. that sighed, 2iob

peate

hard h. of child, 9903 hardened Pharaoh's h. 8a


t

day breaks not


io86b

it

is

my

h.,

marriage h., 48gb underneath this sable

h.,

3igb

deep in h. believe, i io4b departeth from the Lord, 343 dictates of h., 4g8a dies when h. is whole, 102 ab

has followed all my days, 94gb has h. gets speeches by it, 5oob has hidden treasures, 67gb has its reasons, 36jb hate-hardened h., gg6b he that is of a merry h., 24b hear her and beat, 6520 hear in my h., 86oa heard of ghost guessed, 8o3b

1386

INDEX
Heart, heathen h. that puts
trust,

Heart
Heart,
troubled h., 883a remember, 824a 6o3a o'eriraught h., 2856 of a king, i8ga of a lion, i4gb of form, 10655 of hearts, 2632 of iron, gg6b of lead, 41 3b of man changeth countenance, 38* of man depressed, 40 ib of man place devils dwell, 3303 of minstrel breaking, 54 ib of my heart were it more, 775b of my mystery, 263b of oak our ships, 4gga of Russia not forget, 6iia old darky's h., 828b once woman has given h., 3883 one jot of h. or hope, 341 a open my h. and see, 66^5 open unto me, 6492. out of h. rapture, 8ioa penknife in your h., logga pent-up love of h., 8i2a Pharaoh's h., 8a physical tinged with h., 6i4a plunges lower than night, g7gb poor h. would fain deny, 2863 possessing h. of woman, go7b pourest thy full h., 57ob preaching down daughter's h., 647* press thee to my h., 5gob prithee send back my h., ssob put fear out of h., 8g6b put them in thy h., 4b quanch my h. trebling, icioa razors to my wounded h., 2i8b recoiled at war, 10313 recover old h., loob recovered greenness, 323b

875b
his

h., lojgb help by lifting here is my h., 8o8a hid in h. of love, 88oa hide what false h. know, 2833 high as my h., 24gb in h. of high-erected thoughts

Heart, live without h., 74ib loaves when h. joyous, 4b locked my h., 10893 logic of h. absurd, 46ob lonely hunter, 8323 look in thy h. and write, 2035 look into your h., 4g7b looked into father's h., io4gb

h. stricken

h.

obey thy

h.,

courtesy, 2o$a history begins in h. of

man

or

Lord Christ's h., 6043 Lord looketh on the


lost h. stiffens, 10043

h.,

123

woman, gsgb
hold

me

in thy h., 266b


sick,

hope deferred maketh h.


hot within me, i8b how but through broken

love cow with all my h., 8235 love gushed from my h., 525b love the Lord with all thine h..

loa
h.,

love-sick h. dies, io22b make glad h. of childhood,

how dear to this h., 5533 how h. grows weary, 727b how this small h. beat, 6g7b human h. by which we live,
humble and
I

man

78ob
after his

own
lusty

h.,

123
fed,

man's own resinous h.

May when
meet mutual

8835

h,

blossom,

54a

am

I
I

contrite h., sick at h., 256b have h. of a king,

875b
i8ga

meditation of

my

h.,

i)b

told her 3ll my h., idol marble h. stone, 8goa if h. fails climb not, igga if h. just frank kindly,
if

4883

4203 mend the h., 404b a has human h., 4873 Mercy merry h. doeth good, 253
h.,

3613

s88b imagination of man's h., 6b in h. a little heaven, 3&7b in h. blind desire, 7733 in h. cold December, 10853 in his pained h., 58 ib in my h. of h., 2633 in the h. or in the head,
h.,

one h3s no

merry h. goes all day, merry h. maketh cheerful tenance, 24b mind is dupe of the h., mind lives on the h.,

2g5b coun-

3555 355b

mind thousand eyes h. one, 826b mine with my h. in it, 2973


mortality touches the
h.,

n8a

moved more than with trumpet,


203b music in h. I bore, 5133 must break piecemeal, 68ob must pause to breathe, 55gb my crown is in my h., 2i5b

in unison with mankind, 8i5b into h. air that kills, 8533 intoxicated with bliss, 4983

a lonely hunter, 8323 34b is harder than stone, 673 is Highland, 5goa is in Highlands, 4g4b is lying still, 5123 is slow to learn, i023b is wounded within me, 2ib keep h. when all lost, 66ia keep thy h. with all diligence,
is is

deceitful,

keeps open house, io64b kep' gom' pity-pat, 6933 kindness makes h. run

my h. aches, 5823 my h. consumed in fire, 1533 my h. in my mouth, i^b my h. is at rest, 487b my h. is heavy, 478b my h. is not here, 4g4b my h. is pure, 647b my h. is wax, igyb my h. leaps up, 51 ib my h. shall not fear, i8a my h. with Oxford men, g6ga my sad h. foams at stern, 82gb my true-love hath my h., 20jb
naughtiness
ne'er within
of

red-leaved table of
replies,

my

h.,

30 ib

45ga
rebellious h., 343

revolting and
rise in toe h.,

648b

h. keeps, gsia-b rose in deeps of h., 88ob rule my h., 597b

room my

over,

thine

h.,

123

4693

him burned, 5i8b

knock at my ribs, 28 ib know truth by the h., $$b knoweth own bitterness, 24a-b laid h. open to indifference,
io68b

never never never never

ached with h., 77 3b give all h., 88ob given in vain, 852b say I was false of h., 2gsb
h.,

language of the h., 41 ib languor not in your h., 7i5b large wealth larger h., 368b larger h. kindlier hand, 6513 lay h. out for my board, io75b
leaps up, 5 lent out h.
less

no

new-opened, 2g8b feeling in h. not in every

How goes it, goa in every breast, 7iib savage indignation tear h., 3911 seal upon thine h., 303 search thine own h., 6263 seared and blighted h., 6413 season priketh every gentil h.,
said to
h.

runs away with head, jooa sad h. of Ruth, 5833

same

h.

1673
secret anniversaries of h., 6253 secret of freedom a brave h.,

nb

with usury, 534b bounding, 7143 let h. have its say, 8313 let no man's h. fail, 123 let not h. be troubled, 4ga level in her husband's h., 2523 lies open unto me, 64ga light of step and h., 9143 like bowl brimming, 7473 like music on my h., 525b like singing bird, 7sgb little body mighty h., 243b

no human h. goes wrong, 8203 no island but continent, 2o8b no matter from the h., 26gb no nor for constant h., io86a no pity could change h., 7gob no wider than h. wide, 10233 nook for h. tried sore, 5?8b nor h. to report, 23ob
not not not not not
a

goa
set set
sets sets

my

poor h. free, 27 ib not h. upon goods, my h. a-clickin', 8igb

376

my

h.

to

fluttering,

6gb

cloud

keep
lose

in heart, 7403 alive on either, 107 ib his child's h., looa

with club h. broken, 7383 your h. away, 852b cracks a noble h., 266b nowhere beats so kindly, 674b O h. if she'd but turn, 88ob

now

shaft that quivered in h., 555& Shakespeare unlocked h., 5173, 668a she wants a h., 4o6b sheer into h. of foe, 654b shot straighter to h., 7373 sick at h., 256b sky melt into his h., sogb some h. did break, 6503 some h. responds, 62 ib

1387

Heart
Heart soonest awake 54ib
soothes
to

INDEX
flowers,

Heart, what dungeon dark as


h. f

Hearts,
as

as

much
fair,

love as

if

giv-

6i4b
h.

ing h., i73a

humble

h.,

88ya
h.,

what female
439
h.,

gold

despise,

pure and
f

7$7b

sound as bell, *46a soured kindness in

*8ib my of h., io4yb squatter's rights squirrel's h. beat, 68gb-6goa steady of h,, 5i8a stick the h. of falsehood, s68b stirred h. of Englishman, 8g6a stop h. from breaking, 7373 strike mine eyes but not my h.,

what stronger breastplate than


2isa

when my h. hath 'scaped, 2gsa when to h. of man, gssb


where h. lies brain lie, 665b which beats only for you, 8o8a whole h. is faint, 3oa wine that maketh glad the h., 2ib wisdom to believe h., 867a wise and understanding h., i3a
with but half ah., 32 ib with fear freeze, io85b with h. in hand, 6s8a with love fry, icSsb with my whole h., 34b with rue h. laden, 853b withered h., io54a within blood-tinctured, 6i7b within God o'erhead, 62ob

blind h. ii3b cashboxes for h., 5913 cause that makes hard h., 27ga cheerful h. now broken, 542b cherish h. that hate thee, 2gga cleanse thoughts of our h., 6ob
to steal away h., 255b country cherished in h., 655b daystar arise in your h., 573 drunk with beauty, 8ggb

come not

Soab b strong and diverse h., 1041 stubborn h. shall fare evil, 37b h., stuff which weighs upon 286b subject of Japanese poetry, 4iga summer to your h., xosjjb superior have best h., 74ga sweeping up the h., 7$7b take back h. thou gavest, 7ssb take beak from out my h., 643 a
that has truly loved, 54a that loveth nought in

dry as

summer

dust, 5163

ennobled our

May,

woman whose h. is snares, woman with the h., 64ga

28a

i64a
there will your h. be also, 4ob there's where h. turning, 727b thing that eats h., io57b thinks tongue speaks, s46a
as loving, thou'Il break h., 4g4 through fire for kind h.,

though h.

still

ssgb
267a

my

Heartache, by sleep we end h., 26ib Heartbreak, altar of our h., io68a

world no wider than h., io23a words shall be in thine h., loa wound h. that's broken, 52ob wound h. with languor, 8o7b wounded is wounding h., 354b

3g2a ensanguined h., 45&b fasten hands upon h., 8s4a feet leave but not h., 633b finite h. that yearn, 664a first in h. of countrymen, 486a given our h, away, 5i$b high in people's h., 254a hoard little h, great, 6ssa hope men set h. upon, 62gb hugest h. that break, 738b human h. to chew, 5703 in imagination of their h., 4$b in love use own tongues, 24$b in retiring draw h., 348b in unison strike twelve, i056b
h.,

grows old in sick h., iggb keep your h. and minds, 54b keeps their h. vacuous, 73b kind h. more than coronets,
itch

thy breast encloseth my h., 2i7a in player's hide, 2o6a tiger's h. woman's hide, 2i5b tiger's h. in

Time

laid hand on my h., 624* tired h. cease to palpitate, 624b to conceive, logib to dog to tear, 8?7a to heart, 5i8b to hold, 6ogb to mind shameful to h. beauty,

better chiding than h., 267b Heartburn, I am h., 8o4a Heartfelt, simple and h. lay, 6223 Hearth, by this still h., 646a clean-winged h., 626b

645*

Knave of H., iog4b


land of broken h., gi8a Lord dwelt in people's
3643
h.,

dear

fire clean h.,

535a

Lord searcheth

cricket

on the h., 335b no more blazing h., 44oa


for the h., &4ga smoke against
sky,

i4a men with Splendid H., ggsb mercy enthroned in h. of kings,

all h.,

woman

234b
neither have
h.'

Hearthfire

to

stay,

J53b
h.,

7o8a
to

new heraldry

hands

not

poke poor

Billy,

ggob

to resolve,

466a

too soon made glad, 662a too tender or too firm h., 4063 tragedy The Human H., g trusteth in his own h., 26b turned to stone, S75b

Hearths, their country their h., ii6a Hearthstone, every h. over land,
fox build on h., goga of hell best bed, goga
Heartiest,

purest

h.

tenderness,

turning

home

again, 82fb

unfortified, 25;b unquiet h. and brain, 64gb untraveled turns to thee, 447b vacant h. hand eye, 52ia

Heartily

know when

half-gods go,

6o$a
Heart-leaves of lilac, 93 ib Heartless Godless hell's delight,

veracity
verities
visit

h.

of
h.,

morality,
h.,

86ob
Heart-revealing intimacy, 882b Heart's affections, 584b
asides in tears, 5933 at liberty, gsga

and truths of
sad

lojgb

want of thought and h., s war in his h., igb ward has no h. they say, s warm and gay, io2oa

my

254b

*75 a not had as gift, 882b not their h. that roam, 874b O blind h., ii3b of controversy, 253b of oak, 18 ib of the noble may be turned, 64a our h. all with thee, 622b pluck their h. from them, 2452 Queen of H-, iog4a rain falls in h., io4ob shutting away of loving h., i024a sing to find your h., g8oa slow unreckoning h., io7gb somewhere h. are light, 868a
steel

warm h. within, 45ga warm with friends, loagb


was one which most enamor,
559 b wasted
h., 10565 waters of the h., loyoa

dead never buried, 10173 deep h. core, 88oa desire, i7b, 6313, 88oa desires be with you, 2473 health to be sick, io22b his h. his mouth, s8gb
hot h.
shell,

my

soldiers' h.,

245a

6gya

strong minds great h., 6gob that beat as one, 6iga that kindle, 72oa that roam, 874b they leave behind, 53&a though stout and brave, 6aob

to

h.

through

stomach,

my h. in the Highlands, my h. right there, g34a my h. undoing, 542b

4g4b

hands mighty h., 57 ib weaned h. from low desires,


1783

wear

h.

upon my

sleeve,

2723

supreme ambition, 4343 wear him in my h. core, young man's h. complaint, 7oob Hearts, affect h. and minds, 102 la
all that human h. endure, 428a apply our h. unto wisdom, 2ob

weeping in my h., 8o8a wet eye dhry h., 8gia what deep h. means, 10575

are earned, 88ab

thousand h. beat happily, 555b tight hot cell of h., io38a touched with fire, 786b true plain h., so4b two h. multiply, io86a two loving h. divide, 8o6b union of hands and h., 356b unto whom all h. are open, 6ob utter what h. hold, 8g6b we leave behind, ss8a

1388

INDEX
Hearts, while ing, 9 17*

Heaven
Heaven has joined great
issues,

your h. are yearn-

Heaven about

to confer great of-

u wine unto those of heavy h., 26b with your hands your h., 2i6a wore at h. the fire's center,

fice, loob above road below, 8a4a all h. around us, 54ab

55*
336a 2i$a

10670
write upon h. of men, 4973 Heartsease, infinite h., 2440 Heart-shaped leaves of green,
93 lb Heartsick

h. before mine eyes, all hell that is not h., all I ask h. above, 8243
all all

have ye souls in h., 583b hell I suffer seems a h., 345a hell or Hoboken, g62a helps not men who will not act,
76b
hills

places distant from h. alike,

whose

heads

touch

h.,

3iib
things in h., 54b all this and h. too, g86b all we hope in h., 64ia alone given away, 6g2a
all

hand workers, 75sa

Heart-stifled, die h., 58aa Heartstrings are a lute, 6410

though 274b

jesses

my

dear

h.,

Heartthrobs,

count

time

by

h., h.,

6yga Heart-whole, 25oa


Hearty,
h.,

warrant
h.,

him

Heart-wounded, sank

hand that
5i8a

is

gg2a honest and

humble and h. old man, 53 ib

thanks, 6ob

Heat as mode of motion, 7053 burden and h. of day, 4$b cold and h., 6b fantastic summer's h., 226a
fear

nature sing, 3g7a angels in h. above, 6"44a is in h., 4ob as the h. is high, 2ia ascended into h., 6oa awful rainbow in h., 58 ib blazing into head, 884b breadth of h. betwixt, 6i8a brightest h. of invention, 2433
as it

and and and and and and

Charing Cross, 857a


earth in ashes, ivfjb

earth pass away, 44a, 5iga future's sakes, g28b

home, 5i7a

part to h., 2gga holds all, 8iga hours to which h. chime, 362b how long permit to h., 3483 humbler h., 4o8a husbandry in h., ?83a if earth be shadow of h., 346b if h. looked on riches, gSga if I ascend up into h., 2$a if I cannot bend h., ugb
in in in in
in
is
is

27 2b his blessed

h. dream fulfilled, 722b h. perfect round, 66sb

heart a

little h., 387b hell's despair, 48ga

which no horses, 826b above all yet, *g8a love, 5i8b

no more

h.

o'

the sun,

hands hold much of h., loogb if you can't stand h., g8$a from h., 487a I'll shade him in very sod, 687b makes h. when he desires, b mechanical equivalent of h.,
795 b
neither h. affection limb, 271 a neither h. nor light, $i5a neither sun light on them nor
h,,

2gia

h. I do love, 222a call h. and earth to witness, 2goa care of h., 4oga clear religion of h., 58ob combined essences of h. and earth, noa commences ere world past, 44ga confess yourself to h., a64a court it in shape of h., 25gb crawling between h. and earth,

by

smells to h., aGgb points out hereafter, 393b itself we seek in our folly, i2ob
it

itself

itself would stoop to her, 338a keys of kingdom of h., 4sa kingdom of h. is at hand, ggb kingdom of h. like a net, 75a kingdom of h. like mustard

58a

exerted on h., strength io7sa not furnace for foe, 2g8a not see when h. cometh, $4a-b not snow nor rain nor h., 87a

no

of conflict, 5i5a

262a dances in sight of h,, io7ga did recompense send, 441 a differ as h. and hell, 6533 down the abandoned h., g86a each goes own byway to h., 385b earth and high h., 85 ^a earth nigher h. than now, 66ib earth's crammed with h., 6iga endures, 855a
enter into

knows how to put knows its time, 522a

seed, 42b kiss h. gives earth,

gzga
price,

466b

lay up treasures in h., 4ob leave her to h., 26oa leave the rest to h., 33ib leaving mercy to h., 424b left to h. the rest, Siga less of earth than h., 5203 lies about us in infancy, 5isb lift my soul to h., 2g8a
light from h., 4g$a like egg earth like yolk, like the h. above, 71 go Lord of h. and earth, 5oa

1413

one draught above h., 25 ib one h. drive out another, 2osb Promethean h., 276a race not without h., ^oa surprised was I with sudden h., aiob there is nothing hid from the
h.,

kingdom

of h., 410,

43*
eye of h, to garnish, 2373 eye sees open h., 4g8a farewells as stars in h., s6ga finds means to kill joys, 25b floor of h., goga floor of h. is inlaid, 2%$b
flowerless fields of h., 772b

love

is h.,

5i8b
earth, 22a

made heaven and


make face Maker of
makes
222a
h.

majesty of H., 42ob make a h. of hell, 342a


of h. so fine, saga
h. and earth, 6oa drowsy with harmony,

i7b

which made my heart to glow, 2iob Heated in the chase, $43. Heath and harebells, 685b best felt not clearly seen, 78ga brown h. and shaggy wood,
519*
foot on native in airy rings skim in the desert, 343

my

h.,
h.,
h.,

521 a

4osa
4883

sword sung on barren Heathen Chinee, 76gb

hold earth from h., 7gob four winds of the h., 363" from Glee to h., 8s2a from h. did hie, io84b gained from h., 44ia gate of h., 73 gates not so arched, 3i$a gems of h. starry train, 345b gentle rain from h., 2$4b getting to h. at last, 735b gives glimpses, g27b
follies

man man

alone
is

beneath

h.,

5i8b
ig6a

H. made him, marriages made in h., 2o$a matches made in h., i8ab meadows of h., 622a
as

measuring earth and

met

h., gsb my dearest foe in h., 2583 mild h. a time ordains, 34ob

mind

of superior

man

like h.,

74oa
earth, 26oa, io2ib most of h. he hath, 6793 mount up to h., 2ib near h. by sea as by land, ig2a never to h. go, a64a new h. and new earth, 58b

heart that puts trust, 875b in his blindness, 54gb

gives

its favorites,

iO2a

more things

in

h.

and

pore benighted h., 8733 of h. splendid vices, i43b do die h. rage, i7a why Heather, know how h. looks, 737b Heaths, game on these lone h.,
virtues

without h., Heating, Heat-oppressed brain, sS$n

warm

glance from h. to earth, 2 gob God created h. and earth, 5 a God is in h., 28a God's in his h., 66ib going forth is from the end of the h., i7b gold bar of heaven, 7318 great eye of h., 2ooa had made her such a man, 2733

no humor in h., 762b no rain left in h., 7o4a

harbingers to

h.,

333a

not at single bound, 6goa not beteem winds of h., 257b

1389

Heaven
Heaven, not enter into kingdom of h., 433 not grim but fair, 668a
not h.
if

INDEX
Heaven, to appreciate h. well, 8o8b to be young W3S very h., 5103 to gaudy day denies, 558b to h. being gone, 3o6b
to throne in, 2903 towsrd h. advancing, 497 a treasure in h., 43 a treasures in h., 4ob tries earth if it be in tune,

Heaven's glories shine, 685!)


godfathers of h. lights, great lamps do dive, 3003 in h. high bower, 4873
at la

we knew what

it

were,

35ob not h.

itself

upon past has

power, 36gb
nurseries of h., 8565 of all their wish, gggb offspring of h. firstborn, 344b on earth, 3453 open face of h. 57ga or near it, 57ob ordinances of h., 733 our Father which art in h., 4ob parting all we know of h., 7393
f

692 b trouble deaf h., 29 ib under feet as well

jeweled crown, 7583 joybells ring in h. street, g47a lark at h. gate sings, 2gob last best gift, 3463 light forever shines, 5723 men touched by h. virtue, 378b net is indeed V3st, 753

as

over

peep through blanket, 282* Persian's h. easily made, 54b


226a places eye of h. visits, la plays such tricks before h., 27 in h., 66jb practice solid hue, the presents ga^a that I and she ride to-

heads, 68sb in h., unextinguishable Isugh 33 ia unfolds both h. and earth, 228b vain war with h., 3433
visited in h.,

nothing situate under h. eye, 2183 riches of h. psvement, 3433


study like h. glorious sun, 2213 sugar cake, 38 ib
vaults should crack, 2 Sob wide pathless way, $35b Heavens, ancient h., 5i4b clothed with h., 377b

wanted
368b

one
h.,

737b immortal

song,

prove

583 watered h. with

war in

declare glory of God, i7a-b distorts the h., 4913

tears,

4893
1923

gether, 664a puts all h. in rage, 49oa

to h. of like length, what's a h. for, 66"4b

way

quit port o' h., 8653 reach port of h., 6g3b


rejects the lore, 5i7a

when

remembrance

fallen

from

h.,

77 3 a rest of h. blue, 64ib rich man enter h., 891 a riches flown to h., 4b ring bells of h., gosb

same world

hell h.,

6o4b

h. was falling, 8543 wherever bright sun of h., sggb which gi3nt Atlas upholds, 84b whispered in h., 5013 who sword of h. will besr, 27 ib will most incorrect to h., 257 will protect working girl, 845 a wind from blue h. blows, 4773 winds of h. in our land, ioi2b winds of h. visit face roughh., 644a wished hell for ease from h., 4gob with all splendors lie, 6923 with the compsny of h., 61 a would I were h., 826a Heaven-born band, 5083 child, 3343 Hesven-bred poesy, 2213 Hesven-kissing hill, 2643 Heavenly blessings without number, 3g6b can h. minds yield, ii7b caught my h. jewel, 203b connection, io8ib days that cannot die, siob

with commerce, 6473 with shouting, 6473 hung be h. with bl3Ck, 2143 islands whose h. opened, 8303 look bright my dear, 5423
fill fill

new

h.
as

and 3 new
blazing
h.,

earth,

potentates

in

h.,

33b 78b

5i2b pure rejoice in motion, 3073


sing

naked

ye h. earth spangled h., 3933

reply,

4253

save from foolish friend, 5osb say over door of h., io7gb
says nothing, 378b sea and h. as one, 9563 in wildflower, h. see see h. open, 48a serve in h., 342* short arm to reach h.,

winged seraphs of

4goa

me, 4453 gone in, 8785 themselves blaze forth, 254b themselves the planets, 267b though the h. fall, 33ob embroidered cloths, Heavens' 88ob
Heaviest ore of the body, g86a Heavily, they were h. insured, 76sb Heaviness, foolish son the h. of
his mother, 243 garment of praise for
h.,

starry h. above thank h. sun

8573

shut thee from h., 6g3b


silent finger points to h., 5i6b sincerity the way of h., looa single dram of h., 73ga smells to h., 26$b so he goes to h., 26sb so much of h., 5113

spirit of

33b taken h. away, io65b that's gone, 2g7b Heaving up my either hand, 321 a Heavy as yonder stone, g68b

God

spark from h., 7123 spark from h. immortal, 497* in h., j43 a spirit that fought star of unascended h., 56ga of h., 346a starry cope
stay the bottles of h., i6a steep and thorny way to
h.,

destiny, 5133 fools by h. compulsion,


gift of poesy,36gb

2773

but no less divine, 5613 change now thou art gone, 3383 crown of Monomakh, 5gsb eyelids h. and red, 5Q2b
laden, 423
light i light wife
h.

harmony, 3703
mansion, 8843
that place, 3003 paradise pen wherewith thou h. sing,
is

hu
478b
8i

my

heart

is h.,

summons

such grace did lend her, 2213 thee to h. or hell,


2833 sun drives night from h., 62ga swe3r neither by h. nor esrth,

plummet's pace, 339


steps of

plowman,

powers, 4773, 6213


princes like to h. bodies, 2o8b race demands zeal, 4aoa rhetoric of thine eye, 222a

4ob symbol of power of H., gg7a


take

my

soul,

2373

tasted eternal joys of H., 2133 tell little Greek to go to h,,

thank h.
that

fasting,

2503
to
hell,

leads theirs is the

men

2g4b

kingdom of

h., 3gb,

4oa then summer then h. of God,

7363
therefore doth h. divide, 2433 things are sons of h., 42 though the h. falls, 33ob till h. and earth pass, 4oa

Rosalind, 2473 into esrthly life, 4g7b things h. or things esrthly, 365 Heaven-rescued land, 6ooa Hesven's, ag3inst h. hand, 3413 all gracious King, 657!) at h. gates claps wings, 2033 blue h. height, 8123 breath smells wooingly, 2823 cherubin horsed, 282b
roses

toward school with h. looks, 2243 weight of world, 5093 wine unto those of h. hearts, 26b

Hebraism

strictness of conscience,

7163 Hebrew, called in H. Armageddon, s8b Hebrides, in dreams behold H., 59 oa seas colder than H., g8oa
stormy H., 3393, 4203 Hecate's, black H. summons, 284b
pale H. offerings, 2833 Hecla whose sulphureous fire, 10853 Hector is de3d, 26gb Hecubs, wh3t's H. to him, 26 ib

command, 4203
despite, 4893 eternal King, 3343 eternal year is thine, 36gb

1390

INDEX
doth Hedge, divinity
h.

HeWs
Hell, lead apes in h., 2iga liberated the h. out of place,

a king,

Hedgehog knows one great

26sa over h. before stile, igfr not down, your h., pull

3243
thing,

Heir, that flesh is h. to, 26 ib yourself sole h. of world, 377b Heirs, joint h. with Christ, 513 of all eternity, 22 la of God, 51 a

limbecks foul as

h.,

2g4&

Hedgehogs, thorny h., 22gb h. little Hedgerows, these

lines,

59 a
Hedges grow
I will
if

left alone,
h.,

io47a

544b of tomorrow, 78ga Helen brought her dowry destruction, 78b did not board the ships, 6ga
life,

of spiritual

madness risen from h., make a heaven of h., make my bed in h., 2$a

7731 342a

more

social fences like h., io47a

Leda mother of
ggsa
ways,

H., 78 la

unkempt about
Heed, i8b

those take h. to

my

rumble of distant drum, 62gb take h. lest he fall, 5a take h. of loving me, 3o6b
ye

like another H., 37 ib sweet H. make me immortal, 2i3a threw into wine a drug, 653 thy beauty is to me, 64ib Helen's beauty in brow of Egypt,

who

lead take

h.,

8gga
logGa

Heedless,

ran

my

earth's h. sons, h. ways, io7ob

self-interest

bad

economics,

unwise to be h. while giving advice, iagb h. mien, Heejous, creature of 8gia to it come h., loooa Heel, bids
coat

97 ib

from h. Europe under

to throat, his h., ga2b

88 ib

of courtier, 26sb of Northeast Trade, 874a thou shalt bruise his h., 6a tread each other's h., 265a Heels, at his h. a stone, 2653 first toes then h., go2a follow truth too near h., iggb fortune grow out at h., 277b from h. up to head, 823b gunpowder out at h., 443a hi but she h. to it, io22b horses' h. over paving, 1004* out at h., 267a

dawn in H. arms, 884a dust hath closed H. eye, 3oob Helican, damned if I see how h., 95 3b Helicon, muses of H., 67a shepherding below holy H., 67 a watered our horses in H., 205b Hell, agreement with h., 6i5b all h. broke loose, 346a all h. stir for this, 24$a all right then I'll go to h., 76ib all we need of h., 73ga better to reign in h., 342a black as h., 2945 born on undigested dumpling,
6g6a
characters of h. to trace, 44ib
city

milk of concord into h., devils than h. hold, muttered in h., 501 a myself am h., 345a, io76b never married that's his h., 3iia nor h. a fury like woman scorned, ggaa of a good universe, io3a of nuclear destruction, io8zb old age is woman's h., ssga on earth, 8s6b out of h. leads to light, 343^ passage broad to h., io4b paved with good intentions, *54b, 3*4b Presbyterian in h., y64a print news and raise h., ioggb procuress to lords of h., 65ob
Puritan's idea of h., 751 a rebellious h., a64a reign in h., 342a riches grow in h., 34sa

same world

road to h. gradual, 10423 h. heaven, 6o4b served my time in h., iiosb and the h. with it, spinach
io46a
thee to heaven or h., 28 sa take curtains, g7ga tell him to go to h., 5523
this is h. though h.
till

much

like

London, 57oa

summons

cunning livery of h., 27 la curse of h. frae me, io87b


death hate and h., gi8a differ as heaven and h., 65$a each bears his own h., uga
easy to go

nor am I out, aiga bar way, g6ib

down
of

into h.,
horses,

n8b
h.,

h. freezes,

no4b
g88a

over head

and

h.,

n4b
than

England
3i2a i6ob

h.

20 ib,

repose with h. higher head, igib took to my h., loga

entertained great scorn of

Heeltap I never could bear it, 552b Heft of cathedral tunes, 7353 Heifer, if ye had not plowed with

failure in great object, 5802 father for hoarding went to h.,


fifteen
full full

tyranny like h., 466b very respectable h., 8g4a walked eye-deep in h., war is h., 7053 way I fly is h., 345a we make ourselves, 7g$a

wedlock forced a

h.,

2i4b

my

h.,

nb

minutes of h., 8o8b followed with him, 583

lowing at

skies,

58b

Heifer's, false as wolf to h. calf,

268b
Height, asks of us certain h., gsga blue heaven's h., 8isa depths of h., logib

of good intentions, of good meanings, gates of h. not prevail, 'em h., 552a give halls of h., g8ga

what h. in suing long, 201 a what in h. have i done, g46a what is h., 1007 a where h. is there must we be,
where we are is h., 21 3a whip all h. yet, 7osa whole body not be cast into
bed,

2i3a

happiness makes up in h., gs8b measure h. by shade, 66 ib my soul can reach, 6i8b nor depth, 5ia
objects

has no fury, 3gaa hath no limits, 2iga


hearthstone
of
h.

h.,

best

in

an

airy

of

man

equal to

h., ffia. tips of hands,

goga heaven h. or Hoboken, g62a heaven that leads men to h.,


hissing hot from h., 67ga

4oa with h. are we at agreement, 32a within him, 344b within myself, 33oa wrote of devils and h., 4B?b
Hellas, all

i3*b
smiles
street

H. monument

of Eurip-

from h. wide as h.

worth's taken, ag4a Heights by great

at me, 1059 a of houses, i74b unknown though h.

hot
I

as h.,

myself

am

48sb
h.,

I oft

wished for

ioy6b h., 4gob

I shall

move

h.,

ngb

ides, gob confounded H., gob Hellenes, boy is most powerful of H., 77b

men

reached,

623a
dwell on h. of mankind, 4g8b march up h. of fame, gggb towering h. of hills, 6743 Heir as great in admiration as

I suffer seems a heaven, 345a in h. roast like herrin, 4g6a in heaven's despite, 48ga

Hellenism, governing idea of H.,

7i6a
spirit of consciousness,

7i6a

aggb grandchild h. of the first, 3043 great h. of fame, 334a of all the ages, 647b of mongrel bitch, 277b

herself,

injured lover's h., 346a into mouth of h., 652a is alone, 1007 a is oneself, looya is other people, logSb Italy h. for women, 31 2a itself breathes out, 26gb keys of h. and death, s?b

Hellespont,
Hell-kite,

Propontic
h.,

and

H.,

Hello sucker, g8oa

thingumbob again, 7gsb


Hell's

broke

loose

in

Georgia,

broken loose, 2o6a

1391

HeWs

Hell's concave, 342b delight, 86ob despair, 48ga fear of h. a hangman's whip,
Hells,

_
forests,

INDEX
\

Helps,

God
h.

h.

them that help


m

selves,

42 1 b
others
saves

who

himself,

3133 tormented with ten thousand h., 2133 Helm, aboard at ship's h., 7oib
everyone prepared to
take h.,

with their h. only defend, 2i6a


Hemisphere, extend system h., 4g2a find two betHemispheres, where ter h., 304b Hemlock I had drunk, 5823 snow from h. tree, g27a Hemlocks, cry against the h., 9553
to this

i57a

hold h. when sea calm, Pleasure at the h., 44ib

72b

is6a

Helmet and the plume, 645^ for h. the hope of salvation,


55 a now hive for bees, so4b of Navarre, 594b

Hemp, molders h. and steel, 521 Hempen, sing in a h. string, 3133


Hen,
as

murmuring pines and


h.

h.,

6223
a

Herd, hate the common h., i2ib imitators you slavish h., i23b in Mammon's mesh, 86ob lowing h. wind slowly, 44oa of elephant traveling, g84b of swine ran into sea, 4ib spirit, gisb that only sleep and feed, 264b unreflecting h., 5173 what H. to Herder, taught Goethe, 7ogb h. or or flocks human, Herds, 344b of walruses and whales, 6g6a

Herdsman,
879b

God

the

h.

goads,

gathereth
of

chickens,
egg, 755 b

4 3b

valiant h., gb

Helmets gleamed in
Help,
very trouble, iga

7*ob
in

egg's

way

making
7513

present

h.

has right to

set,

Herdsmen, bad h. ruin flocks, 66b Here a little child I stand, 32 la


a little there a little, 323 a sheer hulk, 475b am I, lib am I send me, sob and now cease to matter, ioo6a and there eat and drink, 7isb comes the lady, 224b comes the trout, 2$2b

between hindrance and h., 5 lib cannot h. nor pardon, losgb could not hope for h. io6ob encumbers him with h., 4agb
t

homely h. marsh h.

lays one, secretly builds,

noib

7g6b

my

black h., iog6b

feeble up, 2903 for living hope for dead, 749*

from New World to Old, gajb from whence cometh my h., 222. go love without the h., 4gob God our h. in ages past, 3g6b God's h. and their valor, 54b good wise great, 8833 into Macedonia and h. us, $oa Lord h. 'em how I pities all,

h., 672b yard in printing house, g8Bb vain all Hence delights, sisb you endure their going h., 28oa horrible shadow, 2853 loathed Melancholy, 334b i28b stay far h. you prudes, these tears, io8a vain deluding Joys, 335b with denial vain, 3383 ye profane, 358a

two owls and

from h.

to eternity, 87sb gone h. and there, 2gsb he lies where he longed, 82 sb I am and here I stay, 627a I have been h. before, 7313
I stand, 1793 in the body pent, $i8a God's plenty, 3723 is my space, 2873 is no water, 10033 it can't happen h., g87a
is

Henley's, third place

H.

Invictus,

icooa

make

man man is without h., ios8b me with knowledge, 668b my h. cometh from the

earth happy, 7igb endure, io3gb

Henna

Hennessy, 8gib

hackles halt, 955a Oh well said

Mr. H.,

Lord,

22a not hope and no h. came, 10600 nothing will h., io$3a of the helpless, 5673 one fainting robin, 7373 others out of fellow feeling,
3ioa
past hope
past

Henpecked, fraternity of h., sgsa you all, 5603 Henroosts, defend ourselves and
h., 684a Hens, milk-white h. of Dorking, 673b Hent, merrily h. the stile-a, 2 Heraclitus, thy fate H., io4b told me H. dead, 7igb Herald, hark the h. angels sing,

Kilroy was h., 10403, iiogb Lafayette we are h., 8563 lies a King that ruled, ga6b lies a truly honest man, 354b lies lady of beauty, loogb
lies

Matthew

Prior,

387b
lie,

lies

my

rests his

wife let her head, 4413


h.

372b 7113

thou

ailest

and

h.,

cure past

h.,

2255
since there's

425b

where sword nations drew, 5563 where wind north-northeast,


gooa where world is quiet, 7753 wish he were h., 72ob Hereafter, heaven points out h., 393b she should have died h., a86b what is love 'tis not h., 25ib what may come h., 775a Herebefore, hitherto h., 8i2a Hereditary, contemporary and h.,
6973
dyspeptics, 6g6b strokes of character, logia virtue is not h., 466b Heresies, no h. in dead religion,

no

h., 211 a

thee in thy need, 3oga them that help themselves, 76b that things that h. with things hurt, 7ggb

h. of your glory, io2a lark h. of the morn, 225a Morning Star h. of dawn, noa of tomorrow, 871 a

Homer

thou mine unbelief, 45b to half-a-crown, 78gb use treatment to h. sick, 88a what's gone past h., agsa when no h. in truth, 8ib with h. of surgeon recover, 23ia

owl night's h., 22oa silence perfectest h. of joy, 246* station like h. Mercury, 2643 to remember Herald
Square, H., 944a Heraldry, boast of h., 44oa

me

new
Herb,

h.

hands not hearts, 2753


h.

Helped every one


33*
to

his

neighbor,

dew bespangling
3aob

and
May,

tree,

hansom

outside, 10593

Herbs and

trees flourish in

Helper, antagonist our h., 454b Lord is my h., 563 Helpers fail and comforts flee,

dinner of h., 24b Medea gathered enchanted h.


235a men with h. to smoke, 1723 Hercules and Goth bequeathed us, 78 ib and Lichas play at dice, 2 behind Gates of H., 7goa from the foot H., 86b let H. do what he may, *66a snakes beside cradle of H., 724b Theseus a second H., i36a Herd, avoid reeking h., ggoa deer that left the h., 458a God not worshiped by h., g47b

1753. better is a

5673 Helpful, widest h. influence, 6g8b Helping, God h. her, 842a


to practice virtue, so far from h. me, i7b

8 9 6a truths begin as h., 7250 Heresy anomalies hobbies, 867b lifeblood of religions, 8963

men

ggb

Helpless, justice without strength is h., 3 6 3 b man in ignorance sedate, 4 naked piping loud, 48gb

overcome h. with fire, 1793 Heretic rebel thing to flout, 8273 that makes the fire, 2953 they will proclaim me h., i76b Heretics, faith begets h., 8g6a
Heritage,
I

come

into our h., 9943


h.,

have a goodly

173

rendered United States

h.,

842a

Helpmeet, make him an


Helps, fortune h. the brave, toga

h.,

liberty h. of all, 6s6a of woe, 558b our h. the sea, 5513 proud of ancient h., io72b

1392

INDEX
Heritage, what thou lovest thy true h., g8ga
youth's h., 666a Hermit, aloof with h. eye, 526b crab whale's backbone, ioo6a dwell a weeping h., 443 a New England h., 8ogb old h. oi Prague, 253a poor in place obscure, ig8b shall I like a h. d-well, igga Hermitage, take that for h., 358b Hermon, heights of H., 945* Hern, coot and h., 652a Hero, A H. of Our Time, 6773 basic h. of books labor, 8953 cheering h. or throwing confetti, 948b conquering h. comes, 42ob conqueror Worm, 642b

Eldest
decrepit
that
h.,

Herons,

brood

like

Sob
Herostratus
lives

burned

temple, 331 a Herrin, in hell roast like h., 4g6a Herring, fish nor flesh nor good red h., i83b pond is wide, 666b
Herrings, red h., iog3a Herveys, men women

Hid, wheat h. in two bushels of chaff, 23 ib wherefore these things h., 2513 which is to keep that h., $o$a Hidden, America of poverty is h.,
108 2 a cause h.
result

well

known,

i28b

and

H.,

Herz, mein H. ist schwer, 47 8b Hesiod, Homer and H. attributed to gods, 7oa might have kept his breath, 68a taught H. beauteous song, 673 Hesitancies, elaborate h., 86sb Hesitate and falter life away, 7123
dislike,

4iia

every

h.

becomes

bore,

6c*7b

forgive the h., i078b millions a h., 46oa

Hesitates, if President h., g83a Hesitation, doubt h. pain, 662b Hesper loves to lead home, &54a

growth in mind, 68gb half h. from the eye, 5iob handful of divine inert, 6g6b investigation of h. causes, ig2b like h. lamps, 457a motion of h. fire, 5i8a nature often h., 2oga noise like h. brook, 525b O h. under dove's wing, 10043 player on other side h., 724b something h. behind things, 95 ia something h. go and find, 8763 soul of harmony, 335a
thy works
treasures,

must drink brandy, 4$3a


of course Alexander of next war, g8ob
h.,
fall,

Hesperian,

apple-bearing

H.

h.

before men,

4a

632a

coast,
it

84b
light,

67gb

Hesperus entreats thy


4o8a
h.,

302a

perish

or

sparrow
h., lostfa

was schooner H., 62ia

show

me

soldiers

who wish
ggb

to

be

the starry host, 345b Hessians, yonder are the H., 45 lb


that led

to his valet,

Heterodoxy another man's doxy,


4i 9 a thy-doxy, 577a Hew, not h. as carcass, 254b somebody to h. and hack,

when his sword has won, $6$b Herod, born in the days of H., 39 a daughter of Herodias pleased
H., 4ab

35*0
to line of right,

out-herods H., a6sb should not return to H., 3gb Herodias, daughter of H. danced,

Hewers of wood,

na

733a

Hewing wood
ter,

for master carpenhills,

42b Heroes as well as idealists, 7&6b blood of our h., 47 2b conquered fame of h., 70 la created by demand, ioi7b fit country for h., 866a gladiators died or h., g45a grass-roots h., 74oa hail ye h., 5o8a hand in hand with my h.,
6323

Hewn on Norwegian
tree
is

75a
h.

342 a

down, sgb
h.

wisdom hath

out her seven

pillars, 2gb Hexameter, in the h. rises, 526b Hey for boot and horse, 691 a ho the wind and the rain, 2533,

under dove's wing, ioo4a Hide, for all 'is dirty h,, 8733 furred gowns h. all, 27 gb hair goes with h., loioa head under his wing, 10963 is sure to flatten "em, goib it under his tongue, i5b let me h. myself in thee, 46ga lies to h. it, 32ab me from day's garish eye, 336a me O my Savior, 425b me under the shadow of thy wings, *7a one talent death to h., 3413 owest beast no h., 278b rude stream that must forever h. me, 2g8b shame from every eye, 448b stars h. their diminished heads,
goib
the fault I see, 41 2b the haughty barbers, 10255 their diminished heads, 344b those hills of snow, 27ib thou wear lion's h., 236a thyself for a little moment, 32a in player's h., tiger's heart 2o6a heart in woman's h., tiger's

nonino, 25ob

we will, 7iob many valiant souls


if

of

h.,

62a

peers h. of old, 666b seeds of patriots and h., 446a thin red h., 87ga thin red line of h., 7053
to think great thoughts be h., 786b were plenty, i loob world's brave h., nooa Heroic decision not from cowards,

7673 tame, 2642 Hi, answer to h. or loud cry, 746b but she heels to it, io22b diddle diddle, iog4a

to

you good day

to you,
is

Heyday in the blood

Hie

hi yee, g52a jacet, forlorn h., 5iib

2i5b

101 ib

enterprise is gone, 454a for earth too hard, 66sb lay tuneless now, 56ob
little

Hickety pickety, iog6b Hickory, clothes on h. limb, nosa dickory dock, logsa whittled out of h., i036a Hicks, royal race of h., g45b sticks nix h. pix, gi6b Hid, city set on hill cannot be h.,
4oa
fiend h. in a cloud, 4$9b half as well as he did,

underground alchemy, 6o2b us from each other's sight, 321 a what false heart know, zSsa

what may man within

h.,
'

27 ib

monkey, 6s8b

7693

obstacle to being h., 6i4b pleasures of h. poesy, 3g2a

hallowed
himself
I h.

relics h.,

3341

a biography, s75b 377a systematically h., 7933 womanhood, 62gb Heroically mad, 3693 Heroism endurance for moment more, 8ogb feels never reasons, labor matter of h., truest h. to resist doubt, 6i4b upon land and sea, 6ggb with you is h., 6ggb

poem

among women, 3313 from Him, 8s6b

sires,

in heart of love, 88oa in her interlunar cave, 34ga understood, lightly h. deepest

your golden light, 62 ib Hideaways, bones in h., 105 ib Hideous, making night h., 2593 more h. in a child, 277b notes of woe, s62a phantasma or h. dream, 2543 ruin and combustion, 341 b storm of terror, 3i5a vice a creature of h. mien,
8gia
Hides, death fact nature h., 74ob night that h. things from us, i6aa

world to h. virtues in, 2$ib your diminished rays, 344b

io78b
love

and a cough cannot be

h.,

Moses h. his face, 8a Nature and Nature's laws h., 4i2b there is nothing h. from the
heat, i7b

not visage from cottage, 2gsb one thing speaks another, 6sb smiling face, 456b what plighted cunning h., *77a Hidest, why h. thou thy face from me, 2oa

Hiding
h. place, Hiding, dark 3nd lonely

INDEX
is h. than Higher, rock that igb himself, than 6s7b see h.
I,

Hill,

Jack and

Jill

went up

h.,

Hied

place from the wind, 323 me off to Arcady, 7583 Hier steh' ich ich kann nicht anders, i7ga

steps h.

that

they

took,

than

the

sphery

chime,

s6gb 3383

things, 9523

Hierarchies,

deck

of

cards

h.,

High-erected thoughts, 2033


Highest,
dispose
of
h.

wisdom,

loiga at Hierarchy, English h. tremble air pump, 4623 English h. tremble, 4623 Hieronymo beware, 2043 Hieronymo's m3d againe, ao4a a Hierophsnts of inspiration, 573 Hies to his confine, 2573 High and boastful neighs, 2443

King of France up h., iog2b on h., 4875 laughing heard lived under a h.. ipg7b mine be cot beside h., 5oob on a dark h., g82a on Richmond H. a lass, 48ab or field or river, 648b
over h. over dale, 22ga, g5?a over h. to poorhouse, 8oga
Pillicock h., 278b round it W3S upon 3 h., gssb shsll be made low, 32b stood upon silent h., go6a
h., 57ga tiptoe upon tree yet crowns h., 7i4b vineyard in a very fruitful h.,
little

forth h. good, n4 a Epicurus set in h., 463, sga glory to God good, i nb, n4a in h. position least freedom,
h. 13W, nib people's good the of my greatness, 2 9 8a on ladder of thought,

point

and low rich and poor, 503!] and palmy state of Rome, 2561
as

rung

as the heaven is h., 2ia banished from h. life, 6g5b birth vigor of bone, 26ga cannot be heard so h., 27gb characters cries one, 35ob child so h. you are, g87b death makes equal h. and low,

my

heart, 24gb

8513 looib stand on h. pavement, this is the very h. of all, g6a


to

gob

who

shall dwell in thy holy

h.,

humblest
of

tasks,

type

men

g23b hear Tao,

74 a

1823 diddle diddle, iog4a earth and h. heaven, 8533


for contempt too h., 357b full of h. sentence, 10013 g3le of life h., 8533 God made h. or lowly, in action soar as h., 68ob

High-hearted ways, 6g4a between lowland and Highland, h., 776 a heart is H., 59 oa sweet H. Mary, 495 a

wild birds rounding h., io78b yon high eastern h., 2573 Hill-hid tides throb, 784b Hillmen desire hills, 8763 Hills, 3lter when h. do, 736b blue remembered

my

your H. laddie gone, 5003 of H., 6263 Highlanders, pipes to the H., Highlands, farewell
_ . 494b country places, 824b the H., 494b in my io88b ye H. and Lawtends, life and h. comHigh-lived, high pany, 448a of so h., noob Highly, they speak his H. dog, 4!2b Highness', I am

brown
cattle

h.

h., 8533 melted into spring,


h.,

upon thousand

193

hills of H.,

684b

in h.

in

everl3sting h., 8a far across h. went, 647b fight in the h., g2ia

heart's

Grampi3n

h.,

445 a

in azure steeps, io43b in heavens' h. bower, 4872. in people's hearts, 254a


instincts, 51$* killed calf in

great shout

upon h., 8273 hewn on Norwegian h., 3423


hideh. of snow, 27 ib hillmen desire h., 8763 immutable as h., 8723
Israel
lift

h.

style,

know how
life,

h. we 3re, 448a, 564 a , 6 95b

3653 737b

man

aiming at million, 6040 mountains are a feeling, 556b no bird soars too h., 48?b

of countries Highnesses, give story to Your H., i?2b your H. had strong desire, i?2b H. won these vast lands,

sc3ttered

upon

the

h.,

up mine

eyes

unto the

h.,

223
little h. like lambs, 22a look down on mount3ins, 8283 loves New England h., io48b make h. and forest dance, 5053 no lovelier h. than thine, gi4b o'er h. and far away, 3843 o'er vales 3nd h., 5143 of Chankly Bore, 6743

your

no h. no low, 48b no higher than soul

leads to England, Highroad that


h. of world, 5713 Highway, broad heaping field and h., 6g3b make straight a h. for our God,

h.,

10233

object strange and h., 3603 on throne of royal state, 343 a

only

know

it

shall

be

h.,

868b

pile h. at Gettysburg, g48a price cruel h., 872b exultation of discoverer,

open because dawnest, 43

proud

997 a

Highwayman came
Highways,

quietly

along king's

h.,

437|>

riding,
h.

g6ib
I

Roman

fashion, a88b
fall,

happy

where

shore of world, 244b soar not too h. to

3isb

on h., 3gsa spacious firmament wickedness in h. placspiritual


es,

543

that proved too high, 665b thinking, 5123


lanthoughts must have high gu3ge, gsa trust in all things h., 64gb wall must be kept h., ggia we seldom rise h., 807b where he got that h. brow, i3ga the h. road, loggs ye'll tske under pride broke
lover, io36b 3rt no h.

Hill, all 3ll sleeping on h., 8g83 alone on h. in midnight, 782b and house live together, goob ascend into the h. of the Lord,

went, 8533 Hi-hi-yee, g523

of Habersham, 7g6b of Highlands, 4g4& of home, 824b of Maryland, 6263 old 3S h., gi63 on h. like gods together, 645^ out of h. thou mayest dig brass, loa over h. and far away, 4010,

i8a

becomes the vslley, io66b below the kirk below the


city set
city

peep o'er
h.,

hills,

4033

on sn
the
all

h.,

4 a

upon a

h., 3183,

loT^b

reared in vain, 686a reverberate h., 25 ib rock-ribbed and ancient, 574a shine forth upon clouded h.,

clamb
dancers

h.

thegither,

4g4b
h.,

4gob
sleep

cloud- topped h., 4o8a

among

lonely

h.,

gioa

High-blown me, 2g8b High-bouncing Highbrow, in


giob

gone

under

snow on

stuff,

flung us on windy h., green h. f3r 3way, 684b

gg3 a

5gb strength from n. they call you Shepherd


f

treeless h., g68a of h. is his, 21 a,

haven under
furious

h.,

6483

7123 understanding with


vales

h.,

g44a

High-Churchman,

H.

heaven-kissing h., 2643

woodland
groves

was, iogoa h. classHigher, draw powers into es, 473* law, 65 ib, 10133 no h. thsn soul high, 10233

high Dunsinsne h., 285b house should be of h., goob hunter home from h., 824a hunts on lonely h., 8323 is this the h., 52$b

valleys

plain, 405* h. fields, 2i2a

Vermont

h. and valleys, gub whose heads touch heaven, 2720 wildflowers on h., 86ga h., 7 14 ye too changed ye

INDEX
Hillside,
rally

History
h.,

crouched on bleak h. f
h.,

Hippopotamus,

broad-backed

History, happiest

women no

h.,

from

scholar travels loved h., Hillside's dew-pearled, 66 ib

7i4

Him

first

him

last,

$46a

Himself, above h. erect h., 21 la always h. in both, io4ib

each

man

for h., i6ya

every man for h., i8sb of h., igyb got the better has made h. h., g63b he h. said it, 1513
his

looaa shoot H., Sgoib Hips, when your h. stick, 10533 Hipsters, angelheaded h., 108 ib Hire, for all lady's h., iog7b idiots to paint, 4gob laborer worthy of h., 46b shall win lover's h., 488b those who lied for h., g88b

68gb
people whose h. blank,
has cunning passages, looib hear by tale or h., 228b hurry h., io48b immediate context of h., io24b
in all men's lives, 24a incomprehensible without Christ, 722a

Hired
tears,

money
not

didn't
to

they,
h.,

gna
3313

oblivion

be

33ob

hungering neighbor,

6gab

his
if

own

cortege, io7ga

one conquer h., 8oa if wise man have h., igoa into h. at last Eternity changed him, ygya knows universe not h., 35gb lives unto h., 322a lord of h., goob, 5s8b
loved him for h. alone, 48 ia man count on no one but h.,

wretches h., 427b Hiroshima boiling, io77a bomb on H., g82b bomb that fell on H., g67b Hispanic for converse with God, 434b
Hiss,

influence of sea power on h, t 784b-78 5 a invented h., 4i8b


is

race,

888b
less

is is

more or
on our

bunk, 7i4a

is

ios8b
master of h., jisb no man born unto h., 322a no man dieth to h., 5ib no man wise by h., io5b none liveth to h., sib out of reputation by h., g86a seldom ruined but by h., 4soa sows h. for seed, ggob special people unto h., loa

magnificence of H., 4353 dismal universal h., $48a not turn my back on H., io25b now becoming a roar, loiob roasted crabs h. in bowl, saga Hissed the countess, 887b Hissing hot from hell, 67ga Historian, first law for h., nob

10073 10320 from exlearned philosophy amples, i27b lawyer without h. a mechanic,
is

now and England,


side,

52ob
h. answer question, 4722 of peoples, 732a liquid h., love the h. of woman's life,
let
life

Ma

Goldsmith poet

h.,

4323

of fine consciences, 844h of the Roman Empire, prophet in reverse, 53ob shackles of a h., 33a

502b Mississippi of falsehood, fisb most dangerous situation in h.,


io2gb

466b

must be
never

false, $g7b embraces reality,

713^

sylvan h., 58sa

7Ha
no
of of of of of of of
h. only biography, 6osb

who
Hinc

helps others saves h., 1573 lacrymae, io8a quam sic calamus saevior ense
illae

31 la
false as pard to h., a68b rtet, that would be mated, s6gb

documents, 7ggb yield self to subject, gg7b Historians give own country a break, io7b have conception of men not h., 95* a
hints to

wants

more

an

art, g8ga country begins in heart, gsgb human mind, g$5b

ideas,

888b

individual

Hindmost, devil take the h., $i6b wheels of Phoebus' wain, 3j6b Hindrance, between h. and help,
5iib
Hindrances, luxuries h., 68ab Hindside-before-ness, g8ga Hindus and Argentines sleep,

men who
io7b

budding
are not

h.,
h,,

gg7a gssa

is individual, 4773 liberty h. of safeguards, g67a

masterwork

not

failures,

of opinion, gy6b readers should be critical of h.,

989* of our race, g23a


of science
is

science,

reviewers would have been h.,

of

society

history

477a of

class

5*8a
Historical, awkward h. fact, g5*a books tedious, 80 ib
fights h.,

Hindustan, six men of H., 68oa Hinge, cast-iron back with h.,

Histories

lie,

766b 7i4a
wise,

733b no h. nor loop, 2753


turn on h.

make men

2ogb

writers of small h., 427b

Hinges in 438b

that night, io57a French conversation,

History abhors determinism, io$b absence of romance in my h.,

437b man write h. t 84ob 586a past, judge ought page of h. worth volume of logic, 788b people never learned from h., 5070
only great
to

struggles, 686b of soldier's wound,

periodization

of European

h.,

8ga

liberty of conscience

upon two

h., 32ga pregnant h. of the knee, a63a Hinky dinky parley-voo, ioi8b Hint, before Franklin took h.,

action in bondage to h., 7323 ages before commencement of


h-, 459*> all h. modern h.,

picture of crimes and misfortunes, 41 7b

g57b
h.,

anybody can make


attests

93 a

assurance of recorded
h.,

84ob h., ioo6b

beholding at a

84ga

happiness

depends

on

just h. a fault, 411 a

take h. when h. intended, ggoa take nature's h., Q3oa

upon this h. I spake, 27sa Hinting, nature always h., ggoa Hints for better ordering of universe, i57b nature h. over and over, gsoa of earlier creation, ioo6a
to literary

dinner, ij62a biography of great men, 57?a cannot escape h., 6s8b cannot tolerate chance, ios8b consider an epoch in h., 42b court of h. in judgment, io72b crisis of h. a Thermopylae, 7*3a dignity of h., 3970, 5g6b dust heap called h., 82oa

than poetry more philosophic h., gga progress of freedom, 5o7b proof of theories, 7503 read h. in nation's eyes, 44ob register of crimes, 465 sacred thing, igsb second time in our h., 8g6b sons study natural h., 4<>3a statements of h. are singulars, 99 a strange eventful h., 24ga takes a great deal of h., 7g8a Thucydides wrote h. of war,
to be soldier know h,, to thfe defeated, losgb

craftsmanship, gg7a

Hip,

catch

him once upon

h.,

32a

experience and h. teach, 507b faithfulness to truth of h., 721 a family h. begins with me, g6a

8ga

g&7a

have him on the h., 1853 I have thee on the h., 2353 smote them h. and thigh, lib Hippocrene, blushful H., 582b
Hippogriff,
pity

few materials for

h.,

46gb
h.,

Hag embodiment
nations

of

84 ib

foulest crime in h., 7osa God and h. remember,

io2oa

the

h.,

io47b

happiest

no

h,,

68gb

tortured with h., io43b triumphed over time, iggb true h. of United States, lonb truth of h., 721 a truth only merit to h. f 75oa

1395

History
History, uninstructed in natural

INDEX
Hoc
erat in votis, isoa

very chancy, gg?b

war makes good

h.,

78^b

what's her h., 252a while we read h. we

make

h.,

passing time, nob world's court, 49?b History's purchased page, 556b Hit, a very palpable h., 266b dusty trail, 952a
witness
to

722b wide and mortal pang, io57b wise man does not hurry h., 10485 with its flickering lamp, g22a

world

h.

is

genus omne, iaoa volo sic iubeo, ijgb Hockcarts, maypoles h. wassails, 3*gb Hocus an old cunning attorney, 4i4b Hocus-pocus, law a h. science, 4i4b Hoe, crowbar h. and barrow, 5533 leans upon h. and gazes, 8s6b scratch it with a h., 733a tickle earth with h., 6iob Hog butcher for world, g48a is different, 76ia
of Epicurus' herd, i23a root h. or die, io47a whole house, 10763

Hold, speak or forever peace, 61 a


that you

h. his

know

it,

7ia

hard hard
nail

hit

fast

hit

often,

g68a

it rebounds, 4$ib on head, i86a aim at, 68ab what only

Hogan's

right,

8gob

Hogs eat
like

without striking back, 76$a Hitch wagon to star, 6o8b Hither and thither moves, 6sob and thither spins, 7iib come h., 248a even as their coming h., s8oa let him come h., 366a thithe.i downward upward, i6oa Hitherandthithering waters, g68b Hitherto herebefore, 8iaa shalt thou come but no further,
i6a Hitler break island or lose war,

acorns, 3$sa eat snakes, gssb fattenin' h. ain't in luck, 8i4a

thou the good, 6sob thy right hand shall h. me, 23a to have and to h., 6ib to have to h. and let go, 871 a to one despise other, 4ia up Adam's profession, 2655 water, 3g2b with hare run with hound, i8sb world but as world, 231 a world wide enough to h. both, 437 D you as thing enskyed, 7oa you here root and all, 654b your hand victorious, 8sb your own by attacking, 8378 your tongue and let me love,

35a
yours to h. it high, gisb Hold-fast the only dog, 243b

puncheon

floor,

761 a
desert,

men

eat h., 955b

Hohokams

on

Arizona

am for wit, io78b I Hoist colors to peak, g5ga instantly anchor, 7O2b with his own petar, 264b Hold, affection cannot h. bent,
Ho-hum
2523
aloof
to

Holding mental problem in mind, 977 a pocket handkerchief, 746a writing is h. your breath, I037a
Holds, guess now who h. thee, 6i8a him with glittering eye, 524b
in perfection

gain reputation,

g$b

nature her custom h., that anchor h., 6543

but moment, 29 ib 6sb

92ia even H. against war, ioigb

bag, 4gib

Germany the cause of H., ggga missed bus, 8 97 a monster, g22b


H., g2ib Hitlerite blackguards, 954b Hive for the honeybee, 7gb

candle to my shames, 23$a cannot h. hand, mortality's

Hole, better h., ggsa Boston's a h., 666b child shall play on h. of the
asp, 3ia entrusts life
to

237a cannot h.

thee

close

enough,

one

h.,

wicked

man

io5b

center cannot h., 88sa


cry

H.

h.,

2823

204b the city, 357b this great h. Hiven, rich man enther H., 8gia Ho everyone that thirsteth, 333 man they called H., 747a my h. head halls, g68b talk save us, g68b with a hey and a h., 25ob Hoard, little h. of maxims, 647a little hearts great, 6533 up our true liberty, igoa Hoarded, beauty must not be h.,

helmet

now

h.

for bees,

damned
28ya

that cries

H. enough,
pine,

dominion over
875 a each thing his

palm and
turn
h.

hobbit h., 102 5 a in a' your coats, in the story, io4sb mouse that hath one hole, 1055 not a nasty dirty wet h., 10253 old swimmin' h., 8igb
pessimist sees h., g43b poisoned rat in h., 3903 put in his hand by the h. of the door, 2gb

does h.,

32ob
eternal Footman 1001 a faith h. which

my

coat,

round
Milton
to
is

man
tail

held,

stop h. to keep

in square h., yGgb wind away,

5i2b
farthing
fast
fast

266a
candle
sun,

3123

where

came through, 5333

our end, 7i6b


that
till

337b people think I h. words, g43b

which
9$yb
gives

good,

55a

Holes, foxes have h., 4ib of different shapes, 522b

fast the time,

Hoarding, father for h. hell, 8 i 5 b Hoarfrost, like April h.


Hoarse, raven himself

went

to

fast

blessing,

625b

fire in his

hand, 226a

spread,

is h.,

s8ib

to h. or mute, 346b Hoary, as I in h. winter night,

unchanged
2iob

head a crown

of

glory,
h.,

my

days

dull

and

24b s6sb

sage replied, 42ga Hobbes clearly proves, 3goa

Hobbies and humors, 867b Hobbit, in hole in ground lived h., io25a Hobby, benignant information h.,

777b given us bag to h., 4910 glimmering tapers to sun, 3i2a gorgeous east in fee, 5i2b how take firm h., loob I h. it toward you, 58 ib infinity in palm of hand, 4goa makes nice of no vile h., 236b me but safe again, 666b me in thy heart, 266b me to your deep breast, 758a mirror up to nature, 262b more devils than hell can h.,
net to h. the wind, 3igb nozzle agin the bank, 778b opinion 'with Pythagoras,

fleet angel fast, 421 a fort I coming, 7o5a,

am

worms come through h., loSgb Holiday, he speaks h., a67a regular h. to them, 66ga Roman h., 5573 sunshine h., 335a universal scientific h., g66b Holiday-rejoicing spirit, 535b Holidays free from overemphasis, 1062 a
holiest of all h., 62$a
if year playing h., 238a Holier laws, 691 a richer man held to be h., 1453 than thou, 3gb Holiest of all holidays, 6253 Holiness, art only clean thing except h., 8i4b courage or h., go2a in the beauty of h., i8a

no man safe without h., 8i8a Hobbyhorse, rides h. peaceably,


Hobgoblin of little minds, Hoboken, heaven hell or H.,
Hobson's choice, 3iab
6o6a

*34a

out

relief is

own

coming, 7osa
whatever's
going,

with

93a
poison in the hand, 8oa

of heart's affections, 584b Holla your name to hills, 25 ib Hollaing and singing of anthems, 24ib Holland splendid country, 5373 where H. lies, 447b

INDEX
Holler,
h.,

Home
Home
is is
is is is

Providence
6gsa
all

fashioned us

Hollow,

was

false

and

h.,

g4gb

7i5a applaud blasts of wind, 401 a crown, aayb fires burn to black, B$$b h. tree, give me again my in h. murmurs died, 44gb life h. existence burden, meet thee in h. vale, men, ioo$a mouths with h. phrase,

h. ghost,

41 ib

7593
38 ib

Holy, stand in his h. place, i8a take not thy h. spirit from me, iga temple of God is h., 5sa text of pike and gun, gsaa things h. profane clean obscene, 3i8a time quiet as nun, 5i2a tradition becomes h., 8o5a what is gold doing in h. place,

in minds of men, goa in our own beloved h. in teahouses and h., losoa

7o4b

home, 5&7b on the deep, 537b


safest refuge, ig8a

the sailor, 824a

where one starts from, loosb Jerusalem happy h., io85b


keep h. fires burning, gi7a keep only son at h., 4453

snakes up and down h., tell the grassy h., 7$ob tones are heard, s65b view with h. eye, agsa voice in h. murmurs, soia Hollow-eyed sharp-looking wretch,

8gga 6o4b

white birds flying, g47a who have not lived h. life, Sob

who
*

shall dwell in thy h. hill,

knock as you 407b knows when

-please
to

nobody
h.,

h.,

go

7793

7a

writ,

u 274b

2i8b
Hollowness,

machinations h.

treachery, ayya

Holy Ghost, communion of H., 53b conceived by the H., 6oa Father Son and H., 45a, sj77b filled with H., 4gb glory be to the H., 5gb
6oa incarnate by .he H., 6oa sedentary life sin against H.,
I believe in the H.,

kye's come h., 47 gb liberty must begin at h., 10263


life

life

depends on borrowing, yaga not natural, 8373 longest way round shortest h.,

32 ib love h. love country, 6703

make house

h.,

Hollows, dripping water h. stone,

man

g6gb

uga
radiance
fills hills' h.,

g44a

goeth to his long h., aga merriest when from h., 243b my heart turning h. again, 8ayb

where flowers grew, 7gob Holly and the ivy, iogga English oak and h., 76gb Hollywood a great place, Holmes, Sherlock H., 84gb, Holy and enchanted, s^b and meek she cries, 488a angels guard thy bed, gg6b
as h. as severe, 27 ib

8o6b
sin against H., 77gb

my songs draw n6b

Daphnis
h.,

h.,

whether there be any H., 503 Holystone decks scrape cable, 6783 Homage, owes no h. unto sun,
33<>b vice pays, to virtue, 55b won by lavish h., 54$b again America for

naiad airs brought nearer h. today, 722b never change when

64 ib
has

love

found

h.,

i27b

no
me,

h. like a raft, 7613


like h.,

no place

567b
till

Home
3&7a

not appreciated

left,

8643

Author of that
call it h.

religion,

ground, 57sb

827b again jiggety-jig, 10973


all the way h., loggb and being washing-day, g75b any more at h. like you, 846a any town provided in nineties,

Catholic Church, 6oa

Troy, 6sa city new Jerusalem, 58b close eyes with h. dread, 5243 coming to that h. room, so8a curled last h. drop, gs^b deadlock, ioi7a died to make men h., 6gob divine good or sweet, $48a ears have heard H. Word, 488b fair and wise is she, 221 a glimmers of goodbyes, ioa8b
ground, 8a, 555^ 573b
hail h. light, 3 44b holding such things to
crets,

citadel of

of bean and cod, 8583 of lost causes, 7135 of love; 293b of the brave, 5413, ioi5b of wild mirth, Gigb old Kentucky h., 72?b

944a
ta'en wages, 2gia artist no h. save Paris, 8o6b best be getting h. he said, 747a best country is at h., 4475

art

gone and

on rolling deep, 6763 on the range, 8o8a


our eternal h., 3g6b outlives day and comes safe h.,
2 45 a Paris my h. town, gs3b place they have to take
in,

bright with calm delight, 75$b


call cattle h.,

6gob
h.,

you

charity begins at Christmas, gioa

io8b, 33oa

g26a

come
be
h. se-

h. to roost, 532b

comin' to carry
cow's
day's

me

h.,

noia
h.,

pleasure never at h., sSgb refinement found at h., 49 ib returned h. previous night,

88b
88a

holy holy, gob, s8a, 54gb


I will keep pure and h., in those h. fields, 237b knight of h. spirit, 588b Lamb of God, 4gob land of Walsinghame, ig8b

come h., 47gb march nearer

9170
5183 72ob
returns h. to find needs, 827b seek fortunes further than h.,

do they miss me at h., dunce kept at h., 456b eaten out of house and h., 242a father come h. with me, 747b
fly

2iga send h.

my

long-strayed

eyes,

land of Irlonde, loSab


let

him be
h.

h.

still,

5b

Mother Earth, 78b


of h. prophets, 46a mountain, gia h. nor Roman, 4173 not think money h., 1051 a odd old ends stolen of h. writ, 2i7a

mouth

my

neither

streams, loyob Persians hold sea h., 6gsb whereon thou standest is place h. ground, 8a proofs of h. writ, 274b

pebbles

of

h.

h., 6sb 864b God who is our h., sigb harvest h., 2383, 6s5b hate to be unquiet at h,, 3763 he who gives child a h., 9473 heaven and h., 5i?a Hesper loves to lead h., 8543 hills of h., 824b his footsteps turned, 5i8b homely features to keep h.,

give

away h., logga you husband and

go

h. in dark,

shall men come, gi8b sick for h., 5833 song of h. and friends, tavern for friends, 8g4a

752b

they brought warrior, 6493 they dream of h., 9172


they'll

come

h.,

10950

things at h. crossways, 8o8b at h., things foreign or things


this
till
till

365^ pig stayed


boys come
the

h.,

icgsb
h.,

h.,

337

cow

9173 comes

3163

homely

h.

simple

pleasures,

to a lie, g88a to my ain countree, 5513

remember sabbath

to

keep

it h.,

hotel refuge from h.

Roman Empire,
simplicity, i6gb

ga

how

4i?a

sages once did sing, 3 34 a shrieve me h. man, 526a

sorrow h, ground, 84ia

life, SgSb can tyrants govern h., 2i6a hunter h. from hill, 824a I am far from h., 597b I came h. forever, sssa I keep it staying at h. I'm going h., 60 ib

toddle safely h., ggab turns again h., 6553 welcome h. discarded

faith,

well-beloved in that h., 10673 what is more agreeable than h.,

1397

Home
Home
where buffalo roam, 8o8a where we love is h., 633b
g*gb
wish him safe at h., sooa h. again, 8453 you'll be comin' Home-keeping youth homely wits, 22ob

INDEX
Homesickness,

poem

begins as h.,

Honest, religion

Homeward, look h. Angel, ssga plowman h. plods, 44oa


rooks in families h. go, ?84b

made h. woman of the supernatural, io6ib room for h. men, 46?a


six h. servingmen,

8?6a
49 %n

Homeland

where happy there's h., 15 ib wherever he prospers, ga Homeless near thousand homes,
tempest-tossed, 8i7a of good old cause,
5 12a conversational or h. type, go2b
definitions, gsoa features to keep

of patience, 611 a

Homicidal civilization, g6gb Homines, quot h. tot sententiae,


loga

social friendly h. man, soul that can be h., 3i3a


tale

speeds plainly told,

2i?b

Hominized, love in h. form, 9653 Homme avec Dieu dans la majo-

Homing, horizon of
i86b

his h.,

ioo6b

thief tender murderer, 6653 tired of h. things, i024a

to
to

be

h.

to

be

kind,

825a

Homely beauty

forme de chaque h. porte la 1'humaine condition, igob la vraie etude de 1'h., 4<>8b le style c'est 1'h. meme, 42gb
1'h.

rite,

too h. to steal, noob twelve h. men, 399^ water, 2goa

no purpose, i2ga

whatsoever things win us with h.

trifles,

are h., 54b 2813

home,
h.,

337b

c'est

un roseau

pensant,

hen

lays one,

noib
never so

363b

words suffered corruption, 3143 Honesta turpitude est pro causa


bona, i25b
Honestly, Honesty,
let

home be it home simple


44oa

s67b

1'h. est

ne

home-keeping S20b
joys,

pleasures, 8553 youth h. wits,

qu'est-ce
ture,

que

libre, 435& 1'h. dans

la na-

armed

men who charmed women, 864b


rather handsome than h., 8i2b
slighted shepherd's trade, 3g8a something h. and innocent,
61 2b

36sb Homo, ad unguem factus ecce h., 4gb fecit, io7gb

us walk h., 5ib so strong in h.,

h.,

i2oa
best policy, 1973

sum humani

nil a

me

alienum

verse to

dear, 887a was their food, 38sb wink at h. girl, g6ob

God

puto, io8b Honest, a few h. men, 32?b alehouse, 326a and industrious men's lives, 319* and perfect man, siga

not corruption wins h., 2993 is his fault, 2goa


is

more than

praised and starves, 1393


h.,

love paradox without losing

and wise men

rule,

463^
g26b soob

manhood nor fellowship, 2383 rich h. dwells like miser, 25ob


root of h. in good education,

Homemade
dishes,

contraption, ios6a
exists

sg2b
Achilles

Homer,
all

only

angler, 325b h. men, anglers or very armor is his h. thought,

through H., 5O3b


the books you need, j82b and Hesiod attributed to the

world goes, 2<5ob being h. good exercise,


as

833b

thy h. and love, 27 3b Honey and plenty of money, 6733 and h., iog4b eating bread

and Whitman roar in

pines,

8q8a even good old H. nods, i24b first of heroic poets, 429** found H. herald of your glory,
learned root of H., 30ib liken H. to setting sun, i44a living H. begged bread, soib made blind H. sing to me, 2i3a new and fresh, gi6a nods, i24b, 402b our poets steal from H., gioa read H. once, 382b smote bloomin' lyre, 8743 there were poets before H.,

85a of public interests, depository 47 3b dies an h. fellow, 3i2b direct and h. not safe, 275a doubt, 651 a

day

calling, io26a is for h. men,

dullard, Saga

exceeding poor man, 232b George Third h. dullard, 82ga God noblest work of man, 74ga

good good

h.
to

painful sermon, 3753 be h. and true, 4g6b,


is

hand

that

h.

and hearty,

land flowing with milk and h., 8a land of h., loa locusts and wild h., 3gb milk and honey, 8a, 687b no go my h. love, 106 2 a nor h. make nor pair, 527b pedigree of h., 738b than h., 62b speech sweeter still for tea, gg$b surfeited with h., 24oa sweeter than h. and honeycomb,
this Self
is

the all day, 3g6b gather h. in the carcass of the lion, lib in the horn, logga

ma

translator of H., 7 i2b warred for H. being dead, joib you must not call it H.,

Homeric, in H. times two names, 87oa or Biblical canticles, 703b Homer's rule best, 41 ib

3 86a

5i8a hard-working ancestry, io27a here lies a truly h. man, I one of few h. people, in every h, hand a whip, labor bears lovely face, 30 ib looking for h. man, g6b man appeals to understanding,

h. of all beings, 62a

touch h. of romance, 8s8b


of earthly joy, 357& with milk and h. blessed, 687b the h., 87gb Honeybee, hive for

very h.

the Honeybees, so work

h.,
it

Honeycomb, he dipped
lips

243 a in h.,
as

man close-buttoned, 459 a man looked h. enough, man sent to lie abroad,

123 of a strange

woman drop

75ga
301 a

sweeter than honey and the

h.,

Homerus,

quandoque

dormitat

H., i24b

Home's, way h. the farthest way,

man's aboon his might, 49 6a man's the noblest work of God, ioob, 4g2b

Will H. calls ladies, 395b wrath sweeter than h., 64b

men

rebel

and

revolutionize,

Homes,

eyes

h.

of prayer,

6soa
h.,

68ia

homeless

near

thousand
into

5o8b
introduce

philosophy

h.,

nib
old h. old names, 8g6a poverty keeps h. together, go4a h. firesides, 821 a protect health shut-in h. closed doors, 8g7b 573^ stately h. of England,

47 2D merry and yet h. too, 267a no such thing as h. man, 4oca not h. that filleth own nest,
not so h. more h., 664b our h. sexton tells, 48sa
h. friendship, 47 2a peace and poor but h., 26gb, 11033 prejudices of Englishman, 39$a

men shaped conduct, go2b men with understanding,

Honeydew, on h. hath fed, 524a h. thigh, 3363 Honeyed, bee with ia


with h. song, 9 suck the h. showers, 33ga
filled thicket

words like bees, ggob of Honey-heavy dew


Honeyless,

slumber,
h.,

975 a think of

256a leave of h. fifteen Honeysuckle, odor parts, 864a Honi soit qui mal y pense, 1633 Honneur, mieux vaut h. que honteuse richesse, i6gb

them

firelit h.,

gg2b

INDEX
Honor, accompany old age as
2 86a
h.,

Hope
Honorable murderer, 27 6b no title more h., g67b not h. to tell lies, 83a object only of war h., 4673 politics most h. adventure, g34b
quixotic sense of
retreat,
h.,

Honor, no
ioo8b

h. in sure success,

action
all lost all

faithful

h.

clear,

4073

save h.,

i8ob

men, s6b

of equal h., gasb and greatness of his name, 2ggb as valiant I h. him, 255a bards have a share of h., 66a before h. is humility, 24b
all tasks

live with h., 86oa not least in h. or applause, 201 a not pay h. with tears, io6b of striking blow for freedom,

no longer

644a

24gb
i2ib

or dishonor to last generation,

6 3 8b

bestowing h. pudding pence, 6oob better h. than shameful wealth,


i6gb
bright, 268b

our sacred h., 471 a peace with h., 6133, 8g7a peace with justice and h., ioyb peace without h. not peace,

style of Christian, 32gb to die for one's country, true and h. wife, 54b

Honored among

yet write verse badly, 361 a foxes, io7ob

brothers all in h., 5ioa

by

but an empty bubble, 37 ib h. and dishonor, ssb can h. set a leg, 24ob
can't

5 67 b h. in their peasants carry hands, $i6b peereth in meanest habit, 2igb perseverance keeps h. bright,

268b
physician, 38b pluck bright h.

give word of h. give promise, g67b changes labor from burden to

from moon,
h.,

2s8b pluck up drowned


post
pricks

bones, 334a by strangers h., 4o6a by the few, 6g4a custom more h. in breach, 2$ga die h. and admired, g22a followed him h. him, 66sb how loved how h. once, 4o6a in their generations, 38b of them all, 646b these h. dead, 6$ga

ss8b
station,

chastity of h.,

454a

of

h.

is

private

dear, 4O7a comes from Zeus, 62b comes a pilgrim gray, 44sa dearer than life, i%a depends on opinion of mob,

374 a desirous of h. and glory, 374a-b die with h., 86oa

me on, 24ob prophet not without h., 42b purchased by merit, 2333 quaint h. turn to dust, 3603 Republic's roll of h., 733a
holds no nobler figure,

22zb Honorificabilitudinitatibus, Honoring, not so much h. thee, 3<>3 a Honor's, can h. voice provoke,

44ob
listen

for

dear h.
at

sake,
stake,

when

h.

the

337b 2653

roll of h.

Honors acquired by unrighteousness, yib

done with hope and duty is word of great bestowed favor well
395

h.,
h.,

873b 468a
h.,

rooted in dishonor, 65jb sacred h., 471 a


sense of h. in action, goa set h. in one eye, st$$b shall uphold the humble, signed with their h., io67b
sin to covet h., $45a sin to prefer life to h.,
sinks,

an

bears his blushing h., 2g8b beauties wits, 3osb gave his h. to the world, sgga highest h. this air give, 6g6b mindless of its just h., $i7a

foe while you strike, 8653 free man abide with h., 681 a friend who prospered, 78b from books of h. razed, agib full of days riches and h., i4a giving h. unto the wife, 57a good death does h. to whole
life, i6sa has come back, gg4a

26b

i3gb

people I cannot win with h., $64b Hood, him that wears a h., i88b more than a h. to make monk, i5oa

447b
endure,

so long shall your h.

Hooded
Hoodoo,

clouds

like

friars,

62ob
h.

ii8a
stain in thine h., 38 b strength and h. are her clothing, 27a

Mumbo-Jumbo

will

you, g53a

his memory, 3^4a hurt that h. feels, 647a if peace not with h., 8g7a if we can vertical man, io$gb in her left hand riches and h.,
inherits h. or wealth,
is

subject of my story, 253^ take h. from me and life done,

226a
that h. would thee do, 24sb the king, 56b those they have slain, 7o8b through his h. I conquered

527a a mere scutcheon, 2400

jealous in h., 24ga lacking neither h.

him, 3i6b

nor

lyre,

thy father

and mother, ga
268b

i2ia
life

like

and h. in hands, 752a an island, 377b


h.,

honor due, 5ib to travels in strait so narrow,

whom

louder talked of

sgsa

love in excess brings nor h., 84a loved I not h. more, 358b

truth above friends, g7b voyage not for gain h. wealth, i74a

Hoodwinking, respected succeeded in h., 1067 a Hoof, head and h. of Law, &74b whatsoever parteth the h., gb Hoofs of invisible horses, 86oa of swinish multitude, 454a Hoohooed it in ocean-booms, 955 Hook, bait the h. well, 2463 baited with dragon's tail, 332a by h. or by crook, i63b draw out leviathan with a h., i6b spares next swath, 5&4a thine has great h. nose, 4gia
without bait, 6o8b Hooking, taking sweetmeats only h., 75gb Hook-nosed fellow of Home, 242b Hooks, silver h., 3o6a Hoops, grapple with h. of steel, 258b Hooting and shrieking, S54a at glorious sun, 526b Hoots, owl that nightly h., 2*gb Hop, hoppity hoppity h., g7oa lets it h. a little, 224a light ladies, 8i4a Hope a waking dream, g7a Admiral cheered them holding out h., i72a against h. believed in h., sob
all h.

make one

vessel

unto

h.,

man
act,

513

what what

is

h.

a word, 24ob

is left

when

of h. regrets discreditable

when

faith

willing to sink, 6g2b of h. in thy face, march in ranks of h., may we h. law, 548b

man map

g6ia
aisa g22a

whom
i4a

king

h, lost, i2$b lost h. dies, fagb delighteth to h.,

meaning and import, 468a men who have a sense of


64a

h.,

with native h. clad, 3453 women, 4g7b words such as h. obscene, io44a Honorable, all h. men, 255b ancient and h., 3ia

and

men who have


h. is national h.

mine

my

6gob life, 226a


h.,

Brutus

glorious, 461 a is an h.

man,

255b

national

property,

4gib naught in hate all in h., 276b neither h. nor property touched, i77b new-made h. doth forget, 236a

conquests, 45 3b designs were strictly h., 424b get loose from h. engagement,

452a have that which


loob
intentions h., 46oa

is

truly

h.,

abandon who enter


have

here,

^Qb
all

am

and

h.,

46 $a

1399

Hope
Hope,
all

INDEX
we
h. in heaven,

64ia

Hope, nursing unconquerable


7123
of of of of of of
fair advsntsges, 233a gain allured, 76sb glory, 6ob

h.,

all will yet

be well, 6s6b

Americans h. of world, 44 animated by faith and h., beacons of h. appear, yisb beautiful Evelyn H., SSgb because I do not h., loojb

Hopes, hearts h. prayers tears, 622b life's span forbids us enter on h., i2ob like towering falcons, 3873

beyond h. and despair, loosb beyond shadow of dream, 58ob blessed h. whereof he knew,
78 3 b

break it to our h., 2873 certain h. of Resurrection, 6ib confidently h. all well, 6s6b days are spent without h., i4b
deferred maketh the heart sick, 24a done with h. and honor, 87gb

a pride and power, 641 the ungodly, 373 a on h. wretch relies, 447 once crushed less quick, 714* one jot of heart or h., 341 a one will cut halter, 333b only h. lies in despair, 3783 outskirts of h., io6sb cure past help, p3st h. past

posterity,

454a

no more change name,


of future years, 622b

5i4b

225b

phantoms of
ple3sure
in

h.,

4283
yet

wh3t
dust

remain,
h.,

extinguish

h.

from

soul,

8303

faith and love, 497* faith h. charity, 536b farewell h., 3453 fear cannot be without h.,

plummets

to

of

8ib

37$b

prisoners of h., 363 ray of h. blown out, 635b rejoicing in h., 10733
S3fety
to

feed on h., 201 a fondest h. decay, 5433 fooled with h., for a season, 5373 for helmet the h. of salvation, 55 a for the best, saab

h.
h.,

saved by
sin

not io24b

safety,
h.,

n8a
3O2b

stirred up with high h., 3403 tender leaves of h., 2g8b that cannot die, 78sb that resemble regrets, 688a thst St. Nicholas, 5413 vain h. like dreams of those who wake, 1 363 vanity of human h., 427b what are h., 49 8b wholly h. to be, 666a Hoping, by h. more have but less, 2203 not disappoint h. soul, 4g7b tender yearning sweet h., 4983 trembling h. lingering, 4043 on one end, Hopkins, Mark H. 7413 Hopping, birds still h. on tree,

^b

was

too

much

8233

springs eternal, 4083 steadfastness courage h., gsgb that hath been crossed, 722b that there it not withered be,

meager shriveled h., 454b through frothing waves, 745b Hoppity hoppity hop, 9703
Horsce,
studied
I

spontaneity
so,

of

for years to come, ggSb forks and h., 747a from h. and fear set free, 7753 frustrate of his h., sggb
full of

H., i34a

thing with feathers, 7353


things

whom
4723

hated

5573

you do not

h.

happen,
h.,

io6a
this

good
207b

immortality, $6b bad supper, breakfast

government best

hath happy place, 686a he receives h. who recognizes


benefit, i48b

help for 749 a

living

h.

for

dead,

to make day go through, 8sgb to see Pilot, 6553 to the end, 56b to turn again, ioo3b to world for future, 6373 transform h. to desire, 7& 1D triumph of h. over experience,

Horatii curiosa felicitas, 1343 Horatio, I knew him H., 265!) in my mind's eye H., 2583 more things in heaven H., 2603 speak to it H., 256b thrift thrift H., 2583 Horde, society one polished h., 5623 Horizon, eye fixed on h., 10563
limit of sight, 7853 of his homing, ioo6b of human life, 6o7b our h. never at our

illusions of h., 4640 in faith and h. world disagree,

43 ia
true h. is swift, i7b understood terror and
h.,

10773
h.,

elbows,

in grass-roots heroes, 7403 in the day of evil, 34b


in

virtue flock to their aid, 6o5b

6833
resteth in his h., 4a settest in western h., 3b Horizon's, line of h. growing
thin, io66a Horizons, slwsys somebody
h.,
else's

what made her ugly was


441 a
108 ib

trembling

h.

repose,

incurable h., 108 ib is the thing with feathers, 7353 is there any better h., 637b is there no h. sick man said, 401 a
is

what was dead was h., 8413 whence this pleasing h., 393b which guides changeful mind,
8oa while
life there's h.,

8523
of
h.,

io8b,

ma,

lost sight

8943

to expect something for noth-

4oib

ing, 8283 it's nothing trivial, g4ob land of h. and glory, 8623 last best h. of earth, 6s8b leave light of h. behind, lies to mortals, 854b like taper's light, 447 a lined himself with h., 241! lives on h. die fasting, 4223 look forward with h., 9263 memory outlive his life, 2633 men h. and love, 4773 men in exile feed on h., 793 men set hearts ujpn, 62gb my good vain h. of gain, 2053 my h. is sun will pierce, 6673 my h. my hap my love, igsb my h. my love, 3320 never comes, 3423 never to h. again, 2g8b no other medicine but h., 271 a nor love nor friend, 8243 not endure another's h., 3873 not h. and no help came, io6ob now abideth h., 52b

without h., g49 a whose h. the Lord is, 34a without all h. of day, 349* without h. we live in desire,

who can

live

of the sky, sb Horizontsl, cord into h. line,

i59b without object cannot work without h., 527b

live,

527b

575 a msn, losgb Horn, b3rter that h., 88ab beetle winds sullen h., blow wreathed h., 5i5b

443^

Hoped, substance of things


563 we were
brokenhearted,
h.

h. for,

come blow h., logsb cow with crumpled


gate of
h.,

h.,

iog8t
8802
3382

673,

uga
lonely
h.,

77$a

God winding

what we had

for

had not

come, io64b Hopeful hey but I'm h., 7673 Hopeless fancy feigned, 648b grief p3ssionless, 6i7b our h. love, gg8b passion, 66oa
so

h., gray-fly winds sultry great h. spoon, 6933 honey in the h., icgga

hounds and h., 334b huntsman winds his

h.,

4*4*

huge so
doctors

h.,

73g3
h. C3se, 10323

we

know
lovers,

lusty h., 25ob mouth of Plenty's h., 882b of hunter on hill, sg4b one blast upon bugle h., 5203

3703 Hope's gayest wreaths, 627b


true gage, igga

woes of h.

Hopes, adversity not without h., 2083 and fears of all years, 7553

h., poured through mellow 443 D sound of h. at nght, 58ga sound upon bugle h., 6473

tunes

frozen

up

in

h., h.,

4 8a

with his hounds and

5780

1400

INDEX
Horned moon with one bright
star,

Hot
Horses, hoofs of invisible h., 86oa if cattle and h. had hands, 7ob if wishes were h., ^66a
Italy paradise for h., giaa more careful of breed of

5253

Horner, little Jack H., logga Hornets, bees for flies and h. for bees, i7ga cobwebs let h. through, g88b Horns, bares h. above my sleep, io68b hang them on h. of the moon,

Horse, flung himself on h., 8983 foot an' artillery, g8ia for want of h. rider lost, 3253,

422b
for

want of shoe

h. lost, $253.,

h.

422a-b
give

me

another

h.,

2i7b
it

than children, 381 a not swap h., 63gb


oats
in

great h. of gold, 10303 guide h. in direction

England given

to

h.,

wants,
price of thousand h., go8b rode h. up to bed, gi|b run slowly h. of night, 21 3b scans pedigree of h., 6a8b turn mice into h., 857a watered our h. in Helicon, 2osb

28gb
like Kyloe cow, iog4b of Elfland, 648b of my dilemma, 43&a sound of h. and motors, looab throwing confetti blowing h.,

8343

happy

948b
69 ib Horologe of eternity, 6s2a n8a Horresco referens,

h. to bear Antony, 2873 hast thou given the h. strength, i6a hey for boot and h., 6gia I am not so poor a h., 6$gb in silence champed, gi4b

Horny hands of

toil,

Horrible, hence h. shadow, 3853 imaginings, 28 ib invention the bourgeois, yoga that lust and rage, SSjja
voice,
live

eye made h. fat, knows the way, 5983 lean as is a rake, i66b lord if you had h., g86a must think it queer, g27b
king's

1373

who

h. bear him best, drives h. of sun, wild white h. play, 7iob

which

2143 8133

would draw gods


Horus non numero 539 b

like h.,

7ob

Horses* heels over paving, 10043 Horticultural ignoramus, 10523


nisi

gia

my h. my hound, io78a my h. my wife my name, my kingdom for a h.,

serenas,

611 a

2i8a

Horribly, I will h. revenge, 2453

by medicine live h., 4253 stuffed with epithets, aysa Horrid, blow h. deed in every eye, 282b dream h. dreams, 6g8a hideous notes of woe, 562a image doth unfix hair, 281 a life demd h. grind, 66gb shapes and shrieks, 334b when bad she was h., 625a Horridly to shake our disposition,
259 a
Horrified, soul h. by flesh, 747b Horror, Dead Sea makes a h.,
Christian, $66a up upon nature in its h., 10673 lived through this h., g8ib of falling into naught, gggb of that moment, 745a of outer darkness, 748b screams of h. rend, 4o4b soul of plot, 642b
fell
[

human

never look gift h. in mouth, i46a noblest conquest of man, 42 jb nothing but talk of his h., 23 ib O for a h. with wings, 2gia of air, 10863 of our courage, io8oa of that color, 2523 old h. stumbles and nods, 7843 pale h., 583, 348a philosophy a good h., 448b sense in pomp and glory, gg8b shoe the h., 1098 a short h. soon curried, i8sb shut door when h. stolen, i83b sits on h. at hostess* door, 2363 spur not unbroken h., 52 ib taxed h. with taxed bridle, 5223 to h. and away, 6623 tree to which I tied h., 467b
truest

Hosannas, silver h. of rain, 10503 Hose, youthful h. well saved, 24ga Hospit3ble, in peace generous h., 564a on h. thoughts intent, 3463
Hospital, learnt fellowship in h.,

6i8b whole earth our h., 10055 world not inn but h.,
Hospitality, given to h., 513
I like his h.,

3303

gigb

Host, Hesperus led starry h., 345b many an old h. damned, 2395 of furious fancies, io86a
of golden daffodils, 5i4b praise Him heavenly h., 377b though an h. should encamp, i8a tie of h. 3nd guest, 7g3 time like fashionable h., a68b with angelic h. proclaim, 4255 Hostages to fortune, 2083
Hostess, reckoneth without his h.,

friend

that

bestrad h.,

175
uses folly like stalking-h., 2513

1833
Hostess', sits

the h. the h., 844a universal h. unbend, g6sb Horror's, on h. head horrors, 2753

where's the bloody with wings, 2gia

h.,

io4gb

on horse

at h. door,
as

236a
Hostesses
nets,

Horrors accumulate, 275a congenial h. hail, 4igb of half -known life, 6g7a supped full with h., 286b Horse, a dog a h. a rat, s8ob and his rider hath he thrown,

Horseback, 8853

working for dead h., igya beggar on h. 2150,


f

make
6goa

parties

cabi-

Hostile,

universe

not

h.

nor

on

h.

through

dreary

tract,

6423

8b
bean-fed h. beguile, 22ga beggars mounted run h. to death, 2 isb behold a pale h., $8a boot saddle to h., 6623 brewer's h., 24oa bring h. to water, i84a call me h., 23ga cart before h. i85a choice of h. and wife, 7103 dark h., 61 ib dearer than his h., 64ya death on his pale h., 3483
f

Horsed upon sightless couriers, 282b Horseleach hath two daughters, 26b
pass by, 885b Horsemanship, forgetful of his h.,

friendly, g$ab Hostility, eternal h. against tyranny, 47* a mad h. against institutions,

548a sorrow to disarm

h.,

6233

Horseman

64a Horsemen, chariot and


isb Horsemill, desire
rael,
is

h.

of Is-

h.,

3iob
4683 gs8b

Horse's, 'ear h. legs, 654b sprigs root in h. body, straight from h. mouth,
trusts in h. health, 2793

Horses,

difference of opinion

makes h. races, 762b dominated mind of early races,

all the king's h., logsb and poets not overfed, igyb as fed h. in the morning, 33b carriages without h., io87a chariot and h. of fire, isb

uncompromising h., io55a Host's Canary wine, 583b Hosts, arms and God of h., 4653 holy is the Lord of h., gob Lord God of h., &75b Lord of h. King of glory, i8a of error, 8s8b Hot and bothered, 877b and cold fareth love, i75b and rebellious liquors, 247b as hell, 4835 blow h. and cold, 763 can one go upon h. coals, 23b cold and h. moist and dry, 3443,
>ld light and h. shade, 4gob conscience seared with h. iron,

come saddle your


England
3123

h.,

5223

g86a ego to id as rider to h., 8343 far back in soul h. prances, 9 86a
fine lady

hell for h., 20 ib,

hanged that

h. not be

stolen,

cross buns, logsa


fair h.

on

h., 1095 a

376b heaven in which no

h.,

826b

wench in taffeta, for certainties, 73ob

1401

Hot
Hot, ginger h. 2523
i'

INDEX
the mouth,

lour, hazard of doubtful h.,

Hours,

entertain

lag-end

with

hammer

iron

when

h.,

i25b

I
I I

haste, 556a heart's shell, 6978 hissing h. from hell, 6yga


I

also had my h., 9193 have had my h., 36gb


h.,

quiet h., 24ob in poorhouse, glorious h. even

was born, 10993 improve each shining


h.,

3g6b

would thou went cold on


57b

inevitable h., 4403


is

not yet come, 483


h.

in

my

h. youth, i22a

its

come round

at last, 8823
dial,

6843 golden h. on angel wings, 4gsa his brief h. and weeks, 2943 I once enjoyed, 456b I spent with thee, 86sb lazy leaden-stepping H., 3393
life

Just

logob h., little pot and soon siga within h. was me, i8b heart my neither cold nor h., 57b
pease-porridge h., 10953 is cold for the h., igfa sleep small h. bird, 82ob snake came on h. h. day, 9863 so h. that it singe yourself, 2983 temper leaps over, 23 ib time in old town tonight, 868a

Add H. Water,

last h. of

my

life,

4ob
24b
574b, g62b

short

laugh an h. by his
lightning's h., 10553
lives its little h., living at this h.,

5i2b

mournful midnight h., 62 la nor h. days months, 3053 of life drifted by, 797b redeem these h., 30 ib
seven h. to law, ig8b
six h. in sleep,

cjuiet

h.

few,

6g8b

water to remain upon tea, 328b w'en stew smokin' h., 91 ib when iron is h. strike, i25b which way h. air blows, 864b why sea boiling h., 7463 your wit's too h., 22ib Hotel, back to h. in rain, io44b embraced by porter at h., 955b great advantage of h., 8g6b instead of hymns, 957a long h. acutely white, 878b queen of this summer h., 10823
refuge from smoke-filled

look on you when last h. comes, 1283 look thy last every h., gi4b Lord through this h., 11033 matched us with His h., 9943 met me in evil h., 493 a more desirable tlian fortun3te
h., 1153 nighing his h., 8543 not an h. more or less, 2803 not showpiece of 3n h., 893 nothing can bring back h., 5142 now's the h., 4963 o' night's bl3ck 3rch, 495 of 3dversity, 5503 of courage, ioi4b of departure has arrived, 933

ig8b Hiroshima g82b sorrow breaks reposing h., 2173 steal h. from night, 5423 success unexpected in common h., 68sb sweetest h. e'er I spend, 4g3b time in h. days years, 36sb to which heaven doth chime,
sixteen h. ago

362b

two golden
unless

h.

waked by
weary

h., s86b cups of sack, 2$7b circling h., 346b

home life, SgSb room in h., 8593

Hotels, people in h., 8g5b Hothouse, no h. flowers, 97ga Hotness, day in its h., 7iib Hotspur of the North, 2393 Hottentot, respectable H., 41 6a Hottentots, milk for H., loioa Hound, footprints of gigantic h.

of fate, 748b of thoughtless youth, sogb of truth now alw3ys, 9393 offspring of idle h., 7793 one bare h. to live, 2i3b one dead deathless h., 73ib one h. of life, 5223 our h. is marked, 5o4b rash hand in evil h., 34?b
ripe,

woman
worst
h.,

of days and h., 7753 what h. O what black h., 8043 winged h. of bliss, 537b
in our h. of ease, 5igb
effect
is

banishing for

4573
all

House, i2b

the h. of Israel played,

242b

all through the h., 5413 appointed for all living, as man longs to see h., gb blessings on this h., 46sb bodies' but not souls, 975b

isb

8soa hold with hare run with h.


i8sb

mongrel puppy whelp

h.,

448b

my

horse

my h.,

io78a

single h., 737a sleeping h. to wake, i64b

self-approving h., 4<x)b serve the future h., 5173 single h. of th3t Dundee, 5133 speeches by h. die by h., 473 stay longer in h., 7723 struts and frets his h., 286b
takes

brain's old ghostly h., 10223 built soul pleasure h., 6453 by the side of the road, 633,

8463
call

upon my soul within the

Hounds and horn, $34b


carcass fit for h.,

away things, 4323 th3t turns back longing of seafarers, 1613

h., 25ib castle is, 5783

54b

clergyman so 7563

much about

h.,

four lean h., 10303


join in glorious cry, 4243 noise like questing of thirty h.,
of spring, 772b such h. such hawks, io88b
r'

75 *

the wished the trysted h., 495 this was their finest h., 92 ib thou the day I the h., 7673 time and the h., 28 ib
torturing h., 43gb uncertain h. before ioo6b violet h., ioo2b

covet thy neighbor's h., ga

crooked h., iog6b daughter in mother's h., 8753 daughters of my father's h., 252b
divided against itself, 453, 6ssb doorkeeper in h. of my God, 2oa dwell in h. of the Lord, i8a eaten out of h. and home, 2423 Eden old-fashioned h., 738b emperor in mine own h., ig8a empty h. like stray dog, 7562 evil shall not depart from his h., 253 the h,, except the Lord build

morning,

with his h. and horn, 578b

Hour

before

dawn
h.,
h.,

silent,

g44b

books of the
childhood's

6g8b

5433, 64ib

watch with me one h., what sweet h. yields, 5733

44b
h.
;

children's h., 623!}

when God
34ob wherein 3 25 D

sends

cheerful

cometh and now is, 483 County Guy h. is nigh, 52 ib crowded h., 6o3b crowded h. of glorious life,
455b dark h. or twain, 2843 destined h., 62gb eternity in an h., 4903
Europe's latter h., ynb every h. a miracle, 7O2b every h. that passes O, fall that very h., 2523
far fierce h. for

man might be happy


at
h.,

who drowsy
wonder of 3n

that h.,

3313

555b

Hour's, never spent h. talk withal, 22 ib sleep before midnight, 3253

22b
fairer h.
fell

than prose, 736b


reject

493b

Hours, aching h., 8933 age not numbered by h., 1931 and minutes dollars and cents
arrest

not, 4ib fired that h.


glass

him, 4iob
statecraft,

h. of

German

and

sweet, giga

finest h., 92 ib

422b your course, 565b banishing for h., 4573


too soon, 2673
h.,

God

one short h. see, 652b from h. to h. we ripe, 248b had I died h. before, 2843 happiest day happiest h., 6413

better three h.

erects h. of prayer, 3853 great h. of Tarquin, 5963 hsrrow h. of de3d, io5gb he3p of stones not h., 82gb

count only sunny


credulous

53gb 10403 creeping h. of time, 248b


first h.,

he3rt keeps open h., io64b hill 3nd h. live together, goob hog whole h., 10763

1402

INDEX
r

Human
How who
Howard,
gets what, 9943
left

House, in
is

my

Father's h., 49*

as fortress, ig8a

is in village though, g2?b is of glass, 324b the h. shall tremble, keepers of

House we dwell in every day, 73 8b what happens inside h., 6753 where I was born, 59 ib
whinstone h. castle is, 5783 whose h. is glass, 324b wisdom hath builded her
2$b wish never had in h., with nobody in it, 7563 work and h. be fed, 7043

them my Lord H.,


h.,

654b How-de-do, pretty

768b

Howl howl howl


Lady same
lo8 3b

howl, s8ob
of

823 keeps his h. in hand, the past and I, 7^4* kept h. b labor h. vast, 7i5 the h. of the let us go into
Lord, 22b io7ob lion in thy h., 37b little h. of my own, g&3b ib little h. well filled, 42
lilting h.,

2b

h.,

h. in Irish, 2sgb way for flesh

man,

10543

or groan, 74ob scarcely a h. Howled, cracked growled roared


h.,

524b

wounded
36a you take

in h. of

my

friends,

Howling

down

my

h.,
it

2353
gets possession,

Housed where
b

as of a hen-yard, g88b the street, 10953 flies in night in h. storm, 48ga neither yield to h. of wolf, ao5b

lived in little h., iog7b machine for living in,


h.,

g95 made chimney in my fathers

2isb
h.

home, g6sb make make my h. your

inn, ggbb in way in h., 656b man's h. his castle, ig8a b master of the h. cometh, 45

man

so

Matilda go2b

3nd

house

burned,

2i8a Household, breathing h. laws, 5123 keep h. in oneness, 6$b of Impulse mourns, io6oa she looketh well to ways of her h., 273 Households, clergymen's h. unhappy, 756a Houseless heads 3nd unfed sides,

no more hear tempest


village of H., logob

h.,

475b

woe, 4863

Hub, Boston State-House

h.,

0343

Hubbard, old mother H., logoa


Huckleberry Finn, io44b Huddled masses, 8173 Hudibras, bought H. again, 375* Hue, add another h. to rainbow,
2s6b cuckoo-buds of yellow h., 222b flowers of all h., 3453 hesven presents solid h., 9273
like

mo3t defensive to a h., 226b must be a h. at least, 5303


h. of mermy Father's h. not chandise, 48a my h. called h. of prayer, 43 my h. horse hound, io78a my h. though small, 3240 nae luck about the h., 4643 none other but the h. of God,

Housemaid

in

Downing

Street,

9655 Housemaids, dsmp souls of h., looib Houses all gone under sea, ioo5b and farms pill3ged, 4613 build h. and inhabit them, 33b
destroyed by rats, 3793

when

great painter dips,

native h. of resolution, 2623 now turn different h., 7?a raise a h. and cry, 1953
shells of pearly h., 536* Hues, rich h. marriage 8oia Hug dear deceit, 421 a it in my arms, 2713

58b

devour widows' h., 45b 823 grest h. rain down,


mothers'
1 99

made,

not a h. where there was not one dead, 8b of bondage, 8b of dreams untold, 86ob
of feasting, 28a of God, 7a of good stone, g88b of Have, 78ob of life, 9333 of mourning, 28a of Peers throughout war, 767b of prayer, 43 b 3853 of Representatives, 464b of such good fashion, 11053

wombs

the tiring

h,,

new

prejudices old, 5?8b nimble in selling h., g86b

Huge and
bed for

birdless silence,
this h. birth,

io8ob

354b

old h. mended, 3g2b plague o' both h., 2253

of the Lord, 22b of Usher, 642a of Want, 78ob on fire children burn, 10933 open h. in evening, gi8b ornament of h. friends, 6oga out of the h. of bondage, 8b part of man's self, 793b

wide as height of h., i74 ugly h. stand, io23a seem asleep, 5123 h. very alone Housetop, as a sparrow upon theh., 2ia thats h. the to here's Housewife, thrifty, 48 ib ply evening C3re, 4403 h., Housewifery, payers in your
street

b walk under his h. legs, 25| Hueest hearts that break, 7386 46b of h. 3 living, Leviathan strumHugged and embraced by
pet wind, 232b offender forgave offense,

cloudy symbols, 5813 shadow, 525b ship's h. so h. so hopeless, 7393

3723

Hugger-mugger
2653
Hultre,
1'h. 6toit

to

inter

him,

bonne, 4*3 a
h.,

Housewife's,
337 b

tease

the h.

wool,
say,

Housewives, good h.
in your beds,

now may

b Hulk, here a sheer h., 475 D3kotas under her Hull, lO22b water spurted through my
82gb
Hulls,

h,,

peace to this h.,


return no

460
to his h.,

more

i4b

rich honesty in poor h., 25ob rule his own h., 553 set h. on fire to roast eggs, 2093 set thine h. in order, i4a

Hovel, golden mean avoids poverty of h., i2ib h. Hover, o'er shady groves they

Hum,

ships are only beehive's h. soothe

h.,

8ia
ear,

5oob busy h. of men, 3354 my ears h., 6gb of either army, 244*
of of

human

cities

torture,

55&b

ioo8b seven-pillared worthy h., shelters friend, 6o6b should be of hill, goob small h. and large garden, 357b so fair a h., 2g6b terror in h. does roar, 48gb that Jack built, iog8b them that join h. to h., gob to be let for life, 32 ib to lodge friend, 41 ib upon another man's ground,

mighty workings, 57gb


h., h.,

How

and when and where, 8iab and Where and Who, 876a
can these things be, 48a do you do again, iog8a is your trade Aquarius, i034b long Catiline, nob many ages hence, 255a much more is half than whole,
never tell h. to do things, g87b not how long but h., 6793 not to do it, 6723 h., 588b question remains should man be just, 153

steeples h., 8533 thousand instruments Human, Adam was but


still

2973 7623
cats,

all

h. life in

monkeys and

h. must retrograde, 466a all all that h. hearts endure, 428a alter h. nature, 8593 ^ of single h. being,

7g8a

appl3use

bears

stamp

of

h.

condition,

2673
useful

and beautiful in h,, 75sa wandering about from h. to h.,


55*

igob books, io6gb being crushed by being h. born alone, ggob

1403

Human
Human, being
h. though boys, goob being item with skin wrapped around, 10303 being portable plumbing, ioi7b being raging at me, 1067 a beings in underground den, g4b beings into machines, 6873 benefit and enjoyment, 4533

INDEX
Human, Love
4873
the h. form divine,

Human,
933 a

tragedy

The H.
h.

Heart,

march of h. Mercy has a


10643

mind
h,

slow, heart,

4533 487 a
face,

mice with wings wear h. milk of h. kindness, 28 ib millions of h. beings, 888b moonlight, 108 la

8493 vanity of h. hopes, 427b vast empire of h. society, 511 a voices wake us, looia weakness of h. mind, 373b

undimmed by

tears,

wholeness of h. problem,

wisdom
wish
I

beside ah. door, 51 la best work the h. mind, body a watch, 4343 body is sacred, 701 a

more than

495*

body

politic like h. body,

4350

build on h, heart, 66 ib chariot that bears h. soul, 7383

Chinese poetry most

h.,

8633

civilization scarcely h., go$b civilized h. being, 936b

combination or society, 3293 community, 9743, iO55b condition, igob constant in h. sufferings, g68b contrivance of h. wisdom, 454* course of h. events, 47ob creatures' lives, 5g2b
creeds

root in h.

needs,

79 ia

crises of h. affairs,

4&sb Cruelty has h. heart, 48gb h. of custom guide life, 4g4b


Declaration
of

H.

Rights,

9&4a-b
delightful h. tadpole, 87ob distances between h. beings,

h. arms, 96$) music ministers to h. welfare, 7o6a my Treatise of H. Nature, 434b nature changes, 84ob nature in its horror, 1067 a nature made arrogant by consideration, goa nature not change, 6403 nature weak in bookstore, 674b no h. things of importance, 953 no themes so h., 7ggb noble happy h. beings, 6g8b nor h. spark is left, 4143 nothing h. is alien, io8b O h. love, 6413 observation of h. life, 68gb observer of h. nature, 668b of h. bliss to h. woe, 3513 of h. days, 8243 on my faithless arm, io6oa part of the h. race, g86b Peace the h. dress, 4873 peasant is also h., 4g8a Pity has a h. face, 4873
politics

of h. contrivances, 45^b loved h. race, 86ob


h.
life

g^b

Humane, harmonious and

7i6b heaven and earth are not h., 73b Humsni nil a me alienum puto,
io8b

Humanity achieve
g82b base metal of
h.,

lasting peace,

8i7b chaotic stage of h., losab common right of h., 6363 exslts delights adorns h., forehead of h., s8ob has three enemies, 8i7b
herein
chivalry
courtesy

55^
h.,

i74b
i

history life of h., 7323 love you, 10300 imitated h. so abominably, 2633

justice and h., justice equity,

938b

earth's h. shores, 58 la enemies of h. army, 9203

engine waits, loosb error is impatience, g8ob everything h. pathetic, 76ab face divine, J44b faith in h. beings, 103 la
features

composed of ten
produced by

parts,

i32b
felicity
little

art of h. happiness, 8713 on h. core, 7963 pounces power cannot remove, 10073 predatory h. hands, 85 ib primary h. affections, 7123 principles of h. nature, 5503 provide for h. wants, 4543 pursuit of h. glory, 3273 race born to fly upward, 1613

8gsb 4543 4543 may come to end, Q52b nobody writes for h., 8943 nothing real -but h., 58gb one race, 8273 only three days old, 942 b reason and justice, 4533 still sad music of h., 5090 veined h., 6i7b victory for h., 586b
law of
h.,

violence

and injury

to h., looa

ad-

vantages, 42gb field of h. conflict, 92 ib figure interests me most, find beautiful h. soul, four essential h. freedoms, free the h. will, 41 ab functions and activities,

8g8b 4753 97ab

race organized like bees, 8673 relations exhibited, perfectly 99 reverence h. nature, 5443 rights, 11043
rights to

wearisome condition of h., 202 a with all its fears, 6220 Humanized, to be h. to comply with law, 7i6a Humanizes, liberal arts study h.,
1293

Hum3mzing, power

of h. nature,

which

committed,
as subject,

io72b

8505
11043

ruler having h.

body

5 2 9b whole body of society, 7i6b Humankind, good or bad for h.,

fundamental

h.

rights,

93b

5*5 a
h. breast,

future of h. race, 9423 good fortune to be born h., 379 a happiness of h. race, 45 3 b he served h. liberty, 884a heart break piecemeal, 68ob heart by which we live, 5143 heart has treasures, 67gb hearts to chew, 5703 highest type of h. nature, 7o6b hope springs in h. breast, 4o8a

same heart in every


7iib

same with
sanction
scientific

h. race, 9463 of h. nature,

10450 thought h. progress,

8oga
Secrecy the h. dress, 48gb see h. soul take wing, sorrow of h. existence, species of two races, 534b
stars of h. race,

much reality, ioo4b tyrannies on h., 3703 porcelain clay of h., 37ob vices and follies of h., sgib Humans, creatures both insects
not bear
of
all

lords of h. pass by, 447b

and
5593 45$b

h.,

9460

Humble

Allen, 4123

hopes and h. creeds, 7913 hum of h. cities, 5s6b


I had no h. fears, sna in h. life much endured, 4283 infringement of h. freedom,

status not

4566 depend on economics,


g^gb

and contrite heart, 875b and hearty thanks, 6ob and sweet poverty, io7gb
appearance of telephone, 7423 are usually envious, 37 4a as if pride not h., 668a be it ever so h., 5&7b
cares delicate fears,

965a
stories

4g6b
Jealousy has a h. face, 4$gb just some h. sleep, ga6a kind not bear much reality,

ioo4b
king's

might greater than

h.,

873

repeat themselves, suffering h. race, 7113 of h, things, 475b tale of h. life, 455b tamer of h. breast, 4sgb Terror the h. form divine, things subject to decay, thought or form, 5683 three words for h. race, till h. nature came, 7383

sum

sub

48gb 3693
8323

knowledge of h. nature, 533b,


life a

776b mansion, 5853

to err is h., 137^, 1500, to love for being loved,

5663

to step aside

is

h.,

493b

frowned not on h. birth, 44*a grave adorned, 4063 he3rt in p3in, 8873 heyday in blood is h., 2642 himself shall be exalted, 43 b honor sh3ll uphold the h., 26b hungry me3n, losob kept the h. W3y, 8133 livers in content, 2983 members of society, 5033

1404

INDEX
Humble, ne'er ebb
to h. love,

Hurled
Hungry
10753

75 a out of pride, igob ib pie, 67


soft

Huncamunca O, 4O2a Hunching wings and beak,

meek

patient h., goib

son o h. laborer, g64b citizen, 47*b station of private


the greater the ib very h. person, 67

more

h.,

373
.

Hundred, a few h. scrawls, g8ia at three h. pence ointment prize, 322b buyer needs a h. eyes, 324b daughter of h. earls, 6453 father more than h. schoolmasters,

despite the dream, losob generations, 5833 h. goblin, io85b and hag

he hath
if

filled h.,

46a

enemy be h., *6a judges the sentence sign, 4o4b lean and h. look, 53b
thine

makes h. where most

satisfies,

3253

wisdom is h., 459 a Humbleness, whispering Humbler heaven, 4<*a


Humblest
citizen
,

,_

h.,

232b 8586

of

land,

h. days, io73a h. years hardest, g4ia flowers blossom, io27b fourteen h. years ago nailed,
first first

man man

friends, 5i? b

h. tasks, gagb highest to peer of powerful, 74b beseech you of pardon, Humbly

274b dumbly, g6ga walk h. with

I a h. tongues, i iga very angry count h., 4742 h. grant three, 561 a three of one h. percent American, 8383,
if

eats when not h., uo2a not free, io48b ocean gain advantage, 2gb Pinch a h. lean-faced villain, 2i8b poet should be h., io4*b poor, 758b rich when he is h., g6b sheep look up, 338b

28?b

943 a

sleep
soul,

is

meat to

h.,

ig7a

Humdrum,

thy God, $$b be h., passage might

one

85 ib 8i8a routine poetry of life, of Humiliation, Negro past

h.,

iia

in h., 84 ib peace accepted % V3lley alley of H., 3050 commendable, Humility a thing

a virtue

all

preach, 3173

ran rode the six h., 6523 ssid h. different ways, 10303 schools of thought, io27b ten jokes a h. enemies, 437b thousand thrained men, g8ia thousand to that h., 3203 to that twenty add h. more, 32oa touch a h. flowers, 10233
victory finds a h. fsthers,

h. years hence, 6o8a a h. years to a day,

26b

squalid population, 7253 stomach cannot hear, 35gb


tigers getting h., g2oa and h. Hungry-looking, fear pale men, ii2b beast Hunt, something you could h., io68a for a desert isle, 10693 gunless game, 8463

angling bear success with h., 8i8a before honor is h., 24b for acclaim earned in blood, ioi6b is endless, loosb modest stillness and h., 243 b most difficult virtue, ioo7b pride that apes h., 526b, 5333 proud in h., 3113 sense of reverence, 85b where there is h., 1573 Humming town, 7113 Humor, according as man is you must h. him, iogb awe man from career of his h.,
call it
is

like virtue of h., 3263

10533 while one might


wi'

tell

h.,

a h.

pipers

an'

a',

5023
fruit

Hunted, freedom h. round globe, 466b


little h. hares, go6a past reason h., 2g4b Hunter, Bahrain that great 62gb Es3U was a cunning h., heart lonely h., 8323 home from hill, 8243 lo h. of east caught, 62ga man is the h., 6493 night dark-blue h., 8g$b Nimrod the mighty h., 6b

in fields for health, 37 ib it in the dark, 4573 love down together, 774b what you do not want,

io8ib

Hundredfold, brought forth h., 42b

Hun-dred-mil-lion-oth-ers, iO30b

h.,

Hundred's soon

hit,

664b

Hundredth part

of

members

in

73

arms, 465b Hung aloft the night, 5813 3mong cloudy trophies h., 5843 be he3vens with black, 2i4a because it h. behind him, 66ob here h. those lips, 265b

Mth bloom
Hunger
fer

3long bough,
thirst

Hunters
8463

who hunt

gunless game,

h.

when

they gibe, sgoa

and

after

righ-

3 drug, 7693 most when she obeys, 4073 no h. in he3ven, 762b one hss sense of h., gg6b only test of gravity, 48sb

teousness, 403 bodily h. in eyes, 8373

'em somehow, g6$b

filth

and ignorance, ioi4b

Hunting, 8ioa

for h. of dreams, 8463 Hunter-state of man, 5353 ain't 'unting as 'urts 'un,

woods

own up

to

lack

of

h.,

87ob

for self-approval, 7643 for well-stored mind, 8isb


I

saves few steps, gg6b source of h. sorrow, 762b that's the h. of it, 243^ third glass for good h.,

3m

h.,

io83b
thirst
battles,

offer h.

6203

biography like big game loiib daddy's gone a-h., iog4b dsren't go a-h., 72 ga

h.,

mouth and
3g4b
2383
h.

belly injured by

loob

unconscious h., 756b

unyoked h.

of

idleness,

womsn
366b

in this h. wooed, 217.-

no fear stand up to h., 843 no patience wear h. out, 843 no sauce like h., ig6a
our policy against
they
shall
h.,

a ground for ambitions, 1049 passion for h. something, 66ga upon St. David's Day, 10973

we

wesry wi'
Huntlie,

will go, 424a h., io8ga

Humored, plsyed with and

gsgb
583

true

Thomas

on

H.

Humorous

Humors, gather h. of men daily


365 a a grave or mellow, sg4 hobbies and h., 867b Hump, caraeelious h., 8763

very beadle

sadness, 2503 to h. sigh,

h. no more, toil h. nakedness, 5873

Bank, io88a
Huntress, queen and h., 3023 Hunts in dre3ms, 647a on a lonely hill, 8323 Huntsman, as h. his pack, 4513

22ib

weak
poor

evils

age

when done with

and h., *48b h. rich and

as one, 853

Hungered 3nd ye gave meat, 443 me Hungering neighbor and


874!

winds his horn, 424a

Huntsmen

3re

up

in

America,

haunch and

h. is Obey, that is black and blue, whale's white h., 6g6b

Hungry and he gave him meat,


445^
as grave, 4igb ate when we were not h.,

6g2b

8763

without a positive h., 6sgb Humpty Dumpty, iog$b when I use word said H., 746] Hums, beetle with drowsy h., 2" Hun at throat or feet, g24a is at the g3te, 877b

clouds swag, 4&7b


cloy h.

Hurdygurdies make tune own, 8i4b Hurl cynic's b3n, 8463 Hurled headlong flaming,

33 ia three jolly h., iog7a three jovi3l h., 424a

their

34ib

edge of appetite, 226 cold comfort to fill h. bellies

in ruin and confusion h., 3gsa into ruin h., 4083 world and her train h., 362b

1405

Hurlyburly's
Hurlyburly's,

INDEX
h. done,

when the

Husband,
i68a-b
till

sovereignty

over

h.,

Hyperion to a

satyr,

28ob

Hurrah

for next that dies, 7203

h. cools, 407 a

for old Kentuck, 5523 for revolution, 8853

virtuous

10770 we bring the Jubilee, 748a Hurricane, sired by h., 7603 Hurricanoes, cataracts and h., 2783 Hurries from nothing to naught, 8723 lives in haste h. to feel, 5733 Hurry, always in haste never in h., 4sob history, io48b Nature will h. back, iz$b
to get up when we fall, 975b up and wait, i iojb up please its time, loosb

last h.,

woman a crown to her h., 24a with beard, 245b woman oweth duty to h., 2igb
h.,

Hyperion's curls, 264a Hyphenated Americans, 848b Hypocrisy, base alloy of h.,

Husbanded, so fathered and so


254b

Christian without h., 747b from pride vainglory and h 6rb has ample wages, i7gb

6353

Husbandman waiteth
56b Husbandry, edge of
fruit,

for precious

homage 355 b

vice

pays

to

virtue,

of bishop, iogib
h.,

2593

in heaven, 2833 ye are God's h., 52a Husband's, level in her h. heart,

organized h., 6123 panics touchstone of h., speaking lies in h., 553

4673

world safe for


Hypocrite
falls

h.,

io4gb

2523

into sin, 1463

Husbands

at chirche dore

hadde

fyve, i66b think of fidelity not h.,

7o6b reader, 7o6b


scoundrel h. flatterer, 4913 thou h., 41 a Hypocrites, cant of h. the worst,

lecteur,

Hush hark deep sound


556a

j^b

strikes,

Hurrying, delaying not h. not, 7oib parted by h. world, 5ioa shapes met face to face, 764b Hurt, balm of h. minds, 28gb enemy and friend h. you, 7633 give delight and h. not, 2973 grief h. pain or woe, 10843 he who shall h. wren, 4903 if I don't h. her, 5463 isn't h. that counts, 8873 man keenest in self-love, 728b more frayd than h., 1833

no

h.

found upon Daniel, 353

not the earth, 583 panics produce as much good as h., 4673 power to h., 2933 sweareth to his own h,, 173 that honor feck, 6473 the
little

wren, 4goa

their health it might h., 4513 they h. me I grow older, g88a they shall not h. nor destroy,

3*a
things that help that h., 799b too badly h. to

dear, 3g6b whisper who dares, g6gb with setting moon, 652b Hushabye Street, 82ob Hushed be every thought, 5173 in grim repose, 44 ib in silence h. his soul, 5i6b now air is h., 443b till it is h. and smooth, 58ob Husk of young stars, io7oa Husks, dead h. of life, io6ib strewed with h., 26ga Husky, old h. nurse, 7033 stormy h. brawling, g48a Hustings, pasteboard goddess of h., 93 4b world's h., 6g6b Hustle, tried to h. the East, 8?2b Hustled, Indian summer never h., 777b Hustles, tells you how he h., gigb Hut, love in h., 58 ib of stone, 6343 only in h. live without fears,

my

4383 not h. in sleep, 5403 play h. and deny needy, 1493 scribes and Pharisees h., 4gb Hypocritic days, 6o3b Hypotheses, I frame no h., 37gb Hypothesis, fertile h., 10713

no need of that h., 47gb whatever not deduced


379*>

is

h.,

Hyssop, purge me with h., iga Hysterias trench confessions, 9883 Hysterica passio, 277b h. naked, Hysterical, starving

Hyrcan

tiger,

2853

io8ib
Hysterics, blind h. of Celt,

6513

accept the universe,

am,

with things
laugh,
thee,

why

should

h.

6383 4$7b

you into poetry, io6oa Hurtles in darkened air,

4423

Hurtless breaks, 27gb Hurts, fellows it h. to think, 853b


it h. my hand, 275b pinch which h. and is desired, *8ga some h. you cured, 6o4b truth never h. teller, 667b Husband and wife keep a household, 65b any her h. rather than Christian, 2353 at all times faithful h., ggsb being h, whole-time job, 88gb chaste to her h., 4o6b

4ogb Hyacinth hair, 64 ib the garden wears, 62gb trample underfoot a h., 6gb Hyacinth's temperament, go4b Hyacinths are dark too, n6b Hybla, words rob H. bees, 2563 Hydra, monstrosity more prodigious than H., 1233 Hydrant, talking is a h. in the
yard, 9303 Hydroptic earth hath drunk, 3063 Hyena, man who sold h. skin, 9243 song of siren nor voice of h., aosb Hyla breed shouted in mist, g6b Hylas, je ne vous aime pas H., 386b Hylax barks in doorway, u6b Hymn Brahmin sings, 6043 chants doleful h., 2373 sober as a h., 8isb

1563 Huzzas, loud

h.,

delight

of

h.

aunts

infant,

ioogb
detested first h., Sjgb doth safely trust in her, 273 easier to be lover than h., 5gob frae wife despises, 495b give you h. and home, 6sb

Hymnbook,
6173

cassock

band
faint

h.

too,

Hymns,

holy
is

city

adorned for
in

h.,

known

58b
273

chanting moon, 228b

h.

to

the

gates,

light wife heavy h., 235b lover in h. lost, 4343 man-o' -war's 'er h,, 874b no worse a h. than best, a87b shape a h. out of, 65gb

hotel instead of h., gs7a of praise to life, gg8a psalms h. and spiritual songs,

54a
that
fall

out

of

wind,
h.,

9573
22 2b

Hyperboles,

three-piled

am a Jew, 2333 am a Liberal, 7i5 am a Roman citizen, i lob am Actaeon, i28b am Alpha and Omega, 5&b am become death, 10553 am Davos not Oedipus, io8a am dying Egypt dying, 288b am Fortune's fool, 2253. am from Missouri, Sgob am guilty of corruption, 2073 am he that liveth, 57b am I you are you, 6643 am innocent of the blood, 453 am Jehovah said, 4443 am master of my fate, 8i6a am not as other men, 473 am not what I was, 1220 am only one, 7i7b am quite myself again, 8533 am rising to a man's work, i42b am Sir Oracle, 23 ib am that I am, 8a am that which began, 77$b am the bread of life, 48b am the door, 48b am the good shepherd, 48b am the grass, 948a,b am the light of the world, 48b am the people, g48a, losob am the resurrection, 48b am the state, 3783, 5043 am the way, 4ga am what I am, 5$a

8a, 533,

1406

INDEX
I

Ideas
Idea due to individual, 9633

am

whatever was or

is,

lacta alea est,


lago,

nab
in

am with both, 2365 am with you always, 45 a am yet what who cares, and my Annabel Lee,
and so do I, 7846 and you and all of
another
I,

*37 D

delight

conceiving

I.,

emotion communicates

i.,

8623

5733 6443

us,

2555
6753

1033

art is I science is we, believe and take it, i8gb

bring you good tidings, 463 bucket full of tears am I, 2283 but what am I, 65ob came I saw I conquered, nab came saw and overcame, 242b

585 pity of it I., 275b lam ver egelidos refert tepores, ii4b Iambics, not escape my i., nsb what little i., 8g8a Ibid's, old I. prose, go?a Ibycus, cranes of I., 7oa Ice and iron not be welded, 8253 beneath sun's rays, 37ga

every i. an incitement, 788b every thing has determinate i.,

95*
for poetry get at it as
i.
i.,

everything, 7i6b

g56b

governing i. of Hellenism, 7163 grant artist his i., 7g8b


is

made

between

Eliza

and

pursuer,

8035 it with hatchet, 4623, 499* Eve and I, 66ab even as you and I, 875a fashioned myself sorcerer, S^ob feel it and am in torment, 1153 have found it, 1053 have kept the faith, 55b have liberated my soul, 1543 have lived my day, 1223 have not begun to fight, 476a have somewhat against thee,
can,

did

caves of i., 524a chaste as i., 26ab clink of i. in pitcher, emperor of i. cream, g55a
fire

8203

and

i.

within fight, 8533

for

destruction

would

to whom i. occurs, 8i3b nothing more dangerous than i., 8g3b O the i. was childish, 4g7b of freedom, 657b of sun, 9560 of what true and false, 3733 one i. and that wrong, 431 a,

man

the fact, 7i6b true by events, 7gsa

suffice,

6 123
original i. animate nation, 6563 pain of a new i., 726b psychology give different i.,

9*7*
into eternal darkness fire
i., isgb mast-high, 524b on hot stove, g2gb seek i. in June, 554b

and

gioa
right i. invincible, 10123 right i. of the gods, g6a see clesrly in i. of it, gs6b tesch young i. to shoot, 41 gb tinker with abstract i., 10463 truth happens to i., 7g^3 when i. new its custodians have
fervor, 86 ib

silent

skating over thin

57*>

smooth the
trust not

here am I, ub hid from Him, 8s6b in twelve thousand none, 228a infinite I am, 5a8b it is I, 42b it was I it was I, 9622 John, 57a knew him when, gosb know not the man, 44b letting I dare not, a8sb man in the moon, 2 gob Muses' priest sing, igib myself am hell, 10765 myself on tilting planet, loiob once utter the I, 778b reader I married him, 67gb red I green U, Sgoa rock fly as soon as I, 5203 said the sparrow, loggb says the Quarterly, 562 b
shall return, 9592

he was he and I was I, igoa hear America singing, 6ggb heir of all ages, 647b

language of peak, loiia i., 6073 i., 2$6b


i.,

thick-ribbed

27 ib

one night's i., $24b was here i. was there, 524b cuts facets from within, Iceberg
or two at control, 784b write on principle of i., io4sb Icebergs behoove the soul, io68a hailstones on i., 6g5b
Iced,

whose time come, 5g8b with image, 5sga


Ideal,

charity

scrimped
to

and
I.,

i.,

Christian i. difficult, gi8a higher than ordinary man, 7133 life i. or reverse, 8sob Milton attracts into his i., 52gb of independence, gi5b

8o7a
3773 Ich am of Irlonde, 10835 weiss nicht, 588a Ichabod, named child I., 625b Icicle, chaste as the i., sgoa on Dutchman's beard, 252b Icicles, silent i., 5263 when i. hang by the wall, 222b
Icily regular, 6523

Iceland,

from Rome

Icumen,
winter
Icy

sumer
is
i.

is

i.

in,

10833

sing of brooks, $gb sleep alone, 6gb stand alone, ioi8a stand at the door and knock,

g87b 66ob arms hold hidden 10353


in,

polity, g4b preach i. dread realization, 9313 reduction to 3toms chimerical i., 77ga to be right by instinct, 823 union fervor with messure, 7g6a Idealism shoved aside, 8623 spark of i. fanned, 8333 Idealist, people call me i.. 842b Idealists and planners, 88ga difficult to find, 88ga

and

chill,

heroes 3S well as

i.,

7&f)b

charms,

starry-eyed i., gisb walk into gutter, 8783


Idealistic,

bound

in i. chains, 27 ib current compulsive course, 275a dazzling i. roses, ioi4b


i.

America only

i.

nation.

842b
motives, 8623
Idealize, imagination struggles to
Ideals,

57b
stranger and
afraid, 854a

death lays 3 27b

hand on

kings,

struck the board, 3233 survived, 476b the more fool I, 248a the sole unbusy thing,

52?b

then Roman now I, 8533 think therefore I am, 327b tiresias, ioo2b

principles of i. certainty, 864b silence of tomb, 58 ib took his i. hand, e>7gb Id, ego to i. as rider to horse,

834a

where
world
Ida,
'Ide,

die and you to live, gja told you so, 562a too am in Arcadia, i5ob treated him God cured him,
to

i. was there ego be, 8343 superego and i., 8343 mother many-fountained I.,

645*
for
all
'is
i.

Ideas,
dirty 'i., 8733 of knowledge,
to
i.,

Idea,

absolute

1875 want to be alone, io56a wasted time now doth time waste me, 228a went to the woods, 6833 What am I Life, g47b who saw face of God, 2133 will be heard, 6isb
will

95* angry

opposition

g37a

ashamed of divine i., 6o6a between i. and reality, 10033


communicates emotion, 86 ib conveyed but by symbol, 528b dangerous when only one, Sggb different i. of things we know,
gioa

best i. common property, 1303 burst forth, 7503 cemetery of dead i., 86gb conditioned by time, 86 ib dangerous for good or evil,

528b higher i. revolutionary, 794b I have three i., 8i8a like stars, 7333 of civilization, ggga of Marxism, 10356 tell i. by advertisements, 8943 two wsrring i. in body, 8g4b
i.,

977*

dead

i.

and

beliefs,

72gb

move the

earth, io5a

divine i. below, 6020 does away with i. of things, g53 experiments to control i., 675b free trade in i., 788a

1407

Ideas
Ideas,

INDEX
from
America
plain
i.,

Idle,

unnumbered
i.

i.

pebbles,

Ignorance and passion foes of


morality, 7o6b art hath enemy called I., 3osa best riches i. of wealth, 4493 better without your i., 8?5b

75oa
greatest artist greatest i., 6g8a have rate of growth, 7565 history of i., 888b make best i. prevail, 7ija man of nasty i., j8ga

27gb what seems

why

stand

show, 6a2b we here i.,

4<>5 a

matter and
patterns

i.,

7iga
i.,

made with
not
i.,

g42a

with impunity, 5$oa words as i. tales, 47b Idleness and pride tax heavier, 42 2 b appendix to nobility, giob
best thing to ruin foolish, i34b

blind and naked i., 6533 brings nearer death, ioo4b


childish
i. f

5g2a
i.,

poem words
too

7Q7a realize i. of intellect, 5283 of each i. age, ruling


revolutionary
i.

i., io4ia distinguished for

cloud of

6iaa

bread of

i.,

27a

Gothic
greater

i.,

424b
greater

6873
i.,

egotism sloth
evils of
i.

for

old

54ga shaken off by work,


i.,

i.

dogmatism,

8i7a

g8ab two opposed 10360


Whistler's
i.

i3oa
at

hunger
in

filth

and

same time,
art,

members no i. no

arms and

i.,

procrastination,

4^5b 7iga

in

ignorant of i., form of inert


i.,

ioi4b i45b, 5gob


i.,

facts,

77 7b

about

8g8b

won't keep, 86 ib world of i. world of practice, 7i$a Idem velle atque idem nolle, 1155 Identify themselves with the people, 47 3 b Identity, his twin i., 7373 poet has no i., $fyb
73?a tormenting everlasting L, 53gb Ideologies, excitement as to alien
single
i.,

of tears, 8363 polished i., 50 ib refuge of weak minds, 41 5b sorrow friend foe, ioga unyoked humor of i., 2$8a wine cause of i., 3&3a
Idler,

intelligent

g4ob

intense loneliness

and

i., i.,

8$2a

know nothing except my

work harder
i.

yet thought

i.,

88ob
Idling,

hound

its

own

enjoy 855 a on bent Idly next, 2283


fingers

if

work
that

to

do,

87b knowledge brings nearer i., ioo4b madame pure i., 43oa mistakes made by writers from i., io7b

him
i.,

enters

mother of devotion, jji2a never makes allowance for


724b
never
settles question, 61

i.,

i.,

i037b

wandered

725b

2b

Ides are on fifteenth day, i87b of March, ii2b, 2533 Idiocy during panic, io6ab Idiot, beauteous i. speaks, io8gb

not i. stand aside, goa Idol ceremony, 244b marble and heart stone, or noble true birth, g5b
i.,

8goa

sin but i., 2i2b not innocence, 667b of the law, 3173

no

one

evil

i.,

law

ass

i.,

66gb
i.,

nature's lay

$O7a ninety-nine percent i., 8g8a tale told by an i., a86b


to generalize is to praises, 768a

be

i.,

4gob

who

Idiotic child, 8sga Idiots, general knowledges


sess,

i.

pos-

4gob
to paint,
I.

hire
Idiot's,

i.

4gob
Delight,

playing

lo^b

sg4a superannuated thou the i. I the throng, 767a Idolatries, bowed to i. knee, 556b Idolatrous, because I am i., 8goa Idolatry, god of my i., 224* has ample wages, i7gb know neither sect nor i., i7sa mad i,, 268a Mass the highest i., i7gb on this side i., 3o4a speak of ancients without i.,
4i5b
Idols, cast his i. to the moles, 3oa four classes of i., 207a
I

owe

to

my

i.,

87b g8sa

pity his i., 66gb plays chief part, i43a preferable to error, 471 a putting us to i. again, sedate, 427 a

665b

shine with i., giga the only slavery, 7493

toboggans into know, i032a understand writer's i.,


vagueness perhaps way of i., loosb
i.,

Idle

syjb 5245 be a gentleman be i., 2053 be not solitary be not i., 3iaa biologically speaking, loagb chatter, 766b children of an i. brain, 2233 gloomy calm of i. vacancy, 431 a hands, 3g6b if i. be not solitary, 4333 if one live hundred years i., 8oa if solitary be not i., 4333 in i. wishes fools stay, 4833 little profits i. king, 646a man and he who has done much, 6gb manners not i., 653b
as painted ship,

and

false imposition,

where

i. is

bliss,

43gb

have

loved

so

long,

63ob

of the tribe, 207a old i. lost obscenes,

gi7b

Ignorant adores what he cannot understand, 77ob armies clash by night, 7^a be not i. of anything, 37b

poetry purged of i., gogb which beset men's minds, 2073 If is the only peacemaker, 251 a land of L, 1048 a other is Kipling's I., icooa pondering repose of I., 6g7b Iffucan, Chieftain I. of Azcan,

become
better

i.

man

again, giJ6b

than half know, 1273 blind and i. in all, 301 a


i.

courage to say
eye, gs6b far rather

am

i.,

8iga

be
of

i.,

78a
426a

in

spite

experience,

955*
Ifs eternally,

jumpy
6g7b

Ignis fatuus of mind, 38sb Ignobilis otii, 8473

mind knows not what

it

wants,

mock
most

air

with

i.

state,

44ib

Ignoble ease, 847 a ease and peaceful sloth, 4sb government play i. part, 788b
peace, 847b
soiled with
strife,
i.

cheap-lived, 978b learned fool more foolish than i. one, 3623 loved and were i., 884b of i., 5gob malady many i. men are sure, 844b nation i. and free, 473a
i.

i. has most grief, 7gia neither i. nor overworked, 7533 never less i. than wholly i.,

negligent youth
use,

middle

age,

6513
impotently
to mistrust,

35't>

4400
vain

nib
i.

Ignobly
all

and
i.

no occupation
not

men

i.,

because absorbed, on i. days mutinous and relsome, 42 b pass by me as i. wind, rainbow, go6a singer of empty day, 753a spear and shield, 334a tears, 648b they learn to be i., 55a time lost in i. company,

2g6b 5ggb
quar2563

great, 4osa

Ignominious, more

355D

Ignominy of boyhood, 88sb


of our natures, 330a of popular applause, 826b sleep with thee, 24ia Ignoramus, horticultural i., Ignorance, abstain from i., alike in i., 4080 ambition or ineptitude,

8g4b of his understanding, $28b of ignorance, 1450, sgob of ourselves, 2870 of what he's most assured, 27ob
i., i. despise education, i26b science teaches to be i., 86gb taught to doubt, 7883

not that

men

are

only

37sa

gsga

Ignorantly read, 4043 Ignore, men of ill judgment good, 8ia rules and regulations, 886a

i.

140

INDEX
Ignoring has 7 1 3a
Iliction,
all

Imagination
mine own,
Image, idea with
i.,

you

reject,

6iob
stamp,
i.,

Ill-favored thing but

52ga

Iliad

great

master's

25ob
faults, 267a 111 -housed ill-clad ill-nourished,

vile

i.

supreme coort follows

8 9 ob tu-rrned into angels be i., 8gib Ilion, cloud-kissing I., 22ob fatherl3nd O I., 1183 Ilium, topless towers of I., 2133 111, 3S i. luck would h3ve it, 2673 avenues of i., 6osb

g7ib
Illiberal as audible laughter, 4493 Illiteracy, conquest of i. first,

in rivers and oceans, 6g6a in the i. of God, 6b made in i. mannikin, 64$b make man in i., 5a

man

is

God's

i.,

pur g22b

man's

i.

and

his cry, 8Soa

io63b
sea of
Illiterate
i.,

o eternity, 557b

10635

him from your memory, 7

48ob
Ill-natured gossip, go4a vain i. Englishman, 3853 Illnesses, for extreme i. extreme

benefit of i., 2g43 best things confused with

i.,

568b go by, 1043 he rule the great, 2oob captive good attending captain
i.

bid C3n

311

treatments, 88b ill-housed Ill-nourished,


i.,

ill-clad

g7ib

i., 2g2b cook that cannot lick fingers,

deeds doubled with evil word

2i8b
fares the land, 44ga
fit

belief in improbable, 9 6ob doctrine so i. and dull, g76b Ills, age the harbor of all i., io4b bear those i. we have, 2623 flood of mortal i. prevailing,
Illogical

of his own eternity, 36b of phantom of life, 6g6a of war without guilt, 3973 scorn her own i., aQsb speech is i. of actions, 68b that blossoms a rose, 88ob thrice tried to clasp her i., 66a time the i. of eternity, 1433 tormenting i. in fountain, 6g6a Imagery of Greek and Latin, 4353

Images, both i. regard, 32*b deposits of accumulated experience, gssa elevate i. of senses, 5283 find mirror in every mind, 4$8b graven i. of her gods, gib heap of broken i., ioo2a of beauty, gsa of collective unconscious, 935 a
receives
i.

God

instruments of loveth not

i.,

4<Hb speaking

i.,

i7 9 b forgetfulness of
i.

all

i.,

653
free,
i.,

i49 a good better made by i., 2o8a good final goal of i., 65ob habits gather by degrees, va& how i. white hairs become fool, 242b illusion comprehensive i., 10633 larger bill for darker i., 686a layer-up of beauty, 2453 love had been i. to win, io8ga love pressed with i., 45ga luck seldom alone, ig4b

from what

you are

medicos marveling on

1133 loogb

mighty i. done by woman, 38gb no sense of i. to come, 43gb


o'er i. o' life victorious, scholar's life assail, 427a to hastening i. a prey,

without

absorbing,
i.,

777a
reflect before

4g5b
44ga 2igb 6g8b

what

throwing

ioi8b

i.

return

O my

daughter,
real

1004*

Ill-seeming, Ill-spenders,

muddy

i.

thick,
i.,

Imaginary
necessities,

gardens

with

borrowers

toads, gg6a

Ill-tempered and queer, 6733 Ill-timed truth, 7gob Illuminated reader is the poem,

3283 paint shadows in

i.

lines,

2iob
i.,

maintain no i. opinions, 45oa malice or i. will, 5oab means to do i. deeds, 237a

gi6b
Illuminatio, dominus i. mea, i8a Illuminations, bonfires and i.,

is so sweet, 2682 Imagination, a really grasping

relish

abhorred in
as
i.

men

my

i.,

265b

of

i.

judgment

ignore
Illumine, sunset
as
i., i.

Adam's dream, 584b


rolling waves,

men whom men condemn

good, 8ia

78gb mingled yarn good and i., sQgb ne'er wants occasion, 3243 news travels fast, 1373 not lived i. who passed unknown, lasb nothing becomes him i., 22 ib nothing i. can dwell in such temple, 2g6b policy in Leo the Tenth, 462a power to do me i., sgga rather calamities than suffer no i., i34b rather speak i. of ourselves than not talk, 3555 report while you live, 26 ib run to meet i. luck, 6iob speak i. of the dead, 68b spirit have so fair a house, 2g6b spirit sob in blood cell, io76b
things
i.

what in me is dark i., 34ib Illumines, history i. reality, nob Ill-used, hardest knife i., 2933
Illusion,

8303

bodies forth, 23ob baffled by facts, g22b cold and barren, 45 2 b bare i. of feast, 226a colors of i., 5293
dissolves diffuses,

certainty

generally

i.,

787* Clemenceau had one i., g76b comprehensive ill, 10633


great i., gi7a in love i. reaches zenith, 8o6a
life is

dwell most on
lost,

woman won

5285

or

883a

an

i.,

3283

of

of philosophers, 10393 power of friends, 777b


i.,

i., 8833 i. about her, g28a with egotistical i., 6133 gifted higher gift of i., 8523 in balance or reconciliation,

fantastical fate had

religion an

8s4b

rob of

i.

rob of happiness, 72gb

529a in i. of their hearts, 45b incalculable debt to i.,

that times were better, 6585 which makes me happy, 4623


Illusions

indebted to

i,

for

facts,

9353 48 2 a

judgment and
lady's
i.

i.,

528a

world of divine i., 716!) by which cheated, go8a natural to indulge in i., 464b poetry purged of i., gogb

literalists of

rapid, 5333 the i., 9963

living power loose i., 884b

prime agent, 528b

got

had bad

success,

2i5b i. on Thursday, iog6a unquiet meals make i. digestions, 2i8b ware is never cheap, 3243 weary and i. at ease, 725b weed groweth fast, i8sb wind blows no man good, i8sb I'll not budge an inch, 2iga
took
Ill-advised,

Illustrate all shadows, vivid Illustration, physical

30b

makes us eloquent, 1363


i.,

man without

i.,

978b

74ib
Illustrious
fuse,
acts

high raptures

in-

332a
i.,

bustle so

7383

name

i.

and revered, i34b

predecessors, 4253 spark, 457b

master of art, 844a of boy healthy, 5803 of i. all compact, 2 gob of man's heart, 6b one of forces of nature, g57b outdistance by i., 747b

primary

i.

living power,

some

quotations

i.,

no malice or i., 502b Image, age demanded an i., g88a


Ill-will,

reconciling

mediatory

5a8b power,

constant
Ill-born, amphibious i. mob, 3853 Ill-bred as audible laughter, 44gb this age how i., n4b
Ill-clad,
ill

i.

of the creature, 2523

dreams wrought, 8goa


give
i.

of
i.,

what we

see,

78ob
28ia

-housed

i.,

g7ib

graven horrid

i.

ga doth unfix

hair,

regulate i. by reality, 4293 resemblance striking i., solitude needful to i., 6953 such tricks hath strong i., suspend i., 10453

1409

Imagination
Imagination, sweeten my i., 2795 trace dust of Alexander, s66a truth of i., 5840 truth only in i., 844a were it not for i., 4320 wings of ostrich, 595a Imaginations and wanton tempers,

INDEX
Immense, error
is i., $g7b long derangement, Ssob river of oblivion, 722a silkworm size or i., gg7a Immensity of first power,

Immortality, evidence of fields of i., 571 a

i.,

6053

5023

of

life,

Immersed in place and period,


ggyb Immigrants, i., g72a
all

63a

from death to i., 6aa hope full of i., s6b is an achievement, 8g8b labor at eternal task, 7*2a
i., 5&5a longing after i., 393b mortal put on i., ssa not a gift, 8g8b

load of

462b
all

Lord understandeth

the

i.,

descended from

i4a my i. are as foul, 26ga waste not remnant of life in i., 1410 world canvas to i., 68 ib Imaginative awe, io6ia education of i. life, 8oob genius of west, 7o$b Imagine excellence, 10790 himself pleasing to all, 37 jb how it feels, go2a people i. a vain thing, i7a to i. is everything, 8o2a too bold to i., 45gb Imagined, each i. pinnacle, 57gb exhausted worlds i. new, 4*6b live life he has i., 68 3b

one chose
90713

person

one

loved,

republics

and
i.

principalities,

i77a

round

earth's

corners,

?jo7b

Imagines he cannot do this or that, 373b Imagining in excited reverie, 882a some fear, 2 gob Imaginings, horrible i., 28 ib Imbecile, Apollo i., 6o4a
Imbeciles, three generations of
i.,

788b
Imbecility, convinced of i., 428b Imitate action of the tiger, 24$b
fools

great

do not i. successes, io7a poems of former times,

all i. except Indians, welcomin' Irish i., 8646 Imminent, contagious blastments i., 258b deadly breach, 272b Immoderate, unseasonable and i. sleep, 4280 Immoderately married, io65b Immodest, no more modest than i., 7oob words admit no defense, $74b Immoral, moral or i. book, 8393 what you feel bad after, io44b Immorality, schools nurseries of i., 424a Immortal, bee to be i., 956b bird, 58sa crown, 42oa dead who live again, 68ga death has taken mortal life, ii3b Death the only i., 764b desire to be i., 657b diamond is i. diamond, 8o4a dim light of this i. day, 5693 driven away from i. day, 48 7 a either soul i. or perishes, gga else i. us, 3o8a genius is not i., 478a God created man to be i., g6b gods I crave no pelf, agoa grow i. as they quote, 3g8b happy be and have i. bliss, 20oa

nurslings of i., 5693 ourselves and i., 736b unveil third event, 73ga Immortalizes, diffused knowledge
i., soib Immortally, wished to remain go8a Immortals cannot escape, Sab
i.,

he lives not long 6sa

who

battles

i.,

President of the I., 78sa seek not life of i., 7gb

Immune

send you to Elysian plain, 6gb to spirit of own epoch,


i.

g 3 6b Immured,

love not alone brain, 22*a Immutable as hills, 87*a


as

in

Imogen,

much

lago

as I.,
i.

5850

of the perverse, 643a Impaint, watercolors to

Imp

cause,

24ob Imparadised in arms, 345b

one

another's
i.
it,

Impart, solitary and cannot

43oa Impartial adjustment of claims, 842b Death with i. tread, i2ob


in

thought

and

action,
i.

841 a
his

judge, 454b Impartiality, considers


treasure, iogb

as

i56b

hate, 342a

him

if you dare, 884a immature poets .i, looyb

the sun, 2<j8a Imitated humanity so abominably, 26sa Imitates, art i. nature, iggb third art i. them, gsa Imitation, art i. of nature, 1303 limps after in base i., 226b of action that is serious, g8b sincerest flattery, 5453 whole vocation endless i., 5igb Imitator poor creature, 754b without precedent and i., 4s6a Imitators, no garlands for i., 4gSa you slavish herd, i23b Immaculate, look i. of landscapes,

in flesh beauty i., 9555 in thy exegesis, io35a Jove's dread clamors, 275a
lay plans as if
i.,

Impassioned expression in countenance, 5iia


great speech i., loia Impatience and laziness, g8ob human error is i., g8ob Impatient as the wind, 5i6a mind i., 257b of disgrace, 368a Impeachment, soft i., 481 a

795a

life eternal love i., 785a locks fell forward, 6ab

longings in me, s8ga


look, 666b

a kiss, i. with married to i. verse, 335a mortal or i. here I die, names not born to die, no i. work behind, 586a not similar are i. gods and 6$a

make me

2i$a 6g6a

$6$b

men,

Impeccable all-pervasiveness, 7g6a Impediment, we marched without i., 2i7b Impediments, admit i., 2g4a in fancy's course, 27oa to great enterprises, 2o8a
wife and children are i., 2o8a Impel, causes which i. separation,

ggob
manliness in ourselves, 6g6b white chrysanthemum remains
i.,

8i4b O ship i. ship, 70 ib one i. song, $68b part of myself, 273b


is i. life,

now

47ob
Impelled, speech
i.

us, ioo6b

scrip of joy

3 8ob
will

Immanent

and

its

designs,

i. diet, igga Shakespeare rose, 4266 ib ship, 70

7 8 3b Immanuel, call his name I., 31 a Immature poets imitate, ioo7b Immaturus obi, 11053 Immediate context of history,

sight of

i.

sea,

5i3b

songs composed of tears, 6573 spark from heaven i., 4g7a spirit grows, sioa such harmony in i. souls, 235b thine i. wine, 734b

Impending, wrath and doom i., 57b Impenetrable as monads of Leibniz, g87a movable ^articles, 37gb Impera, divide et i., iijob

Impels

all

thinking things, gogb

Imperative, categorical i., 445^ magisterial or i. type, go2b to preserve rights, 8646

jewel of souls, 274a passage i. passage, 7o2b Immediately, difficult do i., they'd i. go out, 4goa

nosb

though no more, 555b way to be i. is die daily, ggoa what i. hand or eye, 48ga
wheat, 377b

Imperator vitae animus


Imperceptible, obstacle

est,

n6a
i.,

become

go8a
water, 5g2b Imperfect offices of prayer, 5i6a Imperfections, dwell on excellencies not i.,

Immemorial elms, 64gb most i. year, 643b Immense, at twelve I felt

where saints wound, gsgb


i.,

i.

reign, 3973

886b

youth

to

mortal

maids,

5365

141O

INDEX
of human Imperfections 10550 on my head, 26oa

Inattentive
Impropriety, indulge in without
i.,

mind,

Impossibility, physical and metaphysical, i., 575b Impossible, can't believe i. things,

767b

soul of wit, 932a

outward bound,

pass my i. by, soy of the Imperial, act

i.

theme,

746a carry out the i., 8gsa certain because i., i4$b

Improve each shining hour, 3g6b


shining
for
tail,

74ja
conversation,

28ia
ensign full high advanced, 342b
friend,

doing what

Improved by death, go4b


literary

is

i.

genius, 7o6b

7$6b

ear and eye expected i., 8&3a eliminate i. truth remains, 84gb
in two words i., g67b in war nothing i., cjSyb looked on as i. until effected, ig2b loyalties, 7i$b

gioa
i.

Improvement, diversion or

of

i. race ensnare, 404!) national and i. boundaries the same, 10385

man's

Tom

sword mace crown i., 244b Jones outlive i. eagle, 466a

country, 3943 learned with view to i., 72a makes straight roads, 487b of underdeveloped areas, gSsb Improvements by generation,

459b
Improves, love i. a woman, 3g8a Improving, middle age time of i., 35 ib
Improviste,
le

most

i.

of

conclusions,

867 a

votaress passed on, 22ga

Imperialism and

Chinese, losyb obstruct peace, 974a would be i., Union Imperiled,

Imperious Caesar dead, 266a Imperishable peace, 854b quiet, io6sb Impersonality of science, 675a
Impertinence, lesson on

not think what is hard is i., i42b nothing i. in supernatural, 868a nothing i. to willing heart, iSga nothing unnatural that is not i., 48 ib
takes longer, i iob that not i. she, g54a these i. women, gib to be cheated, 6o6b
to be silent, 454a to live pleasurably without living wisely, io3a to love and be wise, i25a to please all the world, 3593 to reduce society to level, 6573
to write history
i.,

courage

de

1'i.,

Imprudently married barber, 44?b Impudence, Cockney i., 754a Impulse, blot out pomp check i.,

H3a
faction

united by
I.

common

i.,

grammar

48oa household of

Imperturbe, me i., Impetuous, be thou me i. one, 57 a such i. blood, 51 la Impiety of pious, 7o6a Impious, course of i. stubbornness, 257b men bear sway, ggsb Implacable Charybdis guards left, 234* in hate, s68b Implausible already said by philosopher, 327b
Implications, 79 8b
trace
i.

mourns, io6oa lonely i. of delight, 88ib obey that i., 887b one i. from vernal wood, 5093 to see it tried, 64ob to take life strivingly, 793b
primitive
i.

with

God nothing
i.

i.,

732a-b 45 b

Impulses,

of

heart,

642b
Impulsive, our virtues are i., 6i4b Impunity, no one provokes me with i., i5ia ravage with i. rose, 66ib Impure, although it passes among i., g6b ditches i., 88$b
Impurities,
essay,

Impostors, sages all i., 455b treat two i. same, 877a Impotent, all-powerful to be

not French, 5o4a Im-possible, in two words i., g67b Impostor employs force, 109 2 a

word

i.,

of

things,

Implore, I adore thee i. thee, i92b Implores passing tribute of sigh,

44ia Import, honor meaning and 468a Importance, art makes life and

sygb Impotently great, 4osa Impoverished stock of harmless pleasure, 428b Impoverishment in symbolism,
i.

lame and

conclusion,

no room
i.

for

i.

in

9753
to

Impute, In and

i.,

ghost, 66sa put the Eagle, ioggb birds without despair to get i.,

sin I

i.,

8oob
eternal

hence

i.

human poem no i.
no

like baseball, g86b i. of poetry, 7i$b thing of i., 953 except as poetry,

Imprecision of feeling, ioo5b Impregnable, seas for fence 2i6a Impress, themselves our minds

i.,

i.,

5o8b
Impressed, line in

igob look out not i., 7i8a those i. wish to get out, 6o8a when age i. wit out, 246b who's i. who's out, 28oa
Inability to stay quiet, 726b Inaccessible, desert i., 248b tower of past, 6g4b

which force

i.,

95?a Important, beginning most i. part, 94a beyond this fiddle, gg6a and discriminate between i.
if

379 b Impression as from seal of ring, 95 b be not swept off feet by i., is8b Impressions, did not trust my

valley of reveries, gjob Inaccuracy, not mind lying hate


i- 757a saves explanation, go4b Inaction, disciplined i., tjoib moment not of action or

own

i.,

8ga
to eradicate, i46a of external, 6g8b

negligible, 94ga anyone think it important, 794a people most i. element, loob

early falseness in i. forever courting

i.

hard

i.,

new

i.,

7ib
mode,

io6a
saps vigors of mind, 1743 Inactivity, wise and masterly
i,,

principles inflexible, 641 a

question

is

what you

of free mind, 88sb Impressive, poetry most


7i 3 b

i.

think,

7iga timing is most i. factor, 68a Importunate chink, 454b pawing and neighing, 86oa rashly i., 5g2b Importune, I here i. death, 288b too proud to i., 44sa
Impose, fates 2i6a
i.

thunder i., 7&4a Imprinted, remember what is i., 95 Imprison gifts in such calling, 888a
Imprisoned
in

50ib Inadequacy, intellect understand its i., 9353 Inadequate formulations, io26b their food is i., g82b

every

fat

man,

that

men

abide,

in viewless winds, 27 ib

some evil said Inadvertently thing, 9 6b Inane, intense i., 5693 Inanimate, mortality of i. things,
772a
Inanition, spirit die of i., 7i3b Inarticulate, raid on i., loosb
Inartistic,

Montezuma, 595b
Imprisonment,
i.,

one

style of art, ios8a

age

ache

penury

Imposition, reputation a false 27 3b


sibility,

and

i.,

27 ib

begotten

upon

i.,

36oa
likely
i.

preferable, gga

Improbable, absurd not the i., 676a truth sometimes i., 562a what remains however i., 84gb

Thoreau

i.,

7g8a

Inattention, patient i., 73 la Inattentive, brave man i. to duty,

Inaudible
Inaudible and noiseless foot, 2703 its name is The I., 743 Inauspicious stars, 2256 Incalculable soul, lojob Incapable, noble and i. of deceit, 52ib Incarnadine, seas i., 28$b Incarnate by the Holy Ghost, 6oa
Inclines

INDEX
to think there is God, 688b Include me out, gfr/b Includes itself in power, 268a

Inci eases, necessity of being: readv 7

Increaseth, he that sorrow, 27b

i.

knowledge

i.

Inclusion,

life

i.

and confusion,

Fourth of July
part of
i.

i.,

5033

cosmos, g86b

799b Income, annual i. twenty pounds, 67ib business with i. at heels, 457 a he has i. she pattable, 10523
just

Increasing belly, 24 ib purpose runs, 647b


store with loss, 2g2b youth waneth by i., 204b

Increment, unearned i., 6igb Increments, velocities of evanescent i., sggb Incumbent, care of poor ciety, 374a
Incurable, accept as
disease
life is
is i.,
i.

Well

I told

you
of

Incarnation

6243 land he
so,

man

will

pay more

i.

tax,

loved,

94a

i.

on

so-

934b
Incarnations of hopes and fears, 57 ib Incense, gods themselves throw i.,

7563 rent is sorrow i. tears, 32 ib solvency not matter of i., 8783 twenty expenditure nineteen,

live

beyond

i.,

the present,

24ib
disease,

28ob

67 ib
i.,

hope, io8ib

my
soft

morning
i.

4833

hangs, 5825 stupefying i. smoke, 6&4b Incense-breathing morn, 44oa Incensed, blows and buffets have
i.>

Incommunicable, 55 a
Incomparable, 772a
oil

burden

of
sole

i.,

an

i.

358a

Clemens

i.,

Macassar, 5603
spice

old age is an i. disease, 6o7a Ind, from east to western I., 24gb wealth of Ormus and I., 34ja Indebted, at once i. and dis-

s84b

fragrant Incentive, feel beautiful

most

when

Incompatibility
i.,

of

life,

2o8a
i.

as

pang, 79 9b
Incertainties
selves,

now crown themit

2Q3b

Incessant,
care,

what boots

with

i.

by same things Incompatible name, 6sgb for view, unfit and Incomplete 754a Incompleteness, God's greatness
round
i.,

charged, 344b to memory for his jests, 48sa Indecency, prejudicial as public i., ig6b Indecision, nothing habitual but i- 793 a Indefatigable pursuit of unattainable, 878a science Indefinite,

3383 Incessantly, sinned i., 8ggb stand on head, 74$b

6i7b

Incomprehensibility of God, 591 a Incomprehensible, history i. with-

repulses

i.,

6753
Indefinitely desolate, 878b

weeps

i.

work

i.

for sin, 48gb to the last, 4783


i.,

my

world joked

76ga 884b yo2b


g6ga i8sb

Inch, cannot grow by i., cubic i. of space miracle, every i. a king, 27gb every i. not fool is rogue, give an i. take an ell,
I'll

out Christ, 722a mutual i., Incomprehension, ios8b Inconceivable idea of sun, 956b with intelligence, Incongruous

75b
Inconsistencies in principle, 7&2b of opinion justifiable, 548a-b Inconsistency in American moral-

Indelicate fool Americano, 10573 Indemnify, literature effort to i., 6073 Indemnity for the past, 4263 Indenture, this oath and this i., 88a

not budge an
i.

i.,

2iga

no

painful gain, paint an i. thick, 26sb

to

688b
2g5b

queen

it no i. further, rule of taste, 777a tale cornered in i., Si^b

ism, io55b Inconstancy, constant i- 357 b

hi

Nature
i.,

Independence, as Japan kept 997b be our boast, 5083 bulwark of our i., 6363

i.,

nothing
state of

constant but

s88b
57ga 374*

Inchcape Rock, s^b Inches, death by i., 2goa die by famine die by i., g86a thirty i. from nose, io6ob
Incident,
I

s6gb Inconstant childish proud,


i.,

man

equal in marriage, 94jb forever, 5473


glittering generalities of laration of L, 5gia-b

Dec-

mob

is

varied

and

i.,

governments whose
edged, 4g2a
ideal of
i.,

i.

acknowl-

moon, 224a
she will i. prove, io8sb Inconvenience, go with show of i., 979 a Inconveniences, modern i., 76ob Incorrect, will most i. to heaven,

curious

i.

of

dog

in

individual

gi5b i. economic printii

nod is

In-.ipit vita

nighttime, 8soa in Scyllam cupiens, 2343 nova, i5ga


i.,
i.,

pie, lost genius of

9 5 7b

magnanimity

trust,

v 6363 682b

Incisions, underneath fine

7343

257b
Incorruptible, dead raised smiling sincere i., 10563
i.,

Incitement, every idea an

533

788b
Incitements, safeguarding from
i.,

middle-class blasphemy, S^b mutual guarantees of i., 842b no conscious goal, gg7b-gg8a

Incorruption, corruptible put on


. .

now and independence


547a

forever,

864b
Inciters

of

servile

insurrection,

75*a
Incivility

and

procrastination,

in i., 53a Increase, as if i. of appetite, 25yb from fairest creatures desire i.,

55*b
Inclement, raw i. summers, $8gb Inclination cannot alter evidence,

agia

of solitude, 6o6a reluctant last resort, gg7b-gg8a resistance to herd, gisb sentiment in Declaration of I.,

God gave

i.,

52a

6373
to this day, gg7b

462b
read as
i.

leads,

4$ob

his tribe i., 55 ib in proportion with years, io27b of his government, 313

thoughts according to i., 242b to hear you, $g5b to injustice, io24b Incline thine ear O Lord, 32b thine ears to my sayings, 4a
Inclined, as to embrace

without i. or diminution, 5gob Increased devotion to cause, 6$ga


force
in nature not i., 7ogb from whence comforts i., 486a Jesus i. in wisdom, 46b knowledge shall be i., 35 a means and leisure, 6i2b

Independent and have inherent rights, 445b free and i. states, 46ob, 46sb scientist, io33b support renders i., 461 a Indescribable, beauty i., 8673
Indestructible

Union

indestructible

me

she

i.,

3410
as twig bent tree's i., always to joy i., 488a sins they are i. to, 352a to learning much i., 68oa

4o6b

Increases,
sions,

absence

i.

great

pas-

356a

to snap like vixens,

ggob

bezzle i., 10633 flesh i. but not wisdom, in geometrical ratio, 5o2a

Sob

states, 6273 Indeterminable, life-form i., gssb Index, a dab at an i., 447* marble i. of a mind, 5ioa Indexes baby figure of giant mass, 268a Indian, I'll be an I., io65b

1412

INDEX
Indian land undefiled, like the base I., 276b lo the poor I., 4o8a
Indisposeth,
living
i.

Infamy
for

dying,
i.,

331*
Individual, affirmation of

morn on

steep, 3$6b not decked with I. stones, 2i$b lion of falcon glance bearing,

the

I.

5 66b Sioux or Crow, 82$b summer of life, 777b to wilderness to teach I., 868b wilderness, 3873 Indians, all immigrants except I.,

786a argue point with i., 6g6a balance of individual with representative, 5293 competition hard for i., 757a connection of i. man, uooa

Industry, avarice spur of i., 434^ captains of i., 5783 choke fountain of i., 5483 cultivated i. and frugality, 7170 free to regulate i., 4723 in art a necessity, 7543
life

without
i.

i.

guilt,
i.,

love of bustle not

6gga 1303

development repetition of race,


833b
difficulties of

not
of

only but judgment, 452b


avail,

no

government
goia
history
of

of family, $$$b relationship to i.,


i.

omnipresent 867a

10323 in brooding

i.,

973D-974a
to I., io4aa give country only good I. dead, 7423 ten little I., iog8a thanks f'r bein* presarved fr'm
I.,

is the i., 4773 g6$a economic independence princii.

idea due to
ple,

i.,

proletariat product of i., 686b to quote argues feeble i., 88 b without art brutality, 6gga Inebriate, cheer but not i., 3990,

g57b
i.,

8gia
called

liberty of

6igb
i., 7073 424a development of i.,

Indians',

Guanahani in

I.

tongue, i72a
India's coral strand, 54gb Indicates, determines or
fate,
i. man's 682a whole Indictment against people, 453a

not

no i. could resent, ggoa no progress except in


i.

458a of air am I, 735a Inebriated virtue, 7763

but

species,

ontogenesis

752b person

sacrificed

to

i.,

g6gb

with verbosity, 6133 Ineffable, mystic sees i., g3$a Ineffective, materiel without rale i., gsgb Ineffectual angel, 7173

mo-

Indies,

had come
I.,

to the

I.,

1723

wealth of

43b
conquer a people,
i.

priceless i. man, 8g5a public strength i. security, 484b universe directed to one i.,

armed neutrality i., 8423 Inelegance, continual state of


533&

i.,

went

to

I.

to

7o2b

Ineptitude, ignorance ambition or


Inequalities

i73b
Indifference,
verse,

benign io68b

of

uni-

way of seeing, 7g5a who refuses to defend, 5033 Individualism, art most intense i.,
gsob Individuality, England paradise of i., 867b Individuals, if i. have no virtues,
i,,

and
effect

unfairnesses,

extinction from i., io45b mask of i., g$4b moral i. of cultivated, morn and cold i., gg6a on part of government, softness of i., 747b
to quality,

84ob rugged

Inequality

of

brutalizing,

7i6b
of environment, 757a religion of i., 7i6a Inert, divine i., 6g6b

7o6b
gsga

iog2a

earth tideless and


facts,

i.,

8133

gisb
i.,

tragedy of love

g32a
i.

Indifferent, all matter

to form,

3ga
and cannot enjoy
good bad
it, 42gb-43oa children of earth, 26ia delayed till I am i., 4gb
i.,

not act arbitrarily, 10133 numerous free active, 7133 reproduction to new i., 4753 Indivisibility of peace, g4ia
Indivisible, fleshed fair erected
i.,

777b
animal
55a
walks

Inescapable

with

me, 106 9 a wide water i.,

1068 a

3743, 4383

stood aside been i., io54b to be i. essence of inhumanity,


universe
is i.,

Indifferently, 2 53 D

look

on
i.

both

i.

freedom i. word, 10253 grandeur i., ioi5b nation under God i., 8g2b peace i., g4ia Indolence, phlegmatic emerged from i., 46gb wealth die parent of i., g4a Indolent but agreeable doing
nothing, i4ob readers become more i., vacuity of thought, 458b

Inestimable, thine i. love, 6ob Inevitability of gradualness, 857 a of wars, 954b Inevitable, arguing .with i-> 6g4a awaits alike i. hour, 44oa

not grieve over

i.,

io6a
i.,

war

is i.,

9505
terminological
i.,

Inexactitude,

Inexhausti lustible, Paris


Inexorability
of

Indigested, irregular

piece, 427!)
i.

law

io2oa of nature,
core

Indignant, no one such liar as

447a

man, 8o5a
spirit

fled

i.

to

shades,

iigb

Indomitable people of Vermont,

Indignation

Indignatio, ubi saeva i., sgia at literary wrongs,

gub
soul,

687a Inexorable boredom at life, 3653 his own i. self, 6g6a


'

of

66ia

5280 provoking thy wrath and L, 6ia


391 a, 8843 unsatisfied i., 7o8a until the i. be overpast,

savage

i.,

as thee, 7033 Indomitably on his instincts, 6o5b in luxury of skepticism, Indulge

untamed

law deaf

more

irresistible benignant, gssib i. inflexible, 46ab fierce and i. far,

225b

Sosb
323
to

will

produce

verses,

i^ga
i.

myself a little the more, 375b never i. in poetics, io6b

Inexplicable dumbshows, 26ab mystery of sound, ioo7a poetry search for i., 957b Inexpugnably in the necessary,

Indirect,

persecution

way
i.,

Indulgence, beg your

i,

but why,
7923 4o5b 68oa
pur-

plant religion, g2gb poet become more


Indirections,

53ib
ioo7b
of propensity Indus, from I. Industan, six men
Industrial,
to forego, to Pole,

by

i.

find directions,

26ob
Indiscretion,

of

I.,
i.

794 Inexterminate, man's practically igaga of passion Inextinguishable woman, sgib


Infallibility

lover

without

i.,

dog

serves

no

of

bad-tempered
7g6a

782b
Indiscriminate charity, 757a
readers, 855b

Indispensable, as loved

we

are

i.,

pose, 845b progress available, g82b Industrialized communities, 9623 Industries, business crises wrecked
i.,

woman, g4gb
Infallible
all-pervasiveness,
liberty,
1'i.,

sympton of

466a
flattery,

825a

8igb

Infallibly Infame, ecrasez

gained by

4i?b
i.

charm

i.

to

women, 857b

Industrious

comforts not L, 68ab condition of freedom, goga

make
no
i.

yourself

i.,

8g7b

man, g7ob

ambitious liar, 76ib conversationalist, 10323 honest and i. men's lives, giga only a few i. Scots, 2053 Industry, arms i., ioi6b

Infamous, crush the delay, ggga


rich quiet

thing,

and

i.,

5g6a
in
i.,

Infamy,

date

live

g73b

heaped on memory, 6s8b

1413

Infancy
us in i., Infancy, heaven about 5 1 3b nations like men have i., 5970

INDEX
nfinite heartsease, 244b in faculty, 261 a
inferiority,

information, can find i./43ib not better than

judgment
10203

i.,

6g6b

not only around our i., 6gjja io86b perish in their i., shined in my angel L, jGab tetchy and wayward thy i., giyb Infancy's unconscious spell, Ggyb Infant, compared to an i., 74b crying in night, 65ob i. year, 3273 firstling of the mewling and puking, 24ga of three, ioogb Infanticide, rape death humiliation,

a king of i. space, 261 marvelous mercies i. love, 774a meadows of heaven, 6223
i.

knowledge

lost in
i.,

i.,

ioo4b

only ask for

67 ib
i.,

woman

of little

5333
past,

nature's

book

of

secrecy,

2873
to i., s63b nothing in relation passion and the pain, 6643 are i., 86ib possibilities power wisdom goodness, 3873 riches in little room, 2i2b

Informed, correctly i. 3s to 59 6b people well enough i.,


Infrequent,
sighs

g7a
i.,

short

and

1002b

worshipper of gods, i2ia Infringement of human freedom,


Infuse, illustrious acts tures i., 3323

io8ia

shapeless white, g53b silence of i. spaces, 363b

high rapinto men,

Infantryman's,

look
i.

at

i.

eyes,

io8ob
Infant's, in every

cry of fear,

48 9 b

can never meet, 3603 variety, 287b comest virtue smiling, 2883 what cannot see over is i., 5763

though

i.

souls

of

animals

i.

2343
Infuses
th3t
liberal

obedience,
passions,

newborn
ly,

i.

tear,

48gb
Ifs eternal-

what

Infants boys

men and

that to I., sgga while men believe in i.,


is

453b
683b
Infusing

thoughts

and

6g7b

canker galls i. of spring, 2583 me a dozen healthy i., g4ga nay who but i. question, 73 ib where unbaptized i. are laid, 78 3 a Infect, false words i. the soul, gsb to north star, 246a Infected, all seems i. that i. spy,
give

despair, 3453 Infinitesimals, countless i. of feeli.

wrath snd

Ingenious portable plumbing,

ing, 53oa
Infinities,

numberless

i.

of souls,

Infinitude, finite reveal i., io6sb out of i., 86ib grasp as much of silence, 7o$b of hand, Infinity, hold i. in palm

and Ingenuity, skill surprise you with fa i. chi Ingiuria,


Inglorious

i., i.,

434a g87b

non perdona,

403b
Infection
Infelicity,

4go3

and hand of war, aa6b


her
i.

years too many,


-

3153

sense of constant i., 356b Inferior grievances, iogib

Cw

Infirm, child i., 6o3b minstrel i. and old, 5183 my body i. and exhausted, 1743
of purpose, z8%b

Ingratiate

arts of peace, Milton, 44ob man, 2783 Ingrateful deeply with mind,

35b

mute

i.

3gib
Ingratitude, denounce
i.

coldness,

54ga
i,,

poor

i.

we3k old man, 2783


bear his friend's

no one make you feel i., g8ib of man whose rights I trample,
74ga
superior providence of
Inferiority,
i.,

Infirmities,

haste in paying is i., 355b hate i. more than lying, 2533

2563 bear i. of weak, $ib


Infirmity,
last
i.

74ga
i.,

of noble

mind,

Inhsbit, build houses

m3n's i., 24gb thou msrble-hesrted fiend, 277b and i. them,

acknowledgment of
i.,

546a
feeling of
infinite
i.,

i02ob

of his age, 2773 of will, 6o6a

6g6b

moral

i.

of

man, 7643
i.,

rancor feeling of Senator seldom

g77b
i.

proclaims

776b
Inferiors, between superiors i., 72a revolt to be equal, g8b Infernal constancy, 836a newspapers the most i., serpent whose guile, 34ib Inferno, Dante of dread I., Infidel I have thee on the

and

Inflamed with mutual animosity, 4803 with study of learning, 3403 Inflation is repudiation, giia weakens government, io63b Inflections, beauty of i., g55b Inflexible, importsnt principles i.,
6413 law deaf inexorable i., we must be i., g2ib Influence, cock has great 4^2b
i.

who country belongs to people i. it, 6373 house 3nd all that i. it, 463b parched places, 343 soul of grandam i. bird, 2343 Inh3bit3nts, Californians 3 race not i., 8643 not only i. of field, 454b Inh3bits our frail blood, 2533 poem, 10613 Inharmonious, sickness sin death
Inhere 3S do the suns, 7373 Inherent as oak tree in acorn,
101 sb

48 ib

on

66sb
hip,

own dunghill, i25b commands all light all

i.,

3133

235 a

worse than an
Infidelity,
i.,

i.,

55a

neither loses through 858b Infidels, Jews kiss and i. adore 404a sleep with Turks and i., 228a Infinite, aim at the i., 78ga climbing after knowledge i.
2123.

corrupt i., 45 3b over lives of others, 6g8b planet3ry i., 2773


rain
i.

decay

is

i.

in

all

things,
i.

Sob

rights, Inherit, all

44b
which
it

dissolve,

snd judge
i.

prize,

3353

salutary

some being or
teacher's
i.

example, 4*8b i., 70 ib never stops, 777; unwarranted i., ioi6b

of

flow'rets of Eden i., 543a good to i. library, 8igb meek shall i. the earth,

i8b,

day excludes the night, deal of nothing, 23 ib


debt through eternity, 478a echo of i., 7873 evil has i. forms, $6$b

widest helpful i., 6g8b win friends i. people, loooa Influenced by the polls, g8sb Influences, servile to all skyey i. 2713 sweet i. of Pleiades, 163
Infolded,

4oa tonight it doth i., 7i2b with psin purchssed 2213 Inherence, divided 3n

i.

pain,

i.

with

fellow of i. jest, 265b fellows of i. tongue, 245a genius i. capacity for taking
pains, 77oa God a sea of
i.

wide world-embracing i., 5763 tongues of flsme i,


i.

10073 Inform, occasions


press

him, 46gb enter upon your i., g2oa meek enter i., go73 must I lose soul's i., B$ob not be destroyed, iogi3
questions of i., 7?6b Inherited, tradition not i., 10073 Inheritor, president is i., 10683 Inherits honor or wealth, 5273 Inhuman as hawk's cry, gg5 a
of the veritable ocean, gs6a

against

me

goodness has wide arms, he cannot bury under


57 6a

substance, 1523 16 la
finite

home

Christm3s, gioa
i.

their discretion, 47 sb Information, benignant

hobby

1414

INDEX
Inhumanity, indifferent of i., 836b
is

Inseparable
i.,

essence

Injustice,

mankind censure
to person

g^a

no
i.,

i.

who

consents,

Innocent, look like i. flower, 2823 man sent to legislature, 8gsa

man's
Inimies,

i.

to

man, 4g2b
without
8gob

1522.

merriment, 768b

livin*

Inimitable vegetative gracefulness,


Iniquities, judge Iniquity, approved

allow

i.,

78ga

bond draw
Sob
gray

of
i.

i.,

i. f 8ggb 490 with cords of vanity,

nothing so felt as i., 672a-b on part of government, gsga one man's justice another's i., 6073 road to downfall, 63 ib sometimes public service, logib
threat to justice, loSsb Injye other people's sufferin', 89 ib Ink, crave shelter of i., 842b effusion of i., 444b essential in painting, 1593 every drop of i. ran cold, 44aa gall enough in thy i., 253a
galley slave to
i.,

minds i. and quiet, 358b moon, 85 6b no i. wit be suppressed, 46ga


of the blood, 4$a
officious i. sincere, 43jb skin of i. lamb parchment, 2153
sleep,

283b than one i.

suffer,

444b

i.,

23gb

that doeth i., ga I was shapen in i., iga

him
is

who perished being i., i4b women i. and pure, 2g6b Innocently, live i. God here, 4253
Innocuous desuetude, 7713 Innovation, opponents of out, 8473
scientific
i.
i.

love soft words of oblivion, 3313

pardoned, gsb

hate

i.,

SSga

die

punish wicked for their i., 3ib reaped i., 35b religious know more about i.,
of the fathers, ga 737a Iniuria, volenti non fit i., 1523 Injunctions, parting i., g25a and not i., 75b Injure, to benefit to i. does Injured, forgiveness
visiting the
i.

5gob

hath not drunk i., 22a saw pen and i., 25ga seated livelong day before i.
never
slab, i6aa Inkstand, Vesuvius' crater for
i.,

rarely converts op-

ponents, 847a Inns not residences, gg6b of molten blue, 735a Innuendoes, beauty of

i.,

g5$b

Initial of creation,

&97 a Inky, not alone my i. cloak, *57b Inlaid with patines of bright
gold, 235b Inland island, 7763 though i. far we be, 5igb tract of i. ground, 5i6b Inlets, through creeks and i.
ing,
classics

Innumerable bees, 64gb caravan which moves, 574b


things creeping
i.,

2ib

belong, isob
lover's hell,

Inoffensive, smooth easy i. to Hell, io4b untitled aristocracy, 634b

down

346a
thirst,

Inquire, shoot

first

i.

afterwards,

minds
loob

i.

by hunger and
save
i.,

io26b

mak-

no one

i.

by

himself, i44b

688b
i., g42b have charm in

things as they are, 8oib Inquirer, workshop of serious i.,

why

party, 7703 those I have

Inn, book's an

779D
i.,

io76b
i.

6o8a

Inquiries,

whom, they have


i3ob
Injures, never

they hate,
i.,

pardons those he

Injuries, forgive saints in your i.,

me my
27sa
of
i.

i.,

io76b
their

Injuring,

at expense

i.

72b time without kill 82a


i.

virtue,

eternity,

hands, 753 rarely escapes restrain men from i., 47sa i. f 34gb Injurious, 'beauty though
Injury,

own

gain timely i., *84b happiness produced by i., 4$2a make my house your i., gg6b no room in the i., 46a remember i. Miranda, 9 02 a take mine ease in mine i., i83a up to old i. door, 96 ib warmest welcome at an i., 4j2a world not i. but hospital, 33oa Inner air i. light, io48b blindness, looob

suspended religious i., 466a Inquiring eye or tongue, 53$b Inquiry thought to aim at some good, g7b undismayed unintimidated i.,
gi2a
Inquisition, committee
Inquisitive,
i.,

951 a

acute
to

i.

dexterous, of
selves,

453* Insane love

speak

man, 543 mine with


resolve
i.
i.

i.

add

insult

to

i.,

i2gb,

conflicts,

weather, g28a g85a

77ob most i. of passions, 8g7a


ordinarily he is i., 588b root, 28 la Insanity often logic, 633b Insatiate blood, io56a

435

engraved in metal, iyga fear of i., 8g2b


greatest

service

or greatest

i.,

temple's weather, g28a what i. voice says, 4g7b Innisfail, harp of I., 537b
Innisfree, go to

shrine, 5isa

93b
never forget i., go4a never use treatment with view to i., 88a

87gb Innocence and health, 44ga of i., 882 a ceremony


I.,
i. for i., 2gsa closing up his eyes, 21 ib confession next thing to i., i27b fearful i., 5i2a has nothing to dread, 37&b

pursue war with heaven, 343a is what I aim at, 8o4a Inscription, altar with i., soa Inscriptions, lapidary i., 43ib
to

Inscape

changed

Inscrutable

colossal

and

alone,

recompense i. with justice, 72b sooner than insult, 4isa such i. vex a saint, 2iga violence and i. to humanity,
looa
violence

and
let

i.

to willow, looa

where
i57 a
Injustice,

i.

me

sow pardon,
i.,

bear with patience

36ia complain of i. of government, 503b conscience with i. corrupted, 2i5a easy to bear, g6ob extreme justice extreme i., 15 ib extreme justice often i., io8b extreme law is extreme i., io8b fear of suffering i., 355a inclination to i., i024b jealousy i,, 4ooa makes democracy necessary,

i. a child, 36gb ignorance not i., 667b i. of sea, 88sa never blossom into license, $78b of love, 252a of our neighbors, 68gb our peace our i., 5 iga recovered i., 68$b silence often of pure i., 2953 what is our i., 9960 Innocent and beautiful, 883b armed without i. within, 4123 as new-laid e^g, 76sb calm quiet i. recreation, 326b children's souls not i., i46b condemn an i. person, 4i7a coursed down his i. nose, 247!)

her

8i2a dark i. workmanship, sioa dumb i. grand, 7153 jest unseen i., 22ob Insect carries impress of Maker, 383 a
I

murderous

am

that

i.

brother, 7o8a

man mere

i.,

78ob

scraping on surface of life, 772a vile i. that has risen up, 42ob Insects, creatures both i. and hu-

mans, 946b get meaning for other i., 772a loud and troublesome i., 454& of the hour, 454b to whom God gave lust, 7o8a
Insensate
care
of mortals,

nsb

Insensibility, stark i., 42gb Insensible, honor i. then, 24ob to freedoms of Constitution, 9 67 a

he that maketh haste not i., 26b

to

be rich

nonviolence Inseparable, truth i., 8g7a

and

1415

Inseparable
Inseparable, one and
i.,

INDEX
547 b,
Institooshuns, greatest
i.

of land,

Insures us to git best

o'

noose

895
sex

75ob
i.,

and beauty
i.,

g86a

Institute

and

digest

of

anarchy,
i.

Inside, fur side

g<>7a

454a
Instituted, governments

not forgotten i. of church, *4oa smash to see what's i., 6755 Insidious encroachment by men of
zeal,
it,

among
dosed

men, 4?ob
Institution,

establishment

8333

did i. want Insurrection, such watercolors, 24ob servile i., 75*a suffers nature of an i., 2543 Intangible, world i. we touch, 85?a
never
Integer vitae i2ia
Integers,
Integrity,

Insignificant,

man

i.

and aware of
line
-written,

glorious

i.,

scelerisque
i.,

purus,

9i$b Insincere, most


loooa

i.

lengthened shadow of one man, 6o6a life's a pleasant i., 7693


Institutions
cease

God made

72oa

Integration, different

Insinuating appearance, 7ia


Insipid
as

being
i.,

liberal,

queen on card, 6542


vulgar,
i.,

i., ioj8b clothed with i., 3613 destruction of natural i., ioib

happiness i. to tale without love

87 8a

8o2b

conditions for free continuity of i.

959b

in silence preserve
territorial
i.,

i.,

1593

and Empire,

84ab
f

Insisture course proportion, 267b Insolence, above i. and triviality,

921 a
create nation, 6i2b greatest i. of land, 75ob
hostility against i., liberal i. enemies

were we men of i. io7sb Intellect, achievements of i.


lasting,

ever-

996a flown with

n6a
i.,

i.
-

and wine, $4%b

5483
of freedom,

of office, 2 62 a

strength without i., 554b surfeit begets i., 77a Insolent menaces of villains, 464b

8o6a
neither for nor against i., 70ia overthrow of i. by force, 864b
political
i.

adduces authority uses not i74a conformity of object and 155*


effort of
i.

i.,

Insomnia, amor vincit i., io6ib Inspiration, cleanse by the i. of


thy Holy Spirit, genius one percent i., 81 ib hierophants of i., 5733 lost an i., 98 ib madness without i., 109 la no more i. than muffins, SgGb whatever poet writes with divine i., 88a
Inspire hopeless passion, 66oa two qualities i. affection, g8a we do not i. conduct, &6b

superstructure, go$a
i.,

6ob

sought to destroy this country with


Instruct sorrows to

its i.,

7013 6^7a

be proud, 2363 Instructing, delighting and i. at same time, i24b


Instruction,
I will

to see poor, io8aa extraction of living i., 34oa fashion birth i., 7213 feather to tickle i., 536a forced to choose, 884a

health and

i.

the two blessings,

102b

better the

i.,

satisfaction and i., 4b text of civil i., Instructor, age not qualified as

47b

i.,

68*b
Instructors,

practice

best

of
i.

i.,

improperly exposed, 522b invisible to man who has none, 5 6 4a is to emotion as clothes, 86aa judgment of i. half truth, 9353 light between truth and i., 161 a march of i., 533a

who

i.

love
(

most

fortunate,
i.,

is6a
Instructs,

marks of God in
too,

liberal

i.,

544a
i.,

569*
Inspired, pired, eyes upraised as
Inspires, fair

delights reader
fever
is

mugwump

educated beyond

44gb
30 ib

wine

i.

fame us and

i.,

4iob
us,

377 a Instrument,
3<54b
little i.

Nature's

i.,

fires

Inspiring bold

John Barleycorn,
first

appeared, 74*a
to

772a not i. but personality, 7033 not understand only by i., 935a opinion from feelings not i.,
705
physical tinged with i., 6143 pure i. find pure pleasure, 8oib

495b
Installment, gratitude repays
i.,

made mind

i.

like musical

know, J5$a i., 7o$b

i$ia Instances, wise saws and modern i., *49a


Instancy, majestic 8s6b Instant, for each ecstatic in season, 55b
i.,

of slavery, 4433 of trade and commerce, of your peace, i57a


i.

75a

restless versatile

i.,

7*sb
with

i.,

7g4a

of Executive, 5jia pliant sweeter than sound of i., gjoa tune the i. here at the door,
3<>8a

sin of i. that triumphed, 6ijb subtlety of i., 779b


taste

connects

i.

senses,

made
more

i.

eternity, 664a than Feet, 8s6b

5*8a thought labor of


truth

i.,

5ggb
of
i.,

Instruments,

find

fit

i.

of

ill,

satisfaction

6431
935*

Instant's truce
vice,

between virtue and


i.

4?4b
fit
i.

68gb
erotic

to

make

slaves,
i.,

Instinct,

questionable,

93 6b

genius and mortal of darkness, 281 a

426a 2543

imaging i., 88ab understand its inadequacy, voice of i. soft, 8g4a weakness of i., 768b
will
i.,

men should be right by i., 8aa no longer guided by i., 95b


reason against
it i.

for self-preservation, 845b

of European greatness, 4853

and

i.

the

for

it,

756b

running off upon i., io8ia spirit and i. in harmony, 9$6b telepathic i., 976b truth by i. here, 667a volcanic political i., 8$8a war not an i., 9783 Instinctive, killing for food not i., 9 8ob pursuing i. course, 5&5b Instinctively, rats i. have quit it,
2963
Instincts, a few strong i., 5163 decisions more of i. than will,

played before the Lord on i2b thousand twangling i., 297a to plague us, a8ob we've notes we've i., 55b
Insufficient,

Intellection, happiest
Intellects,

i.,

same, 3731 io7ga


i.

argument and

too

448a
three classes of i., i77b Intellectual, a tear an
i.

thing

Insubstantial pageant faded, 207b


ability

49oa
,

alone

is

i.,

All-in-all, 5

na

379a
Insular Tahiti full of peace, 6973 Insult, add i. to injury, isgb,

before committees, 951 a being, 343b


chains, io53b

435b
injury sooner than
to God, 662b Insulting, rushed to
i.,

4i5a
i.

chap, 767b co-perception, 6ioa


foe,

meet

48 2 b
Insults of Fortune,

935*>

heed no i. but our own, jgga high i., 5 i 3 b plant himself on i., 6o5b uncivilized Eastern i., 87ib

424b unavenged, 5i6a Insure domestic tranquillity, 474a peace of mind, 886a
Insured,
7 65 b

g4ib dandyism, 73ob desolation, 6873 enjoyment, 857b hatred worst, 88sb
curiosity,

they

were

heavily

i.,

Japanese propensity for i., 9382 life like bees, 867a material progress depends on 628a
i

1416

INDEX
Intellectual, neutralize
i.

Intolerable
i.,

element,
i.

Intent, pious passion grave

867b Northwest Passage 438a


not separate
i.

8493
to

world,

prick sides of
truth
told

Intermingle soga
4goa

jest

with

earnest,

my

i.,

28ab
i.,

with bad

from

social,

gj7b

upon our
logb
Intention

ought
95 ia
passion i74a

to

refuse

to

interests in old age,

Intermission, laugh sans L, *48b pleasure is i. of pain, Internal domestic empire,

testify,

of

environment, Syga

drives

out

communicating

medium, &75a
International,
affairs,

sensuality,

product judged from age produced in, 781 a


pygmies, io24b
responsibility,

truth, 528b stabs the center, ggsa abstain Intentional,

bring order

to

i.

from
good

gsob

i.

wrongdoing, 88a
Intentions,
hell
full

of

i.,

ioigb

i54b

rights and powers, superiority of man, take i. possession, 7ggb throne, 7isa
virile

courageous, 8gsb

paved with good i., i54b, 324b honorable, 46oa Intents are savage-wild, 225b discerner of thoughts and i.,
hell

life competitive, iO54b nuclear control, io74b police power, 8483 spirit of science in i. affairs,

Internationally,

bring
in

suit

in
i.,

court
Interpose,

i.,

who

gSaa
quarrels
i.,

4oib
Interposed, mountains

wants, 7g4b world divided, 86gb Intellectuals at one pole, io58b deserve intended slavery, gsia I'm one of the i.,

55b wicked or charitable, S5ga Inter, in hugger-mugger i. him,


2653

457b

Interpret interpretations, igib Interpretation, aid to i. of future,

8ga
doctrine or practice or i,, i4ga interpreter not need i., 77gb this is the i. of the thing, 35a
Interpretations, interpret i. f igib Interpreter, critic i. of artist, 7g8b

ipsyb

Intelligence, controlling stands, 1420

i.

under-

peace children i. parents, 86b Intercede with Neptune, 6g5b


Interchange, quiet i. of sentiments, 43 ib Interchangeable shows, 1057 a Interchangeably, sighs i., io86a Intercourse between tyrants and
slaves,

in

even if superior i. tell us, g42b gods do not give all men i., &5b incongruous with i., 7osb learning does not teach i., 77b making artificial objects, 84gb overwhelms i. of all gods, 675

448b
i.,

losob apprehend, quickness test of first-rate i., logGb


i.,

pawn your

lived in social

431 a
i.,

to

86 ib

open and friendly in private

enough to comprehend all forces, 47ga which goes with sex, g86a Intelligent ignorance, 94ob may be called i. indeed, 7a moral obligation to be i., 95 la
vast

8gb speed the soft i., 4osb with foreign nations, 456b Interest, art makes life and i., 8oob by those who borrow trouble,
953*>
i., 46 ib exceed in i. knock at door, 5353 impulse of passion or i., 4oa I du believe in i., 6g3a people's frauds have i., 8783 public i., 10143 self interest other people, 78 ib

the hardest of the two, 48 ib nature not own i., 6g8a not need interpretation, 77gb perfect i. of life, ggia tear great i., gggb Interpreters, for crowd they need i., 79* . v men on shore i., go5a
is

Interpreting

divine

Principle,

7oga
Interprets, poet i. poem, 885b Interred, good oft i, with bones,

perception

of

255b
life is

least

i.,

loisa

duty and

shrunk dead and


silly

i.,

possesses keen i. mind, gsa reporting, ioi4a so elegant so i., loosb we are not i., 768a

goGa

Interrupt with such

question,

woman, gogb
Intelligently, think
Intelligible,
i.,

Interrupted by dying, Interruption, noise impertinent

i.,

564a
Interstate commerce, xosib
Interstellar spaces,

74ga
i.

monarchy
i.

governworld,
like
i.,

ment, 726b Intelligibly, speak


8 79 a Intemperance, 6i6a
Intend,

Interest's

unborrowed from die eye, 5033 on dangerous edge, 6653

888a
i.,

to

no tyrant
evil I
i.

i. in defeat, 6gga i., 6gga because Interesting unimportant, ioi8b

Interested, not

we

spaces, ioo5b Interstitially, judges legislate

vacant

i.

are not

788a
robe of gold, Interval, enjoy i., 867b lucid i., $6ga
Intertissued
Intervals,

244b

what

to do,

84b

Intended an ode, 78aa,b take hint when i., gjoa


years

damp my

i.

wing, g47b

Intending
Intense

to build tower, 473 loneliness intense igno-

Interesting but tough, 76ia Interesting, only obligation novel to be i., 7g8a want of the i., 7i6b war talk i., 7600
Interests, carnal
i.,

of

rance, 8 32 a isolated, ioo6a Intensely, soul listened

35sb

moment

i.,

5i6b
is
i.,

Intensity,

all

care about
i.,

786a
full

of passionate

grandeur
i44a

remains

882a without

i.,

moving into another i., ioo6a Intent, eye i. on wondrous plan,


4g5a
forget
is all,

figure in hands of honest men, 472!) of community, 4&oa various powerful i., 545b Interfere by force with slaveholder, 6843.

human

conflicting i. of society, 91 2 a exposed to conflicting i., g6gb great i. at stake, g8b


i.

full of lucid i., ig6a lucid i. and happy pauses, ao7b Interventionism, total i. no answer, i04ga Interview with Satan. 85 ib Intestines, prejudices trace to i.,

8o6b
Intimacy, heart-revealing i., 88ab Intimate, my most i. enemies,
73.1D

me

most, 8g8b

of air, io66a quality of

handmade

things,

94oa
quality of the Four, g76b Intimates are predestined, 7771 eternity to man, $g$b Intimation, steel against i., gs6b Intimidate human race into order, Q5ob threats of halter i., 475a Intimidation, smoke screen of i.,

not
i65a

Interfered in behalf of rich, 5g4a Interfused, something far more i.,

yet

tried
i.,

i.,

i86b

his first

avowed

59b
Interim like a phantasma, 2$4a Interline aphorisms hi reading,

s66a
i.,

love come 8 4b

with murderous

46gb
Interlude, strange i., xooga Interlunar, vacant i. cave,

night of dark i., gaSa not criminal unless i. criminal,

on hospitable thoughts

i.,

3463

34ga Intermeddle, stranger doth not i., 24b Interminable night, ioo6b

102Ob
Intolerable,

burden

of

them

is i.,

6ia
deal of sack,

1417

Intolerable
Intolerable, in worst state
i.,

INDEX
4665
Invention, equal license in bold
i.,

Invite, all occasions

i.

his mercies

music

falls,

8853

12-ia
i. i.

3 o8b

shirt of flame, 1007 a situation becomes unimportant,

greatest

of century, 861 a

God and

his angels, 30 8 b

horrible
is

the bourgeois, 7093

goSa
that beings doomed, 6293

unfruitful,

452b
1330,

was

i.

becomes

unimportant,

man's greatest i., i05oa necessity mother of i.,


i5ia
of method of scaled i., 9893
i.,

soul, 7003 Invites, bell i. me, 2833 his wit i. you, 4o7b

my

my

steps

and

points, 4063

go8a
wrestle with words
ings,

Invocation,

true
of

poem

an

i.

and mean-

861 a

ioo5a
against
i.,

Intolerably just, 8oob Intolerance, fought

983
Intolerant,

Inventions,

learned

toleration

stomach dispenser of i., i33b war is an i., 9783 sought out many i., s8a
statistics

Invoke genius 426b

Constitution,

from i., gyGa Intone dull commercial liturgies, 8gga Intoxicate the brain, 4033 Intoxicated, heart i. with bliss, 4983
Intractable,

Inventories,
i.,

and

history
i.,

6o8a

Inventors,

seldom

or

never

4i7 D Inventory of undiscovered embezzlement, io62b


Invents,

Involuntary, it was i., 10723 Involve us in wrong war, 10251 Involved in mankind, goSb we are not person i., 7623 Inward and spiritual grace, 6ia as men of i. light are wont, 353* beauty in i. soul, g2b

draw
eye,

i.

quality

after,

2881

sullen

untamed

i.,

modern man

i.

museum,

51^

ioo6a Intrepid sailors, yosb


Shorebirds, io65b Intricate as death, $o8b
Intricated,

lossa
Inversion, negative i., io5gb Inverted, country an i. cone, 432b winter ruler of i. year, 45&b Investigation of hidden causes,

grass nibbling i., icssb greatness, 243b horror, sgsb

3080 Intrigue, spotless through i., 66 la Intrinsic value, 4i5b Introduce philosophy into homes,
poor
i.

soul,

journey i., i056b never a war not i., 9g6b

igab
scientific
i.,

724b
i.

on i. vision close outward and i.


never

eyes, 866b at one, 92!


367;

Investment,
fails,

nib

goodness 683b

self-disparagement, 5i6b
to read Nature looked i., turn i. and examine, 7ib

Introduced, cut anyone i. to, 746b when I'm i. to one, 86ob Introspection, prone to i., 9973 Introversion of noosphere, 9653 tendency to i., 608 b Intrude, for bellies' sake i., 338b Intrudes, society where none i., 557 b Intuition, intelligence which goes with sex is i., g86a more subtle than premise, 787b passionate i., 5i6b reliance on i., 9383 Intuitions without method, 8673 Intuitive, beautiful always i., 5283 calculation transcended mathematics, 938a

of genius pays dividends, 77ob Inveterate, long i. foes saluted,


3 6 9b scars, 10053

upward and
vision,

i.

delight,

696

8673
in
secret

Invictus, third place Henley's

I.,

loooa
Invidious,
Invincible,
birth's
i.

bar,
i.

65ob

Inw3rdly great, 694 Inwardness of the situation, 795! lona, ruins of I., 4283 Ipse dixit, 1513
Ira,

Invigorated and reimpressed, 428b


in

ca

i.,

nosb
in
I

me

summer,

Iram indeed
Ireland,

io68b

no animal more
gib
right idea
soul's
i.

i.

than woman,

is gone, 6293 dance wyth me io8sb

i.,

loiaa
locks,

shaking her
Inviolable

34ob surmise, 8673


i.

constitutional

rights,

864b
shade, 7123 Inviolate sea, 65 ib Invisible, all things visible

Japanese propensity for i., 9383 our virtues are i., 6i4b Inurned, weep a people i., 595b Invade, better not i., 5533 chilling breath i., 7Ha Invaded, France is i., 5043
Invading, ours is the i. army, 68ia Invalid, invaluable permanent i.

and

i.,

54b
aloft in night, at times i., gg7a
i.

843a

gives England generals, 731 grand you look, 8 lib great Gaels of I., gi8a holy lande of I., io8sb ich am of I., io8sb if ever ride in I., 9183 Irishmen never do well in I 827a mad I. hurt you, io6oa snow all over I., g68a was I on road to I., 1051 Ireland's, romantic I. dead an

beauty, 9443

gone, 88 ib
Ireson, old Floyd I., 6263 Iridescent dream, 748b no bubble so i., 8i8b
Iris'

Bunbury, 8403
i. friendships marriage, 7563 for i. so waiting fishes, 9222 Invent, lies you can i., 4903

Invalidated,
Invasion,

by
are

necessary to i. him, 4i8a to remember or i., ga8b

bloody and i. hand, 2&4b choir i., 68ga country i. by commercial art, 10633 Fortune though blind not i., 2oga hands restore year, gg2a hoofs of i. horses, 86oa its name is The I., 74a jest unseen inscrutable i., 22ob
labor, sggb

woof, 3s6b

Irish,

beer into I. Channel, 81* blithe I. lad, 537b

would children i. game, 9853 young men fitter to i., 209 a


Invented an invaluable invalid, 84oa disappointed in monkey i. man, 764a falsehood i., 9 66a first i. sleep, ig7a, 68oa first i. war, 2i2a first i. work, 535b fool i. kissing, 3gob history, 4i8b time someone i. plot, g75b Invention, brightest heaven of i.
f

no bird but

i.

O world
skuttle

thing, 5i4a

i.,

857a
i.,

poor become
fish

10823
i.,

becomes

3953

soap, 592 b soul bright i. green, 68 ib spirit of wine, 273b

web you wove, 10073 why art silent and worm, 4893 wounds i., 2503
mand,

i.,

4883

ground, logob I'm I., ggf Lady howl in I., 2ggb no language like I., 9093 poets learn trade, 8853 upon the I. shore, 4943 welcomin' I. immigrants, 86Irish-Americans, have done wi I., 82ib Irishman, give I. lager for mont 76ob in Eden boss it, 6853 Irishmen never do well in IT land, 8273 Irks care crop-full bird, 666a Irksome, all great changes i., 46
I

grow on

I.

am

troubled

Invisibly, silently i., 4883 than Invitation, more i.

com-

discourse of fools is Irlonde, dance wyth me in

i.,

I.,

1418

INDEX
Irlonde, holy lande of I., io%$b ich am of I., io8sb Iron, age of i., 4i6b and blood, 677b armies clad in i., 34ga cold i., 2ooa, 553b conscience seared with hot i.,
Irreligion, free for
i.,

Item

ioa
irresistibly

Isles,

throned on her hundred


I.,

Irreparable ravages of time, 378b Irreproachably tender, joaSa


Irresistible desire to

556b touch Happy


i.,

646b
less

be

Islington,

village

than

I.,

desired, ggoa

55*
curtain, g24b door of north, 10573 earth, 10553 earth hard as i., 7403 entered into his soul, 6ib
fist,

benignant, gaib Irresistibly desired, 9303 Irresolute, resolved to be i., gaoa Irresponsible foetus, looib Irritability, chronic i. Bostonitis,
Irritable reaching after fact, 584b
Irritation,

inexorable

i.

Ism, alien i., g7ib Isness of man's nature, io82b


Isn't, as it
i.

35?*

it ain't,

745b

Isolated joy of thinker, 786b

God who made

5063

i.

grow, 5O3b

hammer

golden opes the


i.

when

i. shuts, 338b hot, i25b

hand in velvet glove, i86a heart of i., gg6b ice and i. not welded, if gold ruste what shal
i66b
in water float, 10873 is iron till rust, gg6b legs of i., 353 meals of beef i. steel, meddles with cold i., 2ooa nerve, 65 ib New England dark, loggb nor any tool of i., 4s8b nor i. bars a cage, 35b physician of I. Age, 7113 rod of i., 57b

estimate value by i. they cause, g46b i. der es Irrt, Mensch, 478b Is, all that i. and shall be, 8sa as he i. so was he made, 80 ib he i. or was or has to be,

with no before and after, ioo6a Isolates, silence i., g^yb Isolation of sky at evening, 9553 robbed of i. that is life, gsib worst counselor, 87oa about don't care Isolationism, word i., loigb may obstruct peace, g74a
total
i.

4i8a
8253
i.

Israel, arose

no answer, 1049 a a mother in

I.,

na
46a

one

i.

or

i.

do,

seems

madam Nay
i. i.,

not, gsb

blessed be Lord

God
from

of

I.,

that that
Isaac,

which was and

God

of

I.

it i., 2573 2533 i., 583 not philosophers,

captive I., 687b chariot of I., isb


glory

departed

I.,

iaa,

625b
glory of thy people I., 46a he that keepeth I., saa

3643
244a
Iscariot-like crime, gg6b

Ishmael, call
1723

me
i.

I.,
i.

6gsb
of

Judah and
lost

Island, arrived at

Bahamas,
cost,

defend
gaia
entire of
floating

our

whatever

I. dwelt safely, 133 sheep of house of I., 42 a no king in I., nb scattered upon the hills, i3b sweet psalmist of I., isb

itself,

3o8b

from disuse, 1743 scourge, 4sgb shard, 875b sharpeneth iron, 26b slamming of i., io64b sleet of arrowy shower,
rusts

heart no

bulwark of our i., 444b i. but continent,


like

Israfel,

aoSb honor is
inland
misty
4423
i.,

an

i.,

37yb

i.,

stones are
strike
te3rs
till

i.,

loa

no man i., 3o8b no owls in whole i., 4g2b


of England, 2443 rough i. story, 65 ib savages in unknown

776a sgoa is an

your tents O I., 133 dwell where I. dwelt, 64ib Issue is in God's hands, 7ga judged in light of final i., gga know what i. at stake, 88gb
to

thy tabernacles

I.,

loa

settled

i.

before office expired,

when
i.

strong as

hot, i25b bands, 6213


i.

98 3 b Issues, contrived corridors

and

i.,

looib
i.,

down
i.

throat of

Pluto's cheek, 3363 chest of brass, uga


to

6iib

snug

little

i.,

5i7b

uncapable wrought, 35 ib tongue of midnight, 2313 when i. hot strike, i&$b written with a pen o i., 343 Iron-3rmed soldier, 6003 Iron-bound bucket, 5533 Ironic, Death's i. scraping, g55b
Ironies, silver-footed i., 8663 Irons, two i. in the fire,

heated

be

solitude unsponsored, g55a tight little i., 5i7b watched famous i. descending,

distract attention from i., 866b fine i., 2703 heaven has joined great i., 5153 out of it are the i. of life, ssb

when
It can't
is
it's

i.

are joined, 75a


state,

gsob
Islanded in stream of
place remote and
Islands, adagios of
i.,

Isthmus of a middle
stars,

4o8b

gggb

happen here, g87a


I.,

8i6b

finished,

Greek

i.

i., 10433 over Harvard Square,

just

Italia

who

4gb 876b
fatal
gift,

hast

5573
sex,

3163
trays,

Ironware,

firewood

i.

and

g47b
Iroquois, quois,
I'll be Indian I., io6sb would have had strong states,

Irradiate* .ted

an Indian wilderness,

Irradiating word, 74ob Irrational fears, 83b laws of nature may be i., g66b substitute rational for i., ggsb to rational being i. unendurable, i38a

io42a looked seaward among i., 8i6b of the Blessed, 8743, g4?a realms and i. as plates, 28ga round many western i., 57gb what gray rocks what i., ioo4a whose heavens opened, 8303 Isle, a ship an i., g8oa all isles excelling, 3713 cause or men of Emerald I.,

Italian, fine I. for converse

hand, 1057 a with feminine

435 a

speak I. to women, perhaps I., 7663 proletariat, g77b race a race of sheep, g77b
I

i6$b

tenderness
Italian,
Italy,

of

I.
i.

tongue,

4353

je parle

aux femmes,
lies
I.,

i6sb

483b
cherry i., 32oa green i. in sea, 6423 hunt for a desert in far-off seas, 66ib

beyond Alps

1253

fashions in proud I., 226b graved inside of it I., 66sb


i.,

io6ga

Greece I. and adorn, 37ob

England

did

Irrationally held truths, 7S>5b

Irrecoverably
Irregular

dark total

ecl eclipse,

and intimate

quality,

g4oa
piece, 427b Irregulars, Baker Street Irrelevancies, past free of

indigested

is full of noises, 2g7a it frights the i., 273b of beauty, 5883 sceptered i., 226b that is called Patmos, 57a-b Isled, wound with thee in thee

designs by Michelangelo, 75ga for horses, 3123 paradise paradise of exiles, 56gb incurable i. for writing, Itch,
i.,

made from

1390
of disputing, 3013
Itchez,

i., i.,

84gb giob
i.,

8osb
Isles,

Irrelevancy,

stern

and simple
i.

fished by obstinate Isle all i. excelling, 371 a


i.,

i.,

g88a

Ah

i.

Ah

scratchez, io5ib

8isa
Irrelevant, ture,

naked melancholy
of Greece, 56ob

4igb

most

thing in na-

Itching palm, 2563 producing constant i., 108 ib Item with skin wrapped around,

sprinkled

i.,

66sb

1419

Items
Items for imaginative genius of west, 7osb Iteration, damnable i., 2383 Ithaca, fill I. full of moths, *8gb
Itself,
is it

INDEX
Jacob's, talk of J. ladder, 6iob voice is J. voice, 73

Jaws of death, 1933, 6523


th3t bite, 7453

Jade, arrant j. on a journey, 448b Chinese love i., gg2b

true in

and
i.,

for

i.,

love

is

most nearly

ioo6a

you quickly, 588b let galled j. wince, 26gb Jael took a nail, 113
Jail,
all

kisses

"aybird don't rob own nes', 8143 [3zz, 3sk whst j. is, io46b [azzmen, go to it 948b j., Je connais tout fors moi-meme,

'ay,

poor Jim

J.,

gi4b

thou

art

Itylus, half

lucundior,
sedei.,

ma
ne

the thing i., 2785 assuaged for I., 77ab quae set domestica

we know who
j.,

lie

in

j.,

i7ib
Jealous, art i. mistress, 6o8a confirmations, 274b for they are jealous, 275b

8413
like living in
little

10673

stealin'

gets

you

in

j.,

ludex damnatur ubi nocens absolvitur, i26a

ludicaret, sutor

i.,

ioa

supra

crepidam
1293
15 la

10093 patron and the j., 4273 with chance of being drowned,

gods who 8goa


I

brook

no worship,

am

j.

God, ga
54$b

43oa
sua
Jailer

in honor, 24ga
as
self,

lura,
I us

sunt
ars

est

summum
itia,

i., superis boni et aequi,

inexorable

6i4b

lawa

j.

mistress,

Jake,

Yukon
calico

J.,

saepe io8b
fiat
i.

summa

est

malcoeli,

Jam,

j.,

i035b 673b

Institia,

et

ruant

Ivan n
Ives,

Ilych's life

most simple,

i loob I., 10933 going Ivory apes and peacocks, 133, 9473 bit of i. on which I work, 533b

Petrofski Skevar,
to St.

gate of
laces
i.

i.,

673, 1193
i.,

and

neck

is

gold, g43b as a tower of

2gb

tower, 6153, 937b towers, 8783 Ivy, goats eat i., 10973 holly and the i., 10993

myrtle and i., 56ab not hang i. over wine, with i. never sere, 3383

1273

tomorrow j. yesterday, 7463 Jamaicas of remembrance, 738b James could almost hear the bronze Negroes, io76b First Second and Old Pretender, 101 ib James Morrison Morrison, 9703 let J. rejoice, 444b Truthful J., 76gb work of Henry J., loiib Jsmes's elsborate hesitancies, 86sb kdies of St. J., 7823 J3mshyd gloried drank deep, 6agb Jsne, from J, to Eliz3beth, 5333 Lady J. tall and slim, 5543 Jsngled, sweet bells j., fc6sb Jsmtor's, in love with j. boy,
10693 Jsnuary, a fly this J. day, 7s8b Japan, as J. kept her indepen-

not 3 j. woman, ioi6b not j. for the csuse, 27 one not essily j., 276b
possessions of happiness, Sgyb scornful yet j. eyes, 4iob souls not answered, 27 $b venom clsmors of j. woman,

2i8b
Jealousies, surmises
j.

conjectures,

24ia
Jealousy,

beware

my

lord of

j.,

*74a

born with
ear of

love, 3563 hesreth all, 36b j. Father of J., 4883 feeds upon suspicion, 3553
full of artless
j.,

2653

Ivy-mantled tower, 4403, g6sb

green-eyed j., 233b has 3 human face, 48gb in j. more self-love, 3563 injured lover's hell, 3463
injustice, 4003 is cruel as the grave,
is

dent, 997b

303
agb

J
Jabal father of such as dwell in tents, 6a

create

in

J.

civilized

nation,

7523
of Empire of J., from Paris to J., 3773 born in J., 5373 gods what they say in J., 7gob
forces

rage of 3 man, jaundice of the soul, 37ob


the
of j., 274b Jesn, farewell to Jeanie with light
life

97 3b

my

J.,

4oob
h3ir,

brown

Jabberwock, beware J'accuse, 7863 Jack and Jill, 10943

J.,

745*

banish plump J., 23gb be nimble, iog6b before say J. Robinson, fly 3W3y J., iog8b gorging J., 6613 house that J. built, iog8b joke poor potsherd, 8043 little J. Homer, 10933 one named J., iog8b spanking J. so comely, Sprat eat no fat, logab Jackass, cudgel his own j., Jsckdaw, devil must be in j.,

Japanee, little Turk or J., 8*3b Japanese, cultural nature of J., 9383 don't care to, 10433

727b Jeanne d'Arc


10163 Jedge, of

3nd

Bonaparte,

67ob

gargoyle-faced J., g78b heart subject of J. poetry, 4193


life like J. picture,

my merit you j., 6933 Jeers at fate, g62b exiled on ground in j., 7073 Jefferson, celebrities such as J.,
749b

7893

practiced virtues, 5373 reliance on intuition, 9383

Thomas J. still lives, 4643 when J. dined alone, io74a


Yokn3p3t3wph3 County,
Jeffers's,

Japheth,
Jar, feel

No3h beg3t
amid

J.,

6b

io3gb
J.,

city's j.,

7113

475b
78$b 5543

in Tennessee, 9556 people in front get


j.,

Jeffersonian simplicity, 7583 too much like one of

9423 j., strings untouched will harshly


aisa
j.

995 a
Jeffrey,

no one minds

J.,

522b

Jsckson, pick Andrew J. from pebbles, 6g6b standing like stone wall, 7193 Stonew3ll J. wrapped in beard,

wine
Jardin,

when molding began,


faut cultiver notre
j.,

Jehovah has triumphed, 543a in name of gre3t J., 4683


is my strength, 313 Jove or Lord, 4i2b Lawd God J., 10153

1243
il

Jacksonian vulgsrity, 7583 Tacky have new m3ster, 10943 Jacob called the plsce Peniel, 7b gave Esau bread and pottage,
7a

4173 Jargon of the schools, 3873 Jars, two j. on floor of Zeus, 653 Jasmine impossible to counterfeit, 8i4b inimitable j., 8i4b
Jasper of jocundity, 1763 jaundice, jealousy j. of the soul,
37.ob

God

of

J.

not

philosophers,

3643
served seven yesrs, 73 sold his birthright unto J., 73 J,, 103 thy tents was a plain man, 73 W3S left alone, 70 wrestled as angel with J., 325b

Jaundiced eye, 403b

bound for J. or Gadire, 349b Jaw, muscular strength to j., 743b Jawbone of an ass, i ib
Javan,
Jaws, gently smiling j., 7433 of darkness do devour it, 228b

tell them I am J. said, 4443 Jehu, the driving of J., isb Jelly, distilled 3lmost to j., 2583 out vile j., 2793 Je-ne-sais-quoi young m3n, 7673 Jenny kissed me, 55 ib Jeoffrey, consider my cat J., 444b Jeopardy, went in j. of their lives, i2b Jeremy, Mr. J. liked feet wet,

887b
Jericho, from Jerusalem to J., 46b tarry at J. until beards be

J3cob*s ladder, 8573

grown, i2b Jerusalem, daughters of

J.,

aga.b

1420

INDEX
Jerusalem, from J. to Jericho, 46b in conquest of J., gain spent
I

Join
Joan as my lady, 32oa Darby always the same
J., J.,

saw the new

i72b

Jesus her little child, 684b I believe in J., 6oa and patience of

to old

kingdom

J.,

58b

redemption by our Lord

57a 6ob

wife

J.,

8i5a 222b

I will wipe J., i4a I forget thee, if

O
to

J. (

22b

meet in sweet J., 2i6b my happy home, io85b


speak

shut up in asylum, 85 ib son of man, 95&a testimony of J., 57b the same yesterday today and
forever, ij6a

greasy J. keel pot, the dreamer, 9 66a Job, back of j. iob blessed the latter end of J.,

doth

J.

fear

God
j.,

for nought,

comfortably

J.,

32b

give tools finish

Q22a

that killest prophets, 43b the golden, 687!) a thy sister calls, 491 was J. builded here, 4gob

Jesus', good jjoob

friend

for

J.

sake,

patience of

J., 5<3b

de Jeunesse, au temps
cueillez

ma

j.

folk,

poor as J., 24ib Jobbing jockies, go8b


Joblillies,

Picninnies and the J.,

wise

men came

to J., 3ga
stirred,

Jessamine,
Jesse,

lob Jeshurun waxed fat, casement j.

qu'as-tu

cueillez votre de ta fait

j.,

j.,

i88a 8o8a
J.,

442b
Jobs,

right

people

in

right

j.,

si j. savait,

i88b
of Norfolk not too bold, 2oob
Jockies, jobbing Jocund, cocks
j.,

David the son of J., i2b rod out of the stem of J., 3 ia

or Jew, either for Englishman 49 la hated like a J., loSga

go8b
lions
j.

dear heartstrings, 274b Jesses my Jessica, sit J. look, 235b


Jest and youthful jollity, best to use myself in j., between j. and earnest,

334b 3osb
ig5 a

breaks no bones, 433b fellow of infinite j., 26sb glory j. and riddle, 4oga

good

forever, 238b Oberon, 22ga with intermingle j.


j.

I j. to

earnest,

nor Gentile, judges neither J. 9*7* much kindness in the J., 232b neither Greek nor J., 54b of Tarsus, sob that Shakespeare drew, 4i3 a wandering J., io88a a J., 61 ib yes I am Jewel, caught my heavenly j.,
consistency paste j., 8g6b immediate j. of souls, 274a no j. like Rosalind, 24gb of gold in swine's snout, of the just, 36ga

hath not a J. eyes, 233a Jesus was a J., Q52a

and

be,

3 o6b day stands tiptoe, 2253 rebecks sound, 335a such a j. company, 5i4b then be thou j., 284b of j., i76a Jocundity, jasper i Joe, G.I. Joe, iosb

Old Black
Joe's,

J.,
J.,

Sloppy

727b io6oa

Jog on the footpath way, 295b


bottle of Johannisberg, extra

2oga life is a

fac totum, Johannes, absolute J. 2o6a


J.,

j.,

402a
j.,

may yet be said, gi8a most bitter is scornful


not
bear
serious

426b

48ia
24

examination,
j.,

John and

I are quit,
jo,
J.,

3883

put his

whole wit in a

unseen inscrutable, 22ob and swore, 6563 Jested quaffed fool and j., 242b Jester, g4$b motley garb, Jester's saddest ones wear j. garb, g45b with edge tools, Jesting, no j. 3 1 3D

lost in Strephon's kiss

j.,

3i6a 98 ib

phosphorescent
precious
j.

j.

gives

glow,

Anderson my awake my St.

Baptist's head,

494b 4O?b 42b

carved

curiously,

8o2b
in his head, 24?b precious j. rich j. in Ethiop's ear, 223a mass of millinery, 652a

b Barleycorn got up again, 493 Brown's body, 755a Bull or Englishman's Fireside,
buried Evangelist Saint J., Don J. of Austria, gi8b Donne Anne Donne Un-done,
greyest
I J-.
I J.

Jeweled

unicorns, ioo3b

Jewelry,

like

j.

from

grave,

what
Jest's Jests,

is

truth

said
lies

j.

Pilate,

prosperity

in ear, 222b
for
j.,

he

j.

at scars,

223b
482a
Pelican,

Jewels five-words-long, 648a these are my j., 3i2a warmed j., 582 a
unclasps

of

all

is

J.

Bull,

indebted to
Jesu,

memory
J.

Lord

blessed

Jewish gaberdine, 232a no J. blood in my veins, io8sa


Jews, among false J., generally give value, 8s7b Jesus king of J., 45a King of the J., sga kiss and infidels adore,

5?a saw

the

holy
J.

city,

$8b

inspiring

bold

Barleycorn,
J.,

io88a

Matthew Mark Luke and


357 a

dearest one, ig2b Christ and seiynte Benedight,

my

esus Jesuit,

bland as a J., 8i5b author and finisher, came to save sinners, 55a cross of J., 75ob

404*

my son J., iog6b or Shaun, g68b


60 ib outglittering J. Keats, P. Robinson he, 6g3a Peel with coat so gay, 578b shut
the

56a

of Solomon's glory, 794a Turks in Papists Protestants J.

one

ship, 3293

and mild, 425 gentle J. meek increased in wisdom, 46b hearts through Christ keep your
->

refuse till conversion of J., 35gb three paynims three J. three Christians, i74b shall eat J., 13^ Jezebel, dogs

door good

J.,

41 oa

some

king of Jews, 45a


lover of

painted her

face,

man who
most
stand

my

soul, ,

425b

Tiggety-jig,
Jill? fly

home

i$b again

j.,

10973

said J. print it, 62 sa speak for yourself J., Stuart Mill, 934a ib St. 41 there J. mingles, who killed J. Keats, s62b

3653

says

scientific

he is J., 43 8b man, yoga

away J.,io98b Jack and J., iog4a

whose name was

J.,

48a

up

stand

up

for

J.,

other

named
in

J.,

686a
sure this J. will not do, 491 a took bread, 44b was a Jew, g$2a was born in Bethlehem, 393 went to them walking on the
sea,

Jim detested
keerless

it,

iog8b go2a

J., Johnny, Frankie I hardly knew ye, loggb little J. Green, iog4a J.,

and

noib

talk

was

most ruined for poor J. Jay, gi4b


guzzling
ingle, little
j.

servant,

778b 7613

John's,

bounded by
J.,

St.

J.,

6553

Johnson knew, 43oa

J.,

little

661 a chimes, 4oob

42b

wept, 4ga

with

J.

we worship

Father, 544a
I,

Jesus Christ

Don Quixote and

ingling of guinea, 6473 ingly, Lady J. Jones, 673b a ingo, by j. by gee, 1031 Iimmy, if we do, 7*7 a

45 lb was musJohnson's conversation tard, 468b Join choir invisible, 68ga don't j. too many gangs, 9283

no arguing with

by

j.

repent by

j.,

592a

family, Q28a few gangs if any, 928a hand in hand Americans, 46ob

1421

Join
Join,

INDEX
now
j.

your hands and


to

Joshua, like J.

commanded

sun,

them

hearts, 2162 that j. house

4*3*
house,
Jostle,

job triumph of skies, 4250 two lives j. oft scar, 664a United States, gs8a will you j. dance, 744b Joined great issues, sisa he has j. great majority, 13^
lawfully
j.

jostling,

may j., 766b no man lives without j., 575b not done by j. in street, 4900 Jot, one j. of former love retain, 2iib one j. of heart or hope, 341 a or tittle, 4oa
Jotting down 1623
Jour,
le
j.

Philistines

Joy be unconfined, 5563 be wi' you a', 502a before a j. proposed, 2g4b being my first j., io66a being used for purpose,
bitter j., io4ab brightened with j., 5i6b bringer of that j., 23ob cease every j., 537b

8s6b

make

together, 6ia
j.

trifling

thoughts,
est

third

former two,
to
theirs,

37<>b

de

my name
when

gloire

arrive,

j.

i*8b

what God hath j., 433


issues are

499*
Journalism,
responsible j., ioi4a Journalist, I was a fresh new j., 8b 75

childish j. lives in me, g6$b chortled in his j., 745a cometh in the morning, i8a courage love j., 40 ib deep power of j., soga delights in joy, 2gib

whom God hath

j.,

7sa

desperate the

j.,

551 a

j.,

6ib

dream of

j.

all

but in vain,

Joint, every j. and motive, *6ga force and full result, 4o 3 a heirs with Christ, 513

whether

j.

puts

truth

first,

knee a j. not an entertainment, 915* remove the j., 746b


time
is

out of

j.,

s6oa
j.

ioi4a Journey, arrant jade on a j., 448b begin j. on Sundays, 3gob dawn speeds a man on j., 68a day's j. take whole day, 73gb death and sorrow on our j.,

Joint-laborer, night

with day,

gaib

i7ia earthborn j. renew, 801 a enter into j., 44a even his griefs are a j., every child may j. to hear, every j. gain, 66ib father's j. mother's pride, feast of j. a dish of pain,
for life

66b 486b

52ob 2045

256b
Joints,

end of
j.

dividing

and marrow,
ago

55b
Joke,
every
j.

long

made,

769*
forgive Thy j. on me, gaga gentle Dullness loves j., 4i 3 b good j. not criticized, gi8b Jack j. poor potsherd, 8o4a many a j, had he, 44gb subtleties of American j., 75ga 'twixt earnest and j., 488a Joked, world j. incessantly, 76ga

86*b going a j., 539 a he is in a j. or sleepeth, 133 in middle of j. of life, i5ga long day's j. into night, 1009 a longestj. go, 571 a
j.

too,

and objects, 7023 formed of j. and mirth, 4gob fruit of Spirit is j., ssb full of peace and j., 6g7a
j.

and

general

longest

j.

inwards, 10566
it

methinks

is

no

j.,

io86a

of a thousand miles, 74b

i76a of whole table, 28sa of great j., 4<5a good Greensleeves all my j., 10846
j.,

gem

of all
j.

tidings

prepare for j., ioi4a soul of j. liberty, ssgb to promised land, go4b universe in map, ig6a

grief j. misunderstood, 6iga have j. or power, 6o4b he who binds to himself a j., 488b honey of all earthly j., 357b
is

Jokes, crack any of these old

j.,

gib
difference of taste in Fate's saddest j., 76b
little
j.
j.,

6goa

on Thee, gaga

with my strange heroes, 6j2a ourneyed across centuries, 92 3 b ourneyings, swift j., 10493 ourneyman to grief, 226a ourneymen, nature's j., 2633
ourney's,

is
is

a partnership, 8g8a the sweet voice, 527a wisdom, 88oa


as it flies, 488b j. pure stretch of j.,
j.

kisses
last

io66b
knee,

standing j., 3 o4a ten j. a hundred enemies, 4*7b veiled j., 866a
Jollity, jest

here

is

when j.

dine at j. end, my j. end, 276a


over,

88 ib

lean in

upon

father's

487a
love and thought and j., 5 lib Marcellus exiled feels, 4ogb marriage has more j. than pain,
8 3b

and youthful

85b
stars,

j.,

g34b
56oa

Gb tipsy dance and j., Jolly and easy in minds,

Journeys end in lovers meeting, 25ib

Journeywork of
Jove,

7oob

good

lesson,

8ysb

miller, 464a red nose, $22a

awful 6oaa

J.

Phidias brought,

masterpiece

j.
j.

to

meet with
lem, 2i6b
J.,

in

artist, 754a-b sweet Jerusa-

so pleasant so

j.,

4750

daughter of J., 4sgb deity own brother of


for his

6gsb

more of

j.

than sorrow, 6g7a

swagman, 86ga
three j. gentlemen, gi4b three j. huntsmen, iog7a well right, 875b what j. fun, 86ob

to thunder, 28gb front of J. himself, 264a in ancestral J. Troy's sons re-

power

joice,

ngb
J.

Jehovah

or Lord, 4i2b

Jonah was in the belly of the fish, 35 b Jonathan heard not his father's
oath, isa

laughs at lovers' perjuries,


Rain-giver,

223b

1283
J.,

we descend from

no j. but calm, 6456 no j. but lacks salt, 9276 no j. in Mudville, 868a none hath j. of death, 7746
nor love nor light, 7i5a not because troubles are delectable j., 1133 not intermeddle with his j., 24b

my j. my grief, 3 3 2b my j. my jockey, io68b my life my j., ig 3 b

ngb

loved him

as his

own

soul, i*a

Jones, Casey J., go4b Lady Jingly J., 67sb Joneses, keeping up with J., i ioaa Jonson and he did gather humors,

where J. bestows, 326b with J. I begin, u6b Jove's, immortal J. dread clamors,
27ga
of J. nectar sup, 3o 3 a starry threshold of J.
Jovial,

now
court,

365*

O O
of of of of

'tis little j.,

5ga

j.

what
i54a

Ben

that in our embers, 5igb and glory must be, j.

J., 3023 Jonson's learned sock, 3353 Jordan, fertilize J. plain, looked over J., noia stood in midst of J., lob Joris and he, 662b

J.

his

best

poetry,

joab

autumn comes
j.
j.

rare

Ben

j.

on, 4igb

three
Joy,
all

huntsmen, 424a
impossible, 1081 a

g45a

all that j. can give, 4o6b although our last, 276b to inclined, 488a always j.

ocean and my j., 557b crimson j., 48ga elevated thoughts, sogb life is variety, 428a

Joruri, writing

j.,

3843
J.,

Joseph, king which knew not


8a
stript J. of his coat,

and function of poetry, 10713 and love triumphing, 3 44b apprehend some j., z$
asks
if this

love too short, i75a of j. for mourning, pain short j. eternal, 4g8b perfect j. therein I find,
oil

33b
ig2a

yb

at weeping,

be j., 45oa s45b

Phyllis is my only pleasance revel, 274a

j.,

1422

INDEX
of j., 8783 joy, poor capable pray in j. and abundance, 9763 of knowledge, 107 ib pure j. reveal itself when transformed
in us, 9$8b
riding's a j., 664a rule it with stern
j.,

Judgment
success, Judge, people j. 355 people seldom j. right, 4853 quick and the dead, 6oa rain influence and j. prize, 3353 right j. judges wrong, 82a

Joys,

homely

j.,

4403
stztjb

men by

in another's loss of ease, 4893


kill

let

j.

your j. with love, be as May, 3223

minds
98 la
1993

me

o'

departed

j.,

4943

immortal diet, scrip of j. secret j. of thinker, 786b senses forever in j., 6653 shall reap in j., 22b
shipmate
silence
joy,

mingle j. with occupation, 4253 must be used, 9i7b nakedness all j. are due to thee, 3073
only solitary

setting

yourself

up

as

j.,

g6a

know

j.

of friend-

7033
herald of
j.,

ship, 9403 our youth our

perfectest

j. our all, iggb perish in infancy, io86b present j. more to flesh and

should not be young, 943 sober as j., 4243 sole j. of truth, 4093 the fatherless, 303 upright j. learned j., 2353

at silly things, 4493 silly j. fearful j., 4392 a snatch " ' divide j. with, somebody 7 6 3a sons of God shouted for j., i6a sorrow and j. are one, io6ob source of humor not j., 76ab spontaneous j., 881 a stern j. warriors feel, 5203

blood, 37 ob raise j. and triumphs high, 4253 rob us of our j., io86b
society's chief

whole piece by pattern, 7g8b you as you are, 27ob Judged according to lies, is6b
in light of final issue, gga intellectual product j. by age,

summer hath
taste

whole

j.,

_
j.

tasted

eternal^

Heaven,

2133
tenderness its j. and fears, 5143 that came down showerlike,

strength through j., ioi7b surprised by j., 5163 sweeten present j., 5goa that your j. be full, 493 the luminous cloud, 5273 the thrill the whirl, 6g$b thing of beauty j. forever,
5 8oa

thy

when shall I see, j. to this are folly, 3103

10855

alone life j. empire, 5693 torment my j., io66a thou spark from heaven, 497a to pass to world below, n8b to the world, 3973 to their friends, 6$b walked in glory and j., 5iib was never sure, 775a we end in j., io66a weep at j., 245b where poverty and j., i57a with j. and love triumphing, 344b without canker or cark, 8o4b work with j., g76a writhed not at passing j., 5803
this

vain deluding j., 335b with age diminish, 667b withered like grass, 6oob youth's season for j., 4oib Jubal f3ther of such as h3ndle
harp, 6b Jubiknt, bright

78ia judge not that ye be not j., 41 a, 64ob not to have lived, 786b should be j. as a captain, i7^b Judge's robe, 27pb Judges, a fool with j., 1363 all ranged, 402 a as j. neither Jew nor Gentile, g6 7 a common j. of property, 427b constitution what j. say, 8640 do and must legislate, 7883

hungry
in

j.

sentence sign,
state

4<>4b

every

bound

thereby,

this

474b

pomp

ascended

3- 347* Jubilee, bring the j., 7483 sons to thy j. throng,

naif simple-minded, 787b of facts not laws, 3ggb

5663

Jubjub bird, 7453 Jud3h 3nd Israel dwelt S3fely, 133 say unto the cities of J., 32b sin of J., 343
Judas had given them the
slip,

Judging

right judge j. wrong, 82a Judgest, thou j. another, tjob character motive
pulse, 97 6b for themselves, 48 ib no way of j. future, 4653

im-

so J. did to Christ, 2283 Judes, Bethlehem of J., 393 Judee, didn't know everythin' in

people by appearances, 35gb Judgment, accurate in his j., 462b and imagination, 5283 beauty bought by j. of eye,
22 ib

Joybells

ring

in

heaven's
rise,

street,

6933 Judge above his


J-,

last,

ioaa

947*
Joyful all

ye

nations

425b
28a

births, 245a in day of prosperity


let

be

j.,

poet be, 686a


a
j.

make
shall

noise, igb, 2ia

my

Joyfully,

Joyfulness

j. temples bind, sjjsb singing most j., 7na prolongeth his days,

38b
Joyous, good great and j., 5693 loaves when heart j., 4b we too launch out, 7o2b Joyously, flowers through grass j. sprang, i56a Joyousness, lends j. to a wall,

allow iniquities, 7893 amongst fools a j., 1363 by sample we j. whole, 1943 children j. parents, 8393 condemned when criminsl absolved, 1263 de3d drunk j., 10683 fitter to invent th3n j., 2093 forbe3r to j., 2153 I j. not thee, ig7b

bounded by Day of J., 6553 bring every work into j., sga commonly we say j. falls, 3173
complains of his j., 3555 Daniel come to j., *34b defend against your j.,
difficult, 88b,

3713
io68b

477b
j.,

do not wait for last enough for me, 8ioa

be jury, 74sb 454b justice j. or vicar, 4813 man by foes, 8433 mind proper j. of man, isob my friend j. not me, ig7b
I'll

be

j.

I'll

impartial

j.,

ever awake, 5293 execute j. against gods of Egypt, 8b fled to brutish beasts, 255b from old fountains new j., 8323

God and
losoa

history

remember

j.,

79oa
Joy's delicious springs,

555a

never 863

j.

until other side he3rd,

grape, 5843 soul lies in doing, sGyb the voice, iojjib Joys abound as seasons

no king can corrupt, 2983 no one should j. own case, 1263 none blessed, 383
fleet,

2i4b
as

and sorrows song aroused, winged dreams, 10853


j.

>jo$b

be

three

parts
j.

pain,
j. f

666a

not 3ccording to appesrance, 48b not j. by one 3Ct, 8473 not play before done, 32 ib not that ye be not judged, 413,
*"**'"

leaves of J. Book unfold, 7263 man's erring j., 4oab men of ill j. ignore good, 8ia

God's great J. Seat, 87 2b good j. of Americans, 6i6b green in j., 287b he looked for j., sob He which is top of j., 27ob his ways are j., iob

blest

with some new

g67b

my j. approves measure, 4633 no comparison no j., 4553 nor people's j. always true, $68b not better than information,
losoa

of night, 4883 fading j. we dote upon, 3853 fairest j. give unrest, s8ob fall not to rich alone, isgb

dreaming o'er

of all things, 3643 of authors' names, 4ogb of my merit you j., 6933 out of thy mouth will I

not industry only but


of
j.,

473

j., 452b intellect half truth, 9353 or intuition more subtle, 7&7b

1423

Judgment
Judgment, private
reserve thy
j., j.,

INDEX
444a
June, rare as day in J,, 6g2a seek ice in J., 5$4b
sophistries of J., 734b skies clouds of J., 741 a swarm of bees in J., io87a tell one's name livelong J., 7ssa tenth day of J. 1940, g72b thirty days hath J M i87a
Just, thrice

armed

that hath

258b

j., 2i4a time makes possible Day of J., g8ob vulgarize Day of J., 6iob we thought it J. Day, 784a were we men of j., 10720 young in limbs in j. old, 2333 Judgments, brawling j., 6533 men's j. parcel of their fortunes, 288a of Lord righteous, i7b, 64ob selling j. of law, go8b so in our very j., 35ob with j. as watches, 4O2b Judicial, duty of j. department,

seek j., soa shallow spirit of

suns

quarrel j., 2153 unjust peace before j. war, 42?b upright man laughed to scorn, 15* way is plain peaceful j., 638b

whatever is is j., 367b whatsoever things are


Juste, le j. milieu, 4i7b justice accommodation
ests,

54b
inter-

moment in when J. is past


this
3 26b

J.,

g75a

the fading rose,


j.

of

gi2a

Jungle, law of the laws of the j.,

art of

and humanity, 8gsb good and fair, 1513

pack meets pack in j., 874 power politics law of j., loiga triumph and the j., 9753 Juniper, leopards under j. tree,
Juno's unrelenting hate, 3713 Jupiter knows how to sugarcoat,
361 b

biased in point of j., 3513 blind deef and dumb, 8gob characteristic of democracy,

i045b Chief J.

rich

quiet
j.

infamous,
people,

essence of j. duty, 48sb function, Sgga

dence
37a-b

in

of

power
463b

distinct

from

legislative,

laughs at i28a

perjuries

of

lovers,

doing

j.

loving

mercy,

467b

writing, go2b Judiciary safeguard

of

liberty,

what you see and touch, i34b Jupiter's statue by Phidias, iiO2b
Juridical-political organization, 9 64b Juries fill stomachs selling judg-

done though world perish, i86a enough to accuse, 448b


equal and exact j., 4723 equal j. for all, 8gb equal piece of j. Death, 32gb establish j., 4743 even-handed j., 282a

864b
Judicious, a little j. levity, 824b swearin' keeps temper, 8gib wales portion with j. care, 4g2b Jug he had gone far to fill, gooa of wine loaf of bread, 62gb one old j. without handle, 673b

ments, go8b by j., 472a Jurisprudence, gladsome light of 8a j.. i9


trial

w'en

it gits

loose

fum

j.,

Juggler, threadbare j. fortunetels ler, 2i8b

Juggling fiends no more believed, 287* Jug-jug, cuckoo j. pu-we, 30ob


Julia,

Jury, I'll be judge I'll be j., 74sb passing on prisoner's life, 27ob Jurymen, that j. may dine, 4o4b Just, a j. war, 422b, 46?a actions of the j., 327b

extreme j. extreme injustice, i5ib extreme j, often injustice, io8b female has no sense of j., 564a
forever in passion, 661 a

government of eternal
great interest of

j.,

657b

humanity reason

man, 5482 and j., 45ga

Add Hot Water,


and

losob

in silks

my
my

J.

goes,

32 la
J.,

Julian,
Julia's,

remembered
where
J.

poor
lips

lasting peace, 64ob, g8sb are the ways of God, 34ga be j. and fear not, sgga

in fair round belly, 24ga in j. none should see salvation,

*34b
the only worship, 74ga judge or vicar, 48 la
is

be
smile,

j.

before

you're

generous,
j.,

48 ib
blessing upon blood of this

lance

of

j.

hurtless

breaks,

3oa
Juliet
is

head of
j.

and her Rorneo, 225b

person,

24a 45a

279

unless

the sun, 22$b philosophy

cause

it is j.,

541 a
j.

make a

J.,

company of

and righteous,

225a
Julius Caesar thou art mighty yet, 2 5 6b mightiest J. fell, 56b July, English winter ending J.,

562a
in her eyes, loSga June and J. flowers, 3igb

8sb and unjust, contemplates j. 593 b friends and brave enemies, 472b gentle plain j. resolute, 7023 gods are j., 28ob

March
second

J.

October
J.

day of
of

1776,
J.,

May, i87a 4635


n587a

good man and j., 47b how should man be if all men were j., g2a
heart
j.

j.,

isa

swarm
July's

day

bees short

in
as

December,
J.
live,

*95* Jumblies, 673*

frank kindly, in J. -spring, losoa intolerably j., Soob jewel of the j., 3633
if

3613

law of humanity j. equity, 454a let j. be done, 33ob for all, Sjab liberty and j. liberty plucks j., 27oa love of j. simply fear, 355a machine rolls of itself, 82b made for sake of peace, 1795 makes possible, democracy io24b man's capacity for j., io24b mercy seasons j., 2g4b moderation in j., 467b no such thing as j., 844b one man's j. another's injustice, 6o7a passions without j., 8673
peace a disposition for j., 373a peace and sobriety, 32ga peace more important than j.,
i7 9 b penetrates eternal sea, i6aa
j.

lands
wits
j.

where
j.,

made what

man

will

is 6$b strong j., pay more income tax,

Jump, good I see him


not
j.

1973 before me, 823b

94a

with

common

memory
merelyj. not a j.

of the
is

j.

is

blessed, 24a

spirits,

severe,

4i6b
earth, 28a
j.

as eye into

233* over the candlestick, iog6b

man upon
as

thought j. sea and land, 2923 we'd j. life to come, 282a Jumped into bramble bush, iog8a

nothing 44b path of the 3b

to

do with that
j.

man,

poetic j., 4i3b price of j. publicity, 88gb


rails upon thief, 27gb j., 48sa recompense injury with revenge a wild j ., 2o8a strength without j., 36 3b strong lance of j., 7gb

shining light,

reason and

Jumping from chair she


55iD

sat

in,

Jumps in after train started, 867 b over lazy dog, noia June and July flowers, srgb
as cuckoo
is

place for j. man prison, 681 a play fair j. and patient, 724b rain on j. and unjust, 4ob reflect that God is j., 4713
shall

j.,

72b

man be more
j.

j.

than God,

subject to

God and

].,

1552.

in J., 24oa
J.,

i4b
spirits of

knee-deep in
leafy

month

of

J.,

newly sprung in

8igb 525b J., 4g4a

strong j. weak secure, sweet remembrance of j.,

men, 56a

superhighway of j., io82b sword of j. has no scabbard, 482b sword of j. lay down, 38sb

1424

INDEX
Justice,

Kennedy
Keep
talk

temper j. 34 8a temporary but conscience nal, i7gb the law my ducats, 2333
J.,

with mercy,
eter-

Keen discriminating sight, 5o6b dull fighter and k. guest, 24ob frost daily more k., ioi4b
love's k. arrows, 2503

from getting overwise,

gsSa
the Lord bless thee and k. thee,

there take says

41 3a

polished razor k., 4i4a with k. appetite he sits down,

9b
thee in all thy ways, sob thee in the way, ga thee only unto her, 6ia

be thy plea, 234b j. io2b j. everywhere, thunders condemnation, 68oa Thwackum was for doing j.,

though

threat to

Keener sounds, g56a with constant use, 5503 with his k. eye, 35gb
Keen-scented, these the k,, g87b Keep abreast of truth, 6g2a and pass and turn again, 6043 another thing hidden, 66a at times frae being sour, 4933

them within
this

thee,

asb

thing seven years, 5223

up

forever, g6$a.
feet,

thou

to

none

my

597b

toward

sell j,, i57b all nations, 461 b

thy friend under

own
all

key,
diligence,

truth in action, 6i2a

a6gb
thy
heart

with

uncompromising
waiting
j.

as

j.,

6i5b

sleeps, 69 52 a
j.,

was done, 7833 weep for me who has what stings is j., g6ob which is the j., 27gb
without strength, 363b
Justifiable,

1743

bid them k. teeth clean, 28gb breath's a ware will not k., 8 5 2b
citizen

23b thy tongue from time to k., 2?b

evil,

i8b

from

falling

in

error,

inconsistencies

often

ways of God
Justification,

losib cold young orchard, g2^b coming back and coming back, 957*

up appearances, 67oa up your bright swords,

j.

work
not

to men, 340,3 of art carry j.,


j.

company he

is

wont

who can, 5133 wolf from door, i76a word of promise to 287a

272b

our ear,

to

k.,

86a

cool, 6o8a, 10353

843a
Justified, evil cy, 847b
Justify,

for expedien-

wisdom j. of her children, 42 a end must j. the means,

387b God's ways to man, 853b he will not j. you without you, i47 a
thought toj. wrongdoings, 41 7b ways of God to men, 34 ib Justifying means by the end, H5a virtue debases in j., 4i6b Justly, do j. and love mercy, 35b
Just-spring, in J., i03oa Jutty, no j. frieze buttress, 282a J'y suis j'y reste, 627a

corner in thing I love, 274b base in man, 6535 drowsy emperor awake, 883a easier to get than k. Fortune, i25b 'em down on the farm, gggb 'em flying, 10373 England k. my bones, 2373 except the Lord k. the city, S2b eyes open before marriage, 422a

wrong to k. guest back, 66b you shall k. the key, 25ga


your fancy free, 852b your hearts and minds, 54b your powder dry, 5gga yourself to yourself, 66ga Keeper, Abel was k. of sheep, 6a
brother's k., 6a of warm lights, 823 stands up to keep goal, 8533 the Lord is thy k., 22a Keepers of the house shall tremble,

down

fear

God and

k. his

command-

28b

ments, 2ga
friends with himself, 825a

golden mean, i2ib good tongue in head, 2973 good-bye and k. cold, gayb government from error, 102 2 a guard and k. them, 74b he may k. that will and can,

Keepest, company thou k., 246b ports of slumber open, 24ab Keepeth, he that k. Israel, 22a he that k. thee will not slumber, 22 a Keeping, fools make such vain k.,
k., 727a men off keep them on, 40 ib time keeping rhythm, loosa time fme time, 644a up with Joneses, noaa up with yesterday, g46a

315* in thy gracious

K
auf der Vaterland, 8ua Kansas and Colorado have quarrel, g82a what's matter with K., 8g6a Karamazov way, yoSb Karamazovs, all we K. such insects, 7o8a they have Hamlets we K., 7o8b Kaspar's old K. work was done, 53*a Kate, kiss me K., 2iga some alas with K., io6oa
Kaiser
trust thee gentle K., 23ga Kathleen Mavourneen, 5g4b Katie, no music in rest K., 6g8b Keats, out-glittering K., 6oib who killed John K., 562b Kedar, tents of K., 2ga Keel, drinks water her k. plows air, 205b greasy Joan doth k. pot, 222b keep mind steady on k,, 6gsa ship sink on even k., isoa thnll of life along k., 622b Keelson, main-truck higher than k. low, 6g6a of creation is love, 7003 Keen and quivering ratio, 734b

is there any, 8o3b ideas won't k., 86ib in adversity k. an even mind,

home fires how to k.


i2ib

8543

burning, gi7a

Keeps,

bond which

k.

me

pale,

in any case k. cool, 10353 in despite of light k. us together, 3 o5 b


t

2841

it gets to k., 9453 keeper stands up 853 a

company he k., 86a end from being hard, g28b finds young k. young, 351 a
house in hand, 82 a all creeds, 65oa money movin' around, 8gib on windy side of care, 246a perseverance k. honor bright, 268b self-made laws, 707b thee from thy God, 5g7b truly k. his first last day, 3O5b warm her note, 3273 Keerless man in talk was Jim, 778b Keg, fizz like wine in k., g46a Kelly and Burke and Shea, 8iob
his

to
k.

k.

goal,

keeping 40 ib
let it k.

men

off

them

keys of

on,

one shape, 2yob Lord bless thee and k. thee, gb many to k., 6gob

me

as the apple of the eye, 173

moving on, 7173 no bad company, 4503 one in paint and powder, g87a
our Christmas merry still, sigb own appointed limits k., 7263 past upon throne, 6g$b promises to k., gzyb push on k. moving, 5013 Sabbath going to church, 735b shop and shop keep thee, 2053 six honest servingmen, 8763 state in wonted manner k., 3023 stiff upper lip, 722b

slide K. slide,
Kelly's, Fanny face, 534b

noia
K.
divine

plain

blessed

man who

possesses

k.

mind, g2a

stop hole to k. wind away, 266a strong if possible, 10353 such consort as they k., 3363 sword within scabbard k., 3723

Kelson, main-truck higher than k. low, 6g6a of creation is love, 7ooa Kemmerich's grave, io4ob Ken, as far as angels k., 34 ib nane sail k. where he is gane, io88b

swims into his

k.,

57gb

1425

Kennel
Kennel,
truth's

INDEX
,.

a dog must to

k.,

Kill,

almost
bliss

k.

man

as k. book,

food not natural, Killing for


frost,

2g8b
k. cat,

*77b u Kennin', gang a k. wrang, 495 Kennst du das Land, 477 a 2a Kentuck, hurrah for old K., 55 smile lit eyes o! K., ?6gb

more ways of
and
me, 10853
tfg" k., could
sift
sure to k., 4023 basilisk k. you, be my brother or I
is

beast something you

2a why use k. 3t all, 7 Kills, 3ir that k., 8533 k. reason, destroys book
doctor k. more, 3823
k.

time essence of

6913 comedy, 8 7 oa

3 4oa

Kentucky

boys

alligator-horses,

btoon* before

its

time,

8040 moonlight softest in K., old K. home, 7370 his pottage, Kept breath to cool 68a k. law, 34b by transgressing easier k. than recovered, 4&7
falling oars k. time, 3&ob I have not k. square, I k. word he said,

my

my

a87 914

hates thing he

would not

Kilmeny
Kilmer

gout 64b not night that k., 86gb shadow k. the growth, 3043 Scots, 2393 six or seven dozen the very good, 10443 thing he loves, 84ob world k. the good, 10443 been she knew not
where, 5o8a

more

rich

than poor,

234a

the

him

faith,

ssb

watch
looib

Matthew

and

Waldo,
k.,

when no proportion
Kernel, Kernels,
if

228a

it

corn

Kettle, faces as

contain k., 737 full of k., 85gb blackness of a k.,

manner, 577 a in ioys with love, 22$b 28oa kill kill kill kill, him, 7600 learn him or k.
artificial

in the shell, 2543

tongue

not

far

from

cheek, loooa
Kiltartan,

"Ojb Kilroy was here, 10403, my country K. Cross,


88ib
Kiltartan's poor,

tertfc

all

the

lawyers

2i 5 a

88ib

how
of

agree the k.

and pot, $

not k., Ggob lust of office k. me, gosa nor yet canst thou needst not keep but not k.

767b Polly put k. on, ioo.7b pot calls k. black, 1973 Kettledrums, copper k., gi8b

fish,

prinvk
sooner

46oa

Kimono, woman in k., 10540 a than k., Kin, little more 2|7 makes whole world k., 2693 kith, 10523 one's own k. and
Kind, adieu k. friends, adieu k. friends, iiooa and foolish comrade, 854b and northern face, io43b art of being k., 8263 coronation, 37oa as kings upon bek. to my remains, 3713 be to her virtues k., 3873 a blundering k. of melody, 3&9
charity is k., 52b cruel only to be k., *64b
she's enjoy her while

uooa

SSeat
K.,

Kew,

his

Highness'

dog at

tn

41 2b

in lilac time, gGib Key, door to which no

k.,

0303

6ioa 2 4a Xey dS not love, 3 thou shalt not k., 93 thy physician, 2773 6823 eternity, time
king
k.

k man than hawk, 9 9 4b


him,

injuring

golden k., 3363 I have heard k., 10033 in a bondman's k., 2323 out of k. with his time, 9883 think of k. each in prison,
looga
this is

k.

to

wear fox have to truths which can

to create, k. it,

9973

k.

nation,

urge to

the k.

to

it

all,

6963

to keep back beauty,

Sogb
s6ob
-

under thy own life's k., used k. always bright, 4223 with this k. Shakespeare, 5i7 a
668a

you
Keys,

shall

keep the

k.,

2593
k.,

fingers

on these

955fe

of all the creeds, 6503 of hell and death, 57b of kingdom of heaven, 43 a over the noisy k., 725b

9*5 a you wife with kindness, 2igb k. a fly, 2193 willingly 3s io44a world has to k. peoole, you if you quote it, 8873 i a k. he dragon, 9 9 Killed, before books not k. by fire, 973 by overwork, 8723 calf in high style, 3653 care k. a cat, 247 a effort nesrly k. her, 9023

k., 1083 us for their sport, 2793 hsve to k., when

Fortune more

k.

k., 3690 than her cus-

had"* been

early

had been

k.,

heart benevolent and k., &$> coronets, 6453 hearts more than

7oob
his k. that lived yesrs 3go, realhuman k. not bear much
ity,

am

ioo4b a k. of burr, 2723


k.,

the k.

fought dogs k.

cats,
k.,

to,

9693
k.

arch the Keystone, night's black k., 495^


Kibe,
galls his k.,

two massy

he bore,

338b

hawked
poet

at

and

662b 2843

kindness not therefore 3nd k., io86a lady sweet less than k., 2573

4063

hunting hyens, 9243 could be k., 775b if


I'm
k. sire,

man
more
9191

auu.

******

662a

nearly

k.

3nd

O75b J r gentle,

26sb

Kick against

pricks, 4gb, ?8b ass thinks he may k., 47 5b out but not let down, losgb

little

a cherry tree, 499 many times in politics,

more

them in the pants, 97?b wheel's k., Q46b

by suppers, 324b in war, gigo only once


k.

*Sett in k. but degree, 6233 not seek for k. relief, 487 old sun will know, i028b of the k., 644b

no

propitiatory bird, 10573

you downstairs, 743b Kicked and torn and beaten out,


573 in head by mule, 886a
until they

why

k.

me

downstairs,

49 lb

Rowing

him, 902!) scotched snake not k. it, 2840 some sleeping k., 22?b
Bill

who

k.

plenty so k., io constant and k. word, thief said last


fire for k. heart,

5oo

soul k. by wine, 747 b than frightened to death,

6ua

can

feel,
k.,

352b

the

rat,

logSb

waxed

fat

and

iob

two

thirds of people k.,

Kicks dust, 682b Kid, leopard shall lie


313 Kiddo, take it from
the
k.,

down with
k.,

who k. Cock who k. Tohn


you
first

me
k.,

lojob

Killer

Kidney,

man

of

my

2673

Kids in big field of rye, 10783 mountain, highest Kilimanjaro io4sa Kill admiral from time to time,
4173

a , Killeth, letter k., 53 wrath k. the foolish man, as canker to rose, 3383

kings io75

9500 Robin, logsb Keats, 502b a time off base, io44 on Etruscan cup,

through time is a k. friend, 9823 be k, 8253 to be honest to 4023 too k. to be k. enough, k., 4o6b two 3lmost divide the were all thy children k., 2430 b yet he was k., 449 CMrv than necessary, Kinder, a little k.
85 little k, let me be a when will, 7^ a Kindle, C3nnot k. hearts th3t k., 7203 2a of former days, g* passion soft desire, 37 ib Lord k., 45 g a Kindled, anger of

6673 2673

ig

Killing

breathed k.

chills,

8243

of tragedy, 8703 eternity essence

1426

INDEX
Kindled at taper of conwiviality,

Kingdom
King of glory shall come in, i8a of infinite space, 261 a
i66b
of kings, s8b, 425b, s68b of pain, 774b of shreds and patches, 264a of Spain's daughter, iog5b of terrors, 153 of the Jews, jga of the sea, 954a offends no law is k. indeed,

King balm from an anointed


king, 227a be you clown or

66gb
earth, s6$a
light here k., jiga

beloved of a
best
k.

that k. flame, 952!) Kindles, fires true genius k., 4iob in clothes a wantonness, 32oa love kindled by virtue k. another, i6ib Kindleth, how great a little fire
wise

man

k., 82 ib k., io88a of good fellows,

born to be k., 84gb but thou the k. did banish, 226a by your own fireside, ig$b
Cambyses' vein, 2$ga can do no wrong, 444b
cat

56b Kindlier hand, 651 a


k.,

Kindliness of sheets, gg^b

Kindling her undazzled eyes, $4ob Kindly, be k. affectioned, 5ia earth slumber, 647b frosty but k., 48a fruits of the earth, 6ob had we never loved sae k., 4g4a heart just frank k., 361 a if
Light, 597b

look on k., i8sa conscience of k., 26 ib Charles's head, 67 ib chief defect of Henry K., go2a Christ the world all aleak,

may

205b
old and foolish k., 27b old k. to sparrow, gi4b old mad blind despised k., 57oa only is so by being so, 191 a over children of pride, i6b Ozymandias k. of kings, g68b pageantry of k., iogib

catch

logia

come back as k., gg4a cometh unto thee lowly,


2i5b Cophetua 223b
cotton
is k.,

$6a contrary to k. built paper mill,


loved

Nature's k. law, 4oga stopped for me, 7$6b to his fellow men, 6ja word goodly act, g4ga words do not enter so deeply, loob Kindness, a God of great k., i4a acts of k. and of love, 5oga begets kindness, 8ia Christ took k., 667a cup o' k. yet, 4gsa glad k., 882b have you had k. shown, 782* in women mot looks, 2igb kill wife with k., sigb learned k. from unkind, g?6a lose natural k., 88ab milk of human k., 28 ib much k. in the Jew, agsb no act of k. ever wasted, 75b not free from ridicule, SjSb-

beggarmaid,

Pandion he is dead, 3093 pirate k., 766b reigns but not govern, igab remain k. in underwear, 863a
rightwise k. of England, ruthless k., 44 ib

5g8b David and K. Solomon, &5gb doth hedge a k., 26a divinity earth receive her K., J97a
every inch a k., 2790 farced title 'fore k., 244b farewell k., 227b first k. fortunate soldier, 4i?a follow the k., 65 3a
glorious to be pirate k., 766b glory to newborn K., 4*5b

i75a

seemed

to

me

like

k.,

g86a

shall reign in righteousness, $2a sigh sword of Angel K., 4goa

sing Long live k., 457b singer accompany the k., 4g8b in Dunfermline, io87a so excellent a k., 257b Son of Heaven's eternal K.,
sits

God God God

bless the k.,

save the k., 4oia save the k. say amen, 228a

m,

4Hb

state
still

334* without
I

k.,

am

5913
of
those,

k.
k.,

228a

stomach of a

i8ga

gold-crowned k., g8aa good K. Wenceslas, 687b governs like a k., 4g6b great God our K., 627b greater than k. himself, 4263
vain, 37 ib half the zeal I served

strike at k. kill him, 6ioa such as K. Harry, ana

grew
not therefore kind, 4o6a of wooed and wooer, losSb recompense k. with k., 72b
reputation for k. enters deeply, loob save in the way of k., so8b
sincerity earnestness and k., 7$a to fellow creatures, 531 a

my

k.,

agga
heart and stomach of a k., 189 a heaven's all gracious k., 657b

the K. went on, 7453 think not k. did banish thee, 226a this hath not offended k., iyga to be k. not within prospect, 28ia to execute orders not to be k.,

454b
shall die, $8a true beggar true k., 4553 was in countinghouse, iog4b wash balm from an anointed k.,

here here

lies

k. that ruled,

j26b

tomorrow

the k., gSaa honor the k., 560 I am the Roman k., gGaa
lies
I
if

tongue
436a

is

the law of

k.,

sya
k.,

was a

what wisdom greater than


Kindnesses, great persons great

k. in Babylon, 8i6a chance will have me k., 28 ib

k.,

ig6b

one kindness among k., thought of k. done, lisa

46ga

in in in in

carriage
exile,

may

ride, 631 a

g86a

Kindred, brothers sons k. slain, 4iob friends k. days, 6o$a like k. drops been mingled, 457 to God who made him, 6g7b true to k. points, 5i7a welcome k. glooms, 4igb Kindreds, all nations and k., s8a Kinds, absolute natures or k., g$a birds are k. of knowledge, g6a material objects of two k. f uga Kine, learn from k. ruminating, 8osa Pharaoh's lean k. loved, 2ggb seven thin k., 7b
King, a' for our rightfu' k., 4943 a new k. over Egypt, 8a all looking for a k., 72$b asked the queen, g6gb
Ballyhoo's Court, gg8b

Prussia forward, 8i5a sleep a k., 29$a the k. dead, aiyb is Jesus K. of Jews, 453 kings did k. to death, Lear, 47oa let there be one k., 6zb
little profits idle k., long live k., 457b

io7oa

646a

made

for quietness' sake,

gi7b

mine eyes have seen the K., gob mockery k. of snow, 2z8a Moloch sceptered k., 343* more royalist than k.,
mortal temples of k,, 22?b my God and K., 32gb niece of K. Gorboduc, 25$a

227a whatsoever k. reign, logob is this K. of glory, i8a Pretender or who K., 4i$a wholesome even for k., 7g8a whom the k. delighteth to honor, i4a will not leave country, io47b winter k., io43b without woman I love, 10343 world is a k., 5o6b worm that eat of a k., 264b year's pleasant k., 3ooa King Lear, impressed by reading K., 47oa-b Kingdom, advantage on k. of shore, sgab

who who

and patience
57* by the
sea,

of

Jesus

Chiist,

644a
41 b

no

k. in Israel,

nb

not every year a k. born, iogb of a k. of England too, i8ga


of all kings, io84a of Babylon stood at the partof

death's other k., icoga enter into k. of heaven, fit for k. of God, 46b

God hath numbered


is

thy

k.,

35a

went up

hill,

divided, keys of k. of heaven, 43a large k. for little grave,

1427

Kingdom
Kingdom,

INDEX
Kings, deaths of k., 7 65 a descended of so many k., 2893 did king to death, io7oa divine right of k., 636a dread and fear of k., 234b flower of k. and knights, i75b glory to King of k., 42$b good of subjects end of k., g85b grammar control k., 36ib have died of gout, 364b
Kiss

man

little k. I possess, 7423 like little k., 2543

and cling, 82 ib and tell, 39 ib


to
k.,

mind content both crown and

my my mind
no

k. is, 2o6a k. for a horse


to

cleanliest shift is come k. me, 10853

2503

me

2i8a a k.

is,

igsa

society bring k. of God, go^a not enter into k. of heaven, 433 of daylight's dauphin, 8031 of heaven is at hand, jgb of heaven like a net, 753 of heaven like mustard seed,

us k. and part, 2113 coward does it with k., 8413 fades out from k. to k., 88ob give me a k., 3203 in Colin 's eyes, g8ib
let

come

have

he

sat down, 38a shall stand before

k.,

25b

42b
of perpetual night, 2173 of such is k. of God, 45b of the shore, agsb palaces in K. come, g4ya remember me when in thy k.,
rich man enter into root of the k., ggb

heartsease must k. neglect, 244b it makes gods, 2iyb

kind

as k.

upon coronation

47b

k.,

4$b
66ob 2433

day, 37oa king of all k., 10843 King of k. f 580, 425b know k. of England, 766b laws or k. cause or cure, 4283
like stars,

snug

little

k.

up

stairs,

mad
may may

teach order to peopled k., theirs is the k. of heaven, ggb,

57ob world mad k., 2363 be blessed, 4gsb

4oa
thine
is

the k., 4ob

thy k. come, 4ob


to find

man

love treason but traitor hate, ii2a meaner creatures k*, 2i7b mercy enthroned in hearts of
k.,

Kingdoms, all 46b are but cares, 17 xa

to benefit k., ggb the k. of -world,

234b
k.,

Nature's little k., 3013 nine worthy and best

i74b

not

k.

and

lords

but nations,

are clay, 2873 destroyed by bandits, 3793 did shake k., gib

545* plucker down of k., 2i5b on Etruscan cup, icysb

place to make well, 5463 k. of blankets, sigh too much k. too long, so k. on, 3203 some that shadows k., 2333 Strephon's k. lost in jest, this month is a k., 3293 through 3 veil, 5ggb till the cow comes home,

Jews k. infidels adore, 4043 keep k. in refrigerator, i03&b last lamenting k., goSb leave a k. but in the cup, 3033 long and fervent k., 588b long as my exile, sgoa make me immortal with a k., 213* me and be quiet, 4i4a me Hardy, 4gab me Kate, 2iga me sweet and twenty, 25 ib not k. your f.ing flag, 10313 of blankets, gggb of death, gi6b one k. for all the world, 4973
gg3b 723b

rough male

g8ib

goodly states and

k.,

57gb

kissed away k., 288a of this world, 58a sifted three k., 37sb

Kingfisher, in Black

blue k. dives, Mud k., 10753

10753

Ozymandias king of k., s68b politeness of k., 4&$b pride of k., 4o7b, 76ob princes but breath of k., 4g2b prophets and k., 46b right divine of k., 4i3b
io4ib royal throne of k., ss6b ruin k., g68a sad stories of death of k., 227b
saddest among k. of earth, 8ggb saddest of all k., 8933 setter up of k., 2i5b
rivers of k.,

what is a k., 3igb with one long k. my -soul, 2i3b you take is better, a6ga
Kissed by

3163

m3n who

didn't

wax

moustache, 8723

Kingfishers, as k. catch fire, Sogb

came to Jesus curtsied when


2g6a
here

and k. him, 44b you have and k.,

Kingly commons, 6g6b crown to gain, 54ga


his state
King's,
all
is k.,

341 a the k. horses,

iog5b

first k. beside thorn, 8oia hung lips I have k,, z6$b in forty years, ioi8b

daughter
iga

is all

glorious within,

Jenny

k.

me, 55 ib

Noroway, io87b daughter English, a67a first minister, g24a grim k. dog, 8sb marched by k. name, loasb might greater than human, 873 name a tower of strength, 2i7b not the k. crown nor sword, 27ob our only lord, ana
rides hobbyhorse along k. high-

o'

showers

on

her

k.

barbaric
k.,

lovely grass, 9933 maiden all forlorn, iog8b

pearl, 3433 slave to fate


spirit

chance

of Zeus-fostered k., sport of k., 39.73 sword of justice lay down, 385b tax heavier than k., 422b teeming womb of royal k., 226b they are no k., 3&5b tired of k., 6033

3083 62b

sad k. mouth, 77 gb pacified Psyche k. her, 643b righteousness and peace have k. each other, 2oa stones k. by English dead,

io28b

them and put them toyed and k., 40 ib we have k. away


2883
Kisses,

there,

Ssob

kingdoms,

triumphing over
xoiga

k.

and

aces,

way, 487b
subject's duty
is k.,

244b

Kings,
all k.

all

be happy as k., 82sb and their favorites, ^o^b

tyrants from policy, 4543 until philosophers are k.,

vain the ambition of k.,

and counselors of the earth, i4b and princes have philosophy,


94a
angels barrel-house
in

g4a 3153

walk with k., 8773 what have k. that privates have


not, 2440

k., io8ga between k. and wine, 8goa bring again bring agsin, 27 ib from female mouth, 55gb give me a thousand k., n4b

wist before I

forms
k.,

of

k.,

4723

52b

by God appointed, iogoa cabbages and k., 7463 calm contending k., 22ob captains and k. depart, 875b
change
crept
state

would not play at, 4$8b Kinquering Congs their


take,

titles

with
to

k.,

agaa
sun,

out
that

feel

6i7b
enjoy,

crown

seldom k.

2isb customs curtsy to great k., 245b death beats at palaces of k., i2ob death lays icy hand on k.,

8o7b Kinship with the stars, 7303 Kinsmen, as k. met a night, 7363 Kipling, Rudyards cease from K., 8563 Kipling's, other is K. If, loooa Kirk, below the k., 524b is this the k., 525b Kiss, ae fond k., 4943 afresh, ssob after k. comes throttle, i05gb again with tears, 648a

understand thy k., 23gb it flies, 488b many thousand k., 288b more than k. letters mingle souls, 3073 of enemy deceitful, 26b played cards for k., 2O3a quickly is gone, 5&8b
1

joy as

remembered
648b

k.

after

death,

stolen k. completer, 55 ib

you have forgotten


Kissing

my

k.,

775b
do,

don't

last

cookery

7303
fool invented k., 3gob god k. carrion, 26ob

1428

INDEX
Kissing

Know
43gb
Knights, death of most noblest k., i75 b flower of kings and k. destroyed, 1755 ladies dead and lovely k.,

had to stop, 6653 hand may feel good, io27a her down, 10573 no more k. after, 82 ib

Knell, curfew tolls of Union, 47 3b

k.,

strikes like rising k., 5563

overpowering

k.,

56ib

Kist, wist before I k., io8ga Kit, your old k. bag, 9583 Kitchen, get out of k,, 9833

that summons, 2833 Knelt down with angry prayers,

2gsb

go6a

long and ghastly k., 6753 scrub k. pavement, 88ob fire, 8iga set around the k. Kitchens, wildcats in your k., a 273 Kite cut from the string, g85b Kites, chronicle the wars of k.,

Knew,

Achilles

whom we
4soa

k.,

646b
6823

anguish of marrow, ioo2a

anybody

else I k. as well,
k.,

let others sing of k., 2iob Knit, come k. hands, 3g6b Knits a bolder one, 735b up raveled sleave of care, 2&3b Knitters in the sun, 252a

carry all he

and k., 10523 Kith, one's own Kits cats sacks wives, logga Kitten, rather be k. and cry mew,
239b
Kittens, deserve all these k., soshubble ez baskit er k.,

35<*

km

changed from him they k., g25b God and I k. once, 77oa he nothing k., 34ga head which all men k., 6$ib
I k. all her ways, 8s4b I k. him Horatio, 26sb I k. him when, gosb
if

Knives,
39

Knitting, brings her k., 588b loose train of thy hair, 337b hands made before k.,

b
k.
k.,

men with
mishaps like

in

brain,

6o8b

6g4b

Knock and it shall be opened, 41 a as you please nobody home,


4o7b
heart k. at
I k.

youth but
could, i88b
I

k.

and old age

g46a 8143

my

ribs, 28 ib

Johnny

Kitty Fisher

found

it,

iog7a

hardly k. ye, life the old Sabines k.,

unbidden once, 748b


or k. the breast, 35oa

Hawk, 10363
Klopstock, praise K., 4553

man who

questioned, 7?oa Knapsack, marshal's baton in k.,

5053 Knave, arrant k., a6oa cat's a cat Rolet a k., 377a himself a k., 4ooa how absolute the k. is, s6sb men crown the k., 791 a more k. than fool, 1950, 2i2b of Hearts, io94b playing the k., 3753
yea-forsooth k., surname epithet for k., Knaves all three, 10973 arrant k. all, 2623
rascally

k. more spoke less, 137* my son was mortal, gab never k. so young a body, 2343 no more he was poor, 738b not Astrophil, 31 4b not Joseph, 8a not 'twas her own, 57 ib phoenix in my youth, 88 ib roses of world fade, 88gb

sounds exceed k. at door, 535a stand at the door and k., syb
to wail

where k. is open wide, you but k. breathe shine, Knockdown argument, 37ob, Knocker, tie up the k., 4ioa Knocking around with men, come k. at my door, 72gb on moonlit door, 9140

444a
308 a

746b
477 a

stars flowers birds, goga

24ib i76b

called
little

them untaught

k.,

better than false k., thieves and teachers, 2773 Kneaded, a k. clod, 27 ib

2g8b 246b

Knee, banjo on my k., 727b bowed patient k., 556b her head on her k., 2763 joint not entertainment, gisa lean in joy upon father's k., 487a pregnant hinges of the k., 2633

876a taught they were pilgrims, 3i8b things that were and would be, 6sb thy face or name, 3O5b we should both forget, 7753 worst too young, 874a you k. Astrophil, 3i4b Knife, cut off tails with k., logab hardest k. ill-used, 2933 how cut without k., iog4a
I the other

me

all I k.,

wound and k., men are the


with bowie
k.

707 a carving
k.,

the k. when I'm dead, g4ga Knocks, apostolic blows and k., 35* a life k. no one can wait, g47b open locks whoever k., 2853 you down with butt end, 45 ib Knolled, bells k. to church, 248b Knolling departing friend, 241 a Knot, crowned k. of fire, 10073 dark red love k., g6ib Gordian k. unloose, 243a seeking k. in a bulrush, io5b subtle k. which makes us man,
3 o6b

k.,

88ga

pinned put a

to
k.,
k.,

smiler with

thy throat, i67b

76gb 2$b

Knot's tied in public way, 1041 a Knots, pokers into true-love k., 527*

Knotted and combined locks part,

Knee-deep in June, 8igb Kneel down and ask forgiveness, 28oa mother state to thee I k., 78 ib not to k. seemed boast, 8g8b
Kneeling, Faith k. by his bed of death, 2iib Kneels, not one k. to another,

555a watering pot pruning k., 6$6b when they take k., 734a wind's like whetted k., g46b without a blade, 4703 Knight, ail thee k. at arms, 5813 courteoust k. ever bare shield, !750

war even

to

Know
all

43 ib 5i5b all ye k. on earth, $8$b arrive at what not k., ioo5b as I am known, 52b as much as possible, 8ooa be still and k. that I am God,
a
subject
ourselves,

her seamen

k.,

7oob
Knees, brought

dark Care enthroned behind K.,

me down

to

k.,

i2ib
gentle
k.

io66a
fell

pricking

on

plain,

down on your k., 25oa upon k. and blessed God,


3i8b-3iga

like
k.,

2ooa lean and foolish k., gi8b young Lochinvar, gigb

iga believed what we least k., igoa best that is in one, 8osb best things not learned, 43ga
better be ignorant than half
k.,

1273
k.,

first fell

on own

686a

never

matched

of

earthly

better better

k.

nothing

than

half-

live

on

k.,

man-at-arms 204b

9433, g73a now serve

WBb
on
k.,

on parent
476a

of the gods, 65a k.

newborn

child,

of ghosts and shadows, io86a of holy spirit, 588b of the Woeful Figure, ig4b parfit gentil k., i66a

know, 685b k. nothing than what ain't so, 68sb both act and k., 35gb
'

brave what

shins ankles calves k., go2a they that enter must go on k.,

plumed k., 74ga prince can make belted k,, 4g6a to be their wooer, io88b Knighthood, of k. and of freedom
flower, i6gb

by their
cannot k.

ioi4b fruits k. them,


k.,

we

4ib
456b

how much

learn, 8gga

never k., dancer from dance, 88 gb

charms

slaves

Thee all k. bent, work done upon his


to

^a

determined to k. beans, 683b


different idea of things

k.,
k.,

877b

young climber-up of Knell, by fairy hands


443*

50 ib k. rung,

Knightly years were gone, 8i6a Knight's bones are dust, 5273 Knights, armorers accomplishing k., 244a

we

k.,

gioa
disciplines of wars, 244a disposition of women, loga

1429

Know
Know, do not
do you
k.
k.

INDEX
much about
lord,

Know, never
26ob

k.

how high we

are,

Know

trick

worth two of

that,

gods, ioo6a

238b
never k. what is enough, 4870 never k. when succeeded best, never prophesy unless k., 6gsb never see nor k. nor miss me,

me my

doesn't k. what he likes, i033a don't k. where go better, g26b dost k. who made thee, 486b who k. how to learn,

we are eternal, 374b we k. the good, 84b we k. what we are, 2653 we musicians k., 666a
well I

am

not great, 65sb


k.,

enough

777 a son k., 25 ib every wise man's everything forgive everything,


5<>2b

g68b
never
think

you

already

k.,

what can we k., 301 a what cares he he cannot


7iga

8i8b

everything
for

down

in Judee, 6gsa

whom

bell tolls,

3o8b

four things wiser to k., io2ga gallanter I k., 734b a go we k. not where, 271 God with thee k. it not, 5i2a

good

listener gets

to k. some-

we k., 5i7 a greater than handful o' things I k., 778b have the gift to k. it, 248b hawk from handsaw, 261 a heartily k., 6o3a how first he met her, 66ob how in your darkness k., go6b

thing, 94ia

how man reacts, g87b how should I true love k., 26sa how tender 'tis to love babe,
282b

no such liberty, ss8b not draw out more than already k., 8o6b not enough to k., g8a not k. better k. more, go4b not k. I am a woman, 24gb not k. we are dead, gsa not k. what it was about, io44a not subtle ways, 6o4a not utter what dost not k., 23ga not what they do, 47b not what they mean, 648b not what we may be, 26sa not where His islands, 626b not whether laws be right, 841 a not why I am sad, s88a nothing except my ignorance,
87b

what do I k., igoa what false heart doth k., 2833 what God and man is, 654b what I like, giob what I read in papers, 9543 what is past I k., 36b what is to come I k. not, 36b what it is to be child, &57a what lays afore us, 67ob what no other man can k., 843b what should it k. of death,
5 o8b

what should they


87 4a

k. of England,

what 'tis to pity, 248b what we need to k., ioi2b what wood a cudgel's of, 352b what you don't k. make book,
52 3b whatever there is to where'er I go, 5isa
k.,

old

men

k.

when

old

man

dies,

how how
I I

to

well k. what 66 3b

speak falsehoods,

67a

mean

to do,

am but summer, 10230 am happier than I k.,

347 a

a bank, 22gb I k. myself a man, 301 a I k. not seems, 257a I k. not the man, 44b
I k. I k.

io52a one thing I k. is land, g7ob ioo2a only broken images, in vain, 554b only k, we loved knew, only that he nothing 349a 262a not k. of, we others that we k. of heaven, parting all 739 a first time, ioo7a place for

7sib

who who

only England k., 8?4a not k., 74b speaks does whose prayers make whole,

that

is

poetry,

I k. thy pride, i2a I k. tomorrow, 3a I k. what I like, giob

I k. you all, 2s8a I shall meet fate, 88 ib I sing the sweets Ik., ib if to do as easy as to k., 23 if you haven't guessed, 876a
if
if

pleasure none but 3693 pools I used to k., 85 3b power to k. all things, 30ia reason from what we k., 4<>7 b i28a rest who does not k., said I didn't k., 76ob k. another, 469^ say not you
k.,

madmen

87*b whose woods I think I k., gs7b world unknowable we k., 8573 world without going outdoors, 74b worst and provide for it, 4653 wot lays afore us, 67ob is a prince fallen, ye not there
i2b ye the land, 558a 662a you k. we French, you solitary griefs, 8gsa

you mean you want

to k. yourself, to k. yourself,

46gb 4g7b
k,

ignorance

toboggans

into

say what I k., 483b not k., ggia saying all we did she thinks o' me, 87 3b own of country, 4383 something
strive to grasp
k.,

what they do not


to
k.
is

I'm farther from heaven, 5 in Boston ask how much k., 7 63 b in mathematics never k. what
about, gi2b in part prophesy in part, i;2b in truth we k. nothing, it no more, 21 a kind old sun will k., ioa8b labor as we k., g66b learn what I wanted to k., 48s

loib
great

study

deal

little,

4i4b
subject of

young k. everything, 483^ Knowest, speak less than thou k., 277b thou k. my downsitting, 233 thou k. thy estimate, 2gsa thou k. 'tis common, 25?a thou the land, 477a Knoweth, he k. not who shall gather them, iga

knowledge
k.,

to k.

no man

k. of his sepulcher, lob

g6a
tell

me what you

5o4b

sun k. his going down, 2ib be k., Knowing, better friends not

that age to age succeeds, 644t that I may k. how frail I am

i8b
that man might k. end, 256b -"^ that my redeemer liveth, that the Lord is God, 2ia that we shall k. one day, 73 ib that you do not know, 753 the like no more, 6soa the right timing, 68b p-

God God
I

give joy of k., 958b grateful and k., i4ga of persons, 1303 gossip most k.
is

understand more, g75a let him not k. it, 274b let not left hand k., 4ob liberty to k., 34ob light falls and fills, 10653 living k. no bounds, 32?b
less

loved my books, 2g6a not k. what they do, 246b of devil's party without

k.

it,

they k. and

do not

k.,

ioo4b

love

8og lucky to die and I k. it, 700 make me to k. mine end, i8b man not k. of God, ios4a men k. so little of men, 894 much say little, 4$6a my methods Watson, 8soa
k.,

him and

let

him

this I k. full well, 386b this truth at least k.,

8ggb
402 a

Knowledge,

secret of happiness freedom, goa too much of neighbors, 77?b when to have done, 578a without author's k. it, 865b absolute idea of k., access to k.,

487b

thought so
thyself, 68a,
till

now
4o8b

k.

it,

then

what

love

bore

thee,

siob
7.,
lit

acquired under compulsion, after such k., looib


all

soul hath power to k., 301 neither shall his place k. him

my

to k. is nothing, 8o2a to k. to kill to create,

k.

and wonder

is

pleasure,

2o6b
all k. my province, 2o6a and timber seasoned, 34a

too

much convinced
ioo7b

of too

i4b

tie,

1430

INDEX
Knowledge, apply thine heart unto my k., 25b
birds are kinds of
k.,

Labor
Knows, greatness happy who
k. itself, 24ob k. rural gods,

Knowledge of Greek thought,


of human nature, 5330, 776b of nothing, 668b of our buried life, 7i2a of their duty, goa of world not in closet, 4153

g6a
k.,

nya-b

book of k. fair, 344b born in possession of born to follow k., i6ob


brings
us

how
it

7ib

nearer

ignorance,

ioo4b but no power, 87a by suffering, 6iyb

new k., 564b captivating as carrier of news and k., 752a causes to be without k., 73b climbing after k. infinite, iaa
comes wisdom
lingers, 647b conformity of object and intellect, 1553 dawn of k. false dawn, logga death is k., 49&b desire more love and k., S4?a desire of k. caused man to fall,

opinion is k. in making, $4oa out-topping k., 7iob poetry finer spirit of k., siia profess not the k., 37b puffeth up, 52a pure joy of k., 107 ib quest for k. Occidental, 8i8b
responsible

to confess, 42 aa k. not what it is, SSga man says what he k., 4363 no beast but k. some pity, no one k. masterpiece,

*i6b g88b

no one

he tries, i27a not also to unknow, 7o7b


k. till

human

k.,

io52b

rich storehouse, 2o6b science achieve perfect k., 7103 scientific k. from textbooks,

not how other half lives, 3253 not how to k., 707b not what to do, logaa now God alone k. t 77oa reason k. nothing of, $6$b sage k. without going about,

74b
secret
sits

in

middle and

k.,

2o8b
desire of k. increases, 437b diffused k. immortalizes, 50 ib diffusion of k. advantageous,

i026b shall any teach God k., shall be increased, 35a shine with k., giga should be his guide, 941
spirit

gaga
i$b
sleep that k. not breaking, tale every schoolboy k., tell wife all he k., 333b the less one k., 74b the universe not himself, toad beneath harrow k., what none other k., 884b

52oa 43ga

of

k.

and
is

fear
to

of

the

35gb
87 ib

6i6b
discard k., icib

Lord, gia subject of k.


subjective

know, g6a
k.,

and

objective in

what one

k. of little

moment,

do deed without God's k., 7ga dreadful k. of truth, 8ib


earth full of k.
of

528b sun in firmament, 546b


sweetly uttered k., 2O3b they have too much
this is k., 7ia to the young man k.
tion,
k.,

Lord, jia

enormous
essential k.,

makes god of me,


676a

74b

and

discre-

exact k. of the past, 8ga excellent things in counsels and


k.,

23a

25b
collection of
k.,

too too

extraordinary

107 4a faith and k. in medicine, s65a

price for k., 4oob k. for skeptic, 4o8b tree of diabolical k., 48ob tree of k. of good and evil, sb

much

high

fence against world is k., g7ga follow k. like star, 646b gradualness in accumulation of
k.,

under difficulties, 54ob virtue harder than k., 373a wise man has no extensive
utter vain k., Knowledgeable of evils, 7&a

k.,

Kodak, It Isn't A K., io3ob Kosciusko, freedom shrieked as K.


fell, 5S7b Kosmos, untented K. 824a

777* what's what, 66ga k. does not speak, 74b k. himself is enlightened, 74a who k. others is wise, 743 wise father that k. child, 2$2b wots' wot, 66ga ye not heavenly powers, 62 ia you not heavenly powers, 4773 Knuckle-end of England, 52 sb Ko-ax, brekekekex k. k., g2a

who who

8i8b

75 wise

man

i$a

my

abode,

grow from more to more, 64gb he that hath k. spareth his


words, 25a

Knowledges, sess, 4gob

general k. idiots pos-

K., 7ooa with dread abysses, 7962

Walt Whitman a

he that increaseth
help
if

k.,

me with k., 668b her ample page, 44ob


a
little

27b

Known
all

we have

a better day, 5i8a k. and cared


leaves
all

for,

Krivchians,

Kraft durch Freude, ioi7b the Chuds Slavs and


K., i7oa Kronos, son of K.,

k.

dangerous, 7253

among

never
it,

k.,

6b
K.,

in traveling carry k. 4$2b increaseth strength, 26a is bought in market, 688a is of two kinds, 43 ib
is

and do not want


because of

43oa
k.,

Kubla Khan, in Xanadu did


88 ib
523*>

is is

power, 2o6b proud, 45ga


sufficient to attain,

things best k. and said in world, 7i6a best k. and thought, 7ijb cause hidden result well k.,

i28b

Kunti, son of K. goes, io6b Kurtz, Mistah K. he dead, 8443 Kye's, the k. come hame, 47gb Kyloe, little K. cow, iog4b

72b is the one only good, 8?b but action, 725a life not k. light of k. in eyes, 78sb lost in information, 10046 manners must adorn k., 4i5b may give weight, 4isb

from

k. to

unknown, 675b
k.,

Kyrie eleison,

5<ja

God
in

of fathers k. of old, 8753

have ye not
all

know

as I am k., 52b lady k. as Lou, 9333

32b the land, 645b

letters

should not be

k.,

ag6b

meager and unsatisfactory, 7233 men by nature desire k., g7b

lightning's hour, io55a much to be done little

k.,

4*8b
233

more than

force,

2o6b
k.,

multiplieth i6a

words without

searched me and too late, 223b

k.

me,

Label

must come through

action, 82b never learned of schools, 626a night unto night showeth k., i7b no k. beyond experience, 37 2b no work nor device nor k., 28b not infused from without, loob not k. but personality, 7033

6ob what do to be forever k., 357b am not I K., 635a Know-Nothing, Knows, all this the world well k.,

unto

whom

all

desires k.,

Labels,

men for God, men are 1.


to event,

856b
that give

732a Labor, a youth of 1., 44ga all ye that 1., 42a

name

objects of God

and
35b

k.

curious,

}o2a
of-

more than burnt

ferings,

ag4b babs k. what and babs k. why, 945b but world end tonight, 664a each exercise art he k., 91 a expert k. more about less, 86ab God's mouth k. not falsehood, 78b

and capital get together, and intense study, 33gb and sorrow, 7&gb and to wait, 62ob and wounds vain, 688b
as another's serf, 66a as we know, g66b at eternal task, 722a

1431

Labor
Labor, aversion to
1.,

INDEX

bad book
basic hero

as

much

$3*
1.,

Labor, weary of

1.,

g8gb
1.,

what
yet
is

profit

1., 8g5a because they excel, 54oa

who have
1.,

of all his not to 1., 6s8a


1.

7a
sor-

laws 1. make, . Lackeys, little Lacking, contains all nothing

7oia
little is

their strength

and

never L,

u4a

bread from mouth of brow of 1., 8s8b


capital fruit of L, 6$7b of capital solicits aid

47* a

1., 546b to changes 1. from burden honor, 954b Chinese cheap 1., 76gb daily hurled, gyga discontinued 1. dangerous, sggb disgraces no man, 7i?b employers of wage L, 686b exact day 1. light denied, 341*

row, gob Laborare, orare est L, 1513 closed ten Laboratory, every 1, years, g56a-b Labored not for myself only, s8b nothings, 4osa b Laborer, I am a true 1., *49 right of 1. to savings, 75?a sett'st weary 1. free, 538a son of robust L, g64b

lovers

1.

matter, 25oa

neither honor nor lyre, i2ia Lackluster eye, 248a Lacks, what it 1. in length, g28b

worthy of

hire,

46b

genius

intuitive

talent

for

1.,

Laborer's task o'er, 72?a Laborers, class of modern wage L,

424a
grant me this 1., n6b has natural and market price,

686b
1.,

good week's

314*

enable 1. to subsist, 53ob fanners mechanics and 1., 503a


harvest

plenteous

but

1.

few,

53ob
honest 30 ib
in all 1. there in vain, 22b
is
1.

bears

a lovely
profit,

face,

together with God, 5a look out, Laboring children can


fine thing needs
seas,

42a

24b
go6a sleep of a

much

1.,

881 a

independent and proud, 546b


independent of 1. of hands, 68ib is 1. learning without thought lost, 7ia little effect much L, 534* live by fruit of 1., 6s6a look after souls in 1., 95b man organized by 1., 8g5a many must 1. for one, ss8b marvels of man's 1., io64a masterpiece not created without
1.,

1.

man, 28a

surges of world, 856b to produce bons mots, 361 a Laborious, consciousness L achievelive 1. days, 338b Labor's, sore 1. bath, *v, ~ Labors at this conference, fruits of 1., 868b

g82b
,

garner

4*7 a notice you take of

no

1.

tire,

my

1.,

429*

8g?b
disgrace L, 7i?b will be in L,
for

men

patient 75 2a

under

dangerous

mountains

i24a

rest

from their

my
no

1.

my

travail,

267b

Labourage

L, s8b et paturage

Laconic and Olympian, Sggb or sententious type, go2b Lacrimae, hinc illae 1., io8a rerum, n8a Lactiferous maids, nob Lad, all sport stale L, 691 a blithe Irish 1., 537b born to be king, 84gb come to you my L, 494b lightfoot 1., 853b of mettle a good boy, 2$ga can L, 853b pass me the up 1. when journey's over, 852b well for sailor 1., 648a when all world young 1., 6gia when I was a L, 766a Lads, dust was 1. and girls, 736b golden 1. and girls, 2913 that die in glory, 853a that drive me mad, gi8a though 1. far away, gi?a thought no more behind, 2g5a Ladder, behold a L, 7a build 1. by which rise, 6goa charity's golden 1., i55b down 1. rung by rung, 873b Jacob's 1., 6iob, 85?a made death his 1., 201 a make a 1. of our vices, i47a of human thought, 851 a of vices frame L, 623a set up on the earth, 7a L, 6iob talk of
Jacob's
to
all

deux ma1.,

high designs, 2670.


1.

sin to 1. in vocation, 2383 not ask for reward, i8ob not to be rich, 5b nothing but 1. for pains, igjb nothing without capital, 9313 obtain tradition by 1., 10073

melles, 2o6a in dark Labyrinth, wandering

unto

turns

his

back,

254*

2iib
Labyrinthical,

young ambition's L, 254* Laddie, your Highland 1. gone,

perplexed

1.

soul,

Laden with
Ladies

Labyrinthine ways, 8s6b


Lace, brace
latch catch, 8o3b 1. Greek is like 1., 433 a Lacedemonians not wont to ask how many, 87b

of an age, 334a of France poured earnings, 78 la of love, 5413 only relaxation another kind of
1.,

icy roses, ioi4b with rue heart 1., 853b a little more virginity,

Cambridge
dust
is

L, io3ob
1.,

of 1., organization prior to capital, 6 private property

Spaa

Lacerare, cor 1. nequit, 3gia Lacerate, cannot 1. his breast,

fruit

of

1.,

8843 Laces and ivory and gold, g4gb


just reveal surge, 734b
Lacessit,

94*b

which acquires for process by B, 7923 his 1., 63gb of product to 1., g4ib property stimulus
say picture shows L, 754a

nemo me impune
of
1.

L, 15 la

Lack, eternal L gall, 26ib

pence,

647b

good counselors
shall not L,
if

no

clients,

power, 686b selling six days shalt thou L, ga, 6783 sounding 1. house vast, 7i5b
1.

he that giveth unto the poor


any
1.

26b wisdom, s6a

superior to capital, 6s7b take nothing of his 1., a8a that has reference to want, soyb those who 1. in earth, 471 a thou and I waste, i86b thought 1. of intellect, 5ggb

in abundance 1., 88b of discrimination, ggsa of many a thing sought, 2g2a of money root of evil, Bffla. of woman's nursing, 627b of wit, 26ob plentiful 1.
shalt

be but young and fair, 1. 248b in praise of 1. dead, 2gsb intellectual, 56oa lion among 1., 23oa lords and 1. of Byzantium, 88sa novel on tables of 1., sg6a of St. James's, 782a over-offended 1., sgsb when they write letters, 55ib whose bright eyes, 335a wild witches noble I., 88 ib Ladies', for 1. love unfit, 372a 1. eyes, 221 a pearls in beauteous rhyme into 1. favors, 245 a Ladles, cooks' own 1., 6fab
if

good fortune to be 1., 76oa good night sweet 1., 2653 Grecian Urn worth old 1., io4pa

gentlemen and

736b

time for
to
his
1.

1.

and thought, 77sa


until
1.

not

1.

evening,

unemployed
loioa

means

2ib want,

some

virtues

union elemental response, gisa useless if object useless, 687a visible and invisible 1., 5ggb we delight in physics pain, 28sb

they 1. a they 1. I have, 192 a Lacked, being 1. and lost, 246b if 1 1. anything, 324a Lackey, card 1. to those above,
loiga

any thing, loa he might 1., 866a sacred poet, i22b

Ladling butter from adjacent


tubs,

noia

Lady Bountiful, 397b by yonder blessed


swear, 224a clean as a 1., ggoa colonel's L an' Judy

moon

O'grady,

1432

INDEX
Lady, dance
little
1.,

Land
1.

Lady's, he capers nimbly in

Lamb, tempers wind

to

shorn

1.,

Disdain, z%$b doth protest too much, 2630 enjoyed the 1., 488a faint heart never won fair 1.,
ig6a, 768a fairer 1. never seen, io87b

chamber, 2i6b imagination rapid, 5333 in my 1. chamber, iog4b in the case, 40 ib


love

learned

fine 1. on horse, logsa fool called her 1. fair, for secrecy no 1. closer,

feigning

1.

by

Bazille,

io78b

Lady-smocks 222b

in 1. eyes, all silver-white,

2223

i88b, 4380 to the slaughter, 3$a was the holy L. of God, 4gob when lion fawns upon 1., 2i6b will never cease to follow, 2i6b wolf shall dwell with the 1., gia

Lambs could not


gather the
1.

875a

23Qa

from other door 1., 75$b from Philadelphia, 7043 garmented in light, 57oa he saw a 1. bright, io88b
hear 1. sing in Welsh, aggb here comes the 1., 224b here lies beautiful 1., gi4a here lies 1. of beauty, ioogb I asked a lithe I., 488a were April's 1., 774b if you
slim, 554a Jingly Jones, 673b Joan as my L., gaoa lent him to a 1., i liner she's a 1., longing for that lovely L, iioa make 1. of my own, giob

Lafayette we are here, 856a Lag, comfortable time 1., 888b Lag-end of my life, 24ob Lager, give Irishman 1., 76ob Laggard in love, 5igb
Lags, fiction superfluous
bait
1.
1.
1.

forgive, 67ob with his arm, $2b


1,,

little hills like

22a

poor

little

1.

lost

we were as
wolves and
1.

way, 873b twinned L, 2Q5a have no concord,


conclusion,

after

truth,

452b

veteran, 42?a

64b Lame and impotent


feet to the
1.,

Laid aside business, 325b


to

make

taker

mad,

2940

him on

in the case, 401 b Jane was tall and

the green, io88b in a manger, 46a in sad cypress L, 2522. me down with a will, 823b my heart open to indifference,

isb little 1. balloonman, 1030 a live with 1. man learn to limp, i 3 7a

man

leap as an hart, 32 a

wrinkled and slanting-eyed, 6gb Lament, come to dark and 1.,

io68b

Q28b
for

on with
sun

a trowel, 247a to sleep, gosa to make taker mad, 2g4b


is 1.

Madame
I

Blaize,
1.,

44ya
ii7a
to
1.,

frogs drone their

have
38jb
I
1.

not reason

when
where

am

5o8b

1.

in

earth,

wast

thou

when

foundations, i6a

mistakes of good man, iogib universal Nature did 1., 338a wild L, 10543

many
met
1.

many

1.

friends,

8$gb

in meads, 5813 Moon where roving, 6g4b beautiful most L, gi4a

Lain for a century dead, should I have 1. still, i4b


Lair,

652b

Lamentable, most
that skin of

1.

comedy, 228b

lamb parchment,
praise,
1.

deep his midnight

1.

made,
52 ib

2153 Lamentation

and

io6ob
wail-

icgja 1. sleeps, 62 ib 1. sweet arise, 2gob no 1. ever gentleman, gsoa not raise hand against American 1., 8g2a

my my my

fair L,

lion from his 1., slugs leave their 1., $27b

rouse

Lais

now

old, io86a

empire's 1., 65 ib Lamentations, sighs ings, isgb

and
3o6b

Laisse un peu de soi-meme, 835a Laissez faire L passer, 41 6b Laith were gude Scots lairds,
Laity, paintings

Lamenting,

last

1.

kiss,

Laments

1.

we

receive

what we

give,

527 a of certain age, 56 ib of Christ's College, $65a of light, 772b of delight, 8i2a of Shalott, 645b, 646a

the Bible of
1.

1.,

in pathetic spondees, 8312 Aladdin's 1., 5623, 6g4a Lamp, beside the golden door, 8172

fluttered

round

L, 7473

my

Lake, dream 87oa of the silver goddess in 1. an arm,


life as

dreams
1.,

sky,

history with flickering L, Q22a

from Dubuque, io24b 1. Old L. of Threadneedle Street,


old

4gia
old 1. quoted by Forster, 1061 a or the tiger, 75sb Our L. of Babylon, Our L. of Pain, 77$b rather hear L. howl in Irish,

Pilot of Galilean 1., river 1. glimmering pool, 72ob sedge withered from L, 58 la to Rydal L. that lead, 5iob Lakes, great 1. of North America,
59'

have but one 1., 46sa lady with 1., 623b of experience, 46$a slaves of the 1., 742b smell of the 1., loib, go2b swallowed lighted 1., g4ob
I

unlit

1.

unto

when
word

my

ungirt loin, 66sa feet, 22a


shattered, 572b

1. is

23gb rob 1. by marriage, 424b

light shakes across 1., 648b Lalah member of ancient profession,

like a 1., $ga writing smelling of lamp, go2b Lamplight o'er him. streaming,

burned

872a

82ob Seymour's Fat L., io78a for love of 1., 76ga sighed sweet and kind, io86a talking to hens of Dorking, 673 that's known as Lou, g3$a the brach may stand, 277b three white leopards, ioo3b through whose fragile lips, losia treat whore like 1., g4ia weep no more my L, 727b with lamp, 623b you are the cruelest she, 25 ib

Rockabye

L.,

Eli 1. sabachthani, 45a High L. asked him, io47b Lamb at home lion in chase, 5o8a blood of the 1., 58a by Emerson out of Charles L.,

Lama, Eli

Lamps, bright
expire, 8goa

1.

shone

o'er,

g6ob

go

false as fox to L, 268b to bed with 1., 202b

God
7*

will provide himself a

I.,

he who made L. make


little

thee,

L.

who made
little
1.,

thee,

486b

Mary had a

s6sb
a
L.,

giyb Ladybug, fly away home, iog$a Ladylike, birch most 1. of trees,
1.

young

named

Bright,

of God, 4'8a, sga pipe song about quiet as a 1., sgGb

486b

6gaa Lady's, brain him with 23ga for all 1. hire, iog7b

1.

fan,

save one little ewe 1., i2b sedulous ape to L., 824a be without blemish, 8a skin of innocent 1. parchment,
shall

going out over Europe, golden 1. in green light, g6oa heaven's great 1. dive, 3ooa like hidden 1., 4573 lovely 1. windows of soul, igsa not lit in our lifetime, 863b old 1. for new, io8gb poets light but 1., 737a virgins took L, 44a Lance, lay his 1. in rest, 7&2a never had oar or 1., gia strong 1. of justice, 27gb threw his shining L, 74ga Lancelot mused a space, 646a sang Sir L., 645b there tho-u liest, i75b through L. war wrought, i7sb Land, America my new-found 1.,
,

37 a
and the pleasant
1.,

215*

7igb

H33

Land
Land, anybody is as their 1. is, 933b appeared at two leagues, 172 a as near by sea as by 1., igsa before ever 1. was, 775b blatant 1., 65sa bomb fell it burst it shook L,
o'

INDEX
Land, no slave upon our
the
leal, all the
1.,

Land
this

thieves

and water

thieves,

5osa,b o'er pleasant L, of broken heads, gi8a of broken hearts, gi8a of brown heath, 5iga of Calvin and oatcakes,
of of of of of of of of of
cotton, 6783

232a

522b

was charter of 1., 4oa thought jump sea and I., agsa to Frencn empire of 1., 5003 too deep into new 1., 52 ib turning back without sighting
l.

79<>a
1.

bourn bound of

2g6b bowels of the 1., 21 7b bringeth thee into a good


1.,

1.,

counterpane, 823a darkness and shadow, dead, 1041 a, io6oa

twilight

no-mans*

1.,

764b

153

loa can't fly away, 6yga chance to reach the chosen emblem of her
city
1.

1., 1.,

4goa 578b

raises taxes,

cleaner greener 1., darkness of the 1., 651 a death's gray 1., 992 a Dixie L.,

73$b 87 $b

of of
of of of of of of of of of of of of of of
of of of of of of

GySa dry and thirsty L, igb England's the one L, gg$b ethic for tomorrow, io77b every 1. in rejoicing, gb fat of the 1., 7b fenced in piece of 1,, 4j5b flowing with milk and honey, 8a free 1. in beloved home, 704b go to 1. of poetry, 478a God and native L, $6$b

dreams, 7i4b drowsyhead, 4oa faery, 88oa Goshen, 7b heart's desire, 88oa hope and glory, 8&2a If, io48a Just Add Water, io$ob Lincoln and Pinkham, logob
living, 1041 a lost content,

unwillingly I left your 1., uga various as your 1., io4ib verdant 1., 6g7a violet of native 1., 6soa voice of the turtle is heard in

853a
flood,

mountain and

5192

our 1., 2gb westward look 1. bright, 68ga where all men stones, 74b where Bong tree grows, 673a where cypress and myrtle, 558a where lemon trees bloom, 47ya where lies the 1., si$b where my fathers died, 6a7b wherein thou shalt eat bread,
loa

my dreams, loiab nowadays, goob our birth we pledge,

8773

woman
wrong
Landing, 92ia

which the Lord giveth thee, ga a foreign 1., 72ib


rules the
1.,

Pilgrims' pride, 6s7b pilgrims' and so forth, 10313 poetry, 478a pure delight, 3g7a
scholars, 447b slaves ne'er mine, 561 a

6g2a
1.

fight

on

grounds,

on coast of France, ioi6b


Landless gull, 6g6a Landlord, nor 1. raise rent, uosa Landlord's wine, g42b Landmark on boundary of fields,

gone into silent L, 7sgb good and bad of every L, 6?ga great rock in a weary L, gaa green and pleasant L, 4gob hail Columbia happy 1., 5o8a he became a 1., io6oa heaven-rescued L, 6ooa heroism upon 1. and sea, 6ggb his hands formed the dry 1., aia holy 1. of Irlonde, io83b holy 1. of Walsinghame, ig8b hour later I saw L, 1051 a huge 1. will lie revealed, 131 a I will pass through the 1., 8b if by 1. one lantern, 464*
ill

the Arrow Ide, l the Cluett Shirt, the free, 541 a, the Gods, 537a the living, isb

4b remove not the ancient 1., asb Landmarks set up in Bill of


Rights, io37b Landor, with L. and with Donne,

on

wheat and barley, loa 1. as on the sea, nooa one if by 1., 6*4a one thing I know is 1., g7ob
or cherry isle, 32oa our 1. before we her

88ib
Land's, land ours before

we

the

people,
it,

g28b our 1. great but no order in


ours before
Pacific

9285 sea 1. edge also, ioo6a Lands and horses part


1.,

of

self,

beyond the

sea,

5iob
days,

discoverers think there is

no

we the
1,,

land's,

broader
covet

1.

better

92 ib

1.,

207a
1.,

owes nothing to
44ga
leans

4g6a
L,

no people's
of
1,

ill

fares the

on the

gg4b

envy
faery

incarnation of 1. he loved, gs4b Indian 1. undefiled, io77b


is it

piece of

L with a garden, iaoa

L, io25a happier L, forlorn, 5&3a


less
1.,

226b soob

bright, 68ga

cometh from a terrible 1., 3ib it is promised L, 587a just the same as on 1., 67gb known in all L, 645b known in any 1. or age, fosa law of the 1., i57b leans against the I., 447b
left to iniquity, sa lie like I. of dreams,

poet's L, 478a post o'er 1. and ocean, 34ia prepared the dry L, 5gb Promised L. beyond wilderness, 8sia rats and water rats, z$za.

lord

men

of himself not in all 1.,, 974b rulers in all 1., 8a6b

sun in lonely 1., 651 a take us 1. away, 738a


taking captive all 1., 3b voyager at last, 7273 where Jumblies live, 67ga your Highnesses won these vast
1.,

reap the harvest of your 1., gb rock in weary 1., 32a rent with civil feuds, 547b salt 1. and not inhabited, 34a
scatter

i7 3 b

plenty
1.

o'er smiling

1.,

7i4b
1.

44ob
sea,

light
lilacs

shines

over

and

search

of living

men, 5iga

Landscape grandest, 8o4b now fades glimmering 1., 44oa Landscapes drawn in monotones,
led into

g*3b
out of dead L, looaa long black 1., 663a long 1. be bright, 62?b Lord's song in strange 1., 22b loss of native L, 84a madden round the 1., 4ioa marching to promised 1., 75ob more than common 1., 6g7b my native 1. good night, 5553 my new-found 1., 307 a my own my native L, 5i8b never was on sea or L, 5i4b
say fish, ggsb of Castile gained L,

seeking 1. of Greeks, 477b seems a moving 1., 347a


sees across weary L, gi8b sent to spy out the
1.,

Way, i47b

gb

sing by

I.

and
1.,

sea,

874a

of the moon, go8b Landsmen, we 1. build upon, 8g8b Lane, boy who lives down 1.,

six feet of

sky

and 1., 8553 somewhere in favored 1., 868a loob spirits of 1. and grain, stone rests on the L, 364^

732!) sea and

logga
in an English
lives in
1.;

66gb

long

1.

Drury L., icgya knows no turnings, 662b

no more 1. no prince

stranger in a strange 1., 8a stubble 1. at harvest home, 238a supreme law of the L, 474b sweet 1. of liberty, 627b that gave you birth, 865a that never has been, 1051 a

straight down crooked L, 5923 to land of dead, io6oa Lang, auld 1. syne, 494b, 4gsa Language, American turn of 1., best

part of human betrayers of L, g88b

8g8a

1.,

52gb

H34

INDEX
Language charged with meaning,
989*
7160 confound the 1. of all earth, 6b conveyed in best chosen 1., 5 dictionary best book in 1., 9163 dissociate 1. from science* 47 4b everything in 1. perish, 5953 force 1. into meaning, icoyb gradually varies, 55oa heightened and unlike itself, 8o4a high thoughts must have high 1., 923 I love the 1., 5595 in her eye, 26ga learned his great L, 662b
1.,

Last
Lash the
281 a
rascals naked, 2?6a Lashed, headstrong liberty 1. with woe, 2i8a vice but spared name, ggoa Lashes beggar on foot, 885a Lass, drink to the L, 48 ib erst attempting L, io86a every 1. a queen, 691 a
I love a I., 476a lover and his L, 25ob

Lanthorn
Lap,

clearness propriety of

is the moon, 23ob chestnuts in her 1., dropped in her 1., 6295
airs,

in thy green 1., 44ib me in soft Lydian of earth, 44ia of legends, 58 ib


sat

3353

Beauty in
it 1.
1.

see

sun in

my 1., 83oa the miles, 7363 of Thetis, ssga


lint

Lapel, plucked

from

L, 864a

on Richmond

Hill,

48sb

Lapidary inscriptions, 43 ib style, 6o7a Lapidem, stilicidi casus 1. cavat,

uga
Lapland,
lovely
as

a L.

night,

ag6a manners laws customs, 5iia mobilized English L, gigb music universal I.', 6soa mutability of 1., 55oa
learning
1.,

me

your

Lapped

in lead, soga

in universal law, 64713

Lapping of water, io65b


water 1. bow, ioo4a Lapse of murmuring
streams,

my

1.

is

plain, 7695

mysterious I. about life, 5653 no 1. but a cry, 6sob no 1. like Irish, goga O great L we love, ioi4'b of Dante common L, ioo8a of English poet, 1008a of the heart, 4iib of the living, ioo6b of truth 1. of creation, gogb oh that lips had 1., 4sgb perverters of 1., gS8b
poetical L, 8o4a

347* Lapwings, clamorous 1., 405a Larceny, sparkle with 1., 9413

penniless 1., 5O2a unparalleled, a8ga Lasse, tout 1., uosb Lasses a* lilting, 446b sweetest hours among 1. O, Lassie, I love a L, go$a Lassitude, yield now to 1,, Last, a 1. a loved a long, act crowns play, 32sa after 1. returns first, 667a and best of God's works, arms take your 1. embrace,

4ggb
9453 g6ga

347b

225b
best hope of earth, 6$8b
1. did go, 3385 cobbler stick to your 1., io2a comes at the 1., 22?b

Lard

their lean books, gioa

came and

reduce I. to seven words, 976a sarcasm 1. of devil, 576a-b silent 1. of peak, lona soothing 1., 47 ib speaks a various 1., 5743
that

Lards lean earth, 238b Large a charter as wind, 24&b and smooth and round, 5323 as life twice as natural, 746b as store, 3233 cold bottle, 82ob discourse, 2645 divine comfortable words, 65$a I am 1. as God, 3645
I

daintiest

commonly best, gioa communion in the haze, 7$4b 1. to make end sweet,
226a

am L
1.

contain

multitudes,

death comes at L, 5iga dike of prevarication, 454a don't be frightened it won't 869 a

1.,

7oob

kingdom
limbo
resolute
style

for little grave,

327b

would

make

hair

curl,

and broad, 344b breed of men, 7o4a small house and 1. garden, 357b
agrees

768b
things used as 1. are attractive, 6o8a traveled! before he hath 1., 2o8b

not

with

purse,

2i4b
utterance of gods, 584a was his bounty, 4413

under

our 1. spoke, 3g2a -tropic universe in L of mathematics,


7&7b
ioo7b

2iib use any 1. you choose, use in measured 1., 64gb


vital

we

development in

L,

praise thee

for perspicuity

Large-brained woman and largehearted man, 6iya Larger bill for darker ill, 686a children of 1. growth, 4150 heart kindlier hand, 651 a large wealth 1. heart, s68b
Largest and most comprehensive soul, 367a movements of 1. bodies, 47ga those of 1, size, 746a Lark, as sings the 1., 6i8b at heaven's gate sings, 2gob

wealth larger heart, 368b youth 1. lusty loving, 7oia

enchantments of Middle Age, 7150 every day passed as if our 1., i26b eyes look your 1,, 225b fight till 1. gasp, 2143 first and the L, 58b first 1. everlasting day, 3O5b first shall be 1., 4sb for more than one century,
ii4a
full

framed her 1. best work, 4952 measure of devotion, 63ga


gasp, 393, 2143

gasp

of
1.

love's

latest

breath,

21 ib

of L, i54a Languages, Americans


1-.

Put out the light, ga8a great Englishman low, 65 ib


God's

not learn

him

first

him

8 95 b

L, 34601

great feast of L, 222b of all 1. the tear master, g3ga skilled in works of both L, i22a

Langueur monotone, 8o7b Languid patience of thy


spleen, 766b strings scarcely move, 486b

face,

busy 1. messager of day, ifr/a clouds silence then L, 8ioa fresh as a L, 5i5b hark hark the 1., a gob herald of the morn, 25a

hurrah, io77b joy our 1. not least, 27 6b laughs best who laughs 1., 88a leaf upon tree, 6g4b let every man consider 1. day, 8ib
love thyself
1.,

2993

no
air,

1.

Languish brokenhearted, 764b Languished, smiles and 1.

now
rise

more blithe than he, 4643 leaves his watery nest, 3323
1.,

my 1. end be like his, loa nice guys finish L, losga night ah yesternight, 88gb no 1. or first, 66 ib
not judge above his 1., 1023 not least in love, 255a of all the Romans, 2&6b of life for which first made, 666a
of red-hot

with

2oab

486a Languishes, cat 1. loudly, 8isb Languor not in your heart, 7i5b wound heart with I., 8o7b Languors, lilies and 1. of virtue,
773-b

that soars singing, i6aa Lark's on the wing, 66 rb Larks, four 1. and wren,

672b

Lank, bronzed 1. man, g5ga long and L and brown, 5253 poor lean 1. face, 6$$b Lantern, if by land one 1., 464b Lanterns, eyes like agate 1., io4$b in North Church, 464'b

sky falleth, 1833 notes prepare, 4053 listens, Larkspur 65 2 b Lars Porsena of Clusium, 5963 Lasciva est nobis pagina vita

have

1.

when
1.

mounting

mamas, g84a
3143
first

on

his

1.

legs,
it

out night in Russia, ayob

pay

for

or

1.,

678b

proba, i34b Lascivious pleasing of a lute, 2i6b Lash, blood drawn with 1., 64ob

peace at the L, 5g8a


poetic voice

magic creature, 738a

poor 1. 288b

lay

dumb, 7na upon thy

lips,

H35

Last
Last pure stretch of joy, io66b
rose of summer, 5423 said 1. word, 8505 scene of all, 2493 sex to the 1., gysa
shall

INDEX
Latimer,
see

L.

and Ridley in
L.,

Laugh, watch and

1.,

75*b
1233

might of

faith, iSoa

6oga Latin, all botany come in L. or in Greek, 332b

their

we must 1. and sing, 8843 when you want a good L, where we must, 407 b

who but must


yet all these

1.,

41 ia

be

first,

4$b

small showers 1. long, 226b syllable of recorded time, s86b taste of sweets, 226b think every day your 1., isga this is the 1. of earth, 5033

he Greek and L. speaks, 352a L. f 435 a imagery of Greek and

mouse

learn L. as honor, g2oa prevails in L., 444b

seem to L, 3063 1. the more, 41 aa into stitches, 2533. yourselves Laughed at original sin, 90 ib
you

may

though till you write your letter, jo4b time I saw Paris, io2oa to lay old aside, 4oga trump, 53a
try fortunes to 1. man, was like the first, iO23b

1.

not

least,

2oia

small L. and less Greek, 303b soft bastard L., 55gb speak no word but L., 1673 was no more difficile, 3523 word for three farthings, 22 ib
Latitude,

consumedly, 3g8a day on which not L, 46ga first baby first 1., 858a His word to scorn, 457a in the sun, ggga
like irresponsible
little

24b

what
will

is it

will

1.,

645b
10233

not 1. the night, word, Ssob words of Marmion, 5igb world's 1. night, joSa

longitude and 1. for seine, 76oa send them 1. and longitude, 9 68a Latter and former rain, 35b blessed the 1. end of Job, i6b carry off the L, 55b
early and 1. rain, 5<>b end of a fray, 24ob
shall stand at the
1.

foetus,

looib

dog

1.,
1.

io94a
he, io87b

loud loud

Lasting, just 9 82b

and

1.

peace, 64ob,

day,

i5b

monument more
122b

1.

than bronze,

Laud and magnify thy Name, 6ia more 1. than gilt o'erdusted,
26ga

no man who L bad, 576a upright man I. to scorn, isa warn't often that we L, 76ia with counterfeited glee, 44gb Laughing Allegra, 6z$b at yourselves, 6s2a bee on stalk, 1082 a fellow rover, g47a flesh of girls, io7gb
he 1. said to me, 486b heard on the hill, 4&7b in your sleeve, 48ob

peace, oSsb sense of filial duty, 4yoa


1.

more

tell if

poem
1.

1.,

g2gb
1.

Lasts,

diamond

nothing 3i8b

los^a save eternal change,


1.,

forever,

Latch, crosspatch draw

no

1.

for

golden
present

gate,
1.

iog4* 8i4a

Latched,

when

postern,

7840 Latchet of whose shoes, 45a Late and early pray, goob and soon, 5159 better 1. than never, issa born too 1., 8ggb coffee and oranges, gssa discovered earth, 9906 everything comes too L, 77ob falls early or too 1., giga finds too 1. men betray, 448b getting up 1., s64a good die early bad 1., gSsb
'

Laudable things, 33gb Laudator temporis acti, i24a Laugh and be well, 4i8b and grow fat, 24ya and shake, 41 gb and world laughs, 825b anything awful makes me 1., 534b at a play to 1. or cry, 38gb at any but fools or foes, 4i2a at any mortal thing, s6ia at gilded butterflies, 28oa at them in our turn, 533b at your friends, 41 aa audience never fail to L, gib before we are happy, 38 ib broke into pieces, S$&* dry eyes I. at fall, 664a explode huge 1. at feet, 866a

leave them L, g44* quaffing unthinking time, 37 2a a wise man to 1., 66b sets shallow dreaming pool, 69 ia somewhere men are 1., 868a
split sides

with L, ig$a

sports and plays, 486a sweetly speaking and softly L,

6gb up her sleeve, gSob Water, 623a Laughingstock, make


ig6a

myself

1.,

Laughs at archer, 707a at broken hammers, g48b


best
fair

who laughs
1.

last,

s88a

earth
1.

fools 1. at men of sense, 38 ib for fear of having to cry, 46oa for hope hath place, 686a

with harvest, 6iob morn, 44 ib


at lovers' perjuries, 22sb 1. at perjuries of lovers,

Jove

1.

know
life's

evil

from

1.

observation,

94a

had he the 1., 73ia he could sing well and


io4b
if

Jupiter i28a

1.

well,
1.,

known

too L,

23b
temptation
1.,

laugh and world L, 825b Laughter, a little time for

1.,

8ib
7373
L,

supreme

you
*33 b

tickle

us

do we not

and

ability

and

sighing,

947b long choosing and beginning 1., 347b love that comes too 1., 2?oa Miniver born too L, 8ggb minute too L, 267a not too 1. to seek world, 646b nothing is too 1., 6a4b
riseth
1.

live

trot all day,

4a

in bed cry, 3513 1. nor be dismayed, 8ggb lowest type 1. heartily, 74* made a cat 1., 5873 make her 1. at that, 266a men that 1. and weep, 7753 my bitter 1., 632b myself to death, 2973
in

bed
1.

arose among gods, 62b better last smile than


3 88a

first

edges of

1.

and anguish, 9753


28b world mad,

excessive 1., s8a feast is made for 1., for a month, 238b gift of 1. and sense

938b
heart 24 b
is

she is L, 652b so 1. into the night, ssgb sorrow never comes too 1., 4ggb toiled so hard and 1., 8833
too too too
I.

1.
1.

loved you, 1473 in century too old, 657 a to say anything not said,
1.,
1.

S8ib
too little too Lated, spurs

ioi8a
traveler

apace,

284b
Latent, hard 1. value, 7ggb Later times more aged than earlier,

never granted before fortieth day, i32a not thing to 1. to scorn, 25ob nothing more silly than silly 1., ii4b sans intermission, 248b seas 1. when rocks near, 3isa siege to scorn, 286b that spoke vacant mind, 44ga they 1. that win, 27sb thy girlish laughter, 84ga time to L, 27b to 1. proper to man, i8ob
to scorn

sorrowful even in L,

hidden 1., 10053 holding both his sides, 334b use you for my 1., 2$6a I'll
ill-bred as audible 1., 449 b laugh thy girlish L, 84ga

love and 1-, 748a myriad 1. of ocean waves, 783 no one died of 1., giob no time for mirth and 1., 886b

ao6b

power of man, 2&5b


1.,
1.

to all to each sooner 1., Latest, earliest 1. care, 4g4a hear the 1. Pole, looia

7023

too badly hurt to unextinguishable 331*

638a in heaven,

Christ the L, g47a of children in foliage, 10053 of Gargantua the 1., io43b of her heart, 1020 a of the fool, 28a out of dead bellies, g88a

1436

INDEX
Laughter, parody of ib present 1., 25
1.,

Lawful
Law
of of of of

io68a

Law, equal before 1., 748b evolution not cause but L, 77gb
$i8a

running 1., 8s6b sudden glory maketh

1.,

extreme io8b

1.

is

extreme

injustice,

take hand part with 1., 774b tinkled among teacups, looib tired of tears and 1., 775a

eye of the L, 748b faith nor love nor 1., 56ga first is 1. the last prerogative,
first
1. for historian, nob for man law for thing, 6o2b for rulers and people, 678a fugitive from 1. of averages,

of God law of good, ?oga humanity, 454a nature and nations, 4543 our Creator, 454a the jungle, gssb

under running 1., 8s6b weeping and the 1., 8goa when her lovely 1. shows, jooa wine women mirth 1., 5600 with pain fraught, 57ob Launch, joyous we 1. out, 7oab Launched, face that 1. a thousand
ships,

of the land, i57b of the Medes and Persians, 353 of the Yukon, ggsb old father antic the L, 237b

io8ob
future lays great cases
1.

of
of

today,
1.,

2isa
idea
in
first-class
1.,

make bad

Laundry, 8g8a nothing but L, io7oga Laura, grave where L. lay, igga if L. Petrarch's wife, 56ob Laurea, concedat 1. laudi, nib Laurel and myrtle and rose, 47?a burned is Apollo's 1. bough, 2isb crown yield to praise, 1 1 ib crowned with 1., 1024* green for a season, 774a
greener from brows, 65 ib

gave

1. 1. 1.

air
is

science,

8o4b 7873 547b

good
great

good order, g8b of culture, 575a

old 1. sad but not bitter, g4ib one God 1. element, 6513 one 1. and one truth, i4ab one 1. for all, 454a one with 1. majority, giia orderly change of L, 787b ordinance of reason for common good, i58b
others
will

plead

at

1.,

uga
ao8a
1.,

greatest not
sjoaa-b

exempted from

1.,

ought to weed it out, our reason is our L, 347 b


people's

has honored us, 548b hath not been dead, *7ob having not the L, 5ob head and hoof of 1.,

nib

good the highest


safety

people's

the

highest

1.,

no
of

1.

crown

for

outrunning

burro, i35b

approved May, 774a wreaths entwine, 76gb Laureled ox, 77 6a Laurels all are cut, 7iga northern 1. not change, 46oa worth all your 1., 56sb yet once more O ye 1., ggSa Lavender in the windows, 36a Lavender's blue dilly dilly lavender's green, iog7b Laver son linge sale, 54a Lavish, liar always 1. of oaths, 33*b no calamity greater than 1. deoutlives not
sires,

iniquity, 8ggb

874b higher 1., 65 ib, loi^a hint of universal 1., 7&7a hocus-pocus science, 4i4b I my Lords embody 1., 767a ignorance of the 1., 3173 in calmness made, 5isa in his 1. doth he meditate, i6b in 1. and love same, 68oa in 1. as in magic mirror, 786b in 1. what plea so tainted, 233b in majestic equality, 8o2a is a ass a idiot, 66gb is good, 55a is order, g8b

i5ib
perfection of reason, ig8a poetry not matured by L, 58sa possession eleven points in 1.,

39*b

power

politics

1.

of

jungle,

ioiga precedents constitute 1., logia preserve steady course, 4<52b principles of 1., 864b
professor of Harvard L. School,

g67b
protection by 1., 503a public opinion in advance of
1.,

jealous mistress, 543]) judgments of English L, go8b justice the 1. my ducats, 233a lapped in universal 1., 647b last result of wisdom, 42ga
lesser breeds life of 1. is

without

1.,

Law

^4b admit of
wearin'

experience,

87&b 786b

8g2b reason the life of the 1., ig8a remoter aspects of L, 7&7a rich men rule the L, 448a rule nations under 1., i iga say what 1. is, 485b seat of 1. in God, 2022 seven hours to L, ig8b so general a study, 45 3 a
sociability 1. of nature, 7g6a stable but not stand still, gogb stands mute in midst of arms,

no
o'

rival,

54$b

agin

logob all things by 1. divine, 5703 all's love yet all's 1., 66sa and order pay, 787b-788a and the prophets, 41 a
applications of
1.,

Green,

locks up man and woman, 7gia love is fulfilling of 1., $ib love 1. to itself, i48a mastered 1. in thoughts, 6o5b

nob
supreme 1. of the land, 474b sword of war or of 1., 473a
tested by higher L, ioi3a this is 1. I maintain,
this
is

mob

L, 63$a
1.

864b
1.,

within me, 445a murder by the 1., sg8b


mysterious 1. true source, 346a natural 1. not exist, 55ob Nature's kindly L, 4oga nature's I. man made to mourn,
necessity has no necessity
prevail, is6b
1.,

moral

army of unalterable
looib
ass idiot,

7sob,

iogob

primeval

1.,
1.,

66gb bloody book of 1., 27 2b born under one 1. to another bound, 2O2a by transgressing kept 1., 34ob can only bring freedom, 47ga common L not omnipresence, 788a common 1. nothing but reason,
198 a

to

windward of

8oa 456a

i47a,
1.

knows no

3*8a except

never strong without 77 8a

people,

common

of England, 10173 1. Congress shall make no 1., 47 ib craving to go to 1., 77oa curses in Book of L., 37ga defense is in 1. and order, 951 a delight is in 1. of the Lord, i6b despair 1. chance hath slain, 307b do as adversaries in 1., 2iga dusty purlieus of 1., 6$db embodies nation's development,

nice sharp quillets of 1., 214* no man above or below 1., 84?b no such thing as natural L,

tongue is the 1. of kindness, 273 took to the L, 74sb translating into living L, ggia true embodiment, 7&7a true 1. of human nature, 7i6a universal L, 445b unto themselves, 5ob voice of 1. harmony, 202 a what I mean by the 1., 787a what others do from fear of L,
97*

55ob not come to destroy 1., 4oa not concerned with trifles, isob not 1. bade me fight, 88 ib not 1. so much as right, 681 a not make scarecrow or 1., 27oa not one jot pass from L, 4oa nothing 1. that is not reason,
ig8a obedience
to
1.

where no I. no transgression, 5ob which governs all 1., 454a who to himself is L, 2O5b windy side of the 1., 246a
write
in

books

of

L,

io6sb
1.,

Law-abiding, io4ga

lawgivers

and

demanded,

786b

Lawd, gangway for de L., ioi5a Lawful, all things 1. for me, 52a
ambitions, 844a everything is 1., 7o8b

embody 7&7a ends tyranny begins, 372b


1.,

the

of accumulation free, 757b of competition, 75?a

M37

Lawful
Lawful, guns aren't is it not 1., 43b
1.,

INDEX
io2ga

Laws of
of of

God
47ob

distribution, 1. of man, 8s4a

without some 1. recreation, 1950 Lawfully, if a man use it 1., 55a Lawgiver, stern L., 5i4b Lawgivers and law-abiding, io4ga Lawlands, ye Highlands and L.,
io88b Lawless attack upon liberty, 4443
linsey-woolsey brother,

nature

and

nature's

God,

Lay not up treasures, 4ob on Macduff, 287a Pelion on Ossa, 66a proud usurpers low, 4g6a
simple heartfelt L, 6asa sleeping head my love, io6oa them down in their dens, sib till next day there she 1., 4ggb

of the jungle, 874b or kings cause or

cure,

428a

ought not to remain unaltered,


g8a people make bad 7?8a
physical power of
1.

1.

then suffer,

unpremeditated

1.,

5i8a
4ob

35b

winged unconfined, 488a Lawlessness, rush of our 1., yoSb world 1., 97 ib Lawn, dew was on L, g74b
rivulets through L, 64ga white as driven snow, 2956 Lawns, like satyrs grazing on the L, 2i2b Law's delay, a6a

all

discovered, 8273

up treasures in heaven, upon thy lips, 288b

right

making 1., 48sa from which 1. derive

iogib
rules of game 1. of nature, 734b self-made L, 707 b

waste our powers, 5i5b Layer upon layer city, iO35a Layer-up, ill 1. of beauty, 24sa Layeth beams of his chambers, 2ia
Lays, constructing tribal 1., 8743 eggs for gentlemen, iog6b Laziness, evasion not L, impatience and L, g8ob

submit thoughts and actions


L, igia

to

in to

L grave study
take
care
o'

six,

ig8b

sweeps a 324a

room

as

for

thy

1.,

raskills,

68gb

Laws, abhor makers and their 1. approve, g7ob abounds with 1. teems with crimes, iogob acting around us, 6a8a after desuetude, 7713 and arms foundations of states, i77a

the more 1. are made prominent, 74b three 1. of righteousness, 783 to execute 1. royal office, 454b true friendship's 1., 4o5b

no

1.

no procrastination, 7iga
i

Lazy dog,
fokes'

loia

two

1.

discrete,
1.

6o2b
1.,

stummucks, 8i4a geese like snow cloud, loogb leaden-stepping Hours, 33ga look for something to do, 43ga
nonprogressive people, loigb Scheldt or wandering Po, 447b Lea, slowly o'er the L, 44oa standing on pleasant L, 5i5b sun has left the 1., 52 ib

unequal
useless
1.

to savage race, 646a

weaken necessary

and

constitution

of

country,

iogib

and learning die, 686b and regulations like

spider's

web, 321 a are like cobwebs, $88b are like spiders' webs, 68b bad 1. bring about worse, 4g6a bad or obnoxious 1., 7i7a base 1. of servitude, 3673
1. teach to trample bad 659* household L, 5isa breathing conflict courts decide, 48sb

best

1.,

Constitution

and

1.

of

U.S.,

474a
devise
1.

for blood, 23 ib

doing what 1. permit, 4i4b end tyranny begins, 4263 for themselves not me, &54a forms all produced by L, 628a found state and give it L, i77b France mother of 1., i87b
give little Senate L, 41 la

4i4b which ran like drinking songs, gob Lawsuit machine you go into, 79*a mania, 7703 Lawsuits, win L and are happy, gob Lawyer, deceive not thy L, 324a draw up the papers 1., 8o8b has peasant inside, 87oa nor for every quarrel to L, 324b not what 1. tells me, 453a peasant has 1. inside, 8yoa prairie 1. master of all, gsga skull of a 1., 265b train anyone to be 1., g4ga without history a mechanic, 52ob Lawyers, charge prepared 1. met, 4o2a let's kill all the 1., 2i5a no 1. among them, i78b Lay aside long-cherished love,

wind was on 1., g74b Lead apes in hell, 2iga

H5a
cleric

made of 1., iog7b but not master them, 7gb but to grave, 44oa easy to L, 54ob from death to immortality, 6aa heart of 1., 41 3b in traces 1. 'em, 6gsa kindly Light, 597b lapped in 1., 3oga little child shall 1. them, 31 a me from darkness to light, 6sa me from unreal to real, 6aa me to rock higher than I, igb me Zeus and Fate, lo^b my steps aright, 574b road rail pig 1., g47b sea of 1. sky of slate, 878b sky like 1., io6ob take 1. in all things, 6$b tears scald like molten L, 28oa
bullets

good 1. lead to better, 4363 government free where 1. rule,

before

and

1.

behind,

3521)

3ob
government of 1. not men, 4$$b grind the poor, 4483 holier 1., 691 a
in

Doric L, 33ga down in her

loveliness,

524a

down

thee to thy grave, 5^a there shall thy hand 1. me, 2$a these graces to grave, 25 ib those that are with young, 32b
to

life for friends,

4ga

more than
6 97 b

common

land,

human mind put

nature,

g66b judges of facts not 1., 3ggb know not whether 1. right, 841 a

language 5iia
little
1.

manners

1.

customs,

lackeys make, 8493 love knoweth no 1., i8$a nation territory people 1., 638a nature and nature's 1. hid,
41 sb

dying in Algiers, 6270 down reins of power, 6403 earthly fancies down, 65 ib enough to 1. up, 4000 field to field, sob heart out for my board, io75b her in the earth, 266a heroic 1. tuneless, 56ob

him low
his

lay him low, 7iga weary bones among ye, 2gga hold on eternal life, 55b

temptation, 4ob wild-goose chase, 194^ ye who 1. take heed, 8gga Leaden army conquers world, 8713 death, 4osa feet, 77 ib if I use 1. ones, goib
scepter, sgga Leaden-eyed despairs, 5825

us

not

into

necessary

to

preserve

order,

958a not assume physical 1. exist, 846b not care who make L, 3&4b not good 1. where not armed,
i77a obedient to their
1.

thick, 756a like folds of bright girdle, like warrior taking rest,

it

on

me down in peace, i7a me down to bleed, io87b me down to sleep, io8gb me on anvil O God, g48b
nature's
1.

7i4b 566b

Leaden-stepping, 339 a

lazy

1.

Hours,

idiot,

we

3O7a

Leader and commander to people, 33 a because of not daring to be ahead, 75a of educator wielder power, io68a
leaves

lie,

7ob

no wagers, 45oa
not flattering unction, 2643

conviction

in

others,

obey

1.

respect flag, 8gsb

1438

INDEX
Leader, philosophy you
1.

Learned
Learn compare
fools
1.

of

life,

nib
test of 1., 10133 that people may require L, 953 to be 1. turn one's back, 8503

Lean and foolish knight, gi8b and hungry look, 253b and low ability, 2533 and sallow abstinence, 337b and slippered pantaloon, 2493
dull as compass needle, 10773 body and visage, 33sa-b privations and 1. emptiness, 3o6a
1.

collect facts,

8i8b

who understood terror, 10773 Leader's indomitable soul, 66 1 a Leaders, ambition of military L, 959 a
ambitiously contending, 4803 blind 1. of the blind, 433
lie

from from from from

other, 4223 having died, 9290 our enemies, 1293 those who teach, 8sa those who never will re1.

in

no

turn, 8gga

gladly he

and gladly
1.,

teche,

i66b

four

hounds, 10303
1. 1.

had
8ggb i66b

to

grow old to

48$b

grew
horse

down

till

1.

have

spoken,

assailed seasons, as is a rake,

of L, Leadership, new generation 10723 Leadest thou that heifer, $B$b Leadeth me beside still waters,
i

8740

hungry savage, 6$$b in joy upon father's knee, 4873 lard their 1. books, 3103 lards the 1. earth, 23&b

know enough know how


777 a
live

heart is slow to L, io*3b him or kill him, 76ob in suffering teach in song, 56gb Irish poets I. trade, 885a
to
1.,

me

7b in

paths of righteousness,

makes you L, 10373 mournful 1. Despair, 4863 on garden urn, looib


over too fsr bsckwsrd, i033b people who 1., 825b Pharaoh's 1. kine loved, 23gb poor 1. lank face, 635b
rent and beggared, 2333 strong 1. upon death, 9953 take fat with L, 6723 unwashed artificer, 2373

i?b
Leads, astronomy 1. from this world, 94b clanging rookery, 6473 heaven that 1. men to hell, 2g4b

3883 man 1. nothing without being taught, 1323 neither shall they I. war, goa never had time to 1., i044a nor account pang, 666a not yet so old but she may L,
1.,

and

2343
of nautilus to sail, 4ogb of the green world, g8ga

highroad 1. to England, 43ob on to fortune, 2563


spirit

of

man who
life,

L,

9873

who

1.

a good

4763
491 a

lie, you to Leaf, abiding L, io66b

believe a

are you the 1. blossom, 883b cut a cabbage 1., 442b fade as a 1., 33b falling of a 1., 6g7b falls with 1. in October, 3i2b flower falling or 1., lona flower say it or 1., 9443 his 1. shall not wither, i6b I were like the L, 774b
in her

white-flsming bush 1., ioi4b wife eat no L, logab Lean-faced, Pinch a hungry 1. villain, 2i8b

read mark 1., 6ia sooner than a song, 4123


task first to 1. what is, 801 b they 1. to be idle, 55a to bear beams of love, 4873 to do well, 303 to hold your own, 8373 to labor and wait, 6aob to read slow, 3643 to teach is to L twice, 4&$b way they eat drink 1. and everything. 933 b what life had to teach, 683a

Leaning
801 a

across

bosom of

west,

mouth was an

olive L,

6b

upon tree, 6g4b let fall no burning L, 10233 lift me as wave 1. cloud, 56gb lives on a L, io64b
1.

last

against the sun, 7353 on reedy shore, 10863 stuffed men 1. together, 10033 Lesnness, style 3grees not with 1. of purse, 2140 Leans against the land, 447b elephant 1. or stands, 3233 her cheek upon her hand, 22 3b Longing 1. and beckons, 6g4b Pacific 1. on the land, gg4b

wise 1. from enemies, gia with view to approbation, 7sb Learned about women from 'er,

875*
1. all drunk, 458b although men say he has not 7ia and conned by rote, 2563 angling never fully L, 3*5b are seldom pretty, 961 a

days in yellow L, 5633 never tear linnet from 1., 88ab November's L, 5193 of grass no less than stars, 7oob olive 1. pacific sign, 3483 one red 1., 524* round elm tree bole in tiny 1.,

my

Leant, on lover's 3rm 1., 647b Lean-witted, lunatic 1. fool, 2273 Leap, excepting 1. year, 1873
I'll
1. up to my God, 2i3b in order to stations 1., 3703 in the dark, 3183 into thy saddle once more, 6g5b

upon

his

hoe and

gazes,

26b

all

1.,

fair

and

1.

and good

as

she,

lame

man

3i9b
fool

1.

as

an

hart,

323

more

foolish,

6633
sere yellow 1., 2863 shall be green, 34b sorrow and scarlet L, 6g8a

look before you 1., 353a look ere ye 1., 1823

forgotten

3623 everything L,

no4b

grew within

stone

1.

unfound door,

nevermore to 1. again, 9153 of whale up Niagara, 422b to pluck bright honor, 2s8b
to tentative conclusion, 10713 Leaped, in Endymion I 1., 5853 into dangerous world II., 48gb out to wed with thought, 6503 Leaping, brooks too broad for L, 853b frog 1. in, 38ob signs of 1. houses, sgyb Lesps, cataract 1. in glory, 648b my heart 1. up, 5 lib nature not proceed by L, 4253 ship clear she 1., 7033 Lear, Hamlet rambles L. rages, 884b ple3S3nt to know Mr. L., 672b there H3mlet there L., 884b till I am Timon 3nd L., 8853 Le3rn and propagate best, 713^

transmute to flower and 1., 7653 turn over a new 1., 1963 Leaf-fringed legend, 5833 Leafy month of June, 525b roll up 1. Olympus, 1173 streams where cherries, io7gb League, half a 1. onward, 65 ib in 1. with future, 72gb in 1. with the stones, i4b of Nations, 94ob Leagues beyond those leagues,

this 1. man, 2igb his great language, 66ab in courtesy have her L, 88*b Jonson's 1. sock, 335a judge should have 1. to know
evil,

94a
best things not
1., 1.,

know

4393

libraries of the

444b

loads of 1. lumber, 4043 love first 1. in lady's eyes, 222a love trade thou hast 1., i42a make the 1. smile, 4033

more L from Dante, ioo8a

much 1. dust, 458a nothing forgotten nothing, 4843


on earth practice 66 3 b root of Homer, 30 ib
in

73ib land appeared at two 1., 1723 scarce 1. ap3rt descried, 688b
ten
1.

heaven,

beyond world's end, io86a

thousand 1. a thousand years, 4*3* world large when weary L, 8o6b Leaks, gas I. twenty parts, 8643 Leal, l3nd o' the L, 502a,b Lesn above me broken-hearted,
98 ib

thoughts of many men, to look on nature, 5ogb to melt at others' woe,

653

4ggb
2353
108 ib

upright

as thread plays out, 10573 at no other, 4553

what habits lead you,

judge

1.

judge,

by doing, g7b by going, 10653

when Sorrow walked, 958b who does not need you, io8ib
with view to improvement, 723

H39

Learned
Learned without sense, 45 6a writer shows he is 1., you are no one, io8ib
Learning,
a'
1.

INDEX
Leather, trod upon neat's 1., 2533 b Leathern, flits by on 1. wing, 443

Leaves

fall early,

g88a

85 ib

hand, ios6b 49ja


silken or
1.

the

1.

I desire,
1.

abandon
i52b

and no sorrow, 74*


I

war with reremice

purse, jg7a for

1.

wings,
1*1 a

of L, 88oa of men like L, 634 generation like wings, 784!) 1. glad green those he 1., happier than

famous

harmony

7a
g6ga

Alcuin my name
angel's wit

loved,
1.,

harmony
Leave all else to the gods, b all meaner things, 4o7 of 479 b at
point
bayonets,

have have time


lisp of
1.,

of 1., 88oa drifted from


to fall,
1.

me, 574a

and singular

but an adjunct to ourself, cast into mire, 454*

ma

i7ga

heart-shaped
ft

of green, g3ib
of life like
1.,

behind bit of ourselves,


bottle

835a

772b
fleet

discourse according to 1., 242b does not teach intelligence, 77b

enough 1. to misquote, 554b evidence of wasted time, 845b grammar nonsense and 1., 450 great end of 1., loob 68b grow old 1. many' things, hath gained most, gssb if I should not be 1. now, io4a inflamed with study of 1., 340* labored for them that seek 1.,
3 8b

on chimleypiece, frjc* by next town drain, 8o7b do not need 1. your room, g8ob
entreat

mankind
gib
.

me

not to

1.

thee,

lib

more, 852b must walk over the


fifty

me

1.,

exempt from plunder, 86ga friends and go, 85 3b when you give themselves

naturally

as

1.

to

tree,

igsb 5853

no
1.,

1.

no

birds,

5Q2a
57ga

noiseless noise among L, oak 1. horses' heels, ioo4a

laws and
little 1.

686b 61 ga dangerous, 4o*b love he bore to L, 449b love of 1., 624b love of slaughter, g88a man of little 1. grows old, Sob much 1. make mad, sob
1.

die,

light liberty

1.,

g80a her to heaven, 26oa him to his pain, 477 a I must 1. all that, 328b it unadvertised, ?87b king not 1. country, io47b kiss but in the cup, 3osa behind, 53?b light of hope little lives in air, 4o5a behind, 3 1 5 a living name we 1., 7033 long anchorage low-vaulted past, 633b man shall 1. father and mother,

of any author, 32gb of Judgment Book unfold, 7263 of life keep falling, 62ga noa piled against doors, poplars showed white of 1.,

private

conscience
1.

for

guide,

37oa

sewed shady

no man wiser for his L, gi7 a on scraps of 1. dote, $g8b pause from 1. to be wise, 427a
s86b red plague rid you for your language, 2g6a royal road to 1., iogb secretary of Nature and
polite
1.,

me a little, 647a me O Love, 2osb me to repose, 442a


monument behind, 8&3a
not a rack behind, 2g7b not a stain, 38b not 1. unless father does, io47b not 1. you comfortless, 4g a n w
off

together, sb fig 1. of destiny, 354a shatter your 1., 338a soul free a little, 665a stop to rake 1. away, g25b stuck out tongues, io64b a swayed my 1. and flowers, 881
sweetest 1. folded, $62a teaches 1. to curtsy, io78b tender 1. of hopes, 2g8b

1.

me
1.,

thick as

autumnal

1.,

342a
is

all

though

326b
steeped in antique L, 72ob thought without 1., 7ia to 1. much inclined, 68oa wear 1. like watch, 4i$b

off

8i2b agony 1. off style, thanks, wishing to deserve

1. are many the root one, 88 1 a turning in the wind, 954b


1. perish, io57b untroubled about us, io8oa

unless

weight of

1.,

whence

is

who

so neglects 1. in youth, 86a wiser without books, 459 a

65 la thy L, 401 a

a peace 1 1. with you, 49 religion to family, 717 sack and live cleanly, 241*

vine

1.

in hair, 7*gb
if
1.

what

my

1.

falling,

56gb

something to after times, 33gb the rest to heaven, 33 ib


thee in the storm, 277b

without thought, 7ia 686a Learning's altar vanish, o'er her foes, 4s6b

them alone

they'll

come home

the rose, 62gb where wings of seraph, losoa words are like 1., 403* world to darkness, 44<> a none or few, 2g2b yellow 1. or

Leaving

triumph

Lease of

my true love, aggb summer's 1. too short, 29 ib Leash, slow on the 1., gSfb
Leash-men,
the 1., g8?b Least deserved such a fate, gob
pallid
faithful in 1., 47* I am 1. of apostles,

them for the poor and stranger,


them honeyless, 256a them in midst of his days, 34b them laughing, g44a them while looking good, io27a
to
1.

all that here win us, 7843 country for country's sake, 3983 love behind, 737a me never alone, 784^

nothing became 28ib outgrown shell, 6s4a

him

like

1.,

5b

joy last last not

276b 1. in love, 255a love 1. that let men know, 22ob most enjoy contented L, 2Q2a myself not 1. but honored, 646b not 1. in honor or applause, 20ia ib nothing so L as truth, 103 of the evils, g?b of these my brethren, 44a of two evils, 64a when 1. promise most given
1.,

not

took

to die a little, 835a 1. but was loth to depart,

to direct themselves, io26b to take command of troops,

us old nobility, 686b we Thy servant sleeping, 727 a


57 ib wilt thou 1. me thus, i86b world no copy, 25 ib your friends and go, 853b Leaven, a little L, 52a a pain for 1., 773 , , Leaveneth the whole lump, 52a
1.,

why did you why didst thou

1.

Owen,

676b

a Leavings, devil's L, 4i3 a Lebanon, cedars of L., 2ib, g45 like a cedar in L., 2ia

5o4a

grow

Lebarge, Lake L., 9333 Lecher, gilded fly does Lecherous goats, so8a

1.,

27gb

Lecteur, hypocrite 1., 7o6b a Lecture, if you wish to hold

1.,

88b
Lectures, behold I

do not

give

1.,

said,

205a
last
1.,

Leaves, air
air wild

wash
1.

1.

cover me, 773b

7000
in nightdress, 5g2b or a little charity, 7oob of ethics, plant read us 1. Led, Bruce has aften L,

said soonest

though

not

mended, igsa 1., 201 a


47 a
occasions
1.

among
1.

with 1., ggoa never known,

582b

woman who

unjust in

talk,

birds snows, io57a cover them with 1., io84a cover with 1. and flowers, 3isa

38^ 49a
46 1 a
1.,

dumb and
neither

silent

be

1.,

Leather, bones and L, go6a clothed all hi 1., iog8a rest all 1. or prunella,

4ogb

crisped and sere, 643b dead driven like ghosts, drifts of withered L, 7i5a
easy as
1.

saint

nor

sophist

56gb
87ga

7iib regiment from behind, 76ga


to believe

Spanish or neat's

1.,

35*b

grow on

tree,

lie,

49 ia

1440

INDEX
Leda, as L. mother of Helen, 781 a Ledge, rocky 1. woods untamed, 86oa Ledlow, farmer L. late at plow, 7830
Lee,
Legislation, conquests through L, 589*) Legislative, correction through 1. action, 8333 every 1. body in, U.S., giaa judicial distinct from 1., 46gb

Lesser
Lends, three things I never
1.,

6na
Length, concept of 1., 9662 drags its slow 1. along, 4033 Folly's at full L, 4ooa in 1. of days understanding, i5a of days and night, 7733 of days in her right hand, 2ga of shambling limb, 68ob
operations

between windward

and

L,

77 6a
I my Annabel L., 6443 shore of age, 8i6b Leek, by this L, 2453 Leeks, wel loved he garleek oynons 1., i67a Leer, assent with civil L, 41 la

and

nominated by executive, 465b Legislature, beauty not at call of


1., 6073 innocent man to L, 8953 not act arbitrarily, 10133

by which mined, 9663

1.

deter-

public opinion stronger than

L,

Lees, drink life to

1.,

646a

mere
stirs

1.

is left,
1.

284a

up

wines on Leeward, soft shower to L, 6g7b Leewardings, such lovely L, 6g7b unfettered 1., 10433 Left booming surge of Aegean, gab cannon to 1. of them, 65^ country for country's good, 3983 fair Scotland's strand, 4943 for handful of silver 1. us, 66ab

of things, 6g6b the L, $ib

Legitimate, let the end be L, 48sb object of government, 4733 Legs, cannonball took off 1., 59 ib
'ear 'erse's legs,

what it lacks in 1., gs8b words of learned 1., 4503 Lengthened sage advices, 4gsb shadow of man, 6o6a Lengthening, drags L chain, 447b
Lengthens not a day, goaa
Lenity, what

654b

giving
his
if
1.

way under me,


bestrid

go high

73 ib the ocean, s88b use own L, 8053

makes robbers bold

of iron, 353 on his last L, 3143 one pair of English

L, 2443 slimy things crawl with 1., 5253 that bird never on 1., 6713 vast trunkless I., 5683

but 1., 2i5b Lenore, lost L., 64ga Lens, each age a 1., 7373 Lent him to a lady, iog7b with 1. money evil done, 6gSb Lente currite noctis equi, ai^b
Lentiles, gave Esau pottage of L, 7a Leo, ill policy in L. the Tenth,

from the right and L, 53 ib his garment in her hand, 7b implacable Chary bdis guards 1.,
234* hand riches in her 1. honor, 233 let not 1. hand know, 4ob lies on her 1. side, io22b look not 1. or right, fyjb
ne'er
1.

walk under his huge L, 2$$b with which you run, loggb
Leibniz, monads of L., 9873 Leicester, farewell L. Square, 9343 Leisure, be doon at 1. parfitly,

4623
Leoline,
5.24a

Sir

L.

the baron rich,

and

i68b
beguiled
1.

of crew, 7&5b

busy

1.,

442b

man

one
the the

taken

the

in mire, 2903 other 1., 44a

conversation wants 1., 9323 gentleman of 1., 845b

warm
web
air

precincts, 441 a
1.

means and 1. civilizers, 6i2b no 1. who useth it not, 3253


repeat at repent at
1., 1.,

left

thou hast
vivid

the loom, 645b thy first love, 57b signed with honor,

g4gb 39ib

retired L., 335b to grow wise, 7i2b

we only are L, 7isb Leg, can honor set to 1., 24ob caper and shake 1., 9463 decreasing 1. increasing belly,
justice has

with dignity,

nob

Leonidas, always a L. to die, 7233 and Washington, 56 ib Leopard change his spots, 34a cloud that looked like 1., 913 frozen carcass of 1., 10453 seeking at that altitude, 10453 sh3ll lie down with the kid, 313 Leopards, three white 1., ioo3b Leprosy, skin white as L, 5253 Lesbia, let us live and love my L., ii4b my sweetest L., 3003 with her sparrow, io23b
Lesbia's
Less,

wooed

in haste
full
1.

wed

at

1.,

we glide, Leisurely, say Miserere very 1., 3293


of L, 45ob
trees

2iga 74sa

sparrow

all

alone, g45b
1.,

by hoping more have but

2203
can't take 1. said Hatter, 7443 fears 1. than imaginings, 28 ib

2410 wooden 1., 8gob never breaks 1., 867b one old timber 1., 9093 took him by left L, 10946

Leman, such a 1., io88b Lemon, be with you in squeezing


bloom, 4773
twelve miles from a 1., 5233 Lemonade, black eyes and 1., 5426

Legacies,

books

1,

genius leaves,

greater prey upon 1., 41 8b he spoke more he heard, 8ioa how much 1. man, isb if clod washed away Europe 1.,

394b
to strange police, 9253 Legacy alleviates sorrow, igyb charm in a good L, ig7b Legal justice art of good and fair,

weak

like

your

soul,

4973

3o8b
rogsb
this than meets eye, more, 664b more and more about 1., more matter with 1. art, never do 1. than duty,

Lemons,

oranges

and L,

in

9993

Lend a hand, 7i8a


a kind of easiness, 2645

is

eye a terrible aspect, 24gb


eyes the

1513 super 1. aid bureau, 9673

glowworm

1.

thee,
1.

32ob
her,

unanimity on 1. questions, 864b Legalizer, time great 1., g6oa Legend, leaf-fringed 1., 5833
of green chapels, io7ob Legend's, qui procul hinc
1.

heaven such grace did

nicely

calculated

1.

or

86sb 26ob 6203 more,

writ,

8653 Legends, asleep in lap of


5 8ib

men who borrow men who


534b

2213 less than thou owest, 277b me leave to come, 20 ib me stone strength, gg4b me your ears, 2553

no man

5*7*

shall have, 84yb

L,

I.,

rather believe fables in 1., ao8b Leges, silent enim 1. inter arma,

us thine aid, 5493 you wings of future, 994b Lender, borrower is servant to the

nob

Legible, thoughts

1.

Legion, my name is L., 453 of lost ones, Sysb soldier of the L., 627b that never was 'listed, 8743 Legiones redde, i24b
Legions, give

in eye, 3i4b

back my 1., i24b Legislate, judges do and must 1., 788a

me

25b borrower nor 1., as8b Lendeth, because it 1. light, 201 a unto the Lord, 253 Lendings, off you 1., 278b Lends hand to honest boldness, 102b he that 1. gives, 325a something to love he 1., 6463 soul 1. tongue vows, 2593
1-,

not that I loved Caesar 1., 2553 of two evils, 643 rather than be 1. cared not to be, 343* small Latin and 1. Greek, gc^b th3n kind, 2573 than the dust, 8713 the 1. one knows, 74b the little 1. what worlds away,
they have the more noise, 4133

neither

weep

to

make

1.

depth of
1.

grief,

2i5b
Lessened, one pain
er's,

by anoth-

2233

Lessening, little things go 1., 666b Lesser breeds without law, god made world, 6543

1441

Lesser
Lesser than

INDEX
my name,
227b
L,

man, 64yb Lesson, draw from others the


1.

woman

6g8a 1. to be learned, 7253 first grandest 1. On sail on, 7903 harder 1. how to die, i8gb heart give 1. to head, 45ga jolly good L, Sysb last 1. learned thoroughly, 7253 on grammar impertinence, 7203 seems to carry, 45gb Lessons of paternalism unlearned, 77ia of two such 1. forget, 561 a three 1. I would write, 4973 Let all her ways be unconfined,
I.,

io8b each reads

his

own

58 7 b America be America, 10513

another man praise thee, 263 at another 1. in the foe, $4gb dead bury dead, 4ib dearly 1. or 1. alone, 32 ib each man exercise art he knows, gia everything that hath breath praise, 233 face of God shine through, 10233 freedom ring, 627 b her not walk in the sun, s6ob him look to his bond, 2333 him never come back, 66ab him now speak, 61 a him pass for a man, 2$ib it be forgotten, gSsa it be let it pass, 41 6b it begin here, 4553 joys be as May, 3223 me die death of righteous, loa me have no lying, 2gsb me not to marriage of true minds, 2943 me play the fool, 2313 me tell the world, 24ob my people go, 8a never curtain drawn, g28a never 1. up for single moment, 983* never 1. you down, io53b
10233 dog bark, 23 ib man's heart fail, i2a such man be trusted, 235b not heart be troubled, 4ga not poor Nelly starve, 366b not the sun go down, 543

Let us have peace, 7173 us have tongs and bones, 2303 us live 3nd love, 1140, 3003 us move forward, 9743 us now praise fsmous men, 38b us reason together, 303 us take it 3s it comes, 7693 us then be up, 62ob wh3t will be said or done, 47 ib who will be clever, 6913, g62b will not 1. thee go, 7b your light shine, 403 your mind 3lone, 10333 Lethe, cup that brings sleep of L., 120b go not to L., 5843 river of oblivion, 3443 rots in e3se on L. wh3rf, 25gb time L., 9373 Lethean, drunken of things L., 7743 Lethe-wards had sunk, 5823 Let's carve him as 3 dish, 254b choose executors, 227b contend no more love, 6633 kill all the lawyers, 2153 look at the record, gi6b
see now what is talk of graves, 227b Lets, make ghost of

Leviathan hugest of creatures, 346b that crooked serpent, 323

whom
2ib

thou hast made

to play,
1.,
1.,

Levity, a little judicious say it with utmost Levy, foreign L, 284b

824b 8363

Levying W3r, 4743 Lewd fellows, 503 rude by day 1. by night, 86ob the sinful and 1., 10355 Lewdness, though 1. court it, 25gb Lex, de minimis non curst L,
igob
salus populi

suprema

L,

m/b,

i5ib Lexicographer writer of dictionaries,

427b
1.,

Lexicography, not so lost in

Lexicon of youth, 60 ib Lexington and Bunker Hill, 5472 so soft this morning, 9693 Lhude sing cuccu, 10833 sing Goddamm, 9870
Liable,
all

men

are

1.

to

error,

one,

g62b
that
1.

him

372b Liar always lavish of oaths, 33 ib and the father of it, 48b
best L, 7563

me, 25gb
Letter

and

spirit of constitution,
1.

doubt truth to be
either
1.

1.,

z6ob
way,

485b

by card by killeth, 533


l3st
till
1.

by

press,

8g6b

makes
7563

or madman, 4363 amount go long


1.

you write your L, 3O4b


spirit,

not

but

533

no one such man, 8053

as

indignant

of yours never grows old, 7653 one writes 1. t3king p3rticul3r trouble, 1533 pleasant to get 1., 7653 read in the bitter L, 272b
scarlet
1. passport, 6143 to the world, 735b

Lettered,

locked

1.

collar,
1.

4933
gild-

Lettering, stripped of
ing, 4213-b

and

of first magnitude, 39 ib picturesque L, 76ib should have good memory, i36a show me a 1., 3253 they answered Little 1., go2b Liars, 3ll men 3re L, 223 drunksrds 1. sdulterers, 2773 ought to h3ve good memories, 33lb some women not I., g$2b

Letters Cadmus gave, 5613 fool in four 1., 3600 in your 1. spesk of me, 27 6b like writin' anonymous L, 8923

when
Libelous

they speak truth, 973 statements about dog,

973
Liber, vade salutatem pro

me

L,

no no no no

bird

call,

mingle

souls,

3073

i65b
society,

no

3rts

no

1. 1.,

no
424b

3183

Liberal

arts

study
Psrty

humanizes,

republic of

1293

6723 sleeping dogs slip dogs of war, 2553


lie,

thame

say,

2023
i7b

the toast pass, 48 ib the words of my mouth, them eat cake, 436b them have their day, 88 ib them say, 2023
this

should not be known, sg6b when Isdies write 1., 55 ib Letting hundred flowers blossom, io27b I dare not, 282b Level, boys 3nd girls 1. with men, 288b dead 1. of mass, 6g6b in her husband's heart, 2523 levelers wish to 1. down not
up, 4sob

Democratic 9723
education,
I

remain

1.,

3m

L.,

infuses th3t 1. obedience, institutions cease being 1., 8osblittle L.,

8063 767b luxury of 1. government, 677b

cup

pass, 44"b

thy words be few, 283 us all to meditation, 2153 us alone, 645b us be b3cked with God and seas, 2i6a us be happy as we can, 4333 us begin, 10733 us go into the house of the Lord, 22b us go singing as far as we go,

ii6b
us go then, looob

6253 with their fount, 6253 Leveled rule of stre3ming light, 337* together by T30, 1013 Levelers, books true I., 544b wish to level down, 43ob Leveling, cannot bear 1, up, 43ob rancorous mind, 8843 wind, 8833 Levels all ranks, 6013 Lever, mind 1. of 3ll things, 546b Levi3th3n, draw out L with a hook, i6b
1.,

no stream

meanders

party believed in people, 9733 philosophy, 10133 st3rry-eyed L, loiob tempered by experience, 7isb to love her is 1. education, 395b Liberslism, English L. nor Toryism, 7i3b principles of 1., 10133 Liberality in gifts well timed,
3 8ib

Liberated, I have I. my soul, i5*a the hell out of place, 11043 Liberates, neither shoots nor 1.,

6843 Liberation

of

energies

of men,

1442

INDEX
Liberation of Europe, ioi6b Liberator, shepherd as 1., Gggb Liberavi animam meam, i54a Liberia, pro patria pro 1., ii6a
Libertas, ubi 1. ibi patria, Libertate, sub 1. quietem, Liberties, dramatist wants 1., liberty above all 1., 3400 not made but grow, 8igb not too strong for 1., 64oa people never give up 1,,

Lie
1.,

Liberty, judiciary safeguard of

Library, furnished

me from mine

864b

own
1.,

1.,

2g6a

know no such
lawless
life
1.

358b

good
1.,

attack

upon
of

444a

public

to inherit 1., Sigb 1. affords conviction,

446b
gSaa 8ooa

pursuit

happiness,

427b
public 1. to beef thrust, 89 ib turn over half a 1., 43ib

47b
light
1.

973*
learning, 6i3a

453 preserve 1. Americans already had, 997b Libertine, chartered 1., 2433

love of 1. God planted, 6363 love of 1. love of others, 5403 mocks my loss of 1., 486a

loosened spirit brings, 7j8b

was

dukedom
I

large

enough,

2g6a

whereon

look, 32 la

Libre, 1'horame est


Libr'y, public
1.

1.,

435b

puffed
Libertines,
1.,

and

reckless 1., self-love makes

258b

most power least 1., s66b mountain nymph sweet 1., 3$4b must be rationed, gogb must begin at home, 10263

to

beef thrust,

8gib
Lice tethered, io64b License, equal 1. in bold invention, i24a innocence never into L, 378b love not freedom but 1., j4ia
poetic
1.,

more

436a a Liberty
abstract
1.

my my

beloved

discipline,

heart's at 1., 35ga soul at 1., 7356 nation conceived in

1.,

6ga

not found, 45ga Americans love 1., 426a

and glory of his country, 546b and justice for all, 832!) and tyranny, 63gb and Union, 547b
arduous
struggle
for
1.,

464b
is
1.,

as end and means, 8$2b basis of democratic state

9b
bulwark of continuing bulwark of our 1., 6s6a
bulwarks of by accident
captivity
is
1.,
1.,

9723

neither in despotism or democracy, 48 5 a neither 1. nor safety, 422b no pretense of loving 1., 6353 not alone to this country, 6373 of a poet, 3323 of conscience, 32ga of individual, 6igb of press, 61 6b, logia of thought life of soul, 4i8a only to those who love it, 5483 peace 1. and safety, 47 2b

ma

Licensing
Licentiae,

and prohibiting, 34ob


poetaruna
1.

ma

liberiora,

Licentious,
1.,

newspapers

the

most

48ib

soldiery, 45 sb

Lichas, Hercules
dice,

and L. play

at

23b

people so dead to
1.,

1.,

4261

446a got its

i77b
1.,

personality sacrosanct meaning of 1., 934b

consciousness so's

735 b

on which given 1., 479 b contending for l. 46ob-46ia corruption symptom of 1., 466a courage secret of 1., 8 gab
condition
F

cradle of 1., 548b crust of bread and 1., 41 ib definition of 1., 971 a definition of word 1., fygb degradation of idea of 1., io68b divinest 1.,

placid repose under 1., 362a plucks justice by nose, 2703 possessions take away 1,, 867b precious, gogb price of 1., 47gb property no stamps, logoa putrid corpse of L, 977!) quick with seed of L, 6953 sacred fire of L, 46 ib secret of happiness, 8s2b secure blessings of L, 474a

Lick absurd pomp, 26 ga ill cook that cannot 1. fingers, 225b it into form, i^a the dust, 2oa valleys up, 736a Licked, admit I'm 1., ioi5a he 1. my wounds, ggob platter clean, logsb soup from ladles, 662b 1. corn Licker, stop victim's watch, g4ob talks mighty loud, 8i4a Licking luscious piece of fruit,
Licks,

bear

1.

them into proper


to
1.

shape, i33a

seeking

1.

which

is

so

dear,

hand
4o8a

raised

shed

blood,

i6ob
sleep the captive's 1., 2iob so loving- jealous of his 1., 224b soul of journey is 1., 53gb spirit of L, 452b survival of 1., ic*72b sweet land of 1., 6*7b
this

doing what laws permit, 4i4b doing what one desires, 6igb enjoy delight with 1., 201 a enjoy such 1., 3593 enjoyment of life and 1., 446a
equality fraternity, no5b extremism in 1., 46yb

pride that Lid, cat that

the

sits

on hot

dust, stove

4nb
1.,

earth's 1., g88b penthouse 1., 281 a why not raise 1., 505b

freedom enfranchisement, 255a friendship love and 1., 52?b from despotism to 1. in featherbed, 47 ib give me 1. or death, 465b God who gave life gave 1., 47ob greatest dangers to 1., 833a Hall, 45ob harder to preserve than obtain, 546a he served human 1., 884a he that commands sea is at 1., 2ogb headstrong 1., 2i8a heritage of all men, 6s6a highest political end, 75oa
history history guards, g67a hoard up our true
I
if

taken with nature, 7?8a country to preserve this is L. Hall, 45ob to be subserved, 702b to know, 34ob
to pray, 741 a to think feel do,

1.,

47 sb

Lids, drops blue-fringed L, 5262 eternal 1. apart, 581 a


Lie,

53gb

Tree, 466b
tree of 1. refreshed, 47 ib tree of 1. watered by

a 1. in world beyond, igob a thought more nigh, $iga abroad for commonwealth, 301 a all the dead 1. down, 7s6a all who 1. beneath, 877a and rest awhile, g7sb asked lady to 1. her down, 488a

blood,

484a V-notes 666b

something

1.

more,

no questions isn't told 1., 45ob at proud foot of conqueror,


asks

we all declare for 1., Sggb what crimes in thy name,


what 1. where 1. there 446b
wrote at
1.

48sb loosened spirit, 738b


is

athwart noses as they 1. asleep, 22$a awake in dark weep for sins,

my

country,

7oob

of

1.

of
1.,

safe-

when

of devils,

becomes habitual, 47 la before us like land of dreams,


7i4b big 1., ioi2a by emperor's side, 275b cannot tell a 1., 4623, 4gga can't pray a L, 76 ib
charitable 1., io54a children and fools

igoa
Liberty's in every blow, 4g6a Libraries, have well-furnished
1.,

must have 1. withal, 248b 1. found in democracy, g8b in moderate governments, 4&5a

sogb
in L, 444b and 1. of Europe, 473b to collect 1., 8igb better Library, circulating 1. in a town, 4&ob
I bless

in mouth of Webster, 6o4b in proportion to restraint, 548b inspire our souls, 3933 interfering with 1., 6iga

God

science

cannot

L,

1443

Lie
Lie circumstantial, 251 a contrive one noble 1., g4a countenance cannot 1., 3145
credit his
Lie,

INDEX
underneath
303*
unless statistics L, 1031 a
this stone

doth

1.,

Lies with dogs riseth with fleas,

3*4b
daisies,
1.,

own

L, ag6a

dead and damned, 66aa deep buried, 773 differences between cat and 7623 dig grave let me L, 823b
direct, 251 a

upon the what is a


1.,

y66b

you can invent, 4903 Life a battle and sojourning, 14 ib


a bubble, 2ioa
a fury slinging flame, 6503 a man's real 1., 8443 a play of passion, 1993

561 b
1.,

where'er she

3543

which

is all

lie,

who

65^

down down down down down down

dost thou 1. so low, 2553 because 'twas night, josb for eon or two, 872 b in bed of sorrow, 35 ib in green pastures, iyb
like tired child,
till

loves to 1. with me, 2483 with a purpose worst, 8gob with my fathers, 7b yonder all before us L, 3603
shall
1.

young
313

down

together,
after

Lied, good

memory needed
L,
as

one has
never
said

5680

1., 33ib flunked never

academic 1., 3ogb account of her 1. to clod, 24sb actuality of thought is 1., g7b add what we can to L, 8i7b admits not of delays, 4323 sdore my 1. with Bird, io66b affirnmion of 1., 9393
after 1. is de3th, 7753 ain't all beer and skittles, 66ga all a man hath will he give for
I.,

leaders spoken, 874b

fain wald 1. down, io8ga families I. together, io8ob

Right 9023

778b Pippin but 1.,

Father

4623 faults 1. gently on him, 2993 for a moment is truth, 7o8b give the world the 1., igga half a truth blackest, 654b handle which fits all, 6343 heaven with splendors 1., 6923 here let her 1., g7*b here obedient to their laws we L, yob home to a 1., g88a how L through centuries, 664b how still we see thee L, 7553 I can't tell a 1., 4993 I 1. down alone, 854b I shall in the dust, 64b 1. I their map 1. flat, 3083 if I 1. spit in my face, 2393 in cold obstruction, 271 a
tell
1.,

cannot

those who I. for hire, Lief not be as be in awe, Liege of loiterers, 22 ib we are men my 1., 2843 Lies at last as always, io7gb believe her though she 1., below correct in cypress, crudest 1. in silence, 82 sb dalliance in wardrobe 1.,

g88b 25sb

4a
1.

3ll
3ll

his

in
1.

human
7983
I

the wrong, 382b


in

monkeys and
is

cats,
3ll all

2g4b
losga

C3re 3bout inclusion and


is
is

L, 7863 confusion,

799b
all
1.

an experiment, 788b
a dream, 3s8b
to
1.

on my tongue, exposed he 1., 37 ib fool 1. here, 872b


death
1.

243b 2413

all all

L
1.

moving

one measure,
flies,

945 a 3long p3rabola

io83b

friend
full

fathom 2 9 6b

or foe spread 1., 73 ib five thy father 1.,


1.,
1.,

Americ3n

1.

solvent,

867b

3mong bumblebees,

great Prince in prison half truth blackest of

3o6b 654b

heaven

1.

about

us,

5isb

in cowslip's bell I L, sg7b in Mellstock churchyard

now,

783b in your throat, 24 ib leads you to believe a

here food for worms, 42 ib here 1. a king that ruled, 326b here 1. beautiful lady, 9143 here 1. Matthew Prior, s87b here I. my wife, 372b here 1. one who meant well,

and De3th 3nd and its few years, 835b and liberty, 4463 3nd power sc3ttered, 546b and what's a 1., 3223
anything for a quiet 66g3
1.,

io62a-b Forever, 6913

3143,

appreciation of good L,

10263

1.,

491 a

light lie light, 822a lightly gentle earth, gi6b like bill on nature's reality,

8253 here 1. our good Edmund, 4513 here 1. truly honest m3n, 354b him down the lubber fiend,
335*
historical books with no Hope 1. to mort3ls, 854b
1.

art long 1. short, 477b art makes 1., 8oob art of drawing conclusions, 7563 as 1. to living, 74ob as much as my 1. was worth,

4383
as

me down to bleed, io87b men who will not 1., 6gob


national nicer to
1.,
1.

5 76b

to bed's-feet

1.

1.,

8oib

as to breathe as to future 1.

were

man

shrunk, 3063 1., 646b judge,

76$b
in bed, goga

how long a time


2263

in one word,

6 2 8b

no worse

than truth misunderstood, 795a not a man that he should L,


1.

loa not know what

in his bed walks with me, 236b in the rude manger 1., 3343 judged according to 1., is6b long time 1. in one word,

it is

to a

1.,

59?b nothing can

need

1.,

322b

on knees of the gods, 65a on Mother's bed, 10763


permits himself to tell 1. 4713 rather 1. in woolen, 24sb
reclined, 645b sergeant's widow
shall rot, sleep will

2263 Matilda told 1., go2a music on spirit 1., 645b my captsin L, 7023 nothing to feed on but now 1. he there, 255b old men's 1., 9883

beginning of 1., sb banished from high 1., bankrupt of L, 3683 be not afraid of 1., 7943 bear a charmed 1., 2873
beautiful or reverse,

A ton

at the door of L, 7743

6gsb

becomes
1.,

rootless plant, 3513


lies

before us

35ib

beg delinquents

in daily 1., 3473 for 1., 10773

told

1.,

6323

on ch3liced flowers that on her left side, io2sb


poets
tell

L, 2 gob

224b 6723 still and slumber, 3g6b still ye thief, 2390 stone tell where 1 1., 4023 summer's 1., 10323 sweet compulsion in music 1., 334b sweets compacted 1., 3233 talking of fall of man, 6843 tangled in her hair, 358b think that histories 1., 7143 thought uttered is L, 61 la truth in masquerade, 56 ib
I.,

7223 never

many
I.

1.,

religion of slaves,

68b 8g4b
553

begins perpetu3lly, 888b believe is not a dream, 67gb best portion of man's 1., 5093 birth 1. and death, 38 ib birthday of my 1., 73gb bitterness of 1., 7473
of book of blow through 1., io5ib boat of 1. be light, 8553 book of 1. begins, 8403 book of 1. opened, 58b

sleeping dogs

1.,

spesking

hypocrisy, steep my speech in 1., 793 subject of all verse, 3igb


tells
1.
1.

in

blameless blot out

1.,

652b
1.,

57b

test

that that
to

made great way madness


it,
1.

without attending, 4713 in action, 7ga


equals,
1., 2780 322b not honorable,

hide
tell

to

833

truth to cover L, 39 ib he3d that wears unessy 1. crown, 2423 where he longed to be, 823b

books substitute for 1., Saab boredom at core of 1., 3653 bread called staff of L, 3863 bread of L, 48b bread of 1. in mouth, 38 ib breath of 1., 5b brief 1. our portion, 687b

1444

INDEX
Life, brisking

Life
dreams
Life goes

about the

1.,

444b

Life,

dream

1.

as lake

on

forever, 10233

and broad margin


British
1.

institutions, 9213 L, 6833 to

my

sky, 8703 dream of 1,, 5723

golden tree of 1. is green, 478b good death does honor to whole


L, 1633

broken

1.

up

for

bread,

7743 5803

dreamed

1.

was beauty, 68oa

buried L, 7123 burrs and thorns of 1., but 3 span, 10893 C major of this 1., 666a so long L, C3lamity of
can't be

2623
right,

wrong whose

1.

4oob
care of
care's
1.

and happiness, 4720


6sob
to
1.,

dregs of 1., 367b drink 1. to lees, 6463 each carries own 1. form, earnest art gay, 49 8a ease one 1. the aching, 73?a echo undermine hold on 95 lb education of imaginative

good

society

good

1.,

9133

grants nothing without work, laoa great business of 1., 77gb great end of 1. is action,
1,,

7*5*

1.,

careless of single L,

8oob
education will determine future !> 94* efflorescence of civilized L, 7063 elevate 1. by endeavor, 6833 elysian, 62 2b empty dream, 4O2a, 62ob

an

enemy
think

L,

2513

cast a cold eye on chain of L, io77b

8B$b
see in
1.,

great interpreter of 1., 779" greater price than L, 10483 greatest thing in family 1., 93oa Greek thought and L, 78b grow sweet as caress, 858b growth evidence of L, 597b

change we
9263 changing

we
1.,

scenes, of
1.,

3843

charmed

2873

chaos breeds 1., 7773 Chinese philosophy of L, loigb Chinese poetry contemplates 1.,

8633
clock
stops

end in itself, 7873 end of 1. cancels bands, 24oa end of 1. is to be, 822b and liberty, enjoyment of 1. 446a
enlarge

grunt and sweat under weary L, 2623 hair stir as 1. were in it, 286b half a 1. asunder, 744b half spent before we know,
325*
lf-psy for 1., 56ib all his 1.,
_*

h3ppy

time

come

to

1.,

10393
closed 1. begins, 7033 closed twice before close, 7393 cold eye on 1. on death, 88sb

comes before literature, 7553 comes to end in prosperity, 78b to inquire compel philosophy about 1., nib conduct three-fourths of 1., 7163

427* 1., 37b one hole, io5b entrusts 1. shorten L, 38b wrath and envy of 1., 949* epigram a criticism escape from L, io56b
1.,

my

enough for

my
to

toward summit, 8o6a harder to harmonious and humane L, 7i6b h3s no meaning except responsibility, i024b hss passed roughly, 4sgb have light of 1., 48b have you found 1. distasteful,

essential facts of

1.,

6833

eternal eternal

1. 1.

gift of God, 513 in knowledge of God,

6oa
everlasting
1.,

consciousness of wh3t we can do, 9783 contraction of 1., 935b contraries the L of one another.
cool

48a
public
haunt,
1.,

exempt

from

he giveth 1., 503 he lives on in your 1., 943* he th3t findeth 1., 423 he thst loveth her loveth 1.,

this sweet experience of fabric of 1., 106 ib

1623

he who knows
here
5 69 b
find
1.

1.,

sequestered

vale

of

1.,

44ob count 1. of battle good, 8653


courage of L, 10723

fading fast awsy, 8153 fall upon thorns of L,


falter
1.

1.

in

3833 death,

5303

away, 7123
1.

high high

L, 448*. 6 9 5b

fancied

in

others'

breath,

crowded hour of L, 455 b crowded to the full, 5223 crown of 1., 563, 57b crown of 1. as it doses, 77 sb
culprit 1., 734* custom guide of human L, 434b his 1., 2763 daily beauty in dancing is 1. itself, 8513 de3r as light and 1., 495*

4ogb
1., 7723 fashion literature fear among fears, &78b fear love fear 1., 9133 fear of Acheron which troubles

of

1.,

ii3b
1.

mistaken path, 5643 his 1. a breath of God, 6793 his 1. W3S gentle, 56b his 1. was in the right, 358b hollow existence burden, 7593 home 1. not natural, 8373 honor dearer than 1., 1953 hope for happiness beyond L,
horizon of human 1., 6o7b horrors of half-known 1.,. 6973 hot for certainties in 1., 73ob house to be let for 1., 32 ib how good man's 1., 6653 human 1. a large m3nsion, 5853 humsn 1. priceless, 10483 husks of 1., io6ib hymns to glory of 1., 998b I 3m the bre3d of I., 48b I believe in 1. everlasting, 6oa
I
if if if
if

death after 1. does ple3se, 2003 death and 1. not alternatives, 995* death and 1. one, 90 ib death gift to L, io56b death makes 1. live, 667b death nor 1. nor angels, 513 desth of each day's 1., 283b death part of 1., 9373 death side of 1. away from us,

so8b 794* art, 7993 felt-1. producing fever of 1. over, 5983 fie upon this quiet 1., 2393
feels
feels like real fight,

in

every limb,

in

for

1.

and

joy

and

for objects,

for 1. six hundred pounds, 41 ib for 1. to come, sggb for the living, 7503 for why my 1. at end, 10871? force uncomprehended was his
1-, 732a fought for
1.,

burned

demd

my L, 276a horrid grind, 66gb desert where no 1. found, 59 ib devote his 1, in serving his
_

at

friend

is

io67b medicine
1.

of

1.,

37 b

frittered

prince, 713 difficulty in

1.

is

choice, 8273

digressions 1. of reading, 437b dim ecstasy holds her 1., gssb dim origins of 1., 1061 a disease of modem 1., 7123

recover, 2 lib from front essential facts of 1., 6833 fruits of 1. and beauty, 488b fury slinging flame, 6503 gale of 1. high, 8533 game that must be played, Sggo

aw3y by

detail,

6833

death to

if if

my 1., 10383 country require my 1., 463* not death tragedy 1. is, 847b it be 1. to pitch, 8843 1. bitter pardon, 7763 my 1. unworthy, 6jj8b not L what have you had,
7993

if

garment we

does thy 1. destroy, 4893 dost thou love 1., 4223 doth 1. in tendance spend, 201 a doubt he was worthy of L,

io8ia

dream

in night, 878b

alter, io4ob thee feed, 486b gave thee I. bid of error, 3153 mist general tree of 1., 57b give to eat of the his 1. for sheep, 48b 1. g'veth od gave gave liberty, 47 ob God of L. Creator, g62a goes not backward, 975b

you h3ven't had 1., 7992 of L, 8443 im3gin3tion master ills scholar's 1. assail, 427* immortal death has taken mortal
1.,

iisb
1.

in

human
4283

much

endured, 0753
3033

in internal environment, in 1. courtesy, 885b in 1. did h3rbor give,

1445

Life
Life, in L many things aside, i$8a

INDEX
draw us
Life like
little

stroll

literature
1.

in

in in in in in in

London all 1. can afford, 432a middle of journey of 1., i5ga old dame yet, g46a our 1. nature live, 27a the midst of 1. death, 6ib United States, io6sb

on beach, 68 la a phase of L, gg6a rounded with sleep,

Life,

never

know what
die,

1.

means

till

you

66yb

whom

standeth
1.,

eternal

L,

2g?b needed to make happy 1., i42b live all days of your 1., ggob beneath making sun, live 1. 8oia live 1. he has imagined, 68sb
little

drawn breath of 1., 88 3 b never turn back on 1., 98 ib new era in 1. from book, 68ga New L. Movement, gg5b
never to have

new 1. when sin no more, 6765 nightmare L.-in-Death was she,


5 2 5*

6oa Indian

live

summer of
like

777b

inseparable

1.

and

con1.,

live live

not childish task, ioi8a out thy 1. as light, 775b thou thy L, 8oia
1.

no bonds attached him


i62b

to

sciousness, g86a interest in death interest in

international

1.

competitive,

lived forwards, 676a lived half 1. in Paris, lively form of death, 2043 Lolita light of L, io46a

gssb

no no no

1. 1.
1.

by

others'

death,

sg^a

lives forever,

775a
passage-

moves in empty

ways, 81 a

into each 1. rain fall, 62 ib is a copycat, icooa is a dream, igob is a jest, 4021 is a wave, 7O5b is action and passion, 786b an incurable disease, 3583 is is but a day, 5795
is
is is is
is is
is is

but a span, io8ga creation, 675a deeds creativeness, 8gsa eternal love immortal, 7853 fading fast away, good, gg4b
1.

London this moment, g75a long disease my 1., 4100 long for another 1., go7b long 1. better than figs, 2873 long littleness of 1., ggib lose 1. shall find it, 43a lost in the living, ioo4b love an episode in man's 1., 502b love anterior to 1., 737a love 1. poor as it is, 684a love of 1. increased, 468b love only business in 1., 551 a love the history of woman's 1.,
502b
love to

no life but death, 204a no man loseth other L, 141 b no man loves 1. like old, 8ja no no no 1., s8ob no rock bottom to 1., 107 ib no wealth but 1., 6g8b nobody write 1. of man, 43^ nor love thy 1. nor hate, g48a not doing a sum, 787b not get what can from L, Siyb
not keep advantages of not long 1. by fire, 86oa not take his own 1., g$b nothing in his 1., 28 ib
1.,

giob

nothing

much
now
1.,

to
to
1.
1.,

so dear, 4652,

woman

is 1.

or death,

novel attempt 7 9 8a

lose, 854b represent 1.,

is
is is

never the same again, >jz$b not a dream, 6?gb not 1. more than meat, 41 a
only error, 4g8b opening readings secret, over life was gay, 82gb painting picture, 787b

is

is is

loved 1. no sorrow to die, g43b loveth her loveth L, 37b luxuries of I., 6$4a made end of 1. with light, ii4a making ends meet in 1., g66b

now now

I live
is

is

done, 2053

immortal

O death in 648b O for 1. of sensations,


o'

8i4b
584b

the building, 284a


1.

object of

something valuable,

man

lives

1.

of

epoch, g^7a
observation of

is real life is earnest,


is

62ob

mankind

fleet of 1. like leaves,

human

is is
is
is

short art long, 88b short live it up, iO32b

supremely easy for thorny, 5243

men. Q$b

what we make it, 7943. isn't all beer and skittles, 7183
it

takes

1.

to
L,

love

1.,

8g8a

it

would be

7j6b

journey of 1., isga joy of 1. is variety, 428a jump the 1. to come, sSaa
jury passing on
1.,

2?ob

keep pure both 1. and an, 88a keep way of the tree of 1., 6a knocks at the door, g47b lag-end of my 1., 24ob
large
last

as

1.

twice

as

natural,

746b hour of
of
1.

my

1.,

42ob

gib man's 1. cheap as beast's, 277b many-colored 1. he drew, 426b marble and mud, 6i4b married to single L, 3543 material of 1., g78b may perfect be, 3043 meant to be lived, 98 ib measured 1. with coffee spoons, looob medicine for 1. which has fled, 7oa memory without pain, 8ib messed up 1. for nothing, ioo8b mine honor is my 1., 226a miserable mortals flame with 1., 64b money as means to L, g77a money preserves 1., 37ga

occupations few I42a ocean of 1., 624a

1., 68gb tranquil 1.,

odds L, 387a
o'er
ills

o'

1.

victorious,

of of of of of of of of

humanity may
jealousy, 274b

end,

4gsb gsab

law not

man heroic poem, man solitary, jiSa

logic,

786b

mortal breath, 62 2b peoples and humanity, 7323 poor man in mean cottage,

of Riley, noob of significant soil, ioo6b of simplicity independence and

magnanimity, 682b
of soul, 4i8a

last

best,

666a

the rest of my 1., 1. for friends, lay lay hold on eternal 1., leaves of 1. Falling, 62ga
lasted

down

74b
4ga

more abundant 1., 971 a more lost than 1., i34a more sweet than painted pomp,
2470

more than he slew


1.

in his

1.,

nb

old age crown of 1., ii2a on ocean wave, 676a on this unavailing star, 8783 one damned thing after another, 938a one draught of 1., 7$ga one entrance into L, 371 one in 1. and death are we, 7&7 a one 1. for each to give, 8?7b one 1. to lose for country, 4&4b only end of 1., 822b only wish to live 1., 8ib ornament 1. in fleeting way, 4Q8b

let thy

1.

be

sincere,

37b
happiness,

most loathed worldly


1.

1.,

27 ib

liberty

pursuit

of

47ob, 97ga
light 1. pleasure pain, 7483 light love 1., 4753 light of L, 48b light of whole 1. dies, 826b like a froward child, 366b

my has gone, io8ib my is preserved, 7b my 1. like music hall, 878b my my fate, 652b my 1. my joy, igsb my lines and 1. are free, 3233 my poems naughty my 1. pure,
1.

dome of many-colored 5723 like Japanese picture, 78ga like living 1. over, 42 b like runners hand on torch of
like

i34b

glass,

my way

of

1.

is

fallen,

mystery deep as death, mystery of 1., 56sa, ioo8a near bone sweetest, 6843 needs spirit lack 1., 668a

*86a 74ob

out of out of

it

ashes 1. again, 8ioa are the issues of I.,


1.

2 3b outlive his

half a year, 26sa

1446

INDEX
Life over there behind shelf,
of L, 78ob paint minute movepainting should possess ment of L, 1483 part with 1. cheerfully, i42b people say 1. the thing, 8783 of 1., ggia perfect interpreter death, 6i7b perfected by to utmost, 6g8b 1. perfected or work, 884a 1. perfection of leader of L,
Life, shall

Life
1.,

one ictrace his

Life, to beautify

1.

give

it object,

8gob shape of 1., g78b short a fleeting


short short
1.

8s8a
vapor,

8i4b

quiet
sister

in saddle, 8603 hours few,

to neighbor's creed lent, to sovereign power, 6453 tomorrow's 1. is too late,

6o2a ij4b

6g8b

too short to bore selves,

shut

from

L, g6aa

similar to that here below, go7b


1., loigb 1. to honor, isgb the thin-spun L, 338b of road smooth 1., 438b so short craft so long, 1643 so was it when 1. began, 5iib soul the captain of L, u6a sound which tells of 1., 5343 space of 1. between, 5803 spare all I have take 1., ggSa spirit giveth 1., 533 staff of 1. bread, 3863 staff of my 1., 1953 stands brunt of 1., 84b start 1. with good books, 8503

simple

sin to prefer

slits

8o 5 b too short to waste, 6o2b too strong for you, 8g8a took a man's 1. with him, 575b totality of functions, $i7b

philosophy

you

nib

of 1., 9573 part of sense to fictions, 9573 1. poet gives of L, g4ga poetry a criticism for peace, io42b price 1. exacts from want to want,

poem

tough proposition, 941 a treads on 1., 6i7b treasured up to 1. beyond


34oa
tree of
1.

1.,

progress

in garden, sb Tree of L. middle tree, 3453 tree of 1. itself, 8gga trials of 1. nearly done, 7793
trifles

protracted

is

protracted
of

woe,

career, g34b public 1. crown situation of power, public 1. 45 2 a stood still, ggga pulse of 11. economic, pulse of modern 957 121 a 1. free from sin, in pure of human L, 86 ib

have possibility of 1., 94b story of my 1., 27sb stream of subjective L, 7933
state

make sum of 1., 6723 trod through 1. before, 5i8a truth about L, io56b twenty years in woman's 1., g4a two things aim at in L, 8783 unbought grace of 1., 454a
understand 1. at forty, 86gb understood backwards, 6763 unexamined 1. not worth living, 933-

purpose

question

whether
L,

you

have

strenuous L, 8473 struck on de3th, 6i8b struggle not warfsre, 77ob struggling for 1. in the W3ter,
subtle demonisms of 1., succession of preludes, 5663 sunset of 1. gives lore, superior powers direct 1., surging immensity of 1., sweet courtesies of 1., 4g8b

ungraspable
use

phantom

of

1.,

7873 1203 rarely find 3 hsppy L, rationalism renounces 1., g78a

enough

6g6b
5383 Saga 6323

useless

resson the 1. of the law, ig8a refreshment of inner 1., 728b on L, 7g4b religion reaction religious feeling towsrd 1., 8g8b of counrelinquish 1. for good
try,

first part of 1., 38 ib 1. is early death, 477b uttered part of man's L, 575b
1,,

vagrant gypsy

g46b

504b

rest of his dull 1., 3163 resurrection 3nd the 1., 48b resurrection unto eternsl 1., 6ib reverence for 1., 9393 revolutionized daily 1., ggsb rich for others, io4ob right to dignified 1., g64b rights to a better L, 8213 Rom3n's 1. Romsn's 3rms, 5963 roses into earthly 1., 497b rounded with 3 sleep, 2g7b routine the poetry of 1., 8183

rover's

1.,

6950:
1.

rule of

from tonight, 857b

runs on road strange, 6g4b


sated with banquet of 1., ngb satisfaction in L depends on
will,

i8gb
shall lose
it,

save

1.

433

take honor and my 1. is done, 2263 take 1. easy, 87gb take 1. strivingly, 7ggb taken us round obstacle, go8a taking 1. by throat, 9303 tale of human L, 455b tedious as twice-told t3le, 236b th3t breathes with breath, 644b that dares send challenge, 3543 that they might have L, 48b that which men call death, 86a the Lord is the strength of my 1., i8a the old Sabines knew, ii7b the way the truth 3nd the 1., 49 a theater house of 1., 9333 theater of man's 1., 2073 therefore choose 1., lob think 1. too long, 3833

vale of L, 44ob vale of rural 1., 4413 value of 1. not in length, i8gb variety's spice of L, 45&a veil those who live call L, 568b

very effective therapist, 9853 vicarious 1., 845b vicissitudes of 1., 8$4b voyage of their 1., 2563 warmed hands before fire of 1.,

was full of misfortunes, 8iab wasted hours of 1., 797b watch or vision, 7733
water of L, io$$b way that leadeth to we live and see, 74ob weary pilgrimage, 3223 weathered storms of
L,

4ib

1.,

&55b
833

web of our 1., 26gb weight and pain


welcome

of

L,

L, g68b

saw 1. steadily saw it whole, 7iob science claims whole 1., 8193
science

thin-spun

1.,

338b

well used happy death, well-written 1. rare, 5753

i74b

thirsty for L, gg4b this alone 1. joy empire, 5693


this this
1.

of

1.

like

hall,
1.,

scraping
sess of
1.
1.

on
of

surface of
belly

6753 7723

enough, 10213
1.

wh3t

tsught, ioi4a

like wine, 3783

secret
secret

3nd bone,
in
1.,

thou 3rt g3lling load, 49 3b thought the slave of 1., 24ob


threatened

io6gb
of
1.
1.

with

suffocation,

success
sin,

Sigb

10353
thrill of 1. along keel, 622b through creatures, 4063 through 1. looked on God, g4 tides and 1. of man, 8293 till storm of 1. past, 4ssb time of 1. is short, 24ob time of your 1., io66b time stuff 1. made of, 4223 time's fool, 24ob

sedent3iy
see into

8o6b

of things, 5093 seek not 1. of immortals, 7gb

we've been long together, 47oa what am I L., 947b what gives I. value, 105 6 a what is 1. a madness, 3283 what is 1. if full of care, 9053 what is 1. without love, 4g8a what is our 1., igga what is the prime of L, g4a what is your 1., s6b what 1. is there without Aphrodite, 68b what makes 1. so sweet, 7393 what signifies 1. o' man, 4gsb what you think of this 1., asgb

self-evolving circle, 6123 sense of what 1. means, 7953 set before you 1. and death, lob
set set set
set

gray
1.

1.,

6463 284b

at pin's fee, 25gb

my 1. on any chance, my 1. upon cast, 2183

tired

of

London

tired

of

L,

sex pattern of 1. process, 85 shadow of desth, 3313, 7733

4323 to be taken for L, 672b

when when when

what's a 1., 3223 wheels of weary 1., geyb I consider 1., 367^ Sgsb 1. is burdensome, 87a love and 1. fair, 8413 where is 1. lost in living, ioo4b

1447

Life
Life,

INDEX
while
1.

4oib while you do not know who enjoys not 1., 3303 who have not lived holy

ma,

there's hope,

io8b,

1.,

723

1.,

Sob

leads a good 1., 4763 should a dog have L, a8ob wine of 1. is drawn, a84a winged 1. destroy, 488b with 1. all other passions fly,

who why

without him live no 1., 347b without industry guilt, 6993 woke found 1. duty, 68oa

wonder of earth and 1., 1021 a words have longer 1. than deeds, 790 worth living, 867 a write I. with exactness, 431 a wrung 1. dry for your lips, 774a you take my 1., 2353

vague generality 1., 886b Lifetime burning in every moment, ioo6a friendship last a 1., 76aa lamps not lit in our 1., 863b last reasonable man a 1., 7653 live out 1. of God, 6g6a not 1. of one man only, ioo6a nothing completed in 1., ioa4b of happiness, 8365 once in a 1., ggoa patriotism 1. dedication, lo^Sa-b Liffeying waters of, g68b Lift and loosen old foundations,
948b her with care, 5g2b him alive over gullies,

Lifesaver,

Light, commands all ence, 3133

1.

all

influ-

56ga consider how I. is spent, 341 a convenient 1. switch, 10493

common
danced

3s

1.

is

love,

by

1.

darkness and

1.

of moon, 6733 alike to thee,

233 dawn's early L, 54ob dear as 1. and life, 4953 dies before thy word, 4143 dim religious 1., 3363 doth seize my brain, 486b doth trample on my days, 36ab echo and 1. unto eternity, 5713 endeavor 1. our country, 10733

enough
1081 a

for

wot

I've to do, 66gb

everlasting

1.,

young 1. is before us, young prodigal of L, 5403


your death bought,
Lifeblood, book
it,
1.

151 a

to 1. them high, 723b lamp beside golden door, 8i7a me as wave leaf cloud, 56gb my soul to heaven, ag8a

king

95b

of master spir-

3403
1.

curiosity

of civilization, 941 b

heresy of our

1.

of religions, 8963

veil, 5686 one totters, 74oa people from dust, 6o3b people who 1., 825b thou up the light of thy coun-

not painted

every hour 70 ab exact day labor 1. denied, 3413 excelleth darkness, 27b excess of 1., 44ib fade from eyes, 9093 fade into 1. of common day,
5 l 3b
fails

7553 of 1. dark,

one

if

on

winter's
L,

afternoon,

10073
faintly
falls

muddy
fills,

gg2b

seemed

enterprise, 24oa to sip, 525a

tenance, i7a

and

10653

unto thee

1.

hands, 5573
gates, i8a

Life-form,

each

carries

own

1.,

up mine eyes, 22a up your heads O ye


waters
Lifted,
1.

fsntsstic round, 336b fantastic toe, 334!)


fierce
filled

indeterminable, 935b Life-in-Death, nightmare L. was she, 5253 Lifelike portrait drew, 43oa Lifeline, throw out the 1., 8a6a Life-melody, missing part of L,

their

bosoms,

a68a

1. bests on throne, 6533 by prevailing 1,, 191 a

your pack, 853b hath not 1. his soul unto


vanity, i8a

flash of

1. cut scross sky, io6gb focused by mirrors, 7970

nevermore, 6433
sliding from
Lifting,
1.

6gga
Lifepreservers

help

oar, 1065 a by 1. his heart,

there

are

none,

io$ia
Life's a pleasant institution, 7693

a pudding full of plums, 7693 a tough proposition, 941 a brief span forbids us, iaob business terrible choice, 667b but a walking shadow, 286b

by 1. others, 7493 Light a glory a fair cloud, 527* a little warmth a little a little while is L, 4Qa
afraid

rises

1.,

75 ib

common

of us, 72gb against after -sunset 1., 878b

of

1.

all

way, siab
of soul, 491 a

dim windows

dull round, 4323 enchanted cup, sssb evening, 8oga fighting line, 9203

all was 1., 4iab and life pleasure pain, and will aspire, 22oa

7483

a84b gymnasium, 7033 train, 7i4a headlong here at 1. end, 884b


I

fitful fever,

know my
1

I.

pain,

3013

in the loom,

78gb

love o 1. young day, 5893 not a paragraph, 1031 a nourisher in 1. feast, a8sb old death new, 668b

angel of L, 684* angels progeny of 1., 346b appareled in celestial L, 5133 armor of 1., 5ib a-roving by 1. of moon, 55gb at night faith in 1., 8g6a be not darkened, a8b be the earth, $8b because it lendeth 1., aoia better to 1. one candle, 98 ib black as if bereaved of 1., 486b breaks wher* no sun shines,

former 1. restore, 2763 forward the L. Brig3de, 6523 freedom's holy 1., 627b from grave to 1., 3773 gains make heavy purses, 2053 garmented in 1., 5703 gates of 1., 346b g3ve him 1. in his ways, 7733 gives 3 lovely 1., 10233 gives 1. in darkness, 2i4b gladsome 1. of jurisprudence 1983 gleams an instant, 3ogb God is L, 573 God's eldest daughter, 33jb God's first cresture L, 344b gold 3nd silver 1., 88ob
golden Ismps in green 1., 3603 into world of 1., 36ab gospel 1. first dawned, 43gb great men 1. up time, 674b green 1., ioi7b guide by 1. of reason, 8333 hail holy L, 344b half 1. half shade, 6463 half -believers, 7123 h3ve 1. of life, 48b he is angel of 1., 6843

gone

our

1.

star,

5i3b
1.

outcast from P a Se 555 b


>

feast,

g68a

pay glad 1. arrears, 666b perhaps the only riddle, 7693 poor play is o'er, 4ogb prose, 7423 spirit that on 1. rough sea, 2o5b supreme temptation late, g47b surges rudest roll, 4g7b travel on 1. common way, 5i2b troubled bubble, gi^b
uncertain voyage, "agob under thy own 1. key, unresting sea, 6343

10703 bringeth to 1. the shadow death, 153 broke upon brain, 5593

of

heaven to dsy denies,

26gb

washed

in

1.

river,

4873

burning and shining 1., 48b by her own radiant 1., 3373 candle and put it under bushel, 4oa of understanding, 36b candle to the sun, 3623 carrying you into fields of 1., 8sb certain slant of 1., 7353 children of I., 473, 7isb children of 1. and day, 553 cold 1. and hot shade, 4gob comes from thine eyes, io86b

hesven's 1. forever shines, 5723 here kindled, 310,3 Hesperus entreats thy 1., 3023 hide your golden L, 62 ib

hop
I
if

1.

ladies,

8i4a

am

1.

1. of the world, 48b in thee be darkness, 4ob.

lose this L, 302b inhere, 7373 in despite of 1. keep us togethif if vit3l 1.

413 once

we

er,

in the dust lies dead, in present 1. flames, 9233


in ragged luck,

8i5b

1448

INDEX
in this waning 1., io6sb Light, in which freedom lives, io48b infant crying for 1., 65ob
is

Lightning
Light unto
8480,

of

Light, purple

1.

of love, 44ib
1.,

my

path, 223
1., 1.

put out 9283

the

2763,

unveiled

her peerless
the

345 b

all,

10653

is
is

lion comes to drink, 9563 shadow of God, 3313

it

giveth

1.

unto
1.

all,

403

itself

not so
in

fleet, 771!)

judged

of final issue, gga

radiant I. rests on men, 7gb rage against dying of 1., io7ob raised jug up to 1., gooa rather 1. candles than curse darkness, 98 ib relume, 27 6a

upon them hath


313
us

shined,

down
6 3 8b

in honor or dishonor,

lady of 1., 77 2b lead kindly L., 5g7b lead me from darkness to

remember while
1.,

1.

lives,

7753

river of crystal roving by 1. of

1.,

82ob

623
leading from 1. to 1., 6243 let there be 1., 53 let your 1. shine, 403
liberty learning,
lie 1. lie

6133

life
lift

3nd

L, 8223 1. be thine, 6613


1.

up the n3nce, 173

of

thy counte-

like

listened,
little

taper's 1., 4473 io65b of 1., 332b drops little trim little, 768b live 3nd love in God's 1., 1783 live out thy life 3s 1., 775b

gle3ming

moon, 55gb 1., 3373 than moon, 6a6b seeking light, 2213 servants of 1., 742b sh3ft of 1. in darkness, io74b she loves, 65 2b she treads on it so 1., 2203 shines over land and sea, 92 3b shineth in darkness, 47b shower of 1. poesy, 5803 shuddering in gloaming 1.,
rule of streaming

sadder

1.

Vesper now raising his 1., 1153 void of 1., 3423 waited for the 1., gooa walk while ye have 1., 4ga was 1. from he3ven, 4g3a water 1. air, 748b way which opens into 1., 6243 we fear in the 1., iisb we sought shimmering, 7i4b what 1. through yonder window, 223b when daylight comes comes 1., 688b when else wert blind, 4g7b when my 1. low, 6503 when our brief 1. has set, n4b

when

the

1.

falls,

ios6b

shut
so
1.

sister

from 1., g62a a foot, 224b


1.,

lived 1. in spring, Lolit3 1. of life, 10463 long 1. shakes, 648b

7ub

speed far faster than spring of L, s86b stand in your own


strikes

gi7b
1853
1.,

1.,

sultan's

turret with

which lighteth every man, 483 why rise because 'tis 1., 305b wife make heavy husband, 235b winning make prize 1., 2g6b withdrawn which once he wore, 625b world rolls into L, 6253
Lighted fools way to dusty death, 286b Lighten our darkness, 6ob Lightened, thundered and 1., gob weight of world 1., 50,93 Lightens, ce3se to be ere it L, 2243 Lighter than cork danced on waves, Sagb town is 1. than vanity, $G$b Lightest, movements of 1. atom, 479 a sovereign is the L, loob word hsrrow soul, s^gb Lightfoot, m3ny a 1. lad, 85 sb a Lighthesrted, afoot and L, 701 Lighthouse, below the 1. top, 524b took sitivation at L, 66ga Lighting 3 little hour or two, 62gb Lightly draws its breath, 5o8b earth rest 1. on /you, i5ib entered into unadvisedly or L, 6ia hid deepest understood, io78b lie 1. gentle earth, 3i6b rest, 83b slender .nose tip-tilted, 6533 some hsve it 1., gg6b soul of my youth t3ken flight,
985
think not 1. of evil, 8oa tread 1. she is near, 8s8b we esteem too 1., 466b Lightning, bottled 1., 66gb countenance like 1., 45 a does the work, 7643

love life,

4753
of life with
1.,

6293
1143

m3de end made 1. of

strong sh3dow where

much

L,

man

it, 43b for man, io4ob make 1. work, 1853 hands many
1.

m3ss times speed of 1. squ3red, 95<> a men of inward 1., 3533 mocks at it and sets it L, 2263
.

more by number than your


30ob

L,

4773 suffusion from that 1., 5273 sun gives 1. soon as he rises, 4233 sunny 1. sullen gloom. 5933 suns to 1. me rise, 4o8a sweetness and 1., 388!), 7163 tesch 1. to counterfeit a gloom,
335 that cometh

423 neither heat nor 1., 3153 neither joy nor love nor
L,

more 1., 4793 my burden is

from her wisdom,

L,

37 a that led astray 4933 th3t lies in woman's eyes, 542b that loses night th3t wins, 7733

night shadow of 1., 7733 no darkness into 1. without emotion, g36b no 1. but darkness visible, 34 ib noose of L, 6293 not to wise the 1., 827b of bright world dies, 8263 of fuller day, 691 a
of of of of of of of
of

th3t never W3S, 5i4b that shineth more and

more,

230
the Lord is my L, i8a the true 1., 483 thickens 3nd crow makes wing,
things holy profane grave
L, 3183

and
1.,

Light, 6oa light beguile, 221 a setting suns, sogb step and heart, 9143 the body, 4ob the world, 4oa

those thst rebel against the

through the word named day,


1523 thy 1. is come, 33b thy 1. relume, 2763
1.,

150 threshold of waking

1.,

io8ib

things, 5og3 whole life dies, 826b on dark theme trace verses of
little
1.
1.,

time's glory bring truth

to

1.,

1133 once set is our one small candle

22ob
3003 a thousand,
to guide, 5i4b to lighten Gentiles, 463 to them in darkness, 463

out of hell leads to L, 343b path of America, goob peace like shaft of 1., 6643 people have seen a great L, 313 perturbation of 1., 10573 place void of all 1., isgb
pleasing

too

much

1.

often blinds, 4623


1.,

tracings of eternal travel 1., 106 ib


trifles
1.

4973

as air,

274b

done like 1., 3023 earthquakes with 76oa fsteful 1., 6gob

thunder

1.,

dreams

slumbers

L,

tripped 1. fantastic, 86ab truth not sought for comes to L, io2b truth will come to 1., 1693

poets 1. lamps, 7373 prime work of God, 344b progeny of L, 346b pure and endless 1., $6sb

two ways of spreading 1., 8&5b unbarred the gates of L, 346b unconscious not only dark but

flsshed the living 1., 404b he thence h3d riven, 56-33 in collied night, 228b in thunder 1. or in rsin, 28ob m3kes -3wful L, 6i8b mirth like flssh of L, 5940 outstare the 1., 2883
pilot,

76ob

1449

Lightning
Lightning reached fiery rod, 7goa Satan as 1. fall, 46b scratch head with 1., 7603 strikes mountaintop, i2ib Superman the 1., 8053 too like the 1., 2243
vain to look for defense against 1., 1273 Lightning's hour, io55a Lightnings, veiling 1. of song 57 2 * Light-o'-love lady known as Lou, 933* Lights around the shore, 73 ib burn low in barbershop, i025b candle to sun, 3123 electric 1. not science, 8i5a Father of 1., 563 fled garlands dead, 54sb godfathers of heaven's 1., 221 a guttering low, 85 gb keeper of warm L, 8sa mansion where we can turn off
1-.

INDEX
Likeness,

grow into 1. of bad men, g6a in 1. not lion, ggob let us make man after our
of
filly foal,

Limbs, lopped 1., io64b melter of 1., 675


of
1.,

53

a dismembered recreant 1., 2363


1.

poet,

1203

2293

very 1. of roasted crab, 293 Likenesses, representation should


give 1., i48a Likes, doesn't know

what he

1.,

10333

nobody

1.

man who
1.,

flaming hair, 488b 1. her provinces, goGb decent 1. composed, 4063 in 1. young judgment old, 2333 Lime of love, 3igb sat beneath a 1. tree, 5053
these

ruddy
thy

brings bad

news, 8aa Likewise, go and do Liking, all love all

Limestone

46b
all

1.

delight,

32ob grounds

other
1.

than

L,

6903

happy
I

1.

what they do, 4s8b


old,

bower my prison, 5235 quarried near spot * 88 5 a Limit, fixes solemn 1. of Heaven 8 4b horizon 1. of sight, 7853 no 1. to what novelist attempt V '
tree

'

have a

saves me trouble of 1., 533b Lilac and brown hair, loogb

74ob

bush tall-growing, 93 ib heart-leaves of 1., 93ib in me, 93 ib


lost
I.,

993*
1.

10043

the earth, 6gb northern L, seen sights, 9333 of the world, 4s6b ridicule one of principal 1.,

moon

up

Lilacs

time, 961 b last in dooryard bloomed,

4833
see how it is without 1., 9933 that do mislead the morn, 27 ib

Lilies

truth may bear turn up L, 864b


1.

all

1.,

4163

your burning, 473 Light-winged dryad, 582 a Like a small gray coffeepot, ggoa a winter my absence, 2gga ape how 1. to us, io7a but oh how different, 5 15 a find 1. again, 5193 God pairs 1. with 1., 66b how do you 1. your blueeyed boy, logob I don't 1. you Sabidius, i35a I know what I L, giob look upon his L again, 2583 me from heels to head, 82sb

7023 out of dead land, 10022. and languors of virtue, 773b Beauty lives though 1. die, 9803 beauty of the 1., 6gob breaking golden L, 6iga crowned with 1., 10243 feed among the 1., 2b handfuls of 1. to scatter, iiga of the field, 413 peacocks and L, 6g8b roses and white 1. grow, 3003 silent war of 1., 2203
that fester, 2933 three 1. in her hand, 7313 twisted braids of 1., 337b

of becoming mirth, 22 ib 1. of world, 652b to realization of tomorrow, 9743 use me to the L, 847b what 1. to grief for one so dear, 1213 Limitation, civil 1. daunts utterance, 7313 of armaments, g6gb Limitations, in 1. the master, 4793 quiet
Limitless fire

no man climb beyond 1., 77gb and brimstone, 75gb


sa6b 2133

fury, 10163 swelling and 1. billows, Limits, hell hath no L,

no
of

1.

but

own own appointed


1.

sky, ig4a field 1. of world, 56sb


1.

keep,

7263

cannot hold love, 223b Limns on water writes in dust, 2ioa Limousine, one perfect 1., 10293
stony

Limp and damp


1373

as tendrils, 10653 into scalding grave, goga live with lame man learn to L,
1.

wheat
I've
Lily,

set

about with L, 2gb


1.,
1.

Lilting house, io7ob

heard them

Limped, hare
446b
grows, 5493

trembling, 58 ib

how

sweet the

more ye see better 1. it, 891 a never met man I didn't 1., 9543
232b nothing anyone obliged to 1., 799* of each thing, 221 a one that stands on promontory, 2i6a
people like priest, 353 poor cat i' the adage, not
fair terms,

maid of
on
1.

Astolat, 6533

Limping with duty, loia Limpopo, greasy L. River, 8763 Limps after in base imitation,
226b
Lincoln, beloved of

of the valleys, 293


o'erlace sea, paint the L. 2365

Abraham

L.,

8g8b
in

poppy or a
scarlet
1.

L, 7673

flamed, 86oa

thick with 1. and rose, trembles to a 1., 7823

something homely, land of L. and Pinkham, io3ob


7533

L.

62 ib
to,

man

to

become

attached

28ab

same things is friendship, nsb those who admire us, 3563 to an hermit poor, ig8b
to see it lap miles,

upon

earth there

is

7363 not his

I.,

i6b very I. a whale, 26gb very very 1. me, 82 3b

bloom, 64sb whispers, 652b Lily-livered boy, 2863 Lima, curious traveler from L., 442* Limb, feels life in every 1., so8b length of shambling 1., 68ob mingle with dissolved limb, 899*
1.

wster

703*
of our literature, 77 aa shoveled into tombs, g48b Lincoln's, murdered L. bier, 68ob name close to Washington's,

733*
Lindens, under the 1., 588b Line, cadence of a rugged 1., 36gb cancel half a L, 6306 creep in one dull 1., 4033 custom in 3ll 1. of order, 267b draw 1. where God has not,

want it most 1. it least, 4i5b what he loves never 1. too much, $o2b
will to like, 1832 Liked book the better, 4sob it not and died, 3013 several women, 2973

neither heat affection of Satan, 76ob

L,

2713

sound wind and 1., ig6b stretches out conquering

1.,

99b
tail's

I.,

10323
1.

way
Likely

it

walks, 86ob
impossibility

preferable,

man
we

99*
in preference to rich, 783
1.,

not bloody
are all

B^b

from 1., 6563 Limbecks foul as hell, 2943 Limber, disciplined and 1., 10563 wing aslant and 1., gsgb Limbo large and broad, 344b Limbs, fair 1. of the tree, gentle 1. undress, 5243
tear

body

789 eats dirt in the 1., io25b embroil about fancied 1., j77b far-flung battle L, 8753 fsthom 1. could never touch,
2 3 8b
it out on this 1., 7173 horizontal 1. straight, 5753 in the very first 1., 451 in which force impressed, 37gb

fight

is

to go astray, 823 Likeness, gods in 1. of men, 503


1.

gone

out

through
1.,

all

the

his
I

1.

cold in death,
1.

ngb

the

and wheel, 7073

earth, i7b life's fighting

g2oa

1450

INDEX
Line, lives along the
1.,

Lips
near mill,
Lions, plucks dead
1.

1033

Links,

golf

1.

lie

so

by beard,

Marlowe's mighty 1., 303 b most insincere 1. written, loooa not a day without a 1., ioaa

94ob
Linnet, flutter like the L, io8sb never tear I. from leaf, 882b Linnet's, evening full of 1. wings, 8 79 b
Linnets, pipe but as 1., 6503 Linsey-woolsey brother, 3525 Linsey-woolsey brothers, 4135 Unt, invisible strand of 1., 8643 Lintel low to keep out pride,
of the year, io57b

2363

young
Lip,
coral

of horizon's growing thin, io66a second 1. sublime third bombast, i44a blotted Shakespeare never 3043 across 1., 5 8 7* stepped thin red 1. of 'eroes, 7053
1.,

2ib between cup and l. 31 ib contempt and anger of 1., 25$b


f

stronger than L, i2b 1. roar after prey,

1.

hair

on upper

admires, 3273 L, loiib

language in her 1., 26ga not 1. or eye beauty call, 4o$a


of

thin red-1. streak, 704b uniform motion in right

hand of foot of reproof on her 1., 5893


stiff

1.,

agsb

1.,

upper
apply

1.,

72ab
1.,

379b

Lion among
323
stretch out, zStf)
1.,

ladies,

2303

vermeil -tinctured
Lips,

337b
1.

upon
will
1.

line,

write a living 1., gosb Linea, nulla dies sine

ioaa
1.,

old L, g8oa Lineage, proud Lineaments, molded changing 7813 of Gospel books, 3i4b

and cock, g4sa and falling together, 313 3nd Iiz3rd keep, 62gb and unicorn, iog2b as 1. woos his brides, 4453
at the door, iog2a

polished

to

ear,

53 6a
are dumb, 645b betwixt her 1, and mine, 88gb causing L of those asleep to

be 1. to frighten wolves, i77b beard 1. in his den, 5igb


devil as roaring L, 573 every 1. cometh forth, $b first be3St like a L, 57b first 1. thought last a bore, 53ob from his toenail a 1., i5ob he has heart of a 1., i4gb

of gratified desire, 488b Lined himself with hope, 24ib Linen, not 1. wearing out, 5Q2b old 1. wash whitest, $i4b wash dirty 1- at home, 5o4a Liner she's a lady, 874b Lines are fallen unto me, i?a as 1. so loves oblique, 3603 deathless 1. ahem, g6gb desert of a thousand L, 412* drawing no unnecessary 1., goob let lord once own happy 1.,

speak, 2gb closed 1. hurt no one, 1373 coral more red than 1., sg4b crimson in 1. and cheeks, 225b eternity was in our 1., 2873 fitted in thy 1., *5b flattereth with his 1., zfi

forbid to speak,

$S>]\>

honey in the
lib
1.

carcass of the
roar,

1.,

4o$b

many

1.

in

dial's

center,

my

and life are free, 1. in imaginary paint shadows


2iob
rain in slanting 1., 74oa silken 1. silver hooks, so6a

243 a 3233
1.,

grievous hungry in the way, 26a in thy house, 37b Indian of 1. bearing, 566b is in the streets, 26a lamb at home 1. in chase, 5083 comes to light is the 1. that
living

53ob

I a hundred 1., uga her 1. suck forth my soul, 2isb here hung those 1., 26sb his swords are, 2053 keep from slips, 8i2b

had

keep thy
i8b
kiss

1.

from speaking
through

guile,
I.,

my

soul

my

2isb
lay upon thy L, 288b love at the 1., ga7b man of unclean 1., 3ob

drink, 9563 dog better thsn dead

1.,

28b
navy,

names of God upon L, 4363


of

supply ioa6a
these

1.

guarded

by

mated by the L, 26gb more horrible than

strange

woman drop

as

1.,

10673

honeycomb, 2$b
of bereaved lover, 643b of dying men, 7i2b of inebriated virtue, 7763 oh that 1. had language, 459

hedgerows little 1., soga town crier spoke my 1., 262b silver 1. on the night, 336b
wholly consisted of
1.

not 1. but pard, ggob not more fearful wildfowl than


1., 2303 not TO fierce as they paint him,

like these,

once sanctified by hers,

6313

74ob
zones and meridian 1., Linge, laver son 1. sale, Linger, do not live but 1.,

now
746b 5o4a

3iob

many

fall 1.

near, 5oob

on flathouse

roof, io6ga

out a purposed overthrow, 2gsa unhappy 1. a space, gg4b Lingered under benign sky, 685b Lingering bays, 4s6b

the old I. is dead, 47 6b on old stone gates, 6453 only 1. and cock, g45& and 1., i77b prince imit3te fox prince must be 1., i36b as a 1., a6b righteous are bold rouse 1. from his lair, 52 ib start hare, 238b rouse 1. than shall eat straw, 313 thou shalt tread upon the 1.,

open thou

my

1.,

iga

sob
or vapor like bear well roared L., 23ob
1.,

dewdrop, 5i7b hoping 1. flying, 4O4a I alone sit 1. here, s6sb longing 1. look behind,
winter
Lingers,
1.

288b

people of unclean 1., sob b persuasion hung upon 1., 437 poverty to the very 1., 275b profound and fragile L, 10313 put 1. to it when dispoged, 67ob red 1. not so red, io28b rosy 1. and cheeks, 2g4a say God be pitiful, 6i7b slughorn to my 1. I set, 278b smile on 1. tear in eye, 5igb sweet voice sweet 1., 581 a
take

when
441 a
out,

May, 447 b borrowing only 1. it


chills

fawns upon lamb, 2i6b wine, 5gga wrath of 1. wisdom of God,


1.

talk of the

take those 1. away, 27 ib 1. tendeth to penury,

24b
that are for others, 648b that touch, loiob that touch liquor, 886a thick eyes trianguUr, g78b touch 1. part with tesrs, 774b touch sacred fire, go6b truth from his L, 449b of 1., 10863 two
pairs

24ib
find where last rose L, 12 ib no falsehood 1. to old age, 833

young
Lion's,

1.

and the dragon, 2ob


as

hardy
1.

Nemean

1.

nerve,

one

who

1.
1.

soul that

behind, 6$b sighing, 85 %b

patch

skin with fox's,

is6b

wisdom

1.,

647b

Lingo, unless you know L, 5g2a Lining, silver 1., gi7a silver 1. on the night, 3 Link, I feel the 1. of nature, 3483
silver 1. silken tie, 5i8b Linked analogies, 6g7a sweetness long drawn out, to radiant angel 1., 25gb with one virtue, 5586

shadow ere himself, 2353 1. ruddy eyes, 4873 thou wesr 1. hide, 2363 Lions, besrs and 1. growl, 3g6a
saw
1.

there

the

until

cast Daniel into the den of

1.

cocks
if
1.

3 35 a

my

no compacts men, 64b

and 1. jocund be, 3o6b had hands, 7ob i8b darling from the L, between 1. and

moss reached 1., 7363 weary 1. I close, 44** were red looks free, 5253 when I ope my 1., 23 ib where my Julia's 1. smile, 3203 whispering with white 1., 5563 with 1. he travaileth, 773a wrung life dry for your L,

1451

Lips
Lips,

INDEX
you
shall
live

on our

1.,

much 1., 10523 Liquefaction of her clothes, 321 a Liquefies drop by drop, io57a Liquid, bedewed with 1. odors, 120b
Lipstick, too

Listening, nightly to 1. earth, 3933 planets in stations 1., 347a to himself appears, 4o4a Listens, he 1. well who takes
notes, i6ob larkspur L, 652b like three years'

Literature written in American

way, 8g8a
Literatures,
effort

of

1.

critical

child,

j24b
it 1.,

dew
fire,

of youth, 258b 501 a

Listeth,

wind bloweth where


sensitive

48a
Lit

history, 846a inventing 1. wine, 853 lapse of murmuring streams, 347* notes close eye of day, ssgb sittings fall, looaa Liquidation of British Empire,

upon gentle
8823

mind,

7133 knowledge of different 1., 8a8a Lithe, I asked a 1. lady, 4883 Litigious terms fat contentions, 3403 Litter, cities hideous by L, 10633
Litterature,
la
1.,

beaux sentiments de
I

8g7b
1.

Literalists

Litany, Lovers' L., 87 ib. of the imagination,

Little,

can

read,

gg6a
Literary,

among our

1.

scenes,

9243 Liquor, bumper of good I., 481 a claret the 1. for boys, 4333 corn 1. stop victim's watch,

9813 attempt unfortunate, 434b craftsmanship, gg7a

German
76ib
ideals

fellow travelers, g57b into dives

sentence,

94ob drank 1. straight, io6oa good L, 4sob is quicker, losib lips that touch 1., 886a livelier 1. than Muse, never brewed, 74b talks mighty loud, 8i4a Liquor's out why clink cannikin 662b Liquors, hot and rebellious 1., 247b Lisp and wear strange suits, 25oa of leaves, 772b Lisped, I 1. in numbers, 4iob

animate improved for


3ioa indignation at
intellectuals at

my
1.
1.

breast, 7g7b conversation,

wrongs, 5280

men

one pole, io58b a priesthood, 575b


1.

a 1. more than kin, 2573 advantages every day, 4 ah 1. they think, 54ib all minds are 1., 78ob better is 1. with the fear of the Lord, S4b better than one of wicked, 2383 black sheep, 87 3b body with mighty heart, 243b Bo-peep, logsb boy blue, logsb Boy Blue kissed them, Saob boys made of, iog6b
breezes shiver, 645b

2873

nature and civilization 797 b parole of 1. men, 433b

field,

brother of rich, Sssb but 1. at a time, 3903 candle throws beams, sssb care we, 66ob
cares that fretted, noia cargo boats, 874b child shall lead them, 313

somewhat he
to

1.,

i66a

me

low delicious word, 70 ib

Lisping of

Lissom
List,

human soul, 5ggb clerical printless toe, 99 gb I've got a little L, 768a
1. is
1.

then the
thinning

'Listed, legion

done, 7$6a of single men, lO^Gb never was '!., 8743

performance, 7O3b weather 1. speciality, 76 ib Literature a phase of life, gg6a all else is 1., 8o8a belong to sacred 1., io35a best half trade half art, 8sgb Bible 1. not dogma, 867b books not American 1., 6563 classicist in 1., ioo8a clear and cold, 9873 Clemens was Lincoln of 1., 7723 complete statement 1., g75a
create new 1., loiga current 1. of day, 756b defect of modern 1., 7i2b
effort to indemnify, 6073 enfant terrible of L, 756b for 1. call back world of shad-

creature formed of joy, 4gob creatures everywhere, g74b dear 1. Buttercup, 765^ deeds of kindness, yigb

do great right 1. wrong, 234b dogs and all, 2793 drops of water, 7igb earn a 1. spend a 1. less, 8253 every 1. makes a mickle, 1963 fall by 1. and L, 383
fire
fly,

Listen all day to such stuff, 74gb

now, 57ob awhile ye nations, 57gb I L, 58sb darkling didn't 1. to him, 974b do not 1. simply wait, g8ob for dear honor's sake, g37b fur'z you look or L, 6933 go and L as thou goest, 161 a gods to him particularly L, 62b good music people don't 1., 84oa heath slowly awake and L, 7833 my children, 623b not 1. to reason, 6s6b remain sitting and 1., g8ob there's a hell of good universe,
to it

save, 337b as I listening

and

quickly trodden out, 2i6a

am

4893

ows, 9933
gives

no
1.
1.

man

foxes that spoil the vines, 2gb friend of 311 the world, 875b gain 1. p3tch of ground, 2&4b girl don't cry, 8193

sinecure,

good

must do good,

g88b 8553

great allegorical, 9183 impurities of L, g753 in 1. read oldest, 601 b investment of genius, 77ob is something dead, 9860 keep up with current 1., 886a

language charged with ing, 9893 life before 1., 7553 little or great 1., 8i6b

mean-

modern American
and do not hear, 74a
book, io44b
to it growling, io67b to little bird's voice, 91 a to the mockingbird, 7a8a

1.

from one

made of, iog6b book, i65b, gSab goodness in 1. finger, 3gob graves of 1. magazines, 9813 great empire and 1. minds, 453b great love goes here with 1. gift, 1043 great ones .eat up 1. ones, 2gob group of willful men, 8423 happy if say how much, 2463 have and seek no more, igaa having been a 1. chastised, 360 heads so 1. no room for wit,
girls

go

1.

where thou art sitting, wind is rising, ggoa

337!)

wish him to 1., 7gib Listened and looked sideways up, 5 25a
light 1., io65b soul 1. intensely,

5i6b
gets
1.,

Listener,

good

1.

to

know

something, g4ia speak to unwilling

i45b

Listening, and to my 1. ear, 5i6b disease of not 1., 24ib mood seemed to stand, 5203

8s8b Utopia, gs8b never pursue 1. as trade, 5a8b news that stays news, g8gb noble sentiments in bad 1., 8g7b not abstract science, 866b out of life, 7723 patronize polite L, 4623 reduced to essence, gogb remarks are not L, 933b sanity in ancient 1., 7i2b substitute for religion, ioo7b to produce a little L, 7983 true-blue professor of L, g86b with 1. as with law, 64ib without charm no 1., 8793

my my

mistress,

333b here a here a

1. 1.

and there a L, 323

hoard

how how how

child I stand, 3213 lambs, 223 hearts great, 6533 horse think it queer, g27b
hills like
1.

1. 1.

gained, 65ob one knows oneself, ioi6a

1.

room we

take in death,

how
I

327b
1.

we

think of other, ?64b

hunted hares, 9063 I ask my wants are few, 6343

know owe

to ignorance, 9853

if thou have but a I., s6b Indian Sioux or Crow, 82 3b infinite riches in 1. room, 2i2b

1452

INDEX
Little is never lacking,

Live
Live, date
possess,
1.,

H4a
thee,

jack Homer, 10933 Johnny Green, 10943

Little to earn, 6gob to have 1. is to


to Ie3ve
is

1.

in infamy,

9730
die,
1.,

743

dead
deeds

1.

the

living

3703

to die 3

Lamb who made

4860

lame balloonman, 10303 learning dangerous thing, 4oab life rounded with a sleep, 2g?b like 1. mice stole in and out,
list,

Tom Tucker, 10943 Tommy Tittlemouse,


too
1. too late, ioi8a touch of Harry, 244b

8353

by which we

205b

deliberately, 6833 desire to 1. ag3in, 8p6a desire to 1. beyond income, 7563

35ob 7683
grave, 22?b

town of Bethlehem, 7553 toy dog covered with dust, 8aob


understand
857

do not I. but linger, giob dying we 1., 668a


easy 1. quiet die, 5213 eat to 1. not 1. to eat, 3613, 42 ib evil manners 1. in brass, 2993 exalt will to 1., 9393
flesh

how

1.

we

need,

little

long yet get 1., i8gb me 1. love me long, 3203, 10845 is free, s^b lovely 1. flower
live

wanton boys that swim on bladders, 2g8b we see in nature, 5i5b whatever great seemed 1., sggb whatever 1. seemed great, 5953-b

love

must

L, 668a

for

lovely moony night, 4goa man had a little gun, iog7b man like 1. kingdom, 2543 man of 1. learning grows old, Sob man wants but 1., 3993, 4483 man what now, 10260 Miss Muffet, iog6b monstrous 1. voice, 2293 more than kin, 2573 more than 1. is too much, 2403 much drinking 1. thinking, 3894 Namby Pamby's 1. rhymes, 4oob nameless acts, 5093 Nature's 1. kings, 3013 neat 1. sweet 1. craft, 768b

when

1.

fesrs

grow

great, 2633

more than one century, 1143 for others not myself, 837b
for
for

while is the light, 493 who are a 1. wise, 3053 with a 1. pin, 227b work a L play, 75 ib

what

1.

but make sport,


to
1.,

533

which we bear

4ogb

world made cunningly, 3o7b world of childhood, 9363 wretched creature, 42ob

needed to make happy life, i42b nothing 1. to him that feels it, 4303 nourishment I get, ggob nut tree, logsb O thou of 1. faith, 42b ye of 1. faith, 4ib oh the 1. more, 66sb old lady from Dubuque, io24b
old New York, 8643 once set is our 1. light, 3003 one 1. room sn everywhere,

by L, i36b life, 99 ib 5773 Littlenesses, disdaining 1., gsb peering 1., 6533 Littlepsge, Captain L. overset mind, 8i6b Little's, Mrs. L. second son, io46b Liturgies, commercial 1., 8993 Live a bsrren sister all your life
yield
1.

when

taken
1.
1,

Littleness,

long

of

Gilpin long 1. he, 457b glad 1. and gladly die, 823b gray d3wn, io8ib hair shining and free, ggsb hope without object not L, sa7b how to 1. well on nothing, 66oa

proof of

own

how we

1.

far

from how we

ought, 1773 hesrt by which we 1., 5*4* I csnnot 1. with you, 736b

human

still

L,

548b

to die and you to 1., gsa would not 1. alway, 153


I

228b
a
little

if 1 1.

too wise never

1.

long

if

1 will fight, ioi6a should 1. to be,

6s4b

2i7b
after so

many

alive
all

together, age youth 10843 while thy book 1., sosb all days of your life, 3gob

deaths not 1.

1.,

323b

start to try, io5gb if man die shall he 1. again, 153


if 1.
ill

one 1. hundred years idle, 8oa report while you 1., 26ib in any case wilt 1. again, 8o6a in fact or in thought, io8oa
if

34b
one 1. word, 2263 one shall become a thousand, 33b one-horse town, 7593 philosophy inclineth to atheism, 2o8b pig went to market, iog$b plans have no magic, 8iob
Polly Flinders, logsb pot and soon hot, 2193
practice
1.

that 1. must die, 2573 all you can, 7993 alone in bee-loud glade, 87gb

in fragments no longer, 95 ib in furnished souls, lojob hearts we leave behind, in

and die all I have to do, 41 ia and die in Aristotle's works,


2133

and and and and and 3nd and


as
as as

die in Dixie, 678b die wi' Charlie, 507b

in him we L, 503 in house by side of road, 846a in mankind more than name,

952b
in in in in in in

proceed to gre3ter,

1383
profits that idle king, 6463

put even

1.

on

1.,

670

as
as

help live logic, io77b learn, 3883 let live, 4983 lie reclined, 645b love in God's light, 1783 if eternal, 933 if God beheld you, 1303 men not ostriches, 9743 we can, 1023

our

old chaos of sun, 955a life n3ture 1., 5273

peace adieu, 4133


restricted circle, 7g2b smsll circle 3s we will, 478a this faith I will 1. and die,

1713
in world as spectator, 3943 in world good or bad, 681 a

shall I grace my cause, 272b shrunk to this 1. measure, 2553

you will wish when dying, 43&b

innocently God here, 4253 it all again, 8843


it all once more, 8830 l3ugh nor be dismayed, 8ggb leave ssck 1. cleanly, 24ia let me 1. my own, 4113 let me 1. unseen unknown, 4023 let us 1. and love, ii4b, 3003 life he has imagined, 6&3b childish task, 10183 life not

snug
so
1.

1.

island, 5i7b
to do, &$6b,

at

home
level

at ease, 328b

done so much
sit

at

of
to
1.

8a8b
sorrows
sting,

begins

great men, that day,

8293 7383

and weep, 4883


great
1.

ggob
fell

strokes

oaks,

4223

better L rich, 432b better to 1. alone, Sob better to 1. one day of energy

sweeten this

hand, 286a

things affect little minds, 6123


things go lessening, 666b think too 1., s68b this 1. world, 226b those who have too 1., 97 ib though 1. I'll work, 10873 though 1. she is fierce, 2303 tight 1. island, 5i7b tin gods on wheels, 87 ib tiny boy, 2533 tiny wit, 2783

8oa bid me to

1.,

gigb

Bohemia country not 1. in, 86sb by medicine live horribly, 4253 by squeezing from stone, ggob by yes 3nd no, 794b
csn these bones 1., 353 C3n't 1. with them or witnout,

life

short

1.

it

up, ioj2b

like stoic bird, 9903 like velvet mole, ggoa

long

our noble king, 4013 1. love that help you to 1., 775b love wisdom 1. accordingly,
682b
loves to to
1.
1.

gib
cesses to
1. unreflectively, 9393 content with small means, 655b converse and 1. with ease, 4iob

in the sun, 2483

mad

mad

to

be saved,

io8ob

H53

Live
Live,

INDEX
to
1.

make war

in peace,

man man

g8a

desires to 1. long, j8ga forgets to 1., 38 ib martyrdom to 1., ggob marvel how fishes 1. in sea,

Live that they may eat, 87b that you desire to 1. again, 8o6a their wonted fires, 4413 they pine I L, igaa thou hast no more to L, 7763

Lived, everything 1. in me, 7543 for all times, 4983

had we
I
I I I
I

1.

tale

to

had

1.

a blessed

agob
merrily
shall
I
1.

now, 2Q7b

Mirth with thee


335*
moderately, 7433

mean

to

I.,

thou thy life, 801 a though dead shall he L, 48b through time or die suicide,
635* till tomorrow, 4593 to be in awe, 253b to be show and gaze, 2873 to fight another day, 1033 to itself it 1. and die, 2933
to to to to to

have 1. long enough, 2863 have 1. my day, 1223 have 1. today, 3695 have not 1. in vain, 934
in everything, 7243

tell, 8963 time, 2843

I 1.
I 1.

on

air,

g27b

more virtue than doth

1.,

gosa

name
no no no no no

shall

1.
1.

behind me, 266b


on, 7913

evil

deed

longer 1. with honor, 86oa man shall see me and 1., gb one so old he cannot 1., i76b
picture

know how
1.
1.

in cellar damp, 6g4a in little house, iog7b in mild magnificent eye, 66ab in Paris as young man, io45b in practice of every virtue,
in pretty how town, i03ib in tide of times, 2553

gob

is is

made

to

1.

with,

g88b nobly to

1.

is

to 1., 1903 Christ, 543 like to love, 7$6b to function, 7893


to
live,

judged
life
1.

not
to

to

have L,
1.,

786b

forwards, 676a

L, 8ia

not how long 1. but how, 67ga not in myself, 556b not know how to 1., 8403 not 1. by bread only, loa not 1. if England finished, gjab not 1. unto oneself, ioab not 1. with living, 24ob not L without cooks, 74ib not three good men unhanged,

please must please

life

mesnt

be

g8ib

4?a
today, i34b together in peace, 11043 too beautiful to 1., 66gb too much in circle, 6123 true as I L, 3143 truth 1. with right and wrong,
1. with animals, 7oob unable to 1. in society, g8a unto the Lord, 5ib

light in spring,

7nb
8ooa

long on alms-basket of words,

222b
loved

cursed

floundered,

10313 turn and

now

239a
I
1.

now

life is

done, 2053

7g4a or die, 546b out lifetime of God, 6g6a out my years, 11053 out thy life as light, past years again, 367 peaceably, 5ia people who had to 1., 7633 pleasurably without living wisely, 1033 plenty to 1. on happily, 9833 power to 1. and act, 5i7a prophets do they 1. forever, 363 proudly, 86oa pure speak true, 6533 rage to 1., 4o6b for time assigned, rationally i4ab right way to I., 8oob says Death, ngb see so much nor 1. so long, a8ob shall not 1. in vain, 7373 she tried to 1. without him,
301 a
so
so
1.

on hay, iiO3b on knees, 9433, g7ga on our lips, ioi4b one bare hour to 1., 2i3b only by risking we 1.,

up to principles, io48b upon daily rations, 6713 upon vapor of dungeon, 274b we how we can, ai6b we 1. as we dream alone, 843b

we 1. but world passed, 77 ib we 1. here they 1. there, 10673 we must attempt to 1., gogb we only 1. only suspire, 10073 we shsll 1. in his sight, 35b
what thou
while
I
1.

in paradise, 4g7b father 1. his soul, io3ib never to have 1. is best, 88sb of days 1. better part, 4823 on River Dee, 4643 she 1. unknown, 5iob through this horror, g8ib time not sacred until 1., 77ob in crooked house, together iog6b under a hill, iog73 under my woodside, 3283 who have not 1. holy life, 8ob Livelier liquor than Muse, Ssgb plaything gives you delight,

men 1. like moment 1.

fishes,

agob

my

4oga
Livelihood, snxiety about 1,, 9323 partner in my 1., 88a Lively, cock with 1. din, 334b

livest

1.

well,

3483

have free country,

4633 while ye may, 345b

from
life 1.

1.

to severe,
filisl

4103

who can 1. without hope, g4ga who dies if England 1., 77b who longs in solitude to 1., 4773
wisdom to love to 1., 8713 with ease, 4iob with her and live with thee, 334b with me and be my love, aiaa, 3063 with the gods, i4ab with thee 3nd be thy love, ig8b with you love to 1., 1223 within no power to 1. -long,
1303 within reach to 1. nobly, 1303 within sense they quicken, 57sb without conscience, 7^ib without duties obscene, 6ioa without me God cannot 1., g64b without playing knave, 3753 without poetry music art, 74 ib without Thee I cannot 1., 5673 world not to 1. but die in, 33ob would you 1. forever, 4353 you might as well 1., 10293 you will know how to L, 47 8b
Live-and-help-live logic, io77b Lived, back above element they in, 2893
1.

form of de3th, 2043

duty, 4703 understand3ble spirit, 10653 in L. Street lie fenLiverpool,


lands, gpjib Livers, criticism of life by 1., 9493 humble 1. in content, 2983
Livery, cunning 1. of hell, 2713 in his 1. wslked crowns, 2893 in sober 1. cl3d, 345b of burnished sun, 232b Lives 3nd dies in single blessedness, 228b snd souls dreaming, 6973
at

sense of

1.

that

sinking

in

last

e3se

th3t freely

lives,

1633

sleep,

4763

that

when summons comes,

bad and dreary 1., 8s8b beauty 1. though lilies die,


g8oa body's beauty L, g55b but marches to grave, 6aob cat has only nine 1., 7623 competency 1. longer, 23ib cuckold 1. in bliss, 274a evil men do 1. after them, 2553 for cap and bells 1. pay, 6gaa for meanest mortal, 789!} fructify in 1. of others, io6a gave 1. that nation live, 6393 God 1. not without me, 3<54b
goodness 1. gone, 85b

574a
so long as ye both shall 1., 61 a so we'll 1. pray sing, a8oa so wise young never 1. long,

ai7b good to 1. on, 6g4a something that doth L, 5isb sure to 1, well, 4763 swim or sink 1. or die, 46ab463*
soil

take

taught us how to L, 4oob teach me to L, 3770 teach men to 1., i8gb

means whereby

1.,

2353

teaching nations how to 1., 33gb ten times ten, sggb that nation might 1., 6393

courage 10723
criticism
L, 949a

with

which

men

1.,

though

they
1.,

are

by those
I

who have
1.,

not

discover

had not

6833

government he 1. he wskes, 5723 he 1. in bliss, 4g6b

involved in

goia

H54

INDEX
Lives,

Lo
Living, leave a 1. name behind, 3!5 a leave 1. to servants, 7803 life for the 1., 7503 life lost in the L, ioo4b
1.,

he 1. in others who knew him, g43 a ,_ here or passes night, g8oa men's 1., 2423 all history in honest and industrious men's 1.,

Lives,

unto himself, 3223 long 1., igsb whose range is small, 7553 woman true and fair, 30^ ib ye led were mine, 87 Livest, be useful where thou
1.

who

who

well

1.

life

worth

1.,

7943, 8673

howbsd and

how the human creatures'


2i8b

dreary 1. are, 8s8b other half L, 3 2 5 a

in eternity's cause, in fame died in virtue's

5g2b sunrise, 488b


1.,

in haste hurries to feel, in others who knew him, in our alley, 4oob in purer 1. service find, influence over 1. of others,
it's

573 a g43 a

620b

6g8b

Liveth and believeth in me, 493 I am he that 1., 57 b know that my redeemer 1., isb name 1. forevermore, 393 none 1. to himself, 516 not in fierce desire, 5i8b Livia's daughter-sons, g68b Livid loneliness of fear, io42b Livin', heap o' 1., gSsb not worth 1. without inimies

her eyes, lightning from like 1. in jail, 10673 Lord of 1. 3nd dead, 8oab
lyre,

44ob

man

blind and drinks, 88sb mother of all 1., 6a, I034b motion like 1. thing, 5ioa need charity more, 7503 no 1. near her, 2463 no 1. with thee or without thee,

394 a

ye're buying, 52ob leave little 1. in air, 4<>5 a mold 1., less conscious actions

men's

1.

8gob
Living a rover, s87b
all

the

1.

and the dead, g68n

no 1. with you or without, i35b no speech for when 1., ioo6b noble 1. and noble dead, 5103
not live with 1., 24ob not reverence of dead but envy of L, 3183 not worth 1. without enemies,

like

drunken

sailor,

2i6a

look into 1. as into mirror, iogb loss of 1. cannot be valued, siga and pleasant in their 1.,
lovely

living, ioo4b as life to L, 74ob at this hour, 5i2b

and partly
L

better

for
1.

more and more,

9830

123-b

mske bsrren our 1., 77 3b mske our 1. sublime, 62ob


merry merry 1., 8sgb lives than one, 8413 most 1. who thinks most, 6?g3 music of men's L, 2283

more

nine

1.

like a cat, 1853

1. and dies, 77b noon and evening of L, 72ob

noblest

not alone in brain, 2223 not how man dies but 1., 3413 not long who battles immortals, 633 not mounting and unfolding,
of great men, 62ob of quiet desperation, 6823

man, 7153 a bouquets while I'm 1., 949 brave men 1. 3nd dead, 6393 burden of long 1., 774b burn at heart of L, io4oa catch the manners 1., 407b on 1., 942b courage to keep dead govern 1., gSgb 1. die, 3703 dead live the dead man, 2i8b dead not interested in 1., 10413

blamed the

8 9 ob
1.

Aton, 3b

object in 1. to unite, g28b one thinks to get a 1., 43 6b ioo6a pattern of dead and L, pity for 1. envy for dead, 762b

plain 1. high thinking, 5123 and end pleasure the beginning of 1., 1033 prec3rious L,
recollection
rest

no2b
1.

like

over,
1.,

from loving be
1.,

42 3b 10553

desire of every 1. thing, 233 dog better than dead lion, 28b earn I. by sweat, 68ab

riotous

47a

on a leaf, io64b on hope die fasting, 4223 on in your life, g4sa one 1. but once, 477 a our 1. grow together, 774b
our 1. in acts exemplary, aosb our 1. our fortunes, 4713 our pilot still, 2i6b part as ships, 6243 poison their 1., g25b
presches well th3t
press
1.

earned precarious 1., no2b earth belongs to 1., 473 a 6b every 1. thing of all flesh, feel daggers keep on L, 942b fever called 1., 644a consideration earning 1.. first 3 78b freely and nobly, 9133

round ocean and 1. air, 5ogb scarce able to bury dead, 3iga search land of 1. men, 5193 seek 1. smong desd, 47 b servsnt of 1. God, 444b shake 1. out of Fate, 7423
shall forfeit

renown, 5193 God, 43a sons of the 1. God, gga souls departed shadows of

Son of the

1.

1.,

from hand to mouth, 1933 b glowed with 1. sapphires, 345 God, 353, 433, 444b God 1. working still, 675b God of 1., 47b
habit of 1., 3313 half dead a 1. death, 3493
o' 1., 96gb help for 1. hope for dead, 7493 Homer begged his bread, 30 ib house a machine for 1. in, ggsb house appointed for all L, ^b how good mere 1., 6653 l8a I advise you to go on 1., 4

33 ia sweet is costlier, 737b take notice if he were L, 53gb

theologian born by this 1. hand, 58 ib


this life

1.,

i8oa

worth

L,

794a

by

well, ig6b disclosures, loggb


1.

heap

1., public supreme judge 55 ob sacrifice 1. to preserve virtue,

of

throne, 44 ib to one's self, 53gb too much love of L, 7753 translating into 1. law,

9913

-K

sacrificed

1.

and
1.

Santa
slander

Glaus
1.

upon

spend rest of 1. spending 1. like


1.

fortunes, forever, 78ob succession, 2i8a in future, g4ob


serfs,

up to it difficult, 66oa we fret, 668a when 1. might exceed dead,


33 ob whether 1. is dying, 923 which are yet alive, 27b who 1. had no note, io86a who 1. had no roof, 30 ib with us even in silence, 477 b world you haunt, io8ib write a 1. line, 30$) on 1., ioo4b yet we have gone Living-dead man, 2i8b
Livings, set to earn 1., 8523 L. I presume, Livingstone, Dr.

make war on

the

1.,

i86a

68sb

of better people, 8253 spoil talk not of other men's 1. there still, 10973 Thomas Jefferson still 1., 464 a

in a garret, 44ab in agreement with nature, i03b in conditions approaching misery,

g82b

throbbing 1002b
traced
1.

between
of

two

1.,

good men,
relives

5173
past,
1.,

in living seasons, loosa in underground den, g4b in Yorkshire, 5233 incarnate cosmos, g86b it is for us the 1., 6393

two two

1.

join oft scar, 6643


lives

who

know no bounds, 327b know they shall die, a8b


Lady Disdain
are

7913
1.,

you yet

Lizard,
Lizzie

went in jeopardy of
i2b while he
1.

their

who

1.

be glad, 774b everywhere 1. nowhere,

land of 1., 10412 land of the 1., i5b

language of the
law, 99 la

1.,

ioo6b

lion and 1. keep, 62gb like 1., 937b slips away Borden took ax, iioia Lo footprint is our own, 9673 I 3m with you always, 453 virtue is at hand, 7ib

time

H55

Load
Load, ass will carry
cruelty to
1.
1.,

INDEX
igya

Locks, shaking her invincible

1.,

Loiterers,

liege

of

all

1.,

aaib
1.

falling man, 2g8b every rift of subject, 5863 life thou art galling 1., not that 1. difficult, 5055

34ob time to silver turned, 2O4b were like the raven, 494b

Loitering,

alone

and

palely

58ia

which are

left

are gray, 53 ib

of immortality, 5853 save them by barrel 1., would sink a navy, 298 b

yellow as gold, 5253 Locksmith, zealous 1. died, Locust of soul unshelled,


1.

Loman never made money,


Lomonosov was our

Lolita light of my life, 10464 Lollipop Sea, 8aob


1071 a
first universi-

u<Mb

Loaded, with pickled pork 66ob


4<>4a

she,

tossed

up and down

1080 a as the 1.,

London

2ib
Locusts and wild honey, sgb food as luscious as L, 2733 Lodes tone, like needle to 1., 6g5b Lodge, house to 1. friend, 4nb in garden of cucumbers, 303,
in

Loads of learned lumber in head,


with superfluous burden 1. day, 34ob Loaf and invite soul, 7003 better half a 1., i84b Charlotte held brown 1., 66ob of bread and thou, sgb
to every bird, 736*)

ty, 434b ale is right ale, g47b Bridge broken down, 10933 Bridge falling down, 862b brisk's the L. 3ir, g47b broken arch of L. Bridge, 5gsb

clearinghouse of world, 7f>5b finest thing in L. bobby/ gosb flower of cities all, 1763
fog thirty parts, 8643 great cesspool, 84gb

not

some vast wilderness, 1. thee by Chaucer, 30$)


I 'will

Loafing around the Throne, 7y8b Loan oft loses friend, 258b Loaning, on ilka green 1., 446b Loath, long and 1. at going, iooga to lay out money on rope, $iob what maidens 1., 5833. Loathe, I 1. the country, 3923 sweet tunes, 774a taste of sweetness, 24oa that I did love, 187* Loathed Melancholy, 3$4b most 1. worldly life, 27 ib Loathes, all outward 1., 3053 Loathing, deepest 1. brings, 23011 lost love and l. 10543 Loathsome canker in sweetest bud, 2g2a Loaves, five 1. and two fishes, 42b
f

porter of father's 1., 7363 thorns that in bosom 1., 2603

hell city much like L., 5703 in ruins rather than enslaved,

where thou lodgest


lib

L,

Lodged, love
30ob

1.

in woman's breast,

with me useless, 3413 Lodges, where care 1. sleep never


lie,

224b

Lodgest,
lodge,

where

thou

1.

will

nb
5983 4oia
343 5023

Lodging, grant us safe L, hard was their L, $S$b my 1. is on cold ground, Phoebus' 1., 2253 place of wayf3ring men, Lo'ed, better 1. ye canna be, Loftier race than known,

7&5b

joyous, 4b Lobotomized, flabby bold L,

when heart
io76a

raise somewhat 1. strain, ii6b Loftiest peaks most wrapped, 5563

Loftiness

of

thought
1.,

surpassed,

g2ib 3 man's town, 827b from L., 96 ib knowledge of L. extensive, 66ga Lord Mayor of L., io8$b loved life L., g75a one road leads to L., 9473 particular a fog, 6723 sea at best in L., gi6b sights rare, g47b tired of L. tired of life, 432a to L. to look at queen, 10963 Town's fine town, g47b vast mass of L., g2ib vilest alleys of L., 84gb whale-fat of postwar L., io75b London's, nursed amid L. noise, 534b Lone, a way a 1. a last, g6ga
is

isn't far

37ob
turn lowness into

8573

Glenartney's hazel lorn creetur, 6713

shade,

5203

Lobster, like 1. boiled the 353 a voice of the L., 744b

mom,

Lofty and sour, 2ggb build the 1. rhyme, 3383


scene be acted o'er, 2553 sky immeasurably L, 7323

not in

1.

splendor, 581 a

poor

I.

woman, 2423

sheiling, 5903

Lobster-nights, luxurious 1., 4osb Lobsterpot, shattered 1., ioo6a Lobsters, thrain 1. to fly, 891 a Local cult Christianity, 7830 defense important, looob habitation and name, 2 gob seemed to be 1. dust cloud,

sky-pointing tree, 7i4b

Log hut with simple bench, 7413


memories has got, 8o8b Mark Hopkins at end of
its

L,

wslking by wild worker makes 963*

1.,

8763
advance,

first

on

74ia 1. expiring frog, 66ga

roll

my

1.

roll

yours,
1.,

1313

io6gb Locale Celtic season spring, 968 b Loch, banks o' Lomond, 1099 a Lochaber, farewell to L., 4oob Lochinvar, young L., 5iga Lochow, far cry to L., 5123 Lock, cryin' at 1., 657a meant to pick 1., no4b something picked 1. slid bolts, 94oa sure 1. me up, 1009 a Locked lettered collar, 4933 my heart, io8ga

tough wedge for tough


1273 Logan's, enter L. cabin

Loneliness liness, die of 1., 8855 intense 1. and ignorance, 8323 of fear, io42b of yesterday, 10383

hungry,

445b Logic and rhetoric able to contend, 2ogb book of female L, 661 a doctrinaire 1., losib is logic, 6343 of heart absurd, 46ob
of

mind

overtaxed,

6^b

naked
2i5a

though

1.

up

in

steel,

razor, 10763 'tis in my

page of history worth volume of 1., 788b temper 1. with wisdom, iO2ib that's 1., 74sb Logical, built in such 1. way, 6343
consequences fools, 7253
scarecrows
to all,
1.

overcome 1., io56b promise of decade of 1., logGb Lonely and poor of old, 9943 and swift like planet, 8433 consoler of 1., 7523 dark and I. hiding place, 5263 flowering in 1. word, 6540 God winding 1. horn, 88oa heart 1. hunter, 8323 how I. we sh3ll be, 95 3b hunts on 1. hill, 8323 I'm 1. I'll make world, go6b impulse of delight, 88 ib

memory

1.,

25ga

of

up from mortal eye, 3543 Locket, Lucy L. lost pocket, iog7a Locks are like the snaw, 4g4b
his

more L among men, 68 jjb rapture on 1. shore, 5570 sea and sky, g46b
simple
1.

Logos
Logs,

is

common
bears

cry,

iog7b

Tom

77b

into the hall,

immortal 62b

1.

fell

forward,

222b
Loin, ungirt 1., 6653 Loins, fire of my 1., 10463 gird up thy 1. like 3 man, i6a

sleep among 1. hills, 5163 so 1. am I, 1533 so 1. 'twas that God, 5263 sun in 1. lands, 6513

knotted and combined 1., 25gb open 1. whoever knocks, 2853 played with hoary 1., 5583 pluck drowned honor by 1.,
thy gory
1.

at

me, 2853

he girded up his 1., i3b let your 1. be girded, 473 shudder in L, 88sb with your 1. girded, 8b

the 1. thing, 5i6b wandered 1. as a cloud, 5143 Lonesome, be good be 1., 762b like one that on 1. road, 52sb October, 64sb
place against sky, 8273

H5 6

Lonesome road, 5255


lit Lonesomeness, 1., starlight 782b Long, a loved a 1. the, 9693

anchorage

we

leave, 7033

and and and and and


art

ghastly kitchen, 6753

lank and brown, 5253


loath at going, looga steep is the way, 6yb

terrible way, io66b apprenticehood, 2262


1.

life short,

477b
421 a

as 1. as ever you can, battle rages loud and 1., be day never so 1., i8$b

5375

Long, short meaning of 1. speech, 498a small showers last 1., 226b still should 1. for more, 5033 stubbornly 1. or suddenly splendor, 994b suits, 10193 that thy days may be 1., 93 think life too 1., 3833 thought the travel 1., gi4b three 1. mountains, 10233 time between drinks, 8a4b to talk with lover's ghost, so6b trick's over, 9473
trochee trips from
1.

Look, afraid to L upon God, 8a


after souls in labor, 95b all world here to 1. on me,

22gb

and pass on, isgb angel of backward 1., 6a6b around choose ground, 56$b 3S they run 1. behind, 4393 ashamed to 1. next morning,
3263 astronomy compels soul to 1. upwards, g4b at all the fire-folk, 8033 at record, gi6b at the stars, 8033 at thee with many eyes, 8263 at them long and long, 7oob at things in bloom, 852b at was to love, 6473 away Dixie Land, 6783 backward 1. behind assurance, ioo6b before time to 1. round, 4783 before you Ie3p, 3533 behind the Ranges, 8763 clean starved for a 1., 2gab
direct

to

short,

black land, 6633 boots hard boots, 948b brown path before me, 7013 calamity of so 1. life, 2623
cool

5*7*

way way

1.

wind

to

cold, 5183 Tipperary, 9343

winding saxophones, 948b dark autumn evenings, 6635 day's journey into night, 10093 day's task is done, 288b
deliberate derangement, 8 gob divorce of steel, 2983 enough and just so long, logib for a mornin's mornin', 8305
for another life, 907b for imperishable quiet, loGgb from 1. to 1. in solemn sort,

to see him hanged, 90 ib truly 1. for death, 6453 Longer, impossible takes 1., 11035 no 1. stay with you, iiooa smile dwells 1., 9143

where tarry so 1., 6763 within no power to live 1., 1303 words bother me, 9703 Long-drawn aisle, 4403 Longed, lies where 1. to be, 823b to embrace mother's ghost, 66a

him where
with bitter
1.

to

1.

for

it,

do

it

1.,

84ob

don't

back, 10483

5*7*
Gilpin 1. live he, 457b gray beard glittering eye, 54b groveled here 1. enough, 7o2b hair glory to woman, 52a happy as heart was 1., io7ob
his

some days 1., 9253 song had been 1., 10943 stretch him out 1., 28ob words have 1. life than deeds,
79*>

down on

hate, 5565 ere ye Ie3p, 1823 every 1. a dsrt, io8gb eyes 1. your Isst, sa$b eyes thst would not 1.

on me,

arm is very 1., 873 home I 1. to be, 827b how I. a time in one word, 226a how 1. Catiline, nob how 1. wilt thou forget me, 173
I
I

Longest fifty-nine minutes, 9103 journey go, 5713 journey inwards, io^&b nights are 1. there, 27ob river in world, 7603

4813
fear in the face, 98 ib for me in nurseries, &56b for me under boot soles, 7013 for truth but not find it, 4373 forty centuries I. down, 5043

way round

shortest

home, 32 ib

I
it

have lived 1. enough, 2863 loved you once 1. ago, 6gb speak not loud or 1., 2oib shan't be 1., 4163
1.

Longest-lived and die same, i4ib

shortest-lived

Longeth,

my

flesh

Longfellow's,

for thee, igb shown L. grave,


1.
1.

kiss

as

my

exile,
1.

2903
observation,

know
94a
lane
life

996* Long-haired, not these


fear,

men

evil

from

nab

turnings, 662b or short, 3483 life is short art 1., 88b light shakes, 648b limp subterranean weeds, io64b littleness of life, 99 ib

knows no
1.

Longing
cast
1.

how

our noble king, 4oia long ago, 588a long thoughts, 623b long trail a-winding, iciab long wintry nights, 674a Lord how 1., sob
live

after immortality, 3935 eye on offices, 47 ib feeling of sadness and 1., 62 ib for stewed prunes, 27ob for that lovely lady, i loa leans and beckons, 6*94b lingering look behind, 4413 more 1. wavering, 2523 wept with bitter L, ios7b Longings, I have immortal 1. in me, 2893 of insatiate blood, io66a
for seine,

forwsrd not bsck, 7183 forwsrd to posterity, 4543 forward to with hope, 9263 give me 3 1., 3oab goose 1., 2863 have a 1. at yourselves, 858b her quick 1., 10653 her wanton spirits 1. out, 2693 homeward Angel, 3393 how floor of hesven, 235b how others do it, 4g7b how ring encompssseth thy finger, 2l6fo

had fixed my L on his, i6ob not 1. for wine, 3033 immortal 1., 666b in almanac find out moonshine,
I
I'll

2303
in that tone of voice, 8iob in thy hesrt 3nd write, 2ojb into hsppiness through snother's eyes,

love

me

little

love

me

Longitude and latitude


3203,

1.,

10845

make no 1. meals, 4503 may land be bright, 62


mechanic pacings, 646a melancholy 1. withdrawing
roar,

76oa in 1. though scanty, 4963 send them latitude and 1., 9683 with no platitude, io6ib
Long-leggety beasties, iog8b

25ob
iogb

74b
24sb never make 1. visits, 9963 nor that little 1., 3993, 448a not how 1. but how, 6793 not 1. life by fire, 86oa not 1. the weeping and the laughter, 8903 pull strong pull, 67 ib road 1. and dusty to grave, Saab see so much nor live so 1., 28ob seven 1. year, 78b short and 1. of it, 267a

Longmans', 5iob
Longs,

it's

still

in L. shop,

into into into into


last

lives as into mirror,

oneself, 8653

seeds of time, 2813 your heart, 49?b

merry

as

day

is 1.,

who
1.

who

for death, 3213 in solitude to live, 4773


1.

on things lovely, gi4b lean and hungry 1., 25 $b learned to 1. on n3ture, sogb
let

Longshoreman's union, 8923 Long-stemmed gigantic flowers, 985* Long-strayed eyes, 305b
Longsuffering 3nd very pitiful, 37* fruit of Spirit is I., 5$b love is 1., i7ob Loo, oh Miss L., 8143 Look about us and die, 40?b

him

1.

to his
1

library

whereon

bond, 2333 1., 3213

like innocent flower, 2823

lingering 1. behind, 4413 look up at skies, 8033 love the 1. of landscspes, ggob

make man 1. sad, 2313 men met with erected


morn
257*

1.,

36gb

in russet mantle clad,

H57

Look
Look,

INDEX
1.

my God a3b
1.

not so

fierce,

back, 2753 not down but up, 666a not left or right, &$$b not thou upon the wine, a6a of eagles, 9130 of love alarms, 488b of soft deceit, 488b

ne'er

Looking, conscience warns somebody 1., g6ia eastward to sea, 873b even if gods should be 1., 65b for gold and silver, 686a for honest man, g6b
for something to do, 4$ga fresh as paint, 687b hand to plow and 1. back,

Loose, hell's broken

1.,

sofa

imagination, 884b past free of 1. ends, goib the bands of Orion, i6a type of things, 5i2b

w'en

it

gits

1.

fum
1.

Loosed, arrows 243*

jug, 8143 several ways

on both indifferently, 253b on my works ye mighty, 568b on you when last hour comes,
1283

only a

1.

and

voice, 6242.

46b them while 1. good, 10273 on happy fields, 648b one way rowing another, 365b over harbor and city, g48a seaman 1. for something else,
leave

blood-dimmed tide 1., 8823 fateful lightning, 6gob


silver cord be 1., 2ga Loosen, old faiths 1. and old foundations, g48b
fall,

7^

Loosened

spirit brings,

738b

or listen, 6gsa out how use proud words, g48b out not in, 7183
position to 1. close, gayb reader 1., gogb round habitable world, 3713

997b
see without
1.

Loosens fragrant bodice, 5823

through windows,

74b
well can't

Lopped limbs, 10645 tree may grow again, Sob


Loquacious, light griefs 1., i3ib Loquacity, poetry checks 1., 6oga Lord, abideth in presence of 1., 4b all ye works of the L., 3ga am an attendant L, looia among wits, 4303 snd Fsther of mankind, 626b angel of L. came down, 3843 angel of L. came upon them, 46a anger of L. kindled, 4583 answered Job out of the whirlwind, i6a be thankit, 4g5b be with you, 5ga believing Christians from sky,
i72b
better is little with the fear of the L., 24b bless thee and keep thee, gb
bless ye the L., sga blessed be L. God, 46a blessed the latter end of Job,

Looking-glass,

move her, 35oa no use to blame

L,

same

1.

she turned
1.

when he

6323
Looking-glasses,

women

1.

reflect-

rose, 5423 see monument

ing man, g75b

around, g74b

Looks

as well as

on steamship,
1.,

sexes 1. alike, ggga soul 1. body touch, 884b take a backward 1., 734b

10273 assurance given by


back,

3i4b
skies,

things fairer

when we

1.

commercing with the 335 b


dispatchful everybody's
1.,

6g4b through a millstone, 2033


thy
last

1.

3463 of death,
all

on things

375b

lovely,

gi4b

gigantically
1.,

down, 6423

to essence of a thing, usb to it, 637b to your looms again, 78gb up at the skies, 8o3a

gods do not give

men good

6sb

up not down, 7i8a upon a little child, 425b upon his like again, 2583 upon world as parish, 42ob upward 1. of caution, g2ga we 1. before and after, 57ob
westward 1. land bright, 68ga who comes here, 2$6b with favor on bold beginning,

in the clouds, 2543 kindness not beauteous 1., 2igb love 1. not with eyes, 228b modest 1. cottage adorn, more elder than thy 1., 234b never 1. nor 'eeds, 874b

not deep-searched with saucy 1., 22ia old man 1. before and after, 62b-63a
tempests, 2g4a patron 1. with unconcern, 42gb poet 1. at world as man at woman, g57b puts on his pretty 1., 236b quite through deeds of men, 253b she L with threatening eye, 236b she needs good 1., g84a sidelong 1. of love, 44ga stolen 1. nice, 55 ib through Nature up, 4103 toward school with heavy 1., 224a up friend clear your 1., 5oga war of 1. between them, 22oa were free, 5253 whole world in face, 62 ib Loom, broider world upon 1.,
I

i6b
blot out his name, 37sa bringeth thee into good land, loa Cain went out from presence of

n7a
with thine ears, 27gb ye there, 4s4a Looked again found it was, 7473

on on

alike,

2gb

and sighed again, 37 ib


as she did love, 581 a before thou leaped, i8sa

the L., 6a Christ the L. risen today, 4353


Christ's heart, 6043 climb tree L. to see, 10893

come when 1. for, 6760 down to Camelot, 645b God 1. around and said, go6b
into eye of day, 883b Lot's wife 1. back, 7a love to eyes which spake, 555b no sooner 1. but loved, 25ob on Beauty bare, lozgb on better days, 248b out of eye of saint, 884a over his shoulder, io6oa

coming of the L., 6gob custom 1. of mankind, 5ggb Dark Maid and her Lord, 8gb day of the L., 54b day which the L. hath made,
22a dead which die in the L. f s8b died by the hand of the L., 8b directeth his steps, 24b disciples of the L., 4gb do if He knew facts, 8gia fear of the L. is beginning of wisdom, sib fear of the L. is wisdom, i5b feast to the L., 8b fetch mo'ners up higher, 8i4a
for the erring thought, 77 ib for the L. is good, 2ia forbade me to put off my hat,

sideways up, 5253

through

life 1.

on God, g4sb

to government for bread. 4553 unutterable things, 4igb with such a wistful eye, 84ob with wild surmise, 57gb Looker-on, patient 1., 32 ib Lookers-on, only God and angels 1., 2073 Looketh, Lord 1. on the heart, i2a on the outward appearance, i2a well to ways of her household, 273 Lookin' eastward to sea, 873b Looking, all 1. for a king, 723b as like as peas, 18 ib
at self

878b cannot ply the


the

1.,

6gb

web left the 1., 645b the L, 78gb look to 1. again, 78gb Looms,
left
life's in

Loon, thou cream-faced 1., 2863 Loop to hang doubt on, 2753

3643
forgive

L.

Looped and windowed raggedness,


278b Loophole, from her cabined peep, 336b
1.

my

jokes, gaga

no

1.

in case drafted,

from winter plague L. deliver us, 30ob gangway for L., 10153 gave and hath taken away, Ma
glory of the L.
is

risen,

through others, 8g4b

Loopholes of retreat, Loose, all hell broke 1., 3463 as the wind, 3233 feel his title hang 1., 286a

^b

God Almighty, 583 God caused 3 deep sleep, 5b God formed man, 53

go and the L. be with

thee, iza

Lord God

is

subtle, 951 a
all,

God God God God God God

made them

Lord neat and trimly dressed,


2383 not everyone that saith L., 41 b not tempt the L. your God, loa

Lordly, butter in a

1.

dish,

iia

684b

of Hosts, 8755

planted a garden, 5b send high wave, 9093

walking in garden, 5b in full, 8753 good L. deliver us, Gob, iog8b good L. had only ten, 786a Gracious L. bomb Germans,

O O

L. L.
all

if

there

is

a L., 722a

we paid

my God

have

trusted,

igab
of of of of of
yet prey to all, 4093 far-flung battle line, 8753 folded arms, 22 ib

cedar green with boughs, 8273 name is, 6433 Lord's Anointed, logob anointed temple, 2843 earth is the L., 18 a, 523 it is the L. passover, 8b name is to be praised, 22a
sing the L. song, 22b who is on the L. side, 93 Lords and ladies of Byzantium,

10593

and dreadful day of the 363 handkerchief of L., 7ooa hath chosen thee, loa hath taken away, i4a have mercy on us, 593, goob hear me out, io66b hear word of the L., 34!)
great
L.,

heaven and earth, 5oa himself, soob, 558b of hosts he is the King of
i8a
living
lords,

88 3 a
glory,

of of of of

and dead, 8o2b 58b the ocean, 84b


yourself, 37 ib

once

help 'em how I pities all, 5i7b holy is the L. of hosts, sob how discourse is of death, 375b

own happy

lines,

4o3b

how long, 3ob how world given


I

to lying, 241 a

patient unto coming of L., 56b praise L. pass ammunition, 10622 pray L. soul to keep, io8gb precious in the sight of the L.,

believe,

45b

I I
I

heard the voice of the L., gob


replied

My

L., 32 3 b

22a prepare way of L., 3b, 3gb preserve thee, 223


preserve thy going and coming,

were

I will

1. in May, 774b sing unto the L., 8b

22a
raise me up I trust, iggb reason L. makes so many, 6ggb reigneth, 2ia replied O L. Thou art, 444a rib which L. God had taken, sb Savior which is Christ the L.,

if horse, g86a in glance of the L., 5593 in the morning hear, sg6b
is
is

you had

is

a man of war, 8b come, 3973 good, aia

and owners of their faces, 2933 but breath of kings, 4g2b gude Scots 1., io87b Lord of 1., *8b masters 1. and rulers, 8a6b neither 1. nor shogun, 7403 not kings and 1., 5453 o' the creation, 4933 of hell, 6sob of humankind pass by, 44?b of it all, io22b of ladies intellectual, 5603 princes and L, 4493 Scots I. at his feet, loSyb seemed 1. of all, 3453 who lay ye low, 5703 wit among 1., 4303 women who love their 1., 4453 Lordships', dance attendance on 1. pleasures, sggb Lore, admire virtue follow not her 1., 348b
Christ's
1.

and his

apostles

is
is

in his holy temple, 363 in this place, 73


I,

46a
searcheth
secret
L.,
all hearts,

twelve, i66b

i4a

gives

me

is it
is

44b

my helper, 563 is my light, i8a is my rock, i2b is my shepherd, i7b is my strength and shield, i8a is my strength and song, 8b
is
is
is

things belong unto the lob seeth not as man, i2a servant in love
1.

Heaven volume

mystical 1., 5383 rejects the 1., 5173 of forgotten 1., 6*42b

in marriage,

nigh unto them that risen, $gb


the strength of thy keeper, 223 thy shade, 22a

call,

233
i8a

my

life,

i6ga servant not above 1., 423 serve the L. with gladness, aia set a mark upon Cain, 6a short life in saddle L., 86oa showed me so I did see, 3643
sitting upon a throne, 30b sole 1. taking captive, 30 Spirit of the L. shall rest

Lorena, years creep slowly L., 7243 Lorn, lone 1, creetur, 6713
Lorries,

monotonously

1.

sway,

io4ob

Lose and neglect creeping hours, 248b comfort or money too, 9323
convictions to

is
is is

win or
vslue

freedom

if

L, 9123 something

it

with thee, 45b but a day, Sisa

upon

Jehovah Jove or L., 42 ib kingdoms of our L., 583


king's

our only 1., ana that the L. he is God, 213 land which the L. giveth thee,

him, $ia support us all day long, 5g8a swear to L., 10500 sword of the L. and of Gideon,

know ye

na
taste

more, 9323 gain world L soul, 433 good we oft might win, 2703 has no wits to 1., 4553 having nothing nothing 1., 2i6a he that findeth life shall 1. it,

and

see that the L.

is

good, i8b

42a he who doesn't L


I
if
it

9* lendeth unto the L., 253 lift up his countenance, gb looketh on the heart, isa love the L. with all thine heart, loa

through
thy

this
is

God

hour, 11033 with thee, lob

wits, his child's-heart, icoa

4553

would not
once we

1.

you, 233b
this light,

wait upon the L., 32b was not in the wind the earth-

1.

302b

quake the fire, isb watch between me and


7a-b

thee,

made all to prosper, 7b make a joyful noise unto the


L.,

in moment you detect, 4o6a it that buy it with care, 2313 itself in sky, 66sb knife ill-used 1. edge, 2933

aia
his face shine

make
9*>

upon

thee,

are as L. made us, 89 ib went before them, 8b what fools these mortals be,

we

make me an instrument, 1573 make my enemies ridiculous,


Mayor
of

2303

London,

mercy on

Thy

people

L.,

methought what pain

to

875b drown,
L.,

what would they say, 88 ib where dear L. crucified, 684b whom the L. loveth he chasteneth, 56a whose hope the L. is, 343 will wipe away tears, sib
with

my

2173 help cometh from the


223.

me

woman

abide, 567a that feareth the L., 273

word of the L. endureth, 56b


worship the L. in beauty of holiness,

my

name

soul doth magnify L., 45b of the L. in vain, ga

i8a

we 1. Edens, 66sb nothing much to 1., 854!* myself in a mystery, 32gb myself in other minds, 5 name of action, 2623 natural kindness, 88 sb never 1. touch of the one, 8613 nobly S3ve meanly 1., 638b nor 1. common touch, 8773 nothing to 1. but chains, 6873 one life to 1. for country, 4&4b our ventures, 2563 play to win toil to 1., 9003 some d3y 1. them all, 6743 some 1. their W3y, 7343
lest
life

Lose
Lose
soul's inheritance,

INDEX
8$8b
Lost causes, 713!}, 1008 a defaced deflowered, 3483 every dream thought 1., 722b every other friend, 6403 for him I sm not 1., io6b for wsnt of nail shoe 1.,
Lost,

what

is left

when honor
be
1.,

substance by grasping at shadow, 76a sweets grown common 1. delight,

1.,

i25b
field
1.

what though

3423

293b

thee myself, 3483 their original nature, loia


this intellectual being, thy love lose all, 4osb

$4$b

time to
7123

I.,

27b

4223 found sheep which was L, 47 a France not L W3r, 10163 friends I have 1. 3 day, iftb
generation, 9333 he is not 1. for Me., io6b heart stiffens, 10043

faith is L, 625!} I had 1. one shaft, 23 ib without a sigh, 797b without deserving, 27jb woman that deliberates 1., 393)3

when when when

battle's

and won, 2813

woman won
wreath has
year only
1.

or

woman

1.,

8833

tomorrow ground won today,

1.

rose, $2ob to me, 3*3b

what gives life value, 10563 what he never had, 3263


whatever gained he will 1., 7b whatever you 1. no account,

who

i*5b

possesses learn to 1., 4g8b whosoever 1. life shall find it,

her honest name, 11033 holding 3nchor 1., 21 6b I hsve I. my reputation, 273b in convent's gloom, 4050 in temple 1. outright, 63ob
in the sweets, 4023 in wandering mazes
it
1., 344a with holding and singing, 24ib I've 1. a day, 3993 just 1. when I W3S ssved, 734b Iscked 3nd 1., 246b Ismbs who 1. W3y, 873b Isnd of 1. content, 8533 legion of I. ones, 873b Lenore, 6433 life 1. in the living, ioo4b

yesterday, 586b Lot, blameless vestal's L, 4o5b dwelled in the cities, 7a is fallen unto me, 173

no no
of

1.

is

msn content with 1., 1203 me and all so luscious, 7oob


1.

sltogether h3ppy, 121 b

43*

win or

1.

it all,

ss^b

policeman's 1., 766b strange was his 1., 8isb


this
is bitterest,

Loser, peace forced upon 1., 84ib Losers, both should 1. be, ^agb tell me if lovers are 1., g48b

7gb

Lothario, gay L., 3963 Lot's, remember L. wife, 473


Lots, csst
1.

world
it,

1.

and

forsalcers,
1.

8o7a
find

Loseth, he that

life shall

42*
itself

Loses beauty in light of day, 9933

Lou, lady known as L., 9333 Loud alarum bells, 6443 as the hemlocks, 9553
bsttle rages 1. and long, 537b curses not 1. but deep, 8623

upon my

vesture, i7b

both

and
1.,

friend, 2585

light that

773a

past and dead for future, 86a what one 1. one 1., 79ga who 1. and who wins, 2803

love and loathing, 10543 loved and 1., 6503 memory of loved 3nd L, 6403

wise

man

never

1.

anything,
sure of
1.,

igoa Losing, fight


profit

when

by

1.

our prayers, 287b


90 ib

Loss

and possession one, better to incur 1., io5b


black as our
1.,

have 1. their reason, 255b missed it 1. it forever, 066b more 1. than life, 1343 more than a friend, 98 ib Mule Flat, io4ib never 1. as much but twice,
734a

men

dry wind, 5103 had tongue yet never L, 27 gb heard the 1. bassoon, 524b helpless naked piping 1., 48gb huzzas, 4ogb I speak not 1. or long, 20 ib laugh spoke vacant mind, 4493 licker talks mighty L, 8143 play skillfully with a 1. noise,
i8b roared dreadful thunder, 4ggb shout out 1. and strong, 9523 sing cuckoo, 10833 sing Goddamm, 9875 so 1. each tongue, 4563 troublesome insects, 454b trumpet's 1. clsngor, 3703 turned in 1. fire, 9553
uplifted angel trumpets, 33gb winds when they call, 5123 Louder, a little 1. but as empty, 4093 cock louder in own farmyard, 678b he talked of honor, 5953 sing 1. around, 486b Loud-hissing, bubbling and 1. urn, 4583 Louis, desr L. of awful cheek,

gg$b grief aggravates 1., 10853 increasing store with 1., 2Q2b joys in another's 1. of ease. 4983 mocks my 1. of liberty, 4863
of all I sing, 108 ib of appetite for mediocrities,
-

no friend, 4073 no hate 1. between us, 3143 no love 1., 1960, 3023
not 1. but gone before, 1303 not profited so much as 1., 68sb not that you won or 1., g6ib nothing except battle 1., 5063 nothing 1. but money, io62b old nonchalance of hand, 8823 old simplicity of times, iogob on roundabouts, 91 13 or won game, 5973 pain like 1. fire, io66a
people on

795D
of Eden, 34 ib of lives cannot be valued, 3193 of native land, 843 profit and 1., 10033 so overwhelming, 6403 thy so sore 1., 8573

whom
is

nothing

1.,

unknown no loss, 1253 we note time but from

1.,

ggga

praising what

Losses, all 1. are restored, 2923 tosses up our 1., 1006a

wrought by nature, 4753 Lost, all good to me is 1., 3453


not L, 3423 all 1. save honor, i8ob all was 1., 347b almost 1. that built it, 3313 and by wind grieved ghost, 1049& and waiting for you go, 876b angel of ruined paradise, 5713 are you I. daddy, g%$b art of getting on together, g66b awhile, 597b become a 1. name, 10693 behind the Ranges, 876b better to have loved 3nd 1.,
all is

L, 2703 principles of free constitution 1. 46 5 b race, io4gb

ransomed broken

1.,

io57b

reputation, 27gb sea smell, 10043 seek for the 1. mind, loob sheep of house of Israel, 423 so fallen so 1., 625b

sooner

1.

and worn, 2523

Strephon's kiss 1. in jest, 98 ih sun is 1. and the esrth, fflb

823b Loungers of Empire drained, 849b Lousy, poor and very 1., 4233 unethical and 1., 10535 Lovable, Elaine the L, 6533 to be loved be 1., i28b Love, a feeling and a 1., 5093 3 kind of W3rf3re, i28b
absence cure of L, 1953 sbsence opens 1., 6793 3nd 3cts of kindness

swsllowed up and 1., 3430 time never found, 4223


to fame, 1173 to love and truth, 873b to sight to memory dear, 5903 violent souls, 10033

of

L,

5093
sfter 1. book collecting best, g8ib 3h 1. let us be true, 7i4b
3las
3ll

6503 books by which printers have 333 b Bo-peep has 1. sheep, iog5b but ane twa behin', 4g6a

1.,

virtue 1. seldom recovered, 3733 war in time utterly L, 7oib

how
for
for
1.

1. 1.

C3n
3

trifle,

little

22 la for bottle,

was

1.

and
1.

is

found, 473

475 b
311

we

sre

the C3ptain shouted,

nothing for rewsrd,

20O3

1460

Love,

all

in green

my

1.

went

rid-

ing, 10303
all 1. all
all

Love, brook weather that wind, 2223


1.,

1.

not

Love

false or true,
1.
1.

87gb

all

liking all delight, jsob 1. impossible, io8ia love of other sights con-

trols,
all 1. all
all all all

304b

brotherly 513, 563 built on beauty, 3073 business that we L, 2883 but her love forever, 4943

sweet, 5693

she loves is 1., 56ob trust a few, 26gb we know of 1., 7393

but I do 1. thee, 2743 but you alone, 10843 by heaven I do L, 2223

fear life, 9133 to hear sins they 1., 2gob fickleness of women I 1., 8363 figure the same for 1., 9296 final face of L, io8oa fiii3l form of 1. forgiveness,
fear

few

find out
first
first

way, io86b

all

we know we know

by
loiob

in of

1.

bitter,

1.,

7393

are driven 3W3y, 4863 W3r, 2053 care of discipline is 1., 373
1.

C3lls to

all's 1. yet all's law, 665a almost too much 1., gsyb aloha means I 1. you, 10303 alone capable of uniting be-

careless

1.,

io7$b

is deep 1., 753 learned in lady's eyes, 2223 fitter 1. for me, 3053 flies out window, 10873

carrier of 1. and sympathy, 7523 cement glue and lime of 1.,

3*9

fly away from 1., gooa fond 1. charmed me, 10855 food of 1., 2513

ings,

9653

alone give 935*

woman

change old
full stature,

1.

for new, 2O4b

alters not, 2942 am like to 1. three more, gosb Americans because they love liberty, 4263 anchor of 1. is death, Soya and a cough, 324a and all his pleasures toys, 3003 and all its smart, 601 a and be loved by me, 644a and be wise, 1253 and desire and hate, 8903 and fame to nothingness, 5813 and fear hardly together, 1773 and good company, 3983 and nave not 1., 52a-b and I had wit to win, 8273 and laughter, 7483 and man's unconquerable mind,

chatter 1. and hate, 7i5b cherish and obey, 6ib children's gratitude woman's

1.,

8843
clearness of etern3l L, io7gb close hand out of 1., 8053

for 1. lead apes in hell, 2iga for 1. sweet 1., 7023 for ladies' 1. unfit, 3723 for Love's sake, io66b for sake of being loved, 5663

come unto my
comes in at

for wh3t they sre, g26b forbearance 1. charity, 465b


force,

1.,

2oib

8g7a

eye, 881 a

comforteth like sunshine, 2203 common as light is L, 5693 conquer 1. that run away, 3273 conquers all things, 1173 contend no more 1., 6633 converted from thing it wss, 2923 could you and I conspire, 6313 country support Constitution,

forever wilt thou L, 5833 forget 1. to friends and brethren, 363 forgive us, 58 ib forspent with 1.

and

shame,

9183 foundation is 1., io8sb fragments driven by L, 9653 freedom in my 1., 358b freely serve because we freely
1.,

found thing to

1.,

and and and and and and and and and

scandal, 424b

courage 1. joy, 40 ib course of true 1., 228b covereth all sins, 243 crime to 1. too well, 4063
friendship, 58ob curiosity freckles doubt, 10293 dare 1. that and say so too,

ndliness hardiness

1.,

1740-

175* friends of

shame, yg6b
space for delight, 7733
still

crown

is 1.

and

today not of L, 33 friendship charity, 2693 friendship 1. and liberty, 527b


eyelids dripped fruit of Spirit is L, 53b fruits of 1. gone, 56sa
1.,

to L,

4$ga

from

67b

thanks, 466b

thought and joy, 5iib toil in years to be, 8773

35*
dark red 1. knot, g6ib dark secret 1., 4893 deep as first L, 648b desire more 1. and knowledge,
247*
die for 1., a6gb die to what we
1.,

full of

showers, siob
prize,
1.,

war same thing, ig6b you must 1. him, 5113

fullness even of L,

game beyond
gather rose of

anger of lovers renews 1., io8a anterior to life, 7373 appear in hominized form, 9653 art accomplice of 1., 846b as angels may, 6i8a as long as you can 1., 6563 as we soon might 1. them, 8ia ashamed of having been in 1., 355* at first sight, 87 ib
at the lips, gayb babe that milks me, 2&2b bade me welcome, 3243 ballad in print, 29$b base men being in L, 27 sb be but sworn my 1., 2230 beareth all things, 52b

63b 865a sooa


7453

gift of fsiry tsle,

8ssa
1.

gilds the scene, 4813

died before god of

was born,

3 o6b dinner of herbs where 1. is, 24b distills desire, 84b do justly and 1. mercy, 35b do not 1. the Sabbath, io34b do not trifle with L, 6573 doesn't 1. 3 wall, 9263 dooms of 1., 103 ib draw as 1. with thread, 3123 drew them with bands of 1.,

gin give a little 1. to child, 6g8b give all to 1., 6033 give 1. not thoughts, 975b give me more 1. or more disdain, 3273 go 1. without the help, 4gob

1.

be bonnie, io88b

go

35 b

beautiful time of young 1., 4983 begets love, io66a believeth all things, 52b better is thy 1. than wine, 2gb

dropped like 3 flower, ii4b dull sublunary lovers' L, 3063 earth's place for L, 926b ecstasy of 1., a6ob end of 1. or season, 9263
endureth
3ll things,

573 I dare say, 7s6b gods 1. the obscure, 623 goes toward love, 2243 golden time of first 1., 4983 good man's L, 2503
1.

God God God

my

L, 664b gives us 1., 6463


is 1.,

52b

between predilection and 7833 beyond the world, 3813 bid me take 1. easy, 8793 bout with 1., 703 boy's L, 2793

L,

envieth not, 52b episode in man's life, 502b eyes silent tongues of 1., 1943 faith nor 1. nor 13W, 5693
faithful in 1., 5193 fsll in 1. with Athens, 903
fsll

great 1. goes here, 1043 great 1. grows there, 2633 great language we 1., ioi4b greater 1. hath no man, 493 greater 1. the more false,
greatest
is 1.,

52b

grow from grass I 1., 7013 grown old in 1., 4gob


grows bitter with treason, 7743 gushed from my heart, 525^* had been ill to win, 10893
hail

bresstplste of faith and 1., 553 bridge is 1., 1041 a brief as woman's L, 2633 bright particular star, 26gb brings bewitching grace, 84b

out with those we 1., 6483 falling out renewing is of L,


1083

wedded
in

1.,

3463

hslf
1.,

false

maids in

268b

1. with death, s82b hardly worth thinking of, 88ob

1461

Love
Love, harmony is pure 1., 2iia hate one and 1. other, 41 a hate traitors treason 1., 370 b

INDEX
Love, in our will to
1.

or not,

Love, like everybody not in L,

346b
in spite of darkness, gosb in summer's wonderland, 96 ib in the frost, io7oa inestimable L, 6ob
infinite
1.,

9070
like measles, 6853, &55b like ours never die, 87 ib liken 1. to summer and winter

hath so long possessed me, 1591 hatred as well as 1., 4360 he bore to learning, 449 b he was all for 1., 4755 he will then 1. me, 487a
he's

*75 b
little

774a
1.,

innocence of
is

my
is

1.
1.

hearts in

forevermore, iog8a use own tongues,

irresistible desire,
is

2523 9303

little

live live

245b heaven her till

L,

5i8b
io86a

is
is

I die,

herself not there, ios6b hid in heart of L, 88oa Highlands forever I L,

is is

a boy, 353a a mood to man, 8255 a sickness full of woes, agreement, 211 a all there is, 7393
blind, i68b, 2333

1. come to me, 944b words of 1., 7190 and 1. in God's light, i7a with me and be my 1.,

ana

494!)

is
is

dead, 2O3b
flowerlike,

him and let him know, 8oga him because my child, 861 a him most for enemies, yaSa him who in 1. of nature, 574a
banner over me was 1., aga history of woman's life, 5020 hold your tongue and let me 1.,
his

is

enough, 7533 527b


of law, 5ib heaven, 5i8b
intercourse
slaves,

is fulfilling
is

is

and
is

between 44&b

tyrants

and be thy 1 ig8b lodged in woman's breast, 3oob long 1. doth so, 224b long life better than figs, 287a look at enemies with !., 3752 look at was to 1., 64^3. look of 1. alarms, 488 b looked as she did 1., 581 a looks not with eyes, 228b
live

2i2a, 3o6a with thee

lose
lost

power
1.

to

1.,

kind, 52b
alone, 646a like measles, 6853, 855b most beautiful among gods,

lose thy
1.

lose all,

675b 4o5b

3052

is left
is is

hope faith and L, 49 7 a hope nor 1. nor friend, 8243 hopeth all things, 520 hot and cold fareth L, 1755 how do I 1. thee, 61 8b

lost to

and loathing, 1. and truth,


1.

how how how how

left the ancient 1., 486b should I true 1. know, 26sa they could L, noib vast a memory has L., 4o2b human 1. seen at its height,

humanity i 1. you, lo^ob hunt 1. down together,

am

774b

sick of

1.,

2ga
1.,

and

my
1.

true L, iogga

both
1.

and do not
I
1.,

703

67b is most nearly itself, ioo6a is not all, io24a is not love which alters, 2943 is only meaning, 1041 a is strong as death, 303 is the whole, losib is then our duty, 40 ib it and who shall dare, 686a it would conceal, 527b itself have rest, 5590 itself slumber on, born with 1. jealousy joy and 1. triumphing, 344b nor nor light, 7i5a 1. joy
joy of
1.

lover, 6o6b lovers who


lovers'

do not write, 8o2a


renewal
1.

quarrels
all

of

1.,

io8a
loving
lyric
1.

that

me,

6^b

half angel, 6673

makes 1. at all seasons, uo2a makes world go round, 7440,


7683,

uosb
1.

makes young, 351 a

man

in

endures more, 8o6a

man's

mankind except American, 432b 1. apart from life, 5603 many waters cannot quench 1.,
1.

3oa marriage from which

gone,

hate and
1.
1.

ii5a

too short, lytja


to
1.,

a lass, 4763 a lassie, goga

jumps from admiration


533*
life,

broad margin to
6i8b

68sa
1873

1.

everything old, 45ob loathe that I did 1.,


to lose,

keep corner in thing II., 274b kelson of creation 1., 7ooa


things they do not 1., 2343 your joys with L, 225b kindled by virtue, i6ib kindness shall win my 1., 2igb King without woman I L, 10343 know the 1. betwixt us, 3583
kill

marriage without 1., 42 ib martyrs honor slain, 7o8b May never month of 1., 2iob may perfectly 1. thee, 6ob me in December, 7g6a

seemed

kill

me

little

love

me

long,

3203,

taught thee to L, 3o7a I told my 1., 488a idea of two sexes, lossa if ever thou shalt 1., 252a if I 1, you what business of
yours, 477b
if if
1. were what rose is, 774b music food of L, 25 la no 1. is what feel I so, i64b she 1, me this believe, 3i8b

knoweth no

laws, i8sa
bitter,

known

1.

how
1.,

774a

knows nothing of order, 1453


labor of
last

54b

if if
if
if

she will not 1., 3503 thou must 1. me. 6i8a


i

if

world 9 8b
in
1.

and

1.

were young,
our L, g8gb
boy,

laggard in 1., 5igb not least in L, 255a law to itself, i48a lay aside long-cherished 1., uga learn to bear beams of L, 487 a
least

if

You wish

for

lease of my true 1., 2gsb that let men know, 2 sob

I'm

with janitor's

leave
lest

me O
1. 1.

1. him, 2380 men died but not for L, 2503 men hope and L, 477a Mercy Pity Peace and L., 4873 met you not with my true 1., i 9 8b mie 1. ys dedde, 48sa mighty pain to 1., 357 b ministers of 1., 5260 mischievous devil, 756b mistress to the man I 1., 405 b

io84b me not for grace, io86a me sure to die, 5433 medicines to make me

L.,

2O3b

moderately, 224b

in a golden bowl, 4S6b in a hut, 58 ib

leaving thy
1.

let let

in idleness, 22gb in it was 1. and desire, 643 in 1. illusion reaches zenith, 8o6a
in in in
1.

me

behind, 7373 prove variable, 224a who never loved, 1503


1.

river

and woodland,

L two
1.

things different, 8o6a solitudes touch, g$8b

ii7a thy 1. be younger, 2523 let us be true, 7i4b let us live and L, ii4b, sooa let us surrender to L, ii7a
let
let
life

money rage and 1., 10573 money the sinew of 1., io4b moody food of L, 288a more cruel than lust, 77sb more 1. less we flatter, 3613 more libertines than 1., 4363 more than 1., 644a more true than 1. to me, 10853
most important business, 5513 music food of 1., 251 a, 288a music thing I 1. most, 37b must have wings, gooa my home of 1., 293b

with American names, io4ib in 1. with loving, i46b in law and 1. same, 68oa in bosom like a bee, 2O4b ray in others they 1. 1., 356b

warm

1.

in, ijSsb

eternal 1. immortal, light dies when 1. done,

7853

826b

light 1. life, 475a like a dizziness, 5o8a like death levels, 601 a

my hope my hap my my hope my 1.,

].,

1462

Love,

my

1.

and

did meet,

Love obedience troops of


2863
of a brute,

friends,

Love, pray that

1,

may

never

8 79 a

my 1. he purloined away, 7803 my 1. is come to me, yggb my I. is dead, 4823 my 1. like red red rose, 4943 my 1. like the melody, 494a my 1. of a birth as rare, 3603 my whole course of 1., 2725
mysterious by this needs spirit and 935 a
ne'er
1.,

come, 84b prophet of soul, 6023


prosperity's very

of of of of
of of of of of of of of

besuty, 713
British people, 4533 fame vanity, 8673
flattery,

bond of

1.,

prove so hard master, 8oob


purlieu of god of 1., jo6b purple light of L., 441 b pussy my 1., 6733 putting 1. aw3y, 737!) quaint figure men 1., 9533 quantity of 1., 2663 quarrels in concord end, 34yb quench my 1. I wonder, 767b quick-eyed 1., 3243 radiant with splendor, 1573 rather than 1. than money than fame, 6843 regain 1. once possessed, 3496 regent of 1. rhymes, 22 ib renewed by absence, 4283 repine resson chafe, 6043 resembleth April d3y, 22ob respect or nstursl 1., 8443 rhymes so rare to 1., 8043 right true end of L, 3073 rock know 1. better, loiob rose yet leave it on stem, 74 ib rose of our 1., io8oa ruined 1. when built anew, 2943 rules the court, 5i8b
rules the gods, 82b sadder not to be able to 1., 8703 sang of 1. not of fame, 7263 satisfied, ioo$b saved by 1., 10245 se3ls of 1., 27 ib see how Christians 1. one another,

3ggb

glory the most 3rdent, 3gsb

God, 53b

3053
love,

spirit
1.,

God in Christ, 513 home love of country,


justice
liberty,
life

6703

ebb

to

humble

simply fear, 3553

2753

learning, 624b

neighbor as thyself, gb neighbor well, 78gb neighbor yet pull not down hedge, 3243 never any that could escape 1.,

6363

increased with years,

468b
of love, 644b of money as possession, 9773 of money the root of evil, 55b of old for old, 855b of pleasure, 4o6b
of of of of of of of of
prsise,

H7b
never change

when
I 1.,

1.

has found

26ob 1., 6573 never faileth, 52b


never 1. stranger, 1021 a never 1. unless you can, 3003 never see what you 1,, 9093 never seek to tell thy 1., 4883 never seeketh own, i7ob never sick old dead, ig8b never taint my 1., 2763 never told her 1., 2523 no concern with art, 754b no disguise conceal 1., 3554 no go my honey 1., 10623

home, i27b never doubt never doubt

sg8b

slaughter, 9883
spiders, io46b

swsy, 4o6b the turtle, 5583 the virtuous, 713

virtue, 4363 young for young, 855b off with old 1., 7530, 7543 offender detest offense, 3723 office and affairs of 1., 245b

no 1. but vanity, ssib no 1. lost, ig6b, soaa no 1. no property, io57b no more dear 1., 6493 no sesson knows, 3053 noght old as whan newe, i68b none but 1. find me out, ig8b none knew thee but to L, 565^ nor 1. thy life nor hate, 3483 nor says nor thinks, 757b not a gsping pig, 2343 not Death but L., 6i8a not enough religion to make us
L, 389*

on with new 1., 753^ 7543 one another, 493, 510 one jot of former 1. retain, 21 ib one maiden only, 653b only 1. sprung from only hate,
223b only survival, 1041 a

i43b

open rebuke better than


1.,

secret

26b
hopeless
1.

our our our our out out

1.,

gg8b
sosb

decay, occupations, 6713


principle, s8gb of 1. cheat others, go8a

hath

no

seeketh not self to please, 488b seeketh self to please, 4893 seem worthy of your 1., 5113 seems shame to their 1. pure,

io28b
seized
this

man

for fair form,


1.

i6oa
separate us from
servant in
1.

of

1.

with your

nativity,

of Christ,

2503
oyster

may be
1.

crossed

in

L,

lord in marriage,

not for L, 2503

not found thing to 1., gsgb not freedom but license, 3413 not love not, 627b not 1. thee dear so much, 558b not m3n the less, 557b
not not not not not not not not

48ib p3in to

i6ga
in vain, 3583
task like that, 55 ib shackles of old L, 65 3 b shadow of power, 9j6b
sets
1.

pains of 1. sweeter far, 3673 pangs of disprized 1., 2623 pardon to extent we L, 3563 p3ssing the 1. of women, i2b
perfect

shall

know no

she

whom
with
1.,

quarrels,

121 a

1.

h3rd

to catch,

my

1.

to see, 201 a

puffed up, 52b say all it means, gooa to be loved but to 1., i57b to be purchssed, 1453 to eat not for 1., 6o4b to 1. when we L, ig4b wise who buffet against 1.. 82b
I
1.

psths to woman's L, 3133 1. casteth out fesr,

73ob
shoot false L., 10853
sick

57*
perfect
1.

io22b

C3sts

out

prudery,

757 b

nothing

as

much

as fight,

97b
nothing in L, 2863 nothing we 1. overmuch, 88aa now abideth 1., 52b

perhaps right to dissemble L, 4913 pest of 1., 58ob physicians by their 1. grown cosmographers, 3083 pitched his mansion, 8843
pity melts mind to 1., 3133 pity swells tide of 1., 3133 pity's akin to L, 3133

sidelong looks of 1., 4493 sighed for 1. of lady, 7693 silence in 1. betrays woe, 1993 sin who tell us 1. die, 532 b sit down says L., 3243 sleep on my 1., 3213 smile of 1., 4903
so desr I
so long 3S so many I
1.

him, 347b

we
1.

1.

we

serve, 8253

were not yet born,

now 1. is over, now warm in 1., now who never

loved

before,

pl3net of I. on high, 652b Platonic 1., 1953 pleasure and 1. are pinions,

10523 so sweet

1.

seemed, 801 a
1.

someone

to

and

I.

you,

now with
i67b

39a

477b
1.

something
233

tells

me
he

but not

1.,

now

in colde grave,

O human 1., 6413 O 1. they die, 648b O ye that 1. mankind,


o' life's

466b

young day, 5893

pleasure drives 1. 3wsy, 883b ple3sure of 1. in loving, 355b poet should have lost L, io42b poets' food 1. and fame, 56gb possess heart fall in 1., go7b possible to 1. such a man, 4163

something sorrow of

to
1.

1.

lends, 6463

dureth

overlong,

sought is good, 252b speak low if you speak

1.,

2450

1463

Love
Love, speak very wisely about 1., io52b spirit all compact of fire, 2igb spirit of 1,, 55b spirit of 1. how quick and fresh,
25 la sports of 1., 302b state of perceptual

INDEX
Love, thy honesty and 1., thy 1. to me was wonderful, i2b thy neighbor, gb thy sweet 1. remembered, 2923 thyself last, sgga till beauty truth 1. one, 80 ib till I prince of 1. beheld, 4863 time to 1., 27b time weskens 1., 38 ib to be wise and 1. 268b to be worst of company, g88b
to begin journey

Love,

anesthesia,

g6oa stony limits

cannot

hold
1783
of

I.,

when 1. is done, 826b when 1. is in excess, 843 when 1. pules 3nd whines, 6o6a when L. spesks, 2223 when 1. was loveliest, 7583 when my 1. swesrs, 2g4b when silence spesks for 1., 757 b when we love not, ig4b where I 3nd my 1. wont to ?ae 8

'

22$b such I believe


swears she sweet sweet sweet sweet sweet sweet
is

my

1.,

on Sundays,

suffereth long, 52b

390
truth.

made
1.,

are words of
as
1.,

48$b

to believe in 1., 8573 to faults always blind, 4883 to h3tred turned, sg23 to have known 1. how bitter,

io88b where is 1. besuty truth, 56gb where 1. and need one, g28b where 1. is grest, 2633 where 1. of man 1. of art, 88b where I. rules no will to power,

for a day, 774a is true 1., 6^b


love,

774*
to to
1.

and

7023
3053

1.

to cherish, 61 b her a liberal education.

lovers 1. spring, sweetest I. I do not go,

395 b
to live is like to 1., 7s6b to lose myself, 535b to lose myself in a mystery,

where power predominates 1. Iscking, 936b where we 1. is home, 6$$b which grsybesrds call divine, 2i6b
white rose bresthes of L, 8o6b

take 1. away no art, 846b take 1. together to sky, takes life to 1. life, 8g8a

7gob

32gb
to

tale without 1., 8o2b teach monarch to be wise, that can be reckoned, 2873 that conies too late, 2703 that endures for breath, 773.1 that 1. is all is all we know of 1., 73ga that moves sun and other stars, i6sa that my I. were in my arms,

matrimony
533 a

in a
1.

moment,
is little 1.,

whom do we 1., 10663 whom the gods 1., 1023 why 3m I crying 3fter L,
why why
is all 1.

to say

how much

1633
to see her wss to 1. her, 4943 to wom3n life or desth, too much 1. of living, 7753

9823 speak, 738a L. needs be blind, 228b wife Belle Aurore, 667b

will creep in service, 1843 will find out wsy, io86b

that that that that that

io84a never seen twice, s8gb never told can be, 4883 should help to live, 77sb
so desires,

touch of 1. and pride, 8443 trade thou hast learned, 1423 tragedy of 1. indifference, 9323 treason but hate traitor, 1123 true 1. a durable fire, ig8b true 1. is like ghosts, 3553 true 1. kept under, 767^
true
1.

wisdom wisdom
with
all

live sccordingly, 682b to 1. to live, 8173

7gob
seraphs
coveted,

sits

him down,

nooa

winged

6443
that word is 1., 833 the brotherhood, s6b the good pursue the worst, 1293 the human form divine, 4873 the look of landscapes, ggob the Lord with all thine heart,

thou thy 1., 6gga truth is truth 1. is 1., g44b truth psrdon error, 41 6b try thinking of 1., io6ib tunes shepherd's reed, 5i8b turns to thoughts of 1., 6473 unconditional 1., io8sb unconquerable wsster, 823
trust

thy faults I 1. thee, 4563 with delight discourses, 1593 with stresming hsir, 10383 with you 1. to live, 1223 without dissimulation, 513 without his wings, 5543 without marriage, 42 ib without power destroyed, 10241 without the woman I 1., 10343 woman more barbarous in 1..

8053

women L
word
1.

lovers,

3565
of courtesan,

in

mouth
1.

loa the only priest, 74ga the wild swan, 9953 thee better after death, 6i8b thee Doctor Fell, 386b thee to the depth, 6i8b them that love me, 23b there are those who 1. it, 546b they do not 1. that do not show,

unfamiliar

unknown woman

Name, 10073
I
1.,

6o4b words of

then spoken, 5425

8o7b

work
world

is

1. 1.

msde

visible,

9763

unrelenting foe to 1., 4203 unreturned has rainbow, 857b unsatisfied, ioo3b

in

worms
2503

e3ten

with night, 3253 but not for 1.,

unsought is better, 2525 up groweth with you re age,


165!)

wroth with one we 1., 524a wrought new alchemy, 3063 ye do me wrong, io84b
years grow cold to 1,, yes I'm in 1., 4393 yields to business, 1293

use

him

as

though

1.

him,

1175

22ob
I., 332b they happy they 1. a train, 2653 thing to 1., 9183 things we 1. for what are, 92 6b this bud of 1., 2243 those I guard I do not 1., 88 ib those who 3lwsys loved 1.

10363
are

and

more, 3983
those those those

who 1. want wisdom, 568b who love you, 4i?b who wrong him, i42b thou wast all to me 1., 6423

though pressed with ill, 4593 thought 1. never change, 801 a through 1. come together into one, 8sb through our I. is my lord slain,
175

vaunteth not, 52b vegetable 1. grow, ^gb vegetable 1. not suit me, 7673 very ecstssy of 1., 26ob very few to 1., siob Virtue she slone is free, 337 b wsft her 1. to Csrthage, 2353 we have seen thee O 1., 7733 weathered storms of life, Sssb well of 1., 586b went my 1. riding, 10303 what 3 plague is 1., io8tjb wh3t I 1. near at hand, io65b what is 1. 'tis not hereafter,

25ib

what what

is life
1.

I
1.

throw away
thy
first 1.,

1.

on conceited,

57 b

when when when when

without 1., 4983 bore to thee, giob


thee not, 2743

I I
1.
1.

wss in 1. with you, 852b and life fsir, 8413


begins to sicken, 2563

you as New En glanders L pie, 945 b you do not 1. me at all, 7740 you for speed of observ3tion, 93 lb you in December, 7963 you 1. me so much, gS^b you 1. the dsylight, 843 you ten yesrs before the Flood, 359 b your enemies, 4ob your eyes tb.3t can see, 9953 your life poor 38 it is, 6843 youth g3ve 1. and roses, 5433 Zeus's bed of 1., 853 Loved, 3 1. 3 long, 9693 alss I 1. you best, 3833 al3S th3t 311 we 1. of him, 57 ib Alcuin my nsme Ie3rning I 1.,

1464

Loved and cursed and floundered,


8ooa

Loved, so many I dead, 10523


so

1,

were not yet


so

and lost, 6403, 6503 and thought himself beloved,


882b
as 1. we are indispensable, 8253 at first sight, 2izb
at

much

cost
1.

me

Lovely, gives a 1. light, 10233 go 1. rose, 332b, g62b

much,

s8b

grow
he

1.

growing

old,

943b
a
1.

Solomon some we

1.

strange women, 133 loveliest, 6303

is 3! together

L, 2gb
face,

honest labor

bears

home

sorrows of changing face, 87gb the man and honor memory,

30ib
in her bones, is the rose, 5133 ladies dead and 1. knights, 293 b

revered abroad, 4g2b

3043

betray heart that i. her, better 1. ye canna be, better to be 1. than feared, better to have 1. lost,

sogb 5023
1773

them

in other days, gi4b these I have 1,, gg$b those who 3lwsys 1. love more,

6503

burning Sappho
conviction

1.,

g6ob

5993 country as no other man, 7183 did till we 1., 3043 each other and were ignorant,
1.,

we

are

398a them hast not 1., 2483 be 1. be lovable, i28b to have thought, to have 1.
to

leewardings, 697 b flower is free, 5i7b little 1. moony night, 4903 look last on things 1., gi4b
little

loveliness

7iib
too late I 1. you, 1473 too much hope of thee 1. boy, 302 b twice or thrice had I 1. thee,

he made more L, 5723 Mary Morison, 4g$b memory of 1. thing, 9823


monster, 10573
1.

884b
flowers that fade, 801 a God so 1. world, 483

more more

and more temperate,


than
Pandors,
3463

1.

him because he was he, igoa him for himself alone, 4813 him like a brother, 4g5b him so followed him, 66ab him that 1. rose, 8563 him too much not to hate him,

happy human

face, 5513

35 b
use

him

as

though you

1.

him,

Nature swears 1. dears, 4g$b nothing but truth is 1., g77b order a 1. thing, gi7b

we never 1. sae kindly, 4943 when all was young, 6913 wish I 1. human race, 86ob

poem

1.

as a tree, 9923

how
I
I

I I
I

I
if

1. how honored once, 4063 have 1. beauty, 5863 have 1. thee Ocean, 557b 1. Ophelia, 2663 that she did pity, 2733 1. not honor more, 35b saw and 1., 4663

3783

woman
you

with more than love, 6443 once 1. hateful, you once long ago, 6gb
so
I

91 ob

Richard sweet 1. rose, 2s8b so 1. fair, 275b some once 1. head, 6sgb Thais sits beside thee, 37 ib two 1. berries on one stem, 2303
virtue

drew

tides

of

men.

how

L,
1.

346a
are
1.,

ioo8b

you Wednesday, 6183 your moments of glad


Love-darting eyes, 337b

whatsoever when her


grace,

things

54b

laughter
1.,

shows,

3003
wise and the

10243

ever
I

man

1.

by wife, 35 ib
that
1.

if

had a friend

her,

2733
incarnation of land he 1., gg4b Jonathan 1. him as his own soul, i2a

Love-gift of fairy tale, 7453 Love-in-idleness, 22gb Lovelier flower on earth, 5iob

me is to be 1. still, 4593 woman stoops to folly, 448b,


with

1002b

woods
Lover

Ring Cophetua

1.

beggarmaid,

know we
life

1.

in vain,

knowing I 1. my books, 2963 London this moment, 9753 no sorrow to die, 943b life long since and lost, 59yb love and be 1. by me, 6443
love

than thine, gi4b things mercy shown, 5583 Loveliest and best, 6303 despsiring songs 1., 6573 of lovely things, 574b of trees, 852b village of the plain, 4493 when love was 1., 7583
1.

no

hills

woman
I its

born, 882b

Loveliness exists, 10823

now who never


little,
1.

1.,

3983

mansionry, 2823

me

ever so

774b
lost,

memory of money with

and

6403
3703

af fiction, Sgsb

needs only to be seen, never 1. tree or flower, never time place 1. one, never to hsve 1., 6503 no man ever 1., 2943 no sooner looked but 1., not 1. world nor world me, not that I 1. Caesar less, not wisely but too well, one blotted from psge, out upon it I have 1.,
pale hands I 1., 8713 passing well, 2613 Pharaoh's lean kine
1.,

5433 668b

25ob
2553

Lovely,
all
1.

276b 555b 35ob

5862 3 single 1. action, 6953 things hsve ending, loiob smiable 1. death, 2s6b and pleasant in their lives, isa-b and soothing death, 7023

never knew, 586b 1. increases, 5803 lay down in her L, 5243 let thy 1. fade, 5423 needs not ornament, 4igb portion of the 1., 5723 this Adonis in I., 5513 to believe in 1., 8573 web of 1., 9i?b within, 3053 your 1. and my de3th,

dark and deep, g?7b 23ob and his lass, 2500 and sensualist, 8155 angel 3ppe3r to 1., 3983 beauty familiar to 1., S93b bereaved 1., 643b cannot having been 1., 878b dividing 1. and L, 7733 easier to be 1. than husband, 590 every 1. a warrior, i28b fond L, 3503 give repentance to her L, 448b gold-hatted lover, io36b happy as a L, 5153 high-bouncing 1., 103613 I am 1., 93gb in husband lost, 4343 it wss a 1. and his lass, 25ob Jesus 1. of my soul, 425b love L, 6o6b lunatic the 1. the poet, 23ob magnetic peripatetic 1., 7673
1.

all as frantic,

no

2395 produces motion through being


1.,

9 7b

Rome

more, 2553
1.,

sad not to be 1., 8703 safer to be feared than

apparition sent, 5143 April of her prime, 29 ib as 1. so be various, 10343 as Lapland night, 5153 as woman so be 1., 10343 being scarcely formed, 5623 billboard 1. as a tree, io5ib
corpse,

1. and no adventurer, 8433 of all plagues 1. bears, 3873 of concord, 6oa of men the sea, 7743 rooted stays, 6040 scratch 1. find foe, 10293

sesrching for new 1., 10533 sighed as 1. obeyed as son, 4663 sighing like furnace, 2493 true 1. therefore had good end,
!75 D
truest
1. that ever loved, i75b without indiscretion no 1., 7$2b loves her 1., 56ob

1773

67ob

scenes his fathers 1., 10533 scholar travels 1. hillside, 7Hb see souls we 1., 652b she 1. me for dangers, 2733 she 1. much, 46b

devours all 1. things, ioz$b diminutives, 10653 everything that's 1. is, 88ob fsded but still 1. woman, 10373
flowers are
1.,

woman woman
5 23D

wsiling

for

demon
L,

1.,

527b

Wotton 3 most dear


you
1.

3263

sighed

to

many

1.

one,

5553

gentleman-like man, 2293

of trees,

1465

Lover's
Lover's,

INDEX
1.

act

or Roman's part,

Loves,

all

1.

except
love,

trade

give,

Loving, in love with

1.,

4063 death as
injured

L
1.

pinch, 28ga hell, 3463


leant,

668a all she 1. an inner

Lady Moon

whom
1.,

i46b are you

on

1.

arm

6475

quarrel "with world, gaga run into it as to 1. bed,

s6ob air, io48b so lines 1. as oblique, 3603 but their oldest clothes, caldron of dissolute 1.,

is

mercy, 467b never call it

3053 i46b
L.

for pardon for too

night

made

].,

much

6i8a 55gb
1.

you

288b
shall win slide into
1.
1.

change
hire,

everything

except

488b

41 8a

head, 5iob

ghost, goGb Lovers always talking about themselves, 35 6a

some old

1.

cheerly she 1. me dearly, 58ob color 1. and skin, 3053 cruel mother of sweet 1., i22b demirep that 1., 6653

among

all

her

1.

none
2333

to

com-

doubt being who


fat

1.,

fort, 34b cannot see

faint in light she L,


follies,

woman nobody

6573 652b 1., ggib

pleasure of love is in 1., 35^ rapid merciless, 10763 rest from 1., 10553 shutting away of 1. hearts 10243 so 1. to my mother, 257b
dwells 1. Father, take heed of 1. me, 3065 that old armchair, 686a
surely

4073

find their peace, g8oa fled away into storm, 5823

Frankie and Johnny


free
1.

1.,

iioib

free spenders,

8gsb

wars and faithful 1., 2ooa he that 1. a rosy cheek, 3273 he that 1. sorrow, 3023 heart of woman he L, 907 b
fierce

if any get more than 1., 94&b journeys end in 1. meeting.

him
I
if

better for faults,

448b
your
1..

his fellow

men, 55 ib

youth large lusty L, 7oia Loving-jealous of his liberty, 24b Lovingkindness, how excellent is thy 1., i8b thanks for thy 1., 6oa

asib
lacking matter, 2503 lying two and two, 8g2b make two 1. happy, 407 b never tired of each other, 3563 not of two 1. but two loves,
3<>7a

have
1893

reigned with

Low, abatement and 1. price, 2513 ambition and pride of kings,


4<>7b

our

kills

1. remain, 663b thing he 1., 84ob

ambition and

thirst

of

man 1. wh3t he is good at, 3803 Mary 1. the lamb, $6$b me best that calls me Tom,

praise F

'

of beauty without extravagance,

8gb
of virtue, gsGb of wisdom without unmanliness,

me let him follow me, i62b mourn ye Graces and L., 1143 muse 1. the race of bards, 66a
no man 1. life like old, 833 no one who 1. unhappy, 857b
not his wronger, 2743 of two 1. the nests, 3073 on to the close, 54sa seat of pleasures and L,

30ib

8143 cast one's eyes so 1., 2793 death makes equal high and
1.,

Brer Fox he lay

1.,

1823
delicious

word death, 70 ib

8gb

old 1. soundest, gi4b other 1. estranged or dead, 884b perjuries of 1., i28a

Romans
255*

countrymen

and

descending sun, iogoa dost thou lie so L, 2553 exalted them of 1. degree, 4Kb few of us fall 1., 8 5 7b foreheads villainous 1., 2975
gods' custom to bring
1.

1..

great-

3713

ness,
I'll

873
1.

star-crossed 1., 2233 such as I all true L, 2523

sound

1.

to revel,

such end true 1. have, 486a swear more performance, a68b sweet 1. love the spring, 2506 tell me if 1. are losers, g48b thy 1. were all untrue, 3723 to bed, 23ia
true

I., 2743 suspects yet time turns 1. to corpses, 7735 to hear himself talk, 224b to live in the sun, 2483 to sit and hear me sing, 4863

64ib soundly

high and
last

rich
1.

and poor, 5osb

tak' the

road, logga.

two

1.

have, 2g4b
1.

unknown woman who


what he
1.

me,

L run

low breathe and blow, 6483 man adding one to one, ft>4b no high no L, 4o8b
not that

great Englishman 1., 65 ib lay him L, 7iga lean and 1. ability, 2533

into strange capers,

2483
love do not write, woes of hopeless 1., 3703 women love I., 35<3b
Lovers', at
1.

never like too much,

who

8023

302b

perjuries Jove
1.

laughs, 22gb dull sublunary Litany, 87 ib

love,

3063
io8a

quarrels renewal of love, seasons run, 3053


silver-sweet

tongues, 2243 sonnets turned psalms, 2O4b Love's architecture is his own,

sound

1.

354b but frailty of mind, jg2a evening star 1. harbinger, 3483 except for 1. sake only, 6i8a fires glow longest, 8o4b keen arrow, 2503 my 1. richer than tongue, 276b mysteries in souls grow, 3o6b not Time's fool, 2g4a passives, 354b pleasure drives love, 883b purple with 1. wound, 22gb stricken why, 7383 such ever 1, way, 666a true 1. the gift, 5i8b withstand 1. shock, 9453 young dream, 5423

who 1. a garden, 4583, 5gob who 1. to lie with me, *48a world as his body, 73b Lovesick heart dies, io82b twenty 1. maidens, 766b winds were 1., 2870 Lovesickness, poem begins as 1., g2gb Lovesome, garden 1. thing, 7343 wee thing, 4953 Lovest, paint thing thou 1., 833b what thou 1. well, g8ga Loveth cheerful giver, 536 dear God who 1. us, 5263 he that 1. her 1. life, 37b he that 1. not knoweth not God, 57a him whom my soul 1., 2gb prayeth best who 1. best, 5263 well both man bird beast, 5263 whom the Lord 1. he chasteneth, 563 Loving, children begin 1. parents, 8gga distance between human beings, gs8b for 1. and for saying so, 3053 friend worth L, 8092 give a 1. heart to thee, 3igb

I deem them L, 733b speak 1., 245b sweet and 1., 6483 swing 1. sweet chariot, iioia

swinging 1. with sullen 335b ten 1. words, 4osa too 1. for envy, 357b too 1. they build, 3ggb
voice

roar,

was gentle and


is
1.

1.,

28ob

what

raise
1.,

and
6503

support,

34ib

when my
Low- backed

light
car,

yellow half-moon large

1.,

6633

5893

Lowells talk to Cabots, 8583 Lower, 3 little 1. than angels, 173 brutalizing 1. class, 7i6b

down can
middle

fall

no

1.,

352b

classes,

767a

night beginning to 1., 6235 orders set good ex3mple, 84oa part of mankind, 3&5b prevent 1. from getting more,

g8a
see front o' battle
1.,

4g6a

take you a buttonhole 1., 222b while there is a 1. class, 83 ib Lowered, sash 1. when night, g28a Lowest and most dejected thing,

27ga
type hear Tao, 743

1466

INDEX
Lowest, vice-prisidincy
I.

Luxury
risk
it,

office,

Luck,

women

try

1.

men
to

8gaa

Lowing herd wind slowly, 4403 Lowland, between 1. and highland, 7763 Lowlands low, io8ga

Luscious woodbine, 22gb Lust a species of madness, 3743

Luckiest

knows when
silver

go home,

779*

ye Highlands and L., io88b Lowliness, man of 1. and affability,

i7ga
air of

young ambition's ladder, 254*


Dials, Lowly and riding upon an ass, gtia better 1. deed done, 8133 better to be 1. born, 2g8a cattle shed, 684b God made high or 1., 68 4!)

Seven

767 b

Lucknow, L., 6263 Lucky, book 1. or unlucky, 78 ib just as 1. to die, 7ooa not call man happy but L, 6ga sixpence in shoe, uoab to be born, 7003 to die and I know it, 7003 to have lived in Paris, io45b Lucre, filthy 1., 553 Lucrece swears he did her wrong,
22ob
blushed and put book ijsb Lucy, if L. should be dead, 5iob Locket lost her pocket, 10973
Lucretia
aside,

domes of

and rage, 88fia avarice 1. and rum, 86ob for blood and plunder,
for power, 97 ib gold and the 1., 10355 guile and 1. of gain, 4203

g22b

in action, 2943 in youth L, 733 into ashes all my

1., $6oa is perjured murderous, 2943 looketh to 1. after her, 403 love more cruel than L, 77jb melted him in own grease, i68a

meek and
Lowness, 857*

1.

in heart, 423.
tear,

singer dries one

887a
loftiness,

turn

1.

into

narrowing 1. of gold, 6513 not after her beauty, a$b of goat bounty of God, 487b
of office, 6gob power of fright and
sensual
1.
1.,

when

L.

ceased

to

be,

5iob

io$4b

Low-vaulted past, 6$$b Loyal and neutral in a moment, 284a


discharging 1. service, nature noble mind, to a trust, 8353 club rather than to
io46a
Loyalty,
Loyalties, impossible L, 7igb confidence zeal 1.,

Lugged, melancholy as 1. bear, 237b Lui, parce que c'e"tait 1., igoa Lui-mfime, tel qu'en L. f'^terniti le change, 797a Luke beloved physician, 54b

tempest, 7o8a

so 1. will sate itself, 25gb to rage to 1. to write to, 3o6b Luster, accomplishments give I.,

4i5b
ne'er

planet,

Matthew Mark
357*

L. and John,
art
1.,

could any 1. see, shine with such a L, 45ga

4813

Lukewarm, because them


57b
Lull distant folds, 4403 Lullaby, dreamy L, 7683

thy face, 2153 logoa to petrified opinion, 7&4b the to, g6ga keys Lps

map of 1. in no harm meant,

Lulled

by

slamming

of

iron,

shone with preeminent 1., 1403 strange 1. surrounds king, igia Lustily, swans sing more 1., g$b Lusts, fleshly 1., 56b to fulfill L, 5ib Lusty horn, 25ob

io64b
in these flowers, 22gb into half-sleep, io6sb

month of May, 1753

Lubber

fiend, 335a

my
of world,

age

1.

winter, 2483

Lubricates,

dinner

1.

business,

sails

filled

with

I.

wind, so$b

Lucan, servare 7i6a Lucasta, then crave, ssga

modum
my
L.

says

L.,
I

Lumber, dead become 382 b

1.

might

loads of learned 1., 4043 Lumbering, creak of 1. cart, 88ob

Lucent, softly 1. as moon, 6g4b Lucid, full of 1. intervals, jg6a


interval, $6ga and intervals

Luminous, beating vain, 7i7a fair 1. cloud, 5273

1.

wings

in

stealth of nature, 277a yet I am strong and L, youth large 1. loving, 7013 Lute, heartstrings L, 64 ib lascivious pleasing of a 1.,

s47b

2i6b
musical as 2223 musical as

bright Apollo's L,
is

happy

pauses,

moments, 588b
Lucidity of thought, 7i6b sad 1. of soul, 7iia
Lucifer,

shade, iog2a Lump in throat, gagb leaveneth the whole 1., 523 of same I. make one vessel, 513 strange L of stone, gg2b whole thing, 75ga

he

falls

like

L.,

2g8b

Prince L. uprose, 7gob proud seat of L., g48a son of the morning, gib spirits that fell with L., 2133 Luck, as good 1. would have it, 267a counted and cursed his 1., 8543 fattenin' hogs ain't in 1., 8i4a for good 1. cast old shoe, i8$b

Lunar, held in 1. synthesis, looib Lunatic asylum in Jerusalem, 8 5 ib


fringe,

Apollo's L, 3373 awake, i86b Orpheus with his 1., 2983 rift within 1., 6533 Lutes, dance to 1., 841 a Luve, my 1. is like the melody, 494* my 1. is like a red red rose,

my

1.

848b

good 1. gayest, 5&8b good 1. giddy maid, s88b good 1. in odd numbers, 267a-b had 1. met monster, 10573 ill 1. seldom alone, 1946 important in winning elections,
in

lean-witted fool, 2273 optimism in 1. asylum, 8513 padded 1. asylums, $753. the lover the poet, 2 gob Lunatics, crowd treat great as 1., 1313 Lunch, breakfast dinner 1. tea,

go2a Luncheon,
759 a Lungs, if
1.

Michelangelo

for

1.,

odd numbers,

infatuated with I've got the L. with me, 76gb


light in ragged
1.,

2D*7b, 5&ga efficient, 6o8b

receive our air, 457b my 1. began to crow, 248b Lure fantasy to utmost, 9153 it back to cancel, 6$ob

494a Lux, fiat 1., 53 Luxe calme et volupte 7o7a Luxuries, give us 1. of life, 6343 hindrances, 68ab two 1. in my walks, 5&6a unnecessary 1. of life, 8943 Luxurious lobster-nights, 4o5b society as 1. as can be, 43?b soft 1. flow, 597b Luxury and torment of novelist, 79 8a
1

blesses his stars

and thinks
1.,

it 1.,

393 a elegance

more
Lurid

strong, 8 lib

Madame Bad
nae
not
1.

L.,

8155 5885

this tassel-gentle back, 2243 tricks with memory, 8433

thsn in self-dispraise, $i6b it was 1. to be, 52$b


rather

65sb

Lurk

run

to

about the house, 4643 holding best cards, 778b meet ill L, 6iob

Lurks, within, 2i6a


politician
1.

gossip's bowl, 22ga foretold that danger 1.

in

morality private costly 1., 7773 more deadly than war, iggb of liberal government, 677b
of one's own opinion, 677b of skepticism, Sosb Persian 1. I hate, iaia

under every

stone,

shallow men believe in 1., 608 b struck streak of bad L, 76gb

gib thought
Luscious,

1.

was always with me, g8$b watching 1, his light-o'-love, 933*

food

in delight, 8iaa as 1. as locusts,


all

was doing good, $86a wealth the parent of L,

94a
1.,

2733 lot of

who

serves

me and

good lord

lives in

so

1.,

7oob

'55*

1467

Lycidas
Lycidas, for L. sorrow not dead,

INDEX
Machiavel, much beholden to M., 2073

Mad,

339*

sunk low
339*

but

mounted high.

Ma chin a,

Lydian measures, 37 ib
notes of Andrew Carnegie, 8313 soft L. airs, 3353 Lyeth between bride and bride-

trick, 3533 deus ex m., io2b Mschinstions hollowness treach-

Nick M. had ne'er

sense that world m., th3t he is m. 'tis true, thst trusts in wolf, 27gs
to live

26ob

m.

undevout
399

be ssved, io8ob astronomer is m.,


to

ery, 2773 Mschine, air

pump

or electrical

groom, g88b-g8ga Lying, African moon


985*

I.

on back,

awake with headache,


days of
let

me have no
1.

my

youth, 881 a
1.,

sgs

god from the m., iob


justice
is

m., 4623 bathing m., 7&8a beauty of great m., ggsb for living in, ggsb for turning wine into 984 b
a m., 8g2b
psrts,

we are m. nationally, i3ob we have all been m., 8723


went m. and bit the man, 448 b
world, 67 ib

world
urine,

mad

Madam Bad Luck, 5886 call me m., 9703


955*

kings, 2363

lovers

two and two,

is there nothing else, 7363 poetry the supreme fiction m.

mighty heart 1. still, 5123 not mind 1. hate inaccuracy. 757 a now on his side now on back, 64b sea careless lying fellow, 95gb smallest amount of 1., 7563 till noon, 428b vainness drunkenness, 25 3 a

military m., gasb

no unnecesssry
not

goob
836b

Madden, made mannikin

to

m.

it,

man you're 3 m., pulse of the ra., 5i4a slavery of the m., 84ob

time m., 888a you're not man you're m., 836b Machine-a-habiter, gg0b

643 rave recite and m., 4103 to crime, 5583 Maddens, all that most m., 6$Qb

"Trees" m. me, loooa Madder music stronger wine, 8goa

Machines

for

making

m.,

gi?b

when

world Lynn, set out from L., 5gsa Lyonnesse, set out for L., 78ab Lyre, a god has given 1. and song, 6sb
bloomin'
idle
to
1.,

asserts contrary is L, 908 a given to 1., 241 a

beings into m., 6873 slaves not masters, 8513 Machinery of night, 108 ib Mackerel, stinks like rotten m.,

human

Maddest merriest day, 6453 Madding, far from m. crowd's strife, 44ob Made a rural pen, 486b and loveth all, 5263
annihilating all that's m., 3603 as he is so was he m., 8oib begotten not m., 6oa
better
self-m.
all

8743

53ib Mackerel-crowded seas, 882b Macrocosm, microcosm and


atoned, 7243

m.

lacking iaia
living
1.,

play I. for ass, 1453 neither honor nor 1.,

than

not

m.,

44ob
thy
1.,

make me

56gb

Mscte nov3 virtute puer, ugb Msd, 3ll poets are m., siob am m. and am not m., 7oa as Bedlam, 67 ib

6 3 3b

minstrel's 1., go6b so long divine, 56ob

tuning 1. and handling harp, 77b within the sky, 64ib Lyres, sound of 1. and flutes, 7813 Lyric love half angel, 667a

name me among 1. bards, uob Lyrical grave or satirical, g8a

minions, 5883

M
M, drew everything begins with M, 744a Mab, Queen M. hath been with
you, 2233

Msrch hsre, 1763 bad and dangerous, 552b birds m. with glee, 7583 cold m. father, g68b dogs and Englishmen, 10433 don't C3ll 3 man m., 43&b everyone m. on one point, 8723 face that drove me m., 797 b father and mither gae m., 494 D fitter sane than m., 666b go m. or unstable, 86b he first makes m., 86a
3s

things m., 6oa confusion m. mssterpiece, 2843 all critics ready m., 554b dsy which the Lord h3th m., 223 did he who m. Lamb, 48gb

by

whom

dost

know who m.

thee,

486b
m.,

fesrfully

3nd wonderfully 233 for esch other, 522b friends born not m., 776b
man, 23 ib

God m. and eaten, 6f>4b God m. him let him p3ss


him a
173
little

for

lower than angels,

heroically m., s6ga

Hieronymo's
I

m.

againe,

2043

am

not m., gob

his pendent bed, 2823 in .wisdom hast thou m. all, 21 b

idolatry, 2683

Mabel, ain't it awful M., 9643 Macaroni, called it m., iogoa MacArthur, victory M. had in mind, 9843 Macassar, incomparable oil M., 5 6oa Macaulay, apostle of Philistines
M., 7143

they behold a cat, 2343 in pursuit, 2g4b Irehnd hurt you, 10603 lads that drive me m., laid to make taker m., makes men m., 2763 man certainly stark m.,
if

incarnate and was m. man, 6oa it is he that hath m. us, 21 a


little

L3mb who m.

thee, 486b

9183 sg4b
igoa

Lord Sod m. them all, 684b man was m. to mourn, 4Q2b marriages m. in heaven, 2033 men and not made them well,
2633

March March

men
more

days, 9473 hsre, 1763 God made m., gi8a

mouths

book in 'breeches, 5233 sure of everything, 541 a

deadly

than

m.

dog's

in a glass, aySa song a coat, 88 ib a motley, 2g4a myself of sterner stuff, 255b

my

tooth, 2i8b

Macbeth does murder sleep, 283b none shall harm M., 285!)
Macdonald, wherever M. sits, 6o 5 b Macduff, lay on M., 2873 Mace, sword the m. the crown. 244b Macedonia, come into M., 503 MacGregor, my name is M., 5213 wherever M. sits, 6o5b MacGregor's, Mr. M. garden, 88yb Machiavel, every country hath its
M.,
shall never vanquished be, shall sleep no more, zS$b

much

learning make m., sob naked summer night, 7003

s%$b

nobly wild not m., 32ob north-northwest, 261 a

as born, 303 b poet's m. as well sea is his and he m. it, 21 a stuff as dresras 3re m. on, 2g?b swe3rs she is m. of truth, 2Q4b

the best of

this,

4g6b

O
old

fool

shall

go

m.,

2?8a
king,

m.

blind

despised

this p3iting well m., 256b to sell snd quickly, g88b

5703
pleasure in being m., $6ga practice drives me m., io84b prose run m., 4iob provided man not m., 4363
pursuit, 5833 sad and m. and bad, 666a sad m. brother's name, 7763 saint run m., 4iab

us with

large

discourse,

264b

what man has m. of man, so8b when or you or I are m., 3ob
without fear, i6b world I never m., 8s4a world of m. is not world of
born, 103 ib

Madeleine

upon b3rroom

floor,

i7b

1468

INDEX
Madeline's fair breast, 5823 Mademoiselle from Armenteers, loiSb from St. Nazaire, ioi8b Madest, creature that thou m., 854b

Main
Maid, neither m. widow nor wife, 2723 not dead but sleepeth, 42 a nut-brown m., 10843 of Athens, 5553
slain

Magic, lash m. creature, 738a little plans no m., 8iob no rhymes no m., 8943 numbers, 3923

m.

sleep,

58ob

Mad-eyed

from stating obvious,

Madison, Miss McFlimsey of M. Square, 7243 Madly, stars shot m. from spheres, saga

of a face, 3273 of a name, 537b painting form of m., 96^ preservation in books, 577b sweet m. brings together, 4973 talking to itself, 10823
tents, 8013 to stir men's blood, Siob with a m. like thee, 5593 Magical power imagination, 5293 Magician, Bergson you are m., 849b rope-dancer physician m., 1393 Magister artis ingenique largitor venter, i33b

by

fair

cruel

m.,

2523

sphere-descended m., 4430 was in garden, iog4b

Madman,
if

twirled fingers m., 67$b either liar or m., 4363


that

way of man with m., 26b, 8743 wedded m. virgin mother, 3343 whom none to praise, 5100 widow or wife, 1763 yonder a m. and wight, 7&4b youth in Babylon loved m..

Madmen,

he like m. lived, ig7b is the m., asob which none but m. know, 3693 worst of m. saint run mad,
a
little

Maiden and
famous

mistress of months.

4i2b Madness, 73 8a

m.

in

spring,

Magisterial

or
is

imperative

type,

go2b

to all time, 1223 fleshed thy m. sword, 2413 I sing of a m., 10843 kissed m. all forlorn, love one m. only, 65 sb

anger a short m., 1233 avarice a piece of m.,

despondency

and

m.,

3743 5123,

great trust, 454b Magistrate, by m. equally useful,

Magistracy

meditation fancy-free, 2293

most

perfect,

772b

465b

grown gray
destroyed by m., 108 ib devil's m. war, Q33a first step towards m., i76b from breakfast to m., 10823 go you may call it m., goob great wits to m. allied, 3683

no name of m., 2g6b

in office, 593b

Magistrates, governed m., 5913

by

grave

neater sweeter m., 87 3b never bold, 272b now the M. returns, n6b of bashful fifteen, 48 ib
passion for maid, 653b phoenix ashes new- create,
presence, 2593 rare and radiant m., 6433 rose-lipped m., 853b simple m. in flower, 6453

Magna
est

est veritas,

7223
praev3let, 36b h3ve no sovertrust,

veritas

ct
will

M3gn3 Carta

harmonious m. flow, 57ob


in brain, 5243 a m., 3283 midsummer m., 2533

eign, ig8b

Magnsnimity and

682b

life is

curb your m., 5863


in politics, 453b in victory m., 9253

moon-struck m., 3483

much m. divinest much of m., 642 b


i3ob
of

sense,

7ssb

no genius without touch of m.,

many
4053

for gain of few, 3893,

of poetry, 1091 a of the Caesars, 6


risen from hell, 7733 sense starkest m., 735b species of m., 3743

marks of God in m., 5443 Magnet, by no endeavor can m., 7673 Magnetic nourishing night, 7003 peripatetic lover, 7673 Magnificence of Hispanic, 4353 pristine m., 5873 Magnificent and awful cause,
4583 blond besst, 8osb but not wsr, 655b from work returned m., 3473 mild and m. eye, 66ab most m. movement of all, 46ab
Magnificently stern array, 5563 unprepared, 99 ib Magnify him, 393 laud and m. thy Name, 6ia my soul doth m. Lord, 45b thy holy N3me, 6ob

tell me pretty m., 8463 with no other thought, 6443 Maiden-fair poetic soul, 8243 Maiden's, what be m. fate, 5183 who be m. mate, 5183 Maidens, 311 her m. watching, 6493

as

many m.
m.
2033

be,

s86b
22gb
fortunate,

call it love-in-idleness,

fair

commonly

strike with no m., i034b sudden m. came upon Orpheus,

M7b
that fine m., 21 ib that way m. lies, 278b though this be m., 26ob

time
'tis

is

your m. i056b
f

m.
let

to defer,

3993
enterprise
set

to

private

3iob what m. has caught you, n6b Madonnas, Rafael of dear M., 66 5 b Madrigal, woeful stuff this m.,

habits, 10273 to live like wretch,

Msgnitude,

liar of first m., 39 ib star of smallest m., 344a-b

Magnus 3b

integro saeculorum nascitur ordo, u6b

hsve not little m. gone, g4sb like moths, 5553 loth, 5833 twenty love-sick m., 766b withering on st3lk, 51 $b young fsir m. quiet eyes, 824b Msid's, se3 m. music, 2293 Msids are May when maids, 25ob dance in a ring, soob false m. in love, 268b in modesty say No, 22ob pretty m. in row, iog$b seven m. with seven mops, 74sb that weave with bones, 2523 three little m., 7683
Maidservant, covet thy neighbor's m., 93 Msil from Tunis probably, 7s8b on time with southbound m.,
rusty m., 268b

inter opes inops, 1223

4030
Madrigals, melodious birds m., 2i2b Mads, music m. me, 228b second m. him, 25 ib Maecenas, how comes it M.,
sing

Magus with leathern hand, ios6b Mahogsny tree, 66ob Mahomet to Moses, 6oob
Maid, Abyssinian m., 5433 as with m. so with mistress,

Maimed, dusty cobweb-covered


he that wants anger hath m. mind, 333b poor and m., 473 Main, arose from out azure m.,
4203
m., 755*>

Sb
be good sweet m., 6913 beggar m. be queen, 6483 chariest m. prodigal, 2583 Dark M. and her Lord,

,_

i2oa

Maenad

of Massachusetts, 7763 Magazines, graves of little m., 9813 Maggie, aged and gray M., 7793 Maggots, breed m. in dead dog,

8sb

a6ob

Maggoty minus, io3ib Magic, argosies of m. casements, 5833

fair m. dwellin', 10883 good luck giddy m., s88b lily m. of Astolat, 6533 m3iden psssion for m., 6ssb m3ny 3 youth snd m3ny am.,

besms

bemocked

sultry

m.,

sails,

6473

335*

my

pretty m., 10953

ch3nce, 2O2b, 3533 flooding in the m., 688b psrt of the m., 3o8b stand to the m. chance,

202b

14.60

Main
Main,
toil

INDEX
and be mixed with
Majority, not leave right to m., 681 a of one, 681 a

Make, unless philosophy m. a


Juliet,

m., 7g6b watery m., zgzb

2253

Maine,

as

M.

so

noia

goes

nation,

remember the M., noib


Mainsails of stone, 91 la Mainstay, workers m. of civilization, 82 1 a Maintain, fuel to m. his fires, 3273 his argument, 2443 it before whole world, 36 ib no ill opinions, 4503 poet's dignity and ease, 4113 the sublime, g88a Maintained, boisterously m. as gained, 3365

one man with courage a m., 53 b one on God's side m., 6593 one with law m., giia questions not decided by m.
6773
respect minority, g34b stirred by motives, 8g4a 'tis m. prevail, 735b

us do what we can, 6o8b us heirs of all eternity, war to live in peace, g8a

up my sum, 2663

221 a

waves

m.

towsrds

pebbled

wind world world


worse
in

shore, 2g2b to shake world, 10553 S3fe for democracy, 8423


safe

appear

tyranny of m., 7503

yourself do thing you have

for. diversity, 10743 the better, gia


to,

when were good and brave


m., 6843 wisdom of m., g73a

Majors,

make m. but not

scholars,

Maintaining constitutional shield, 99ia independence to this day, ggyb Main-truck higher than kelson low, 6g6a ? Mair, cantie wi m., 4943
Maltre, qui que tu sois voici ton m., 41 8a tel m. tel valet, i88a Maize, rose with m. to die, io43b

31 la Make a joyful noise, igb,

Majestic free, 5i2b


instancy, 8s6b law in m. equality, 8oaa

motion, 5573 silence, 45&b theme, 786b

sia angels weep, 2713 be and m. new nations, 2ggb Britain country for heroes, 866a conscience m. cowards, 2623 content" with his fortunes, 2783 fault worse by excuse, 2 37 a fears m. us traitors, 285^ felicity we m. or find, 4283 ghost of him that lets me, 25gb haste better foot before, 2373 he himself his quietus m., 2623 her laugh at that, 2663 I could not well m. out, 5323 I shall m. reckless choice, gz6b

725 a youi selves another face, 2 Sab Make-believe, Eve seen through m., go6a maiden that is m., Makeless, 10843 Maker, flower carries impress of M., 3833 more pure than his m., i4b of Heaven and earth, 6oa

reproacheth his M., 24b tool m., 9483 Maker's rage, 9563 Makers, abhor m. and their laws approve, 37ob Makes, another which m., 953 figure a poem m., gzgb

heaven drowsy with harmony,


2223
heretic

that m.

the

fire,

nosb
it

though in ruin, 343b Majestical, happy high m., $6gb laid in bed m., 2445 roof, 261 a Majesties, purple mountain m.,
849* Majesty, against thy Divine M., 6ia attribute to awe and m., 234b clad in naked m., 3453 dignity m. sublimity, 46ab moon rising in clouded m.,
345 b

do or do without, iio2b
what we m.

it over your way, 9303 lady of my own, 5iob

life

it,

me a child again, 7426 me a fixed figure, 275b me a willow cabin, 25ib me immortal with a kiss, 2133 me sick discussing duty, 7oob me that to thee, 4o5b me to know mine end, i8b men m. the city, gob
mighty ocean, 7igb

7943

next in m. surpassed, $7ob of gods is revealed, 6gb of heaven, 42ob of this world, io6ob rayless m., 3993 ride on in m., 5663
rise in m. to meet thine, 6gib sight so touching in m., 5123 tender m., 735b this earth of m., 226b Major, model of m. general, 766b

money by any means. 1233 most of what we yet may spend,


6303

or fordoes me quite, 2763 poor indeed, 2743 men msd, 2763 night hideous, 2593 one little room sn everywhere, 304b or mars us, 2763 swanlike end, 233b sweet music with stones, 2 sob them and arts and work, g$$b thinking m. it so, 2613 tongue of him that m. it, 222b whole world kin, 26ga you thin, 10373 Makest, thou m. darkness, 2ib what m. thou, 333

me me

2953

Maketh clouds
he m. me the deep to
to

his
lie

chariot,

2ia

my bed in hell, 233 my bed soon, io8ga my house your inn, gg6b my seated heart knock, my small elves coats, 22gb

down,
28sb

i?b

boil,

i6b
red,

Making green one


28 ib
it

blossom with pleasure, 6643 machines for m. machines, gi7b

poets read from 10463

own

works,

no truce with Adam-zad, 8753 not m. cannot mar, 7113 not m. scarecrow of law, 2703 of your prayers one sacrifice.
can m. tree, lives sublime, 62ob m. to right government,

many

books, 2ga, gti2b


it,

news better than taking


night hideous, 2593

gigb
m..

Majorities, decision by m. expedient, 63 ib not act arbitrarily, 10133

2g8a only God

gg23
46 ib

through 688b M3l, honi


1633 Maladies,

creeks
soit

snd

inlets

qui m. y pense,

our

soul

with

all

its

m.,

not entirely wrong, 7o6a Majority as distinguished from minority, 9733 authority not m., 6oob big enough m. in any town,

shalt not

m. any graven image,


of fragmentary

9*
so

much
9273
is

blue,

7813 Maladministration, secured against m., 4463 Mslsdy, greatest m. is poverty,


379 a

soul

form and doth body m.,

76ib
deprive minority of right, 637 a divine m., 7353 fools big enough m., 76 ib have clear-cut criteria, io28a he has joined great m., i33b long since Death had m., 33ob man with God always in m., i86b

20lb
straight a highway for our God,

3*b sudden sally, 6523 the Lord m. his face upon thee, gb the most of it, 464b thee an ark, 6b
thee mightier yet, 8623 thick my blood, 28 ib
things

he smiles it is a m., ii4b medicine worse than m., i25b of cultivated classes, 7p6b of not marking, 24 ib
to whose causation, sg Malaria ten parts, 8643 Malcontents, liege of m., Mars of m., 2673 Male and female created he, 5a especially m. of species,

shine

22 ib

minority yield to m., g34b never replace man, loiib

work my W3y,

g86a

1470

INDEX
Male healthy wealthy and dead,
10335
kiss of blankets,

Man
Man
by nature political animal, 98a Caius is a m., 7$2b call Himself a m., 10313

Man, am

not m. and brother,

9935

more deadly than m., 8773 no hundred percent m., loiia


Malefactors of great wealth, 848a Malherbe, at last comes M., 377a what M. writes will endure, 2043 Malheur, de son age tout le m.,

4503 ambitious m. have no satisfaction, 3093 and bird and beast, 5263

4i8a Malheureux, ou nous Itions

si

m.,

and brother, 4563. and his fate, 9503 and what he loves have but day, 94ib and wife for year and day, 52 ib and woman in garden, 4oa animal which devours own,
4713 apparel oft proclaims m., 258b appoints God disappoints, i7ob arms and the m. I sing, nyb,
37ia

call no m. foe, 1021 a came to making of m., 7733 can a m. take fire in his bosom,

can die but once, can raise thirst, 8y3b cannot choose but pay, 72 ib cannot emerge from himself,

11055 Malice basest of all instincts, 7643 domestic, zSjb from envy hatred and m., 6ob

9083
capable of becoming m., ioi4b caverns measureless to m.,

much m.

5230
cease ye from m., ;joa celebration of m., 10713 cells and gibbets for m., 686a center of circle, 748b century of common m., loioa certainly stark mad, 1903 child conceived, 140 child father of m., 51 ib childhood shows the m., g48b Christian faithful m., 2173 city is teacher of the m., 7ob
civilized

little wit,

$7ob

never was his aim, 39oa no m. or ill-will, 5O2b no rampart against m.,
ing,

around
g6ob
art
as as

m. bend other

faces,

mediatress between nature

no suspicion of m. in his writ-

ma

nor set down aught in m., 276b only man possesses m., 764a pride envy m., 536b ridicule without m., 638b toward none, 64ob treasonous m., a84a
truth with m. in
it,

and m., 5295 a m. wipeth 3 dish, 143 happy a m. as any, 3753 as m. looks at woman, 957 b
as nature made him, 436b as old as he's feeling, 7283 as old as his arteries,

assurance of a m., 264a


at
at

^b

m. not

live

without

6g6b

thirty
fool,

m.

suspects

himself

Malices, tiptoe m., 866a

3993

Malicious ferocity, 95b he is not, 951 a wisdom entereth not mind, i8ia

in

m.

Malignant 276b
so

and

turbaned

Turk,

m. so devastating, 102 ib
ius est m., io8b

Maligner of reputation, 7493 Malignity, motiveless m., 5283


Malitia,

summum

saepe

wheel taught to feel, 7923 average m., 9713 baker's m., logab battlefield heart of m., 7083 be a friend of m., 8463 bear that walks like m., 875,1 bear with all the faults of m., 3003 beautiful thing raises m.* 1783 became a living soul, 5b

cooks, 74 ib clothed with rags, come forth thou

^b fearful

m.,

2253

comes with his torment, 4g8b common enemies of m., 10733 common m. has triumphed, 8o 5 b

common m.

protection against

summa

become ignorant m. ag3in, gs6b


behold the in., 4gb believe in equality of m., 467b Benedick the married rn., 245b best m. like water, 7sb best m. worst-natured muse,
3823
better kind of m., >jg^b better m. th3n I Gunga Din,

Mallecho, miching m., 2633 Malorura, radix m. est cupiditas, 55 Malt, ate the m., logSb does more than Milton can,

war, 97gb concern for m. himself, 9503 condition of m. a condition of war, 3i7b conference maketh 3 ready m.,

connection

of

individual

m.,

nooa
control the wind, 71 ib could ease a heart, 10293 count on no one but himself,

853b

Mamas,

last

of red-hot m., 9843

Mammon,
is

cannot serve m., 4ia like fire, 577b


least

God and

8733
better

spared better m.,

241 a

the

erected

spirit,

g42b

beware m. of one book, i58b


big butter-3nd-egg m., 9803 bites dog, 8o8b blamed the living m., 7153
blessed
stones,

wins his way, 5553

Mammon's mesh, 86ob


Man, 46b
a
certain

m. went down,

m.

that

spares

these

country turns out, 6o8b coupling of m. and woman, 10053 courage befitting m., 8i8a crime of being young m., 425b crooked m., iog6b cruelty to load falling m., 2g8b

a little worse than a m., 2323 a long time coming, 948b a m. like me, 48ga a m. zealous for nothing, 4333 a social animal, 37 4a abandoned on earth, 10585 according as m. is must you humor him, iogb accustomed to everything, 707 b actions show m. we find, 4o6a Adam the goodliest m., 3453 after his own heart, isa
,

2ggb

aged m. paltry thing, 88ab ah for m. to arise, 6523 ah when to heart of m.,
all

gztjb

pleasant in m., 451 a all that a m. hath will he give, i4a all that makes m., 6543 all that may become a m., 28sb alone beneath heaven, 5i8b alone no chance, 10453 always tell Harvard m., 11023

blessings on thee little m., 6263 blood of 3 British m., 2793 bold bad m., 2003, 2983 bold m. first eat oyster, sgob born work born with him, 69 ib boyhood changing into m., 88sb brave m. in3ttentive to duty, 5033 brave ra. struggling, 4o4b brave m. with a sword, 8413 breathes there the m., 5i8b broad too broad, 7083 bronzed lank m., 9533 Brutus is an honorable m., 255b but be a m., 71 ib

daring young m. on trapeze, ?8oa dark as world of m., ggSb dark cloud m., 8053 Dsrwinian m., 768a decides he is not God, 787b delights not me, 2613 desire for desire of m., 5303 desire of knowledge caused m. to fall, 2o8b diapason closing in m., 3702 did not make cannot mar, 7113 dieth and wasteth away, 153
difference between dog

and m.,

butterfly iota

dreaming

am

a m.,

by m. came death, 533 by m. came resurrection, 533 by m. cursed alway, 6igb by m. shall his blood be shed, 6b

dignity of m. respected, diseased animal, SSgb dispute it like a m., 2&5b divine as myself dead, does what he must, 10723

7023

doth not
loa

live

by bread only,

1471

Man
Man, doubts began with
fall

INDEX
Man, get away from m., Sogb gird up thy loins like a m.,
2303
i6a

Msn, horse

of m., 90 ib dream past wit of m., drest in brief authority, drink takes m., 7gob

noblest conquest of m., 423b how dieth the wise m., 27b

27ob

drove out the m., 6a

m. always sure, g6ob each m. act of God, 6793 each m. kills thing he loves, 8 4 ob each m. resembles other men, 957* ear of m. hath not seen, 2303 eats when not hungry, 11023 end of that m. is peace, i8b enough for tear in eye, 831 a errs while struggle lasts, 478b Esau was a m. of the field, 73 from escape rope and gun, 40 ib even such a m. so faint, 2413 every cry of every m., 48gb every m. a piece of the continent, 3o8b every m. architect of his for6a tune, every m. at his best state, i8b every m. for himself, i8sb every m. has his fault, agoa every m. hath a good and bad

dull dull

ear

of

drowsy

m.,

sg6b

give every m. thy ear, 258b giveth up the ghost, 153 go west young m., 6780 God above or m. below, 4o7b

God and m. decree, 8543 God became m. devil woman,


Jb in ruins, 6053 is not a m., loa God's ways to m., 853b

howl for flesh of m., io83b hungry m. not free, io48b hungry sinner, 5623
I
I

how marvelous is m., 8940 how poor 3 thing is m., ana how proud -word M. rings, 8g4b

goes riding by, 8233 goeth forth unto his work, 2ib goeth to his long home, 293 good for a m. that he bear the
yoke, 34b good great

cease to be, 6523 first 3 m., 4145 3ppe3l to 3ny white m., 44gb have been 3 m., 4783 know myself 3 m., 3013 loved the m. and honor memory, 304a

3m am

m.

inherits,

5273

good m. and just, 47b good m. does not argue, 753 good m. wafted to all quarters,
8oa

must feel it as a m., 2855 never writ nor no m. loved, 294* I the m. in the moon, agob
!

if
if

if

a m. die shall he live, 153 a m. has talent, 10495 not wedding day is fixed

good name in m. and woman,


2743
great m. grest ganglion, 7873 great nose great m. 8gsb m. greater courtesy, greater
f

if

angel, giob every m. his

grestest fool is m., 3773 grestest m. ever seen, 45 ib

greatest

enemy,

grew within

this

Ie3rned

m.,

424b a m. there be, 4113 superior m. dwelt among Barbarians, 723 I'll m3ke me a m., go6b in srmor slsve, 667b in arms wish to be, 5153 in bush God meet, 6023 in every m. two postutetions,
on,

such

if

33*
every m. is wanted, 6o7b every m. own architect, 667b every m. to do duty, 4923 every m. under his vine, 133 every m. was God or Devil, 368b expatiate o'er scene of m., 4o7b eye of m. hath not heard, 5303 faced -with spiritual, 834b
fallen god,

2130 grows beyond his work, losab guess what m. going to do,
half psrt of blessed hand of 3 mighty m., hand will be against 7a happiness of common

7073
in gray flannel suit, 10783 in love endures more, 8063 in mind of m. 3 motion, 5095 in our town, 10983 in soul of m. one Tahiti, 6973 in unsearchable darkness, 80 ib in whose hand cup is found, 75 in wilderness, 10933 in wit 3 m., 3698 incarnate and was made m., 6oa indispens3ble m., g7ob inflicts pain for sport, 7643 influenced by polls, g83b
ingrateful m., 2783

m.,

2363

225
every m.,
m., g4gb

56sb

false m., 3845 false m. does easy, 2843. false to m., 2591

happy citizen free, gggb happy m. be his dole, happy m. happy dole, happy m. works ancestr3l
120b

i82b i82b
acres,

any

fashion wears out more than m., 246b favor with God and m., 46b favorite of mother, 8s4b first m. among these than sec-

happy the m. and he alone,


hardly
3
ra.

h3ppy old m., 1163

inner m., 543


insignificant

and aware of

it,

now

alive,

62 3b

9*3 b
intellect of

ond

in

Rome, lisa
m., 8733

first

m. takes drink, 7gob

first-class fightin'

fit night for m. or beast, 95 ib foolish fond old m., 28oa foolish passionate m., 884b

h3rrowing has two primal passions, 8173 hss will womsn W3y, 6330 hath penance done, 5255 having put hand to plow, 46b he was 3 m., 9053

clods,

7843

m. choose, 8843
superiority
of
m.,

intellectual

7643
intimates eternity to m., ggsb

invented
is

he W3S 3 m. take him


in
all,

for all

foot-in-the-grave

young

m.,

2583

is
is
is

7673
for all seasons, iyga for m. marvel to be alive, 9863 for the field, 6493 for the sword, 6493

he W3S her m., noib he3rd wise m. S3y, Ssab heart of m. place devils dwell
3303 hearty old m., 53 ib height of m. equal to tips of hands, 1325 her W3ys with a m., 10655 her wit wss more thsn m., 3695
in,

m. because disappointed in monkey, 7643 a prisoner, g3a 3 reasoning animal, 1303 3 thinking reed, 3635 alone, 10585
as

is

is
is

forgotten as a dead mind, i8a

m. out

of

is is is is is
is
is

Heaven made him, 1963 born for uprightness, 7ib born free, 435 b born unto trouble, i4b
crested free, 497*> God blunder of
his

forgotten m., 7853, g7ob formed by struggle, 9783 formed for society, 444b formed m. of dust, 53 free as Nature made m., 3673 fresh from natur's mold, 67ob fribble and less than m. of reason, 957a Friday, 38sb frontiers where 681 b

m.,

8o5b

own

star,

3133

high sbstracted m. alone, 6973 his grestest enemy, 3303 his own executioner, 3303 honest exceeding poor m., 2325 honest m. appeals to understanding, 10923 honest m. close-buttoned, 4593 honest m. noblest work of God, 4ogb, 492b honest m. sent to lie sbrosd, 3013 horizontal m., 10595

is

is
is is

m. blunder of God, 8o5b m. no more than this, 278b man and master, 6533 not so good Christian, 824b not so great 3 cow3rd, 824b one soul msny tongues, i4sb
origin

of

his
to

sction,

983

m. fronts

fact,

is

something 8053

be surpsssed,

fury of patient m., s68b gently scan brother m., get a new m., 2973

is

the hunter, 6493

4g3b

je-ne-sais-quoi

young m., 7673


8433

judge m. by

foes,

1472

INDEX
Man
kills thing he loves, 84ob kind m. and died in want, 10755 know myself a m., 301 a

Man
of m.,

Man, mind's the stsndard


39 6a misfortunes of m., i32b

Man

m. occssioned by

know defy opinion, know what God and m. is, 654b


to

502 b 323

mistake young m. for god, 9603 mollusk cheap edition of m.,

lame m. leap
last

as

an

hart,

large-hearted m., 6173 strands of m., 8o3b laugh to scorn power

of

m.,

28sb law for m., 6oab laws of God laws of m., 8543 least considerable m., logib leave his father and mother, 5b lengthened shadow of one m., 6o6a
less

let

no m. have, end try the m.

let
let

him

pass

for

m.,

23 ib

m. outlive his wealth, 2353 let no such m. be trusted, 23gb let us make m. in our image, 53 life of m. solitary, 3183
light for m., io4ob

6093 monastic m. artist, 9565 moral inferiority of m., 7643 moral sensible well-bred rn., 457* more no m. entitled to, 847b more right than neighbor, 681 a more sinned against, 2783 mortal m. who hath more joy, 6973 most detestable creature, 7643 muffin m., 10973 must have faults, i33b my fellow m. my brother, 7o6b my m. Friday, $S$b naked m. in book of moons,
native metal of m.,

not passion's slave, 2633 not sum of what he has, 10585 not what kind of paper but m., 6823 nothing come out of artist not in m., 9613 nothing feebler than 3 m., 66b nothing more fun than a m., 10293 nothing more wretched than a m., 643 nothing to do with just m., 44b nothing wears clothes but m., 323* O nature O soul of m., 6973 O that m. might know end, 256b of action, ioi6a of action forced to thought,
893a of an unbounded stomach, 2993 of cheerful yesterdsys, 5i6b of comfort no m. speak, 2273
of dust, 53 of evil repute, 33 of genius had to pay, giob of honor regrets discreditable
act,

nature

formed

one

such

m.

lightning out of cloud m., 8053

photograph, 8373 difference between m. and m., 794b little m. had little gun, iog7b little m. what now, ios6b lived with birds and beasts,
little

like

loia
lives life of

epoch, 9373

blind, 88sb living living-dead m., 2i8b


is

m.

559* nature removes great m., 6070 necessarily a m., 4i4b ne'er left m. in mire, 2903 neither angel nor beast, 363b never bad m. good service, 4535 never is blessed, 4083 never met m. I didn't like, 9543 never saw m. who looked, 84ob new m. raised up in him, 6ib

9613

of little learning grows old, Sob of many resources, 653 of many wiles, 4053 of morals tell me why, 357b
of of of of of of
of of of of

look no way but down, 3663 looketh on the outward appearance, 123 looking for honest m., g6b looks small at wedding, 1041 a

no benefit
843

nice m., 3893 in gifts of

bad m.,
8943

kidney, 2673 peculiar weakness, g6ob nasty ideas, 3893 sorrows, 333, 6973 sovereign psrts, 22 ib strife and contention, 343

my

my

Lord is a m. of war, 8b Lord seeth not as m. seeth, 123 lose what he never had, 3263 lot of m. but once to die, 32 ib love is a mood to m., 825b love not m. the less, 557b
lovely

no no no no no no no

gre3t m. born too soon, indispensable m., 97ob m. above or below law, m. born an angler, m. born unto himself,

talent sees two or three, gSgb

unclean

lips,

sob

847b $25b
3223 izoa

understanding, 37 b understanding is of excellent spirit, 253

m. content with m. deserved less at

lot,

of virtue, 7ib

country's

hands, 7183

gentleman-like m., 2293

low m. seeks little thing, 6643 made her such a m., 2733 made m. can change, ioi8b

no no no no no

m. do for your sake, 7743 m. is an island, goSb m. see me more, 2983 m. should marry, 6isb m. t3kes weslth with him,

made of ordinary things, 4983 made the town, 457b made to mourn, 4g2b
majority never replace m.,

773

no m. taketh goods with him,


3a

lonb
49 2 b

no m.
8253

useless

who

has friend,
true, 3883

of words not deeds, 10923 old age in universal m., so6b old m. broken, 2gga old m. eloquent, 34ob old m. had so much blood, 2863 old m. in dry month, looib Old M. River, 92 ib old m. to whom old men hearkened, i24b old m. twice 3 child, 2613 old m. who will not laugh,

manners maketh m., 1635 man's inhumanity to m., man's monument a m., man's word God in m., marks earth with ruin, marry best m. on earth, marry this m. and woman,

86?b
expected,

ygob
6533

no m. worth having no reason3ble m.


10173

old m. with beard, 672b m. with something old iiib-iiaa

of

557b
8953 3903 i8gb

no

sin for

m.

to l3bor in voca-

m. wouldn't rung,

S3y

prayers,

tion,

no such

2383 thing as honest m.,

once to every m. and nation,


one one one one one one

marvelous vain subject, mass of thawing clay, 683b master of fate, 6533, ioi4b master of himself a happy
1223

noblest
ra.,

nobody call me fussy m., 9690 none more wonderful than m.,
823 not a just m. upon earth, 283 not a m. but cloud, 10283 not cause of work, gogb not creature of circumstances,

4003 noble animal, 3313 work of m., 7493

with worm, 264b meaning in saying he is a good m., 2323 measure of all things, 873 mere m., 642 b middle-aged m. build woodshed, 6823 mildest-mannered m., 560 b military m., 2443

may

fish

m. among a thousand, 283 m. crossing bridge, 9553 m. loved pilgrim soul, 87gb m. one vote, iio4b m. pl3ys many parts, 3493 m. with courage a m3jority 53b one m. with dream conquer,
8073 one more wrong to m., 66ab one still strong m., 6523 one-book m., 5233 only 3nim3l that blushes, 7633 only great m. write history,
only m. harrowing clods, 7843

6nb
not good that m. be alone, 5b not lifetime of one m. only, 10063 not m. you're 3 machine, 836b not msterisl decisive, io27b not old but mellow, 8693

mind of m. capable of
thing, 843b

any-

mind proper judge

of m., isob

H73

Man
Man, only m. is vile, 54gb only m. who does not know,
io4ib only one that knows nothing, 1323 organized by labor, 8953 out of me God and m., 775b out of one m. a race, 346b outrage a brave m. dead, 8ia
outrage

INDEX
Man,
not record register of God of m., 33 ia in youth, m. O young rejoice
2 8b

Man,
still

state of
sits

m.

like

kingdom,
19 ib

254*

on

his

stole

the

fruit,

bottom, 322b
to

rejoiceth

as a strong m., i7b a republic of m., io49 rich in things he can let alone,

strong 7 69 b strong m.

m.

clinging
digests

babe,

experiences,

6833
rich rich

8osb
to
fall,

m. beginning
m.
enter

383

when m.

destroys na-

into

kingdom,

ture, 94 ib

owes not any m., 62 ib paint m. as well as features, 754b parliament of m., 647b pure young m., particularly
7 67a partly
patriot
is,

rich m. enther Hiven, 891 a rich m. has motor car, g62b richest pleasures cheapest, 68aa richest with widest influence,

43b

strong m. in wrath, 6i7b strongest m. stands alone, 7agb style is the m., 423b subtle knot which makes us m.
3 o6b

successful animal,

846b

6g8b
righted up falling m., 684a the life righteous m. regardeth of his beast, 24a

666a

m, and American, 82 ib people arose as one m., lib perceives it die away, si^b
of

picked out 2 6ob

ten

thousand,

rope perman, 8053

2ooa righteous m. to make fall, rights of m., 454a, 75oa between animal and Su-

pig edible to m., 7gib-7g2a pious m. can't stay in peace, 499 a pious m. not less a m., 3000
place

round fat oily m. of God, 42oa round m. in square hole, 7&sb


rousing like strong m., 34ob ruined m., ioo8a ruins of the noblest m., 255a rule will show the m., 68b sabbath made for m. 453 said to universe, gosa sat on rock and sought, 797 a savage in m. never eradicated, 682a says what he knows, 4363 seeks for what is remote, looa seems the only growth,
sent from God, 48a serve time to every trade, seven women shall take hold of one m., 3ob severe he was, 44gb
shall shall
i

such a disagreeable m., 7683 such master such m., i88a superfluous m., 687 b acts before he superior m. speaks, 713 is modest, 72b m. superior superior m. like Heaven, 7403 surest plan to make m., "6gsb sweet slumbers of virtuous m., 394 a
tailless

takes

m., 7g7a drink drink

takes

m.,

79ob
teach

and means

for every

m.

you more of m.,

5093

2703 plain blunt m., 2555 Plato's m., g6b play is tragedy M., 642b play the m. Master Ridley, i8oa pliable animal, 7o7b 8i8a poetry of ordinary m., poor despised old m., 278a poor m. being down, 383 poor m. get out iv Purgatory, 8911 poor m. had nothing, iab poor m. is Christ's stamp, 322b poor m. poor mankind, 10393 88ab poor m. that has loved, poorest m. in his cottage, 4260 to m., 8293 powers superior prayer of righteous m., 56b preached as dying m., 3573 prentice han' tried on m., 493b press not falling m., agSb of m., 8953 priceless qualities primitive m. tactile m., 978b of m., Q4oa prisoned spirit proper m. as see in summer's day, 2293 proper study of mankind is m., 4o8b
proposes God disposes, 1703 prosperity comes to bad m., 773 prudent m. looketh well to his
going, 24b

tempt not desperate m., 2255 that died for men, 778b that hangs on favors, sg8b that hath his quiver full, 22b that hath no music, 235b that hath tongue no man, 22ob that is a worm, i5b that is born of a woman, i5a
that that that
lays

hand upon woman,

5o8a

makes character, 3g8b mocks and sets it light,

226a
that trusteth in man, 343 that trusteth in the Lord, 34a that was in evening made, 332b
that's

m. be more pure maker, i4b mortal m. be more


4b

than
just,

there

marred, 26gb did meet another


is

m.,

she knows her m., 3i2a m. young, 646a sight make old
significance of m., 91 sb
silliest

42gb
there

a m.

child conceived,

woman manage m., 8723 singularly deep young m., 766b slothful m. saith, 26a small m. may not be entrusted,
72b
smiling destructive m., 38^ smiteth a m. so that he die, ga so can any m., 239b so frail a thing m., io8gb so in way in house, 6s6b so is it now I am a m., 51 ib so much one m. can do, ssgb so near God to m., 6osb
so unto m. woman, 6233 so various, 368b social friendly honest m., 4933

i 4b there was a little m., 543a thin m. in every fat m., 10533 think mortal thoughts, 843 thinking or working is alone, 68 3 b this dust once the m., 7oaa this is Plato's m., g6b this is the state of m., 2g8b this m. met rancor, 8ggb

this

this

prudent
aside,

m.

putteth

himself

m. shall be myself, 45&b m. this mongrel beast, ggob was a m., 2g6b third beast had a face as a m.,
this

4b de grapevine, 828b Raggedy M. works for Pa, 8igb rather be worm than son of m.,
pull in'

57

thou art the m., i2b thought young m. brings forth,


95

995 a reading maketh a full m., zogb detective reads nothing but
stories,

gggb

ready
397 a

money

makes

the

m.,

ready to believe what is told, i33b reasonable m. mythical, 10173 rebuke a wise m., 24a recovered of the bite, 448b reduced no m. to atomic elements, g67b

something less than m., io2ob something to be surpassed, 8053 son of m. Jesus Christ, 9583 son of ra. that thou visitest him, 173 sooner kill m. than hawk, gg4b soul of m. larger, s86b spares neither m. nor his works,
466a speech open m. to m., 376b sprang to his feet, 6623
stage

where every m. play part,

2313
stagger like a drunken m., 2ib

thousandth m., 8773 time whereof memory of m., 444b Time you old gypsy m., go6a from better m. I stole, title 82 3 b to a wise m. ports, 22 6a to all country dear, 44gb to be a great m., yo7b to be m. with thy might, 77&b to command, 64ga to every m. a damsel or two,
iia

H74

INDEX
Man,
to
to

Manhood
Man
without imagination, than without money rather money without man, 783 woes of m. with spondulix,
8313 wolf to man,
996)3,

to every

m. according

to

Man, where
art,

love of m. love of

his work, 190 earth, 5963 hold against world, 8s6b laugh proper to m., i8ob match mountains, 8260 men m. is mind, 79 ib

88b

every m. upon

to

to to

to the

young m. knowledge and


*jzga.

who brings bad news, 8sa who broke bank, 821 a who convinces the world, 8isb who craves more is poor, i2gb who destroys township, g8ob who goes alone start today,
682b

loioa

woman lesser ra., 647 b woman more barbarous


m., 8053 women looking-glasses ing m., 975b

than

discretion, 233 to thyself be true,

who had become what he


10563

could,

reflect-

tool-using animal, 576a he might have, totality of what


tree of m. never quiet, 8533 truly honest m., 354b trust m. on his oath or bond,

io58b

who had been promised, io22b who has city obedient, g4b who has come through, gfyb who has found himself out,
8 5 8a

2903

who has mind and knows


to
last

it,

24ab try Tubal Cain m. of might, 6773 turns to face snow, io66a mind of m., 4723 tyranny over unaccommodated m., 2y8b unfinished m. and his pain, 88 3 b
fortunes

m.,

upright m., 3 a j use every m. after desert, 26 ib valor-ruined m., 6g6b various m., 4953 vertical m., io$Qb very undubable m., 4$ia
victory
shifts

who invented sleep, 68oa who is anybody criticized, 8353 who is seen and heard, 86gb who lives for self, 78gb who never fought pilfers, gia who never got ahead, losob who owes nothing to land, 4363 who runs may fight again, io2b who said one word for woman,
8323

8383

wonder and glory of universe, 6283 wonder grandeur woe, 6973 work for m. to mend, 3723 work from sun to sun, iogoa works of present m., 5260 worst cliques one m., 837b worst use a m. could be put to, 3013 worth makes the m., 4ogb wrath killeth the foolish m., i4b wrathful m. stirreth up strife, 24b writing maketh exact m., 2ogb yes I am fatal m., 66oa you drop from chamber, 6823

from m.

to

in.,

6sb

who who who who

said
sits

This

is

mine, 4ssb

facing you, 6gb

sold

hyena

touches

skin, g24a this touches

m.,

you shsll find me grave m., 2253 you'll be a m. my son, 8773 young m. in whom something
of old,

m. that mourns, 4o8b wants but little, 3993, 448a wars caused by m., ioi8b was it God was it m., was made to mourn, 4g2b was there m. dismayed, 6523 way of m. with maid, a6b 8743 ways of God to m., 4o7b weak m. better enemy than
vile
f

7033

nib

who turnips who used to


7840

cries,

4293 notice such things,


10563

young m. married
26gb

is

marred,
America,

young
452b

m.

there

is

who was what he was, who wasn't there, 9383 who wert once despot,

young m. who has not wept,


867b
you're not a m., 836b Manacles, mind-forged m., 48gb Manage this matter to a T, 1813

5693

friend, 6853

whole duty of m., 293 whom Fortune scratched, 2703 whom king delighteth to honor,
i4a

wealth even to a wicked m., 773 well-bred m. knows how to confess,

Management, guiding genius of


m., 9313 labor and capital need m., 9313

4223

well-favored m., 246b

went mad and bit the m., 448b went to bar as very young m.,

what a chimera is m., what a piece of work is m.,


2613

what what

is

is

m. in nature, g6gb m. that thou art mind-

ful, i7a

msster who's m., 3913 whose blood is snow-broth, 2703 whose blood warm within, 2313 wicked m. Hitler, 92 ib will go down into pit, 8133 will no m. say smen, 2283 will not merely endure, io3gb will yet win, giSb wills us slaves, 468b wind sweep m. away, 7iib wind tapped like tired m., 735b wine a peephole on a m., 6ga who's
wise in his own conceit, 263 wise m. has no extensive knowledge, 7 5 b wise m. is strong, 203 wise m. knows himself

nothing

without

community,

931^9323
Man-at-arms

now

serve

on

knees,

Mand3lsy, rosd

to M.,
all

873b
alike,

Mandamus
2873

binds

48 * a

Mandragora, give

me

to drink m.,

not poppy nor m., 274b Mandrake, get with child a m.


root, 3o4b

what is m. to live lifetime of God, 6g6a what is m. what is he not, 7gb what is significance of m., gisb what m. dare I dare, 2853 what m. has made of m., 5o8b what m. may do to himself, what

Mane, laid hand upon thy

m.,

fool,

25ob
wise m.

55 8a bright m. forever, 4873 ocean's m., 5583 Maned^with whistling wind, 91 7b

my

m.

not

know

of

God,

10543

what manner of m., 453 what may m. within hide, 27 ib what mean m. seeks, 72b what signifies life o' m., 493 when honor dies m. dead, 625b when I get to be m., goob when just m. dies, io6ob when m. marries again, Sggb when m. of rank an author,

never loses anything, igoa wise m. not leave right to chance, 681 a wise m. speaks, 3043 wise m. that kindled flame,
wisest m. does not fancy he

Manes, whirlwind

home

in

m.,

Mangent,

qu'ils

m.

de la brioche,

Manger, cold and not cleanly m.,


354b

952b
377 a

dog
is,

when m. takes first drink, 863b when old m. dies, 10523 when right m. rings them, 8a4b

with God always in majority, i86b with God strive, 5573 with great thing to pursue, 664b with seven wives, 10933 with the head, 64ga without a flaw, i2oa without a tear, 538b

in the m., 763 for his bed, 684b in the rude m. lies, 3343 laid in a m., 463 not live as dogs in m., g74a One born in a m., 3633

Mangled by the bronze spear, 64b naked poor m. peace, 245 a Manhattsn, of mighty M. son,
7ooa

Manhood a

3nd decrepit

struggle, 6i2a 3ge, 3223

M75

Manhood
Manhood, bone of m., 4520
conspiracy against m., 6o6a do what m. bids thee, firm against crowd, 64gb full and fair, 801 a grain of m., 3493 honesty m. nor fellowship, 2383
is cast

INDEX
Mankind, optimistic future of
m., 8343

Manners must adorn knowledge,

down, 9855

no sounder British m., 575b some civic m., 6495 Manhood's pondering repose of If, 6 97 b Mania for maintaining all is well,

our countrymen m., 6i5b plagues with which m. cursed, 385b poetry mother tongue of m., 455b poor man poor m., 10393 possesses two blessings, 853 prepare asylum for m., 466b proper study of m. is man, 4o8b put end to war, io73b
school of m., 4553 serve country and m., 75 ib shut gates of mercy on m., 44ob spectator of m., 3943 surpasses or subdues m., 556b survey m., 4273 things ride -m., 6osb true nationality m., 888b two men of all m., 8ggb victory for m., io74b war put end to m., io73b what was meant for m., 4513 wisest brightest meanest of m.,

men uncouth m., 452b saw m. in face, 4293 Mannikin, made m. to madden it,
savage

45 D not men but m., 4243 of m. gentle, 36gb of undertaker, 8g6b old m. books wines, 45ob our nation limps after,

2a6b

643b

4^a
lawsuit m., 7703 of owning things, 7oob

Maniac scattering dust, 65oa Manic statement, 10763


Manifest destiny, 6y6a, 685a nothing shall not be m., 46b plainness, 74a work be made m., 523 Manifestation of unfriendly disposition, 492.1

Manifesto,

this

m.

more

than

theory, 788b

Manifold,
4-a,

how m.

are thy works,

2 ib

our m. sins, 61 a sins and wickedness, 59b stories not to thy credit, 74ob Manila, admiral down in M. Bay,

4090 worth destroying, 56 ib is Mankind's concern ch3rity, 4ogb epitome, s68b


motto, 3593 Manlier, nobler and m. one, 5613 Manliness, beauty of true m., 7403

Mannish cowards, 247 b Manor, as if a m. washed away 3 o8b Man-o'-war's 'er 'usband, 874b Man's, a m. worth something, 6653 any m. death diminishes me, 3 o8b any m. fair daughter, $$$> bad m. refuge, 74b bedevilment and God's, 8543 best portion of m. life, 5093 blind m. ditch, 8843 brave m. folly life's wisdom, 8 94 b brown m. burden, 875b
capacity for justice, io24b capscity to despise self, 867b cheer poor m. hesrt, 5igb

cloud like m. hand, igb

Dead M. Chest, 822b dearer than to himself, 3033 deceiver never mine, 8540
desire
is

Mankind,
577

all

m. done in books,

for

woman, 5303

asses that pull, s6ab at war with rights of m., 47 ib

immaculate 6g6b
silent

m.

in

ourselves,

by perverse depravity, s8gb

native western m., 7033 m. of grief, 4sob

desiring this m. art, 2923 difference from brutes, 7943 distinctive mark, 666a

by thee

bored, 862 a calamities shared by m., careless of m., 6455 censure injustice, 943
less

385^

crucify ra., 8s8b cynic from study of m., 79 ib deserve better of m., gSgb distraction to m., 3133 divided m, into parties, 4803 doings of ra. subject of my

Manly, avowed erect and m. foe. 5 o6b his big m. voice, 2493 love is m., i7ob nurse of m. sentiment, 4543 simple modest m. true, 6943 Manna, give us this day m., 1613 his tongue dropped m., 34sb
it

every m. Cleop3tr3, g67b every old m. eye, 224b every true m, apparel, 2723 every wise m. son know, 25 ib first disobedience, 341 b fortune in own hand, 2093

is

m., 93

book, isga dwell on heights of m., 4g8b entitled to respect of m., 5483 faith in future of m., io8ab Father of m., 6a6b fleet of life like leaves, gib fly from not hate m., 556b hate m., 2gob heart in unison with m., 8isb hindrances to elevation of m., 68ab

Msnner, sfter m. of men, 513 after this m. pray ye, 4ob


all

good good good good good

m. feast, 248b m. fortune, 277b m. love, 2503 m. sin, 4383 m. tressure, 74b
for
3' th3t,

gowd

4g6a

well

all

m. of thing

well,

you'd m. degrade, 4gob in charity to all m., 502b


if

in conscious virtue bold, in mass duplicates, 6973 inspired made cathedral, involved in m., 3o8b
is

4o4b
8223

10073 e3se in C3sey's m., 868a is all in all, 4565 no m. of doubt, 7693 of giving worth more, 33 ib pleasant shy m. of mouse, io46b state in wonted m. keep, 3023 subordinates m. to matter, 5293 to the m. born, 2593 vulgsr m., 913 vulgsr of m. overfed, 86ob wh3t m. of man is this, 453

great m. memory, 2633 grestest invention, 10503 hsnd not able to taste, asob happiness result of m. effort,

95a
honest

m. aboon his might, 4963 honest m. noblest work, 4ogb,


his cry,

imsge and

88oa

dream of a shadow, knows men brothers, 4973


m. agree, 3723
in

ygb

let

live

m. more than name,

95*b
love a lover, 6o6b love m. except American, 4sab make science blessing to m., 95<> a minus one of one opinion, 6iga mother of m. $4ib O ye that love m., 466b of all m. I love but you, 10843
t

Msnnerly, behave m. at table, 8233 Manners, amiability of m., 7i6b are not idle, 6ssb as nation no m., 8g6b bewrayed by his m., 2oob catch the m. living, 4o7b character habits and m., 7213 climates councils, 6463 contact with m. is education,
i27b corrupt good m., 533

imagination of m. heart, 6b imperial race ensnare, 44b in theater of in. life, 2073 inclination to injustice, io24b ingratitude, 24gb

inhumanity to man,
life allegory, s&ffi

one

disillusion

was m.,

m. live in brass, 2993 m. need support, 6o8b h3ppy ways of doing, 6o8b language m. laws customs, 5113 maketh man, i6gb
evil

fine

cheap as beast's, a m. town, looking for m. footprint, gioa love an episode in m. life, soab love of m. life apart, 5603 no m. enemy, losgb not taken, io57b no m. pie is freed, 2g7b old m. darling, i8sb old m. frenzy, 8853 old m. gold, 9033 one m. will 3!! men's misery, 20 2 b
life

London

1476

INDEX
Man's, one wise m.
verdict, 6653

Margin
Marble to retain, 55gb wastes statue grows, 1783
well-governed cities, 10603 write evil in m., i78b yielding m., 33b Marblehead, women of M., 6s6a

Many

own resinous

safe, 6o4a perdition place in music, 9566 inex terminate, practically print of m. foot, 3856

heart, to be

88jb

fail one succeeds, 647b hands make light work, 1853 in literature the m. force judg-

gaga

ment, 60 ib inventions, 28a

proud m. contumely, 2623 reach exceed grasp, 664b rising to a m. work, i42b share the good m. smile, 4495 sorrow not mine but m., 854b stain my m. cheeks, 2783 strength m. charm, 8583 take each m. censure, 258b years in m. life, 943 thirty tilling soil of m. vanity, g$ob truest monument a man, 7gob truly sorry m. dominion, 49b unconquerable mind, 5i2b
virtue his monument, 33 watch o'er m. mortality, way to m. heart, 6583

must labor for one, 558b mutable rank-scented m., 28gb not how m. enemy are but where, &7b not m. but much, 1513 one composed of m., ngb
play of the m,, 86ia reason Lord makes so m., 6sgb receive advice few profit, 1255 rushing of m. waters, jib safe from the m., 6943 savings of m., 83 ib
shall run to and fro, 35a so m. I loved were not yet dead,

Marble-hearted fiend, 277b


Marcellus, joy

M.

exiled

feels,

March, alluvial m. of days, ashbuds in front of M., 646a bew3re ides of M., 2533 d3ily to m. and find, g66b m. nearer home, 5183 day's drought of M. perced to roote,
1663

Hare went on, 7443 her m. o'er mountain waves,


537
Ides of M.,
in ranks of
is

10523

nsb, 2533
honor, 9223

5i4a

white m. burden, 87sb whoso sheddeth m. blood, 6b

word God in man, 6533 work portrait of himself, 7563 young m. fancy, 647a young m. heart's complaint, 7oob young m. warling, ifyb
Manservant, covet thy neighbor's m., ga Mansion, back to its m. call, 44ob from m. in the sun,
a m., 5853 Jove's Court my m., 336a love has pitched his m., refuse heavenly m., 8843
life

so much owed by so m., 92 ib sold the m. on the few, 103 ib strokes fell the oak, 2oab that are first, 43b

the few the few

and the m., 4&4b


despoilers of
the
m.,

507b

mad M. days, 9473 mad M. hare, 1763 men who m. away, 7843 of human mind slow, 4533
of intellect, 5333 of this retieating world, ioa8b take winds of M. with beauty,

outside door, io4ob July October May, 1873

6gob we aie in., 453

to keep,

what are they among m. wisdom of m., iog8b Many-colored glass, 5723
life

48b

295b
the people m., 9493 three Frenchmen, 2443 three hours' m. to dinner, 53gb to Salvation m., i034b trees that would m., 9533 truth is on m., 7863 two months back in M., g28b up heights of fame, gggb with sovereign tread, 9583 worse than sun in M., 2403

he drew, 426b

human

8843
lights,

Many-fountained Ida, 6453 Many-headed monster of pit, 4i2b multitude, 1233, 28gb people a m. beast, 1233 Many-splendored thing, 8573

where we can turn

off

Man) -wintered

crow, 6473
to

99 3 a Mansionry, approve by his loved m., 2823 Mansions, his m. deathless, 653 in the skies, 3973 in Father's house many m., 493 Manslaughter, check m. but what of war, i3ob Mantelpiece, commanding of the M., 76 5 b Mantle, green m. of standing
pool, 278b
like a

Mao, examples from Alexander M., 997b Map, I their m., 3083
journey
of

universe

honor
6 94 a

Maple puts

in m., in thy face, corals on in

1963

2153

May,

Maples, scarlet of m. shake me, 8Goa to other world, 3O4b Mar, not make cannot m., 7113

Maps

standing pond, 2313


in

striving to better we m., 277!} your fortunes, zjQb

morn
of

russet

m.
chill

clad,

257a
rain,

wind

and

and

i7ob m. threw, 345b twitched his m. blue, 3393 Mantled in mist, loGoa
silver

Marathon, Athenians crushed at M. the Medes, 7ob looks on the sea, 56ob patriotism gain force on M.,
4283 to Waterloo, 7&6b Maible, drsw living faces from m., 1193 dwelt in m. halls, s86b enduring as m. to retain, ig7b forget thyself to m., 335b hills full of m., 7553 idol m. and heart stone, 8goa index of a mind, 5103 leaped to life 3 god, 5663 left Rome 3 city of m., i24b life m. 3nd mud, 6i4b nor gilded monuments, 2923

Manunkind,
1031!)

busy

monster

m.,

Manuie, natural m., 4i7b

Manus

haec

inimica

tyrannis,

3623 Manuscript, youth's sweet-scented in., 6313 Many a one for him maks mane, io88b and mighty are they, 874b
are called, 4jb as the sand by the sea, 133 beast with m. heads, 28gb

Marche, le Congres ne m. pas, 4643 breast forwsrd, 668b by 3 king's name, io22b in Mulligan Guard, 8093 on without impediment, 2i7b rank on rank, 73ob Marches, army m. on stomach, 5053 funeral m. to grave, 62ob rose-crowned in van, 9583 Marching along, 6623 as to wsr, 75ob boys are m., yo4b His truth m. on, 6gob million m. feet, io6gb single in file, 6o3b soul m. on, 7553 through Boston, io76b through Georgia, 7483 to promised land, 75ob truth m. on, 6gob Msrchings, mighty esrthly m.. 6g6b Marchons msrchons, 4993 Mare, shoe the m., 10983

Marched

beguile
27,fjb

m.

beguiled

by

one,

can brook the weather, 22 2a the m. without one, 95* daughters have done virtuously, 27a exploited by few, 10273
conceive

m. pavement dust grows, 103 poets that lasting m. seek, 332b Priapus made of m., ii6b say more than many a braver

on

Mares eat oats, 10973 Margalo, my name is M., io46b Margaret are you grieving, 8osb fye na said may M., io88b you mourn for, 8o3b Marge of Lake Lebaige, 9333 Margent, Meander's m. green,
3S7 a of the world, 8s6b

m., 354b sleep in dull

cold

m.,

2993

Sunium's m. steep, 5613 sweep through m. halls, 62ob

Margery Daw, 10943 some went up with M,, io6oa


Margin, a certain free m.,

H77

Margin
Margin, broad m. to my life, 6833 life not end at m., ySga
of m., 481 a outmost m., ggjb Margins,

INDEX
Market price they said, 7$ga stock m. a mirror, io62b to m. to buy fat pig, iog7a
truth accepted in m., 7883 Marketplace, bird of night upon m., 2543 idols of the m., 2073 to m. and people, 8543 Marking, malady of not m.,

Married

and

that's

his

plague

meadow

3na
Benedick
happiness
the
in

m. m.

m3n, 2455
estate,

Maria,
say,

what

will

M. Aleksevna

579*

how m. without wife, 10943 how to be happy though m


866a

$%$b

Mariana, dejected M., 27 ib


in moated grange, 27 ib Marian's nose looks red, 22$*. Marie, sweet M., 8323 Marigolds, ardent m., $75a Marijuana, curlicues of m., 10763 Marine, another m. reporting sir,

would be m., 3543 imprudently m. barber, 4425


I

24ib Marks, fairer m., 32 ib I carry with me, 3663 not won or lost, 96 ib
of suffering, io36b our English dead, 8753 Marl, clod of wayward m., 245b over the burning m., 3423

man

and torn, iog8b mocks m, men, 222b m. to one person, monagony


10173

in haste, 39 ib tattered

uogb
Mariner, ancient m., 524b fear thee ancient m., 5251 hath his will, 524b if Ancient M. called Old Sailor, 75 6b monody not wake ra., i04gb unloose thy hawsers O m., 1053 Mariners of England, 5$7b Marines, on land as on the s., iiooa tell that to the m., 52 ib
that will do for the m., 52 ib Maritime, rebellions of m. provin-

Marl borough

Street,

hardly pas-

sionate M., 10763

Marred foundations we forgot, young man m., 26gb Marreth what he makes, 4113 Marriage a necessary evil, io2b
a noose, ig6b accident counts
all

Marley was dead, fv/ob Marlowe's mighty line, 303b Marmion, last words of M., 5igb Marquis duke and a' that, 4963

never m. that's his hell, 3113 no taste when you m. me, 48 ib not live till I were m., 2463 O let us be m., 6733 on Wednesday, iog6a reader I m. him, 67gb strange as if married a great while, 3923 sum m. people owe, 477b till anes we m. be, io88b
to green in flowers, 58ob to immortal verse, 3353 to single life, 3543 unpleasing to a m. ear, 222b we will be m. o' Sunday, 2iga

most immoderately m., io65b most m. man I ever saw, 7513

Mark

gg8a archer little meant, 250b as arrows fly to one m., 243a coming and look brighter, 6oa could man outlook that m.,
ces,

in

rn.,

776b
3223

thy
evil

days as m. day,

an

most

men

welcome,

36sa death loves

102b and death

well-bred

as

if is

shining

m.,

3ggb

and
as

and division, 77gb hanging go by destiny,


of two slaves, 7923 serious business,

young m3n m.

not m., 3g2a marred, 26gb

ever-fixed m., sg4a fault of wit to go

beyond m.,

i82b with cages, igob

Marries, day one m. her, 703 doesn't signify whom one m.,

5oob
times ch3nged 822a

356b go m. him well, 5i8b God save the m., 2380 God speed the m., 6o2b how my fame rings, 79 ib

community damnably

with

who

m.,

how
I

plain

tale

put you down,


543

2$ga
press toward the m., man's distinctive m., 666a

desperate thing, 3173 dirge in m., 2573 field of battle, 8223 friendships invalidated

when man m. again, 8sgb when woman m. again, 83gb Marrons, tirer les m. du feu, s6ob
Marrow,
anguish
of

m.,

10023

by m.,

7563

Matthew M. Luke and John,


357 a

from which love gone, ios4b good m. a communion, i7gb good m. each guardian, 9$8b
has

no drowning m. upon him, 2g6a


of the beast, 58b on red breast still, 6a6b
m.,

many

pains, 4283

has more joy than pain, 8$b hasty m. seldom proveth well,

philosophy

push

beyond

2i6a
hearse, 48gb in m. independence equal, g43b in m. wish to get out, 6o8a
is popular, $37a keep eyes open before m., 4223 love without m., 42 ib makes one flesh, 39 ib merry as m. bell, 556a not bed of roses, 8223 O curse of m., 274b of true minds, 2943 resembles shears, 5233 rob lady of fortune by m., 424b school of sincere pretenses, 8703 seldom develop without crises,

dividing joints and m., 55b fear deep as m., 10813 Puritan m. of my bones, 9903 suck substantific m., i8ob to bestow upon God, io66b Yankees have the m., 5533 Marrowbone, stole a m., iog4a thinks in 3 m., 8845 Marrowbones, better down on m.,

65ob
read m. learn, 61 a
see see their m,, J23b set a m. upon Cain, 6a

some m. of

virtue,

233b

the perfect man, i8b where his carnage, 5583

SSob Marry, advice to persons about to m., 8ioa almost any man, 65&b ancient people, 333b Ann, 8s6b as easy to m. rich woman, 66oa
best man better to

without
554a

m.

without

bound,

on earth, 8953 m. than burn, 523


loogb should m., 6i2b back 3nd m. me,

Mark Antony, woman


world, sSsb

you

his

absolute

shall, s8gb lost M.

boss's dsughter,

every
he'll

woman
come

Mark Twain, book by M., io44b


Marked him for her own, 4413 him for his own, 325b

10983
in haste repeat 3t leisure, g4Qb maiden will you m. me, 767a

Him

in flowering, 6543

where bolt of Cupid fell, 22gb our hour is m., 5o4b Market, do you know considering
I

935 b servant in love lord in stylish m., 88sb


tables,

ra.,

i6ga

m., 9273 existence m. price, 7$ga fortune like the m., 2oga knowledge bought in m., 68 8 a little pig to m., logsb of his time, 26*4b
press at

what Adam
m., 9963

2583

and Eve think of

m, maketh deere ware,

i68a

what torment not a m. bed, 3 o8b without love, 42 ib Marriages made in heaven, 2033 martini one of happiest m., 10385

3213 people people m., 8sgb m. to again, prepared proper time to m., 45gb they'd never m., 863b this is miching mallecho, 2633 your son when you will, 3243 Marrying blowing nearly dying, 10750

man and woman together, 39a msy m. whom she likes, my body to that dust,

6ggb

1478

INDEX
Mars, an eye like M., 2643 makes us or m. us, 276a of malcontents, 2673
this seat of M., 2260 Marsh, frogs in the m. mud, 1173 hen secretly builds, 7960 midst of unpeopled m., 5Q5b space 'twixt m. and skies, 7g6b Marshall Plan one of greatest contributions, 9833 Marshal's, French soldier carries m. baton, sosa truncheon, 2706 Marshes how candid and simple,

Master
Masses, cannot write for m., 588b contradiction between feudalism and m., io27b huddled m., 8i?a little virtue in action of m.,

Marvels

Marx

of man's labor, 10643 explains unsocialized pairs, 10223 methods of M 8893 Marxian socialism portent to his-

976b Marxism, aims and


iQ35b

torians,

68ia
ideals of M.,

long

suits,

Massive,

heard

10193 her

m.

sandal,

Mary at thy window be, 4gsb born of the Virgin M., 6oa
home, 6gob little lamb, 5635 chosen good part, 46b incarnate of the Virgin M., 6oa my M., 4593 my sweet Highlsnd M., 4953 no God and M. His Mother,
call cattle

retaliatory power, looob

had a

SMassy, solid
379*>

m.

hard

particles,

hath

7g6b
of Glynn, 7g6b

Mart, too close in church and m.,

keys he bore, 3$8b Mast, bends gallant m., 5513 like drunken sailor on m., 2i6a nailed colors to the m., 5193 of some great ammiral, 3423

two

m.

Martha, son of M., was cumbered with serving, 46 b Martial, airs m. brisk or grave,
airs of

what though m.
quite contrary, logsb Saint Anne mother of M., 7813 was that Mother mild, 684b young child with M., sgb

blown over-

England, 548a

cloak around him, 566b sounds, 342b swashing and m. outside, 247b

Martin Barton and Fish, 972b Elginbrodde, 11053 if dirt was trumps, 535b you Doctor M., io82a Martini, into a dry m., ggga one of happiest marriages on earth, io38b something about m., io52a Martin's, expect Saint M. summer, 2i4a Martlet, temple-haunting m., 2823 Martyr, die a m. go to heaven,
1653
saint

and m. rule from tomb,


fallest

Mary-buds, winking M. begin, 29ob Maryland, hills of M., 6263 my Maryland, 78 ib Mary's, my M. asleep, 4953 Masai House of God, 10453 Masculine, sea ra., 953b-954a soul a worker, 8673 Mask and antique pageantry, 3353 like Castlereagh, 5703 no m. like truth, 3gib of indifference, 934b Masks outrageous and ausfere, 99ob Mason, mere working m., 52ob Masons building roofs of gold, 2433 Masquerade, truth in m., 56 ib Masquerades as cream, 7663

board, 2i6b Master, accuse not a servant unto his m,, 26b artist who bids come to heel, loooa

no man m., 544b card m. to those below, 10193 disciple not above m., 423 everyone can m. grief, 246b executioner, 753 fire what a m., 577b
calls

behold m., 4183 blessing of St. Peter's M., 32 6b

M. said I see, 6233 new m., 2973 hewing wood for m. carpenter,
great has a

am m. of fantasy, 8303 in limitations the m., 4793 into woods M. went, 7g6b

75*

thou

Martyrdom,

all

a blessed m., 2993 have not gift of

m., 3703 Negro willing to risk m., 10833 not at all fond of m., 4183
to live,

Mass and majesty of world, io6ob baby figure of giant m., s68a blessed mutter of M., 664b chsos a rough unordered m.,
i28b

Jacky have new m., 10943 lent his hand, 6023 lifeblood of m. spirit, 3403 love prove so hard m., 8oob loyal service to his m., 3633 mistress two slaves, 7923 myth of cold war, 10563

ssob

dead
I

level of m.,

torches of m., 4733

i43 b Martyr's, groan of m. woe, 4903 no happiness perfect as m.,

Martyrdoms have crowned church,

the m., 9483 jeweled m. of millinery, 6523

3m

6g6b

man m.

of thawing clay,

need more to be m., 797b no more subtle m., 6530 nor master's man, 7533 not be slave not be m., O worthy M., 622b
of of of of of of All earth

86sb
Martyrs,

blood of Church, i43b

m.

seed

of

in m. duplicates, 6973 novelty stains ancient m., 7953 of London itself, 92 ib of men lead lives of desperation,

68 3 b mankind

Good Workmen,
and
sea, 87 8b

himself, %!$>
his fate, 6533,

create faith, 86gb faith not create m., 86gb love m. honor slain, 7o8b noble army of m., 6oa

682a

of the people, 484b Paris well worth a particle of general

noisy

set

m.

call

world,

88ob-

88ia Marvel how fishes live in sea, agob is to be alive, 9863 more and more, goib Marveling sweetly on her ills, loogb Marvelous, Chatterton m. boy, 5iib how m. is man, 8g4b in all nature something m., 97b man m. vain subject, i8gb mercies infinite love, 7743 unknown taken for m., 1403 what does not first appear m., i32b what is this m. book, 4363 what m. creatures we are, g25b

M., 202a m., gs6b unordered 1280 m., rough shapeless m. and rules, 8o8a spirit which goes through m.,

936b
the greatest blasphemy, i7gb times speed of light squared,

95a
world terrible in m.., 7833 Massa's in cold ground, 727b Massachusetts, here's to M., 8583 House of Representatives of M.
Bay, 464b

himself a happy man, 1223 ioi4b my fate, 8i6a of sea master of every country, 2ogb of us all, gssa one for my m., 10933 passion, 7643 Actaeon your m., recognize i28b Shallow I owe thousand pound, 242b shuttles prepared by M., 78gb

rampant Maenad of M., 7763


is, 5473 Massacre, sudden as m. desdly, 7593 Masses, back m. against

there she

more
classes,

speaker the tear, gsgb spirits of this age, 2553 and m., 77b strife is source stroke nature's p3rt, 6043 strong enough to be m., 435b such beauty as you m., 2gsb such m. such man, i88a temptation for man to m., 6673 these forces met m., 97 ib thou art my m. and author,
'59 to lead but not

6310

bow ye

m., 7673

m. them, 73b

Master
Master, unwitting where

INDEX
M.
Mate, choose not alone proper m., 459b great artificer made m., 824b in England I've m., 673b of Nancy brig, ^G^b old bold m. of Morgan, 74gb prison m. dockyard fellow, 74gb took unto herself a m., 5i2b who be maiden's m., 5183 Mated by the lion, 26gb few poets so m., 8573 Mater artium necessitas, 1513 saeva Cupidinum, i22b Materisl and obvious things, 376b computation, 92 2b depends on intellectual, 6283 disbranch from her m. sap, 2793 enjoyment, loigb environment, loigb man not m. is decisive, io27b moral spiritual force, 8633 objects of two kinds, 1133
of
life,

Mstre

pulchra

fili3

pulchrior,

dwells, 947b which is to be m., 746b

1213

M3trimony,
10173

critical

period in m.,

who's m. who's man, 39 la word work, Siyb ye know not when m. coraeth,
45
Masters',

in m. begin with aversion, 48ob jumps from love to m., 53ga

Matrix, freedom of expression m.,

crumbs from m.
any law
in

table,

43* Mastered

mind detached from

material

thoughts,

date and signature, 7653

Mastering,

Thou m.
m.

me

God,

8o2b
Masterly, wise and
inactivity,

5oib
Masterpiece 754a confusion

appear

as

flower,

made

m., 2843

great m. designed, 4953 joy to artist, 7543-b nature's m. writing well, 38ab no one knows m., g88b not created without labor, 8g<jb of nature, 6o6b place of m. in mind, 6oga Masterpieces, adventures among m., 8023

978b
8483

progress

and prosperity, raw m. of opinion, 84ib

m., g65b Mstron's glance reprove, 4493 mutine in m. bones, 2643 Matter, atom in m. duplicate in mind, 6973 Berkeley ssid no m., 56ib csrry on m. for own sake, 676b daily to be shown m., 68ob for a May morning, 2533 for virtuous deeds, 2056 goes to root of m., 7g4b great m. or small, 37b hear the conclusion of the whole m., 293 here and now cesse to m., 10063
I 3m full of m., 163 in his m. and ideas, 7133 indifferent to form, 3293 lovers lacking m., 2503 m3ke a Star Chamber m., 266b meaning doesn't m., 766b mince the m., 1930, zj$b

not give best at beginning, go7b Master's, dog starved at m. gate,

than m., 6ogb spiritual stronger sublime, 52gb surface of things, 7093 welfare of citizens, 8483 wrought in common crude m.,

49oa
great m. stamp, 7133 in m. steps trod, 687b lost fiddle stick, 10923 neither master nor m.

7723
Materialistic civilization, loigb

man,

Materializing upper class, 7i6b Materially ambitious, 9973 Materials indifferent but not use,
i

more m.

with nervous m., 7773

less

art,

z6ob

753*
Masters, artist has m. in eye, 6i5a done away with, 8o5b ego serves three harsh m., 8343
lords and machines
rulers, slaves

3 8b

youth gets together m., Materiel without morale, gsgb

682a

no m. from the heart, 26gb no m. what he said, 56 ib no m. where it's going, io23b order m. better in France, 4383
poetry does not m., 10053 root of the m. found in me, isb
solid hsrd particles, tfgb state of m. 3t given moment,

Mates

and

all

intrepid
slays,

sailors,

8g6b
not
m.,

851 a

moves 3nd m. and

by m., 293 no man can serve two m., 413


of their fates, 253b of things they write, 3173 old m. never wrong, loijgb sleep that m. all, 8ia

nails fastened

spread yourselves, saga all be m., 2723 worthy valets, 46oa Masterwork, history of m.

we cannot

not

failures, 9893 Mastery, achieve of m. of, 8oga I had m., ioa8b mastodon with m., io68a of desires, 8osb of subject, 9373

accord Mathematical pictures with fact, 942b Mathematician, Architect of Universe m., g42b capable of reasoning, g4b maker of patterns, 9423 reached highest rung, 8513 union of m. with poet, 7963 Msthematicisns, people who 3re merely m., 5393 m., Mathematics, sngling like

7233-b subordin3tes

nmnner

to

m.,

59 a
theory of m., 8383 totslly different m., 6323 un3lter3ble 3S qusntity of m.,

7ogb
unre3l 3nd temporal, 7093 wsking no such m., 2933 whst is m. never mind,

8ioa

what m.
what's

axioms of book of m.,

commence
8613 draws

in

786b disappointment,
conclusions,

ditches impure, 88sb the m. with Kans3S,


if

necessary

propensity for m., 845b strive here for m., 3443 Mast-high, ice m., 524b
Mastiff, toothless m. bitch, 5243 Mastiffs of unmatchable courage,

244*

Mastodon with mastery, io68a Masts, sailyards tremble m. crack,


2osb

eludes our grasp, 861 a m. never know what talking about, 91 2b in region of necessity, 9133 intuitive calculation transcended m., 9383 mathemsticisns' shortcomings not fault of m., 5393
in

8963 you h3te self, 9953 wings sh3ll tell the m., a8b won't m. whether S3ved, ioi5b M3tters, resd strange m., 2823 to do well is whst m., 328b touch no state m., 4503

whether

whst m. what anybody


6o8a

thinks,

Mstthew and W3ldo


looib

guardisns,

msn n3med
Mark
Mature,
Msttress,
sir

Match

for the devil, 10423 forces of selfishness met

poets
m.,

witty

m.

subtile,

2ogb

M., 4 1D Luke and John, 3573

97 ib strength

Matched
77ob
passions

with restraint, io74b buttons pattern sold,

possesses beauty, 9133 pure m. originsl crestion, 861 a queen of sciences, 5393 thst my sons study m., 4633 universe in tenguage of m.,

m.

in

nylon
public

tent,

10633

American

more

m. with mine, us with His hour, 9943 with aged wife, 6463 Matches made in heaven, Matchless deed's achieved,

64?b

Matchwood
8043

immortal

i8ab 444b diamond,

2iib Mather, Cottons m., io4ob Matilds snd house burned, go2b told dresdful lies, 9023 wsltzing M., 86ga Mstin, glowworm shows m. nesr, 2603

m., 10643 poets stesi, ioo7b Maturing sun, 5843 Msturity of custom, 9013 Msud, come into gsrden M., 6523

Msudlin poetess, 4103 Msunder, let public mumble, 5760


Msusolos' tomb,

m.

and

no2b

1480

INDEX
Mauve
and
cerise

Means
Mean, means what I choose it to m., 74^b not csreful what they m., 2i8b
nothing

automobile,

10633

Maw-crammed beast, 666a Mawkish ness and thousand


ters,

bit-

5803 Maxim, act only on that m., 44^0 general m. useless, 5gsa of British people, gigb
old

m.

in

the

schools,

3893

with Foxey, 6yoa Maxima debetur puero reverentia,


i4oa

me E equals mc 9503 McFlimsey, Miss M. of Madison Square, 7243 McGee, cremated Sam M., 9333 M 521 a McGregor, my name is wherever M. sits, 6o5b McGregor's, Mr. M. garden, 887b McGrew, Dangerous Dan M., 9333 Me, does Africa know song of m., 985* imperturbe, 6ggb
2
a
, ,

common

did

or

m.,

observances of decorum, or wish to mean, io8oa

5223
be,

poem should not m. but


10223 proper m., 41 7b
stupid public, 53gb suspicion companion
of

some
little

Maxims,

hoard of m., 6473

Maximum

temptation opportunity, 8373 May, all the months were M., 8130 April showers M. flowers, i88a as you do in M., 7963 ate oysters in M., 8g$a.

maximum

talk of m., the real m., 7g?b well it's m., g42a
little

6303

m.

this is

who am as a nerve, 56gb who sees M. in all, io6b

woe

is m., 3ob wretched let me curr, nob have not always, 44a ye

what m. man seeks, 72'b what may this m., 2593 woman of m. understanding,
533 a
level with fount, 6253 through meadow of margin, 48ia Meander's margent green, 3373 Meaner, ambition of m. sort, 2143 ask no m. pelf, 68ob

466b we speak not what what I say, 7443


souls,

we

m., 2713

come what come m., 28 ib come what m., i2gb, 5583 corals on in M., 6g4a
darling buds of M., 29 ib flowery meads in M., giSb
flush as M., 2643 fresh as month full of spirit as

Mea

you get no more of m., 2iia


culpa, 593
o'er m., by 486b groweth seed bloweth m., 10833
all

Meander

Mead,

stream

and

of

Meadow
M., i66a month of M.,
of

flowers in the m., i6sb flower bloom unfold,

5'7b grove and stream, 5133

24oa gather ye rosebuds while ye m.,

mother of months
of margin, 4813 ragged m. of

beauties of the night, 3oob creatures makes kings, 2i7b leave all m. things, 4O7b

in m., 772b
soul,

32ob
he smells April and M., 2673 I were lord in M., 774b in M. when sea winds, 6oab joys as month of M., 3223 lap of M., 447b outlives not M., 7743 laurel like snow in M., $2$b love I gave in M., 7963 lusty month of M., i75a maids M. when maids, 25ob March July October M., i87a matter for M. morning, 253a merry month of M., 3093

my

10313

rivulets overflow, 784b sheep's in m., iog$b

Meadow's, dropped

like flower
sere,

on

m. edge,
822a-b

i4b

Meadows 'brown and


bypath

574b

m.

where you

linger,

infinite m. of heaven, 6223 of Ease, goga paint the m. with delight, 222b trim with daisies pied, 334b up from the m., 626a

patronizing has m, side, 6893 Meanest flower th3t blows, 5143 floweret of vsle, 441 a honor peereth in m, habit, 2igb mortal known, 78gb of his creatures, 66sb wisest brightest m., 4ogb Meaning, blunders round m., 4iob deeper m. of Narcissus, 6g6a doesn't matter, 766b eternal truths have fresh m.,
force language into m., ioo7b free from all ra., 36ga fresh m. for new situation, g72b

month

flaps leaves like wings,

month was month of M., 7583 never month of love, 2iob nightingale when M. is past,
327*
of April

Meadowsweet, vales of m., io46b Meads, flowery m. in May, $i8b met lady in m., 5813

give each moment m., 9375 gives new m., 9993

M.
of

of June, sigb

one month on in M., queen o' the M., 6453

Meager knowledge, 7233 shriveled m. hopping, 454b Meal, barrel of m. wasted not, 13* full m. more than blessing,
535* handful of m. in a barrel, 133 in firkin, 6osb morning incense evening m., 4833 without wine, 484b Meal-drift molded ever, 8033 Meals, make no long m., 4503 Michelsngelo between m., 7593 of beef iron steel, 2443 saying grace at m., 5353 unquiet m. make ill 'digestions, 2i8b

9283

swarm
there's

welcome

when when
will
will

M., 10873 M., 8ssb 1673 lusty heart blossom, 1753 month of M. is comen,

bees

in

honor m. and import, 4683 it's what you please, 74ob language charged with m., 9893 love is only m., 10413 no m. except responsibility, i024b of life matches marvels, io64a poem never lose m., 9303
short

an

end

of

m. of long

speech.

faire

fresshe M.,

spirit give life highest m.,

4g8a ggsa

tn3t unfolded by surprise, 9303


to faint

m. make pretense,

i65b

36ga

have no slogardie anyght,


not thy

1673

when he
floures

m.,

i8ab
grene,

with

and

1673

Mayday, more bright morn, 48ab

than

M.

Mealy boys, 66gb

Mean

actions

ascribed

to

fear,

Mayflower, forefathers not on M.,


includin including those on M., 9743 Maying, oh that we two were m.,

8o4b
as cat's meat, 9323

on this star, 8783 tread upon brink of m., 4s8b what would we know m. of, 6o 5 b what you please, 74ob word of great m., 4683 year had lost m., i053b Meanings, hell full of good m.,
to life

between

nothing

and

every-

6 9 ob

thing, sGsb few say all they m., 777b

Meanly

Mayor,

Lord

M.

of

London,

golden m., 12 ib

words and m., 10053 admires mean things, 66oa child all m. wrapped, 3343

Maypoles hockcarts wassails, 3igb May's newfangled mirth, 221 a Mays, under blanching m., 8s4b Maze, mighty m., 4o7b
of schools, 402!)

humble hungry m., losob I m. what I say, 7443 if conduct m. and paltry, gga if they m. to have war, 4553
keep golden m., i2ib know not what they m., 648b

how m.

they

live,

nobly save m.

lose,

3763 6s8b

Meanness in argument of conservatism, 6073 poverty the parent of m., 943 all m. appropriate, 485!}

Means,

Mazes, in wandering m.

lost,

3443

man

full of distress, 7 ib

and content, 24gb

1481

Means
Means and
leisure civilizers, 61 ab

INDEX
Measured, choice word m.
phrase, 5123
it

appliances and m. to boot, 2423

bad m. and bad men, by all the m. you can, by any m. get wealth, by fair m. if you can, changes by peaceful m.,
content

4673 42 la 4123
iaga

shall

be

m.

to

you,

4**

8653 with small m., 6556


of what
life

language, 64gb motion, 5ioa out my life with coffee spoons, iooob
Measureless, caverns m.
to

Mechanics, bicycle m. from Day. ton, 10363 farmers m. and laborers, 5033 of culture, 8g4b reduced to atomic m., 75^ reduction of nature to m., 723b

man,

dumb
795 a

sense

m.,

end must the m., gSfb justify fair m. or foul, 97 ib find m. of evil, 3423 First Amendment m. what it
says, 99 ib for every man alive, 2703 game that never m. anything,

523 b rhythms m. and wild, 84b shut up in m. content, 2833 Measures, in short m. life perfect
be, 3 o4a Lydian m., 37 ib not men, 4153, 4493 not men but m., 4523 to impose one style, 10283

give enemies m. of our destruction,

76b

God placed in our power, 4653 heaven finds m. to kill joys, 225b if all m. permitted to fight evil,
lona
m. mischief, 2633 justifying m. by the end, i45a liberty as end and m., 832b
it

Measuring earth and heaven, 95b Meat, as egg is full of m., 224b born a roaster of m., 4&4b buys opinions like m., 75&b
cannot eat but little m., crazy salad with m., 882b dined upon cold m., 375b drink and cloth to us,
flowers in garden
i6 5 b

Mechanism, battles by m., 577a Mechanisms, vital m. have object, 6753 Mechanized armies, 9233 automation, 5683 Med, bloweth m., 10833 Medal, bright hard m., 7ggb Med'cinable gum, 276b Meddle, inclination to m., not with him that flat 2 5b wise men m. in commonwealth,
i78b

Meddles with cold iron, 2003 Meddling, every fool will be


253

m.,

i88b

Mede, of
i65b
18 ib
hall,

3ll

the floures in the m.,


herbs,

Medes gsthered enchsnted


*35 a

m.

in

God

sends m. Devil sends cooks,

live within m., 7513 love not say all it m., gooa love of money as m., 9773 make money by any m., 1233 mercy of his m., io7ob

1833

hungered and ye gave m., 443 hungry and he gave him m.,
445b
in
is

Medes, crushed the gold-bearing M., 7ob law of the M. and Persians, 353 Mediator, painting m. between world and us, 9645 president mostly a m., io68a
Mediatory, reconciling m. power, 5283 Medi3tress, 3rt m. between nsture
Medici,

due
not

season,
life

sib

not but blunders round meaning, 4 job of destruction unhitherto known, gSab of production, 686b requisite to ends, 4852 take m. whereby I live, 2353 thanks for m. of grace. 6ob that wins easiest victory, loiib
to achieve great ends, ioi6a to do ill deeds, 237a to make us one, go6b war political relations by other

more than m., 41 a made worms' m. of me, 2253 mean as cat's m., 9323 mock m. it feeds on, 2 74 a ray m. eats me, 10653 no stomach for such m., 78 2b not m. but appetite, gsob not m. nor drink, 10243 on our m. and on us all, 321 a one appointed to buy m., 3i7b
one man's poison another's m.,
ii4a out of the eater came m., lib outdid the m., 32ob provideth her m. in the summer, 23b seek their m. from God, 2ib sendeth mouth sendeth m., 1833 sit down and taste my m., 3243 sleep is m. to hungry, 1973 snewed of m. and drynke, i66b

and man, 52gb Miniver loved M., 8ggb Medicinable gum, 276b some griefs are m., 2 gob
Medicine bundles, io77b desire to take m. distinguishes msn from animals, 8173 doeth good like m., 253
faith and knowledge in 565 a for case like mine, 7o3b for life which has fled, for mental disorders, iO34b for misery, 853

m.,

m, 544b
t

703

what beauty m., 867a what deep heart m., i what I choose it to mean, 746b Meant, more m. than meets ear,
336*
well tried a
little,

has
in

to

examine

disease,

i36b-

'37 a

m.
565a

common
.

sense

master,

8253

Measles and
love

if so how is like m., 6853,

many, 75 la

in

m.

sins

of

commission
existence,

B^b

Measure every wandering

planet's course, 2123 fervor with m., 7963 keep our m., 7i6a-b last full m. of devotion, 6393 life moving to one m., 9453

some hae m. canna eat, 4gsb strong m. to them of full age,


55b
this dish of m. too good, 326b upon what m. Caesar feed, 25sb was locusts and wild honey, 3gb we are fish and m., 8893 we hae m. we can eat, went without the m., gooa

mortal, 4343 labors to destroy

own

7783
live

by m. live horribly, 4*5 a than disease, more harmful


1020b
Iswful wife, Bfib no m. but hope, 2713 of life, 37b paid seven percent, 5223 tsught by gods, 5373 thee to sweet sleep, 274b truth in m. difficult, 564b

my

man

my

m. of all things, 873 is mind's height, 66 ib judgment approves m., 4633 narrow m. spans, 854b observe due m., 68a of my days, i8b of torment measure of youth,
*78b shrunk
m., 2553 takes right m. of self, 5&4b teach his feet am., 774b there is m. in all things, i2oa three with new song's m., 8o7b turns everything to m., ios6b what you are speaking about,
to
this
little

within requisite, 737b Meatpacker, talent of m., 8g6b Meats, funeral baked m., 2583 of all m. soonest cloy, 357b Mecca, turn thy face towards M., i48b Mechanic, lawyer without history
a m., 520!)

long m. pacings, 6463 made poetry m. art, 456b mere m. operation, 35jb sad m. exercise, 6496 Mechanical equivalent of
795 b
slavery

worse than malady, i25b Medicine Hat, war bonnet of M., io4ib Medicines to make me love him, 238b
to

make women

speak,

8o2a

heat,

Medicos marveling sweetly, loogb Medieval hand, 7673 Medio tutissimus ibis, i28b
Mediocre, if you 3re m. snd grovel, 4603 minds, 3563

723a with what m. ye mete, 41 a Measured by my soul, 3963

future of world, 84ob Mechanician, visible sage m., 686a

148

INDEX
Mediocre passions, 3563 tomb of m. talent, 878a
Mediocrities, loss of appetite for m., 7950 single genius hundred m., 7703 with m., gratified Mediocrity,

Memorial
Mellowing, delivered upon m. of occasion, 2223 year, 3383 Mellstock, lie in M. churchyard now, 783b Melodies echoes of that voice,
5373 heard m. sweet, 5833 Melodious birds sing madrigals, ai2b bursts that fill, 6455
tear, 3383 5823 Melody, blundering kind of rn., 3693 could you view the m., 358b deprived of pitch, ggga falling in m. back, 526b grace is m., 747b life m., 6993 mortal m., 64 ib

Meet, two smiles m., 4goa we shall m. but miss him, 676b we three m. again, 28ob

when men and mountains


4gob

m.,

5010 has no greater consolation, 4783 history of masterwork not m.,


9893

where brook and river m., 62 ib with champagne and chicken,


with joy in sweet Jerusalem, 2i6b your visage here, io43b Meeter to carry off latter, 552b Meeting, journeys end in lovers m., 25ib
soul

knows nothing higher, 8503


solitude safeguard of m., 6o8a Meditate, in his law doth he m., i6b on blood, 244a on interstellar spaces, 888a thankless Muse, 3383 Meditating upon whatsoever state, io6b

meed of some m.

plot,

may

pierce, 3353

Meditation 6 95 b
let

and

water

wedded,

us

all

to m., 215%

maiden m. fancy-free, 22ga


of

my

heart, 170

Meets in oppugnancy, 267^2683 less thsn m. the eye, 9993 more meant than m. ear, 3363 Meg 3nd Molly dear, 74gb Mehitabel, dance m. dance, 9463 Meilleur, le m. des mondes possibles, 4173 Meinself und Gott, 8113 Melancholis of everything com-

my

luve

is

like the m.,

where m. neither anxiety nor


doubt, i57a Meditative spleen. 5i6b Mediterraneans see clearly, g77b Medium, internal m., 675a Medusa's, beauty that M. head,
10223.

Melsncholy

pleted, 8o5b 3s battle won, 5063 as gib cat, 237b bait, sgib

charm

in m., 5oob

494* singing and msking m., 543 small foweles maken m., i66a Melrose, view fsir M., 5183 Melt at others' woe, 4ggb butter not m. in mouth, i8sb in her own fire, 2643
into his heart, sogb Rome in Tiber m., 2873 this iron earth, 10553 too solid flesh would m., 257b with ruth, 3393 brown hills m. into Melted,
let

Meed of some melodious


33 8a

tear,

Meek

gentle butchers, 2553 blessed are the m., 4oa borne his faculties so m., 282b enter inheritance, 9073

and

with

these

gentle Jesus m. and mild, 425b holy and m. she cries, 4883

chord in m., 5923 chronic m. of civilized, dsys 3re come, 574b divinest M., 335b dull -eyed m., 2gob green 3nd yellow m., 252b House of Usher, 6423 Io3thed M., 334b long withdrawing rosr, madness, 1091 a marked him for her own,
4413

7833

7i4b

spring, 685b fortune m. to water, 3793 into air, ag7b like snow, 5593 Melter of limbs, 67b

I am m. and lowly, 42a mysteries revealed unto m., 373

Melting

airs,

4s8b

ornament of m. spirit, 57a safer m. than fierce, 666b


shall inherit the earth, i8b soft m. patient humble, 30 ib terrible m., go7a

men est no beans, giob men most witty, 3113


mirth h3s chord in m., moping m., 3483 most m. of reflections, most musicsl most m., music is good to the m., naked m. isles, 4igb naught so sweet as m., never give wsy to m.,
3103

mood,

27<5b

poem
93<>a

ride

on own

m.,

92gb-

726b 335b
3743

pot, 87ob sweet music's m. fall, 4423 Melts, grief m. 3W3y, 323b
like kisses, 559!}

Meek-eyed parents, i058a Meekness, fruit of Spirit is m., 53b wrath by his m., 487a Meet, beauteous flower when next we m., 2243 descend to m., 6o6b
experiment to me is everyone I m., 737b extremes m., 46ga firm I can m., 5o6b goeth on to m. the armed men,
i6b him with one tooth, goga if we do m. again, 2563 in her aspect and eyes,
in
it

pity

m.

mind
in

to

love,

3133

no m.

if plenty to do, sweetest m., %i$b ocean's gray m. waste, of mine own, 2503

3103 5233 6853

Member
of

then m. forever, 495b of the rabble, io32b

Members

arms and

idleness,

5743

pale

M.

sate retired, 443b

purge m., ag^b


rare recipe for m., 534b rhyme and be m., 2223

human community, 9743 one of another, 543 that one of thy m. should perish, 4oa Meme, plus 53 chsnge plus 13 m.,
6273

shsde of m. boughs, 248b


slow, 447b

Mememormee,
9693
ter,

bussoftlhee

m.,
bet-

558b

one

spirit

m. mingle, 5703
its

and not

see

many ways

m.

in

head, 743 one town,

me

243* by moonlight, 5&7b methinks they are not m., i87a morning dew, 7i4a

such charm in m., 5oob suck m. out of song, 2483 veiled M., 5843 villainous m., 2773 whst chsrm soothe m., 448b wh3t is most m., 64sb who dismissed avsrice, 46gb Melchizedek Ucalegon, 8ggb Meliorist, not optimist but m.,
8523 Mellow, fruit too m. for me, 41 4* he who goes to bed m., 3i2b humors grave or m., 3943 like good wine, 8693 rawness of opinion, 8553 Mellowed, fruit thst m. long,
to tender light, 5s8b

Memento, some common m.

Memnonium W3S

9793

in

all

its

glory,

Mr.

Eliot, 10043 never twain m., 87 gb on bridge of time, 7o7b

political

greatness
rising to

and wisdom

543& Memoire, il f3ut bonne m. 3pres qu'on a menti, ig6a Memoirs, not resd Barere's M., 596b we will write our m., go4b Memorable, days m. in history, 9*3* sentences, 74ob Memorandum, make a m. of it, 745* Memori3l, passover shall be for a m., 8b some have no m., 393 to soul's eternity, 73ib

m., 94a

shadow
spirit

m. you, looab

spirit m., 654b thee in that hollow vale, 32 ib though infinite never m., 3603

with

1483

Memories
Memories encrusted with sublime
thoughts, 9433
liars

INDEX
Memory,
table of my m., 26oa tablet a gift of m., 95b takes to caverns, s87b their very m. is fair, 362b

Men, brave m. brave from the


first,

33 ib

ought

to
if

have good m.,

331

more m. than
old,

thousand years

7073

mother of m., 7073 night of m. and sighs, 5363 of eld, 6423 Memory, adduces authority uses
m., i74a archives of m., go2b be green, S57a cherish his m., 751 a chords of m., 67b comes like a banshee, 8gob complains of his m., $55b dear son of m., 3343 emancipated from time, 5293 fills m. with natural objects,

thou fond deceiver, 447* thoughts to m. dear, 52ob throng into my m., 336b 'tis in ray m. locked, 2593 to m. dear thou remain, 5903 vanity tricks m., 8433 ventricle of m., 2223
vibrates in m., 572b viol of her m., 95jjb warder of the brain, 2833

brave m. lived before Agamemnon, 122b brave m. living and dead, 63ga busy haunts of m., 574a busy hum of m., 3353 by nature desire knowledge, 97b by nature equslly free, 4450
C3ll

up your

cannot

m., 5223 learn m. from

6na

books,

while m. holds a seat, s6oa wit at expense of m., 3913 Mem'ry, cherish his m., 7513 Men, a few honest m., 327b about me that are fat. 253b above reach of ordinary m.,

C3pable of wickedness, 8443 captain of m. of death, 3663 cspture of m. by women, 6sgb C3use or m. of Emerald Isle

4830
cheerful ways of m., 344b children of m. full of wiles, 913 circumstances rule m., 873 cities of m. and manners, 6463

478a fond m. brings light, 542b footfalls echo in m., ioo4b Franklin's quiet m., 5633 from false to false, s68b good m. needed after one has lied, ssib good m. to keep promises, 8o4b green, 3573, 541 b grows fainter relaxes bonds, go8a hands of m. weave, 778a he shall have a noble m., 2903
history vitalizes m., honor his m., 3043

5123
adversity test of strong m., isob are m. condemned, 4sgb all all honorable m., 255b all m. are liars, 22a
all all all
all
all

condemn m. because few, 6843 Constitution for all m., 6783 creatures that once were m., 8 9 4b
creep not walk, 6263 crowd of common m., 37b cunning m. pass for wise, darling of m. and gods, day is for honest m., 853 dead m. rise up never, Death that feeds on m., decay, 4493 deceivers ever, 2463 decent easy m., 4663 desire the good, 983
destiny with m. for pieces
plays, 6gob determine gods

all all
all all
all

nob
still,

m. be free, 64ob m. born distraught, io8oa m. born free, 3413 m. created equal, 47ob, 6393 m. liable to error, 372b m. make faults, 2923 m. Noah's sons, io78b m. strive, 6643 m. would be tyrants, 3&5b sorts and conditions of m.,

2093 ii2b

7753 2g4b

how how
in

456b vast a m. has Love, 4o2b illiterate him from your m., 48ob

sweet their m.

6oa
all

book of

my

indebted to
liar

m. a rubric, 1593 m. for jests, 4823

the king's m., iog5b the stones are m., yo4b and boys thick as hasty pudding, 10903
all

dispose,

nb

and

women
infuse

merely
into

players,

keep m. green, 54 ib should have good m., i36a life a m. without pain, 8ib mixing m. and desire, 10023 mousetraps moon m. muchness, 744a my name and m, I leave, 2ogb nation's m. and veneration,

248b animals

trunks

of

no force abolish m., 973b

no m. of having starred, ga8b not make philosopher, 5983 not necessary for love, 1041 a note you in book of m., 2143 of a lovely thing, 9823 of all he stole, 41 sb of benefits fades, 8ia of Boatswain a dog, 554b of loved and lost, 6403 of Paris inexhaustible, io2oa of the just is blessed, 243 of them is forgotten, 28b
only shield

m., 234a April when they woo, 25ob are men, 273b are my teachers, 4o8b are quick to flare up, 6$b are we and must grieve, 5i2b are where they are, 683b arm and burgonet of m., 287b as in a theater eyes of m.,

die like m., 2oa, 6a7b die to make m. free, 6gob died as m. before their bodies died, io6ob died to make m. holy, 6gob
differ as

heaven and earth,

653 a difference of forty thousand m.,

5063

2283
aspiring to be angels m. rebel,

4083
at point of death, 225b at whiles sober, 8543

attend m. and not women, 95b bad cause bad means bad m.,

from ordinary m., 7403 dine with some m., 9343 disbelief in great m., 5773 disease of old m. avarice, 3143 disgrace Isbor, 7i7b done with roofs and m., 86oa doors for m. to tske their exits, 315* duration of great sentiments
different

9223 outlive his life, 2633 painted perfect day, 862b pluck from m. rooted sorrow, 286a plucking fruit of m., 844b poor m. that only works backwards, 746a pray bring me
to

to m.,

4673 be read as books too much, 4063 be you the m. you've been, 8523 beacons of wise m., 7253 below 3nd S3ints 3bove, 5i8b
best faults, 2723 best of m., 287b best of m. that e'er wore earth,

makes great m., 8053 dying m., 7i2b enforce attention, dying m. 226b
eat hogs, g$$b

m. molded of

education is making m., 7413 eight or nine elderly m., 87ob either war obsolete or m., 10343 England is purgatory of m.,

30ib
better m. his victims, 4713 black m. are pearls, 2213

20lb envy of brilliant m., gioa


equal right of m. and women, 11043 errors of wise m., 3513 evil m. do lives after them,

men's
m.,

m.,

cherishing 7513 proper m. for politician, 77gb put red star in corner, io47b shall be ours, 6253 sinner of his m., 2963 some women stay in m., 876b

i6pa profitable

bodies of unburied m., 3153 body of well-instructed m., 6283 books like m., 388b

255*
evils

born under happier stars, 528b boys and girls level with m., 288b brave m. and worthy patriots,
3403

drsw

m.

fair

women and brave

together, g8b m., 555b

fear of little m., 7293


fell

fesred witches, 832b out knew not why,

35 ib

1484

INDEX
Men,
fifteen

Men
Men, no stander above m. and
no

m. on Dead Man's

Men,
if

Chest, Saab find me m. finds too late


first

who

subjects

7413 m. betray, 448b 68ob afterward,

care,

if ra. are destroyed, 8ob m. knew how women pass time, 86$b if m. like that wise bird, 81 oa if m. unselfish as women, 81 $b

women, 7oob two m. cannot be


guished, i^sb

distin-

fishers of m.,

3gb

flourish only for a moment, 673 foolery wise-in, have, 2473 fools laugh at m. of sense, 38 ib foot of unfamiliar m., 7143 forty thousand m., logab fought by mothers of m., 7goa
free m. free speech, loggb gear of foreign dead m., 1006a get and give, 4773 get there first with most m.,

in catalogue ye go for m., 2843 in m. we various passions find,

no worse than best of m., 2875 nor blame the writings but the
m., 403b not fit that

4o6b
infants boys

6g?b keeping m. off keep them on, 40ib knocking 3round with m., 4773 know so little of m., 8g4b label m. for God, 8s6b
Ifs,

m.

not not not not not

labels that give

name

to event,

7ogb
give

place

go armed

to better m., to seek, 10223

3283

7323 land where m. are laws not m., 463b

stones,

7O4b

m. be compared with gods, 1153 m. out laws, 46gb m. but manners, 4242 m. but measures, 4523 m. you took them for, *46b similar are gods and m., 6sa not three good m. unhanged, 239 a nothing great without great m.,

God give us m., 6gob God justifiable to m., 3493 God made mad, gi8a God these old ra., 83b
gods fashioned by m., 867b gods in likeness of m., 503 goeth on to meet the armed m., i6b good m. and true, 246b good m. eat that they may live,

lead lives of desperation, 6823 let us die like m., 6275 let us praise famous m., $8b let your light shine before m.,

403
light
like

upon

hearts of m., 4973

m. undergo fatigue, 4673 like satyrs grazing, 2i2b little group of willful m., 8422 live as m. not ostriches, 9743 live at level of great m.,
82ga
lived like fishes, 2gob

ioi6a miserable minds of m., iigb what m. dare do, 246b of Athens, 503 of courtly nurture, 721 a of culture true apostles, 7163 of despised race, 75 aa of England wherefore plow,

O O

57oa
of few words best, 244a of good will, 463, 593, ioi5a of ill judgment ignore good,

87b good m. to do nothing, 4545 good will to m., 657b good will toward m., 463 Gotham's three wise m., 5533 government of laws not m., 46 3 b government of m. and newspapers, 658b
great city greatest m., 7013 great m. are not always wise, i6a great m. contending with adversity, 311 a great m. light up time, 674b

8ia
of less value than gold, 1785 of like passions, 503 of other minds, 447b of philosophic temperament, 86ia of place and consequence, 8gga of polite learning, gSeb of renown, 6b
of stones, s8ob

of grest m. remind us, 62ob lodging place of wayfaring m.,


lives

34a
looks

quite m., 25$b

through

deeds

of

lost sight of horizons, 8g4a love to speak of selves, 77 ob

made brutes m. m. divine, 72 ib made m. and not made them


well,

2633

made make

spectacle to m., 523

great m. like torches, 6740 great m. make mistakes, 8i5b great m. not scholars. 6343 group of willful m., 8423 grow into likeness of bad m.,

city, gob makes m. mad, 2763

the

of the South, g4ja of weak nerves, logSb old m. are children, gia old m. from chimney corner,

2osb
old m. garrulous by nature, lisa old m. have rosy faces, 824b old m. know when old man
dies, 1052 a

msn many

died for m., 778b deaths in m., gi7b mssters of their f3tes, assb
that

g6a

may come men may go, 6523 may read strange matters, 2823
measures not m., 4153, 44ga melancholy m. eat beans, 3iob melancholy m. most witty, 3113 men's m., 6goa merriest when from home, S4$b merry m. all, io87b met with erected look, sGgb mice and m., 4gsb mighty m. of vslor, lob mighty m. which were of old, 6b mocks msrried m., 222b more lonely among m., 683b more m. killed by overwork, 8723

hanged that horses may not be


376b hangin' m. and women, iogia happy breed of m., 226b have died from time to time, 2503 have found thing to love, giSa have lost their reason, 255b have their price, 3g7b heard old old m. say, 881 a heart of oak our m., 43Qa heaven that leads m. to hell, 294b His ways with m., 6543 history biography of great m., 577* hit only what they aim at, 682b hollow m., 10033
stolen,

old m.

know young m.

fools,

2053
old m. ought to be explorers, 1006 a old m. should be explorers,

old m. shall dream dreams, older m. declare war, 93 la on shore interpreters, gosa only great m. obscene,

more nearly m.
i038b

and

women,

ought to mind business, 75oa our democratic public m., Sgyb Oxford m. who went abroad to die, g6ga parole of literary m., 43 gb persuade eyes of m. without
orator, ssoa

homely

m.

charmed

women,

864a honest m. revolutionize, 681 a honest m. shaped conduct, go2b honest m. with understanding, 472b

honor all m., s6b hope and love, 4773 if all m. were just, g2a if God punish m. according whst they deserve, i4ga

to

most m. eddy about, 'ji^b must be decided, 1003 must be taught, 4osb must endure their going, 2803 must work women weep, 6gob my m. like S3tyrs grazing, 2i2b naturally in two parties, 473b need of world of m., 6633 never be beloved by m., 5903 no compacts between lions and m., 64b no country for old m., 88sb

place where m. can pray, giga port liquor for m., 4333
practical

m. absorbed

in facts,

86ia
practical m. usually slaves, g77a praise famous m., g8b preached as to dying m., 3573

princerples or m., 6933 private m. enjoy, 244b prize the thing ungained, 267b proper m. as ever trod, 2531 proud m. in old age, 8sb

1485

Men
Men
put enemy in their mouths, 274a quit you like m., 533 quit yourselves like m., i2a rational spiritual beings, 10450 ready booted and spurred, 3623 reason never failed m., 8g6b reject prophets, 7080 rich m. rule the law, 448a rise on steppingstones, 64gb 395b rivalship of wisest m., roll of common m., aggb room for honest m., 467 a sailors but m., 2323 saints aid if m. call, 524a sandwich m. shuffling, 9753 savage m. uncouth manners,
schemes of mice and m., 4920
school for

INDEX
Men,
there
all

He makes

m., 548b

Men who
who

think

m. mortal but them-

3993 thoughts of m. decay, 201 a thoughts of m. widened, 647b

selves,

whom

possess opinions, 6gob say It can't be done, 8873 lust of office not kill

whom men condemn

6 9 ob

as

ill,

thousand m. that fishes gnaw,


2173
tide in affairs of m., 2563 tides of m., ioo8b to be leader of m., 8503 to m. a man is a mind, 79 ib to match mountains, 8s6b

whose heads do grow beneat


their shoulders, 27 2b whose visages do cream,

why don't m. why men behave

2313 propose, 5 87b like apes ooih yy *

tongues of m.

and of
heaven's

angels,
virtue,

willful m., 8423 believe willingly wish, iiaa

what

they

523 touched

by

3 78b traced lives of good m., 5173 traveled among unknown m.,

5iob
truest of

making

first-class m.,

m.

Man

wise m. from the east, 393 wise m. in great struggle, 46<j-b wise m. meddle in commonwealth, i78b wise m. of Gotham, 10943 wise m. profit more from fools,

of Sorrows,

703*
search land of living m., 5193 see m. as trees walking, 45b seldom make passes, 10293

697*

send

m.

who do work, 876b

sensible conscientious m., 4$ob sensible m. never tell, 6i3a sent not corn for rich m. only,

s8gb
shire for

M. who Understand,

993 b

should be what they seem, 274a shut doors against setting sun, agoa sing by land an' sea, 8743 single m. in barracks, 8733 sit and hear each other groait, 58sb six m. of Indus tan, 68oa slain a thousand m. with jawbone, lib slave to fate chance desperate m., 3083 sleek-headed m., 25$b small m. afraid of writings, 46ob
small
so

than eyes, 86b truth on lips of dying m., 7i2b truths not for all m., 4i7b turn one's back on m., 8503 twelve honest m., 3990 twenty m. crossing bridge, 9553 two m. of all mankind, Sggb two m. went up to pray, 3543 two strong m. face to face, 872b upon the hearts of m., 4973 uselessness of m. 3bove sixty,
trust

ears

less

1073 wise m. shun mistakes of fools, 1073 wisest m. have erred, 3493

wish m. everywhere free, 6383 with firebrand, in hand, 1723 with knives in brains, 6o8b with mothers and wives, 592b with muckrake, 8483 with passion for anonymity,
with rith sisters sisi dear, $gzb with Splendid Hearts, gg$b women and clergymen, 5233 women 3nd Herveys, 4143 women and professors, 9393 women better or worse than m., 3823

8i7b
vexes public m., 647b waken and stand, 43

W3r between m. and women,


10333

wars planned by old m., 9623 wars won by m., 9873


waster of rich m., 823

women
68gb

foolish

to

match

m.,

we sre the stuffed m., 10033 we petty m., 253b we will die free m., 4753
were deceivers ever, 2463 we've got the m., 7273

watch the m. at play, 94ob ways of God to m., 341 b we are m. my liege, 2843

women try luck m. risk it, Sggb women wiser than m., 9753 won by m. with courage, goa
wonder m.
2903
trust selves with m.,

words
325*

are

women

deeds

m.,

things
so

make

base

m.

proud, 2i5a

many m.
ioga

many

opinions,

whst wh3t what what what

is it

m. in

women

require,

write

worth a thousand m., 520:1 would be angels, 4083 what m. do not what

488b

some m. love not a pig, 2343 some to pleasure take, 4060 sons of m. and angels say, 4253
speak with tongues of m., 523 speech given to wise m., 376b spirit of m. who follow, 9873 spirits of just m., 563
strange that m. fear, 254b strength of twenty m., 2250 strong m. shall bow themselves,

m. call treasure, 6943 m. or gods these, 5833

28b
studied
close,

m.
7303

from

topsy-turvy

sleep o' nights, 25gb are dangerous, a$$b armed m., 10423 swindled by other m., io62b take best they can get, 432b talk of crabbed old m., ii4b

such such

as

mothers made them, 608 a you and other m. think, 253b whatever you stuff m. with they bear, 684b whatsoever ye would m. do, 41 a when bad m. combine, 452a when force subdues men, ggb when good m. die, 85b when m. and mountains meet, 4gob when m. drink they are rich,

they ought, 2073 ye are brothers ye are m., 5383 ye m. of Athens, 503 ye shall die like m., 2oa years perished to make us m.. 77 ib you are m. of stones, 28ob young m. all over world, 9203 young m. fitter to invent, 2093 young m. need stiffening, 8353 young m. regard elders as senile, 776b young m. shall see visions, 35b young m. think it is, 8g4b young m. think old m. fools,

m.

suffer the

when

gob
old m. gather, goob

2053 youngsters read m. understand.


bones,

where
1002b

dead

m.

lost

talking
text

of of m.

fall

of man, 6843 and women, 8503

where race of m. go by, 8463 which ordinary m. fit for, 2773

95& Menace, atomic energy a m., gtjob Menaces, insolent m. of villains, 464b

that are ruined, 454b that hazard all, 2333


that laugh and weep, 7753 that sow and reap. 7753 that strove with gods, 646b that were boys when I was

who are not historians, who borrow men who


534b

9523
lend,

Mencken Nathsn and God, g66a

Mend
it

fences,

boy, go2a there before us, 68 ib

who can't be bought, 948b who do the work, 876b who drown, 4303 who have a sense of honor, 643 who know much say little, 4363 who march away, 7843

anger and m. not, 4123 722b

or be rid on it, 284b knock breathe seek to m., 3o8a never made for man to m., 3723 nor yet too vain to m., 4<>4 a the heart, 4o4b

your speech a

little,

276b

1486

INDEX
Mendacities, better m., g88a Mended, all is m., 2313 least said soonest m., igsa my wounds were m., ggob old houses m., ggab Mendicant, rich man behaves like
m., 10633

Merry
sans

Merci,

la

belle

dame

m.,

5813
Mercies, all occasions invite his m., 3o8b marvelous m., 7743 tender m. of the wicked are
cruel, 243

Mene Tekel Upharsin, 353


Men's,

m. good, 6463 athwart m, noses as asleep, 2233 business and bosoms, 2o7b evil manners live in brass, 2993
all

Merciful, a 143

God

gracious and m.,

Meredith prose Browning, he is m. flesh and Merely, blood, loosa Merged like the bird, io6$b Meridian, in England under any m., 33<>a of my glory, 2983 zones and m. lines, 746b Merit, by m. raised to that bad
eminence, 3433

and mighty, 54gb


as constant, i034b

be

eyes in April, g66b faiths wafer-cakes, 243b fortune and m. eyes, 29 ib

have grown from sudden 559 a


history
it's

fears,

reed, 2073 blessed are the m., 403 give be m., 623 God be m. to this drinker, i55b He the most m., 1493

m.

to

broken

handsomely allowed, 4$3b makes his cook his m., 3613 makes his way, agyb of my m. you jedge, 6933
of perpetuity, 3313
oft got without m., 273b patient m. takes, 26sa

in

all

m.

lives,

2423

m. lives, 52ob judgments parcel of their fortunes, 288a men, 6goa music of m. lives, 2283 old m. dream, 368b old m. heads are bare, 10173 old m. lies, g88a one man's will all m. misery, 202b poor m. cottages palaces, 23 ib sweat of other m. faces, 64ob talk not of other m. lives, 383 times that try m. souls, 466b wives young m. mistresses, 2o8a young m. vision, 368b

powers, 2833 to me a fool, 7gob to me a sinner, 473 Merciless, loving rapid m., 10763 n3ture a m. stepmother, 1323 Mercury, st3tion like herald M., 2643 words of M. 3re h3rsh, 2233 Mercy 3nd truth are met together, 203

purchased by m. of wearer, 233* such I cannot say too much,

beauty m. have on me, 738b betwixt stirrup and ground,


ig7b

he obtains, 5573 to particularize is m,, 4gob truth only m. to history, 7503 unassisted m., 426b wins the soul, 4o4b Merits, careless m., 44gb goodness result of one's own m.,
i54b
obtain that which he m., 5273 seek his m. to disclose, 4413

31 4 b that which

do

justly

3nd

love

m.,

35!?

doing justice loving m., 4*67b full of compassion and m., 373

Mermaid on

dolphin's back, 2293


at

God

m. is God unjust, 3993 goodness and m. shall follow


all

Tavern, 5&%b

what things done


3163

the

M.,

Mens sana

in corpore sano,

isgb

me, i8a
ha'e m. o'

Mensch, es irrt der M., 47b Menschen, alle M. werden Bruder, 4g7a Mental excellence a splendid possession, ii5b exertion, 7783 fight, 4gob for m. medicine disorders, io34b
obesity m.
specialists
state,

my soul Lord God, 11053 half so good a grace as m., 27ob hand folks to God's m., 68gb has a human heart, 487a have m. on us, 593 have m. upon me, iga
his his
I
I

Mermaids, barmaids diviner than m., i05ib heard the m. singing, looia singing, 3o4b
singing

each

to

each,

looia
talk

Merrier

man

never

spent

10533

how

suffering

in in

m. disesse, 9773 Hsnover Square,

m. endureth for ever, 142 m. is everlasting, 2ia can he m. have, aoob asked and found, ig7b
show, 41 2b

withal, 22 ib the more the m., iB^b Merriest, Christmas told

m.

tale,

5i9 b

desired m., 3$b

7563
Mentality, origin of 10473

I to others

modern

m.,

is

above sceptered sway, 234b

Mention, making m. of thee always, 55b oh no we never m. her, 587b Mentioned, better damned than not m., 468b Mentioning, keeps m. woman he knew, i53b need Mephistopheles, judges something of M., 7&7b Mer, la m. toujours recommence,
Mercator's north poles and equa-

leaving m. to heaven, 424b Lord have m. on us, 593, goob


nobility's true badge, 2i8b not m. unto others show, 20ob nothing emboldens sin as m.. 2gob of a rude stream, 2g8b of his means, io7ob on my poor people, igib on such as we, 8730 on Thy people Lord, 875b peace on earth m. mild, 425b r'lty Peace and Love, 4873 qu3lity of m. not strained, 234b render the deeds of m., 234b seasons justice, 2$4b see evil drowned in m., 8s8b show no m. ourselves, 68gb

maddest m. day, 6453 are from home, 243b Merrily did we drop, 524b die all die m., 24oa fly after summer m., 2Q7b hent the stile-a, 295!)

when they

let

him drink

m., 3023

shall I live

now, agyb

of m., 265b innocent m., 768b Merry, all their wars m., gi8a as cricket, 1843

Merriment,

flashes

as
as at

day is long, 24sb marriage bell, 5563 forty year, 66ob


672b

Christmases happy

New

Years,

746b Mercenary, followed 8543 slavish m., 4613


tors,

m.

calling,

crews laid to rest, 9473 eat drink be m., 28b, 46b

God

England was m. England, 5igb rest you m. gentlemen,


logga
1823,

Merces,

ipS3 quidem virtus sibimet pulcherrima m,, $2$b

shown

Merchandise, not an house of m., 4 8a Merchant, mighty M. sneered, 73 6a


overpolite
train
to

customers,
to

5453
chief,

anyone

be m.
is

every failing, shut g3tes of m., 44ob so great is his m., 2ia temper justice with m., tender m. of God, 463 that m. show to me, 4i2b they sh3ll obtain m., 403
to forgive, 3703 to myself I cried,

to

5583

good to be m. and wise,

3483

guid to be m. and wise, 4g6b he that is of a m. heart, 34b


heart doeth good, 353 heart goes all the day, 2g$b heart maketh cheerful countenance, 24b I am not m., 273b if to be old and m. be sin, 2sgb

949*

Merchantman, monarchy

a m.,

5iob

4gib Merchants are princes, 3ib have no country, 4733

we do pray for m., 234b wound with m. round, 8osb


Mere, honor 3 m. scutcheon, 24ob

keep
519

our

Christmas

m.

still,

1487

Merry
Merry, led m. m. lives, Ssgb may'st hear the m. din, 524b men all, io87b men at point of death m., 2250 merry lives, 859!* merry merry roundelay, 2O4b

INDEX
Metal, base m. of humanity, 8i7b clang of m., 878b no use of m., 2g6b of man tested, 6gsb sonorous m. blowing, 342b there on shining m., io6oa Metals, keys of m. twain, 338b

Mice, cat in gloves catches no m., 4223 chased him continually, 5323 desert building sbout to fall, !33 a fishermen sppear like in., 2ygb
like little

monarch scandalous and poor,


3823

m.

stole in

snd

out.

Metaphor
sweet

fertile

power, g78b

35 b

month of May, 3093 never m. when I hear


music, obstinate
pliant

m.

morose,

old soul, logab playing of m. organ, loggb rather have fool make me m.,

2503 small cheer makes m. feast, 2183 three m. boys are we, 3133 'tis m. in hall, i88a turn his m. note, 248a tu-who a m. note, 222b
very m. dancing drinking, 372a wanderer of the night, 22ga wine maketh m., a8b wives may be ra., 2673

mistaking m. for proof, gogb motive for m., gs6b Metaphysical impossibility, 57sb power, io58b tobacco, io85b Mete and dole laws, 646a with what measure ye m., 41 a Meteor flag of England, 537b misled by fancy's m. ray, 4933 of ocean air, 6333 streamed like a m., 342b streaming to the wind, 342b Meteors not needed less than mountains, 9945 Meter balladmongers, 23gb bards of m. free, g62b prose opposed to m., 527 b Meter-making, not meters but m.,
6073 Meters, not m. but meter-making, 6073 Methinks they are not meet, 1873 Method for choosing presidential nominee, Q&$b for studying unconscious, 8g4a in man's wickedness, 3i6b intuitions without m., 8673 invention of m. of invention. 86ia madness yet m. in 't, s6ob of drawing up indictment, 4533 of making a fortune, 4423 of scientific investigation, 724b premature renunciation of m.

schemes of m. and men, 4g2b three blind m., iog2b turn m. into horses, 8573 with wings, 10643 Michael and his angels fought,
583 Michelangelo, Italy from designs by M., 7593 not want M. for dinner, 7593 tslking of M., looob Miching mallecho, 2633 Mickle, every little mskes a m., ig6a

Microcosm and macrocosm


stoned, 7243 public school, 6113 Microscope begins where telescope

of

ends,

sggb
press,

yarn from fellow rover, g47a Merryman, Doctor M., sgob moping mum, 76ga Mesh, Mammon's m., 86ob Meshach, Shadrach M. and Abednego, 353 Meshes, though its m. are wide, 75* Mess, Benjamin's m., 7b cleanin' up whole m. of them, 10153 let other people clean up m.,

of thought, 5ggb Microscopes of the

87ob

Midday, kindling beam, 34ob


sweat, 32 ib

eyes

at

m.

with wing aslant, g33b Middle age is when, 10523


age

time

o*

improving,

35 ib

aspirin of m. classes, io5ob beware the m. mind, ggob class best political community, g8b
class

in

Araerics

the

n3tion,

of imprecision of feeling, loosb Message for the age, 878a many a m. from skies, 4953 nature's m. into song, gg8a of big round hand, io57b to Garcia, 8353 Messed up life for nothing, ioo8b Messenger, busy lark m. of day,
1673
I

gSob take m. and try it, gfob which rejects revenge, io82b Methods, democratic m., 9723 know my ra. Watson, 8503 Methought I heard one calling
Child, 323b saw the grave, igga Methuselah, days of M., 6b
I

7i6b dead vast and m. of night, 2583 enchantments of M. Age, 7i3b in the m. be sparing, 67b isthmus of a m. state, 408 b no m. commercial, 10643 of the night, 74sb safest in the m., i28b son of M. Border, 8sga
station

fewest

disasters,

$$k
and

will send

my

m., 363

of

Messengers, 596a

sympathy and love, 7523 bade m. ride forth,

vulgarizing m. class, 7i6b wheel in the ra. of a wheel, g4b

Meticulous, politic m., looia


Metier,

cautious

and

whole has beginning


end, gga wives companions 2083

m.

Messing about in boats, 8523 Met, angels m. it half the way,


37<>b

mon m.

et

mon

art c'est

for m. age,

day and way we m., 775a dearest foe in heaven, 2583 guests are m., 524b
hail fellow well m., 3913 I m. a Californian, g26b

man who wasn't there, me in evil hour, 4933 men m. with erected look,
er,

lovely monster, i057a

9383

vivre, igoa Mettle enough to kill care, 2473 grasp it like a man of m., 4003 lad of m. a good boy, 2393 Metuant, oderint dum m., iogb Meurs, je m. de soif en couste" la fontaine, i7ob Meurt, la Garde m. mais ne se rend pas, 5083

Middle-sged 3dversity, 10423 build woodshed, 6823


prosperity, 10423

Middle-cl3ss blasphemy, 8s7b morslity, Stfb Middlesex, sere in M., 59$b


villsge and fsrm, 6243 Midnight, bridge 3t m., 62 ib cease upon the m., 58ab Cerberus and blackest M., 334b cle3r, 657b come again, 10663

Mew,
3&gb

cat

m. and dog have day,

266a

mercy and truth are m. togeth2oa

never

m.

man

and cry m., 23gb Me-wards, to m. your affection's


kitten
strong, 3203

didn't

like,

deep m.

lair

made, 5203

954* never m. or never parted, night first we m., s87b no sooner m. but looked, part of all I have m., rancor with cryptic mirth,
true when you m. her, we have m. enemy, 5533

Mewing her mighty youth, 34ob


4g4a

2sob 646b 8ggb 304b


love,

Mexico, a Virgil at M., 4423 poor M. so far from God so close to U.S., 7343 Mezzotint, an etching a m., 666b Micawber's favorite expression.
6713

Mewling and puking, 24qa

dreary, 642b gravity out of bed at m., 2393 hags, 2853 heard chimes at m., 2423 hour's sleep before m., 3253 into m. galloped, 6633 iron tongue of m., 2313
it

you

not

with

my

true

ig8b Metal, as m. keeps fragrance, 9303

Mice and men, 4Q2b and rats and such small deer,

noon of thought, 4703 is m. and time passes, 6gb hours, 58$) mournful m. hours, 62 la
is

moan upon m.

1488

INDEX
Midnight, ninth-month m., 701 b oil, 32ib, 4oia once upon m. dreary, 64ab owl songs or m. blast, 562 a ride of Paul Revere, 6asb shout and revelry, 336b strikes and hastens, 854b through m, streets, 48gb time cease and m, never come, 2i3b year's m., 3063 Midnight's all a glimmer, 87gb Midshipmite, bos'un tight and
m., Midst,
I

Milk
Mildest-mannered man, s6ob Mildew, beware Mother M.,
10653

Mightiest, Christmas broached m.


ale,

5igb

in the mightiest, *34b Julius fell, 25&b Mightily, lay m. in whirl of dust,

Mildewed day
silo,

in

August,

10753

94ob

643 pleasing myself m. 37sb


strive m. eat as friends, siga Mighty above all things, 365 all proud and m. have, 4193 all that m. heart, 5123 book m. theme, 6973 Caesar thou art m. yet, 256b continent hitherto unknown,

Mildness, ethereal m. come, 4igb Mile, crooked ra., iog6b every m, two in winter, 3253 of warm sea-scented beach, 6633 walked m. with Sorrow, 958 b Mile-a, your sad tires in a m.,

295 b Miles around wonder grew, 85 2b

him

75b
first

away
I

last

m.,

3463

i7 3 b

have many

in preciousness, 792^ ra. to fare, g27b

am
m. m. 6ib

in in

in the m. of them, 433 of eternity, 8i4b of life we are in death,

dead, 4igb each a m. voice, 5163 eagle mewing her m.

youth,

34ob
earthly marchings, 6g6b

in the m. of things, 1243 into the m. of the sea

upon

dry ground, 8b
stood in m. of Jordan, lob Midsummer, gorgeous as sun at
m., 2403 madness, 2533 Midwife, she is the 2233 Midwifery, my m. like
95 b

fates, 8993 fleet of Wren,

of fertile ground, 523b on foot to fare, 927 b river uses up m., 7603 sed m. sed pro patria, 8653 see it l3p the m., 7363 Sheridan twenty m. away, 7i8b
three thous3nd m. 3nd died, 6 9 3b to go before I sleep, g27b twelve m. from a lemon, 5233
villain

9113
thee m., 8623

fortress

is

God who msde

our God, i7gb

gold, 3033 gre3t and ra. resolutions, 352b


fairies'

snd he many m. asun-

m.,

hand of a m. man, 22b


he that
is slow to anger ter than the m., 24b hear the m. crack, 3933

is

bet-

theirs,

der, 2253 Milestones, counting 6 3 2b

m. count on,

Midwinter, bleak m., 74oa Mien, monster of frightful 4093 truth has such face and
37oa Mieux, le m. bien, 4i7b
est

heart

is

m.

how
let

lying still, 5133 are the m. fallen,

i2b

m.,

in the Scriptures, 503 lak' a rose, 845b


little

1'ennemi

du

look on

tant pis and tant m., tout est pour le m., 4173

43&b

Might, clamor of waters and m., 772b dear m. of him that walked, 339 a do it with thy m., sjSb exceeds man's m., s6Sb
half slumbering, 58oa honest man's aboon 4 9 6a
is it

m. babe alone, 354b body m. heart, 24sb my works ye m., 568b make m. ocean, yigb many and m. are they, 874b Marlowe's m. line, sosb maze not without plan, 407 b

headstones change, 6g4b road to hell without m., 10423 Milieu, le juste m., 4i7b un m. entre rien et tout, s6sb Militaristic stairway, io8sb Military, ambition of m. leaders,

into

959 a
civilisn control of m., 9843

establishment, ioi6b forces are one team, iO25b immense m. establishment,

men of V3lor, lob men which were

of

old,

6b

his

m.,

right, i5&b

king's

m. have been, 626a m. greater than human,


ra.

shall be called God, 3 ia m. Caesar, 2553 pain to love, 357b

name

Merchant sneered, 7363 merciful 3nd m., 54gb minds of old, 5sab
the

m.

ioi6b mschine, g22b man, 2443 mind, 888a morale in m. unit, 9593 no adequate m. defense, g8sb only one m. organization, 10263 period of m. government, 8893 power and economic output,
10633
S3fe if m. way of life, 995 b unrestrained m. power, 997b W3r too serious for m., 7863
Military-industrial complex, ioi6b Militi3, place dependence upon m., 4613

873

Latimer and Ridley in


faith, i8oa

of

love the loa

Lord with

all

thy m.,

not by m. nor by power, 363 of gods slow but sure, 853 of the Gentile, 55ga protect us by thy m., 627b
right makes m., 6360 sadness of her m., 584a

poets in misery dead, 5123 put down the m., 4sb ro3st beef, 3923 scourge of war, 64ob so m. a Redeemer, 593 some h3ve C3lled thee m., 3083 sound of m. wind, 4gb splendor of the M. One, io6b states characterless, 268 b things from small beginnings

Milk, adversity's sweet m. philosophy, 2253

and honey

shining with all ra., 745b spend her blood and m., 8423
spirit to be

of counsel

man

and m., gia

grow, 3673 true free Russian speech, 688a victories of m. generals, 7013 weak and m. Russia, 7103 weak things to confound m.,
of eye and ear, sogb Migration of the soul, 933 Migratory, unperplexed like m.
birds, gsSb Mild and magnificent eye, 662b gentle Jesus meek 3nd m., 425b

buys opinions comes frozen 222b

blessed, 687b like m.,

7s6b
pail,

home

in

cow of world, io78b


find trout in m., 6823 for Hottentots, 10103
in pan,

with thy m.,

775

5ib world

Tubal Cain man of m., 6773


Might-have-been,
7 3 ib

name

is

M.,

Might-have-beens, poor m., 8i6a Mightier, cometh one m. than I, 45* make thee m. yet, 8623 pen m. than sword, 60 ib speech m. than fighting, 33 than the noise of many waters, 2ia than they in arms, 346b

grateful evening m., 345b Mary was mother m., 684b of affections m., 36gb peace on esrth mercy m., 425b

tormenting m. im3ge, 6g6a Milder fate than tyranny, 78b term to governments, 4713

6o5b flowing with m. 3nd honey, 83 my ewes 3nd weep, 2gsb of human kindness, 28 ib of Psradise, 5243 quart of m. 3 day, loioa skim m. masquerades as cream, 7663 sweet m. of concord, 28sb take m. cheaper than keep cow, 7560-7573 take my m. for gall, 3823
Isnd
tyrant-hating m., 6923

1489

Milk
Milk, went out to m., logga white curd of ass's m.,
41 la

INDEX
Millions, yearly multiplying m.,

Mind, chance favors m. prepared,


7i8b changeful m.
characteristics

6763
yet to be, 56$) yet unborn, 4443

Milked cow with crumpled horn,


iog8b goat instead of cow, logga Milking, going a-m. sir said, 10953 lilting at ewe m., 4465 time of m., 10053
she

of

of mortals, 8oa vigorous m.,

Milks, love babe that m. me, a8b Milk-white, before m. now purple, aagb hens of Dorking, 67 gb Milky, all the m. sky, 88oa baldric of skies, 578b over Sado the m. way, gSob solar walk or m. way, 4083 twinkle on m. way, 5i4b Mill, at the m. with slaves, 3493 cannot grind with water that's past, 324* charge in earnest were it m., 7823 does m. make water run, 891 a God's m. grinds slow, 3253 golf links so near m., Q4ob grind souls in same m., 8073 John Stuart M., 9343 much water goeth by m., 1853 of the conventional, 7983 of the mind, 8853 of truism, 6osb willowy brook that turns m., 5oob Milldams o' Binnorie, io88b Millennium, war usher in m., 10123 Miller, honest m. hath golden

Millionth, encounter for m. time, 968b Mills are to turn, 7g6b dark Satanic m., 4gob of God grind slowly, 3293 Millstone hanged about neck, 473 hsrd 3S a piece of nether m., i6b look through 3 m., 2033 Milquetoast, Caspar M., g8gb Milton aggravated dissociation. ioo7b attracts into unity of ideal,

427
breast quiet m., 358!) clap padlock on her m., 38^5 clear your m. of cant, 4 b 33 clothed and in right m., 45b cobweb bridge from m.. 86&b*

chaste

8663

companion none

like

unto m.,

1873 complicsted state of m., 766!) concentrates his m. wonderfully,

4323
conscious m,

trained like par-

hold which M. held. 5i2b function as M., g6ob had imaginative mind, 528b knew too much for poetry, 8623 malt does more than M., 8536 mute inglorious M., '44ob reason M. wrote in fetters, 487b test of M. to function 3S M., 9 6ob thou shouldst be living, 5i2b wss for us, 662b
Miltonic,

5 fai th

9363 content, 2o6a


corrupt public m., io48b couldn't copy my m., 8743 courage gaiety quiet m., 8253 creations of m. be blessing, 9503 cut from nature loses life, 544b dagger of the m., 2833 daylight in the m., detached from material mat

rot,

g65b
distressed in

baknced and M.

style,

8043 Milton's prince of poets, 5613 wormwood words, 339'b Miltons, no mute inglorious M.,

disdaining littlenesses, g5b m. body or estate, 6oa dupe of the heart, 35 5b education forms common m.,

water, 1853 not all the water, 1853 there was a jolly m., 4643 Milliard -headed throng, 4073
sees

thumb, 1673 knoweth not of

Milliner,

perfumed
jeweled

like

m.,

2383
Millinery,

mass

of

m.,

timorous, ioi7b golden birds, 8$oa high man aiming at m., 664b mske thst thousand up a m., 3203 nmrching feet, io6gb play pleased not the m., 26ia second m., 43^ Millionaire, right of m. to millions, 7573 ruined m., loosb trustee of poor, 757b embrace now all you Millions, m., 4973 fate of unborn m., 4613

6523 Million dollars

g6ob Mil town, tamed by M., 10763 Mimic motion made cry, 9563 Mimosa touch, 10573 Mimsy were borogoves, 7453 Mince, future 3 m. pie, 10463 not to m. the matter, 1935 this matter, 273b Mincing poetry, 23gb walking and m. as they go, sob Mind, a certain unsoundness of m., 594b absence of m. we have borne, 535b accur3te m. overtsxed, 63 3b acts of mind itself, 52gb sllus on yer m., g63b and soul according, 64gb as 3 dead man out of m., 183
3S

4o6b employ m.
error

to rule, iisb

windows of m., 3013 a loose sslly of m., 427!) esS3y ev3ngels of the m., g66b exercises his m. with suffering,
chokes
loo'b

extract laws from nature, g66b eye see for hand not m., 68 ib face so pleased my m., 10863 f3ce the mirror of the m., i45b f3lse volume of single m., 79 ib fanatic can't change m., 9253 fsrewell the tranquil m., 2753

sspire

m. pitched ear plessed, 458b to higher things, 203b


in

3tom

mstter duplicate in m.,

697a

for defense, 50 ib

m. born m. must die, 9953 of bubbles like us, 6sob of debt, 453b of mixed shades and shadows, 6973 of spiritual creatures, 345b of tongues record, 5563 one murder made villain m. a hero, 4603 ready saddled 3nd bridled, 3623 right of millionaire to m., 7573 run into the m., 11043 tear- wrung m., g2ob there's m. in it, 7593 who are poor, 10823
if

3ware of own rectitude, 1183 bslloon of the m., 8823 beauty exists in m., 434b be3uty momentsry in m., 955b become awsre of itself, 6o8b beholding beauty with eye of
m., 933 benevolence is m3n's m., loob best work the hirmsn m., 4953 beware the middle m., ggob
blessed
bliss

feed this m. of ours, 5o8b fiery particle, 56 ib fire of the m., gg8b b3nish underfirst from m. standing, 86s fool uttereth 311 his m., 26b frailty of the m., 3923 free m. gu3rds rights, 544b free play of m., 7i3b freedom of m., 3376, loisb frugsl m., 457b gentle m. by gentle deeds, aoob gentle sensitive m., 8823 gentleness of spirit serenity of m., 3263 geometricsl m., 3853 golden m. stoops not, 2333 good in which m. 3t rest, i6ib

man who

good
i3ib

m.

possesses

kingdom,
not,

possesses

keen

m., 923

grateful

m. by owing owes

who

dost

thy

m. bosst, 3583

which centers in m.. 4483 block of W3X, 95'b body filled and vscant m., 244b bonds only in m., 908 a breaks chains from every m., 4883 bring S3d thoughts to m., 5o8b by observation satisfy m., 68oa capsble of anything, 843b celestisl wisdom calms m.,

344b
great fortitude of m., 42gb greatest powers of m., sssb grief develops m., 9083 of m. widening con-

growth

sciousness, gssb had such burdens on m., 8833 happy alchemy of m., 41 8b has mountains cliffs, 8043 has thousand eyes, 826b

1490

INDEX
Mind, he that wants anger hath maimed ra., 3335 heart argues not m., yiab her m. to be attached like garden, 7g8a
his eyes are in his m., his own business, 195 a

Minds
Mind, stops and
steps of m.,

Mind, nobler in m.
26ib

to suffer,

228b

m., 9g5b household in oneness of m., 6$b for well-stored m., 8i5b hunger I am not in perfect m., 2803
idle
if

history of

human

nor mouth had no nor m. expressed, 8o3b not acquainted with his m., i34b
not body enough to cover m.,

noblest frailty of m., 3803

stress on not changing m., 93 ib sublimity the echo of a noble m., 144* submitting things to desires of m., 2073 Sumner's m. contained itself,

52ab
not enough to have good m., 327b not rival save with m. not set m. for or against, not to be changed, 3423 not yet of Percy's m., 2393 of own beauty m. diseased, 5573 of superior man like heaven,
f

suspicion

haunts

guilty

m.,

m.

knows

2i6b
sweet to let m. unbend, i22b swift m. beholds, loa^b tact a kind of m. reading, 8i6b that can hear music, 9953 the music and the step, logoa the music breathing, 3585 time out of m., 1943 to m. shameful to heart beauty. 7083 to me a kingdom is, 1923 to me an empire, 1923 to men man is m., 79 ib
to

not

what

ii

wants, 1073 no hatred in m., 88ab impatient, ztfib impressions of free m., SSsb in adversity keep an even m.,
in in in

i2ib another Zeus puts a good m. 63b


its

74oa
old in body but never m., lisa one just suited to our m., 5383 only msn has nssty m., 7643

in my in the

purest play, 10793 man a motion, sogb m. of mankind, 10843 m. ever burning, ig8b inaction saps vigors of m., i74a

m. of

Indian 4o8a

whose

untutored

m.,

ingratiate deeply with m., 391 b is an aviary, g6a is its own place, 3422 is like bat, io7ga
is

discussion, gi2b openness of m., 7i6b opinionated m., 882b oppressions of body and m., 473* or body to prefer, 4o8b out of sight out of m., i7ob,

open m. free

mind, 5i8b

torpid in old age, 432b tranquil m. a m. well ordered,

688b
overset
painter's

peace for m. possible, is stayed on thee, 31 b it's all in the m., io4gb

m. with reading, 8i6b m. with viewer, 59 ib


a

1563

passion passion

fever

wholly

keel, 6953 the Lord, 513 labyrinthine ways of m., 856b last infirmity of noble m., gsSb laugh that spoke vacant m.,

known m. of

keep m. steady on

peace is a peace of m. we must find, 1043 persecutes the m., 3703

in m., 3813 of m., 10383 state of m., 3733

i4ib troubled captain's m., 7923 troubled m. be stranger, 3223 troubled sea of m., 58ob tumors of a troubled m., 3493 tyranny over m. of man, 4723

449*
let dauntless
let

m.

still

ride, 2163

lets

your m. alone, 10333 go thousand things, 765a leveling rancorous m., 8843

persusded in his m., 51 b philosophic m., 5143 pity arrests the m., g68a plumb Orient3l m., 87ib poem act of mind, 52gb
poetry

fine-spun

from

m.

at

power

peace, 1293 lies in

m.

frame without 2o8b untutored m., 4083 vacant is mind distressed, villain's m., 2320 was still unpledged, 84b water never formed to m., weakness of human m., wet m. and say something er, 913 what I am taught, 5463
universal

m.,

4573

9563
37 sb
clev-

lever of all things. 546b like musical instrument, 7osb live on little with contented m.,

and body,

1150
presence of m., ioga, 6gsb presence of m. in danger,

37^

ii4a

on the heart, 355b look dean through the m., 2033 love looks with the m., 228b
lives

proper judge of m3n, i3c-b prudent m. can see room, 8ab


pulse in eternal m., 9943 quiet m. richer than crown,

what is m. no matter, 8ioa what m. put into nature, 9673 wh3t pleased to call m., 5973 where is love but in rn., 56gb wisdom entereth not in malicious m., i8ia

words are physicians of m.


seased, 783

di-

loyal

nature

makes body

man w^o
8383

noble m., Sssb rich, 2igb has m. and knows it,

2o6a
raise

your m. and you, 987 b your m. tossing on ocean, 2313 Minded what they were about,
437* Mind-forged manacles I hear, 48gb Mindful of unhonored dead, 4413 what is man that thou art m.,
173

reader

and erect the m., 20"? a had you in m., 5o8b

man's unconquerable m., 5iab marble index of a m., 510*1 march of human m. slow, 4533 military m., 888a
mill of the m., 885a mingles with whole frame,

reading an oppression of m., 3813 reading to m. as exercise to body, 395b reason ignis fstuus of m., 382b redo the us in our rightful m.,

uga

626b
reeled the m., losob

minister to m. diseased, 2863 mirror in every m., 428b mode of working of human m.,

724b morale state of m., gsgb music and the step, logoa music strained through i056b

rest

regained from nature whst it put in, 966b-g67a to m. cheerer of spirits,

3263
m.,
in m., 10433 rocket the m., io7gb searcher know by mortal m.,

rhythm beating
742b

Mindless action, 10563 of its just honors, 5173 Mind-reading, tact a kind of m., 8i6b Mind's adventures among masterpieces, 8023 avid substance, 10383 dispassionate notations, 5933 find the m. construction, 28 ib
frontiers in m. eye, io7ib in my m. eye Horatio, measure m. height, 661 b

my m. forbids to crave, my m. is troubled, 2693 my m. to me a kingdom,

ig2a
1923

narrowed his m., 4513 nature of m. mortal, U3b nature with equal m., 7iib never brought to m., 4g4b never m. did m. his grace, 3i4b
next winter into m., ios6b noble m. here o'erthrown, 262b
I

seek for the lost m., loob serene for contemplation, 3g$b sickness way to peace of m.,

2583

g8sb sound m. in sound body, ijgb,


373*

my right, io76b the standard of man, 3963 Minds, admiration only of weak m., 348b
affect hearts and m., 1021 a all m. are little, 78ob
all

m. not

sound of body and m.,


spirit of 3 sound m., 55b steal fire from m., 5550

1213

to

have aspiring m., 2123

1491

Minds
Minds are
finite, 86 ib are not ever craving, 4833

INDEX
Mingled, respect m. with surprise,
Minstrel,
5 i8b

no m. raptures

swell,

balm of hurt m., aSgb becks m. to fellowship, 58ob bore so much as own m., 6g4b
can heavenly m. yield, ii7b comfortable m., io3ob free to speak our m., 10253 great empire and little m., 453b greatest m. capable of greatest vices, 327b

whole Mingles, mind m. with frame, uga with friendly bowl, 41 ib with her cares sweet bitterness,
1153 Miniature thunder where he fled,

yarn good and

5oa

ill,

26gb

wandering m. I, 7683 Minstrel's, power of m. lyre, go6b Mint of joy, 55 ib tithe of m., 4sb were esch wish m. of gold, 5033 Minting of gold-crowned king
9823 Minus, maggots m., 103 ib Minute, cage the m., 10623 crowd whole thing in m., 8i4b Cynthi3 of this m., 4o6b

Minikin won't
442 b

set fire to

Thames,
First

grow in

spots,

7gsa

hobgoblin of little m., 6o6a home in ra. of men, goa injured by hunger and thirst. loob innocent and quiet, 3580 intercourse with superior m.,
544b keep m. alive forever, 10473 keep your hearts and in., 54b let our m. be bold, 8333
lose
self

Minimum

guarantee

of

Amendment, ggib Mining, titles of m. claims, io4ib


Minion, morning's m., 8033 Minions of the moon, 237b songs lyric m., 5883 Minister droned monotonously,

do good in m.

particulars, 4913

of life passing, 78ob one m. with him, 9813 save fleeting m., 8i8b speak more in m., 224b sucker born every m., Q^b
too late, 2673

759^
king's first m., g24a to patient must m.

himself,

Minutely 4913
set

organized

particulars,

made by presence, marriage of true m., 2943 me o' departed joys, 4943 mediocre m., 3563 men of other m., 447b mighty m. of old, 532b naturally affirmative, 77ob not aware of m., 10413 O miserable m. of men, nsb of different generations, 9873 of few fastidious people, 8783 of gods not changed, 653 of my generation, io8ib of strongest m. hears least, 5163 peace must be in m., 11043 record of best m., 5733 refuge of weak m., 4isb religion of feeble m., 454b small m. never handle great themes, i45b
so

in better

other

m.,

5!)

28&b thou flaming m., 2763 to mind diseased, 2863 touch me and no m. so
4-iib

ingenious mschine, g84b Minute's success fsilure psys

668b
sore,
sistei

who buys a m. mirth, 2203 Minutes, a few m. for poetry


728b
five

Ministering angel shall be, 2663


angel thou, sigh
Minister's,

my

poor

m.

experience,

6143
Ministers fall on good side, 55 sb

maketh m. flame of

fire,

55b

not 3Ct arbitrarily, 10133 of grace defend us, 2593 of love, 526b spoke of God as if a monopoly, 68 3 b you murdering m., 2823
Ministers',
3 66b

m. of hell, 8o8b m. with that man, 45 ib hasten to their end, 2gsb hours and m. dollars and cents, 422b my thoughts are m., 2s3b round earth in forty m., 229!) sixty diamond m., s86b unless m. capons, agyb
fifteen

what damned m. tells he, 2743 Miracle, cubic inch of space m.,
7o2b

my

actions are

my

m.,

man

many men

so

many

m., ioga

stay our m. be

g2ga steadiest m. to waver, 823

staid,

strong m. great hearts, 6gob that have nothing, 5i7b themselves our m. impress, 508 b to different m., 6o4b wars begin in m., 11043

m. of the proph350 performs secret m., 5263 Miniver Cheevy, 8ggb Minked and Persian-lambed, 866b Minnehaha Laughing Water, 6233 Minnesotan, young M. did heroic
Ministry, by the
ets,

every hour am., 7o2b always prays for m., 688a musical m., 8983

frost

mystery and authority, 7083 no greater m. than myself, 19 ib no testimony establish m., 4346
of rare device, 5243 r'sr back pass m., 10153 Miracles, age of m., 5773 are past, a6gb laughed at, 89 ib

thing, 10513

weak m. recriminate, 528b young men's ra. are changeable, 62b Mine, every beast of the forest
is

Minnow, whale swims m.-small.


99 ia

many signal m. on voyage, 1733 propitious accidents, 867b


Miraculous, falsehood more m. than fact, 434b Miranda, remember inn M., gosa Mire, learning cast into m., 454a
ne'er
left

Minnows,

swarms

of

m.

show

m., iga eyes have seen glory, 6gob factory dockyard, g2sb

heads, 57ga Triton of the m., 28gb Minnow-small, whale swims


99 ia

m..

man

in

words m. and thine, 1943 lives ye led were m., 87 ib mother o' m., 872b she shall be m., 5iob was ever grief like m., 322b what is yours is m., 1053 Mine, what's m. is yours, 2723 why shouldst thou have m., 35 b
fatal
will defend what's m., 1983 with my heart in it, 2973 Minerals, poisonous m. and that
tree,

Minor, embalm m.

poet,

10353

rode
Mirror,

him
best

through

m., sgoa m., io97b


friend,

pants for twenty -one, 4123 Minorities are qualified individuals,

m. an old

9783

government controlled
86 3 a

by m.,

Minority always right, 72gb


as distinguished 973 a
elite ra.,

from msjority,

cracked from side to side, 6463 face the m. of the mind, i4gb hold m. up to nature, s6sb in every mind, 428b in law as msgic m., 7&6b look into lives as into m., iogb
of all courtesy, 168 a, ag8a

judgment
most

3o7b
chil-

small m., majority deprive m., 637a majority respect m., 934b

9783 of

9733

speech a m. of soul, i27b stock market am., loGsb that reflects candle, 86gb

Mingle blood with blood of


dren, 5943 in

one spirit meet m., 5703 joys with occupation, 4253 letters m. souls, 3073 you that m. may, [red drops been Mingled, like kindr

Minstrel

vilified m. in history, g67a yield to majority, g34b boy to war has gone.

thou glorious m., 557b Mirrored on her sea, go63


Mirroring,

windborne

m.

soul,

7iib
ethereal m., 5173 galleons of fire, 10433

Mirrors, light focused by m., 79?b of shadows futurity cssts, 5733

heart of m. is breaking, infirm and old, 5183

54 ib

on empty space, 797b


should
reflect,

ioi8b

1492

INDEX
Mirth admit me of thy crew, and fun fast and furious, as does not make ashamed, bards of passion and m., cryptic m., 8990 formed of joy and m., fun and m., 4963 has chord in melancholy, he is all m., 2463

Mist
is

33^
4963 3263

$$b
4gob
gioa

Miserable, nothing m. but what thought so, 1483 render last part m., 38 ib sharers of the event, 4443 sinners, 61 a
to be
train,

Misguide, blind judgment and m.

mind, 4o2b Mishaps like knives, 604b Mislead, lights that m.


27 ib Misleading,

morn,

weak
5153

is

m., 3433

home of m. made
I'll

desolate, 6ijb

use you for

my

m., 2563

who longs for death is m., 3213 Miserere, iga nobis, 593 say M. leisurely, 3293
Miseries, ambitions climb

gg4b limit of becoming m., aaib man of marvelous m. and pastimes, iyga May's newfangled m., 2213 music of division, iggb no time for m. and laughter,

in funeral, 2573 like flash of lightning,

on

iu.,

844a

bound

in shallows

and m., 2563

886b
ib present m., 25 required of us m., 22b resort of m., $$$b sad old earth borrow m., 8263 songs of sadness and m., 62 2b string attuned to m., 5923 sunburnt m., 5823 that has no bitter springs, 8773 that no repenting draws, 34ob tragical m., 23Ob vexed with m. ear of night,

555*

who buys a minute's m., 2203 wine women m. laughter, 56ob


spleen, 3943 to live, 3353 a-m M., 2gob Misanthropes, Misanthropy and voluptuousness,

wit

and m. and
I I

with thee

mean

death umpire of men's m., 2143 delivered from perils and m., 319* equal sharing of m., 9253 extenuate m. of past, gg8b packet of assorted m., 877 b to get idea of m., 68gb Miser's, heaps of m. treasure, 337* Misers of time as we advance, 54oa Misery acquaints with strange bedfellows, 2g7a companions in m., 1273 departure is taken for in., 36!) distant m., 4663 gave to m. all he had, 441 a half our m. from foibles, 475b half the world living in m., g82b in m. mindful of happy time,
i6oa
loves company, i27b medicine for m., 853 mighty poets in m. dead, 5121* no friend in m., 3093 one man's will all men's m 202b radiant m., 4773
result m., 67 ib sleep ease in m., siob so full of m., 644b still delights to trace, 4sgb

m. least analogy thing, 756b generalizations, io26b Misled by fancy's meteor ray, 493 a simplicity no longer m., logib Mislike me not for complexion, 232b not my speeches you m., 214!) Misnomer, sonnets died in m., 944* Misprint, poet not survive m,, 8 3 8b
Misquote, enough learning to m.,
Misrepresentation,
Miss,

no

colonization

march

without m., 957b do they m. me at home, 72ob many-splendored thing, 8573


of
retreating

world,

io28b
McFlirasey of Madison Square, 7243 mine he cannot m., 2osb Nature cannot m., 3723 b pain that pain to m., see nor know nor m. me, 68b thank Thee for things I m., 7203 whatever Miss T eats, 9145

Missed

595 a virtue Misapplied, being m., 224b

turns

vice

forever, 666b be m., io3ib never would be m., 7683 stars might not h3ve m., 9293 woman much m., 7843
it

lost

it

mr u

will

not

Misbehaved once at funeral, 534b Misbeliever, you call me m., 2$2a Miscalled, simple truth m. simplicity, 2p2b Mischance, ride in triumph over m., 2i6a Mischief, draw new m. on, 2733 in every deed of m., 4663 it means m., 2633 little neglect great m., 4223 no return to place which has

vow

eternal

m.

Misfortune, bad neighbor

together, 383!* is m.,

wonder what you've m., io$gb Misses an unit, 664b Heaven's net m. nothing, 753 man who m. opportunity, 4843 Missing part of life melody, 6993 so much and so much, 99 ib Mission, glorious m. of unions,
82ia
I would eat a m., 6173 not visited our planet, Ggsb stew, 10043 to persuade thousands, 6ogb Mississippi is muddy water, 8463 keeps rolling, g2ib of falsehood called history, 7i3b ran into M. and drowned, io4ib your M. in dry time, 94 2b Missouri, 'cross wide M., noia I am from M., Ssob Misspending time a self -homicide, 3 76b Mist and a weeping rain, 72 3b and cloud turn to rain, 624b as m. resembles rain, 62 ib came both m. and snow, 524b cold and heavy m., 5923

67b lose one parent m., 84oa made throne her seat, 3g6a
never delight in another's m.. 1263 of our best friends, 356b remembrance of former m.. *95 a
to

Missionary,

done m., i2gb Diamond thou

little

knowest

m., 3803 Satan finds m., 3g6b that is past and gone, virtuous do, 66ob

2733

when

to

Mischiefs,

m. mortals bend, 4p4b dreadful m. from wine,


gossip
is

shows friends, 993 have been happy

is

most

383* Mischievous,

unhappy m., 1483 war national m., 5973


Misfortune's, sour m. book, 225b Misfortunes, bear another's m.
perfectly, 4133

m.,

68a

hatched would grow m., 2543 love a m. devil, 756b


Misdeeds, murder and m., 2043 Misdoings, heartily sorry for m., 6ia
Miser, rich honesty like m., 25ob Miserable, comfort of m. partners in woes, 1273 comforters are ye all, i5a
difficult to

oy speaking relieve m., 33ib crimes and m., 4i7b delight in m. of others, 45 ib endure m. of others, 3553 follies and m. of mankind, 46sb hardest never come, 6o4b his life full of m., 81 2b

dispelled

when woman

appears,

make

40ib
engarlsnded, 7i4b from bresth of wind, 9263 gray m. on sea's fsce, g46b here a m. there a m., 7343 in my face, 666b life a m. of error, 3i5a mantled in m., io6oa of tears, 8s6b

m., 637b

have no other medicine, 2713 1 have passed m. night, 2173 made neighbors m., 8o2a

me

m., 3453

mercy on us m. offenders, 5gb minds of men, nsb


mortals like leaves, 64b

not unacquainted with m., 66b of man occasioned by man, i$2b Misgiving, room for m., 82b Misgivings, not view process with
m., gaib Misgovernment,

augur m., 4533

H93

Mist
Mist, saffron m., loiob Scotch m.. 6953 shouted in m. month ago, 9260 swollen with rank m., 3380 wrecked in m. of opium, 7173 Mistake, ask if some m., 927b blue and gold m., 734b in translation, 3883 is has been shall be no m.,

INDEX
Mistrust subordin3te
finds fault, 813!}

who never

Mock, after i 5b
air

have spoken m. on,

Misty moisty morning, 10983 mountaintops, 2253 out of m. dream, 8903 sheiling of m. island, 5903 Misunderstand, no fate willfully
m.. 926b Misunderstanding, culture a m. if not French, 8o6a-b Misunderstood, to be great to be m., 6o6a to be m. penalty for greatness,

with idle state, 44 ib at the great, 8833


fools

make

m.

at

sin,

243

never overlooks m., not to close eyes, 865a of enclosing envelope, pardon Thy M., 10593 pray make no m., 768b woman God's second m., 8o6a young man for Greek god, g6oa Mistaken, I pronounce m., 3563 intuitive calculation, Q38a overzealous piety, 454a think that ye may be m,, 3282,

835* truth m., 7953 Misuse, oft happeth to m. wit, i6gb Misused, sweet poison of m. wine,

33&b
Mites,

widow threw

in

two m.,

9123 think that

45 Mither, father and m. gae mad.

meat it feeds on, 2743 mockers after that, 8833 on Voltaire Roussesu, 48gb spirits of wise m. us, 2423 their own presage, 293b their useful toil, 4403 time with fairest show, 2833 Turtle, 744b your own grinning, a65b Mocked, as if he m. himself, 2530 God is not m., 543 my sense is m., 3013 Mocker, wine is a m., 253 Mockers, mock m. 3f ter that, 8833 Mockery king of snow, 2283 monumental m., 268b
of monumental stone, 5723 traffic in m., 8833 unreal m. hence, 2853 world 3 m., 8670 Mocketh, whoso m. the poor, 24!) Mockingbird, listen to the m.,

we may be

m., 91 aa
m.,

494b
leave to m. dear, io87b Mithridates, half M., 5963 he died old, S^b

zeal, 109 ib Mistakes, all great

men make

8i5b
experience
if

name
l

for m., Ssgb


I will protect,

Mitte sectari rosa, i2ib


Mittens, of skin made m., 9073 Mixed, elements so m. in him,

you make m.

io26b

7283 Mockingbird's, out of m. throat,

made by

writers

from

igno-

2s6b
in wrong that's all, 10093 Mixing memory and desire, 10023 Nashville Mixture give you
drizzle,

rance, io7b

genius no m., g68b no balsam for m., 7913 of good man, iogib paid in casualties, ioi6b Mistaking paradox for discovery,

man

of

8643

good things come in m., 5363 Mizpah, 73

9090
Mister Death, losob
Mistress, art a jealous m., 6o8a as with maid so with her m.,

Mosb

is

my

washpot, igb

Moan,

delicious m., $B$b

3ib
character of m. from dress of maids, i45b court a m. she denies yju, 3033 in my own, 8753 law a jealous m., 543 b literature my m., 85&b

wind made m., 7403 sweet m., 5813 of doves in elms, 649 b paid with m., 8563 Moananosning, moyles of it m.,
frosty

English mother

made

in.,

Sgsb

7oib Mocks, man that m. and sets it light, 2263 msrried men, 222b my loss of liberty, 4863 Mode, decalogue of m., 8493 it began a la m., 7823 Model, Americans may become m., 446b British government best m.,
48 4b of man from natur's mold, 67ob of modern major general, 766b republican m. of government,

made

46ib

969*

Moaning,

moderately

fair,

357 b

more fond than m., 4050 my m. the open road, 8243 O m. mine, 25 ib
of of of or
herself, 4073 mistresses, 7073

bar m., Sgob how they are ra., 446b no m. of the bar, 6553 Mosns round with many voices. 646b Moat defensive to a house, 226b harbor
m.,

m. of barren earth, 227b thy inward greatness, 24sb Modelable, nsture's structure is m., 10343 Models, ancient m. perpetuated, 1483 nature has all kinds of m.,
small
to

Moated grange, 27 ib Mob, amphibious ill -born


77 zb

months and

stars,

3852

a friend, 5713 pensive m., io66a

good handmaid worst m., 207b simplicity deceitful m., 777b such m. such Nan, i88s. teeming m. barren bride, 406 b to the man I love, 4osb
riches
Mistress' eyebrow, 2493 my m. eyes nothing sun, 2945
like

asylum among m., 6955 at times m. swayed, 9293 government by m., 848b honor depends on opinion of
m., 3743 I am the m., 9483 is varied and inconstant, 3743 not ask better only different,
1793

10343 turn pages of Greek m., i24b Moderate, give m. alarm, 6isb liberty is in -m. governments, 4853 while one with m. haste, 2583
Moderately,
a

thing

m.

good,

4 67 b live m., 7433 love m., 224b mistress m. f3ir, 357b rescue wife, 6i5b

the

order to perform, 41 sb
Mistresses,

embrace principles or

m., 447*

hardly any m., 9043 mistress of m., 7073 wives young men's
Mists,
errors

of gentlemen, 4123 of unnecesssry duplicates, 6973 redress of m. law, 6353 supreme governors the m., 4423 Mobile, donna e m., n8b Mobility and damn the cost.

Moderation,

sstonished

at

my

own m., 445b counsels of m., 91 ib even in excess, 611 a


flourishes,

gub gub

gone no court save,

m.,

2083

wanderings m. and

tempests, 1133 foul and ugly m., 2383 mothlike in m., 9793 season of m., 58313 the Apennine, 734b
Mistrust,

more ignominious

to m.,

355

Mobilized English Isnguage, gigb when armies are m., 753 Mobs, best university gauntlet of m., 6093 Moby Dick, evil asssilsble in M., 6 9 6b great diplomat M., gs8b Moccasins waiting on silent shelf, io82b

not

think or write 6i5b silken string, gopb

in all things, io8a in justice no virtue, in principle a vice, 4 in temper a virtue, 467^

with

m.,

spirit of m., 91 ib stoutness in m., 7673 urge me not to m., 6isb

1494

INDEX
Moderator of passions, 3263 reasonable m. Death, 3290 Modern, all history m., 9575
Molded, scarcely formed or m., 5623 two berries m. on one stem,
2303 Moldering, a-m. in grave, 7553 Molders hemp and steel, 5213 Molding mighty fates, 8993 wine J3r when m. beg3n, 1243 Molds, crack n3ture's m., 2783 musket m. in his hands, 82ob Moie, live like velvet m., 9903 will, thou go ask the m., 486b Molecular motions, 7883
Molecule, propensity to unite even in m., 9653 mathematics m. Molecules, by counted, 861 a simple and indivisible m., 474b Molehills from mountains made,

Money
Moments, art gives quality to m., 78ib best and happiest m,, 57sa
hardly dared pass, io4yb
lucid m., 588b no two m. the same, 7osb of glad grace, 879b of high exultation, 9973

American literature from one


book, 104415

born empty into m. age, 378b characteristics of m. spirit, 8633 disease of m. life, 7123 inconveniences, 76ob life economic, 957b

man

when everything goes well, 8693 Momentum, psychological m.,


Monads of Leibniz, 9873. Monagony being married
person, 10173
to

invents

museum, 10353

old or m. bard, 336b one must be absolutely m., Sgob origin of m. world, 1047 a something for m. stage, 9883 m. notions, 874a spite all wise saws and m. instances,

one
5203

Monan's,

moon on M.
becomes

rill,

Monarch,

throned

m,

249 a Moderns, speak of m. without contempt, 4i5b Modes, for m. of faith, 4ogb Modest and commonly chaste,
5 6 4b

better than crown, 234b hears, 3713 love teach m. to be wise, 43gb

10313 Moles, cast his idols to m., 303 Molle atque fscetum, 1203

merry m. scandalous and poor,


3823 morsel for 3 m., 2&7b of all I survey, 457!) of mountains, 5590 of the vine, 2883 richest m. in world, 4g?b

coy submission m. pride, 3453 doubt, 268a front of this small floor, 354b in speech, 72b

gsob Mollify Mollusk cheap edition of man, 6ooa Molly Stark a widow, 45 ib
tears,

it

with

keep m. as giver, 8053 looks cottage adorn, 45ob man with reason, 9253 no more m. than immodest,

inns of m. blue, 7353 scald like m. lead, 2803 Mome raths outgrabe, 7453 Moment, courage of final m.,
tears

Moloch sceptered king, 3433 Molten bowels, g^b

Monarchs, fate summons m. obey,


3693
perplexes m., 34ab

Monarchy 726b
is

intelligible

government,

quip m., 2513


simple
stillness

m.

manly true, 6943 and humility, 243b

the m. near to virtue, 723 wee m. crimson- tipped, 4933

woman
Modesty

dressed in finery, 45ob a species of nobility,

10723 culture m. of clarity, 977b dissolved in a m., 9940 endurance for m. more, 8ogb endures m. or day, 883b eternity was in th3t m., 39 ib

a merchantman, 49 ib universal m. of wit, 326b why m. strong government, 726b Monastic aisles, 602 a

man

artist, gijGb

Monday,

373 ancient sculpture true m., 552b 3nd unselfishness, 9873 maids in m. say No., saob mine is blushing m., 1283 overstep not m. of nature, 262b secondly m., 8i8b speaks without m., 723 Modification, bad plan admits no m., 1263

some awful m., 5153 first m. of atomic age, loSgb force m. to its crisis, moia great pith and m., 2623 hide thyself for a little m., 323 hold every m. sacred, 937b
face
I cut his throat, 108 la in a m. of time, 46b intense m. isolated, 1006 a
to say nothing, 8393 lifetime burning in m., 10063 lived in paradise, 497b loyal and neutral in m., 2843 men flourish only for a m., 673

born on

betwixt Saturday M., 401 a a M., 10963 going to do on M., 9623

and

press reports, 10583 on M. night, 237b child fair of face, 10963 Monday's

morning

snatched

Monde, 1'amour
m.,

fait

tourner le

no5b
le meilleur des

Mondes,
ibles,

m.

poss-

knew m.

4173

Modify, time to m. shape, 763b

Modifying colors of imagination.

Modo liceat vivere est spes, io8b Modum, servare m. finemque tenere,

59 a

never let up for single m., 9833 not of action or inaction, io6a

7163
est

Modus,

m.

in

rebus,

1203

Moi, l'e*tat c'est m., 3783 Moiling street, 8g8b


Moist, cold
3<59b

nothing startles beyond m., 5 84b of difficulty and danger, 109 ib


of grestness flicker, looia of strength of romance, 8433 once let ripe m. go, 488b only a m., 8433 only m. here 3nd m. there,
93<>a

3nd hot m. and

dry.

eye dry hand, 24 ib hot cold m. and dry, 3443

no more th3n m. hand, 955b star upon whose influence, 2573


unpleassnt body, 66gb Moisty morning, 10983 Molar to molecular motions, 7883 Mold, emperors and cobblers in same ra., 1903 fresh from natur's m., 67ob made him and then broke m., 1783 of form, 262b rose above m., 5933 8 Sob splashing wintry m., Molded, best men m. of faults, 2723 changing lineaments, 7813 heart m, as she pleases, igyb

perfection but m., 29 ib precise m. to say nothing, 8393 psychologic3l m., 8393

Mo'ners, Lord fetch m. up higher, 8143 Money, a little wanton m., i78b alone preserves life, 37ga answereth all things, 28b ask of m. spent, g28b beautiful in laws, 6o7b bet my m. on bobtail nag, 72?b blessing m. cannot buy, 326b board m. in ginger J3r, 753b bringing m. be welcome, 1089!* business msy bring m., 53 3 b business other people's m., 7233 by you all the while, 8i2b counting out m., iog4b disease called lack of m., 181 a

doant marry for m., 6g4b


fool and his m., 10853 friendship Isst lifetime if not asked for m., 7623

m. in June, 9753 this which you deem of no m., 963 time of death every m., io6a
this

go where m.

is,

6s4b
in

government

consists

taking

to decide, 69 ib

trap m. before ripe, 488b work of a m., 1943 worst m. in history of France,

hsin't the m. but the principle, 8953 having more credit than m.,

ioi6a

4773
in

Momentary, beauty m.
955"
13

mind,

Moment's monument, 73 ib sent to be m, ornament, 5143

hired m. didn't they, 9113 honey and plenty of m., 6733 how painful to keep m., 3763 how pleasant to have m., 688b

H95

Money
Money
is trash, 3023 keeps m. movin' around, 89 ib lack of m. root of evil, 837a lay out m. on a rope, 3100 like sixth sense, 9323 love of m. as possession, gyya

INDEX
Money, wrote except for m., 4323 Moneybag, aristocracy of m., 5773 Moneychanger, morals of m., 8g6b Moneychangers fled from temple,
97ia tables of the m., 43b Money-lust before senses, g88b

Monster with uncounted heads,


2413 Monstrosity

more prodigious than

love of m. root of evil, 550 love of m. taken hold, 6i6a made m. because loved it, 8gab

Money-mad,
86ob

raving

rotting

m.,

make m. by any means,

making m. slow process, man without m. rather than m. without man, y8a means and content, 24gb money money, 1051 a more m. for books than chewing gum, 835b

1233 37ga

Moneymaker, not a mere -m., 943 Mongrel best for every day, Stfb
I

like

bit

of

m.,

Stfb

puppy whelp hound, 448b


son and heir of m. bitch, 277b
this m. beast, ggob Mongrels, Europe continent of m., 8713 Monism thinks all-form only form, 7953

much m. as 'twill bring, 352 b must have m. to use senses,


93*a

Hydra, i23a Monstrous anger of guns, 10286 big river, 76 ib bottom of m. world, 3393 demonstration, 8oob every fault seeming m., 2503 little voice, 2293 O m., 23gb product of wrongs, 92 ib two evils m. either, 10093 Mont Blanc monarch of mountains, 55gb Montague, fair M. I am too fond, 223b Montaigne endorsed by translating, i8gb in his tower, 10543 sedulous ape to M., 8243

Monitor expressed, 5i6b


to

no way

make

m., 3793

Monk

not appreciate m. till spent, 864a not mind m. not like swank, 9'9 b not pay for anything, gi6a not think m. holy, 105^1 a nothing lost but m., io6gb

nothing so demoralizing as m., 8za old wife old dog ready m., 42 ib pays m. takes choice, 8ioa plentiful, io62b
pretty to see what m. will do,
life, Goyb put m. in thy purse, 2733 m. in trust, 6^b put rage and love, ios7a rather than love m. fame, 6843 ready m. Aladdin's lamp, 5623 ready m. makes the man, 3973 reputation more valuable than

3 76a prose of

95 ib Spanish m. distraught, 624b from as soon descend m., Monkey, 6s8b disappointed in m., 7643 heroic little m., 628b never look long on m., 6283 only a m. shaved, 7683 sittin' on pile of straw, 10993 tricksome little m., 5053 wine, 5993 Monkey-like fox-like squirrel-like,

bring to light my toil, cowl does not make m., be Pope, if ra. you'll only connect beast and m.,

593b
1503

Monte

g64b

Carlo, broke bank at M., 82ia Montes, parturient m. nascetur mus, 1243 Montesquieu, celebrities such as M., 74gb Montezums, halls of M., iiooa who imprisoned M., 595 b Montgomery to Oslo, io82b Month, April crudest m., 10023 contained no r, 8g2b difference sometimes a m., 8283 follow m. with woe, 57 ib full of spirit as m. of May, 24oa
leafy

9?8b Monkeys,
7983

cats

and m. m. and

cats,

laughter for a m., 2s8b m. of June, 525b


flaps leaves like wings,

May m.
m., 6283

New and Old World

refrain from speech, 8523 wilderness of m., 233b

m., i25a retreated back into m., io36b rich possessed by m., 3iob right to possess m., 65 7 a
s.eed

Monody not wake mariner, io43b Monolith, Communist bloc not m., 10563 Monomakh, crown of M., 593b Monopoly, no single nation have
m., gSsb of God, 68 3b Monotones, drawn in pearly m.,
99<>b

no trumpets for new m., 9373


old

784b May never m. of love, merry m. of May, 3093

2iob

man in dry m., looib one m. on in May, 9283

sets
silk

of money, 435b world in motion, i26b


suit cost

much

m.,

3753

sinew of love, io4b sinews of affairs, io4b sinews of war, io4b


store

Monotonous languor, 8o7b


nothing so Monotonously
i04ob
'm. as
sea,

stand to in a m., 224b this is the m., 333b this m. is a kiss, 3293 was month of May, 7583 Monthly chsnges in circled orb, 224a Months add themselves make
years,
all

6g3b
rain,

6543
rn.

falls

the

the

were

May,
of

8i3b
m.,

m.

in

stomachs of needy,

maiden
articulate

and

mistress

1463 they have more m., 10453 thinking like paper m., 8513 thy m. perish with thee, 4gb time is m., 422b, 5g8b times hard m. scarce, 6oga to even get beat with, 9543 touch, 848b use m. as one pleases, 6573 values m. or comfort more, 93 2a voice is full of m., ios6b war begun without m., 18 ta waste of public m., 77gb way the m. goes, 10996 we've got the m. too, 7273 what is worth but m., 1273 Willy Loman never made m., 10713 with lent m. evil done, 6g8b without m. George, io8gb won't surrender to flirt, 8g2b words are m. of fools, 3i7b works for m. coins soul, SsJb world his who has m., 6o8a

Monotony,

bleats

m.,

772b

56a
stark

m. of

Monroe

Doctrine

stone, 878b force

makes seasons by m., 3b mother of m., 772b


United
nor hours days m., 3053 three m. of cold weather, 7i7b travelers of eternity, 3803 two m. after marching, io76b two m. back in March, 928 b Montresl, O God O M., 75sb Monument, all Hell3S ra. of
Euripides, gob esrly but enduring m., leave some m. behind,
like fishbone,

States, 8483 will go far, 847b

Monsieur, farewell M. Traveler, 25oa Monster begot upon itself, 275b faultless m., 3505 green-eyed m., 2743 I had created, 5893 I have lived in the m., 828b
lovely m., 10573

57 ib

8833

10773

made m. me, 10573 manunkind, losib msny-hesded m. of pit, 41 2b more hideous than sea m,, 277b no greater m. than myself, igib
of wickedness, 92 2b one a m. one a saint, 8iib queer m. the artist, 8ooa vice m. of frightful mien, 4093 what a m. is man, 364a with an ache, io68a

man's m. a man, 7gob man's viitue m., 33

moment's m., 73ib more lasting than bronze, i22b Patience on m., 252b sight of such m., 502b to see m. look around, 374b vote m. but refuse help, 8gob without a tomb, 3O3b

Monumental mockery, 268b


smooth
as

m. alabaster,

2763

1496

INDEX
Monuments
carved

Moral
Moonless night in small town, 10713 Moonlight, come to thee by m., 9 6ib ghost along m. shade, 4osb how sweet the m. sleeps, 2353

from

snow,

Moon

economic m., 10630 mountains earth's m., 615* not marble nor gilded m., 2923 of safety, 4723 of unaging intellect, 8820
of

"8a

is down, 2833 kneaded by the m., 7833 M. where are you rovLady ingt 634b landscapes of m., go8b lanthorn is the m., 2sob

lies

fair

upon

the

Straits,

human
is

wit

survive
si

monuments
m.

of

power, 2o6a

Monumentum,

requiris cir-

cumspice, 374!) Mony a one for him, io88b Monyment, vote m. but refuse

7 !4D like a flower, 4873 lucent as rounded m., 6g4b made of green cheese, iSsb make guilty the m., 2773

m., io8ia divine, io6ga

meet me by m., 587b no more from ra., 955b one by one in m., loiob
ribbon of m., 96 ib softest in Kentucky, 8o4b unto sunlight, 647b visit it by pale m., 5183 white waves in m., 9053 Moonlit door, gi4b Moon's red silver, 1081 a Moons, book of m. defend ye, not hers lie mirrored, go6a of Saturn, 6973 reason has m., go6a Moonshine an* snow, 6g3a find out m., 2303 glory of war m., 7053 Moon-struck madness, 3483

Mood
in

help, 8gob apart, 9293 blessed m., 5093

given heart change of m., 9373 any shape any m., 5593

listening

m. seemed

to

stand,

52oa
love

minions of the m., 2370 moping owl to m. complain, 4403 mountains of m., 6443 mousetraps m. memory muchness, 7443 moving m. went up sky, 525^ new m. with auld in arm,

a m. to melting m., 2765


is

man,

8255

no
puts

m.

maintained

tlnough

hours, 937b me in working m., 6043 strain of higher m., 338b ra. sweet when pleasant

no m. outlives night, io8ib no Moravians in m., 6gsb nor the m. by night, 22a
nothing
of

remarkable

beneath

visiting m., 288b delight, 6sob

thoughts, 5o8b of love, 2882 Moon, African m. lying on back,

Moody food
985*

on casement wintry m., 5823 on Monan's rill, 5203 on whom pale m. gleams, 8073
one revolving m., 38b or sun or what you please, 2igb pluck honor from pale-faced m., 25}8b poet not been in m., 76ob ragged m., io66a rake m. from sea, 5533 rather be dog and bay m., 2563 revisitest glimpses of m., 25Qa rising in clouded majesty, $45b roving by light of m., 5590 sadder light than m., 626b said wind to m., 7230 seventeen times high as in.,
shines bright, 235a shining to quiet m., 5263 ship woman and full m.,

my

Moony,
4903

little

lovely

m.

night,

Moor bark with two anchors, never saw am., 737b

1253

and and
and

I,

768b keep

this

up

forever,

963a

keep pace, ggaa appointeth the m. for seasons, 2ib

stars

over the purple m., 96 ib your daughter and the M., 272b Moore, before I go Tom M., 55gb Moored, in Downs fleet m., 4oia Moors, mountains m. fens, goga

a-roving by light of m., 55gb be not darkened, 28b

Moos, my foos won't m., g68b Moose, bull m., 847b sticking head in m., g67b

be still as bright, 55gb behold the wandering m., 335b beneath waning m. was haunted, 52 3b brilliant m.

Moping melancholy, 3483 merryman m. mum, 7693 owl to moon complain, 4403
Mops, seven m., 74sb
Cottontail Peter, 887b Moral and material welfare, 848a and political systems, 9583 attitude in which most alive, 792b

by yonder blessed

milky sky, 88oa m. I swear.


aphrodisiac,

Mopsy

224a circumambulatory
io6ib
close

noaa
ioo2b

by the m., 344b cold fruitless m., 228b come from the dying m., 648b cow jumped over ra., 10943 danced by light of m., 6733 daughter of M. Nokomis, 6233 do not sigh for m., 7513 ebb and flow by the m., 28ob eclipses of m. and other experiments, i73b error of the m., 2763 everyone is a m. has dark side, 7633 fair as the m., 2gb fair along Wabash, gosb follow changes of the m., 274b full m. throw shadow, 9853 ghostly galleon, 96 ib hang them on horns of the m.,

shone

on Mrs.

Porter,

author provided with m., 6i4b


authority, 7o6b bad m. character, 4233

sickle m.,

g8oa sigh for m., 7513 silent as the m., 34ga silver apples of m., 88oa
slowly silently
stain

conception of life, 8sob confronted with m. issue, 10743


conquests, 5896 courage physical timidity, 7833 depravity within classes, 991 a difference in m. life, 7953 equivalent of war, 795b everything's got a m., 744a flabbiness, 7g2b force, 8633 gloom of world, 6i3b

now

the m., 9143

stand

in the valley, na star planets fallen on me, 9823 stars about the lovely m., 6gb sun and m. in flat sea sunk,
still

both m. and sun, sg2a

28gb
harvest m., 3863

has set, 6gb hath her

horned m. with one star, 5253 hush with setting m., 6520
the m., 23ob or no, 3533 in first of the m., io6sb in silver bag, 884b inconstant m., 2243 innocent m.,
I

eclipse endured, 2g3b

the

man

in

if

m. shine

full

337* sun and m. should doubt, 4goa swear not by the m., 2243 sweet regent of sky, 4643 takes up wondrous tale, 3933 talk by poet, 76ob this night of no m., i52b tree etched by -m., 3843 unmask her beauty to m., 2583 whenever m. and stars set, 8233 white m. beams, ioi2b whom are you loving, 6s4b wide awake the m. and I, 768b will wax wane, 624b with how sad steps O M., 203b would h3ve dis3ppeared, 8513 youth build bridge to m., 6823 Moon-calf, 2973 Moonlecht, braw brecht m. necht, 903*

habits

make

way

into

lives,

i36b
indifference of cultivated, 7o6b inferiority of man, 7643 intellectual wants, 7g4b

law within me, 4453 man and man of honor, 961 a natural and m. forces, yioa natural philosophy deep in. grave, 2ogb no one m. till all m., 7063 not showing m. virtues, gSob to be intelligent, obligation
95 ia

of m. evil and of good, 5093 of that is, 744b or immoral book, 8393

M97

Moral
Moral order needs authority, perception of beauty m. 68ib
personality, yoga

INDEX

gQa
test,

Morbidity, somewhat m., 9773

disgusting

Morn, more bright thsn May-day ;


not waking till she sings, 2033 on the Indian steep, 336b opening eyelids of the m., 3383 peeping in 3t m.-, 5923 .ays of m. on shields, 6943 red m. betokened wrack, 2203 rose the morrow m., 5263 rouse the slumbering m., 34b September m., 6263 sweet is breath of m., 34Kb this the happy m., 333b tresses like the m., 337b ushers in the m., 4243 waked by circling hours, g46b Morne plaine, 5993 Mornin', hsngin' Dsnny Deever in m., 8733 mornin's m., 83ob nice to get up in m., 9033 top o' the m., 8i2a

persons attempting to find m.,

76ob
point a m. or adorn
positive m. sense, real progress is
tale,

4273

776b

Mordecai rent his clothes, 143 More and m. about less and less, 86ab and more and more, 745b bear to be no m., 5183 C3nnot do m. than duty, 62va
can tie wi' m., 494a

m,

progress,

Cawdor
restraint, io74b satire ever m. ever

shall sleep

no m.,
M., 643

28 3 b

sense of sensible

work of

art,

new, 3773 7993

celebrities

such

3S

74gb

come through

alive,

well-bred man, 4573 sentiments in novel, 855b shut in rose, 647b soil for aesthetic growth, 9183 spark out of stone not m., 77ob things m. or things evangelical,
36 5 b truth basis
of

easy to take m. than nothing,

744a giving m. to that which

had

too

much, 247b grow from m. to m., 64gb how much m. is half than whole, 67b
is

m.

authority,

man

of

angel's
is

wit,

i7ga

7o6b

know what
less

m. than enough,

what is beautiful is m., 7ogb what you feel good after, io44b when uncomfortable, 8g6b
will ends by settling m., 776b Morale, formula for m. patriotism, 9593 materiel without m. g$gb state of mind, 959 b
f

wins victory, gsgb Moralism, American m., lossb Moralist, statesman cannot afford to be m., 9853 Moralities, never mind m., 7633
Morality,
basis

487b he spoke m. he heard, 8ioa less is m., 664b little m. how much, 663b little m. than kin, 2573 loved Rome m., 2553 Macbeth shall sleep no m., 283b matter with less art, a6ob meant than meets ear, 3363
calculated
less

Mornin's rnornin', 83ob

Morning 3fter, 886b air awash with angels, 10793 all whom m. sends to roam,
8543 3lmost at odds with m., 2853 3lways m. somewhere, 6iob 3S fed horses in the m., 33b as m. shows the day, 348b 3s the sun the m. dew, 372b bid me good m., 4703 birds mad with glee, 7583 birdsong at m., 824b breeze of m. moves, 65 2b

nicely

or

m.,

5*7*

of

human

m.,

no m. dear love, 64ga no m. of that, 276b no man entitled to, 847b


Oliver asked for m., 66ga once m. and no m. after, 774b m. than this rich praise,

io7*b commercial m., 10633 courage of making choice, 91 1 a enliven m. with wit, 3943
foes of popular m., 7o6b for morality's sake, 5673 I who dispensed with m., 8sob knows nothing of geography,

chsrm

to

st3y

m.

st3r,

526b

say

7o 5 b
middle-class
ra.,

837b

not doctrine of

how we make

of common man, Sosb of his actions, 4363

ourselves happy, 4453

periodical fits of m., 5953 plot in framework of m., Sssb private cosdy luxury, 7773

republican m., 5493 sexless orgies of m., 7763 temper wit with m., 3943 true m. takes no heed of m., 363* unawares M. expires, 41 4a understand politics and m.,
779*>

veracity heart of m., 7253

wears m. as garment, g76a work of m. shaped by geometry,


3853 Moralize my song, aooa Moralized his song, 2ooa Morals, code of modern m., 5713 conventional m,, 9133
faith and m. hold, siab heedless self-interest bad

sg3* she yaf awey the more she hadde, 1643 sleep no m., zB$b than just easy word, 10303 the m. the merrier, 1850 the m. he uses for others, 75b there isn't any m., g4gb to be desired than gold, i7b to say when I am dead, gooa you see m. in you, io54a Moremens, onetwo m. more, 9693 Morgan, old bold mate of M., 74gb the Buccaneer, 74gb Mori, in taberna m., i54b pro patria m., i2ib Morison, lovely Mary M., 495b Morituri, ave Caesar m. te salutamus, 1413 Morn 3nd cold indifference, 3963 snd liquid dew of youth, z$8b approach of even or m., 344b
as yet
'tis early m., 6473 cock trumpet to m., 2573 day's at m., 66ib

at m. star, 607 b corne in the m., 67 6b day perpetual m., 68 3a day's disasters in m. face, 44gb Dewey was the m., 7913
civilization

dissolutely

spent

Tuesdsy

m.,

237b
early in the
5a

m. our song, 54gb evening and m. were first day,

evening noon night, 6623 f3des like m. dew, io88b


fsir

f3rewell

C3me forth, 34g3 M. Star, noa

m. star, 7553 forehesd of the m. sky, 33g3


feel like

full

give

many a glorious m., 2923 him the m. star, 57b

glad confident m., 662b glorious m. for America, 4443 glut sorrow on m. rose, 5843 hsngin' Dsnny Deever in m.,

dewy m. to dewy night, 7533 each m. a thousand roses, 6agb evening follows m., 10533 fair laughs m., 44 ib from m. to night my friend,
739*>

8733 hear right W3y in the m., 7ib in bowl of night, 62ga in m. we remember them, 8g6b in the ra. it flourisheth, 203 in the m. of the times, 2o6b in the m. like grass, 203 into the m., into the ra., 9403
joy cometh in the m., 183 looketh forth as the m., 2gb m3de bisck by m. storms, 5343 magnificent fierce m., 9403 matter for May m., 2533 meet m. dew, 7143 misty moisty m., iog8a mornin's m., Ssob motion of m., io65b

m..

97ib

from m.

to

noon he

fell,

man of rigid m., 3793 obedience to command, 8513 of moneychanger, 8g6b time legalizer of m., g6oa Moravisns, no M. in moon, 6g $b

m. make you dreary, 8253 man of m. tell me why, 357b


if

3433

healthy breath of m., 5843 in russet mantle clad, 2573 incense-breathing m., 44oa l3rk herald of the m., lights th3t rnisle3d m., like a lobster the m., lived the space of a m.,

2353
27 ib

3533 2043

my m. incense, 4833 never m. wore to evening, 6503 nice to get up in m., 9033

INDEX
Morning
of the world, 66 ib

Mother
instruments,

our share of m., 7343 penitence next m., 67oa


praise
at

Mortal frame, 526b and m. genius


night,

Mortgage, every radish had a m., gg3a


Mortification, m., 42ob
live

in

continual

m. blame
life,

at

grief itself be m., 57 ib


soil, 338 b sing with m. voice, 346b immortal death has taken m. life, iigb immortal youth to m. maids,

grows on m.

quintessence of

564a
looaa

shadow

at

m.

striding,

Mortify a wit, 4ub Mortifying reflections, 628a Mortis, timor m. conturbat me,
i?6a

shining m. face, 24ga singing each m., io%ib so soft this m., g6ga some m. unaware, 6633 somewhere with m., 9483 son of the m., 315 sons of the m., 54ga sorrow makes night m., 2173 sow thy seed in the m., a8b
stars

Mosaic religion a father religion,

knew my son was

m., gab

laugh at m. thing, 5613 locked up from m. eye, 3543 man who hath more joy, 6973 meanest m. known, 78gb

sang together, i6a


m.,

they that watch for think in the m., 487b


this

aab

m. came home

cloak, 3753

the m., 8iaa two o'clock in m. courage, 5o4b hour before m., uncertain top
o'

melody, 64ib moon eclipse endured, zg$b nature did tremble, $i$b nature of mind m., iisb no m. could vie with Zeus, 653 not m. what you desire, ia8b
or

Moscow, to M, to M., Moses, greeted M. from Pisgah, 587 a hid his face, 8a Mahomet to M., 6oob ridin' on bumblebee, io4ib smote rock twice, 547 b

Moslem

was there forty days, gb and mosque pagan


shrine, 6263

ioo6b veils of m., 87gb wings of the m., 2ga

O you m. engines, 2753 immortal here I die, 6963 purest treasure m. times afford,
2263

Mosquitoes, lets big m. through, 32ia Moss, rolling stone gathers no m., i26a until m. reached lips, 7363

woe

to

them that

rise early in

m., gob womb of m. dew, aooa

would

God

it

were m.,

lob

Morning's at seven, 66 ib easy m. ride, 738b minion, Sosa mornin', 8 gob Mornings, forgotten m., io7ob
savor of

m. great

delight, 17 ib

strangely silent, io6ib Morocco, far as from M., io8sb Moron, happy m., i logb Morose, obstinate pliant merry m., igsb view of present, sg6b Morrison Morrison, g7oa

Morrow, a
75ib

little

fun and good m.,


will bring,

put on immortality, 533 quit this m. frame, 4043 raised a m. to the skies, 37 ib shall ra. man be more just, i4b shuffled off this m. coil, 3623 sins of commission m., 434a spirit of m. be proud, s64b splendor, gg4b stakes, g28b struck a deep m. blow, 78b sufferest m. griefs, 244b temples of king, 22?b tend on m. thoughts, 28 ib therefore Caius is m., 732b things doth sway, aoob think all men m. but themselves, sgga think m. thoughts, 843 this his m. part, 7653

you

are,

g87b
9892

Moss-covered bucket, 5533 Mosses, addled m. dank, greenest m. cling, 6asb Mossy cavern, s8gb

violet by m. stone, 5iob Most enjoy contented least, 2923 fails where m. it promises, 269 b make the m. of it, 4&4b

may

err
is

grossly
it

as

few,

s68b

that says m., agsa Mostest, git thar fustest with m.,

who

thing

they

m. do show, 2933

Mote

7<>gb in thy

brother's

eye,

41 a

Motes that people sunbeams, 335b thick as m. in sonne-beem, 168 a Moth and rust doth corrupt, 4ob
blundering by, io66a both m. and flame, io66a
desire of m. for star, 572b Mother accursed the night she

cease to ask

what m.

whose m. taste, 34 ib what m. heard good of George


tree

isia
desire of night for the m., 572b good m. to our waking souls,

the Third, g34a

3Hb
good night till it be m., 224b man's yesterday ne'er like m.,
568a
misty m. a myrie someris i64b night urge the m., 57 ib put not trust in the m., rainy m., agga rash who reckons on m., rose the m. morn, 526a take no thought for m., wished the m., 64ab Mors, nil igitur m. est ad
day,

wide and m. pang, 10575 wound is m. and is mine, 10323 Mortalem vit3m mors cum immortal is,

bore me, 843

ngb

Mortality, nothing serious in m.,

and lover the sea, 7743 arose a m. in Israel, na as m. so her daughter, g4b blessed m, of us all, 4743 bring child back to its m., 6gb
call
calls

121 a

of inanimate things, 7723 pilgrims of m., gggb to frail m. trust, aioa touches the heart, 1183

me early m., 6453 me Willie, 821 a

C3me and caught

watch o'er man's m., 5143


Sab
41 a
nos,

weighs on

me

like sleep,

57gb

ngb
ultima ratio, 151 a Morsel for a monarch, a87b I found you as a m., under tongue sweet m.,
Morsels,

Mortality's strong hand, 2373 too weak to bear them, 3853 Mortals are blaming the gods, 653 changeful mind of m., 8oa happiest of m., 4173 Hope lies to m., 854b make earth bitter, 5773

her, logsb Charybdis your m., 2343 m. to child to fold, 8543 sheep Church, i43b cruel m. of sweet loves, iaab despise not thy m., &6a died today, io68b diligence m. of good fortune,

tough

m.

to

2883 3863 swallow,

miserable

m.

like

leaves,

64b

more a m., 1323 English m. made moan, 6g3b experience m. of sciences, ig4b
fairer

*97* earth no

more rugged m., 886a no ascent too steep for m., iaob not in m. to command success,
393*

daughter of

fair m.,

laia
father and m. gae mad, 4g4b foolish son the heaviness of his m., 243 France m. of arts, i87b from one m. both draw breath,

Mort, que la m. me trouve plantant mes choux, i8gb Mortal and may err, 327b arm and nerve feel, 521 a behind m. bone, 73513 cloud of m. destiny, 7nb coil, 26aa dreams no m. dared, 6433 every tatter in m. dress, 88ab

some what what

feelings to
all

fools
to

m. given, 5203 m. may correct, 3goa these m. be, izgb,


mischief

agoa

when

m.

bend,

79b gave m.
give

me

forty whacks, the sun, 72gb

noia

Mortar, his chest 3S a m., 6g7a Mortg3ge beats 'em all, 8o8b

Goose, 844b

happy with such a m., 64gb

1499

Mother
Mother, his m. was patient being dead, 72 ib holy M. Earth, y8b honor thy father and thy m., ga Ida hearken, 64.53. if writer rob m., io4oa ignorance m. of devotion, 3123 in sin did my m. conceive me,
iga
laid her Baby, 684b leave to m. dear, io87b make my bed soon, io8ga man favorite of m:, 8j4b man shall leave father and m.,
5*>

INDEX
Mother's pride father's joy, 52ob sons anchors of m. life, 833
Motley, jester's m. garb, made myself m. to the view, 2g4a Motley's the only wear> 248b Motor cars and omnibuses, 9753 Motors, sound of horns and m., 1002b

thou art thy m. glass, Mothers a bloody brood, 10353 fought by m. of men, 7goa good m. and fathers, io53b and wives, injunctions of m.
925a

291 b

Mots de
Motto,

la tribu,

ioo6b

men what m. made, 6o8a men with m. and wives, 5g2b


talking to you m. and fathers,

g72b Mothers'

wombs

the tiring houses,

let this be m., 68oa national m. Root hog, 10473 of sundial near Venice, ssgb that is mankind's m., 35ga this be our m., 5413 Mottoes, pretty m. inside crackers,

Motherless, poor m. Eve, go6a

7650

Mary was that M. mild, 684b may I go out to swim, 11033 memory m. of Muses, 95b

my m., 5463 my m. bore me, 486b my m. groaned, 48gb


myself
77

commanded by
is

boy's m.,

Mothlike in mists, g7ga Moths among heath and harebells, 68 5 b Ithaca full of m., 28gb fill like m. caught by glare, 5553 Motion and a spirit, sogb between acting and first m.,

Moulmein, by the old M. p3goda, "/a" Moulting se3son crisis in lives, 682b Moults, wing of friendship never
m., 66gb

m. of all nature by her m.


necessity

Named

things, 733 wit, 2oob

nature called m., 5893

between m. and change of m. 3790

254a

Mount 311 esger 3nd quick, mount my soul, 228b


pure

10783

act,

10033 proportional,

3nd

stars,

disposed i6ib

to

m.

to

m. of invention, 1330,
M.,

1513

no

God and Mary His


for

1075 not God


o'

father

if

not

Church for
mine,

m., 1443

87b

of Aeneas and his race, of all living, 6a, iog4b

nab

devoid of sense and m., endeavor in continual m., final cause produces ra., gesture without m., 10033 nest as mode of m., 7053 heavens rejoice in m., 3073 her m. blushed at herself, in one sphere, 24ob meandering with mazy m.,

3430 2433 g7b

272b
5243

of arts and eloquence, 348b of five sons who died, 64oa of mankind, 34ib of memories, 7o7a of month's, 77 ab of quartz, 10653 of the free, 8623 old m. Hub bard, 10963 one whom his m. comforteth,
33

measured m., 5103 military machine in m., 8gS2b mimic m. made cry, gs6a money sets world in m., i26b no m. hss she now, 5113 of hidden fire, 5183
of morning, icG^b of the rising day, io66b poetry of m., 8523 scoured with perpetual m., 24ib some men forward m. love, 3 62b this sensible warm m., 2713 uniform m. in right line, 37gb

by round, 6903 to the 2ib hesven, up up with wings as eagles, 333 whilst you m. up on high, 2283 Mount Abors, singing of M., 5243 Mountain, as long as shadows touch m. slopes, n8a and the deep gloomy wood,
care if I see m,, 5343 the m. walls, 8853 flee 3& a bird to your m., 173 forked m. or blue promontory,

rejected to paradise, 6033 to summit round

Sermon on M., io25b

don't

down

Pembroke's m., gigb poetry m. tongue of mankind, 455* Russia, 7ioa so loving to my m., 257b somebody's m., 8 iga stand by country as m., 71707183 startled but admiring, g25b sweet m. I cannot ply, 6gb took great care of m., g7oa Ubu ugly today, 9153 walked with his m., io7ob wedded maid virgin m., 3343 when my m. died, 4873 who'd give her booby for another, 401 a wit, aoob worm thou art my m., i5a Mother Goose, I don't believe in M., 844b Mother-in-law, a-winkin' at m., 10993 go not empty unto thy m., lib
savage contemplates m., 82ga Mother's, botanize upon m. grave, 5iia cannot bear a m. tears, iigb daughter in m. house, 8753 embrace my dead m. ghost, 66a
great M. train divine, 7i4b hang us every m. son, 22ga lie on M. bed, 10763 naked out of my m. womb, 143

what does awesome m. mean,


6 3 2b with majestic m., 5573 with what m. moved clouds, 5103 Motions, molar to molecular m.,

288b freedom from m. height, 578b get thee up into the high m., 3 2b huge gap appeared in m., 763 Kilimanjaro highest m., 10453 land of m. and flood, 5193 like dew on m., 5203 my holy m., 313 nymph sweet liberty, 334b purple m. msjesties, 8493 Red Hoss M., 8203
robes m.
see

in

azure

hue,

537a

7883
skittish in all m., 2523

room enough on m., 7293 one m. and see all, 3113 shall be made low, 32b
sheep 3re sweeter, 552b up the 3iry m., 7293

soul has
stings to thy

many

m., io66a

3nd m. of sense, 2703 m. lovers' seasons run,


fioa

35 a
Motive, every joint snd m., find m. in narrative, 76ob for met3phor, gs6b fruit of action not be m., io6a

upon m. height, 5i6b woods or steepy m. yields, 21 sa Mountsineering, fishing m. antiquities,

hunting, 5283 noble m. fsr-resching purpose,


930

Mountsin's, 6633 Mountains,

8i8a sun

over

m.

rim,
across

across

m.

prairies,

g23b
cold, 3413

path m. guide, 1483 proportional to m. force, religion only m. force, Motiveless malignity, 5283 Motives, anatomizing of m., idealistic m., 8623 of more fancy, 2703 other thsn ignoble, 8g43 period great if high m., strongest of economic m., Motley fool, 2483

Alpine m.

among
37gb 37b

ancient m., 58gb

6o8b

8623 84gb

5373 besutiful upon the m., 333 before the m. were brought forth, 203 creep abased below m., 826b deer W3lk upon m., 9553 Delectable M., 3663 differ in their m., 9273 divide us, 5903 earth's monuments, 6153

at distance airy,

ISOO

INDEX
Mountains, England's m. green, 4gob faith that could remove m., 530 Greenland's icy m., 5490 high m. a feeling, 5560 hills look down on m., 8283 in primeval sleep, 7300 interposed, 4575 labor mouse brought forth, 1243 look on Marathon, sGob man to match m., 8a6b meteors not needed less than
m., 994b mind has m., 8o4a molehills from m. made, 1031 a monarch of m., 55gb moors and fens, goga New Hampshire m. curl, 9273 of the moon, 6443

Mouth
for

Mourn, no longer m.
agab

me,

Mouth, butter not melt in m.,


i83b
close m. catches no flies, 1953 false witness by their own m., 39 a
filled

small gnats m., 5843 the dead, 10780 time to m., 27 b unalterable days, 6o3b upon thy bed, 774b

with ever-returning spring, 702a ye Graces and Loves, 1 143. Mourned and yet shall mourn, 7o2a at birth not death, 4i4b

with dust, 308^3093 with gravel, s$b find m. a rein, 774b


filled

fool's

m.

is

his destruction,

253

from m. flow gentle words, 673 ginger hot i' the m., 252a God's m. knows not falsehood,
78b
heart in her m.

by strangers m., 4063 Mourners go about the


2ga haul

streets,

my
is

m., iggb smoother than

oil,

flag you m., io6gb Lord fetch m. up higher, 8143 most musical of m., 571 a

up

*3b
his heart's his m., zSgb his m. is most sweet, 2gb

on m. is freedom, 4g8b one is of the sea one of m.,


5 i6a over m. over waves, io86b

Mournful,

with m. tread, 7023 lean Despair, 4863 midnight hours, 621 a numbers, 6zob
I

people live in sierras and m., i73b skipped like rams, 223 split m. with thunderbolt, 1173 though the m. be carried into the sea, iga three long m., 1033 a tower proudest in Kentucky,

Psyche, 5843 sound, 7s7b

cannon's m., 2493 her m. was an olive leaf, 6b as many players do, 262b kisses from female m., 55gb let the words of my m. i?b
in

in

it

living

from hand

Mourning becomes Electra, iooga go my way in m., i88a


grief at not wanting back, 937b house of m., 283
let

made m. m3ke m.
mouths

to m., 1933 to water, 352^

to

call

most beautiful 4163

say right thing, 76 ib m. in world,


as

8o4b
truth
these

m.

bound,

igob

Vermont
927*

m.

stretch

straight,

m. shows be spread, 2O3b music in m., 383 oil of joy for m., 33b with my m. very handsome,
3763

sentence bone, 4563


shall
praise, iga

curs

m.

my m.

show forth thy


horse
in

nay an thou'lt m., s66a


never look gift 1463
m.,

when men and m.


yonder 4g8b

meet, 4gob

Mourns,

m.

stand

upon

base,
spices,

young hart upon m. of

303 Mountainside, following plow along m., 5iib from every m., 627b Mountaintop, lightning strikes m., i2ib Mountaintops, stands tiptoe on misty m., 2252 that freeze, 2g8a who ascends to m., 5563

vile man that m., 4080 Mourra, on m. seul, gSsb Mouse, baby looked like

household of Impulse m., io6oa Nature m. her worshipper, 5i8b

m.,

io46b
cat watch m., 3913 caught crooked m., iog6b

consider the

little

m., io5b

frightened

m.

under

chair,

in a trappe if

deed or bledde,

Mountebank, mere anatomy a m., 2i8b Mounted, beggars m. run horse to


death, 2i5b
better m. than I gives cast, 8743 to his cabin, go4b

i66a leave room for m., go4b like gnawing of m., 10233 mountains brought forth

m.,

1243 not a m. stirring, 256b not even a m., 5413


pleasant

nor m. had no nor mind expressed, 8osb not that which goeth into m., 43* not thine own m., a6a O sad kissed m., 77sb of hell, 6523 of his holy prophets, 46a of no other country, io22b of one just dead, g44b of Plenty's horn, 882b one's m. is what one becomes, 893* ope his m. out flew trope, 3523 opened the m. of the ass, loa out of the m. of babes, 173 out of thine own m., 473 proceedeth out of the m. of the
Lord, loa
purple-stained m., $82b reasons made m. water, 352b sendeth m. sendeth meat, 1833 silver spoon in m., ig7b smiling at the good m., g88b so prim, ioo4b speaketh out of abundance, 42b spew thee out of my m., 57b straight from horse's m., gs8b that which cometh out of m.,

Troilus m. Troyan walls, 2353 Mounteth, courage m. with occasion, 2363 Mounting at break of day, 5i5b in hot haste, 556a larks notes prepare, 405a lives not m. and unfolding,
935*> souls m. to in

shy

manner

of

m.,

prevails in Latin, 444b ran up clock, 10933 studying to be rat, 941 a that hath one hole, iosb tiny m. came forth, 763 town m. country m., 763.

Mounts,
Mourir,

God, 7$ia war m. steed, 5i8b

Mousetrap,
warrior's

baiting

m.

with

make

cheese, go4b better m., 6053

partir c'est m. un peu, 56jb, 8353 Mourn, blessed are they that m.,

4oa can children

of

bridechamber
m., m.,

m., 4ib countless thousands

man was made


Margaret you m.
mischief
past

to for,

4g2b 4gab

8osb

and gone, 2733

mourned and yet shall m., 7o2a music bad to those who m.,
374*

Mousetraps moon memory muchness, 744a Mousing, by m. owl hawked at, 2843 Moust3che, man who didn't wax m., 8723 Moustaches on last Czar, 10763 Mouth and belly injured by hunger, icob bread from m. of labor, 4723 bread of life in m., 3&ib

43* tongue cleave to the roof of my m., 233 tree whose m. is pressed,, 9923 verb in his m., 76 ib
violence covereth the

m. of the

wicked, 243

wear not
sgia

my

dagger in

my

m.,

what one becomes, 8933 which dog hath deeper

m.,

brown

hair

over

m.

blown,

2i4a wickedness sweet in his m., igb wine comes in at m., 881 a

1501

Mouth
Mouth, words of
his m. were smoother than butter, igb words of my m. be acceptable, i7b

INDEX
Moves, glory of

Him who m.

Mouth-filling, good m. oath, 24oa Mouth-honor breath, 286a Mouths, blind m., ggSb enemy in their m., 274a have m. but speak not, aaa made m. in a glass, 2783 sentence as curs bone, 4563

everything, i6ib God m. in mysterious way, laboring surges of world, love that m. sun and other stars, 1623 no life m. in empty passage-

Much, so m. depends upon, 9791 so m. for him, 2573 so m. owed by so many, g2ib so m. to do, 65ob, 828b
I could not find, gsoa talk too m., s68b those who have too m., 97 ib too m. of good thing, 1943 unjust in m., 473 what he loves never like too m., 302 b wrested from sure defeat, ioo8b Muchness, much of a m., 3883,

sought

ways, 8ia she stirs she

starts

she

m.,

622b
sits looking then m. on, g48a to see sad sights m. more, 220b where I move, io6ga whole creation m., 6513 Movest, great sphere thou m. in,

with hollow phrase, 8gga Moutons, revenons a nos

m.,

6903, 744a

Movable
feasts,

feast,

Muck,

593 impenetrable m. particles, 37gb Move, aim of oratory to m., all things work and m., 675b but if the other do, go6a but it does m., 2i2a doubt that sun doth m., a6ob fantastic century m., 4823 gentle wind does m., 488a great affair is to m., 8223 I by backward steps m., 36ab

288b

ma

Moveth all together, 5123 Movin' up and down again, 876b Moving accidents by flood and field, 272b
always m. 2123
as
restless

of a m. of sweat, 4483 stop raking m., 8483 Muckle, twice as m. 's a' that,
all

when

4g6a

Muckrake

men with
Mud,
flies

in his hand, 3663

m., 8483

spheres,

alive

and wagging

tail

in

m., loib

dead

still

talk, 10823

forward

I shall m. Hell, ngb I will m. the earth, i05a if it m. at all, 5123

in

cloud of ignorance, 10413 languid strings scarcely m., 486b only in command, 2863

finger writes, 6gob to greater freedom, 97 ia his slow and m. finger, 275b in m. how express, 2613 into another intensity, ioo6a keep m. on, 7173 never stopping, 70 ib
nightly pitch m. tent, 5183 others themselves as stone, 2g$a push on keep m., 5013
asleep, 655a up and down again, SyGb waters at priestlike task, 5813

from wings, io75a frogs in the marsh m., n7a garlic and sapphires in m.,
10053
in Black in m. eel
life

M.
is,

kingfisher,

10753

10973
61 4b

marble and m.,

like elephant stuck in m., Sob psinters today mix colors with

m., 1533
rests

pretty pleasures

might
of

me

m.,

silk

on belly in m., 1002 a stocking filled with m.,


fountains have m., 2923

ig8b
social

tide as

m. seems

505*
silver

conscience

nation,

10833
stars

m. still time runs, sigb stones known to m., 2853 stones of Rome to mutiny, 2563 times change and m. continually, 2oob toward rich

Mown,

like rain

upon m.

grass,

igb-2oa multiply whenever m. down, i43b Moyles and moyles of it, g6ga

Muddied oafs at goals, 875b Muddle through, 6583 Muddled, he's a m. fool, 1963
state sharpest

we

of

realities,

7ggb

Muddlement, constant force for


m., 7ggb

society, 10643

Mozart,

and m., 502 what can I do but m., io8oa when looking well can't m. her,
live

we

some cry up M., tried to play M., 10173

535b

Muddy

ill

-seeming thick, 2 igb

vesture of decay, 235^

Much, and this is m., 5563 bitter and is not m., by m. too m., 2403
drinking
little

loiob
3893

with leaden
I shall

feet,

77 ib

thinking,

Moved beyond endurance, g76b


not be m., igb
like

enough or too m., 4883


faithful in m., 473 given much required,
473,

Mudjokivis, killed the M., go7a Mud-luscious, world is m., 10303 Mudville, no joy in M., 868a Muffet, little Miss M., iog6b Muffin man, 10973 Muffins, no more inspiration than
m., 836b

a vast shadow m., g62b more ways than one, 10655 mystery of being m. by words,
10713

io72b

Muffled and dumb, 6o3b


oars, 53 ib

not m. with concord, 235b not suffer thy foot to be m., 22a through dooms of love, logib
to smile at anything, 25gb virtue never will be m.,

have I seen and known, 6463 have I traveled, 57gb I do not ask you m., 237b in few words, 38b
force of heaven-bred poesy, 22 13 know too ra. convinced of too
is

Muffler, Fortune painted blind with m., 2oga Mug's, poetry m. game, ioo8a Mugwump educated beyond intellect, 7723 Mule, democratic party like m., 454*

woman m.
462b

like

25gb fountain trou-

bled, 2 igb

Movement, most magnificent m.,

little, ioo7b lady doth protest too ra., 26$) learning doth make thee mad, 5ob

little

New
new

happy

if

we

say

how

m.,

Life M., gg$b m. stampede, 87ob


into m. without

2463
little

no apathy
tion,

emo-

9363
largest bodies,

more how m. it is, 663b missing so m. and so m., 99 ib more to that which had too m.,
247b

kicked in head by m., 886a reason with a m., 828b Mules, facts contrary 'z m., 39 ib Mulleary, Shake M. and Go-ethe, 83 13 Mulligan, marched in M. Guard,

symbol of power of m., g86a

Movements of the

479* tongue exceeds in number of m., i74b Mover, Zeus prime m., 78b

Movers and shakers, 8073 Moves a goddess, 4053 and mates and slays, Sgob cursed be he that m. my bones, aggb

no man wanted m., 6o7b not do too m. work, 6g8b not many but m., 1513 nothing too m., 68b of a muchness, 3883, 6goa, 7443 of a which of a wind, 10323 of madness, 642b once that seemed too m., g27b see so m. nor live so long, 28ob so little time to do so m.,

8oga Multa, non m. sed multum, 1513 Multeity in unity, 5283 Multifold, dying m., 737b Multiple, register m. perception in art, g8gb Multiplication is vexation, io84b
Multiplied, deviation is m., 97b
entities

from

truth

not m. beyond necessity, i62b visions, 35b

Multiplieth fruit, 4b

INDEX
Multiplieth

Music
Muse,
tell me M., 653, 4053 tenth M. governs press, 678b Tragic M. trod stage, 4o4b worst-natured m., 3823 Mused, many a m. rhyme, s82b Muses, all charm of all M., 6s4b exaltation in chanting of M.,

words without

knowledge, i6a and m., 53 Multiply, be fruitful sentinels, 5ggb thanks to art see world m.,

Murder, met M. on the way, 5703 one m. made a villain, 4603 one to destroy is m., 3g8b or want of sense, 7473 rage hatred and m., 1081 a
sacrilegious m., 2843 shrieks out, i6ga

go8b io86a two hearts that m., we m. whenever mown down,


Multitude a Hydra, 12

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