"POWER for a pencil, conscience for a table, To write opinion in of any fashion." Ibid. p. 58. "THE plague that in some folded cloud remains, The bright sun soon disperseth: but observe, "HE that would tame a lion, doth not use Ibid. p. 441. “FALSE antidotes for vicious ignorance, Whose causes are within, and so the cure; Error corrupting nature, not mischance, For how can that be wise which is not pure." Ibid. p. 210. "TILL the inward moulds be truly placed, All is made crooked that in them we cast." Ibid. "FROM early childhood's promising estate, Up to performing manhood." GONDIBERT, p. 2. Ibid. "WAR, art's deliberate strength." "READY as pilots waked with sudden winds." Ibid. p. 14. "Dogs, such whose cold secresy was meant By nature for surprize." Ibid. 24. p. "RELAYS of horse, long-breathed as winter winds." Ibid. 25. " ANIMALS They want not the re Bui speech, by which we boast." p. of thought, ours for reason Ibid. p. 26. "WHOSE needless carefulness Infects them past the mind's best medicine, 66 Which from the people does to rulers grow; Power (Fortune's sail) should not for threatenings strike, YET in our walk to our last home design'd In boats bestorm'd, all check at those that (Soul-sick with poison) strike the monu ments "THOU'ST brought me to that dull calamity, | Oh, how they cast to sink it! and defeated, Ibid. p. 60. VIRTUE." The memorial thereof is immortal, because it is known with God and with man. When it is present, men take example at it; and when it is gone, they desire it; it weareth a crown, and triumpheth for ever, having gotten the victory, striving for undefiled rewards."-Wisdom, iv. 1-2. "NIMIRUM primorum parentum peccatum et luimus, et imitamur."-BACON, vol. 10, p. 4. "LIGHT is sown for the righteous, and gladness for the upright in heart.”—Psalm 97, v. 11. Bible translation. DIVINATIONS, and soothsayings, and dreams, are vain; and the heart fancieth as a woman's heart in travail."-Ecclesiasticus, 34. 5. Where noble names lie sleeping, till they sweat, And the cold marble melt.”—Ibid. p. 135. "I HOLD a spleen, no sin of malice, Crowned with still flourishing leaves of F. Elder Brother, p. 110. "He has made his study all his pleasure, And is retired into his contemplation, Not meddling with the dirt and chaff of nature, That makes the spirit of the mind mud too.” Ibid. p. 115. "He has been at court, and learned new tongues, And, now to speak a tedious piece of nothing, MADE his soul melt within him, and To vary his face as seamen do their compass, his blood May live neglected, and do noble things, As fools in strife throw gold into the sea, Drowned in the doing."-Ibid. p. 105. AGAR ELLIS, Hallam, et id genus. "WHERE may a maiden live securely free, Keeping her honour safe?-Not with the living: They feed upon opinions, errors, dreams, And make them truths: they draw a nourishment Out of defamings, grow upon disgraces, And when they see a virtue fortified Strongly above the battery of their tongue, To worship images of gold and silver, - UNBAKED poetry, Such as the dablers of our time contrive, That has no weight nor wheel to move the mind, Nor indeed nothing but an empty sound." Ibid. p. 121. "SUCH a one-shews his thoughts double, Making 'em only food for his repentance." BEAUMONT and FLETCHER. Wit without Money, p. 282. "NOTHING to lose but that my soul inherits, Which they can neither law nor claw away.” Ibid. p. 292. "THAT daily thrust their hazards; lives through |