Hudibras, Volume 21757 |
Table des matières
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Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Hudibras: Poëme ecrit dans le tems de troubles d'Angleterre, Volume 2 Samuel Butler Affichage du livre entier - 1757 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
Ainfi appear auffi avoit Back Beard beft Blows break c'eft C'eſt c'étoit Caufe Cauſe Cheats Chevalier chofe choſe Confcience Covenant Dame derriere Devil Diable dit-il e'er Ears eſt étoit ev'ry Eyes fage faid faifoit falfe fans Fear feffer felf fens fent ferment fervir feul fince find fingle foit fome font fooner forcier forciere found fouvent ftill fuch fuivant fwear give good grace great Hand Heart himſelf hold Honour i'th Jurés Juſtice Knight know l'Ecuyer laiffer left Love made Maimonide make maniere mean Moon n'eft ne'er o'er o'th Oaths paffer perfonne Pow'r Prefbytériens prove Quoth he Quoth Hudibras raiſon Ralpho Saints Sidrophel ſon Squire Stars take tems Thefe things thofe thou thought time Tricks trouve le joint true turn turn'd twas undertake Whachum Whofe Witches Words worfe World
Fréquemment cités
Page 184 - Th' intelligible world he knew, And all men dream on't to be true : That in this world there's not a wart That has not there a counterpart ; Nor can there on the face of ground An individual beard be found, That has not, in that foreign nation, A fellow of the self-same fashion ; So cut, so colour'd, and so curl'd, As those are in th...
Page 42 - Thought he, I understand your play, And how to quit you your own way. He that will win his dame, must do As Love does, when he bends his bow ; With one hand thrust the Lady from, And with the other pull her home. I grant...
Page 250 - There's but the twinkling of a star Between a man of peace and war, A thief and justice, fool and knave, A huffing officer and a slave, A crafty lawyer and pick-pocket, A great philosopher and a block-head, A formal preacher and a player, A learn'd...
Page 372 - And what would serve, if those were gone, To make it orthodox ? " " Our own." " What makes morality a crime, The most notorious of the time — Morality, which both the saints And wicked too cry out against ? " " 'Cause grace and virtue are within Prohibited degrees of kin ; And therefore no true saint allows They shall be...
Page 92 - With pregnant light : The point is clear. Oaths are but words, and words but wind, Too feeble implements to bind, And hold with deeds proportion, so, As shadows to a substance do.
Page 52 - The sun and day shall sooner part, Than love, or you, shake off my heart ; The sun that shall no more...
Page 26 - As beards the nearer that they tend To th' earth still grow more reverend ; And cannons shoot the higher pitches, The lower we let down their breeches : I'll make this low dejected fate Advance me to a greater height.
Page 194 - His bus'ness was to pump and wheedle, And men with their own keys unriddle, To make them to themselves give answers, For which they pay the necromancers ; To fetch and carry intelligence, Of whom, and what, and where, and whence, And all discoveries disperse Among th...
Page 32 - To bid me not to love, Is to forbid my pulse to move, My beard to grow, my ears to prick up, Or (when I'm in a fit) to hickup.
Page 146 - A tailor's prentice has no hard Measure, that's bang'd with a true yard ; But to turn tail, or run away, And without blows give up the day, Or to surrender ere th...